l3, 1944 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Baseball Team Wolverines Seek Fifth Straight Win of Season Broncos To Send Ace Hurlers to Mound in Effort To Halt Maize and Blue Victory String To Meet Western Michigan Today With four games stowed away in the win column this season, Coach, Ray Fisher's baseball aggregation prepared to tangle with a Navy-load- ed Western Michigan nine at 4 p.m. today in the first of a two-game, series here. Bronco Coach John Gill has a 26- man squad composed of marines,; Navy trainees and only three civilians this year. His charges will come to Ann Arbor with a record of three wins against Iowa, Fort Sheridan and Fort Custer, and an 11-inning tie with Northwestern. Western's strength appears to rest mainly in its fine pitching staff, which will include lefty Warren Bid- dIe, a veteran from last year's Bronco campaign who will probably start the first game against the Wolver- ines. Ray Louthen, a righthander, is scheduled to start the second contest for Western Michigan, and has a record of one win against no defeats for the season. Southpaws May Cause Trouble Thee Wolverine sluggers have had some trouble in hitting left-handed hurlers, and although they knocked Biddle out of the box in his freshman start against them last year, they Golf Squad To Engage Notre Dame, Wildcats Linksters Also To Tee Off Against Western Tomorrow, the Wolverine golf squad leaves for South Bend where it will compete in a triangular match with Notre Dame and Northwestern; also on the same trip, the linksters will be seeking honors at Western Mich- igan. The well known Michigan-North- western rivalry, which has been going for 22 years, has always added spark and color to the golf season. The Wildcats and Wolverines first met in 1921 and since that initial match the teams have only missed one year, and that was in 1922. This year, the Maize and Blue opened the Big Ten season by defeat- ing the Purple, 13-8, and the Wildcats will have a chance to avenge the loss Saturday at South Bend. Meet Irish for Sixth Time The Michigan-Notre Dame links- men will meet for the sixth time Sat- urday, and even though the teams have only been playing each other since 1938, both squads are looking toward a hard-fought match. Also, for the first time in athletic history, the Wolverine golf team will be meet- ing the Broncos at Kalamazoo, and the return match will be played here May 7. Coach Courtright's Yharges opened the 1944 season with two victories, one each against the University of Detroit and Northwestern, and have suffered one defeat at the hands of Ohio State last Saturday. Tews Is High Man' The high man for Michigan to date has been Jack Tews, who has been shooting in the 70's, and Court- right said. that all the golfers should be hitting their stride soon now that the weather has given them the op- portunity to practice. Concerning the matches this week- end, Coach Courtright said that "the golfers will be better than they were against Ohio State, and are all work- ing hard to win." The linksmen who will be making the trip are Tews, Phi: Marcellus, Johnny' Jenswold, Pau O'Hara, Tom Messinger and Duncan Noble. will undoubtedly find his mound work much improved with experience. Bernie Compton is the only veteran besides Biddle returning to the Bron- co lineup this year. Compton played shortstop for Gill last season. How- ever, reserve catcher Bill Kowalski will be seeing action, although he is sharing starting assignments with Bill Ward, who has played two years of ball with Western Illinois. Tom Hill may also get in the lineup as a backstop because of his experi- ence as a reserve catcher and first- sacker at Michigan State last year. Hill is also listed as a first baseman. Lost Five in '43 Western lost five games out of an eleven-game card last season. The Broncos were defeated by the Wol- verines in extra innings and also dropped decisions to Notre Dame, Ohio State, Wisconsin and Michigan State. However, they took Michigan by a 4-2 count in their second en- counter with them. They also won a game from Wisconsin, and their loss to the Badgers came in a tight 2-1 contest. Western has shown signs of plenty of power at the plate in. its previous games, and has also displayeda fair brand of fielding. With the high class hurling the team is likely to get, the Broncos should be able to come through with sufficient support to be plenty troublesome afield. Hope for Even Break The Western squad is hoping for an even break with the Wolverines, and then for a chance to clinch the four-game series they will play against Michigan this season with a pair of wins when Coach Fisher's men tangle with them in Kalamazoo June 16 and 17. Gill, appointed head football coach in '42, is coaching the baseball squad at Western for the first time since 1941. In 12 seasons with the Bronco diamond squad, Gill won 60 games and lost 13 for an .822 average. PROBABLE LINEUPS BRONCOS WOLVERINES Gorguze-.... CF..........Lund Milosevich ......SS...... Blanchard Hovanec .......1B.......Swanson Rotman-.......RF....... .. Wiese Morton ........ 3B........Farnyk Krupa...... .LF......... Gregor Compton .......2B....... Ketterer Ward or Kow'ski C...... Stevenson Biddle...... ...P.......Bowman Owners Enter .Derb y Horses LOUISVILLE, Ky., May 4.-(_)- Owners of the horses nominated for the 70th running of the Kentucky Derby Saturday must decide by noon tomorrow whether they want to put up $500 each to enter their mounts in the $75,000 classic. Wherever two or more gathered to- gether there was but one subject- the Derby. Tips were a dime a dozen. Today the condition of the racing strip entered into the conversations, which often turned into hot argu- ments, as an all-day rain soaked the track. The weather man, however, promised fair weather for tomorrow and, barring additional moisture, the oval figures to be in good condition by post time, about 4:45 p.m., Central War Time, Saturday, No matter where the conversations started, they almost always ended up with: "Stir Up is the horse to beat." The stimulus offspring from Mrs. Payne Whitney's Greentree Stable is the current 8-5 favorite with the - probability that his odds will drop a still lower if the track should be 1 muddy. Trainer John Gaver sent the I gelding out from his final serious a workout this morning and he stepped off the mile of sloppy going in 1:43. Tennis Team To Face Notre Dame Squad Irish, Victorious in Two Meets, Present Well-Balanced Outfit By DAVE LOEWENBERG Michigan's tennis squad, fresh from three overwhelming triumphs over Western Michigan and Chicago, is now preparing to face Notre Dame at South Bend Saturday, in what promises to be one of the highlight matches of the season. The Irish have one of the finest teams in the Midwest, as evidenced by their smashing 8-1 and 7-2 triumphs over Northwestern and Wis- consin respectively. The Irish squad is well-balanced and presents a host of experienced performers. Playing in the number one singles position for Notre Dame is Charley Sampson, a veteran of last year's championship Buckeye squad. Samp- i ON THE REDOUND by Jo Ana. Peterson MORE THAN ONE hard earned dollar will ride on the shiny hides of the speedy entries in the most famous of the spring classics, the Kentucky Derby, which will be run off tomorrow. Long the most glamorous of races, the famed "run for the roses" always brings racing fans to a high pitch for several weeks before the actual day of the event. This year's Derby promises to be one of the best in several years- not that any of them are dull affairs-but the field this year seems to be wide open, and as many as 18 entries may well go to the post at starting time Saturday. Not since War Admiral slipped home ahead of 19 rivals in 1937 have there been more than 15 horses running in the famed Louisville classic, and if all the possible starters do leave the post, the winner's share will run to $66,000, some $2,000 more than that garnered by Shut Out in 1942. This morning the starters will "be ascertained when the $500 entry fee must be posted. From then on in, it's no longer a question of what horsese will run-but what horse will win. In the Derby Trial, run off Tuesday, Broadcloth cleaned up conclusively, finishing six lengths ahead of Broad Grin, who had been named as running mate for the highly touted Stir Up, Mrs. Payne Whitney's outstanding three- year-old. As a result Broad Grin will not be running, though Broadcloth will, as will Rockwood Boy and American Eagle, who finished third and fourth respectively in the trials. RIGHT on the heels of the announcement that Broad Grin would not run came additional news from the Whitney Greentree Stables to the effect that possibly Stir Up, labeled to go postward as an even money standout, may not run either. Stir Up, winner of the recent Flamingo stakes was reputed to be long on speed but short on endurance, and as a result the mile and a quarter track at Churchill Downs might be too much for him. This rumor has gained ground, and because it has been widely talked about, two other entries, Shut Up and Sky- tracer have become highly favored. Other starters who did not enter the Derby Trials, but are certain starters for the event, are Autocrat, Alorter, Bell Buzzer, Brief Sigh and Challenge Me. Challenge Me is an interesting outsider, a Chicago-owned runner with the reputation of a "pep" horse. Challenge Me has been brought up on vitamins, and if they are as potent as the advertisements would lead one to believe, perhaps Challenge Me would be as good an entry as any to back. If Stir Up runs, it will be with Eddie Arcaro, double Derby winner, " up; and that looks like a hard combination to beat. There's another little horse, though, runner un in the Chesapeake stakes, a little horse with a nice dreamy name and what has often been labeled "a fighting chance"-that's Pensive. ' That's not where the money will ride, but we'll stick there anyhow. Fielding H. Yost, Michigan's "grand old man of football," was released for a brief time from the University Hospital yesterday and visited his home for an hour. He then returned to the hospital, but will probably be permanently re- leased sometime next week. Yost has been confined since April 11. /%-1A.'ra,4. R AS, 3 E. gVA/E C . /S',7SAS WESTERN MICHIGAN'S INFIELD-which has played such consistent ball as the Broncos gained three victories and a tie in their first four games, will have to be at its peak in the coming contests with the Wolverines today and tomorrow. Michigan also is undefeated in four tilts. DOWN TO THE CELLAR: Browns Continue Winning Ways As Tigers Skid into Last Place' ST. LOUIS, May 4.-(AP)- The Detroit Tigers suffered their first shutout of the season today, a 2 to 0 decision to the St. Louis Browns on the five-hit pitching of the veteran Nelson Potter that tumbled Detroit into the American League cellar. The pace-setting Browns thus took a 2 to 1 series edge over the Tigers who return tomorrow to Briggs Stad- ium where Frank (Stub) Overmire will face the Chicago White Sox in the opener of a four-game fight over. the cellar position. Detroit .....000 000 000-0 5 1 St. Louis .,... 001 010 00x-2 6 0 Gentry and Richards; Potter and Hayworth. White Sox Whip Tribe . CLEVELAND, May 4.-()--Chica- go's White Sox won a 2 to 1 decision behind the southpaw pitching of rookie Eddie Lopat today, to end a series with the Cleveland Indians at two games apiece. Chicago ... , 000 - 200 000-2 6 0 Cleveland .....100 000 0-1 9 1 Lopat and Tresh; Kennedy, Poat and Susce, Rosar. PITTSBURGH, May 4.-(IP)--Af- ter wavering in the first inning to allow St. Louis three runs, big Max Butcher settled down behind excel- lent support today and gave Pitts- burgh a 6-3 victory and the series, three games to one.- The tall West Virginian gave up four hits and a base on balls in the first frame for the Cards' three runs and then steadied to scatter four more St. Louis hits while his mates rallied with a ten-hit attack. St. Louis ....30 000 000-3 8 0 Pittsburgh . 000 103 02x-6 10 3 M. Cooper, Brecheen, Wilks and O'Dea, Mancuso; Butcher and Lopez. Braves Shellack Giants-... NEW YORK, May 4.-(A)- The Boston Braves whipped the New York Giants 8-4 to hand the New Yorkers their fourth consecutive defeat. Con- nie Ryan, ex-Giant, led the Boston attack with two singles and a home run, driving in four runs. New York .. 010 102 000-4 9 1 Boston .....001 420 01x-8 11 2 Pyle, Feldman, Seward and Lom- bardi; Hutchinson, Barrett, Kluttz. son was Big Ten singles champion in the number two brackets last season. According to Coach Leroy Weir, Sampson had little difficulty in win- ning the title. Evert Is Experienced Notre Dame's second man is Jerry Evert, fresh from his spectacular achievement in Illinois prep circles. Evert is a hard-hitting freshman with plenty of tournament experience. He is one of the Midwest's top-ranking junior stars and his tennis record is a very enviable one. Jimmy Evert, Jerry's brother, was top man at Notre Dame last year and the younger Evert is now attempting to carry on the tradition of this tennis-playing family. Changes in Lineup Possible Jimmy Griffin, Sandy Warshawsky Ed Putterman and Bob Black com plete the Irish roster. Black is th only singles performer who suffere a defeat in the two matches agains the Wildcats and the Badgers. Wis consin's number six man, Bill Ed mondson, took the measure of thi Irish netter. At present, Coach Weir is concen trating on ironing out the flaws which showed up in last week-end's en- gagements. Weir indicated that som changes might be made in the singles lineup, but that the doubles team will remain intact. I e r S S1 I e d .t i I.I enio9l MAY f ESTIVAL MUSIC * Major League Standings... Ii AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet t. St. Louis .... . ,.12 New York ..... 7 Boston .........6 Philadelphia.... 5 Washington ..., 5 Cleveland .......6 Chicago ........ 5 Detroit ......... 5 3 4 7 6 6 8 8 9 .800 .636 .462 .455 .455 .429 .385 .357 GB 3 5 5 5 5% 6 6V? NATIONAL LEAGUE' W L St. Louis .......10 4 Cincinnati ......8 4 Philadelphia .... 8 4 New York .......7 6 Brooklyn .......7 6 Pittsburgh ......5 6 Boston.........4 10 Chicago .,........1 10 Pct. .714 .667 .667 .538 .538 .455 .286 .091 G 1 1 21 2 3 6 7 B % *AT HILL AUDITORIUM * AT HOME (ON RECORDS) You will find an extensive collection of albums and single records by the Philadelphia Symphony and other May Festival artists at the MUSIC SUOP Operated by Musicians for Music-Lovers YESTERDAY'S RESULTS St. Louis 2, Detroit 0. Chicago 2, Cleveland 1. Only games scheduled. TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Detroit. St. Louis at Cleveland. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Pittsburgh 6, St. Louis 3. Boston 8, New York 4. Cincinnati at Chicago, cold. Only games scheduled. TODAY'S GAMES Cincinnati at St. Louis. Pittsburgh at Chicago. l lhi nt Branklvtn 205 East Liberty Phone 3675 Washington at Philadelphia. Philadep *a a y_"_ __ _ _ _ _ Boston at New York. New York at Boston. 4 %7 +'7 ,ie . 'I % ' 7,_ ' 'I IM Softball Tilts Start Next Week Michigan's Intramural sports pro- gram, under the supervision of Earl Riskey, gets under way against next week with a full schedule of softball games. The first week of scheduled tilts will not count towards league play, but will enable the team managers to get a line on the material they have. Games will be played at 7 p.m. on Ferry Field and entries for teams will be accepted until Saturday, May 6. Anyone desiring further informa- tion should get in touch with Riskey at the IM Building, 2-2101. i Hey, Mate! fla U' fbwoa4 the ( A Kl im- "0STOMP For Servicemen and Coeds Saturday 3 to 5 i ii 11 1