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May 13, 1934 - Image 3

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Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1934-05-13

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13, 1934

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Tennis
Howard Kahn

Team Downs Buckeyes In Second Big

Ten

Win,

L

Captures SixthI
Straight Mitch
Win In Final Doubles Tilt
Gives Michigan Margin
* Of Victory
COLUMBUS, O., May 12.- (Spe-
cial) -The University of Michigan
tennis team won its second Big Ten
victory in three starts today, down-
ing the Buckeye netters here by the
smallest possible margin, 4 to 2.
The win managed to keep Mich-
igan's record of no defeats in Confer-
ence competition this season intact,
and, although team ability means
little in such a case, also indicated to
a certain degree the possibility that
the Wolverines will finish high in the
coming Big Ten meet at Chicago.
Strength In Singles
Michigan maintained its customary
supremacy in the singles, gaining
three quarters of the final team score
in this division. An even break in the
two doubles matches was all that was
necessary to clinch the meet.
Howard Kahn, number four man,
sparkled for Michigan today. The di-
minutive star took his sixth successive
singles match of the year, defeating
Benjamine, 6-2, 6-4, and, in the last
doubles match, upon which depend-
ed a win or a tie for Michigan, he
and Dan Kean, coming from behind,
swung the tide, 3-6, 6-3, 6-1.
Siegel, Appelt Win
Sam Siegel and Joe Appelt provided
the remainder of the Maize and Blue
score. Siegel, in number two, found
little opposition in Santangelo, won
the first set, 6-0, and copped the sec-
ond, 6-2. Appelt coasted along as
easily as Siegel, losing only three sets,
as he picked up another point from
Hoyles, 6-1, 6-2. .
Dan Kean was the only Wolverine
to lose in the singles. He was rather
helpless against Chambers, Ohio's
number one man, dropping the tilt,
6-1, 6-2.
The Siegel-Appelt doubles com-
bination failed to function satisfac-
torily against Chambers and Hoyles
of the Buckeyes. The Wolverines lost
their first set, 4-6, and the second,
2-6.
Fraternity Ball Teams
Start Play-Offs Monday
Nine fraternity baseball teams have
won their way into the play-offs for
all campus championship. Those nine
are: Alpha Tau Omega, Sigma Chi,
Phi Kappa Psi, Psi Upsilon, Pi Lamb-
da Phi, Phi Beta Delta, Phi Lambda
Kappa, Sigma Nu, and Chi Psi. Sigma
Alpha Epsilon will meet Phi Alpha
Delta for the tenth position.
The championship contests will
start on Monday, as will the con-
solation tournament for the forty
teams that haven't been so successful.
Sigma Nu, twice champions, is favored
again. Their whole offense and de-
fense is built about "Zit" Tessemer,
their speed-ball artist.
IBOX SCORE
01110 STATE
ABR1OAE
Prosenjak, rf ......4 3 2 3 0 0
Lewis, 3b .........4 0 1 1 4 0
Clowson, 2b .......5 1 3 2 2 0
McAfee, lb .........5 1 2 12 0 0
Vidis, cf ..........5 1 2 3 0 0
Moser, c ..........5 0 3 3 2 0
Long,if..........1 0 0 2 0 0
King, ss.........3 0 0 1 1 1
Williams, p .......3 1 0 0 3 0
Totals .......35 7 13 27 12 1
MICHIGAN Ha
AB R H OA1E
Artz, rf..........3 0 d 0 0 0
Oliver, 3b ........3 1 3 1 2 0

Petoskey,ss.......4 0 0 0 2 0
Paulson,2b.......4 0 1 3 4 0
Wistert, lb .......4 1 1 11 2 0
Regeczi,if........4 1 1 0 0 0
Ratterman, cf .....3. 0 0 0 0 0
*Lerner..........1 0 0 0 0 0
Chapman, c ......3 1 0 8 2 1
Patchin, p ........4 0 1 2 4 1
Totals .......33 4 7 27 16 2
*Batted for Ratterman in ninth.
Ohio State.........001 030 300 -7
Michigan...........020 100 010--4
Summaries: Runs batted in, Mc-
Afee 2, Clowson, Vidis, Moser, Pat-
chin 2. Two base hits, Prosenjak;
three base hits, Vidis, Regeezi, Pat-
chin. Bases on balls, off Patchin 2,
off Williams 2; struck out, by Patchin
7, by Williams 3; Left on bases, Mich-
igan 4, Ohio State 7; Double plays,
Petoskey to Paulson to Wistert; Hit
by Pincher, by Patchin (Prosenjak,
Long); Stolen bases, Prosenjak, Clow-
son. Sacrifices, Oliver, Lewis, Long,
Williams. Umpires Slavin and Snyder.
Time, 2:01.
NEVER RAN IN HIGH SCHOOL
Cass Kemp, one of Coach Charlie

PLAY

& BY-PLAY
JBY AL. NiWMAN-------

FThe Bafll Cluba. .. .
Congressmen.
PERSONALLY, I am one of those Doubting Thomases who does not believe
that Coach Ray Fisher of the local diamond squad thought he had much
in the way of a ball club at the opening of the current season. Mr. Fisher
was raising the usual gripes of any coach or manager when the chilly
breezes were sweeping the field toward the latter end of April. He was all
ready to mourn.
We of the press are inured to these lamentations of the master-minds
as they seek to prevent the public from expecting too much from their
young hopefuls . . . as witness Coach Kipke's none-too-convincing wails
at the opening of the past season.
But in the case of Mr. Fisher, I was inclined to fall into the class of those
who perennially buy gold-bricks, purchase such useless items as the Empire
State building and the Brooklyn Bridge, and also listen to the pleas of the
gyp auctioneers in the jewelry shops along the Times Square district. In
short, I was completely taken in by Mr. Fisher's pessimistic talk.
But I still believe that he was sincere. Ineligibility and injury had been
extremely unkind to Mr. Fisher, and one might well believe that a Varsity
coach suffering all the heartaches and the thousand natural shocks that Mr.
Fisher was heir to would have plenty to complain about.
MR. FISHER, I think, is as pleasantly surprised as I am to find that we
have a real ball club. The boys are good, and there is no getting
around it.
They lost yesterday, but practically nobody left until after the final out
of the ninth inning. The fans were all expecting them to do something,
which is considerably more than the fans or the teams of preceding years,
would have allowed to happen. Remember that the score of the game was
7 to 4.
The high point of the game was when Mr. Slavin, the umpire at the plate
or the Simon Legree, or whatever you want to call him, decided that the triple
pounded out by John Regeczi in the last half of the second inning was a,
dead ball. "I was just getting on my mask," he said apologetically. You can
imagine what the grandstand had to say.
At any rate, our congratulations for today go to Mr. Fisher, who is
probably as surprised as the rest of us.
IT IS WITH CONSIDERABLE glee that I quote the following item from
the Associated Press: Washington, May 12.- Rep. Andrew L. Somers, of
New York thinks maybe congressmen should wear uniforms.
His reasons: "People have respect for uniforms but apparently they don't
have much respect for congressmen. Put the congressmen in nice bright uni-
forms and the respect is automatic."
Go on, we'd know them anywhere!

Golfers To End
Big Ten DualI
Meet Season
Purdue Here Tomorrow
As Team Seeks Its Fifth
StraightWin
The Wolverine golf team will wind
up its Conference dual meet season
tomorrow, meeting Purdue on the Uni-
versity Course. Coach Trueblood's
squad will be attempting to register
its fifth straight win.
Purdue will bring a five man squad
composed of Captain Bill Skinner,
Harold Brewer, George Craig, Art
Lockwood, and Ken Dobelbower, in an
attempt to hand Michigan's Confer-
ence championship team its first set-
back.
Michigan will be without the serv-
ices of Chuck Kocsis, number one
player, and Carroll Sweet who will
both be competing in the qualifying
trials for the National Open from the
Detroit district.
Coach Trueblood has indicated that
he will use six men in the meet, with,
two foursomes matches and six singles'
matches, one man playing in two
singles events.
The foursomes matches will begin
at 9 and the singles events at 1:30 p.m.
A four man squad will leave Satur-
day for the Conference meet to be
held at the Kildeer Course May 21, 22.
Cavailcda Beaten By
A Nose In Preakness
BALTIMORE, Md.-In a thrill-
ing nose finish, two great three-
year-old thoroughbreds from Mrs.
Isabel Dodge Sloan's Brookmeade
Stable, today settled a personal
dispute as they soundly whipped
five other fleet colts in the $25,000
Preakness at Pimlico.
High Quest, making his first
start since winning the Wood Me-
morial, won the race, but 'only -a
nose back, driving forward like a
huge machine, was Cavalcade,
winner of the Kentucky Derby,
seeking the elusive turf "double'."
By nosing out his stablemate,
High Quest upset the experts'
dope, Pre-race opinion had Cav-
alcade as the favorite, with High,
Quest finishing second, but when
the home stretch drive was fin-
ished the order was reversed.

Ia

Sidelights On Ohio State's 7-4
Victory Over Wolverine Nine

I

By ART SETTLE
Ohio State's nine is Art Patchin's
jinx. The Buckeyes knocked Patchin
out of the box with a barragetof hits
in the third inning of a game several
weeks previously at Columbus. Yester-
day Ohio State hit Patchin hard to
take a 7 to 4 win from Michigan.
"Whitey" Wistert made the Buckeyesj
helpless at the plate Friday, but they
combed Patchin for ,23 hits.
Patchin had most of his trouble
with Ohio's two left handed batters,
Prosenjak and Clowson. They got five
hits and accounted for five of State's
7 runs.
The Wolverines hit Williams, Ohio's
pitcher, harder than Ohio hit Pat-
chin, but Williams must have had a
horseshoe in his pocket, for most of
the drives went directly at an Ohio
fielder. Regeczi chased the left fielder
half a block for his fly in the second
inning. Petoskey hit a long one to the
right fielder in the third, and Paulson
followed with a deeper drive which
the center fielder pulled down. Wis-
tert also hit two balls well, which the
right fielder caught. Had these balls
gone safe, Michigan would still be un-
defeated on its'home diamond.
S*
In Friday's game with the Buck-
eyes, Ted Chapman poled out the
longest hit of the year on Ferry Field,
for a home run. He hit a towering fly
far over the left fielder's head. Chap-
man is a dead left field hitter. He
hasn't hit a single ball to right field
this season, and very few to center,
Incidentally, Chapman injures a dif-
ferent finger every game. Not a'
digit of his right hand has escapedl
contact with a ball duringthe course
of his catching duties.
"Buck" Slavin, the umpire, called
a play, -or rather recalled a play in
the second inning which stupefied the
crowd, and brought down a chorus
of boos on him. However, he was wholly
within his rights. With Wistert on
first, Regeczi caught hold of Wil-
liam's fast ball with one of his pow-
erful swings and hit what was an easy
homer to left center. Slavin called the
play back, explaining the ball was'
dead as he had called time out to
pick up his mask, which had dropped
off as he stooped to retrieve a foul
Iball. .

against Northwestern with a single in
the ninth, scoring ,wo runs; he got
three hits for three tines at bat ira
the Illinois game, and he drove out
three line singles yesterday.
WOMEN'S TENNIS
To complete the women's tennis
tournament, the largest on the
spring schedule, before the year is
over, it is necessary to speed up the
playoffs. Third round matches, in
both the singles' and doubles see-
tions 01ftHc tourney, areto be
played off by d p.m. Monday after-
noon.

Billy Rogell's home run with
ringer on base, together with s
pitching by Fred Marberry, gav
Detroit Tigers a 4-3 victory ovE
Philadelphia Athletics yestc
Other major league results:
American League
Cleveland 7, Boston 2.
New York 4, Chicago 3.
St. Louis 6, Washington 5
game, 17 innings).
St. Louis 2, Washington 1 (s
game, 12 innings).
National League
Chicago 5, Brooklyn 0.-
Pittsburgh 11, Philadelphia
New York 6, St. Louis 4.
Boston 8, Cincinnati 2.

BASEBALL

11

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Tbeam 'Clicks';
Bierman Glad
MINNEAPOLIS, May 12. - (A) -
Bernie Bierman, Minnesota's head
grid coach, who seldom smiles while
he has football on his mind, "beamed,"
for a short time when his Varsity
eleven rushed over two touchdowns
against the rookies to win 13 to 0
in a rough spring scrimmage game.
Led by Capt. Pug Lund, All-Amer-
ica half, and with last year's lineup
intact with one exception -- the same
team that missed the Big Ten title
by the margin of a wide goal kick -
the Gopher regulars cut loose with a
full assortment of polished plays to
rout the second stringers.
But the "grim and silent" Bernie
refused to be optimistic for long. He
regained his composure even while
watching Lund toss a pass to "Butch"
Larson for a touchdown - one of last
year's pet plays.
Lacking only Roy Oen, 1933 cen-
ter and captain, the Gophers are
working out a new one in the back-
~ - ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Illini Beat Wisconsin,
4-2; Hold Big Ten Lead
The University of Illinois baseball
team continues to lead the Confer-
ence by a 4 to 2 triumph over Wis-
consin yesterday. The Illini are safe-
ly perched in first place with a record
of five wins and one defeat.
Iowa evened up the series with
Northwestern with a 3 to 0 win over
the Wildcats, to remain in third place.
Other College Scores
Luther 7, Minnesota 6 (called in
the seventh, rain).
Notre Dame 7, Indiana 3.
Western State 9, Michigan State 4.
FIVE BUCK HOMERS
Attention, restauranters! The Palm
Grove Inn of Chicago offers a $5.00
prize to the first varsity baseball
player to hit a home run in Confer-
ence games'. Something for the boys
to fight for.
field, a variation of their "Z" forma-
tion. Bierman said he had no name
for it. It is designed to take some
of the pressure off Lund, who last
year did practically all the kicking,
passing, and a major share of ball
carrying.
-~~-- ~~-~ -~~ ~ - r --

Insu'reY o'u rsel
Agai n stth-e Future
To gain the fullest enjoyment of life, do not neglect
to relieve yourself of that constant fear for the
future. Start a Savings Account unow, and banish
from your mind all unnecessary financial troubles.
"The Deposits in this bank are instlred by the Federal
T)eposit insurance Corporation in the manner and to
the extent provided by the Banking Act of 1933."
Ann Arbor Savinms Bank

Russ Oliver has been
most capable hitter in
games. He saved one of

Michigan's
Conference
the games

Main at Huron

707 North Universit

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