PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY StT"AY, APRIL S, 1966 PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, APRIL 3, 1966 U .1 We don't call it Hustler' Special To The Daily TUCSON-They say that the climate is so dry in Arizona that you can't perspire, but the Michi- gan baseball team sure worked up a sweat in handing the Arizona Wildcats a 9-0 forfeit on Friday night. Yesterday afternoon the Wol- verines dropped a 14-4 decision to the Wildcats, bringing their record to 7-4-or 7-5, depending on whether or not you like to count forfeits. But first things first. Friday's night game gave promise of being more than just a ball game when Michigan got into trouble early with plate umpire Augie Acuna. In the second inning, Wolverine ne Lose~s ra Forfeits Game ' Acuna quickly called him out on strikes. catcher Ted Sizemore was ejected from the contest by Acuna for kicking dirt on the plate in pro- test of a closs call at the plate. Then head Coach Moby Benedict followed Sizemore to an early shower by arguing too strenuous- ly on the ejection. Try Bufferin, Maybe From this little skirmish it was evident that Acuna either had a headache or was wearing spikes a size too small. Anyway, matters didn't seem to improve when, in the seventh inning, the sport of baseball was treated to a rhubarb that made the Marichal-Roseboro incident seem bush. Michigan had taken the lead 10-9 in the top half of the frame and was trying to work out of a jam in the "stretch" half of the seventh with one out. Jerry Stitt rapped a single, and, after an in- field out, he advanced to third on pitcher John Hosmer's bingle. Then the roof caved in. Left fielder Scott Neilson brought Stitt home with a single to center with what was appar- ently the tying run. But Michi- gan captain Bob Gilhooley called for the ball, stepped on second, and appealed the run on the grounds that Hosmer had missed second on his way to third. Base umpire Ralph Hartley up- held the appeal and the Wildcats were seemingly retired without scoring a run. "Not so," said Acuna, and he awarded Arizona the tying mark- er. Acuna's Last Stand The Michigan players descend- ed on Acuna like the Indians on Custer protesting the call. Dick Honig, Michigan's assistant coach who had taken the place of the thumbed Benedict, finally fought through the traffic at home plate to show Acuna a rule book stating that a run could not score in a play where the third out is made (Rule 4.09, how a team scores, of the Official Baseball Rules). This apparently didn't impress Acuna, and his ruling stood. Amidst all the shouting and ar- guing, Benedict came down from the stands in his street clothes to appeal further. But Acuna was getting tired of all the chit-chat and ordered the game to go on. He told Les Tan- ona, Michigan's leadoff man in the eighth, to step in the box, but when the Wolverine belter decid- ed to "fight instead of swish" If~~ I " i For the first time ! All you could ask of nature you get in a 6' - -WJe e Suzuki X-6 Hustler, a heavyweight in responsiveness, a lightweight in price! :.. { PEI US U(r Now the loveliest. decollet4 bra in the world-the famous Bali-lo - has been adapted for small figures! A lighter- than-air push-up foam pad. lifts the small or soft-tissue bosom to the front and cen- ter, producing full, femi- nine cleavage, rounded and real. The pad replaces flesh that would normally fill the undercup and sides. Use what nature gave you to best advantage - try on a Bali-loMore-so today. Nylon lace, bolstered with an all- Lycra@ spandex back, for earana 8 NICKELS ARCADE amazing support and com- fort. White or black, 32 to 36. A and B cup sizes, 6.95. MOBY BENEDICT NOW! HONDA Under 21? Don't worry, SEE US! Downtown Honda 211 E. Ann St. Ann Arbor Phone 665-8637 Bara Booted Out Al Bara. the Blue's centerfield- er, stepped in and with a count of one strike was politely inform- ed by Acuna that he had already been kicked out during the fracas at the plate. When the Wolverines protested that they had never heard any- thing about the ejection, Acuna decided that his best place was at home and awarded the Wildcats the forfeit. Michigan had chosen not to count the fiasco as a loss, while Arizona is adding the forfeit to the win side of their ledger. Ac- tually, it will go down in the of- ficial record books as "no contest." Arizona assured the Wolverines that the services of Acuna would not be requested again and that they would provide a "good" um- pire for today's day-night double- header. Benedict talked with the Arizona athletic department to- day but it is not certain whether or not any further action will be taken. Return to Normalcy Settling down to play just "nor- mal baseball," the Wolverines dropped the first game of a twin- bill to the University of Arizona, when the Wildcats sent 12 men to the plate in the first inning, scoring eight runs.hIt just wasn't the Blue's day as the very first batsman blooped a single over the first baseman's head, a double- play ball was booted, and a ball lost in the sun wound up as a two-run triple for Wildcat short- ston Eddie Leon. Six more runs followed on five hits and one hit batsman and that was the story of the game. Michigan starter Bill Zepp, who absorbed the loss to the hard-hit- ting Wildcats, tried to help his cause with a two-run homer in the second but the Wolverines could not narrow the gap closer than five runs. Ed Southhard paced the Arizona attack with three hits, including two singles and a home run, knocking in two tallies and scor- ing two himself. Bob Hanse earn- ed the victory as he forced the Wolverines to hit the ball straight at somebody all afternoon. It was Michigan's fifth straight game without a victory, after lead- ing off their Arizona schedule with seven wins in a row. The Univer- sity of Arizona upped their sea- son mark to 18-6. 40 pi *i Suzuki are here and you should he 100. April 1-9 . .. GIANT GIVE-AWAY OVER $1000 FREE REFRESHMENTS Bali-lo More-so is cut low and wide, back and front, to show your new shape in any neck- line. Suzuki Cycle Center auren 4040 Washtenaw NO 2-2914 MICHIGAN Arizona 030 000 001- 4. 8 3 821 300 00x-14 14 1 JOIN THE DAILY BUSINESS STAFF zepp, Lyijyen (5) and Sizemore, Berline (5). Hansen and Gershon. W-Hansen. L-zepp. HR-Arizona., Southhard, McNevin, Nielsen; Mich- igan, Zepp. ___ 11 V- *i11 E , ATTEND THE on 9 p1 4 * Some Participants ALEXANDER ECKSTEIN Leading Expert on Chinese Economy FELIX GREENE Author, Producer of Film "China-" OWEN LATTIMORE China Scholar, Former U.S. Policy Advisor MORTON FREID Noted Anthropologist of Chinese Peasantry MYRA ROPER Australian Expert on Chinese Education; RHOADS MURPHY U.M. Expert on TODAY -I p.o -2 A. A 2:00 P.M.-4:00 P.M., 4:00 P.M.-6:30 P.M. 8:00 P.M.-11:00 P.M. 11:00 P.M.-1:30 A.M. 1 7rA A A A 1!x1 A AA . 'Lectures on China Today (Greene, Fried, Eckstein) (Diag or Hill Aud.) . . Seminars on Internal Chinese Affairs (Mason Hall) . . Panel on U.S.-Chinese Relations ('Lattimore, Greene et al) (Hill Aud.) . Seminars on U.S.-Chinese Relations (Mason Hall) . I I ml T *t 1Mw..* I III Iii % -41-1 II3W" II9 Il