lY_ 1,_19.Q._ -- THE MICHIGAN DAILY Varsity Loses To State, 5-4, As Rally In Ninth Falls Short Early Wolverine Errors Give Spartans Victory; Ruehle'sTriple Wasted (Continued from Page 1) NotJitei... I l three-bagger to right field, bring Michigan to within one run of State, and set himself up for the hero role for the day. But evidently the gods of baseball had designated Ruehle for another1 role. Bud Chamberlain was rushed in1 to bat for George Harms, but the best1 Chamberlain could do was a sharpI grounder to Duncan. Ruehle held his base while the Spartan shortstop made the throw, but when Joe Kam- erath, substitute first baseman, drop- ped the ball, George foolishly de-] cided to break for the plate. He was thrown out by the prover- bial city block. But the spree wasn't over yet. Pinch-hitter Johnny Erpelding then singled to., center to send Chamber- lain to second and the winning runs were now on the bases. Charlie Pink' and Mike Sofiak both grounded out, however, and the game was over. Michigan had jumped off to the usual early lead in the second on some clever base-running by Nelson. With the bases loaded as a result of hits by Trosko and little Davie and a safe sacrifice by Ruehle, Harms hit into a double play, Munroe to cat- cher Bolster to Owen. By dint of some speedy legging, Nelson scored from second on the play. The Spartans reached Jack Barry for four runs in the third, however. Duncan and Will Davis singled, both advanced on a wild pitch and scored on Paul Starck's bingle to left. Casey Klewicki walked, he and Starck ad- vanced after Harms had taken Ow- en's foul fly back near 'the screen, and rode home on Steve Jacubow- ski's hit to left. State chalked up what eventually proved the winning run in the ninth off Russ Dobson, who had replaced Mickey Stoddard. A triple by Kle- wicki and Owen's infield single did the trick. Mich. State-5 Morrison, 2b Duncan, ss...... Will Davis, of . Starck, cf...... Klewicki, 3b..... Owen, lb....... Kamerath, lb .. Jacubowski, if .... Bolster, c....... Cramer, x Manion, c...... Munroe, p...... Mekules, p . . ..... AB 5 5 5 4 4 3 5 2 1 1 5 0 l Totals .... 41 Michigan-4 AB Pink, cf ..........5 Sofiak, ss ........ 5 Evashevski, rf .... 3 Steppon, 2b .... 3 Trosko, If.......3 Nelson, 3b .. ......4 Ruehle, lb ...... 3 Harms, c .........3 Chamberlain, y .. 1 Barry, p .........1 Greenberg, z .... 1 Stoddard, p ...... 0 Holman, xx .......0 Dobson, p ........ 0 Veigel, p .........0 Erpelding, yy .... 1 Totals .... 33 R 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 ,0 0 .0 5 0 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 H 0 2 4 1 2 1 1 3 0 1 0 0 10 15 H 1 0 1 0 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 8 A 4 4 0 0 2 1 0 1 0 0 2 0 17 A 0 1 0 2 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 9 El 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 E 0 0 0 4 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 N etters Open Home Season Kalamazoo Rivals Boast Impressive Record Kalamazoo College will help the Michigan tennis team inaugurate its home season at 3:30 p.m. today on the Palmer Field courts. Leading the Kazoo contingent is Capt. Marian "Buck" Shane. Shane is indubitably the top collegiate play- er in the state. In two and one half' years of varsity competition, Shane has yet to lose a match. When one stops to consider that he has played the number one men of' such institutions as Miami, North Carolina, Alabama, Georgia, Wayne, Michigan State, and Cincinnati, ten- nis powers in every sense of the' word, you realize the magnitude of the job this tiny Titan of the break- fast food town has accomplished. Kalamazoo is also bringing to Ann Arbor such fine performers as Eric Pratt, Don Worth and Guy Garback, all of whom have collaborated in the winning of seven out of nine matches this spring. Capt. Sam Durst will oppose Shane in the feature match. This past win- ter Durst took Shane to three sets in an indoor practice match at the Sports Building, so it should prove interesting to see if Durst can even approach his previous outstanding performance. Jim Tobin's injured knee is still the main topic of conversation and interest to Coach Weir and the team. As it stands today, Tobin will play number two singles followed by Tom Gamon, Wayne Stille, Harry Kohl and Bob Jeffers at the three, four, five and six spots respectively. The number one doubles team of Durst and Tobin will remain intact, but there's a possibility that the two and three combines will be shift- ed about. (Editor's Note: This week the col- a: umnn is being written by the members1 of the junior sports staff who arel applying for the position of sports editor for the comng year. Today's column is written by Norman Miller, who has been covering varsity base- t ball.) t 'King Carl' .. . Of the great plethora of athletesc that grace the American sportingY scene, there is none who has gained1 our admiration more than Carl Owen Hubbell, lanky screwball artist of the New York Giants. To us, Hubbell has always re- presented all the ideals of good sportsmanship, clean-living and modesty so often found lacking in professional athletes, in addition to exemplifying the acme of mo- dern pitching greatness. "King Carl's" hurling ability needsI no explanation. It speaks for it- self. He is the only active pitcher in the National League who has wvon 200 games. He won 20 or more games per season for five consecutive years from 1933 to 1937; led the senior cir- cuit in earned run averages in '33, '34 and '36 with averages of 1.66, 2.30 and 2.46, respectively: won 24 straight games (16 in 1936 and eight in 1937); set a record of 46 consecutive score- less innings in 1933; is the only pit- cher in the last two decades who has turned in two World Series victories over the New York Yankees; and holds a host of other marks that have well-e'arned him the nickname of "Meal Ticket" for the Giants. Few baseball fans will ever forget Hubbell's history-making exploit in the 1934 major league All-Star game when the lean pe- can farmer from Meeker, Okla- homa, struck out Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Jimmy Foxx, Al Sim- mons and Joe Cronin, six of the heaviest hitters in the American League, in the first two inings. But there's a story behind the fact that places the gaunt left-hander in IN THIS CORNER By MEL FINEBERG_ I Ri ........ in even grander light. It's told by "Gabby" Hartnett, who caught Hub- bell that afternoon. "I could see from thR look on his face that 'Hub' wasn't too keen on throwing all those tough pitches I was calling," revealed Hartnett, after the game. "But rather than make me look like a chump by shaking me off before that packed ball park, he risked the strain on his arm and cut loose with whatever I signalled for." Today, at the age of 36, Hub- bell still ranks one of the great- est pitchers in the game. An operation for the removal of a chipped bone in his elbow at the end of the 1938 season has taken the zip out of his fast ball and the sharp break out of his one time baffling curves. All the old master has left is the ghost of his inimitable screwball, his impeccable control, a stout heart and a keen pitching brain ripened by 12 years of experience in the big show. There's nothing colorful about Hubbell unless it's the peculiar box- shaped manner in which he fixes his baseball pants. He's never been thrown out of a game for arguing with an umpire; he never squabbles with managers (and that aspect of his good nature is even more noteworthy in view of the oft-times exacting de- mands of his manager, Bill Terry, and the New York front office never has any trouble with Hub over salary arrangements. Old "Square Pants" started the Giants' opener against the Phillies a few weeks ago. His assignment didn't attract the dazzling press notices that pre- ceded Dizzy Dean's initial appear- ance, nor did Hub come through with a sensational no-hitter like Bob Feller. In fact, his was a typical Hubbell performance. For six innings he toiled wearily behind a scant 1-0 lead. Then, in the seventh, a hit, an error by a rookie infielder on an easy double play ball, and a slip-up Dodger Hurler Gets No-Hitter Carleton Pitches Brooklyn To NinthStraight Win CINCINNATI, April 30. -OP)- James Otto (Tex) Carleton, a 33- year-old refugee from the minors, stalked into baseball's no-hit hall of fame today by pitching the un- defeated Brooklyn Dodgers to a 3 to! 0 triumph over the Cincinnati Reds. It was the ninth straight victory for the stampeding Dodgers, tying a modern major league record for consecutive wins at the start of the season-a string last attained by the New York Giants in 1918. It also was the second no-hit game of the young season, coming two weeks to the day after Bob Feller shaped his opening day spectacle for the Cleveland Indians against Chicago. Carleton, a righthander who served terms with the St. Louis Cardinals and Chicago Cubs and got into one World Series with the former and two with the latter, was one of several free agents the Dodgers picked up during the winter. Kolesar Out With Injury Recurrence of an ola knee injury in last Saturday's scrimmage has forced Bob Kolesar, promising fresh- man guard from Cleveland, to drop out of spring practice, it was re- ported last night. that enabled Gus Suhr to catch hold of one of his pitches for a home run, and "King Carl" was defeated, 3-1. Yet that's the way it's always been. Hubbell never did have a gang of DiMaggio's, Dickeys, Medwicks or Greenberg's behind him. When the feather-hitting Giants give him three or four runs, it's an occasion for a celebration. But the slender southpaw never complains, never berates a team- mate for a costly blunder, never pops off about his remarkable feats. But when the going gets tough- est, when the chips are on the line, we'll still take Carl Owen Hubbell for our money. -N.M. Relay Events Will Feature Illinois Meet After word had been received from Des Moines saying that Coach Ken Doherty was "continuing to improve and doing very well," Michigan's var- sity track team turned its attention to preparation for its home outdoor debut against Illinois on Saturday afternoon. As they have been ever since last year, the quarter-mile and one-mile relay will be the number one attrac- tions of the day. Warren Breiden- bach, showing even greater ability and strength than last year, will match strides with the Illini captain, Will McCown, who defeated him in- doors at the Illinois Relays. Both are capable of running around 47 seconds when in the pink of con- dition, so the time should be better than 48 even this early in the sea- son. Also in the race and capable of winning, are Michigan's Jack Leutritz, the big junior who is at his best outdoors where his stride is not hampered by a multitude of turns, and Phil Balyeat, whose in- jured arch has hitherto kept him from running as well as he can. Michigan's trio of 440-men, plus Bob Barnard or Jim Rae, will battle the Illini in the relay. The visitors have defeated the Wolverines in- doors, and present one of the best teams in the country. Michigan won the Drake Relays in 3:16 last week, FORDHAM UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW NEW YORK Case System Three-Year Day Course Four-Year Evening Course Co-educational Member of the Assocaton of American Law Schools College Degree or Two Years of College Work with Good Grades Required for Entrance Transcript of Record Must Be Furnished Morning, Early Afternoon and Evening Classes For further information address Registrar of Fordhom Law School 233 Broadway, New York Michigan State .... 004 000 001-5 Michigan. ......... 010 000 003-4 x Batted for Bolster in 5th. y Batted for Harms in 9th. z Batted for Barry in 5th. xx Batted for Stoddard in 8th. yy Batted for Veigel in 9th. Two base hit: Cramer. Three base hits: Klewicki, Ruehle. Stolen bases: Pink, Nelson, Manion. Sacrifices: Owen, Ruehle. Double plays: Mun- roe to Bolster to Owen; Duncan to Bolster to Owen; Klewicki to Morri- son to Owen. Left on bases: Michi- gan 7; Michigan State, 10. Wild pitch: Barry. Losing pitcher: Barry Winning pitcher: Munroe. Umpires Lindsay and Knode. , CHEERLEADING TRYOUTS All eligible students, interested in trying out as cheerleader, should report at 5 P.M. today to the north end of Yost Field House. Art Treut Head Cheerleader . . .. ... .. THE SHOW IS ON! with a Complete Summer Wardrobe of PRLM BEflCH CLOTHING from Van Joven's . . E A Palm Beach Shetlands Available in white and natural shades. Single - breasted sport model, with pleated trousers. An ide'l fabric for sport wear either as full suit or mixed suits. $16.75 Palnm Beach for your lighter montents These smart suits are tailored by Goodall--the same Summer Wear Specialists who make Palm Beach Cloth. Tailored to fit perfectly -with collar that hugs the neck -with weight-free shoulder lift -with edges that will not puck- er. 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