THE MICHIGAN DAILY Mi ia ie si y Neters ce Win1Over *. , I F~I ICBy ART Butler An Gee To Divide The Coachl xkTm k Has Vetera i Pitch r And Strong infield Wolverines Will IPreeant Same Line-Up W hicha Started N.U. Game George Butler and John (Lefty) Gee, two sophomore hurlers, will try to win a baseball game between them this afternoon by dividing the pitch-- ing assignment against Michigan State Normal College at 4:05 pn. Although Coach Ray' Fisher had not decided yesterday as to which one would start first, a good guess is that Butler, a big boy with a lot of natural stuff but little experi-I ence, will lead off, hurl about five' innings and then turn the job over toi Gee.I Both Wild{ Both hurlers in two previous starts' have shown an inability to go more than five inings. Butler started against Virginia on the spring train- ing trip and went along without al- lowing a run till the fifth inning when he walked four in succession. He came out of the game in a hurry, although he had allowed but one hit during his sojourn on the mound. Gee had a similar though more drastic experience when he started against Maryland. Gee was breezing along with a 3-0 li d until he hit the fifth. Then the zephyr turned into a storm and when the clouds' had cleared Gee was on his way to the showers, having allowed five runs, three hits, four walks, and ccnimitted T T( a . Tc 1fflD hgt~ ecourse record set 1-- ~2 yWae Hagen, Chuck toured the University golf e in 67, five under par, yes- r :ci_;ay"afternoon in a brilliant dis- wood and iron play. With J7l ny Fischer and Perry farber, number one man at Ohio ;' e last year and now in-the law ehoel, as partners, the state am- or hampion was over par only nc as he carded three birdies on the first nine and a birdie and an eagle on the second. Kce -is started with a birdie 4 and followed it with a par 4 on inumbor two, was on number three' =green in two, but three-putted for ;w par five. Otherwise he would have been out in 32, and this coupled with his in-coming 34 would have given him a new course ecord of 66. Kocsis' card with par: Par cut ......545 434 434-36 Par in .......453 434 445-36 72 Nocsis in .....445 324 434-33 Kocsis out ....453 433 543-34 67 bigan State __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ SF o r~ TYPICAL current conversation: 21laVredDue TO "What do you think of the Tigers | .' Spart Loss Of Weitz now?" 1 . "Way, how'd they come out today?" Art. Orrns "Lost, 9 and 8." WhHa ha, Oh, they'll get going." W nly a day's respite between It's' nice that some people have otc'he'. Michigan's Varsity tennis that much faith, but, personally, I'm nlayers will face Michigan State on beginning to wonder how that bunchI '.',e latter's courts this afternoon for g t eir {econd contet of the season. of broken-legged lame-brains man- aged to win the American League; Michigan State has been weakened flag last year. by the los of their two top-ranking There may be a lot of truth in this ilaycrs of last year by graduation. belief that a fiery manager taking Weitz and Norris, both of whom have over a new club can raise it to un- believable heights during the firstI ors in the past, will be sorely missed n the oponion of Coach John John- year, while the magic of his new- toane, t he Maize and Blue coh. ness lasts. coach. Joe Cronin did it two years ago Although he was fairly well pleased with Uhe Senators. Mickey Cochranel with the :howing of his protegees did it last year with the Tigers. a ainst Michigan Normal Wednesday There's a chance that Cronin will do afternoon. some very obvious weak- it with the Boston Red Sox this sea- nesses, particularly in the doubles w hBt d x ss clay, are causing Coach Johnstone When the fans start to discover some discomfort. traces of lay between the toes of their A change in the latter part of his idols, said idols are on the skids. Last ranking set-up will give the men who year Mickey Cochrane could have 1did not get on thV courts Wednesday started"Flea Clifton on the mound ,a ( h "ce totpay. Te uhorwa d and Milhanctopa.Tdhowran against the Yanks in a crucial series Milton Eskowitz will make the trip without a murmur of protest from the to dazt Lansing in place of Johnny fans. On Tuesday, when Cochrane Rodriguez and Jarvis Dean. Although lifted Marberry and substituted the latter duo won the most decisive Bridges, who lasted only long enough doubles victory on the score-card to allow two home runs and a single,j against Ype i, the other two will re- the fans squawked. They thought place them today as a test of com-tFan sl uaked eylthiughtl parative strength. Coach Johnstone Fipo should have been left in,. al- feels that these four rate about on a though the Marberry usually folds par, and should all be given a chance. Mickeyor sevenino fair-weather The first half of his ranking netters friends in Detroit -last year, but will will stand unchanged. Captain Sey- probably feel the unsheathed cutting m cur Siegel will play at his usual edge of public ridicule before the sea- post as No. 1 man. Bob Anderson will ; on is over. defend the No. 2 position, and Miller ns r Sherwood and Howie Kahn will T PURDUE, where they do every- handle the No. 3 and No. 4 posts re- A thing just a little better than we filter through to us some time next1 week if the Indians don't get to many of our pony express riders. Michigan coaches will get together some time after the final game, May 4, to decide this year's winner of the Chicago Alumni trophy. Coach Kipke couldn't give us any figure on the value of the trophy but pointed out that "it's a good substantial trophy," made up of an actual-size silver foot- ball mounted on a quebracho pedes- tal. Maybe we shouldn't kick about Purdue, with silver prices going up. Thirty-Eight Cut From Frosh Baseball Squad Thirty-eight men were dropped from the freshman baseball squad yes- terday according to the list posted by Coach Bennie Oosterbaan. This was the first cut of the season which' leaves about 40 men still on the squad. Coach Oosterbaan announced that there would be another cut at the end of this week. Oosterbaan plans to retain about 18 men on the squad. By keeping a smaller squad he can better develop the ablest of the prospects for future varsity material. Besides the men out at present there are several promising candidates ready to come out as soon as football practice is concluded. DUTTON SIGNS MONTREAL, April 25. - P)-Mer- vin "Red" Dutton has signed a con- tract to manage the New York Amer- icans of the National Hockey League. Rugby Fooibtill Is Tried ly Kip s Varsity G ridde:: . By WILLIAM R. REED Football as it is played in the o country was shown yestcrda; to the Varsity grid squad by John raMrmi- chael, a graduate student here forlm the University of St. Andrews, St. Andrews, Scotland. Demonstrating the passing and runing features of rugby, Carmi- chael directed the Wolverine backs as they ran down the field, keeping the ball in the air with lateral passes. The Scot also demonstrated the running kick employed in the older game, surprising the Varsity squad with that feature. In return for Carmichael's demon- tration. Coach Harry Kipke put his squad through a showing of the lc- ments of the Michigan play. The differences in the two games were emphasized by the Scottish vis- itor, not only in the styles of play but. as he pointed out that play in the rugby game does not stop until the ball leaves the field. Teams play short when a player is injured. Carmichael will report nightly. Coach Kipke said, and will continue to give instructions in lateral pass- ing. Carmichael employs a varia- tion of the passing form normally used by American gridders, snap- ping the ball in an underhand m^- tion across the body rather than pushing the ball straight from the chesp with the basketball pass. OPEN TRACK-. When the Veterans of Foreign Wars track opens in Detroit Sunday, it will be the first outdoor automobile racing meet of the 1935 season. Michigan's Infield Composed Of Four High School Pilots By ART SETTLE Four years ago today, four young men in various parts of the Middle. West were playing baseball as cap- tains of their prep school nines. Whether it was a trick of fate, coin- cidence or common desire to play col-: 1 le ball .atone of the best baseball chools in the Big Ten, these same f' men, eoge Ford, Jack Teitel- ;um, Clayt Paulson, and Russ Oliver n atriculated at this University and, tclay provide Michigan with perhaps; the best infield in the Big Ten, and assuredly the most efficient combina- t .on to represent the Maize and Blue da ring Coach Fisher's 14 years of jpectivcly. . The doubles combinations will re- main the same as they were for the do at Michigan, the outstanding freshman football player in spring nvrc ,iePkf iven a$100 Cold watch. 9 two errors. ccacir ng nere. . Ypsi victory. Siegel and Anderson, al- pI a ' i' b it ' v '+'w" A Vetern Inifield . ;Only two of the Varsity infielders, thoug;h not the ideal combination, in Alongside such an award our Chica- 'l a: s { George Ford and Jack Teitelbaum Coach Johnstone's opinion, will work go Alumni trophy would look shoddy. If Gee and Butler can hook to- layed their present positions in high., together again today as the No. 1 The Boilermakers are canny crit- gether nine innings of good ball. school, team. ters, though. They announce the Michigan will be in a fair way to Ford was the acme of third base- Sherwood and Kahn will be the No. award in the spring but don't give defeat Ypsi. Coach Iarry Ocker- men during his senior year as cap- 2 team, while the untried Thorward- the winner his watch until he enrolls man's club will be openig its base- tan in a Detroit high school. Teitel- Eskowitz pair will face the No. 3 pair in school and reports for Varsity ball season today, after only two baum was the classiest shortstop in from Michigan State. football in the fall. weeks of practice. Chicago prep circles fort two years, I-Requiring that he be eligible for John Johns,n, veteran Normal making the all city team during his rag * r , Va] sity gridding is an iron-clad guar- hurler, who ha, aitways been tough junior and senior years. Paulson, -c, . tidCk e iD antee against duds. I can't remem- for Michigan bc tters, will probably w io has performed at every position v I ) M ber a time when one of our Chica- start for the viti ors. [The Ypsi in- at one time or other, was a hard-hit- L , n '"rt go Alumni trophy winners didn't re- field is composed of John Worzniak, ting catcher for New Trier High of turn in the fall, but it's best not to .first ba ,; Lou D'ovi second; Ted Winnetka, Ill., during his year of cap- Th ffreshm,an track team will open be too trusting, you know. J .,.,.,.. . ,. --4s 1 a r i IME FAVORITE £uality Cloth hng! Authentically StySled! Suits I $2950 to $3 750 11 Topcoats $2750 to $3500 Aar-- Ar' II/Y I I Ott1 i ,\-w- ~ ~ I r> C: kT.f~h7~:.AI