THE MCHIGAN DA LY enns And Golf Squads Travel To Play Notre Dame, Netters Face Maroons, Irish And Minnesota Seven Men To Make Trip; Chicago Squad Is Rated Toughest To Beat Michigan's surprising tennis team, bolstered by eight consecutive wins, takes to the road this morning to as- sume the underdog role in a week- end of three matches. Two of them are against Conference competition. This afternoon the Wolverines meet Notre Dame. Tomorrow they take on Minnesota at Evanston, Ill., and Saturday they play Chicago. The Irish squad is not the tough- est on the Wolverine schedule by any means. Their performance to date is not as impressive as that of the Michigan squad, and it is partly on this record the varsity is looking to a win. Tomoriow the Weir squad faces a Gopher team which is practically the same as the one they defeated 5-4 last year. The Gophers lost no one by graduation last season .and are a bit improved since then. Chicago, if anything, is better than last year. The Maroons have won ally their matches by at least 6-3 scores. They lost both Norm Bickel and Norbert Burgess, two of the out- standing players in the Conference, but acquired Charles Shostrum, bro- ther of the number two player, as a partial replacement. The squad which Coach Weir named to make the trip included seven players and manager Norman Soodik. The players, listed in their probable singles positions are Cap- tain Neil Levenson, Don Percival, J'ohn Kidwell, Tom Slattery, Hank Cohen, and Steve Woolsey. Ed Mor- ris, seventh man on the squad, will play doubles with Levenson. ESCOBAR DEFEATED NEW YORK, May 4.--(AP)-World bantamweight Champion Sixto Esco- bar invaded the featherweight ranks tonight and was given a sound ten round beating of Nat Litfin, ex- Pittsburgh pounder now fighting out of New York's Bronx. The A. 1% ยง U . G OLOD EN R U L E C INNCNA TI 1 OHIQO WILLIAM B. AMSTUTZ 607 Wolverine Bldg. Phone 8946 Dean Out For A Month; Tigers Win; Indians Lose In Thirteenth CHICAGO, May 4-(P)-Dizzy Dean will be absent from the Cubs' line- up for at least a month, Dr. J. F. Davis, club physician, announced to- day although x-ray examinations failed to disclose any damaged muscles or ligaments. Dr. Davis ordered Dean to take a complete rest for two weeks. He add- ed that it probably would be another two weeks before the big right hand- er could return to the game. Dr. Davis said there was still a lingering inflammation in Dean's salary arm, due to a muscle injury in his shoulder last year, and that it was his belief it could be completely cured with absolute rest. TIGERS WALLOP BOSTON BOSTON, May 4.-(AP)-The Detroit Tigers, teeing off against righthander, Jack Wilson, made at least one hit and had runners left in every inning today when they topped the Red Sox, 4-1 to deadlock the current'series. With a revamped lineup, that in- aluded Donald Ross at third base and catcher Rudy York in left field, the Tigers whaled Wilson for 13 hits in eight innings and then collected three more from Byron Humphreys in the finale. Boots Poffenberger went the route for the Tigers and held the home forces to six hits, half of them two-baggers. The defeat dropped the Red Sox Han-sen Tees 00, Bags Hole-In-One George Hansen, senior golfer, saw one, of his most profound dreams come true yesterday, when he teed off on the fifth hole at University Golf course, hit a high and true number five shot straight for the green, 160 yards away, watched his ball land about 15 feet from the cup, roll slow- ly across the green and trickle into the awaiting crevice. Hansen playing along with Fred Lamb, freshman golfer, Ken McCar- ren of the varsity squad, and Jack Emery, varsity veteran, finished the round with an 83. George Davis, former varsity golf ace, was the last man to hole out his tee shot at the University course before Hansen, and he turned the rick back in 1934 on the eighth hole. into third place, below the Yanks, and Detroit moved up to sixth place. LEONARD BLANKS INDIANS WASHINGTON, May 4.-(,)- Rookie Dutch Leonard pitched the Senators to a one-to-nothing victory over the lead leading Cleveland In- dians today in 13 innings. Feller gave up only three hits, all singles and whiffed eight Senators. He walked nine however. But Leon- ard's performance was greater. He walked nobody, allowed no Indian to reach third, and only two got as far as second. PhiDeIt ake Third Slraiht Win Places Team In Lead For All-YearTorphy Phi Delta Theta's chances of win- ning the trophy soon to be awarded to the high point winner in all-year fraternity competition soared yester- day when their baseball teem defeat- ed the defending champions, Sigma Chi, 11-0 behind the three-hit hurl- ing of Tom "Ace" Harmon. The Phi Delt's victory, their third straight, lifted them into the cham- pionship flight of the I-M fraternity softball league and added enough team points to their total to place them far above their nearest rivals, Phi Upsilon and Chi Psi. In professional fraternity softball games were played yesterday, Phi Alpha Kappa nosed out Phi Delta Epsilon 6-5. Nu Kappa Nu won 16- 12 over Theta Kappa Psi. Phi Delta Phi trimmed Delta Theta Phi 15-3. The Law Club juniors whipped the Law Club Frosh 8-2. Delta Sigma Delta beat Alpha Omega 21-0. Delta Sigma Pi downed Alpha Kappa Psi 16-12. Alpha Kappa Kappa defeated Phi Beta Pi 10-7 and Phi Chi took Phi Lambda Kappa 17-5. Karpinski And Barclay Given Needed Layoff Squad Should Have Little Difficulty With Tartars; Match Is In Detroit Four sophomores and one senior will comprise Michigan's golf team when it tees off against the Wayne University team tomorrow afternoon at the Tam O'Shanter Golf Club, De- troit. Coach Ray Courtright has named Lynn Riess to play No. 1 man followed by Bob Palmer, Keni Johnson, Bill Black and senior Fred Scnwarze. The purpose of this move to give Bill Barclay and Capt. Al Karpinski rest from competition and to give younger men opportunity to gain experience againset a weak Wayne team which Michigan white-washed in a match several weeks ago. Wayne will start the same line-up which previously faced the Wolver- ines. John Krykokow first man on the Tartar outfit is their outstand- ing player having carded a 77 when the teams last met. Joe Read will again hold down the second position and Ernie Latos will play third man. Bill Bundy and Bud Balkell round out the quintet. The tilt regarded as a warm-up match in the light of the first meet, which incidentally was the first time the teams had met on the links. Saturday the Wolverines will play a strong Illinois team here at Ann Arbor and the home team will be out to preserve its Big Ten unbeaten record. BASEBALL SCORES American Detroit 4, Boston 1. Washington 1, Cleveland 0. New York 3, St. Louis 2. Philadelphia 4, Chicago 1. National Philadelphia 6, Chicago 4. New York 3, Cincinati 2. Pittsburgh 9, Brooklyn 5. Boston 3, St. Louis 3 (rained out at the end of fith). Big Fireplace Built By Newe Coaching Staff By ROY HEATH The question of what a football coach does with his spare time can now bedanswered with some degree of veracity. They don't sit around think- ing up trick plays to bamboozle next fall's opposition or just sit around and think or even just sit around. Not Michigan's coaches. They build fireplaces. "We have a fireplace out behindy Fritz's house that you could roast( maybe 50 chickens on . .. if you had 50 chickens" says Marty Martineu, head of the end department. That is not gluttony on the part of Marty. The boys just like to see things done right. "We built her three feet wide by about six feet long. That is so that if we ever want *to cook anything we can,' 'says Marty with pardonable pride. Marty is self appointed press- agent for the 50-chickens blast fur- nace. Mr. Martineaucontinued: "Fritz was the head brick layer and I was assisitant. I handed him the bricks. Bennie Oosterbaan said his back hurt him so we let him be levelerupper. A few of the bricks are offsides. Wally Weber and Munn were hog-callers .. uh, I mean sandmen,.. "They aren't Japs," put in Dick- inson. "What do I mean Fritz?" "Sandhogs" answered Fritz. "Yeah, they carried the sand and mixed the cement," finished Marty. "I only hope the line sticks togeth- er better than those bricks did with that cement," commented Dickinson who according to Marty did the "hammock work." Clarence Munn was silent. It wa's a solemn thought. Press agent Martineau got in a last comment. "Anyway, we have a swell fireplace. Why, you could cook a corpse on it." Waner Paces Pirates the Pirates to a 9 to 5 victory overthe To Wii Ovr DogersDodgers. To Win Over Dodgers The win ended a five-game Pirate PITTSBURGH, May 4.-(P)-Little losing streak. The Dodgers were Poison Lloyd Waner was big poison I held to three hits by Russ Bauer and to Brooklyn pitchers today. He hit a Joe Bowman, iuut . advantage of homer, two triples and a single, drove I Bauer's wildness to take an early in five runs and scored three to pace lead. THE FIRST CREW RACE The first crew regatta in history was in 1829, between Oxford and Cambridge Universities in England. Students Take To Air To Get Permits By IRVING GERSON Piloting an airplane-once regard- ed a dangerous undertaking for even the experienced-is the aim of some 35 University students now taking lessons at the Ann Arbor Municipal Airport. These sportsmen learn the funda- mentals under the tutelage of George Downs and D. E. Richardsonco-part- ners in the running of the airport. There are six ships located at the --- DRIVEWAY GRAVEL field and one may learn to fly for $75 and up. According to Mr. Downs, there are generally speaking three stages in the development of an aviator. First of all, the instructor takes the student up with him in order to ac- quaint the beginner with the funda- mentals, such as what the instru- ments are used for and how to bank and take off. After the instructor gains a bit of confidence in the student s ability, which is usually after two or three hours of flying, he allows the begin- ner to take the controls and do the best he can, which is very little at this stage of the game. Of course the instructor is every ready to intercept and take over control of the ship if anything goes wrong. Great progress is usually exhibited after this stage and the confidence of the pilot grows rapidly. The next step is schooling the neo- phyte in the details of plane control and when the instructor is satisfied that the student is capable of hand- ling the plane himself, the period of soloing begins. This consists of hours of practice in taking off, banking and landing during which time the student begins to feel at home in the air. Thirty- 1 The shortest time element in engineering is probably that encountered in short wave radio tube design - an allowance of 1/600,000,000 second for an electron to travel a fraction of an inch. 2. A Westinghouse steel mill motor of this type can be reversed from full ahead to full back in 5 seconds. The Westinghouse-equipped streamliner "City of San Francisco" is one of the two most powerful Diesel-electric locomotives in use at this writing - 5400 horsepower. Three years ago, the most powerful train of this type was powered by a 1200 H.P. unit. The purchase and development of the Gaulard & Gibbs transformer patents by Geo. Westinghouse in 1885 led to our present widespread use of alternating current, the foundation of electricity's universal availability. " The lumens per watt of various types of electric lights are as follows: (a) Mazda lamp, (60 watt size) 13.9 lumens per watt; (b) mercury lamp (250 watt size) 30 lumens per watt; (c) Neon lamp, (average tube and gas) approximately 19 lumens per watt. 6. The "De-ion" principle is one which breaks arcs into segments by passing them through a series of grids. It has completely revolutionized the construction of such arc-carrying devices as lightning arresters, circuit breakers,,motor starters, and safety switches. 7.The "De-ion" principle was discovered and put into practice by Dr. Joseph Slepian of the Westinghouse Research Laboratories. The "Spencer Disc" is a type of thermostat which acts on the bi-metallic expansion and contraction principle to give a rifle-like make-and-break in elec- trical contacts. It is an exclusive Westinghouse electric iron feature, and is also used to protect Westinghouse motors from heat damage. The initials 'P.C.C." in connection with the new * streamlined streetcars stand for "Presidents' Con- ference Committee," a committee appointed by the American Transit Association to design these cars. By invitation, Westinghouse engineers worked with this committee, and more than half of the cars of this type now in use are completely equipped with Westinghouse electrical apparatus. 10 The initials KDKA, representing the Westinghouse pioneer station at Pittsburgh, Pa., mean "broadcast- ing" in the Eskimo tongue. Watch for another interesting "Electrical Quiz" in a coming issue of your college publication. Electricity is the greatest single force in this modern age. Learn more about it -and about the companies, like Westinghouse, that put it to doing the world's work. five hours of solo flying and passing a written and flight test given by the Department of Commerce are the re- quirements for receiving the coveted private license. Two coeds, Arlene Krieger and Shirley Roberts are the only repre- sentatives of the weaker sex among the Michigan students learning to fly. The Engineering, Law and Medi- cal schools supply most of the men. Students flying include John Acker, Carl Nelson, Jake Beers, Albert Cham- pion. Tom and Bob Cotton, Louis Goldman, Ed Horder, Bob Harrison, W. R. Harvey and Bill Janeshek. The list continues with Don Knapp, A. L. Kleinschmit, Jack Laro, Don McNabb, Jack McCrea, Ed Martin,' Jack Ort, David Poxson, Scott Royce and John and Larry Rinek. Joe Robinson, Daniel Ranney, Russ Strickland, John Seely, John Shorter, Lee Seltzer, John Stokely, Wayne White, Jack Wilkie, Conrad Wronski, Henry Wightman and Bill Wright complete the list. The number of hours flown by stu- dents have been about the same as last year due to poor weather condi- tions 'but last year showed 33 per cent increase over the preceding year. In 1930 but 300 hours were flown by students but in 1937 2,000 were flown. There has only been one ac- cident involving .students and that was a minor one. Alumni of the instructors are lo- cated all over the country and in various airlines and airplane plants. One is now flying a ship in the war in Spain. KI LLI NS GRAVEL COMPANY Telephone 7112 IV I A l - *R Ankle Fashioned Oxfords 8.50 to 1200 $139 and $159 All Colors - All Sizes All $2.00 and $2.50 values If you enjoy SPORT SHOES, see OUr selection - Every style of Crepe Sole you can imagine. $ to $6.50 Tweeds, Worsteds, Gabardines El w v '