six THE MICHIGAN DAILY lame Washout gainst Illinois 1' Drops 6-5 Heartbreaker to ND; rrors Plague Injured Wolverines 'M' Tennis Rips Indiana 8-1; Dell, Marcus Stage Comeback \ Big Ten Standings Baseball 1 Special To The Daily CHAMPAIGN, Ill.-The drizzle grew into a driving rain yesterday and after one inning of play, the Michigan doubleheader with the University of Illinois baseball team was called off. In that brief period, Illinois managed to jump ahead 3-2. Michigan journeys to Purdue today to take on the Boilermakers in a doubleheader. Special To The Daily SOUTHBEND, Ind. - Notre Dame, trailing by three runs at one point, rallied for two runs in the fourth and seventh innings to down the Michigan nine Thurs- day, 6-5. A squeeze bunt in the ninth pushed a runner past the injury- plagued Wolverines to give Dave Renkiewicz his first loss against one win. The Michigan squad was minus the hot bat of Andy Fisher who pulled a shoulder muscle in Tues- day's loss to Western Michigan; first baseman Jim Hosler, leading hitter, who cracked three teeth in a pitchers collision with a team mate during practice; and Jack Hurley and Joe Notz, out because of grades. Coach Moby Benedict, with only six hurlers left, decided to save standout Geoff Zahn for yester- day's game against Illinois, and elected to go with Renkiewicz. Renkiewicz gave up a walk in the bottom of the ninth to Frank Orga. Irish's Frank Kwiatkowski made it to first on a bunt when third baseman Glenn Redmon slipped trying to field it. Renkiewicz balked the two run- ners around to second and third. Notre Dame shortstop John Rodgers 2-strike bunt was fumbled by Wolverine first baseman Les Tanona as Orga crossed the plate with thewinning run. Michigan fielder John Arvai socked his first home run of the season in the second inning to tie the score at one all. Catcher John Kraft singled to left and Dick Uhlmann was.safe on the pitcher's throwing error. Chuck Schmidt's grounder to short was likewise thrown away, Kraft scoring and Uhlmann going to third. Uhlmann and Schmidt scored on successive wild pitches Sophomore net star Dick Dell beat tennis player named Brown yesterday after falling to another Browne from Notre Dame the day before. The Michigan team swept all matches except the final doubles to take the Indian Hoosiers 8-1. Dell scored off Dave Brown 6-2, 6-0 to keep his Big Ten record unblemished at five wins and no losses. Brian Marcus also came back to win after losing a tough match yesterday against Notre Dame's Pasjit Singh. Marcus put away Mike Bear 12-10, 6-1. Pete Fishback had an easy time with the Hoosiers' Mike Nolan in the number three singles, winning 6-1, 6-2. Dell and Fishback went down to the wire against Brown and Nolan before pulling away in the final set of the number one doubles. The scores were 4-6, 6-4, 6-4. J 1 1 i 1 REMOVE 'TRAMP': NCAA To Investigate Chance For Grid Tourney Ron Teeguarden, Ed Waits and Bob Pritula all registered wins against the first-place Indiana team, knocking the Hoosiers out of the running to take sole pos- session of the Big Ten race. Marcus and Teeguarden dis- posed of Bear and Mike Meis 6-3, 6-3; but Waits and Pritula fell in an anticlimactic match to Bob Gray and Dave Schumacher 6-4, 4-6, 6-4. SINGLES Dick Dell (M) d. Dave Brown, 6-2, 6-0; Brian Marcus (M) d. Mike Bear, 12-10, 6-1; Pete Fishback (M) d. Mike Nolan, 6-1, 6-2; Ron Teeguarden (M) d. Bob Gray, 4-6, 6-3, 6-2; Ed Waits (M) d. Mike Meis, 6-2, 6-2; Bob Pritula (M) d. Dave Schumacher, 6-4, 6-1. DOUBLES Dell, Fishback (M) d. Brown, Nolan, 4-6, 6-4, 6-4; Marcus, Teeguarden (M) d. Baer, Meis, 6-3, 6-3; Waits, Pritula (M) d. Gray, Schumacher, 6-4, 4-6, 6-4. Tennis Northwestern (4-3) Wisconsin (5-2) MICHIGAN (4-0) Michigan State (4-0) Indiana (3-2) Illinois (2-3) Ohio State (1-5) Iowa (2-3) Minnesota (1-4) Purdue (0-4) POINTS 36 35 32 31 31 26 18 12 12 0 Minnesota MICHIGAN Wisconsin Michigan State Indiana Ohio State xPurdue Iowa Illinois Northwestern x-late game 8 5 5 4 4 4 2 3 2 0 3 4 4 4 4 4 5 4 7 1.000 .625 .556 .500 .500 .500 .333 .375 .333 .222 not reported. Midwest LaCrosse Assoc. Denison Ohio State Kenyon Oberlin Bowling Green Ohio Wesleyan Wittenberg Michigan State Notre Dame Columbus Wooster Ball State MICHIGAN Ashland Birmingham Cleveland Defiance Indianapolis Ohio Univ. W 5 5 5 3 4 2 2 2 1 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 L 0 0 1 1 2 2 2 5 4 5 0 0 3 2 0 3 0 1 2 T Pct 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 .833 0 .750 0 .666 0 .500 0 .500 0 .285 0 .200 0 .167 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 .000 0 .000 0 .000 0 .000 0 .000 0 .000 0 .000 YESTERDAY'S GAMES The 5-foot-9, 178-pound speed- Minnesota 9, Iowa 3 ster compiled a record of 639 Ohio State 4-2, Wisconsin 1-3 yards rushing on 112 carries for a Northwestern 4-4, Indiana 3-2, 5.7-yard average in his junior year (1st game, 11 inn.) at Michigan and added 499 yards Michigan at Illinois, cancelled, last year for a three-year total of rain. 1,562 yards. 3 3V2 3V2 4 4 41 5 5 61/ Back to class? Go with class. JOHN AR VAI and the Michigan nine led 4-1. Michigan's fifth run came in the fourth as Kraft scored on Schmidt's first hit in 23 at-bats, a center- field single. Notre Dame scored unearned runsin the fourth and seventh. J MICHIGAN AB R H Redmon 3b 4 0 2 Sygar 2b 4 00 Tanona 1b 4 0 1 Spicer rf 4.0 1 Aravi if 3 1 1 Kraft c 4 2 3 Uhlmann cf 4 1 0 Schmidt ss 4 1 1 Renkiewicz p 3 0 0 Totals 34 5 9 NOTRE DAME AB R H Tencza 2a 4 0 0 Kerrar c 5 2 2 Licini lb 2 2 2 Hardy If 3 011 Topolski 3b 5 0 2 Orga cf 3 1 0 Kw'kow'i rf 5 01 Rogers ss 4 0 1 Arnzen p 41 2 Totals 35 6 11 MICHIGAN 040 100 000-5 NOTRE DAME 100 200 201-6 E-Tanona, Spicer, Schmidt, Rog- ers, Arnzen. DP-Michigan 2, No- tre Dame 2. P0-A-Michigan 24-10, Notre Dame 27-19. LOB-Michigan 6, Notre Dame 14. 3B-Arnzen. HR - Aravi. RBI-Aravi, Schmidt, Kerrar, Licini, Hardy, Toploski. S - Uhl- man. SH-Aravi, Renkiewicz. PITCHING SUMMARY IP H R ER BB SO x-R'wiecz (L, 1-1) 8 11 6 3 9 4 Arnzen (W, 3-0) 9 9 5 2 2 2 x-Faced 3 men in 9th. WP-Arnzen 2. PB-Kerrar. U - EdBurke and Barney Zoss. T - 2:57. CHICAGO (AP) - A national championship playoff in college football was authorized yesterday by the executive committee of the National Collegiate Athletic Asso- ciation. The 10-member committee, end- ing a two-day session, directed Marcus Plant of Michigan, NCAA president, to appoint a study com- mittee to determine merit of the postseason playoff recommended by the American Football Coaches Association. Plant said he would name a representative committee as soon as possible, but the full NCAA convention must certify a playoff plan which could not be operative until the 1968 season. Duff y's Impetus The plan, given impetus last fall by Coach Duffy Daughterty of Michigan State, proposes a three- Cl tl p c t week series involving eight teams and culminating in a televised na- tional championship game. Ostensibly this would put a crimp in postseason bowl games the number of which may be placed under limit by the NCAA Council meeting here Friday through Sunday. The executive committee also revised the format of the NCAA gymnastic championships and di- rected that the trampoline event be abolished in the interest of safety. Gymnastic coaches recommend- ed the trampoline be dropped be- cause of such injury as that which ended the athletic career of Brian Sternberg, brilliant University of Washington pole-vaulter. The field for the NCAA gym- nastics finals now will include only one team instead of four and four instead of eight individuals per event qualified from each of the four regional meets. The 18-man NCAA policy- making Council is expected to act on code violations, including 'the Illinois slush fund case, before it adjourns Sunday. r 0 Schroeder'st Out in Front' Purdue led Michigan by one stroke, 780-781, at the end of 36 holes of play in the second annual Northern Intercollegiate G o 1 f Tournament over the Wolverine Course yesterday. Fourteen teams are entered in the tournament which will con- clude with a final 36 holes today. John Schroeder of the Wolver- ines, last year's winner with Alex Antonio of Ohio State, led today's field with 149, three strokes ahead of Jim Chaney and Jeff Parry of Ohio State, who were tied at 152. John Richart of Michigan and Steve Mayhew of Purdue followed with 153 apiece. Michigan State and Ohio State were close on the heels of the team leaders with 785 and 786 re- spectively. They were followed by the University of Florida with 788 and Indiana with 793. Florida's John Melnyk shot a 75 in the morning but the first nine of his second round was dis- qualified from a scoring card error. Schroeder started out with a 70 in the morning round and Richart had a 71 to give the Wolves a fast start. Afternoon jumped up due to a shifting of tee locations that made the course more difficult in the last round. GO HON'DA!. Just the ticket for campus traffic, crowded parking lots or just plain fun. And, instead of walking her to class, you can ride her to class! .Hondas are more fun than a barrel of coeds. See all the Honda models (there's one just right for you) at state St. i isia St. DO WNTOWN ShAe HONDA 3 thAr. DMa i t Authorized Sales-Service-Parts--Accessories WENK SALES & SERVICE Phone 665-8637 310 E. WASHINGTON Returning Students Note: We Moved in May M'Gymnasts Win U.S. Slots Wolverine ace trampolinist Dave Jacobs and Wayne Miller were selected to represent therUnited States at the World Trampoline Meet in London next month, fol- lowing successful bids in the U.S. Trials at Natchitoches, Louisiana. The two Michigan gymnasts also led two earlier qualifying rounds, scoring in the 9.5 range and above to secure their berths on the U.S. team. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID KNOKE I w i n --- -- 11 I Major League Standings -I AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. Detroit 11 7 .611 Chicago 11 7 .611 New York 9 8 .529 x-California 10 10 .500 x-Washington 9 9 .500 x-Boston 9 9 .500 Baltimore 9 10 .473 Cleveland 8 10 .444 x-Minnesota 8 10 .444 Kansas City 7 11 .389 X-Late games not included. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Detroit 4, Baltimore 0 Chicago 3, Cleveland 2 Washington at California (inc). Minnesota 5, Boston 2 New York at Kansas City (rain) TODAY'S GAMES Baltimore at Detroit Boston at Minnesota New York at Kansas City (n) Washington at California Chicago at Cleveland NATIONAL LEAGUE GB 1 1/2 1Y2 1% 2% 3 3 4 Cincinnati Pittsburgh St. Lbuis Atlanta Chicago Philadelphia San Francisco Houston Los Angeles New York W 16 11 11 11 9 10 9 7 7 8 L 7 6 8 8 8 10 11 15 13 13 Pet. .696 647 .579 .579 .529 .500 .450 .318 .350 .381 GB 2 3 3 4 4%/ 51/2 8%/ 71/ 7 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Philadelphia 3, Los Angeles 1 Cincinnati 14, Atlanta 7 Pittsburgh 7, San Francisco 2 Chicago 5, St. Louis 3 New York 3, Houston 2 TODAY'S GAMES Los Angeles at Philadelphia (n) Houston at New York San Francisco at Pittsburgh St. Louis at Chicago Cincinnati at Atlanta (2) PAUL CAMELET MASTER TAILOR He is not with the Camelet Brothers any more He is in business for himself. 1103 S. University above drug store 663-4381 IN a u V r I {The authentic, traditional, classic, conservative button. down. Very acceptable. The long points on this Arrow Decton Oxford are just right. Anything less would ride up. Anything more would give you too much roll. University fashion. Tapered. "Sanforized-Plus", in a wash and wear that goes past midnight without a wrinkle. Available in white, stripes and smart solid colors. $7.00 Bold New Breed by -ARRO-- + The Paulist Father is a modern man in every sense of the word. He is a man of this age, cognizant of the needs of modern men. He is free from stifling formalism, is a pioneer in using contemporary ways to work with, for and among 100 miillion-non-Catholic Amer- icans. He is a missionary to his own people-the American people. He utilizes modern techniques to ful- fill his mission, is encouraged to call upon his own innate talents to help further his dedicated goal. If the vital spark of serving God through man has been ignited in you, why not pursue an investiga- tion of your life as a priest? 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