MAY 13, 1937 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wolverine Nine Faces Three Conference Foes In Thre e Days Smith To Hurl Sammie's Nemesis The P.-R--.-E SS ANGLE 13 0 0 0 Against Indiana ; f:: .r .: : ... . In First Gamet .. Fifteen Players To Make T rip ; L isagor R eplacesBr w r I I ni l Brewer In Infield Michigan's Varsity baseball team, standing only a mathematical chance - r:=:.:.... to garner its second straight Confer- *V''' f. ence title after last week-end's double defeat, left yesterday on a three-day road trip with games scheduled at Indiana, Purdue and Illinois. The Wolverines will tackle the Hoosiers today at Bloomington, Ind., Purdue tomorrow at Lafayette, Ind., and the potent Illini nine Saturday at Champaign, Ill. 2 15 Make Trip Bog Grieve, backbone of the II- Coach Ray Fisher took 15 players lineis track team, will renew an old on the trip in the hope of lifting the rivalry when he meets Michigan's Varsity out of their fifth place posi- Sam Stoller in the 100-yard dash tion in the Conference standings. To Saturday in the Michigan-Illinois date they have won three and lost meet at Champaign-Urbana. The three games to put them in a tie with Illini ace nosed Sam out of the Big Ohio State's Buckeyes. Ten indoor title at 60 yards this Burt Smith will carry the Michi- winter. gan pitching hopes today against In.- __ _ __1_ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ diana. The chunky right-hander turned in a fine relief job against the In The Majors Hoosiers in his last appearance on ' the mound, holding them to a single AMERICAN LEAGUE run in five innings. Babe Hosler, who Chicago...........302 400 04x-1 beat the Varsity here last Friday, will Washington ........000 130 001- T try to make it two straight for the Newsom, Fischer, Cascarella. Lan' Indiana crew. ahan and Millies; Kennedy and Sew- Fishman-Poat Again eli. Johnny Smithers, bothered this Philadelphia at Cleveland post- season by a trick knee, will take the poned, rain. mound tomorrow against the Boiler- New York at St Louis, postponed makers. I Wet grounds. It will be Herm Fishman against Boston-Detroit, rain. Ray Poat again in Saturday's tussle. __ The Illinois hurler beat Fishman here NATIONAL LEAGUE last Saturday, displaying a lot of Cincinnati .......... 000 010 000-1 speed and a good hook in doing it. Brooklyn..........000 000 50x-5 Don Brewer, who Incurred an in- Moore, Brennan, Grissom and V. Jured thumb and stone bruises in the Davis; Butcher and Spencer. Illinois game, made the trip but will Pittsburgh ..........000 400 200-6 v ,411- ipke eleven FRANCIS "WHITEY" WISTERT, at present WITH backfield Coach Wally Weber' a busy freshman in the Law School, is the standout choice concurring at all positions, for one tackle. Picked by Grant- Coach Harry Kipke yesterday select' l land Rice in 1933, "Whitey" is still re- 1 membered for his speed in driving ed an all-star team from the men , who have played under him since he through the defense to get tackles be- ^ame to Michigan in 1929. Some of hind the line of scrimmage. A verit- i the places were very easy to fill and able giant of a man possessing re- some very hard, but suffice it to say markable speed, Wistert going down , punts ahead of the ends was hat I would take this mythical crew under an inspiring sight. against any that might be put on any His n0-yard passes field anytime. Four of the 12 men :elected there being a duplicity at gave Coach Kipke a surprise play that ,enter) were named by Grantland Rice for positions on his first All- I set more than one !! American teams in three different opposing team back on its heels. The years, one other was picked by the other tackle is All-American Board," and another gas been named "the outstanding more of a problem, , but both Kipk and player in professional football." All rained All-Conference honors and all Weber agree that gad a part in bringing Michigan two Howard Auer is the rational and four consecutive Big Ten logical man to put Wis'tei"t Titles beginning in 1930. opposite Wistert. A husky, powerful man who played in 1929-30-31, Auer was honored in All-Conference se- George Andros Varsity .Dual fensive charge for opening holes through the center of the line. Mor- rison was stronger defensively be- I11inl Powers tween the tackles, but Bernard cov- a ered more ground and was more of a Stoller, Gx power against forward passes. Again In I 3 k ! FREE T HERE is no question about the i By Michigan's tselection of a quarterback-it's Harry Newman, All-American 1932.1 Illinois Saturday Forward passer par excellence, field': final dual meet general as smart as they ever come j with all indicatic and punt returner whose equal is, Ian overwhelming rarely seen in the Conference, New-, man was one of those quarterbacks 1 The feature of coaches dream about once in a while.I 100-yard dash v And the man for the fullback job is and Sammy Sto, almost as easy to choose. It's stubby match strides in Bill Hewitt, later picked as the out- mine who should standing performer in the National throne vacated t Professional Football League. The doors for the las, catch is that Bill gained fame for Illinois dashman the Chicago Bears as a bare-headed i of the going, be,, t end, and not at fullback. He might Conference meet ' have been an All-American end at gained partial re Michigan, but Kipke needed a full- Relays, however, back and Bill filled the spot to Ail- there. Conference Perfection. In the 1936 IY ___1 !YLl-_ L_-t Win At Illinois Saturday r- -ful In Hurdles, rrieve To Clash. The Century D DE LANO 'ack team will face ,y at Urbana in the of the 1937 season ! .ions pointing toward ig Wolverine victory, f the meet will be the where Bobby Grieve oller will once again n an effort to deter- d take over the sprint by Jesse Owens. In- ,st two years the fleet n has had the better eating Sammy in the 3t both times. Stoller revenge at the Butler r, by beating Grieve Illinois-Michigan dual it Grieve in :09.7 and ence meet he again of the Illini flash. Un- ;oller and Grieve are two leading sprinters ,s has joined the pro- and their meeting furnish fans with a Conference title race 22. ve Illinois boasts of xength in the hurdles ,ed strength elsewhere. .ect balance is expect- much for the Illini. ENDS NAMED are Ivan "The Red" I Williamson and Ted Petoskey. Ivy, All-Conference and captain of I the team in 1932, I; . was probably the ::::>:.:":.: finest pass receiver to wear a Michigan jersey since the days of the immor- " tal Benny Ooster- baan (present end coach). A greatf leader and a true exponent of smart football, William- Williamson son played every game in his senior year without a 'lay of practice. He possessed a trick Knee that would swell up like a bal- loon on Saturday and would not come, down again until the following Thursday or Friday. Ivan now ^oaches the ends at Yale. Petoskey, j bruising son of the upstate bay coup- try, was a first-team selection of the "All-American Board" in 1932 and .emained to gain All-Conference t-ionors for a second time the follow- ing year. A driving, tearing sort of a wingman, Pete had a try at carry- .ng the ball in his senior year. He, now is batting in the fourth spot for Toronto in the International League. YY WU 11413VL V ilt 1111 V Vlal Vi V1aVV NV lections. I FILLING the guard positions was * k the greatest problem confronting H ERMAN EVERHARDUS, trze "Fly- Coach Kipke when I approached him ing Dutchman" from Kalamazoo for these selections. Outstanding who has been called Michigan's "last guards have lagged behind the other great running back," gets one of the positions, but a final unanimous halfback posts without much argu- choice puts in bald-headed Stan Ho- ment. Chosen for All-Conference f meet Stoller bea in the Confere finished ahead c questionably Sti the Big Ten's t now that Owen,, fessional ranks Saturday will preview of the to be run May Besides Griei concentrated sti but only scatter Michigan's perfi ed to prove too i 0, u z Y X i 1 t i zer and chunky Omar LaJeunesse. $ honors a n d o n Both were versatile men who might Grantland Rice's have achieved more fame were it third team in 1933, possible to keep them in one position. Evie proved that Michigan's offense had more than "a AYNARD "DOC" MORRISON" 1 I :;. ' 't ' < _ '"." and Chuck Bernard are given a punt, a pass and a ! prayer., He was a draw by Coaches Kipke and Weber fine punter and a in the battle for the center post. Both v > sure bet to come up w e r e chosen by fast a. n d knock Grantland Rice for Everhardus down any opposing All-American first-, back that came through the left side team honors, and of the Michigan line-on those rare each stood above occasions when one did. The fourth the other in certain backfield selection goes to Stan Fay, .:".t '-'.. ::::::: , a captain of the team in 1933. Fay r. product of Weber was the blocking back in the National ff: when t he latter Championship teams of '32 and '33 coached at Benton (which means a lot), and he did a Harbor High, was fine job of picking up where Newman Newman the better passer left off as a safety man and returner but Morrison had the stronger of- of punts. probably be kept out of action until tomorrow's game. His place will be taken by Pete Lisagor, sophomore utility man. Probable Michigan lineup: Lisagor, shortstop; Walter Peckinpaugh, third base; Leo Beebe, catching; Steve Uricek, second base; Merle Kremer, centerfield; . Dan Smick, first base; Bob Campbell, right field; Captain Kim Williams in left; and Smith pitching. .New. York ........... 002 030 000--5 Bowman, Swift and Todd; Melton Al Smith, Coffman and Mancuso. St. Louis ..........061 201 032-15 Philadelphia .......000 002 001-- '3 McGee and Ogrodowski; Passeau, Jorgens, Sivess and Atwood, Grace. Chicago ............000 230 010-6 Boston .............000 002 000-2 Root and Odea; Lanning, Frasier and Lopez. STANDINGS OF THE LEADERS EIS 10 S' ORDER NOW ! CAPS and GOWNS rw Gowns and Hoods for All Degrees sM RVA" G E R"h S MEN'S WEAR on South University Ave, Phone 2-2265 Indiana Is Golf Squad's Last Hurdle Before dig Ten Meet Next Monday I --------- ------ UNIVERSITY TIEN NI S (First Three in G Bell, Browns ... 15 Walker, Tigers 17 Medwick, Card. 18 Cronin, Red Sox 14 Brack, Dodg. . .19 Todd, Pirates . .17 Each AB 60 70 77 58 77 67 League) R Hl 10 27 16 31 19 - 34 11 25 19 31 8 27 Pet. .45f .443 .442 .431 .403 .403 A F SERVICE opp. The Den SOUTH UNIV. 'p.- WiU z ccan State Street on the Campus will be Headquarters for the New 1937 Models PALM BEACH SUITS I ---- ------ ~. &... . By BEN MOORSTEIN Its first defeat in two years in Con- ference dual meets a bygone incident, the Michigan golfing team is center- ing its aim on a. sixth Big Ten title in as many years. Returning, four Evanston, Ill., where , the club swingers dropped a close 91/2-81/2 decision to Northwes- I tern for their first loss in five starts l this year, nearly all the members of the squad, still with the stiffness and weariness of 300 miles of autombile riding in their legs, headed for the University course and started hard and intensive practice. Northwestern, which, incidentally, was also the Big Ten team that stop- ped Michigan two seasons ago when the Wolverine's two starters, Johnny Fischer and Chuck Kocis, happened to be absent from the meet, seems tc have served as a stimulus to the Michigan players. j Practice Needed Coach Ray Courtright's boys see since they lost they will have some- thing cut out for them if they want to take the Conference crown again. They need real practice. All work on the course so far this week has been concentrated more on special items Varsity RXeserves Meet Frosh' Today Rained out yesterday, the fresh- man . and varsity reserve baseball teams, will again attempt to play the second game of their series this afternoon on the varsity diamond. The freshmen were victorious in the first meeting, 7-6. ' Freshman Coach Bennie Ooster- baan will depend for his pitching duties on Russ Dobson or Hyle Car- michael. Both are righthanders. Either Johnny Schuler or Charley Proshaska will do the catching, with both probably coming in for a share of the work. Bob McFayden, Loren Greenblatt, or John Herring, will start on the mound for the reserves. ESCOBAR, STOPS JEROME NEW YORK, May 12.-(R')-Sixto 1 Escobar, world bantamweight cham- pion from Puerto Rico, scored a tech- nical knockout over Nicky Jerome, I Brooklyn, in the second round of their non-title fight at the Hippodrome to- night. ting instead of general course play. But before the Big Ten champion- ship meeting next Monday and Tues- day at Evanston, the Varsity must l play Indiana here. This will be the last game of the regular season ex- cept for one more meeting wtih Mich- igan State. I Competition Powerful The Indiana meet, however, is not what the team is looking forward to. Big Ten championships are not de- cided by team standings during the scheduled season but by the outcome of the one big title meet of, all the teams. Michigan has been dominating the league for quite some time but will find competition very strong in the title race next week. Unlike other years when Michigan took the rest of the conference in tow the Wolverines this year lack a con- sistently outstanding star. The work of the two new members to the squad, Jack Emery and Billy Warren has helped' it considerably. Both Warren and Emery are steady, consistent, players and hard hitters even if neither of them stand five feet six. Indiana will bring a team here that R I D E It' PENS -- TYPEWRITERS 302 South State Street STROH'S PABST BLUE !tlBBON I FRIAR'S ALE At All Dealers J. J. O'KANE, Dist. Dial 3500 far this year but which may pull a surprise. It may be considered un- likely, however, since the Michigan team dropped a game already and does not intend to do so again. The Indiana team boasts a brother act as their best bet. Ray and Howard Beaver forming the combination. Indiana will be playing under an old handicap in that the Hoosier team has never chalked up a victory list of more than three Big, Ten contests in a season. such as driving, accuracy, and put- has not had a very good showing thus oft ralm Beach Suits 16 a k.3 t S x- rah. of They're exactly life dad's in conx- fort and coolness ... cut from the identical cloth , . . tailored with the same care and shill. But made, of course, for boys . , . with a world of endurance built into their youthful lines. See them today. The new patterns ,and colors have just arrived, +c, We're featuring the new Sea Foam, Solar Weave, checks, plaids and solid colors... in single- and double-breasted sports models, in student suits, ages 16 to 22. ^ an wh (J v You Seem a5 cool in that Palm Bea c as I am in this bathin I Su'r TH ERE/S N PALM BEACH COMFORT We are showing a large assortment of Palm Beach Suits--Single- or double- breasted Sport models and also the more conservative styles in white ... grey... . tan. , . and various other styles I TAI'OLli_ O _ nia'tu r X4 ,a i SENIORS Order your Cap and Gown TODAY from VAN BOV'EN, Inc. GOWNS FOR RENT and SALE for Faculty and Graduate Students ALL SCHOOLS & COLLEGES Phone 8911 for Prices and Information ZA.I, L Q fit GIB B Y is Q 1? ®r!o L. 1tt Ptrit'i r a 2t ;) 11 1 1 ' , X91