TUESDAY,MAY1,193 THE MICHIGAN DAILY YAUE 11MUE Wolverin es Nine Will MeetNe Western StateNet In Game Today Captain Larson To Pitch; m Hilltoppers Have Good1 Season Record S By FRED De LANO Co-occupants of the top rung in --- the Big Ten baseball standings with Iowa, Michigan's aggregation of title " WTHY SPI seekers will today attempt to add tion fr Western State to the growing list of tering days defeated opponents that already to- alike. tals 12 in 16 starts. Capt. Berger The answ Larson is due to pitch for the Wol- that it gives verines and the game will be in Kala- to go on is mazoo. So far this season the Hilltoppers in a more have won four games and have lost ing and w one, that to the greatest team Michi- personnel o gan State has turned out in years. As such, s Michigan will enter the affair fresh tified, despi from three successive triumphs over which the p Ohio State, a feat that placed the training per club in a commanding position in the Beyond th Conference. smacks mos Illini Take Licking s but rea For the rest of the Big Ten Satur- poses. day was a day for upsets with the That a previously undefeated Illinois and require t Indiana clubs falling before Wiscon- quf tine sin and Purdue. The Illini were beat- fthings en in a great pitching duel, 1-0, and percompo now have a Conference record of sev- is comp: en wins and one loss. Iowa has won teriatIaie five out of five, as has Michigan, while portunity Indiana has won five in six and Mn- without s nesota has taken four out of five. aminatior The coming week end's results ing lays t should have the greatest of bearing gram as on the final standings because after be empha meeting Purdue in a single game Fri- fashionr- day, Michigan will go to Urbana Sat- not-far-o: urday for two games with Illinois. If Natural: Coach Fisher's charges can gain at the spring least a split there and take Purdue door train they will be very apt to continue the may be exa pace and take their first title since actual con 1928. riod which Last Fri5ay Larson stopped Ohio hot season. with four hits and if backed up with It is upo good playing in the field should win which Mic his fifth game of the year today, al- spring pra though it will certainly not be with- much as po out a struggle. The rest of Michi- length will gan's starting lineup will be the same its own pu as opposed the Buckeyes. draggednth Have Three Veterans and into The Hilltoppers, coached by the spring it is experienced Jud Hyames, have only ball ceases three lettermen from 1935 back onb- s this year's team but of the trio Frank Eecory hit .420 last year and Ron THE F Hibbard was chosen as an outfielder scri on the All-American college baseball heat, wer team. Western and the Wolverines ing and a split a two game series last year, Weber'si Michigan taking the first, 1-0, and Renner, dropping the next, 8-4. hurt ba In addition, Western teams of past the field four years, have all been abl e to lay efit of th undisputed claim to the state chain- the most disputed claim to the state cham- in the St pionship. The only time in these The show years, until last Saturday, that West- it held the ern lost to a Michigan school was the despite a p 1-0 defeat they took from the Wol- across the: verines in 1935. ute to the It is expected that Ed Abbott, sen- Wallie We] ior, will do the hurling for the Hill- the Yellow toppers this afternoon and may find that a V it a tough task to get his slants past fought aga Michigan's club which in 16 games its own gl has hit .308. Wallie cam To Make Bid For 13th Diamond Win ters Play Return Match With Ilurons Today) MILTON'S Headquarters for Summer SLACKS SANFORIZED SHRUNK #e HOT TOVE By BILL REED Dwight Butler Fans 15, Allows Varsity Defeats Only One Hit AsPhys Eds Win Cleveland Club RING football?" is a ques- equently asked these swel- by players and faculty er, in its simplest form, is the coach an opportunity n the fall, with his men advanced state of train- ith a better line on the f his squad. pring football is easily jus- ite unquestioned demands period makes provided the riod is a reasonable length. at, the training not only t strongly of over-empha- cts against its own pur- successful coach must he spring training is un- d in the present order . For every year a large ge of his Varsity squad sed of sophomore ma- A he would have no op- to observe their work some such period of ex- mn. Further, spring train- he basis for the fall pro- the fundamentals may asized then. in a leisurely which the pressure of a aff season would prevent. limitations should define training period, a brief in- rng in which fundamentals mined without resorting to tact,. and an outdoor pe- may be terminated by the n those general principles higan has conducted its wtices, carrying them as ssible over a period whose not automatically defeat urposes. For in a period rough thewinter months the hottest days of the s physically impossible to t from the players - foot- to be sport. * * * i Dwight Butler, standout pitcher of the Independent division, hurled the Phys Eds, 1935 champions, to a 15 to 0 victory over Plowhorse A. C., yes- terday in the I-M softball competi- tion,striking out 15of the 19 men who faced him and allowing but one scratch hit in the last inning. For the first four innings Butler fanned every man that stepped to the plate, then in the fifth held Plowhorse to three easy infield outs. The first man up in the sixth for the losers managed to beat out aI slow roller to third base to rob But- ler of a well deserved no-hit game. Despite a split finger which he re- ceived stopping a hard hit liner, Bob Christy hurled Delta Tau Delta to a 6 to 7 victory over Psi Upsilon, in a first round game of the frater- nity championship flight. The Delts scored two runs in the first inning to take a lead that the Psi U's were unable overcome, de- spite the steady hurling of Dick Lorch, who was on the mound for the losers. In the sixth stanza with the DT.D.'shahead 7 to 5nthe first man up for the Psi U's homered, the second singled and the third got on base through a Delt error. The next three men up, howeverrflied out to give the Delts the game and send them to the second round. The losers were weak at the plate and failed to give Lorch their usual support. Johnny Schaumberger was outstanding for the Delts at bat hit- ting a home run and a single. In the field Bill Steytler of D.T.D. turned in an excellent performance. Nine of the 12 league winners have been determined, in two leagues there is a tie, and in one a three-way play- off is necessary. The league cham- pions already determined are: Psi Upsilon; Phi Kappa Alpha, Alpha, Tau Omega, Phi Delta Epsilon, Al- pha Chi Sigma, Delta Tau Delta, Kappa Sigma, Sigma Chi, and Chi Psi. Delta Uspilon and Phi Kappa Sigma, and Phi Beta Delta and Delta Kappa Epsilon must play for their respective league crowns. TODAY'S RESULTS' Wolverine A 7, Varsity 4 Phys Eds 15, Plowhorse A.C. O A.T.O., 11, Phi Alpha Kappa 10 Alpha Delta Phi 13, Theta Chi 11 Phi Gam's 17, Phi Sigma Kappa 4 Alpha Sig's 15, Theta Delt's 10 Phi Beta Delta 17, Delta Sigma Pi 7 Phi Kappa Tau 16, Lambda Chi's 13 D.D.'s Wildcats 0 (forfeit) Doc's 1, Wolverine B 0 (forfeit) Jayhawks 1, Rinkey Dinks 0 (forfeit) Pi Lambda Phi 14, D.S.D.'s 11 Phi Delta Ep's 17, Alpha Chi Sig's 16. Major League AMERICAN LEAGUE' New York..... Boston........ Cleveland...... Detroit........ Chicago ....'.... Washington Philadelphia St. Louis...... In Exhibitio 1 W L .17 7 ...17 8 .15 9 ..11 11 ..10 10 ...13 14 8.. 3 15 .3 20 Pet. .708 .680 .625 .500 .500 .481 .348 .130 Ranking Matches To Keep Four Men Away From Ypsilanti Meet Coach John Johnstone's Varsity1 netters will meet Michigan State Normal at 3 p.m. today in a return match at Ypsilanti. Michigan white- washed the Hurons, 9-0, in the other encounter of the two teams this year.' Neil Levenson, Jack Edmonds, Mike Barowsky, and Leonard Verdier will make the trip in place of Jarvis Dean, Johnny Rodriguez, Ted Thorward and Jesse Flick who are playing ranking matches to see which two of the four will go to the Conference meet. Beat Cleveland The Wolverines repeated their re- cent win over the Cleveland Tennis Club Sunday when, with the meet tied at four matches all, Jesse Flick and Levenson came through in the pinch to win the number three doubles match, 7-5, 6-2, and give Michigan the victory by a 5-4 count in an exhibition at Ferry Field. In the feature match of the day, Miller Sherwood lost to LeRoy Weir, Cleveland City champion, 4-6,W6-1, 6-4. Sherwood put on a great rally after a poor start to take the first set but from that point on Weir's great- er experience turned the tide in his favor. Johnny Dorr, seeking revengefor the straight set defeat that Capt. Howie Kahn handed him in Cleve- land a week ago, tried hard but was unable to get more than the eight games that Kahn had allowed him in the earlier match, losing, 6-3, 7-5. Thorward Stars Ted Thorward turned in the best, feat of the day in running over his fellow townsman Andy Ingraham, 6-2, 6-1. Thorward had been given little chance to beat Ingraham, who with Weir holds the U.S. Inter-City doubles title and had beaten Jarvis Dean in the match last week, but played great tennis to polish off his favored 'op- ponent. Capt.Chuck Kocsis And ErraticPutter Good Friends Now By GEORGE J. ANDROS Capt. Chuck Kocsis and his erratic putter have reached an agreement at last, it seems -and Coach Ray Courtright hopes. Last week-end's matches with Fred Haas of Louisiana State and Pink Wagner of Northwestern saw the Varsity captain's wavering play on the green cost him defeats at the hands of his well known opponents. In yesterday's Detroit District trials for places in the National Open Championship, Kocsis' putting touch returned-but only after it ap- peared that he would not make the qualifying grade in the first of the two 18-hole rounds The second round of 18 holes was a different story. The Michigan star came through with a 72-stroke round and a qualifying position that was made possible through some remark- able putting. The most sensational play Kocsis turned in during the afternoon round of five one-shot greens was a 50- foot putt for a deuce on the eighth hole - called by the Wolverines lead- er "the longestI ever made." He sunk a 25-fot attempt for a birdie three on the third, made two 20- footers on the 16th and 17th, and climaxed his efforts with a success- - - - - - - - - - ~ - - ~ ~ - NATIONAL LEAGUE W L St. Louis ...... ...14 7 Pittsburgh .........12 9 Chicago ...........12 10 New York .......12 10 Cincinnati .........11 13 Boston ............10 12 Philadelphia ......10 15 Brooklyn .......... 9 14 Pet. .667 .571 .545 .545 .458 .455 .400 .391 STROH'S PABST BLUE RIBBON FRIAR'S ALE At All Dealers J. J. O'KANE, Dist. Dial 3500 --. 90 $145 to $295 Fruit of the Loom Fabrics - in stripes, checks and plain patterns. Summer Wash Ties 35c 3for $1.00 Monito Summer Hose.r ...35c 3 pairs for $1.00 Duke of Kent Shirts . . $1.65 CLO THES 119 South Main Street .. f -- Why Michigan Tops Big Ten INDIVIDUAL BATTING TYPEWRITING and MIMEOGR A PHING Promptly and neatly done by' experienced operators at mod- erate rates. Student work a specialty for twenty-eight years. 0. D. Morrill 314 South State Street i Big Ten Standings MICHIGAN............5 0 1.4 Iowa.................5 0 1.4 Illinois..... ..........7 1 . Indiana ...............5 1 . Minnesota ............4 1 E Chicago................3 3.I Wisconsin.............1 4 .2 Purdue................1 7 . Northwestern ...........0 6 . Ohio State .. ..........0 8 . THIS WEEK'S GAMES Today: Illinois at Purdue Northwestern at Wisconsin. Friday: Michigan at Purdue. Iowa at Wisconsin. Ohio State at Chicago Northwestern at Minnesota Saturday: Michigan at Illinois games). Iowa at Wisconsin. Indiana at Chicago Northwestern at Wisconsin. r0o0 000 875 833 30 500 125 000 000 Educationt bigger and into the g always to the memor games. A proteg school ofg proceeds u a fellow 2: hepped upf belong in u as a gridii few more a than Webe can get mo Michiga In Me Jack Em gan freshm f ailed toc Open tourn terday. H total of 15 owbrook co EATURES of Saturday's mmage, aside from the e Bill Renner's announc- a reaffirma tion of Wallie miracle-working powers. with his "they can't be dly, they're walking off ," inserted for the ben- e mothers, gave the fans announcing ever heard adium. wing of the Yellow team as Blues to a scoreless tie, preponderance of material line, was but another trib- inspirational coaching of ber. And the showing of s was not the first time Veber-coached team has inst far superior talent to ory. For five years, since e here in 1931, his Physical teams have been battling d better freshman teams ,round, never to win but leave the yearlings with y of one of their toughest !ge of the original Yost gridiron leadership which pon the assumption that 2 years old who can't be for a football game doesn't niform, Wallie is no slouch ron strategist. There are stute students of the game r and certainly few who ore out of a little material. n Freshman Fails adowbrook Round eery, University of Michi- nan, was among those who qualify for the National ney in the trials held yes- [he shot a 77-76 for a 53 on the difficult Mead- ourse in Detroit. Ferner ............... Uricek .............. Miller ............... Lane ................ Ktremer .............. Rudness ............. Jablonski ........... . Lerner .............. *AB .66 .55 .10 . 5 .54 .56 .66 .50 R 20 16 7 0 7 14 18 11 H 27 22 4 2 20 19 22 16 14 2 12 5 2 2 2b 4 1 0 0 2 3 0 5 2 0 1 2 0 0 3b 1 3 0 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 HR P 0 16 0 15 2 5 0 0 2 12 1 16 2 118 0 131 0 13 1 12 0 14 0 4 0 5 0 3 A 17 19 6 0 3 3 14 4 31 1 0 10 10 5 E 4 6 2 0 1 2 10 7 5 2 1 0 0 1 TB 33 29 10 2 32 26 30 21 19 5 13 7 2 2 Ave. .409 .400 .400 .400 .370 .339 .333 .320 .269 .250 .245 .208 .133 .125 I i i i 3 Singles: Kahn (M) Weir (C) 6-1, 6-4. Thorward 6-1, 6-2. Rodriguez Brewer ..............52 18 Patanelli ............ 8 1 Heyliger ... ....49 7 Larson..............4 3 Gee ...............15 3 Fishman ............16 3 Team batting average-.308. i { 7 J *Legend: AB-times at bat; R-runs; H-hits; 2b-two base hits; 3b-three base hits; HR-home runs; P-put outs;, A-assists; E-errors; TB-total bases made on hits; Ave.-batting average. PITCHING RECORDS **IP W L 11 BB SO HB Pet. Gee ................. ........37 4 0 20 20 36 1 1.000 Fishman ......................30 4 0 18 7 19 2 1.000 Larson ........................40 4 1 29 9 50 2 .800 Andronik .....................11 0 1 10 7 9 1 .0001 Kremer.......................311 0 1 5 5 3 1 .000 Lahti........................4 0 1 4 3 1 0 .000 Rudness ....................... 6 0 0 2 4 5 0 .000 Harndon1.................... 0 0 2 1 0 0 .000 6-4. Ganger (C) df. Flick (M), 6-2, 5-7, 6-3. Levenson (M) df. Kaille (C), 6-1, 6-4. Doubles: Weir and Ingrham (C) df. Kahn and Sherwood (M), 7-5, 6-1. Ganger and Dorr (C), df. Thorward and Rodriguez (M) 6-3, 4-6, 6-0. Levenson and Flick (M) df. Waid and Kaille (M), 7-5, 6-2. BIG TEN TENNIS At Iowa City, Iowa.: Iowa 5; Purdue 1. At Chicago: Chicago 6; Minnesota 0. TENNIS RACKETS AS SEEN IN ESQUIRE SUMMARIES df. Dorr (C), 6-3, 7-5. df. Sherwood (M), 4-6, (M) df. Ingraham (C), (M) df. Waid (C), 6-3, j READ THE WANT ADS **Legend: IP-innings pitched; W-games won; L-games lost; H-hits al- lowed; BB-bases on balls given; SO-number of men struck out; HB-hit batter with pitched ball; Pct.-won and lost percentage. LAWSON LITTLE FAILS The failure of Lawson Little, double winner of the American and - British Amateur Gold Champion- - -- ships, to qualify, featured the far- flung play in the sectional qualify- ing rounds for the National Open Now at 712 E. Washington Ph. 9793 r 9 (2 Mrs 1 Today's Standout VALUES For Men and Young Men Who appreciater quality, style, and long wear. Clothcraft WOOL Suits $25 & $27.54 Tropical Light Weights $18.50 - $20 Palm Beach $16.75 A Shipment o- 500 Imported Ben Wade Pip f es SIPPRSPORTWEAR TAILORED BY WILSON BROTHERS Here is the sportswear that "stole the show" in Florida this post winter season - Just the thing for a casual r.Go (:4 dcay for the "man about campus" - Shown in fine wools and combed cottons in Jill, Regular, and Gaucho collars - THIS SHIPMENT of the best Briar pipes has just arrived from England. You will find no better pipes made. The prices range from $1.50 to $1 5, including about 200 beautiful $100 In all shades and styles. Featured at pipes at $ 3.5 0. See them for your- I I I I 1 I