THE MICHIGAN DAILY -ASIDE * - LINES- - ay IRVIN LISAGOR - Oops, Pardon Me... EMBARRASSING COINCIDENCE : Prior, to yesterday's ball game with State, Leo Beebe, Varsity cat- cher, decided to visit awhile with his old Dearborn friend Sam Nuznov, who plays a fair game of first base for the Spartans. Leo sneaked up to the Spartan dressing room and had accidentally opened the door on a meeting in which Coach John Kobs was discussing Michigan hitters "Now this Beebe," Kobs was say- ing, "is a pretty good catcher but he can't hit much . . . " The door silently closed and Leo, a wee bil flustered, deferred his Nuznov visit until they reached the field some time later. Amusing aftermath: Leo tried sc hard to discount Kobs' appraisal that he failed to get a hit all afternoon ... ° * * Enroute to the Quadrangular Relays at Bloomington Ind., last weekend, Charley Hoyt, driving his big LaSalle sedan, felt a bit fatigued and asked Jake Town- send to take over. "Let one of the boys In the back drive," offered Jake, "I don't want to." After Charley insisted, Jake acquiesced and took over the wheeling. He buzzed' along at a goodly clip, weaving in and out traffic with almost professional abandon. When the party reached Bloom- ington, Harold ,avidson ap- proached Hoyt and opined that Jake didn't do so bad for the first time. Hoyt's reactions were not recorded, although he refuses to believe it was Jake's first time in the driver's seat. * * * Lou Ambers, lightweight champion. was lambasting the punching bag the other day when a blow broke the supports. The chain by which the bag hung, dropped behind Ambers. cracked him across the conk and ren- dered him unconscious. Ambers must have wondered what coward t'rew dat sneaky punch. * * * ' Bleacher Blowol fs ... Lest it be mistaken, Walt Peckin- paugh ban take the average "riding" from a bleacher blowoff, but some- thing shouted at him during yester- days ball game hurt. When he booted a crashing bounder, someone yelled: "Just like his old man in the World's Series." Peck operates under a terrific handicap trying to justify his her- itage-and he does a swell job, for beyond doubt he's one of the best third sackers you'll ever find in col- lege. And the repeated references to his father mherely add pressure. With- out a weak knee which handicapped his play yesterday, he'd have made that grounder look easy. But what pained Peek'was the reference to the 1925 World's Series, in which his father-one of the game's greatest short field- ers-had a rough time in the field. Explains Walt: "Dad had a severe charley horse in that series, and he was playing all r covered with bandages. I remem- ber my mother staying up almost every night applying hot towels to his leg so that he could play the next day." Young Peck hardly needs any apologies for either his or his father's play. Long John Gee, who hurled for Michigan last year, has pitched two consecutive victories in the Inter- national League, a double A organiza- tion ... If the tall boy continues he may find himself in the big top in short order . . Left-handers who can fog that ball in consistently are at a premium . Steve Uricek, Wol- verine infielder last year, is playing for the Beckley, W. Va., club in the Mid-Atlantic League and rooming with a former Big Ten rival, Murray Franklin, last year's captain of the championship Illini nine . . 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 sterilized before each time used. Complete satisfaction guaranteed. Got our Rental Rates and Selling Prices VAN BOVEN, Inc. Phone 8911 Nickels Arcade Read Daily Ctassified Ads Late Michigan State Rallies Down . z Spartan Nine Pounds Out 15 Hits In Victory, Dahlstrom Hurls Five-Hit Ball; Mates Drive Three Pitchers From Mound (Continued from Page 1) into right, but Capt Butch Kremer's pest was a short fly to Kuk. Then up marched Mr. Smick,.still 3. little warm under the collar. This ime it was a line single to left, and 3rewer crossed. Trosko flied deep to 3eadle, both runners advancing, and ?eckinpaugh tallied on Gedeon's in- jeld single, a beautiful bare hand- :d stop by Owen preventing another -un. That was all for Michigan. State doubled their total in the ,ixth and added three more in the iinth. Singles by Kuk, Dandall, Ewen, and Ciolek, and Peckinpaugh's error accounted for the sixth inning uprising. The same combination did the iinth inning damage, tnis time with Andronik on the mound. * * * - Game Sidelights: Funniest play of the game came in the Michigan dixth . . . Kremer lined a wicked drive )ack at the box, it bounced off Dahl- ;trom's head over to Scott at second rho camped under it for the out ... tate trainers and coach hustled out )n the field, but big Ray was laugh- .ng-unhurt . Even In Baseball 'Good Hit-No Pitch' VMichigan State 9 3eadle, If. . . . 3iebold, rf.. .. Kuk, cf........ landall, c.. .. lTuznov, lb ..... ,,wen, 3b...... Scott, 2b....... 'iolek, ss...... Dahlstrom, p Total....... 3lichigan 3 ?ink, cf ...... 3rewer, ss...... 9eckinpaugh, 3b Kremer, lf ...... ampbell, rf .. 3mick, p-rf... Crosko, 2b ...... ABR 5 1 4 0 5 2 4 2 . .. ...4 1 . ....5 1 5 1 . ,. ...4 1 5 0 .....41 9 AB 4 4 4 0 .....4 4 4 H 1 0 3 3 0 4 1 2 1 15 H 0 1 1 0 0 2 0 1, 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 6 3 13 1 1 0 0 27 2 2 2 1 0 2 2 12 3 1 0 0 R 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Dangerous when his ire's up-. that's Danny Smick. After being batted out of the box by the Spar- tans in the first inning yesterday, Danny shifted 'to right field and things began to happen. His first time up he clouted a long homer into the tennis courts and in the fourth batted in another run with a hard single. Complete Team Still Unnamed For Penn Meet Davidson, Ace Miller, Has Leg Injury; Rae Shows In Tuesday'sDrill With only two days left until their scheduled departure for. the Penn Relays at Philadelphia, the complete personnel of the University of Mich- igan track team was still an open question after yesterday afternoon's drill. Time trials in the 440 and 220 fea- tured what was scheduled to be the deciding practice session. The trials were run but complications had set in which caused Coach Charlie Hoyt to give the team another day of 7ork and himself another night of cereber- ation before coming to. a decision. More Budget Trouble Chief reason for the delayed post- ing of the traveling list was finan- cial. The budget will only allow the Wolverines to carry so many men on a trip of such distance and it will be necessary for the Michigan mentor to choose his men with an eye to doubling each one if possible. The question of where to cast the coveted nod became no less compli- cated when Michigan mile ace, Har- old Davidson, turned up with a muscle irritation which robbed him of much of his old power and quar- termiler Doug Hayes, who has been on the inactive list for the past week with a strained muscle, announced that he was ready to make a play for a spot on one of the Penn bound re- lay foursomes. Both men will run a special 660-yard time trial today. Abbott Edges Rae The quarter mile trial saw veteran Waldo Abbott eke out a decision over rookie Jim "Stretch" Rae but it was Rae's race notwithstanding the fact that he placed second. It was the loosely hung sophomore's first ap- pearance in the long sprint and the manner in Which he ran showed it. Trailing by five yards as the field: entered the first turn, Rae began to pull up but found himself in as neat a box as anyone could ask for. He stumbled, almost hit the cinders, but recvovered in time to tie on to Ab- bot's beautiful stretch sprint that carried the winner home in 50.5 with Rae inches back. Netmen Meet Western State At Home Today Varsity Boasts Only Two Defeats In First Eight Starts Of Season Michigan tennis fans get their first chance to see the 1938 Varsity in action this afternoon when the Wol- verines take on the Western State Teachers squad in a return engage- ment at the Ferry Field Courts. The match is scheduled for 2 p.m. The Wolverines, who have won six of their eight contests to date this season, including the two Conference matches played, added the Kalama- zoo team to their list of victims when they defeated them at their home courts Monday, 5-4. Win Five Matches In the matches Monday, the Var- sity took four singles and one doubles to win. Don Percival, Hank Cohen, Steve Woolsey and Tom Slattery, in the two, four, five and six positions respectively were the singles winners. Capt Neil Levenson and Slattery add- ed the lone doubles win in the first bracket. The trio of wins in the past week has given indications of a rapidly improving squad, which should turn in a fairly noteworthy performances this season. In the' schedule to date the Wol- verines have turned in a record of six victories against two defeats. During the five-game spring trip, they opened with an 8-1 win over the University of Richmond, lost to V.M.I., 3-6, bowed before a 9-0 University of Virginia onslaught, and took Western Maryland and Du- quesne into camp by 8-1 scores. Down Conference Foes In the initial Conference matches last week they downed Indiana and Illinois by 4-2 and 5-4 scores re- spectively.. Monday they added their fifth straight in . the Western State match. Today's meeting will see practical- ly the same lineup that faced the Kalamazoo opposition Monday. Capt. Neil Levensn will lead off for the Wolverines in the number one spot, with Percival, Kidwell, Cohen, Wool- sey and Slattery filling in the other singles spots in that order. However, Coach Weir is undecided as to the doubles combinations he will use in today's contests. In the last three matchesi the pairings he has used have not come through in very good shape. The squad has been able to garner only one win in the miatches in each of the last three contests. Yankee Stadium Is Site For Title Bout NEW YORK, Aril 26.-()-Pro- moter Mike Jacobs today confirmed his selection of the Yankee Stadium as the site for the world heavyweight championship return match between Joe Louis and Max Schmeling, the German challenger. It will be held Wednesday night, June 22, in the ring where Schmeling stunned the fistic universe just two years ago by knock- ing out the Brown Bomber in 12 round?. Jacobs minimized the prospects of an anti-Nazi boycott and predicted the fight will draw at least 80,000 cash customers, with net gate receipts exceeding $1,000,000 at a scale rang- ing from $3.50 for unreserved bleacher seats to $30 for ringside chairs. ST. LOUIS, April 26.--(A)--Elden Auker, the Detroit Tigers' submarine style pitcher, torpedoed the St. Louis Browns today, 7 to 1, with a brilliant five-hit performance to lift his team out of the American League cellar. Up to form in hitting, the Tigers meanwhile thumped three Brownie pitchers for 11 hits and won their first series of the new season after two previous failures against Chicago and Cleveland. The victory, Detroit's third in eight starts, boosted the Tigers into a tie with St. Louis a half game out of last place. Giants Outslug Phils NEW YORK, April 26.-(N)-A seven-run bombardment in the last two innings gave the New York Gi- ants a 12 to 8 decision over the Phil- lies in a loosely-played ball game to- day that saw both starting pitchers shelled off the mound. Manager Bill Terry had planned to start Carl Hubbell, but the Hub re- ported with a slight case of the grippe and Terry switched to Hy Vanden- berg. Reds Move To Fifth CINCINNATI, April 26.- (P) - Blanked for six innings, Cincinnati overcame a seven-run disadvantage today and with rallies in three frames nosed out the St. Louis Cards 8 to 7 in an overtime game to take fifth place in the National League. Pirates Lose First PITTSBURGH, April 26.-(A)-The Pittsburgh Pirates bowed today for the first time in the young National League season, but it took the hard- clubbing Chicago Cubs 10 innings to grind out their 5 to 3 triumph. The Cubs crammed two triples and a single into their half of the extra chapter to account for their margin of two runs. Senators Trim Boston WASHINGTON, April 26.-(P)- The Senators defeated the Boston Red Sox, 6 to 4, today, largely be- cause Pete Appleton was stingy with hits in the pinches and had them to spare when he went to bat. Boston collected 10 blows off the veteran, but they were scattered. At bat, Appleton drove out a triple and two singles. Yank's Big Guns Fire PHILADELPHIA, April 26.--(P)- Breaking loose with their first "big inning" of the season, the New York Yankees today smacked out six hits for five runs in the third to beat the Philadelphia Athletics, 5 to 3. The champions' one big blast in- cluded a home run by Flash Gordon with one on and a double by Lou Gehrig. IF Tigers, Yanks Win; Cubs Nose Out 'Bucs Indians Win Again a 10 to 6 victory over the Chicago White Sox in the delayed opener of CHICAGO, April 26.-P)-Wiping the series here today for their sixth out three early Chicago leads, Cleve- straight triumph. land's first place Indians batted out jledeon, lb..........3 Beebe, c..........2 ishman, p.........2 "Floersch..... . ..1 Andronik, p........0 I II Total ........ ....32 3 5 37 12 'Batted for Fishman in 7th. Vnichigan State 300 000 303 9 Michigan 010 020 000 3 Errors: Randall, Peckinpaugh (2), Kremer, Gedeon. Two base hits: Owen, Scott. Home run: Smick. Struck out: By Dahlstrom 4, by Fish- man 1, by Andronik 2. Bases on balls: off Smick 1, off Fishman 2, off An- lronik. 1, off Dahlstrom 1. Hits: off 3mick, 2 in 1-3 inning, off Fishman, 10 in 6 2-3 innings, off Andronik 3 in 2 innings. Phi Delts Win 33-5 To Break The I-M softball scoring record set by Phi Sigma Kappa last week when they tallied thirty times in four in- nings was broken again yesterday by Phi Delta Theta who crossed home plate thirty three times in defeating Phi Gamma Delta 33-5 for their sec- ond straight win in the fraternity softball league. Gridder Tom Harmon did the hurl- ing for the Phi Delts. Jack Bren- nan started for the Phi Gams but was knocked out in the first inning when the Phi Delts rolled up seventeen runs. Sigma Chi, defending fraternity softball champions, also won their second straight game whipping Phi Kappa Tau 15-8. Bob Parkin, the Sigma Chi twirler, helped win his own game by cracking out a home run and two singlep in three times up. Gil Phares slugged out a first inning homer. In other fraternity softball games Theta Chi walloped Beta Theta Pi 13- 1 behind the four-hit pitching of Dick Shroth. Delta Upsilon spanked Theta Delta Chi 19-3. Phi Kappa Psi defeated Lambda Chi Alpha 7-3. Kappa Delta Rho downed Alpha Kap- pa Lambda 16-6 and Sigma Alpha MiA trimmed Tau Kappa Epsilon 20- 12. L SUMMER s,^'" ammemman mm Phone 3205 Groceries - Beer ,- Wine Ty's Service Market 420 Miller Ave. I hi,. --__________________________ ___________ ....,.... -- _- - Only at .e. .t. a 809 (SOUTH M.Q#! $"MW 3 IMPORTANT POINTS ABOUT This New Kind of SUIT .-+. CROSBY-SQUARE Genuine White Buckskin Shoes - all styles - $6.75 I' * It Wears Longer! SeldomWrinkles! and therefore needs press- ing less often. ,Won't ,"Shine" The reasons for these es- sential features is deeply embedded in the Saxon Weave fabric itself. ...$35.00 I . _ _ __ _ _ _ __ ._ _ Ii I ARROW SHIRTS A 11 1 1 1 II "II lii1111 1111 1