THE MICHIGAN DAILY fisher Names 16 Players To PLAY & BY- PLAY By AL NEWMAN- Letter. .. an open letter to francis albert schmidt the new coach at osu in the football business my dear mister schmidt1 colon i understand that having been put in to1 succeed sammy willaman' who had some difficulties in making his football teams beat michigans and is now out of a job you made some statement about how the michigan football team put on theirgrid panties just the same way that the ohio states do period now mister schmidt i am not one to quibble over technicalities so let your statement stand period after all you are new to this big ten racket and let me tell you it is a tough one period in fact you are about the first big ten coach i have ever heard who breathed confidence in the way of a michigan team since harry kipke arrived here a few years ago period well mister schmidt i only hope that you will feel the same way about things just before the michigans go down there next fall and i will conclude by telling you that even if the michigans do put their pants on the same way that the ohio states do very very few teams have ever found out what they looked like without them by taking them down period yours truly comma al Sport Fans Note: Life Will Soon Be Worth Living Again Good news for local sport fans. You've had a tough time these last few weeks. Track meets away. Swim- ming meets away. No baseball. No golf. No tennis. No nothing. You've had to satisfy yourselves with reading accounts of the Wolver- ines winning track and aquatic titles. But don't lose hope. The most active sport season of the year is just around the corner (like prosperity was for so long). If you happened to drop down to the Field House recently you'd have seen plenty of activity. Baseball play- ers working out. The sound of bat against ball and ,ball against mitt. A pistol shot. Coach Hoyt sending his sprinters down the cinders. Ward goes over the cross bar at six feet. Hunn goes thirteen feet up in the air. And at night. Shades of Willie Heston. Coach Kipke and his men hard at work, preparing for another tough grid campaign. The golfersuand racqueteers have been hiding out some place too. They are all waiting for the weather man to have a change of heart and give 'em a break. Kinda tugging at the traces. Following vacation they hope to go outdoors. The track team will be gunning for its sixteenth Conference title - the baseball team for its elev- enth - the tennis team for its fourth -and the golf team for its third. Prospects for a successful season are brilliant. The tracksters are fa- vored to repeat. Although the golf team lost Johnny Fischer, it gained Chuck Kocsis, so it's favored also. The baseball and tennis teams are of untested ability. Anything may happen. New stars may develop. Surprises are in store for you - may- be good, maybe bad - you can't tell. Coach Hoyt is pessimistic. Coach Fischer is pessimsitic. Coach John- stone is pessimistic. Coaches Court- right and Trueblood are pessimistic. All coaches are pessimistic. ALL-CAMPUS BOWLING Delta Kappa Epsilon, champions of the frateinity bowling league, will meet a picked team of independent bowlers for the All-Campus team championship soon after spring vaca- tion. The Pendalterps, leaders in the independent league, are expected to place a majority of men on the team which will oppose Delta Kappa Ep- silon. v Michigan Nine To Play Colgate In First Game Lack Of Outdoor PracticeL To Handicap Infield Ona Training Tour By ART SETTLEd Coach Ray Fisher announced yes-y terday the squad of 16 all players, who will make the Eastern trainingy trip. The team will leave Ann Arborn early Sunday; moining and travelf East via automobile to Hamilton,a N. Y., where Colgate will be played Monday in the first of a two game1 series. Single games with Lehigh, Temple, Rutgers, Westchester Teach- ers, and Oberlin, will complete the spring training schedule. The men who are making the trip are pitchers, "Whitey" Wistert, ArtJ Patchin, Harry Tillotson, Art Settle, Ed Wilson, Leslie Fish, Milton Melt- zer; infielders, Clayt Paulson, Russ Oliver, Stan Waterbor, Joe Lerner, Harold Roehrig; outfielders, Captain Avon Artz, Ted Petoskey, John Re-t geczi; catcher, Ted Chapman. Settle and Lerner are the only sophomores.h Coach Fisher was forced to makec his selections solely on the basis ofc indoor performances. Although the. squad will be under a severe handi-r cap due to no outdoor practice, the9 pitching and hitting of the Wolver-t ines should be above par. "Murderer's Row" When Petoskey, Artz, Oliver andt Paulson face the opposing pitcher, in that order, the poor hurler will be reminded of the old N e w York l Yankees' "murder- er's row" of Babe s Ruth, Gehrig, and Meusel. s These four Wol- verines have been":" slamming the ball hard for the last month, and if the change in atmos- phere f r o m the PTOstS Field House to an outdoor diamond doesn't impair their batting, the Eastern aggregations will see some real hitting. The only weak spot lies in the fielding phase of the game, and this weakness will be only temporary. The infield, which is a completely re- vamped one from last year's, is in the most urgent need of some outdoor practice. However, it appears un- likely that the infield will have any outdoor workouts before the Colgate game, and a ragged performance will be not at all surprising. Regeczi or Lerner at First Either Regeezi or Lerner will play first base. Whoever is the best fielder of the two will win the job, while the .other will play one of the out- field posts. Clayt Paulson at second, Russ Ol1ivye r at third, and Stan Waterbor at short, round out the in- field The pitchers have been working out s i n c e Christmas vacation, and their a r m s are well enough oiled to show the Eastern- +a/i~reR ers some real hurl- ing. "Whitey" Wistert is a sure bet to pry the lid off against Colgate. He should be a great pitcher this sea- son; he has a very fast, fast ball, a sharp breaking curve, and a good change of pace. With the exception of two games, he won all of Michi- gan's Conference victories last season. Art Patchin appears to rate next to Wistert, and he may get the call in the second encounter with Col- gate. Patchin looked good on several occasions last year, chief among his achievements being a five-hit win over Ohio State. The third veteran "pitcher is Harry Tillotson. He is a gool customer in the pitching box, and he utilizes ex- traordinary control of his deliveries to great advantage.. Last year he subdued the hard-hitting Michigan State bunch, and won a game from Purdue. The other four hurlers will have to prove their merit. Fish and Melt- zer were reserves last year, Wilson is a newcomer, and Settle is a left hander from last year's fresh nine. Heavy Hitting Outfield The outfield will find the slugging duo, Artz and Petoskey, holding down the right and center positions, respectively. Regeczi or Lerner will play left field. Colgate will oppose the Wolverines with a hard hitting lineup, featur- ing Brooks, Bridge, and Kuk, and an PLAY AND HORSE PLAY Dear Mabel: Just a line to let you know that your friend Mike didn't cash his checks after that Guffer debacle last autumn -you remember the day that Lug Lund and his pals darn near put the bite on us down here at Ann Arbor. You know I let you in on a lot of awful good things last fall -such as that Grid-Giraffe, but this hot shot is even better. Well there's a nice little exhibition coming off over at Lebanon (You know, "Yeah, and Moses, he led the faithful Israelites out of Lebanon.") New Hampshire next Mon- day at high noon -only the sun will be high though, Mabel, I promise you, since this Lebanyun is in New England, not Mitchigan. You know Mabel, spring arrove here officially a couple weeks ago and you 'member what those poet-guys say always happens in spring. Well, to make a long story short, Mabul, I've given up poisoning chemistry profs, putting the bites on football gridders and such unseemly occupations and am going the way of all flesh (that's from Shakespeare, Mabel). A guy wit wings and a bow put the bee on me and I'm marrying a girl named Eleanor at afore-mentioned high-noon next Monday. Hoping you are the same, MIKE (by his Ghost) Expect Better Baseball From National League This Season Since the last World Series when the New York Giants trounced the Washington Senators so convincingly, National League stock has taken a decided jump. For many years the older circuit had absorbed an annual defeat at the hands of the leading representative of its sister league and a subsequent newspaper razzing. Now the worm has turned and a man- agerial consensus is of the opinion that better baseball will be played in the National League this year than in the American. Two teams represent New York City in the upper circuit. According to ex- pert opinion, one of them, the Giants, will repeat last year's astonishing victory, while the hapless Brooklyn. Dodgers can challenge any team to the position of cellar tenant, give it a good start, and then win out along in September. Can Pitchers Repeat With the Giants, it is mainly a question of whether a grand perform- ance by the pitching staff can be re- peated. If it can, and if Blondy Ryan can assure Terry he is a Big Leaguer, then the other clubs can begin bidding for second place. As far as the Dodg- ers are concerned, Manager Casey Stengel will have to be a second Hou- dini to break his boys into the rani- fied atmosphere of the first division. Yet Brooklyn ball clubs do astonish- ing things. A competent pitching staff is the keynote of a successful baseball team. Frankie Frisch puts the issue squarely up to his St. Louis veterans. If Jess Haines, Bill Hallahan, and Burleigh Grimes can assist the Dean Brothers to the extent of a triple comeback, then Branch Rickey can eulogize his farm system to the skies, and if not the Cardinals are sunk. Their team afield is good, but not good enough to support a feeble staff of boxmen. The Pittsburgh Pirates and the Chicago Cubs have been cleaning up the Pacific Coast during the train- ing season. Every man in both line- ups is hitting hard, but most of the pitching they have been called upon Tennis Is Most Popular Sport Among Freshmen! Approximate figures for freshmen enrolled in spring physical education groups were given out Wednesday by the office of Dr. George A. May, direc- tor of Waterman Gymnasium. Tennis has drawn the largest fol- lowing from the freshman gym classes, with an enrollment of 175. From this group the freshman tennis squad will be recruited. Work in the gymnasium, including wrestling, boxing, fencing, and hand- ball activities, claims 135 members of the gym classes. Non-instructional swimming activities have only 75 sup- porters. Golf has a following of 65. The freshman baseball squad at present carries about 20 men, while only 10 chose soft ball as a spring activity. ace hurler in the person of Red La- Flamme. PROBABLE LINEUP to face is of the minor league variety. o More will be known of them when o they face major league opposition on the trip East. Both outfits are cer- tain to be in the pennant chase. Braves Look Strong The Boston Braves led by the vet- eran McKechnie will assuredly pro- vide stiff opposition in their own t back yard in Boston. If they can hold up on the road and win a rea- sonable quota of their games on foreign territory, then let the other u teams beware. While it is doubtful if they have flag aspirations, they can certainly upset the applecart for so- called favorites. It is difficult to talk of the chances of Cincinnati and Philadelphia. Both teams have been in the doldrums so long and have been shaken up so often without apparent result, that they have come to be looked upon as "breathers" in .the schedule, and a spot for a rookie pitcher to break in. The process of, rebuilding is a long one. Cincinnati has found a godfather in Powell Crosby. There is little hope for Philadelphia. 1Women's Part In Turf World Is Increasing' NEW YORK, April 5 - (P)-Wom- en are playing an increasingly im- portant part in the turf world. As recently as five years ago, it was rare for one of them to win a race. Now more and more women who can afford it - for it costs big money to keep horses, no matter how much you win-are maintaining their own stables and winning important races. Two of Mrs. Payne Whitney's en- tries - Spy Hill and Black Buddy- are among early favorites in the Ken- tucky Derby, which her Twenty Grand won in 1931. Another out- standing woman's entry is Mrs. John Hay Whitney's Singing Wood. Mrs. Payne Whitney is dean of American women racers, just as the whole Whitney clan is the mainstay of thoroughbred racing in this coun- try. Her husband cared nothing about horses, but after his death in 1927 she organized the Greentree Stable. She has big breeding farms in Ken- tucky and at Red Bank, N. J., the latter with a quarter-mile covered track. Her Belmont Park stable is one of the show places of the racing center, and Mrs. Whitney is one of the guarantors of the track's deficit. In three years Twenty Grand won $260,840, but it costs from $250,000 to $500,000 a year to maintain a large stable and most of the owners have to dig deeply into their own pockets. h Michigan Waterbor, ss Lerner, lb or lf Petoskey, cf Artz, (C), rf Oliver, 3b Paulson, 2b Regeczi, lb or if Chapman, c Wistert, p _ Colgate Dempsey, ss McDonough, 2b Bridge (C), 1b Brooks, If Kuk, cf Anderson, 3b Flaitz, rf O'Hara, c LaFlamme, p BEARS SIGN ROSEQUIST Ted Rosequist, the Ohio State foot- ball and basketball star, has signed a one-year football contract with the Chicago Bears. Although Rosequist has completed four years of college competition, he lacks several hours of having the required work for his bachelors degree. He intends to play with the Bears in their National League campaign and also on their barnstorming tour of the Pacific Coast next winter, re- turning to the Buckeye campus for the spring quarter next year to com- plete his academic work. ____ Superior MILK-ICE CREAM I k; II WEEK-END SPECIAL f 1! " ® tt