.URSDAY, MAY 3, 1934 THE MICHIGAN DAILY llini Baseball, Track, And Golf Teams To Be Here Saturd Gridders Will Meet In Annual SpringBattle Tennis Team To Be Away, Playing Western State And Northwestern Ferry Field and its vicinity will have the busiest day of the spring, Saturday, when Michigan and Illinois athletes meet in baseball, track, and golf, while two squads of the Wol- verine football team hold their an- nual game, the climax of the weeks of spring practice. High school foot- ball coaches will gather in the morn- ing to witness a Varsity demonstra- tion of Michigan football. Only the tennis team will be away, meeting Western State Teachers on Friday at Kalamazoo and Northwestern Satur- day at Evanston. The Wildcats will furnish the second Big Ten opposi- tion for the netmen. Coach Hoyt's traclsmen, hampered by injuries, may have a more diffi- cult time defeating the Illini than was previously expected. The Wol- verine golfers, playing morning and afternoon rounds, will attem, to pass the Illinois obstacle in defense of their Big Ten title. The Indian baseball team promises to give the Michigan nine the stiffest competi- tion it has met so far. The track meet will start at 1:30 p. m., the baseball game at 2:30 p. m. The football game will begin at 4 p. m. Track Team To Meet Illinois Without Ellerby I n j u r i e s May Handicap Ward; Illini Strong In Sprint Events Minus the services of their cap- tain, Tom Ellerby, who is definitely out of the line-up with a pulled leg muscle,-Michigan's tracksters will en- gage in their only home meet of the season with Illinois Saturday after- noon With Willis Ward, Michigan's strongest threat, also suffering from injuries, the Wolverines go into the meet with a handicap that should be hard to overcome. The Illini have good performers in the dashes, quarter mile, weights and pole vault and may pick up enough points in other events to take the measure of Michigan's indoor champions. The Illini have Seeley, one of tlhe best pole vaulters in the Big Ten, with a mark of -13 feet, 10 inches. For the sprints they have Russell who was timed at 9.7 for the century last Saturday and Hellmich, second in the Big Ten 100-yard dash last year. Their shot putters, Cook, Kamm and Cummings, are among the Con- ference leaders. Miller, who will run the 440 and 880, is a former national interscholastic champion and has been timed at; 48.5 seconds for the quarter. Schoeniger, Illinois' best hurdler, was third in the indoor Conference highs this year. For the mile and two mile runs the Illini will have Du Fresne, Knight and Lanmejer, all of whom must be rated above Michigan's entries unless the Wol- verines show improvement Saturday. Coach Hoyt considers his squad three weeks behind its training schedule because of the unfavorable weather which continued until this week. He is cheered, however, by the progress shown in time-trials this week. Week-End Sports TRACK - Michigan vs. Illinois. 1:30 p.m., Saturday, Ferry Field. BASEBALL - Michigan vs. Il- linois. Following track meet, Sat- urday, Ferry Field. FOOTBALL - Annual Spring Scrimmage. 4 p.m.,Saturday, Stadium. GOLF - Michigan vs. Illinois, Foursomes at 9 a.m., Saturday. Singles at 1:15 p.m., University Golf Course. TENNIS - Michigan vs. West- ern State, Friday at Kalamazoo; Michigan vs. Northwestern, Sat- urday at Evanston. Gridders Seek. Alumni Trophy In Final Game Fall Football Invitations May Also Depend Upon Showing Saturday When 22 Maize and Blue clad war- riors trot onto the Stadium football field at 4:00 p.m. Saturday afternoon they will be in search of something more than victory for their own team. The matters of who receives the Chi- cago Alumni Trophy and who will re- ceive invitations to return early for football practice this fall also hang in the balance. The squad of 50 or more players has been divided into rival camps for two weeks and the teams are hop- ing to spring some surprises on each other Saturday. Head Coach Harry Kipke, who is directing the veteran Blue team has just about decided upon his starting line-up, although last minute changes may be made. James, at quarter; Sweet, fullback; Aug I and Triplehorn, halves, are Kipke's starting backfield quartet which will operate behind the al- most-all-veteran line of Johnson and Patanelli, ends, Captain Austin and Jacobson, tackles; Beard and Borg- mann, guards; and Ford, center. With this backfield Kipke appears to have both the best kicker and best passer available for either team. Cedric Sweet is the outstanding punt- er while Vincent Aug is the only available passer who can be rated as of near-Varsity caliber. Though no scrimmage was held yesterday due to the large number of injuries received in Saturday's hard workout, both Kipke and Franklin Cappon, coaching the Yellows, sent their squads through long offensive and defensive drills. Cappon, coaching the team which annually takes a drubbing, would not say yesterday which 11 men he would offer as cannon fodder first, although all of the men on both squads are sure to see action at some time dur- ing the regulation game-period. Individual competition for the Chi- cago Alumni Trophy always features the spring game. The silver foot- ball, given annually to the player, us- ually a freshman, who shows the most improvement in spring practice, was given to Mike Malashevich last year. Malashevich was the only sophomore to win a Varsity letter last year. Indications are that another end may take the trophy this year, with Matt Patanelli making a strong bid. Others who may crash through are Bud Hanshue, Aug, and Chris Ever- hardus, following in the steps of his brother, Herm, who won the honor in 1931. JABLONOWSKI NOW APPLETON Pete Appleton, expected to be one of the Baltimore Orioles' starting pitches in the International league pennant race, is the same young man who hurled successfully for the New- ark club last year. Only then his name was Pete Jablonowski. He changed it during the winter. PLAY & BY-PLAY ByALNLWMAN--------- The Police. . . * * * HE WHO LOOKS FOR TROUBLE seldom has to go very far to find it. That old adage holds true in everything from sports right down to growing cabbages. . except trouble shooting in cars and radios. Tues- day, thirty-eight Michiganu students travelled forty miles to find trouble and excitement in Detroit. -They found it. It was May-Day trouble that they were hunting there. The young men were affiliated, for the most part, with Socialistic organizations on Campus. They desired to demon- strate.' Police came along and with signal brutality even for police, gave some of the lads a shellacking without much if anything in the way of ex- cuse or provocation. Now this is no place for a discus- sion of Socialism, Communism, or any other Ism that you happen to have on hand, but it does demon- strate the usual attitude of those admirable public servants, the police. You might be led to think that a man who depends on the public funds for his coffee and cakes would be at least civil to that public in the discharge of his duties. The police,. for the most part, are not. Abundance Of Good Golfers Vexes Co ac h Faced with the tremendous task of picking a four man team from a squad of nine players of nearly equal ability, Coach Thomas Trueblood is carefully putting his Varsity golfers through practice rounds in preparation for the dual meet with Illinois, Saturday at the University Golf Course. Nothing is known regarding the strength of the Illini, but Coach True- blood is having enough trouble trying to decide on the four men that he will use Saturday. According to him competition for places on the squad has never been so keen. Coach Trueblood is hoping that Il- linois will bring a six-man rather than a four-man outfit, for two men could be added to the Michigan team without weakening its strength in the least. At the beginning of the week, mem- bers of the Varsity squad were ranked in the following order: Kocsis, Cap- tain Dayton, L. David, Malloy, Mark- ham, Schloss, Seelye, Menefee, and Sweet, but scores turned in this week prove that this ranking is a grouping of the nine best players, rather than a rating of their relative ability. Some of the scores turned in to date this week serve to bear out this fact. Markham has posted a 72 and a 77, and yesterday toured the course in 75. Captain Dayton lists 74 and 76, Seelye, 76 and 79, L. David, 74, Sweet, 75, Schloss, 76, and Menefee, 74, his best score of the year. The finals of the annual Open squash tournament will be held at 3:15, Wednesday. Ray Fiske, student champion, will meet Ernest Smith INSTEAD OF BEING PUBLIC SER- vants, they are bullies. They illustrate what happens when you take an ignorant, ill-mannered indi- vidual and give him authority. He becomes a domineering menace. It is not by accident that mothers frighten their children with the threat of police. There is a justifi- cation for it. I have been stopped twice and been reprimanded for speeding . . . once in New Jersey, and once in New York State. Both times, the servants of the public were insulting, domineer- ing, and altogether unjustifiably ar- rogant. I would rather have been fined with civility. The Detroit police are under the orders of an individual who handed down the amazing ruling a few months ago that patrolmen were not allowed to chew gum while on duty on the grounds that the habit is ef- fiminate. The chewing of tobacco was recommended, as more mascu- line. Detroit police are apparently supposed to be "tough". Tuesday's experience shows that the Detroit police are "tough". Their language during the incident was. reported to be too vile even to fit into the at- mosphere of the street-cleaning de- partment. We can only pity the citizens of Detroit who are under the jurisdic- tion of this governmental Franken- stein. It is time that the police in all cities learned a few things about public service and ordinary civility that they "serve". 11 ~ WOMEN'S' S P it R T S . Track for Michigan Co-eds Tentative plans are being discussed by the women's athletic moguls con- cerning an All-Campus track meet. Track has never been tried on the women's athletic program here at Michigan, but has always formed one of the most popular features of the sports schedules of the eastern col- leges and prep schools. Dr. Margaret Bell, head of the women's sports here at the Univer- sity, thinks that a field day featuring track would be a splendid thing to try. "It would be fine to have a program in which everybody would come out-there would be no train- ing beforehand, of course-and have a grand time together. We could arrange for prizes of some sort, and make the affair one of lots of fun for all the girls who participate." The new W. A. A. board, which will meet some time this week, will have the matter under consideration. The ideal time for it, according to Dr. Bell, would be around the middle of this month. Tennis Deadline Postponed Since penalties for playing the tennis matches late are so stiff this spring, the athletic department has announced that there will be an ex- tension of time for completion of the first round. The original date, which was set at last Monday, has Waterbor Fractures Thumb; Out For Year There seems to be a jinx hover- ing over the Michigan infield this year. Stan Waterbor, who broke in as a regular shortstop his soph- omore year, played second base last year, and returned to the shortstop post this season, will be out for the remainder of the year because of a fractured bone in the thumb of his right hand. Waterbor sustained the injury' in the last half of the seventh in- ning of the game with Michigan State Tuesday when he fell, trying to avoid being tagged by the Spar- tan's first baseman, and landed on his right hand. An x-ray yes- terday disclosed that the bone was fractured. Waterbor is the third regular infielder whom Coach Fisher has lost this year. George Ford, slated to be the third sacker, broke his ankle a week before the eastern training trip, and Jack Teitel- baum, regular shortstop last year, was declared ineligible. Fisher Seeks Substitute For Injured Player Artz, Paulson, Petoskey, Regeezi R ali s e Batting Marks Against State Coach Ray Fisher has a big job on his hands now. He must find a short- stop to replace the injured Waterbor. Fisher admits that he doesn't know yet who his selection will be when the Wolverines face the undefeated Il- linois nine in the most important home game of the year Saturday. In practice yesterday, Jack Parker, utility infielder, worked at short in a game with the reserves, and it is barely possible that he will get the call Saturday. Coach Fisher has in- timated that he will try Petoskey and Regeczi, his two best fielding outfielders, at the shortstop position. Lerner In Outfield The plausible reason for this move would be to put Lerner in the out- field, thereby gaining the advantage of his hitting strength. Lerner has played first base in the games which Wistert pitched. He has shown promise as a hitter in the games and in practice, and he is a much better hitter than any of the reserves. The loss of Waterbor, the only three season veteran in the infield, will undoubtedly lessen the defensive efficiency of the infield, regardless of who replaces him. Team Raises Averages The Wolverine nine has been a powerful hitting club all season and the boys demonstrated some of this power when they combed three Mich- igan State hurlers for 13 runs and 15 hits Tuesday. Captain Avon Artz and Clayt Paulson jumped ahead of the terrific clip at which they've been hitting. in the State game. Artz's five hits raised his batting average 72 points, and he's now hitting 413. Paulson got two hits to raise his average 11 points to 383. Petoskey and Regeczi brought their averages to the 340 mark. Cavalcade Favored To Restore Prestige Of East In 60th De Cavalcade, of Mrs. Dodge Sloan'sI Brookmeade Stable, his two sensa-r tional victories in the ShenandoahC and Chesapeake stakes the most im- pressive performance of any Derbyk candidate, is still the favorite to winj the 60th running of the Kentuckyt Derby on Saturday. This hope of Eastern horsemen to defeat Mati Hari of the West, in breaking one track record and equal- ing another, defeated such highly- rated horses as Singing Wood, Jabot,1 Discovery, Time Clock, and' Agrarian., His odds to win the Derby have drop-,. ped to as low as 3-1. The impressive filly, Mati Hari, the1 winner of the Derby; PreparationI Peace Chance, and the fast SirI Thomas, although they have no such1 ;tartling victories to show as those ,f Cavalcade, are heavily supported. Mati Hari is rated one of the best1 fillies in years, a big money winner in 1933. But she is closely inbred and at times unmanageable. In addition, a filly does not run her best at the time of the Derby, Regret being the first and last of the femi- nine element to defeat a colt or a gelding in this race: She did it in 1915. And so many think that tempera- ment, the season, and tradition will combine to keep Mati Hari from be- coming the second filly to win the Derby. Bazaar, Col. E. R. Bradley's winner of the hopeful at Saratoga and his hope for a fifth Derby vic- tory, and Jabot, an Easterner, are other fine fillies. Sir Thomas was a maiden before be entered the Derby Preparation on Tuesday and he was a maiden after the race. Peace Chance, owned by Joseph E. Widener, smashed a track record held by Twenty Grand as he swept over the mile in 1:35 4-5 to win easily, and leave Sir Thomas, the favorite, far back and out of the money. But Sir Thomas has shown fine speed in spring workouts, he lost the Belmont Futurity last year to Singing Wood by only a nose, and in spite of his latest defeat may re- tain the many Western backers he has had all spring. Peace Chance, after this victory, .BASEBALL The rejuvenated St. Louis Browns, under the guiding hand of Roger Hornsby spanked the Tigers again yesterday afternoon, 5-2. Home runs clouted by Burns and Pepper of the Browns gave Vic Sorrell, the Bengal's starting pitcher no end of trouble, while sloppy fielding by the Detroit infield reflected itself in the scoring column. Both teams were credited with eight hits but the Tiges couldn't seem to come through in the pinches with the necessary batting punch or fielding finesse. AMERICAN LEAGUE St. Louis 5, Detroit 2. Philadelphia 12, Boston 11. Washington 2, New York 2. Only games scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis 4, Cincinnati 1. Pittsburg 4, Chicago 2. New York 6, Brooklyn 5. Only games scheduled. has jumped from the position relatively unimportant possibili one of real contender. Doubt been expressed as to whether Si: Wood, leading money winner a two-year-olds last season, can g Derby distance of 1 1-4 miles. Odds have dropped on Agr a consistent place winner, wh second in the Florida Derby at leah, and second to Cavalcade i recent Chesapeake Stakes. Clock, long-shot winner of the ida Derby, and Riskulus, winn the Agua Caliente Derby but d pointing in the recent Texas I have gained prominence th their winter performances. D cry and Sergeant Byrne, the of New York's Little Italy, are a the more important possibilitie There is also a host of little-k: colts and fillies who may or ma start, one of which, however, spring a surprise. And the triu of Burgoo King and Brokers 'I 1932 and 1933, prove that C Bradley's green and white sill always dangerous, whether the that is wearing them is favoi not. The East, headed by Cava will be fighting to regain the pi of the days of Twenty Gran promises to be one of the best bies in years. THE FINEST CLOTH EVER MADE The Famous CLOTHCRAF Clothing J7; Am S -- we have your size- your aurics, yo color- in a wide Price Range- Suits ... $22.50 to $35.C Topcoats . $19.50 to $25.C Mallory Hats $4.00 to $6.0 Others at $3.50 " ?< ers en'e ,4a" 309 SOUTH MAIN STREET THE DOWNTOWN STORE FOlRMICHIGTTAN MEN who eliminated both the winner and ( been postponed, _to Friday of this the runner-up of the faculty tourney. week.I SPECIAL UNIVERSITY MELN AND -A Real Treat Awaits You When You And See Our Complete Showing of . SUIT SALE $21.00 Extra Trousers $4.00 -- -- - m Thursday, Friday, Saturday 50c Ipana, Squibbs, Kolynos Toothpaste 34c 50c RUBBING ALCOHOL 19C LARGE LISTERINE 59c Coty's Combination D^Wr n . CIGARETTES Camels, Luckies, Chesterfields, Old Gold $1.19 Carton Two Packages 25c BATHING CAPS AT THE LOWEST CUT PRICES 5 lbs. 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