1L20, 134 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Michigan Nine Loses Game To Western State, 3-2 PLAY & BY-PLAY By AL NEWMAN- Sports For All. * * * YOU CANNOT KEEP THE GOOD old American Sports fan down. Of course, during recent years he has gone to ball games, horse races, hockey battles, and wrestling matches with a good deal of calm and general quietude of mind. But the era of sports for all is arriving. Yes, it is easy to see it coming. Whether the urge to participate in these events has been inculcated into the minds of the citizens by public parks and playgrounds or perchance by the experiences of many in being involved in things by having a wrestler tossed out of the ring and into the lap is still a question. It is a fact, however, that the public has taken to entering into the spirit and activity of professional games with gay abandon and a pop-bottle in either hand. Take for example the celebrated hockey riots of the past winter. Hitherto most of the clawing, mayhem and stick-swinging was strictly the affair of the players. But lately the spectators have wanted to play also, and the unwary hockeyist who wanders over too close to the wall during one of these slight misunderstandings is likely to find himself grabbed by some character who puts the slug on him merely because that is the thing that is being done on the ice and the citizen does not want to be left out of it. IT GOT SO BAD last winter that you could not take your old Aunt AgathaI to a hockey game . . . that is, and sit down anywhere near the ice. Of' course it depends upon your old Aunt Agatha. She might be of the military type. There are aunts and aunts. At any rate, the tendency is carrying over into baseball. Over in Albany on Wednesday they had quite a pop- -------- ---- ----- - Whitey Wistert Scores All Of Wolverine Runs >-- -- -- --- Team Faces Wildcats bottle throwing contest with the um- pire as the target. It was during a ball game between Toronto and Al- bany. The cash customers became displeased because it was the last half of the tenth with the score thirteen to eight in favor of Toronto and there were two outs. They were trying to hint to the umpire that he ought to call the game on account of darkness. The umpire did not respond to the hint and forfeited the game to To- ronto because there was not adequate police protection. Seems to me that it would have been wiser to give the game to Albany because there was in- adequate police protection. The dispatch states that there were several members of the New York State legislature there but does not Prospective Golfers Are Asked To Report Coach Thomas C. Trueblood an- nounced yesterday that all pros- pective tryouts for the varsity and freshman golf squads who have not tried out as yet must do so im- mediately. Tryouts for places on both squads are now in progress at the University Golf Course. say whether they managed to hit any- thing. Well, it all goes to show that you cannot keep the good old American sports fan down. Not until they start serving pop in wax paper containers. Faulty Pitching, Br e a k s Cause Michigan Defeat; Art Patchin Is Wild Northwestern Today Wistert, Tillotson Are To Face Wildcats In First Big Ten Game Of Season By ART SETTLE KALAMAZOO, April 19. - The Western State Teachers College base- ball team this afternoon squeezed out a 3 to 2 win over the University of Michigan nine the Wolverines get- ting the bad breaks throughout the game. The Hilltoppers scored in the first and second innings when Patchin's wildness put men in scoring positions and again in the sixth. Both Wolver- ine scores were made by "Whitey" Wistert, playing at first, in the fourth and in the sixth innings. Newman, the big gun of the Hill- topper attack, opened the scoring ir the first. He singled to center with one out, advanced to third when Patchin walked Miller and hit Cox and scored on an infield out to Wis- tert. The Teachers scored in the second on a walk and a hit, but Michigar came back with a run in the fourth Wistert walked, went to third on a single to right field by Paulson and scored on a long fly to left by Re- geczi. The Wolverines tied the score in the sixth when Wistert walked and scored on Paulson's single after go- ing to second on a passed ball, but the Hilltopper team came back with the winning run in their half of the in- ning. A fly ball which dropped fo a double followed by a hit by Hib- bard accounted for the Teacher' score. From the second inning on Patchir' pitched high-class ball, but his wild- ness in the early stanzas and ba breaks later prevented a win. He al- lowed only five hits, three of them going to Newman, who led the West- ern attack. Brilliant catches in the early in- nings by Salter, Hilltopper outfielder, Staved off early Michigan threats. The game was characterized by well played baseball in the field, neither team committing an error. The Wolverines will continue on to Evanston tonight, where they will open the Conference season in the first of a two-game series against the Wildcats tomorrow. "Whitey" Wistert, number one Michigan pitcher, will probably get the call on the mound, and Harry Tillotson will probably pitch the second game. Summary Michigan ..... .000 101 000-2 5 0 W.S.T.C. ......110 001 000-3 5 0 Patchin and Chapman; Grant and Koch. PLENTY OF MOORES There are five Moores in the Na- tional League, Joe of the Giants, Gene of the Cardinals, John of the Reds, Randy of the Braves, and Aus- tin of the Phillies. 1I COACH RAY FISHER Hoyt Will Take Large Troupe To Des Moines Tracksters To Start Trials Tomorrow To Determine Drake Relay Entries Two sprint relay teams and the title-defending mile team as well as several individual performers prob- ably will represent Michigan at the Drake Relays next Friday and Sat- urday, thereby giving Michigan one of the largest delegations it has had ,n the track program at Des Moines in several years. The make-up of the relay teams will lepend on the outcome of trials to e held tomorrow and others to be held the middle of next week. It appears now that Willis Ward, Bob Lamb, Cass Kemp, and Dave Barnes will make up the quarter-mile eam, although Barnes may be re- )laced. Coach Hoyt figures that this luartet will run its race in around 42 ;econds if weather and track condi- "ions are satisfactory. Captain Tom Ellerby, Ed Lemen :nd Harvey Smith are sure of places _n the mile relay team. Harvey Pat- ton appears to -be the choice for the Iourth man, but he is getting strong 4ompetition from Jake Kaufman, Ben Starr, Dick Ellerby and Tony Sera- kos. Serakos, a failure indoors, is :oming along rapidly-now. The team .s figured to run its race in around 3:20, a second slower than the time made by the Michigan quartet which won last year. Lamb, Kemp, Lemen md Tom Ellerby probably will make ap the half-mile team, if Hoyt de- sides to enter a team in that event. OWHITE .U ARROW HIRTS SAFFELL & BUSH 11 11 t. a { 5 f f l: ' If DREW RYSSTRONG ALE Canada's 'Pride Since 1877 NOW BREWED IN THE U.S.A. THE DREWRYS LTD., 180 N. 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