TIlE __1 IGAN DAILY ASIDE -Heavywe Varsity Nie -L-y IRVIN LISAGORI -NDrops Opener Wisenheirming . .. THEY LIFTED the barrier on the To W isconsin major league race yesterday - and this pillar of prophecy was left at the post. The telephone didn't Fielding And Baserunning buzz with indignant readers, much Faulty As Badgers Hit to our chagrin, but one fellow did call and inquire in no uncertain terms: Four Pitchers "All right, wisenheimer, who do you like? I wanna get my bets all stacked (continued from Page 1) now." It was heartening indeed tot thik tal omefelow epeds ponthird hit was a line smash into cen- think that some fellow depends upontefil.Dsiratmpngo this corner for his tips, although the ter field. Dismeir; attempting to sacrifice, popped a bunt in front of man's tone suggested that maybe the plate. Beebe had the ball, but he he'd bet contrawise to our selections. dropped it when Peckinpaugh barged Ha! Ha! Perish the thought, Pete, into him, and it fell safely. Beebe perish the thought! was charged with a questionable er- On second thought, this pick- ror on the play. ing pennant winners might be Andy Smith advanced the runners developed into a right tidy racket. with a bunt, Gerlach crossed on 01- For example, we make two weird choices and all you readers will son's infield out which brewer held naturally hop aboard the band- and finally threw to first, and Bob wagon, realizing how unimpeach- Smith's single sent Dismeir scamper- able that information is. Then ing across with the fourth and final we send out a crew of wagerers, Badger tally. covers all bets and when curfew Irked, the Wolverines kept on plug- rings in September, we gather in ging away but Hinrichs had them the velvet. fooled when the hits counted. They This is no precedent; it has been went down in the sixth, despite Peck- done before. Several years ago a inpaugh's single, and couldn't score smart hoss handicapper was making with two on and one out in the sev- lush selections for a large newspaper enth. in a small metropolis. His divina- Wisconsin's seventh was a thrill- ,ons were consistently good, and his er. Smick came in but soon walked following increased as time elapsed out with the bases jammed and one So when evil times set upon him, he >ut. Andronik entered and his blaz- sought new sources of income and in ing fast ball had the Badger buf- a flash conceived a brilliant scheme. faloed. He fanned Bob Smith and Forthwith he hurried into action. made George Zuehls tap weakly to First thing he did was buy the Gedeon to quench the flurry. town's bookie joint-on the q.t Burt Smith came in to pitch the of course. Figuring that if the eighth and ninth and hurled hitless betting gentry played his choices ball. But it was too late. The Wol- on the nose, all he had to do verines kicked away their chances in was to permit selling platers and that unnerving eighth, and Hinrichs glue prospects to creep into his breezed through the ninth to chalk g 4lnn p.sc1 ail relin te s. a up a rather fortunate victory.. ight Bout To Feature All-Star Boxing Show r . k Seeks New Glories Title At Stake As on Siegel Battics Zdan Matches At Field House Tonight At 8 P.M.; Eight Wolverines Entered (Continued irom Page j) Det Chi AMERICAN LEAGUE troit .......000 110 001-3 9 2 Leago ......010 300 00x-4 7 0 awson, Gill and York; Whitehead d Sewell. 1 (, I view of Siegel's record of eight knock- outs in ten bouts. Seven Wolverines Fight Seven other University entries will face stiff competition from out-of- town foes. Leonard Spector, 1937 Ann Arbor trophy winner will clash with Miles Underhill of. South Lyons who took the same honors in 1936. Virgil Young, Michigan colored flash, fpfts Herman DeMarco; a home town favorite, and in another bout of local interest Michigan's Miles Lihn meets George Conley, Ann Arbor open champion for 1937. Two top-notch light heavyweights who were runners-up in their tourna- ments this year will, appear in the first of two 175 pound scraps. Jerry Wisner took second in the Grand Rapids novice class while his oppon- ent, Ted Witowitch, was a semi-final- ist in the Detroit Golden Gloves tour- ney. In the other light heavy fight, Paul Asher, Pontiac open champion. opposes Joan Witowitch, brother of Ted. (, Big Don Siegel, Michigan's tow ering heavyweight champion, goes out after his ninth knockout to- night in the feature bout of the All-State boxing show at Tost Field House. Don's road is expected to be a tough one however since oppon- ent Leonard Zdan also owns an impressive string of knockout vic- tories. TONIGHT'S BOXING CARD Heavyweights: *Siegel, Mich. vs *Zdan, Detroit. *Van, Pontiac, vs. *Tempest, sciectionsma ny.na in x A o ~g run, the bookie would clean up. It meant sacrificing his profes- sional reputation, but what, he calculated, is a rep beside a por- terhouse steak. Well, what is it? At any rate, his readers, though puzzled by some of his choices, remained loyal and religiously followed their favorite handi- capper. And then there fell a fly in the ointment. By some stroke of fate, the selling platers and hayburners which the, writer picked started to finnish in the money. Like the Midas touch, any horse he singled out turned into a gold entry, and naturally the bookie joint took a terrific beating. In short order, it collapsed and left the conniving handicapper flat bust- ed. But to his readers he was still the premier selector in the nation. His reputation was intact, but the porter- house steaks had proven nothing more than a series of mirages. All of which goes to prove noth- \ng, and still leaves us with two choices to make. If the Chicago Cubs fail to capture the National League gonfalon this year, then owner Phil K. Wrigley might better concentrate his attention upon chewing gum-and leave the 'baccer chewing lads to their own resources. For Dizzy Dean should be what the doctor ordered, even though he cost the Cubs plenty of green lettuce. With a slick de- fersive team with punch well dis- tributed throughout their line- up, the Cubs lacked only a No. I hurler, someone like Hubbell, to complete a winner. In the spring book, they can't lose . .. or can they? They've even got in re- serve two managers-Tony Laz- zeri and Gabby Hartnett. And with Wrigley edging in his own- ers prerogative now and then, the boys should never doubt the presence of leadership, although they may have trouble putting their finger on it. We might create a mild sensation by declaring that the Yankees will fold up in the American loop, but that might indicate chicanery, espe- cially if some furtive looking gent approaches you in the next few days and offers a few shekels that they won't. So rather than incur the risk, we'll merely predict that the battle will be between two western clubs. Detroit and Cleveland. Is that all right, wisenheimer? NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago ......001 202 201-8 15 4 Cincinnati ... . 104 000 101-7 14 2 Bryant, Root and Hartnett: Schott, R. Davis and Lombardi, V. Davis. Brooklyn . . . 100 300 062-12 15 0 Philadelphia .101 020 001- 5 11 0 Mungo and Chervinko, Spencer; Lamaster and Atwood. Pittsburgh . 101 000 002-4 10 2 St. Louis...... 000 030 000-3 11 1 Blanton, M. Brown, Klinger and Todd; Weiland,3Bush and Owen. Boston....000 000 100- 1 7 3 New York .... 431 100 04x-13 16 0 Box Scores Detroit. 175 Pounds: Wisner, Grand Rapids, Witowitch, Detroit. "Asher, Pontiac, vs. J. witch, Detroit. 150 Pounds: uSorenson, Grand Rali Sabo, Kalamazoo. Trowell, Mich. vs. Skri Mich. 147 Pounds: *Spector, Mich. vs. *Un S. Lyons. Lihn, Mich. vs. *Conley Arbor. Calkins, Grand Rapid Plesha, Detroit. 135 Pounds: Young, Mich. vs. DeMar( Arbor. vs. T. Wito- ids, vs. ig anuk, iderhill, y, Ann ds, vs. co, Ann Camp Gets Proceeds Tickets on sale at the Union are priced at $1.00 for ringside with gen- eral admission being 50 cents. The show is being sponsored by the Junior Chamber of Commerce for the ben- efit of the University Fresh Air Camp which does its bit to help the under- privileged children of the state. The show's feature bout will give local fans their first glimpse at Siegel the champion. Don's first fight in Ann Arbor was the go against Cedric Sweet after which he went on to win the state Golden Gloves title by virtue of two consecutive knockouts, his most recent coming when he won the Detroit C.Y.O. championship by flat- tening Buddy Michaels in the third round. Don Works With . so Siegel has not been taking tonight's battle lightly. "It would be a fine thing if I lost at Yost Field House now, wouldn't it?" he asks. And as a precautionary measure he is work- ing out three times a day under Patsy Urso, former National Golden Gloves champion and present coach of the Briggs A. C. fighters in Detroit. Wisconsin Schilling, Bietila, c Gerlach, s Dismeier, A. Smith, Olson, 2b Radder, If R. Smith, Zuehls, lb Hinrichs, Totals Michigan Pink, ef Brewer, ss Peckinpau Kremer, If Campbell, Trosko, 2b Gedeon, 1 Beebe, c Fishman, Smick, p Andronik, B. Smith, *Floersch *Lisagor ABR of . . .. ...,. .4 0 .. . . .....5 1 ... .. ..3 1 rf . . . . ... ..4 2 3b . . .. . . ..3 0 4 0 f ......... 4. 1 0 If .........3 0 . .. . .. ...4 0 p .:........ 4 0 . . .. .. .. ...35 4 AB R f.........32 gh, 3b . . ...4 0 f . .. . ... .. . .3 0 rf . .. . .. .. . 4 .0 ....,......4 0 ,b . . .. . . .,..4 0 . .. . .. . .. . 4 0 p . .. . .. .. ..1 0 . .. . ... . .. ..0 0 p .. .. . .. ..0 0 p .. .. . .. . ..0 0 . .. ..... 1 0 1 0 A 0 2 3 1 3 2 0 0 0 6 17 A 0 2 4 0 0 0 0 2 4 0 0 0 0 0 Kenjelo, Pontiac. vs. Papic, Battle Creek. 126 Pounds: Huey, Mich. vs. Shipp, Pontiac. *Roberts, Pontiac, vs. Dornick, Kalamazoo. 118 Pounds: Beyer, Mich. vs. Ford, Pontiac. donates title holder. brief offensive scrimmage have 'ea- tured both sessions this week. Deviat- ing somewhat from his usual variety of drills, Crisler has concentrated heavily on line blocking. Excluding ends, lines of five were alternated in the blocking assignments. Following the long workout, Cris- ler lined his men up in an offensive drill which stressed line plays and passes, putting into practice the line- work featured in the earlier workout. Caps, Gowns and Hoods FOR FACULTY AND GRADUATES COMPLETE RENTAL AND SALES SERVICE Call and inspect the nat- ionally advertised line of The C. E. Ward Company, New London, Ohio. All rental items thoroughly storilized before each time used. Complete satisfaction guaranteed. Get our Rental Rates and Selling Prices VAN BOVEN, Inc. Phone 8911 Nickels Arcade 34 2 8 27 12 Totae *Batted for Andronik in 7th. **Batted for B. Smith in 9th. Wisconsin ..........100 102 000-4 Michigan .......... .100 000 001-1 Errors: Beebe, Olson (2). Runs battled in: Gerlach, Olson, R. Smith (2), Campbell, Kremer. Two base hits: Dismeier, Pink, Kremer. Three base hits: Bietila, Olson. Left on' bases: Wisconsin 7, Michigan 8. Struck out: By Hinrichs 5, by Fish- man 4, by Andronik 1, by B. Smith 3. Bases on balls: off Hinrichs 2, off Smick 2. Hits: off Fishman, 8 in 6 innings, off Smick 1, in 1-3 inning, off Andronik, none in 2-3 inning, off B. Smith, none in 2 innings. Wild pitch, Fishman. Umpires: Vick and Snyder. Time of game, 2-5. Crisler Drives Gridders Hard Blocking AndI Lne Play Stressed In Drills After the 10-day layoff, the grid- ders went back to work Monday on the second leg of the spring practice session. Coach Fritz Crisltr drove his charges hard Monday and yes- terday in an effort to erase the evi- dent slump brought on by the recess. Blocking drills topped off by a R EVERSIBLE TOPCOATS In English and Scotch Tweed . . in Herringbonc-check and Plaid patterns - in Camel's Hair, A waterproof Gabardine on one side and imported fabric on the other. 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