THE MICHIGAN DAILY I4 Men eave oda or Big Baseball ener Will Play Ohio Tomorrow In Buckeye Camp Patchin To Start Battle Against Conference Foes At Columbus Michigan's baseball team, fourteen strong, leaves here this afternoon for Columbus, Ohio, where the Big Ten diamond season will be opened tomorrow in the first of a two-game series with the hard-hitting Buckeyes. Included on the roster of Wolverine players are four outfielders, four in- fielders, two catchers, and four pitch- ers. They are: John Regeczi, George Rudness, Joe Lerner, Vic Heyliger, George Ford, Jack Teitelbaum, Clayt Paulson, Capt. Russ Oliver, Kim Wil- liams, Walt Parker, Art Patchin, Ber- ger Larson, George Butler, and John Gee. Leaving here this afternoon, Coach Ray Fisher plans to have his team pull into Columbus in time for a good night's sleep before tangling with State tomorrow. The tilt will not be the first Conference game for Ohio, the Buckeyes having met Illinois last week and losing, 5 to 2. Hale Swan- son, for the Illini, fanned 15 State batsmen, but yielded one circuit clout to Prosenjack, Ohio's leading slugger. Fisher considers the Buckeyes are the team for Michigan to beat. Ohio is a slugging crew, and meets the Wolverines in four of the 11 Big Ten games scheduled. Illinois has better pitching than any other Wolverine foe, but the Indians have to be con- tended with only twice during the season. Ait Patchin will start on the mound tomorrow. Michigan broke even with Ohio last year, winning two and losing two. Patchin was credited with both' losses. . In the series at Columbus, Michigan won the first game, 16 to 2, but with Patchin hurling in the sec- ond game lost 17 to 3 in a most as- tonishing reversal of form. In the series here Patchin lost to Ohio, 7 to 5. Fisher and Patchin's teammates feel that "the senior member of his pitching staff" is about due to quell the Buckeyes He has demonstrate(: his superiority over State in the past, winning twice over that club in his sophomore year. STAR * SDUST 4-By ART CARSTENS- * Tigers Beaten En ire TrI Team Performed By White Sox1e Tan Coach Expe 1 e icted! 4 W 1 T B J XY- I Wyat Taines Bengals In Final Innings To Cinch 7-6 Win Over Rowe WE THINK that it's about time someone cleared away the mists lEIROIT, Anril 17--+P'- The bat enshroud the National Amateur Thi go White Sox, aided by Wyatt's 'ootball Association, that brain-child 3 f the Heston family which has re- line relief hurling, outslugged the{ :eived so much newspaper publicity 'i . yer:credy to win the season's ind editorial comment recently. ,p'mcv 7 to G, before 24,000 fans. For our information we turned Sd Sarm Jones outpitched School- to Fielding H. Yost and Franklin boy Rowe for six innings despite Goose Cappon. Yost has been nomin- ;o lin's homer with two on base and z'- to the presidency of this left the ane in the seventh with organization, but, when informed the White Sox leading by one run. of that fact, said, "Well, that's Manager Jimmy Dykes put the Sox news to me." in the lead in the eighth inning with 3 t t { Cappon, who is supposed to be ie- donal director for Michigan, said; "hat he, too, knew little more than1 ,he bare outlines of the organization's, >lans and hadn't heard that he had{ Jeen given an official position. It seems that Cappon and Yost,c fnmindful of the honors being heaped ipon them, neglected to go to the rganization meeting held in Detroit :ecently and aren't particularly anx-_ :ous to add to the already heavy bur. len of their administrative duties. The N.A.F.A. was born out of aj conference between Jack lHeston, who played football here in 1932 and '33, aid George Graves, president of the State A.A.U. Hes- ten, who helped organize a sand- Ict football 1-ague in Dtrcit hst year, wont to CArev-eb'with,, plea that scine provision be niale in I A.A.U. rules to pro-idc his git- ders with amateur cards, so that re question of eligibility for col- Icge competition rmght come up in the future. Graves saw no reasons why the A. A.U. shouldn't sponsor amateur foot- ;all just as it does am.ateur hockey >layed by teams not affiliated with :clleges or prep schools. The pla ;ay further embroidered to include a )ationwide organization with leagues n laige cities and other regions; -1 chelarship fund to send deserving andlotters to college; and a book onf rganization so thick that Cappon re- :used to read it. Too much has been made, I think, of 'he scholarship fund I angle. The alm of the organi a- ticn is not se much to provide better football inatsrial for col-. lege teams, but to aid and pre- tect the growingt numbers of youths who are playing sandl&, foeball-l . The local amateur outfit which :ampaigned at Wines Field last yearJ a trinle. After Max Bishop s home rim with Roy Johnson on base had tied the score in the ninth inning the Boston Red Sox won out in the tenth to score their second successive victory cver the Yankees, 4 to 3. YESTE'RDAY'S RESULTS Amc-i an League Chicago 7, Detroit 6. Boston 4, New York 3 (10 innings). Washington 4, Philadelphia 2. Cleveland-St. Louis, rain. Natienal League Cincinnati 7, Pittsburgh 4. New York-Boston, cold. Brooklyn-Philadelphia, cold. St. Louis-Chicago, cold. ng Crosby Wins Bet From Varsity Trackinen 3in Crosby will extend his ompamn-ts to Michigan students vh a $10 advn tisement in the Michigan Daly. paid for by mem- iys of the Michigan track ;quad, as th- rasit of a bet between th a