THURSDAY, MAY 29, 3953 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE 'SEVEm THURSDAY, MAY 2S, 195S PAGE SEVEN DiamondS Wolverines Begin District iquad s es with Ohio <" - I NCAA Playoffs Tomorrow Michigan Net Team Opens Play in Big Ten Tennis Meet By DAVE BAAD Michigan's baseball team, shar- er of the Big Ten title for the sec- ond consecutive season, will open its quest of the National Collegiate championship , tomorrow after- noon, playing Ohio University at Ferry Field. The game starts at 3:30 p.m. THE TWO. concluding games of the best two out of three game series to select NCAA playoffs' District Four representative are scheduled for Saturday afternoon with the lidlifter beginning at 1:30 p.m. ' If rain should cancel either day's competition, the tourna- ment will automatically become a one game knockout affair with the winner of the first game be- ing declared District champion. The winner of the series will enter the NCAA tournament to be played in Omaha from June 11 to June 15. This is Michigan's second entrance into the tourney. * * * THE Wolverines were knocked out in the district playoffs five years ago by Western Michigan. Coach Ray Fisher would like to start ace righthander Jack Corbett in the first game against the Ohioans. Corbett, however, picked up a sore shoulder pitch- ing against Wisconsin last Fri- day and may not be ready to hurl. If this is the case, Jack Ritter, Marv Wsiniewski and Dick Yir- kosky will split the chucking Ducat Sale Students desiring additional football tickets to Michigan's six home games or to the three away contests may -make ap- plications beginning Monday June 1, accompanied by cash, at the Ferry Field Ticket Office. Each student automatically re- ceives one season ticket for the home games at registration next fall. Tickets to the three away games, Michigan State, Minnesota, and Illinois, will be $3.60 each. chores during the three game se- ries, with Garby adian ready for spot relief roles. * * 4 WISNIEWSKI, out for almost four weeks with a sore arm is throwing easily again and will be ready for a starting shot against the Bobcats. His first post injury pitching assignment ended un- successfully last Saturday when he was driven from the boxin the second inning. This was due, however, to lack ofscontrol caused byainactivity. tiHis 11/3 inning stint against the Wildcats marked the first time he had faced a batter since April 26. Frank Howell, regular center- fielder, is on the injury list with a bad foot. He injured it 6aturday when he tripped over first base trying to beat out an infield hit. The left handed power hitter may not be ready for tomorrow's series opener. * * * OHIO, champions of the Mid- American Conference, come to Ann Arbor sporting a nifty 19 won and two lost record. The Bobcats finished a half- game ahead of Western Michi- gan, a team which split two games with the Wolverines dur- ing the regular season. Western beat Michigan at Ann Arbor 5-1, but Wisniewski turned back the Broncos in Kalamazoo, 5-4. Ohio beat Western Michigan once 8-1 and dropped the return match 8-0. Either Don Kries or Jack Mell, both righthanders, will hurl Fri- day's series' opener against Mich- igan. Kries racked up six wins this spring without a setback, and Mell won seven while suffering the Bobcats' only two losses. Students tickets to the NCAA series cost 60 cents. Non-student ducats are priced at $1.20. Pasadena Pact Renewal Sees Formal Vote By the Associated Press CHAMPAIGN-The Big Ten is expected to give formal approval to a three-year renewal of the Rose Bowl football pact at its spring business meeting today. Individually, six schools have voted for renewal and four against in balloting extended over the past three months. Today's session on the conference level presumably will confirm this majority. * * * THE CURRENT three-year pact with the Pacific Coast Conference ends with the 1954 Rose Bowl game. Schools favoring renewal are Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Pur- due, Iowa and Ohio State. Those opposed: Minnesota, Northwest- ern, Michigan State and Wiscon- sin, 7-0 loser to Southern Cali- fornia in the last Rose Bowl game. Michigan State, top team in the 1952 Associated Press natonal foot- ball poll, this fall becomes eligible for Big Ten championship play for the first time and can compete in the Rose Bowl by winning the title. If a hitch develops at today's meeting of faculty representatives, it may stem from Illinois' insist- ence that a team may not play in the Rose Bowl oftener than once in three years. TOP ATHLETE-The Michigan Daily Trophy to the outstanding all-campus intramural athlete was presented yesterday to Don Peterson (right) by new sports editor Ivan Kaye (left) while intramural sports director Earl Riskey looks on. Intramral A " l-Stars In conjunction with the announcement of the All-Campus Athlete yesterday, the Residence hali and Fraternity All-Star soft- ball teams have been announced by the intramural department, and they are as follows: FRATERNITY RESIDENCE HALL c-Howie Guggenheim-Pi Lambda Phi c - Diel Wright-Allen-Rumsey lb-Dick Aspinwall-Alpha Tau Omega lb-Charles Heck-Hinsdale 2b-Warren Wertheimer-Sigma Alpha Mu 2b-Don Peterson-Gomberg ss-Roger Mulier-Alpha Delta Phi ss-Dave Longworth-Williams 3b-Jerry Rovner-Pi Lambda Phi 3b-Tom Stapleton-Taylor If-Joe Hipfel-Sigma Phi Epsilon If-Gary Morrison-Winchell cf-Lee Krumbholtz-Chi.Psi cf-BobHitchmough-Hinsdale rf-Tom Ehman-Alpha Sigma Phi rf-Dave Parks-Wenley p-Bob Schmidt-Sigma Phi Epsilon p-Larry Schleh-Hinsdale p-Jay Casemier-Lambda Chi Alpha p-Jack Labreck-Gomberg By DICK BUCK Michigan opens play in the Big Ten tennis meet this afternoon at Evanston, hoping to improve on the fifth place finish it registered on the same Northwestern courts last year. The meet runs through Satur- day when the finals will be held. * * * IN THE BEST shape they have been all season, the Michigan net- ters are strong contenders for third place behind Indiana and Michi- gan State. Also powerful enough to be in the running for this spot are Northwestern, Wisconsin, Pur- due, and Iowa. Michigan boasts a much stronger squad than last season. Although composed largely of sophomores and juniors it has staged creditable performances in dual meets, becoming exper- ienced as the campaign pro- gressed. Probably the most improved players on the team are Pete Paul- us and Bob Nederlander. Paulus, a novice to varsity play, after los- ing his first three meets in the number one spot was shifted to the second slot. Here he overcame the early season uneasiness which had been troubling him and settled down to take six of his eight re- maining contests. * * * NEDERLANDER, also getting his baptism under fire, was a ques- HAIRCUTTING For the Entire Family with a Deluxe Shoe Shine Service U. of M. Barbers 715 N. University tion mark as a number six man but quickly showed he could fill the job. He recorded seven straight wins before dropping a match to Indiana's Dick Bennett, his only loss of the season. Occupying the number one spot for the second straight Con- ference meet, Al Mann will have to overcome players such as Spartan Stan Drobac and Iowa's Norm Barnes, both of whom beat him out last time. Drobac and Eli Glazer of Indiana have downed Mann decisively in dual meet competition. Two seniors playing for the last time under the Maize and Bluc colors, Dave Mills and Maury Pelto, go as usual in the third and fourth slots. They have strength- ened the Wolverines considerably in their only season of varsity play. Number five man, "Pancho" Bob Paley, erratic but experienced, rounds out the lineup; the doubles roster also remains unchanged. 122 East Huron St. Tel. 3-4221 .ummerEmployed . . u mrOR . .. Before You Can Whistle While You Work, You've Got to Get - t on the Payroll -Once there was a Junior who had pro- write right now!' crastinated himself into a Bleak Out- "Write, schmite?" continued the Ti"? look. Two weeks from the end of the Voice. "Drag your hulking Frame out Term, he had no Summer Job lined of that chair fast, and down to the up, no Prospects, no Funds. Western Union office. The ad specifies JBrowsing through "Help Wanted", Intelligence and Initiative-you'll show his eye hit a High Octane Item. To both by applying by Telegram, and be wit "Wanted: college man of intelli- Number One Man." gence, initiative and good appearance He did-and he was. 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