. ..W$U$BDA Y, , MAY 6, 1943 THE MICHIGAN DAILY VAGE THREE XUUXSDAYI MAY 6, 1943 I A1IJ~ THREE Second Big Ten Match for Netmen with Chicago Today (i'. Michigan Seeks First Triumph In Conference Maize and Blue Squad Favored in Battle with Strong Maroon Team By HARVEY FRANK Opening a three-day stand against ti 'ten opponents, Michigan's ten- xiis team will play its second Confer- ence match against the University of Chicago today at Chicago. The Wolverines, beaten 5-4 in their first Big Ten match by Illinois, will stay in the Windy City to take on Ohio State tomorrow, and then will take the short jaunt to Evanston to meet Northwestern on Saturday. " Despite the loss of all six of last year's lettermen the Maroon squad is, still dangerous. Wally Michel, number five man last year, played' #%umber one for them in the earlier matches, but was expected to be lost to the armed services before the sea- son was half over. 'thus, Earl Theimer and Grover Daly, members of Chicago's "B" team last year, will probably start at one and two against the Wolverines to- day. Frank Trovillion, Phil Glotzer, and Harry Tully will play three, four, fnd five, with the sixth spot still Undecided. *For the Wolverines it will be Jinx Johnson .at one, Roger Lewis, two; Roy Bradley, three; Fred Wellington, four; Roy Boucher, five; and Fred Sleator, six. .The doubles will probably line up as: they have all year. Lewis and Wellington will play one; Johnson and Bradley, two; and Boucher and Merle Brown, three. 'Last year Chicago tied the Maize and, Blie for second place in the Onference, with their ace, Cal Saw- yier, winning the number one singles crown. So far this year the Maroon team has defeated Minnesota, 8-1, in a Big Ten match. The Wolverines will be favored,1 however, to .take their first Confer- ence win of the season. Only Home Track Meet of Season Saturday Nine To Open Series At Purdue Tomorrow Faces Buckeye Flash Buckeye, Spartan Cindermen To Run in Triangular Meet c, By JOE McHALE The Wolverine baseball team will be facing virtually an unknown quantity when it faces the Purdue Boilermaker squad in the first game of a two-game series tomorrow at Lafayette. The Boilermakers have had no Conference games as yet, while Michigan will be fighting to keep its hold on first place, a position it oc- cupies Jointly with Wisconsin at the present time. Although they did win two games last week-end from St. Joseph, the Boilermakers took both by narrow margins. Earlier in the spring Pur- due played the Cleveland Indians, but since Cleveland pitchers per- formed for both teams, not much Paul Dean Starts On Comeback Trail ST. LOUIS, May 5.-(Y)-The box score of the Detroit Tigers-St. Loius Browns' series opener Tuesday hints at the drama of a former star pitcher starting a comeback attempt against the team he beat twice in the memor- able World Series of 1934. In cold print, it listed "Dean" as a pitcher for the Browns-a terse identification of the once great Paul Dean, who paired with Brother Dizzy to reach baseball fame in the Gas- house Days of the St. Louis Cardi- nals. In the 1934 World Series against Detroit, "Me 'n' Paul" each won two games after pitching a total of 49 victories during the regular season. Arm trouble forced Paul out of the major league and he tried without success to return with the Cardinals and then with the New York Giants before the Browns bought him from Houston, via Washington, this win- ter. indication of Purdue's strength could be gained from this game. The Lou- isville Colonels were also played dur- ing the spring training season. This year the Lafayette team has three letter-winners as its core with a star sophomore, a sprinkling of freshmen and some service men fill- ing in the vacant spots. The 'chief weakness seems to be behind the plate, for the backstop is a converted infielder, Walt Hesse. Leading the pitching staff is senior letter-winner Ed Misselhorn. Not much is known about him, either, for he didn't pitch too much last year and didn't appear against the Wol- verines. He is reported to be in fine form, however, along with Irv Class- man, who will probably pitch the Saturday encounter. In the outfield will be Paul Friend at left field, one of the three letter- winners, scrappy little Henry Strain in center and Charles Wright in right. Stram has received his orders to report for induction Saturday and may not be available. Ehlers Leading Prospect The leading infield prospect is Ed Ehlers, sophomore who starred on the Boilermaker basketball team. He holds down the third base post. Bill Burghardt, veteran shortstop and the third letter-winner on the squad, is counted on to furnish some more punch to the outfit. Jim Jennings will be the first sacker, and Jack Irmsher will cover second. The Wolverines will go into tomor- row afternoon's contest with three wins and one loss in Conference competition. A pair of wins are al- most essential to keep in the race for the title, and, "If we don't make too many mistakes and have a fair amount of luck, we ought to take the series," according to Coach Ray Fisher. Major Leaoue Standings 6 , Its a SLACK seaSOn A .F yam, ."". .'A1.. AMERICAN LEAGUE W L New York . .............9 3 Cleveland ............8 4 Detroit ...............7 4 Washington ...........8 6 St. Louis ..............4 6 Philadelphia ..........5 9 Boston ................4 8 Chicago ..............3 8 Detroit 5, St. Louis 1. New York 4, Boston 3. Washington 8, Philadelphia Pct. .750 .667 .636 .571 .400 .357 .333 .2731 1. I CHUCK PINNEY . .Wolverine star wuo will face Ohio State's ace Dallas Dupre in the low hurdle race and broad jump here Saturday. Over mire Stars As Tigers Whip St. Louis, 5- ST. LOUIS, May 5. -(P)- Little Frank (Stub) Overmire pitched the Detroit Tigers to their fourth succes- sive 1943 victory over the St. Louis Browns by coming up with a neat four-hit 5 to 1 triumph today for his second major league success. Overmire, five-foot, seven-inch rookie southpaw from Grand Rapids via Western Michigan College who beat the Cleveland Indians 4 to 1 on a five-hitter in his big league de- but, was just as efficient today. The Tigers knocked the veteran Nelson Potter out of action with four runs in less than two innings, and that's all Overmire needed. The Brownies didn't get anything that resembled a hit until Mike Chartak singled to center with two out in the fifth. Two innings later the Browns clustered their remaining three hits for the sole run. Stub Issues Two Walks Noted for his pin-point control, Overmire issued the relatively large total of two passes today. He didn't strike out anybody. He merely in- duced the Brownies to hit harmless infield grounders or lazy outfield flies. Overmire's buddy, Dick Wake- field, had five chances in left field. The Tigers meanwhile gathered nine hits against four enemy hurlers to compile five runs, their largest scoring total of the season. The first inning rally produced three runs, all after two were out, and was the best. Big First Inning Joe Hoover fanned and Ned Harris popped out, but Wakefield was safe on George McQuinn's bad throw to Potter, who was covering first. Rudy York walked, and then Pinky Hig- gins, Rip Radcliff and Jimmy Blood- worth punched successive singles that drove in a run each. Potter got out alive by fanning Dixie Parsons. In the second Overmire and Hoov- er went out, but Harris and Wake- field walked and York singled Har- ris home before Rookie Fred Sanford came in to retire Higgin and the side. Sanford got along all right until the fourth when, with one out, Hoov- er singled and stole second. Harris tripled him home. The Tigers went scoreless there- after with ex-Tiger Archie McKain and Bob Muncrief working the last three frames. Detroit .......310 100 000-5 9 0 St. Louis .....000 000 100-1 4 1 Overmire and Parsons; Potter, San- ford (2), McKain (7), Muncrief (9) and Ferrell. By JACK MARTIN Cindermen from Ohio State, Mich-< igan State, and Michigan clash at Ferry Field this coming Saturday in the Wolverine's first and only home track meet of theoutdoor season.m The Maize and Blue have a special incentive for a victory over the Buck- eyes this year. They remember all too well the trip to Columbus last May and the Bucks' stunning 81 2/3' to 40%/3 triumph; consequently, ven- geance is the keyword now. Ohio State's squad has been hard hit by calls from the armed forces and by ineligibility this season. Many of last year's championship outfit are gone. Bob Wright, Ohio's hurdle king, came upon eligibility woes in the in- door season, and they continued into the outdoor meets. Wright was Big Ten champion in both the highs and lows, and his loss is a very decided setback for the Bucks. And Russ Owen is absent from Ohio's entry list. Owen won the 440 in last May's Michigan-Ohio dual battle, nosing out the Wolverines' Bob Ufer by a yard for an unexpec- ted victory. Leroy Collins, who is also gone, nipped the Michigan ace, too. George Hoeflinger, another hurdle star, is lost to the Bucks. Hoeflinger was second to Wright in the highs in last season's dual meet. Further losses are Jim Trepanier and Chet Thomas, sprinters. Trepanier placed second in both the 100 and 220 in last year's contest, while Thomas won the 60-yard dash in the indoor en- counter with Ohio here in February. Regardless of these Buckeye dis- Major League Highights.. BOSTON, May 5.- (P)- The New York Giants swept a doubleheader from the Boston Braves today, 5 to 1 and 7 to 3, winning the second game on the strength of a six-run sixth inning after homers by Buster Maynard and Sid Gordon had pro- pelled them to victory in the opener. BROOKLYN, May 5.- (P)- The Brooklyn Dodgers collected 23 hits today to overwhelm the Philadelphia Phillies 18 to 6 behind Max Macon, who gave a dozen safeties but al- lowed no scoring till the sixth inning. The Brooklyn blows included Dolph Camilli's second homer of the spring. * * * CHICAGO, May 5.- ()- Catcher Chico Hernandez's sharp double play grounder hopped over second base- man Jimmy Brown's shoulder to score Heinz Becker from second with one out in the 14th inning today and gave Claude Passeau, veteran Chi- cago Cub right-hander, a 2-1 mara- thon decision over Max Lanier, St. Louis Cardinals' southpaw. * * * PHILADELPHIA, May 5.- (P)- Jumping on relief pitcher Sam Har- ris for five runs in the eighth, the Washington Senators trounced the Philadelphia Athletics 8-1 in the second game of a series today. * *r CLEVELAND, May 5.-(A')-Rookie Dick Culler lined a two-run double off tiring Cleveland relief pitcher Allie Reynolds in the eleventh inn- ing today to give the Chicago White Sox a 5 to 2 triumph in the second game of a twin bill after Chubby Dean won the opener for the Indians, 2 to 1. NEW YORK, May 5.- ()- A balk by rookie Anton Karl with the basses loaded in the last half of the ninth inning gave the New York Yankees the deciding run today in a 4 to 3 victory over the Boston Red Sox, who had tied the score with a two-run flurry in the top half of the frame. - I advantages, however, Saturday should not see any pushover for the Wolverines, by any means. Ohio still has seasoned runners on hand who may turn the trick. These are led by Dallas Dupre, NCAA broad jump champion. Dupre has leaped 24' 8". In February's in- door meet here he was expected to break the Field House record, but a leg injury received at the Michigan State Relays the week before pre- vented him from doing so. Besides the broad jump, Dupre is a point-getter in the low hurdles and dashes. He was second in the lows in both the Ohio meet and the Con- ference last year, and also took sec- ond place in the 220 dash. One of the highly anticipated fea- tures of this Saturday will be the low hurdle race between Dupre and Michigan's Chuck Pinney. Pinney captured the 60-yard lows in the Indoor Conference last March; in fact, he never lost a race all season. Warren Jones, a consistent place- winner in the half-mile, will also be present, together with the Buckeyes' Hatfield, who has been dangerous in the sprints this season and may be ready for a first place Saturday. Golfers Play Second Match With Spartans Michigan's golf team will go to East Lansing Saturday to meet Mich- igan State's linksmen in the second match of the season between the two schools. Wolverines handily defeated the Spartans, 121/-21/2, in the matches here two weeks ago. Captain Ben Smith beat George Zimmerman, State's number one man, 2%-1. Bonisteel and Ludolph each captured three points from their opponents. Hicks, another Spartan, made only 1/ point off Bob Fife, and John Leidy tied his rival, Jim Davis, 12-11/2. Michigan State linksmen did not gain any points in the reserve match- es, going down to a 12-0 defeat at the hands of the Wolverine's alter- nates. Coach Ben Van Alstyne's Spartan team has looked promising this year, but has not been the strong group that faced the Maize and Blue in past years. This match scheduled for Saturday will be a prelude to the one with Ohio State here Monday. It will afford the Wolverines more practice in actual competition before they meet the powerful Buckeyes in their third Big Ten match. The Michigan golfers will be seeking their first Conference victory at that time. COLLEGE BASEBALL Ohio U. 12, Ohio State 1. Camp Grant 12, Chicago 1. ONLY FOR ELECTRICITY UFACI __ / A S 'V ::.::5 S. .Jtt . t J F r a For comfort and style we have your choice in slacks of gab- ardine, twill, twist, light weight flannel, and Badford cords. $2.95 to $8.95 Cleveland 2-2, Chicago 1-5 (secondj game, 11 innings). * * * NATIONAL LEAGUE N I Brooklyn ...... St. Louis...... *Pittsburgh . Boston ......,.. *Cincinnati New York ...,.. Chicago ....... Philadelphia W L ,.... 10 3 . 7 5 ,... . 7 5 ,.. ,. 5 5 ....,. 6 6 .5 8 4 8 3 7 Pct. .769 .583 .583 .500 .500 .385 .333 .300 r 570 . i-d, 7-..ON F AUfP-A1 I CL.OT IER RRS "eWhere the Good Clothes Come From" 119 SOUTH MAIN STREET, ANN ARBOR S *Playing night game. Brooklyn 18, Philadelphia 6. Pittsburgh at Cincinnati (night game). Chicago 2, St. Louis 1. New York 5-7, Boston 1-3. in the total average cost of WAR PRODUCTION m 19 have a date Aahte 11 4 dsp Saturday, 'Music Dy si ; 7 :on 4Th r / / - \ 11 Iii ~ ~ ,::..--- .-. IF YOU TORE off one small corner of a dollar bill; that would give you some idea of the cost of the electricity used in manufacturing war products. Only 1I/z per cent of the total cost of war production, on the average, goes for electricity: 981 per cent goes for materials, labor, plant and equipment, etc. Yet electricity plays a most important part in turning out tanks and planes and guns and ships, and the thousand- and-one other weapons of war. Without electric power, scarcely a wheel would turn in any factory or arsenal or shipyard in America. Not a piece of armament would be produced, not a bullet cast, not a shell turned. Electricity makes possible the machine tools used to build other machines. It powers the huge rollers in steel mills. It runs high-speed precision lathes, and giant presses, and drills, and milling and grinding machines, and motors for countless factory jobs. It melts alloy steels in the electric furnace-steels used for armor plate and tanks and guns. With induction heating, it point-hardens armor-piercing shells, and makes tough, wear-resistant parts for motors and airplane engines. Electric power is doing a vital war job at low cost. And it May 8th Sawyer 9:00 to 12:00 4 a I I :.: I II III