THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY TII2IJRSDAY, MAY 4,1961 INOIS, PURDUE: VI' Nine Faces Notre Dame, Iwo Weekend Doubleheaders E Golfers Defeat MSU Team, As Englehart Takes Honors Shooting consistently in the By PHIL BROWN Michigan's baseball team, still hurting from that 8-0 drubbing by Western Michigan, today meets Notre Dame in the first of five road games on three days. The Wolverines will play dou- bleheaders with Illinois and Pur- due before returning to Ann Arbor. Coach Moby Benedict's charges downed Notre Dame 6-3 in a con- test played on April 11, one of eight straight wins for the Wol- verines. But since that date Mich- igan has dropped four of ten games, three in conference action, so the two twin bills are especially important. Dave Renkiewicz will be on the mound for today's game with the Irish. He is Michigan's only pitcher with a perfept record, having wor one against no losses. Benedict will send Geoff Zahn and Joe Kerr to the hill in to- morrow's twin bill with Illinois. The Illini are tied with Purdue for eighth place in the Big Ten standings with a 2-4 mark, and offer the Wolverines an excellent opportunity to move up. Purdue will opposeuMichigan in a doubleheader Saturday. Bill Zepp and Jim Lyijynen will han- dle the pitching chores for the Wolverines. Michigan presently occupies third place in the conference standings with a 5-3 record, and! the four contests with , eighth- place teams could make it a little easier for the Wolverine diamond- men to improve on that. The over- all record stands at 18-8. Minnesota, with an unblemished 7-0 record is alone at the top of the standings, while Indiana's 4-2 mark puts the Hoosiers in second place. Only six games remain on the conference schedule after 'this week's action, and a 9-3 record would make a cushion for the high seventies, the Michigan golf team roundly defeated the Spar-I final two weeks of competition. tans from Michigan State, 627- As the Wolverines take the road, 655 Jim Hosler, sophomore first base- The individual performances in man from Ann Arbor leads the the eight-man contest saw Wol- hitters with .358 in 23 contests. verine Harry Englehart's low of Glenn Redmon, third baseman, 75 edge MSU's Larry Murphy who and Les Tanona, senior center- carded at 76. fielder, both are batting .305. Touted as a "warm-up match" SAM S STORE Has Levi's galore-for gals and guys over 5,000 pairs of Levi s in stock WE HAVE BUTTON LEVI'S TOO! fyou want a pair of Levi's come to SAMN STORE 122 E. Washington Open Monday & Friday Nights in preparation for the weekend's one Spartan slot was the only Northern Intercollegiate Tourna- player besides Murphy to break ment, yesterday's victory on the that barrier. Michigan links should provide the Lead off golfer John Schroeder team with the needed boost after bested McAnders' 79 by carding a a six-week lull broken only by a 78. Team captain Bob Barclay's Michigan sweep of the Alma In- 77 failed to match Murphy's ef- vitational. fort, however. Yesterday's match saw six Mich- Frank Groves holed in in 78 igan players shoot below 80 while strokes, followed by John Richart Sandy McAnders on the number and Rod Sumpter with 79s. Mark S- - -- - - Christianson tallied at 80 and Dave Graff had 81. MICHIGAN John Schroeder 78 ,.:. John Richart 79 Frank Groves 78 Rod Sumpter 79 ' Bob Barclay 71 Sarry Englehart 75 D9~Iave Graff 81 Mark Christianson 80 MICHIGAN STATE Sandy McAnders 79 Troy Campbell 833 Steve Benson 83 John Bailey 85 Larry Murphy 76 low George Buth 83 Dick Hill 85 IHal Thiess 81 Inspired Win TORONTO (A)-Terry Sawchuk, veteran 37-year-old goalie who was benched, vindicated himself and brought the Stanley Cup back to the Toronto Maple Leafs. It was Sawchuk's inspired goal -Associated Press tending that was the key to To- ronto's 3-1 victory over the Mon- NROE treal Canadiens Tuesday night that gave the Leafs the coveted illets of the National Basketball Cup, symbolic of world hockey basketball last season, averaging supremacy. e 6-foot-3 Monroe was drafted Sawchuk was benched after d their first choice, Providence's Montreal won the first game of the series. He was replaced by another veteran goalie, 42-year- old Johnny Bower, who starred as the Leafs won the next two games. Indiana OS Sawchuk got a second chance when Bower injured his thigh muscle in the pre-game warmup before the fourth game. Montreal beat him again. In the fifth game, Sawchuk rose to the occasion as The other singles players for the the Leafs won 4-1 on Montreal ice. Notre Dame meet will be, in order, He was superb against the Steve Fishback, Brian Marcus, Canadiens Tuesday night and the Jack Teeguarden, Ed Waites and crowd of 15,977 gave him a stand- Robert Pritula. ing ovation when the game ended. Dell and Fishback, Marcus and "He came up with the key Teeguarden, and Waites and Pri- saves," said Jean' Beliveau, the tula will pair off against the Irish Montreal captain. "There were doubles teams. three or four shots early in the Coach Bill Murphy cites the In- game you could usually count on diana match as the toughest hur- as goals." die yet in the netters' path to the Sawchuk made 40 saves. He conference crown. The Hoosiers stopped what seemed sure Mon- have played more games than treal goals. He robbed Beliveau Michigan and are consequently twice on close-in shots and stop- leading in the standings even ped John Ferguson three times. BULLETS GET MO Earl Monroe is shown above after signing with the Baltimore Bu Association. Monroe was the nation's highest se orer in college 1 41.5 points a game for Winston-Salem State, North Carolina. Th formally yesterday after the Detroit Pistons had formally signe Jim Walker. Monroe to Bullets I- In Draft Choice Pistons Pick Dove Following Walker; Smith, MSU Footballer, Selected Too NEW YORK (P)-The Balti- National Basketball Association. more Bullets drafted Earl Monroe. Getting two picks in the first the nation's top scorer last season round. Wednesday the Pistons also and a Little All-America, today drafted Sonny Dove of St. John's after Detroit formally made All- to go with the already signed All- America Jimmy Walker the No. 1 America Jimmy Walker of Provi- pick in the college draft by the dence. I r I Notre Dame, On Tap for The Michigan tennis team will host three home meets in as many days. Today the Wolverine netters will entertain the Irishmen of Notre Dame at 2 p.m. at the Ferry Field Courts. Two conference meets are scheduled, beginning at revised times. Friday at 2 p.m., the Hoosiers of Indiana University bring their record to Michigan. Saturday's duel with Ohio State will start at 10 a.m. instead of the originally scheduled 2 p.m. start. Michigan's unbeaten Dick Dell will be sent against Notre Dame's Brown in the number one singles, NThe'll khave to beat outth New York club of the fledgling American Basketball Association l( x t S efor the services of the springy 6- foot-8 ove. named New York's SlushCase top player. The ABA team also drafted the flashy New Yorker. a 22.4 points CHICAGO (,P-Top officials of per game shooter and a 14.8 re- the National Collegiate Athletic bounder last season. Association wade into a four-day Dishinger Back session today on "important In addition, the Pistons expect issues," including possible action Terry Dischinger, an outstanding on the University of Illinois' well- 6-7 corner man or backcourter, probed slush fund case. back from two years of army duty. A proposed national collegiate This could make the Pistons a football playoff, possible limita- power in the Eastern Division of tion of post-season bowl games, the realigned and expanded 12- and the perennial AAU vs. NCAA team pro league. hot potato also are on agendas of "If we can get some consistency the NCAA's Council. Executive at center, we'll be in good shape," Committee and Extra Events said Ed Coil, general manager of Committee. the Pistons. "We were quite for- Playoff Study tunate in getting Dove. When we The 10-man executive commit- heard that Baltimore was going tee, meeting today and Friday, to take Earl Monroe, then we felt m a y authorize a "feasibility we had a chance for Dove." study" of the American Football The Bullets announced they had Coaches Association's proposal for signed the 6-foot-3 Monroe who a national title playoff. also had been drafted by the Pitts- The Illini case, already re- burgh club of the newly formed solved by the Big Ten awaits ac- American Basketball Association. tion by the 18-member council, Led Small Colleges the NCAA's policy-making body, Monroe, of Winston - Salem along with other cases expected State, North Carolina, had aver- to be cited by the infractions com- aged 41.5 points a game last season mittee during the weekend. to lead the NCAA's Small College It is unlikely any infractions 'Division scorers. announcements will be made be- I Walker, the Providence All- fore Sunday's closing session. America, had led .the major col- Probation Expected lege scorers with a 30.4 average. NCAA punishment of IIliinois The Pistons announced Walker's for its illegal $21,000 fund is ex- signing for an estimated four- pected to be confined to probation years for upwards of $250,00 without penalty in view of the Tuesday. Big Ten's stern reprisals in MarchTedy The Big Tenforced resignation Michigan's Craig Dill was draft- of three Illini coaches, including ed in the fourth round by San football Coach Pete Elliott and Diego. Philadelphia tapped Mich- basketball Coach EHarry Combes, igan State football end Bubba basktbal Coch arryComesSmith in the 11th round. and declared five athletes perma- "I thought it was rather nice," nently ineligible. "Itho d The council is headed by the Sith said. NCAA president, Marcus L. Plant "I'd like to play" he said, but of Michigan, who also presided at added, "I'm not sure that it can a Big Ten faculty representative be worked out," when the conference directed its "I havent played basketball at most severe mandate in history Michigan State," Smith said, "I against Illinois. played in high school and had a During its sessions, the council 27-point scoring average." also may act to limit the number Formal Pick of post-season bowl games and Walker, signed to a four-year review the status of the long- contract for an estimated $250,000 standing scrap with the AAU. to $300,000, was formally picked - - No. 1 by the Pistons . They had been assigned Los An.geles' first round pick fourth in the draft by the league because Rudy LaRusso failed to join the t)st Sought I itosfo.wighis trade by the e : Lakers to Detroit. Chicago, picking third, grabbed said. "Somebody's got to do some- Clem Haskins, the 6-3 All-Amer- thing about it." ican from Western Kentucky and The two teams played again the Ohio Valley Conference's Play- last night with the mercury at er of the Year for the third 37 degrees, straight season. He averaged 22.6 Hamilton said he discussed the last season, matter at an informal meeting After Detroit, using LA's pick, of Yankee players before yester- took Dove, the New York Knicks day's game. selected Walt Fraizer, the 6-3 "We're agreed that there should whiz of Southern Illinois's small be some arbitrary cutoff point at college and NIT champions. which it is considered too cold to The other first round choices in play baseball," Hamilton said. "We the 11-round draft were: 6, Al think 40 degrees might be a good Tucker, 6-8, Oklahoma Baptist, by starting point." Seattle 7, Pat Riley, 6-3, Ken- Hamilton said he plans to talk tucky, by San Diego; 8, Tom to player representatives of ocher Workman, 6-7, Seattle, by St. American League clubs before the orkma, 6-7,aSel, by9 St. I All-Star Game in July. Louis; 9, Mel Daniels, 6-9, New Countered Griffith: "You can't Mexico, by Cincinnati; 10, Dave : ou n'tLattin, 6-7, U. of Texas at El Paso, set any temperature limit. Idon't by San Francisco; 11, Mal Gra- think it will have a chance to get ham, 6-1, New York U., by Boston, anywhere:" hm a"'hee' .and 12, Craig Raymond, 6-11, Griffith, obviously irritated by andg12, Yraig Rymonde6-11, the criticism said "If the Yankees had won Tuesday night, there Second round pickets were: 1. wouldn't have been a protest from James Jones, Grambling, Balti- New York. We lost one game this more; 2. Steve Sullivan, George- series to the weather, and from town, DC., by Detroit; 3. Byron weather predictions, we could Beck, Denver, by Chicago; 4. have lost all three games. Randy Mahaffey, Clemson, by Los "They would have had three Angeles; 5. Phil Jackson, North doubleheaders in a row when they Dakota, New York; 6. Bob Neto- came back .here, and then they licky, Drake, by San Diego; 7. Bob would really have complained." Rule, Colorado State by Seattle. COLLEGE STUDENTS Returning to Chicago '1 though both teams are undefeated in conference play. 11 SPRING FERVOR: UNION-LEAGUE Saturday, May 6th VANGUARDS DANCE ON THE DIAG in the Union Ballroom in case of rain FEE I"L i ...o. i iiI" FM French Fold Is Here! A completely unique method of folding laundered shirts. Eliminates unsightly wrinkles and crushed or curled collars. Shirts store neatly in 1/3 less space. Better than shirts on 777 hangers, Ask for French-Fold from .. . --- Too Cold T( Mercury T ST. PAUL - MINNEAPOLIS (P) Steve Hamilton, New York Yankees' player representative, said last night he would lead a movement to prohibit the playing of major league baseball games in extreme cold weather. Minnesota President C a 1v i n Griffith said club owners "would be fools if they ever consented to anything like that." Hamilton's pronouncement came after the game time temperature Tuesday night was 32 degrees and the reading at game's end was 29. "This is ridiculous," Hamilton FOLKj DANCE CLUB Friday night 8-11 BARBOUR GYM. Casual Dress Beginners Welcome Huge discounts with the International Student ID Card Air travel throughout Europe, Israel at 60% less. Same huge savings on accommodations, admissions, etc. The ID Card is a must for every traveling student. The Official Student Guide to Europe Lists student hotels, restaurants, discounts, local tours, and complete routes, schedules, prices of student flights, trains, etc. An essential com- panion to the ID Card. $1.95 Also 4-Day $31 Expo'67 Tour 4 4 I i i i l e t III a - ..a 1'! 1M 1111 II this summer? , NK, I Make the most of it at ROOSEVELT UNIVERSITY . W It ti '' I - i M5, #i a, r *31sa r s N' 11 'p ' { ;:,, . 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