I WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 1967 THE MICRIG.i 11 DAILY ,, WEDNESDAY, MAY 3,1967 TUE MICIHGA Y II&ILY WMU Defeats Cold Diamondmen Behind Overpowering 4-Hitter, 8-0 WEEK IN REVIEM Fisher C By MICHAEL HEFFER Chilling breezes and a pitcher named Charles Mestek combined yesterday to freeze the Wolverine 'nine in ,all departments as the Western Michigan Broncos walked off with an easy 8-0 victory yes- terday at Ferry Field Mestek allowed just four hits, fanned 11, and never was in seri- ous trouble. In fact, Mestek was able to coast all the way because his teammates, who threatened in nearly every ining, scored in the second, third and fourth frames. Threat Starts Bronco threats started with the very first batter, Jim Johnson, who drew a walk from Wolverine starter Joe Kerr. who was always in trouble, then was hit by Jim Redman for what appeared to be a double. a sharp grounder just in- side the third base foul line. When the dust had cleared, Johnson was on third and Redman on second. But an alert Wolverine noted that Redman had not touched first. and an appeal play to first turned his double into a ground out. This took the steam out of the Broncos first rally, but they came night back in the second. After Richard Trudeau walked and the next batter flew out, Kerr hit Bruce Roberts. Bronco catcher Richard .Brown then singled to right field, and right fielder Keith Spicer's throw in was wild, en- abling Trudeau to score. Belts Homer In the third, Redmon made up for his base-running mistake by belting his first home run of the year. Pat Locanto's double and Koselke's single started another threat which Trudeau continued by knocking Kerr out of the game with a double to left. . Kerr was replaced by Larry Guidi, Coach Moby Benedict's strong reliever. Yet before Guidi could retire the side, Roberts knocked a double to left, scoring two more Broncos For all purposes, that wvas the game, but the Broncos refused to stop, and their next attack re- sulted in a couple Wolverine mis- cues. As the sun hid itself and hands froze, the Broncos scored on a walk, an error and a single that sent a runner scoring all the way from first. In the most unusual play.of the game, Trudeau singled with runners from first and second and two out; but Trudeau thought he could make it to second on the throw. He was wrong. As the men who had been on base raced for hone. the Wolverines caught Trudeau in a rundown, chased him to first and tagged him out. It was ruled, however, that Rick Sygar, the Wolverine second baseman, had obstructed Trudeau's path. (Sygar did not have the ball at the time.) Trudeau was called safe, and Sygar was changed with an error. No Chance The Wolverines never had a chance at the plate. Two quick double plays in each of the first two innings saw to that, and Mestek's mastery over the Wolver- ines hardly wavered. While several Wolverines man- aged hard line drives, almost all were caught. Prior to yesterday the Wolverines had outhit their opponents, .269 to .2 14, but the Mid:American Conference leading Broncos altered these figures somewhat, outhitting the Wolver- ines 10-4. . The loss lowers Michigan's rec- ord to 18-8. Kerr, who took the loss, is now 3-2. E l 1 1 t 7 Zahn Pitches Twin Bill Win; Grid-Gra( Tennis Team Stays Unbeaten Prize for Michigan's Big TenC The Michigan baseball team Iowa's Dale LePrevost 6-0, 6-3. cousin 8-1 and Northwestern 6-3. Medal of Honor has be swept one Big Ten doubleheader Dell is unbeaten in four Western The netters face Notre Dame on ed to David R. (Dave) and split another over the week- Conference matches. the Ferry Field courts Thursday Kettering. Ohio. fullba end but fell behind in the league The successful road trip left the at 2 p.m. verine football teams i race as Minnesota increased its Wolverines with a 4-0 record (4-2 Meets with tough Indiana Fri- 66. pristine record to 7-0 with a pair on the season), in ideal position day at 1 p.m. and Ohio State Sat- The medal is given of wins against Purdue. for a three-meet home stand. urday at 2 p.m. offer the Wolver- the student at each Bt Twin victories by Geoff Zahn Michigan previously downed Wis- ines a chance to gain a strangle- stitution pho demons over Northwestern Friday and Jim- hold on the conference title. sit ated athliciency n Lyijynen's six-hitter in the second i k m eshnadtltc. 'Wisconsin game Saturday assured tkmnW nA m ihr eire the Michigan team of third place Ltdksmten T o Linksmh Win Ala tabeenior th with a 5-3 record and a shat at Wolverine golfers took individ- All-Scholastic team for the title when they face Minnesota ual and team honors in the Alma sons and also was ch the til hen ey ce MCollege Invitational Tournament Conference fullback in in a twin bill on May 13. nn Vriria .T hn Co eer I ck n engi. he E thr 196 Letf-hander Zahn pitched all seven innings of both games, win- ning 1-0 and 8-2. It was the first time a Big Ten pitcher had start- ed, finished and won a twin bill since Minnesota's Paul Giel in 1964. Zahn allowed only four scattered singles in the first game. Coach Moby Benedict, deciding Zahn was still going strong, sent him into start the second game and con- tinue as long as he held up. The Wolverines, paced by Les' Tanona's home run and Andy Fisher's three for three perform- ance at the plate, pushed across six runs before Northwestern's Jim Henderson hit a centerfield home run in the fourth. Zahn worked effectively, tossing only 93 and 92 pitches during the afternoon. The Wildcats managed only three hits in the second game. Michigan bowed to Wisconsin, 4-2, in the first game of what WALKER SIGNS WITH PISTONS Jim Walker, Providence All-America and the nation's top scorer among major teams last season, signed a four-year contract yesterday with the Detroit Pistons of the National Basketball Associa- tion for an estimated $250,000. The 6-foot 3-inch Bostonian, seen amove signing autographs for fans in New York, will join Dave Bing, NBA Rookie of the Year in the Pistons' backcourt. The Michigan golf team will face their first dual meet compe- tition in over a month when they go against the linksmen from Michigan State University today at 12:30 at the Michigan Course. Except for the Alma Invita- tional which the Wolverines won last week,,the golf team has not played in intercollegiate compe- tition since the Miami University Invitational in late March. "The layoff from finals has cer- tainly done us no good," said Coach Bert Katzenmeyer. "State has played more than we have and is undoubtedly better prepared for the meet." The Wolverine squad spent yes- terday afternoon on the course with the University of Florida squad. The Florida team is here in preparation for the second an- nual Northern Intercollegiate Golf Tournament to be held this Friday and Saturday. Today's eight-man meet with Michigan State will see senior John Schroeder p a i r e d with State's Sandy McAndrew in the first match. The seven other Wolverine play- ers will be John Richart, Frank Groves, Rod Sumpter, Bob Bar- clay, Harry Engelhart, Dave Graff and Mark Christianson. on Friaay. Jon Szchroeder led the golfers with a three over par 75. The team compiled a 314 score for first place in the team's first outing since the University of Miami Invitational in March. John Richart, Dave Graff and Mark Christianson all fired 79s. The Wolverines will host the Northern Collegiate Champion- ships at the 'Michigan Course this Friday and Saturday. Retains Shot Put Title Michigan shot putter Jack Har- vey defended his championship in the Penn Relays Saturday with a 58"1%" toss. The Michigan two-mile relay team marked a third-place finish, behind Villanova and Fordham. In the Ohio Relays earlier in the week, Harvey tossed the shot 58 feet 612 inches and the two- milercombo of John Reynolds, Tom Kearney, Alex McDonald and Ron Kutschinski won in 7:44.8. Larry Midlam was clocked in a wind-assisted high hurdles time of :13.8. Read and Use Daily Classifieds YANKS, CARDS FALL: Giants' Triple Play I ler this year he was aware NCAA Postgraduate Scho Award and last year he aL the Golden Helmet Award f scholarship and athletic ab: The burly 215-pound lin( er understudied fullback M9 thony as a sophomore on t Big Ten championship tea went on to win the 1965 Ron crown. Two years ago he" a starter and averaged 4. per play. During the past he scored five touchdown gained 673 yards on 131 p] a 5.1 yard average. During his varsity career he maintained a average in his engineering He plans to continue his in graduate school. By The Associated Press and fired to shortstop Hal Lanier, The San Francisco Giants exe- 'who covered second, retiring Davis, cuted the first triple play of the Lanier's relay to Willie McCovey major league baseball season in got Kranepool, last night's game against the New Nevertheless, the Giants bowed York Mets. in the 12th inning as Kranepool Tommy Davis was on second trippled home the tying run and base and Ed Kranepool on first John Sullivan delivered the win- with consecutive singles in the ner with a pinch single. second inning when Ken Boyer nrwt ic ige smashed a line drive back at the Pinch-hitter Wes Parker de- pitcher. livered a two-run double in the Gaylord Perry, the Giants' 11th inning giving the Los An- starter, speared the ball, wheeled geles Dodgers a 5-3 victory over proved to be an error-studded af- " -ternoon. Fisher continued his hit- ting streak with three singles for three at-bats as Michigan reversed the score in the second game with four unearned runs to Wisconsin's two. . Badger pitcher Mike Nickles Four Yankee errors handed the scattered eight hits to take com- Twins five unearned runs, includ- mand of the opener, although ing three in the sixth inning when Wolverine second baseman Rick Mickey Mantle's first error in 133 Sygar smashed doubles in his first games dating back to 1965 opened two plate appearance and scored the door. on both efforts. Wisconsin had al- Harmon Killebrew and rookie ready taken the lead with three Ron Clark each drove in three runs in the first inning, however, Minnesota runs. Dean Chance and forced losing pitcher Bill Zepp went the first six innings for the (2-2) out of the game with the Twins, recording his third victory clinching run in the third. in four decisions. Wisconsin's infield fell apart in Dick Green's run-scoring single the second game as two errors and in the sixth inning backed Jim singles by Jim Hosler, Fisher and (Catfish) Hunter's tight pitching Lyijynen accounted for three runs and gave Kansas City a 1-0 vic- in the fourth. Two errors and a tory over Washington last night single by Fisher added the fourth after the Senators took the dou- tally in the last Michigan inning. bleheader opener 1-0 as Pete Wisconsin's run in the fifth was Richert and two relivers combined unearned and Badger firstbaseman for 4 two-hitter. Hunter halted Walt Pinnow added a futile homer, the Senators' winning streak at his second of the day, in the sixth. four games by scattering seven hits in the nightcap. Tennis Takes Two Bob Gibson fired a two-hitter and Mike Shannon doubled in Tennis coach Bill Murphy's net- thred runsks.ete S tn ou dinters continued on their hot streak three runs as the St. Louis Cardi- with identical 9-0 stompings of nals blanked the Cincinnati Reds Minnesota on Friday and Iowa on 5-0 last night. Saturday. The 12-strikeout performance Number one singles player, by Gibson, 4-1, ended a four-game sophomore Dick Dell, bested Min- 1 3 i z i 1 t r BOX SCORE WESTERN MICHIGAN Johnson, of Redmon, If Locanto, 2b Koselke, lb Trudeau, 3b Schlukebir, rf Roberts, ss Brown, c Mestek, p Totals MICHIGAN Redmon, 3b Sygar, 2b Rose, 2b Tanona, If Spicer, rf Hosler, lb Nelson, c Fisher, cf Harvey, cf Forsythe, ss Kerr, p Guidi, p Zepp, p Totals W. MICHIGAN 01 MICHIGAN 0 AB R H RBI 5 2,1 1 5 3 2 0 5 12-,1 4 222 5 0 1 0 3 0 1 2 5 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 38 8 10 6 AB R H RBI 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 4 0 2 0 4 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 30 0 0 2 0 0 0 32 0 40 3421000- 1000000 Pittsburgh. J o h n Roseboro opened thel Dodgers' 11th with a single and moved to second when nobody fieled Jim Hickman's bunt. After Don Suttoon ran for Roseboro, Gen Michael sacrificed. Then Parker batted for winning pitcher Phil Regan and doubled, scoring: Sutton and Hickman. Rico Carty's three-run homer and the four-hit pitching of Den- ny Lemaster led the Atlanta Braves to a 3-1 victory over theI Chicago Cubs last night. Minnesota lumped on NewJ York s Fritz Peterson for six runs in the first inning and went on to rout the Yankees 13-4.1 / A4'" i,. losing streak for the Cardinals. nesota's Lou Swallon, 6-2, 6-1, and E-Trudeau 2, Mestek, Redmon, Sygar, Forsythe, Spicer 2. DP - WMU 2, M 1. PO-A--WMU 27-10, M 27-13. LOB-WMU 9, M 6. 2B- Locanto. Koselke, Roberts, Trudeau, Fisher. dil-Redmon. PITCHING SUMMARY IP H R ER BB SO Mestek (W) 9 4 0 0 1 11 Kerr (L) 2* 5 5 4 2 1 Guidi 4 4 3 1 1 2 Zepp 3 1 0 0 2 3 *-Faced four men in the third. WP-Mestek. HBP-Roberts (by Kerr). With Mohawk's Weekends Unlimited it 5cheaper to go home this weekend than to stay at school. ) (I I Big Ten Standings I Minnesota Indiana MICHIGAN Wisconsin Ohio State Michigan State Iowa illinois Purdue Northwestern W, 7 4 5 4 3 4 3 2 02 0 L 0 2 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 7 Pct. GB 1.000 - .667 22 .625 2 .571 3 .500 3%/ .500 3 .429 4 .333 4 : .333 4 .000 7 Go-home costs Stay-at-School costs Eat on Mom and Dad (They'll be glad to see you) Borrow $5 from Dad Use Dad's car (There's gas in it) No Charge +$5.OO No Charge Meals $8.25 We've, been at it But it still takes over four months to brew Carlsberg- thne ellow. See yourr best girl (This must be worth something) Weekends Unlimited airfare $25.00 (Fly all you want for $25) Saturday movie Gas for the car Beer and pizza (With the fellows) Miscellaneous Loss at gin rummy YOUR TOTAL COST 2.00 2.00 2.10 . 6.00 6.00 $26.35 YOUR TOTAL COST $20.00 HERE'S HOW TO TAKE OFF! 1. Pick your weekend. Fare applies from 6 a.m. Saturday to 6 p.m. Sunday. 2. Check Mohawk's passenger schedule for weekend flights from your city. Then phone Mohawk or your travel agent for specific flight reservations desired. (Ex- cept Canada) 3. Ask for positive space reservations on the flights of your choice. 4. Reservations must be made on the Wed- nesday, Thursday or Friday preceding your departure. The first leg of yourajour- ney must begin on Saturday and the last leg of your trip must begin before 6 p.m. Sunday. REMEMBER, WITH WEEKENDS UNLIM-' ITED YOU CAN FLY ANYWHERE MOHAWK FLIES AND BACK (except Canada), ALL FOR THE SAME $25, PLUS FEDERAL TAX. Hondas what's happening. On campus and off. Name the scene, you'll find Honda. Get with it on machines like this perfectly balanced Honda Super 90. Do a carefree 65 mph on the highway. Look like you're moving that fast on campus. Economy? Honda's dependable OHC 4-stroke engine delivers up to 160 mpg. Initial cost, upkeep and insurance are ridiculously low. Parking problems? Forget them. Make the scene now at any of Honda's 1,800 dealerships. Take a safety demonstration ride. Check what's happening. RESTRICTIONS: In offering the tremendous savings involved in the $25 Weekends Un-