WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1.967 THE MICIIIG.I Y DAILY PAGE SEVEN WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1967 TUE MICUIG. N DulLY PAGE ~EVE?. ..A- - -- I - I I Batmen Soar Past Irsh, Tsh, 6-3' Philadelphia Eliminates Bostoir Montreal, Toronto Win in NHL By RUSS ROJAKOVICK One bouncing, ground-ball single through the middle of the Notre Dame infield made a lot of Michi- gan people happy yesterday, es- pecially Jim Hosler and Joe Notz. Pinch-hitter Doug Nelson, who produced the hit, came through at just the right moment to take these two off the hook and help produce a 6-3 Wolverine victory over the visitors from South Bend. Going into the bottom of the eighth inning, the score was tied 3-3 because of a mix-up while Hosler was base-running. In the sixth, after Keith Spicer flew out, Hosler lifted a short single to center and then stole sec- ond. Andy Fisher, the next batter, was hit by a pitch before John Craft :popped to third. Holy Moby Then, with two out, Chuck Schmidt rapped a line single to right field. Hosler, rounding third, was momentarily stopped by coach Moby Benedict, and then waved on. While he raced towards home plate, Notre Dame right fielder Frank Kwaiatowski bobbled the ball, and Schmidt tried for ,J4 . 4'+f/Py4 Y':: }' 1......,..:%' { :.. "~.:YJ:y: Michigan's freshman baseball team will play a doubleheader against Eastern Michigan today at 1 p.m. at Ferry Field. The varsity squad will open the Big Ten season Friday in a double- header against Indiana. GYA~~~v:: Y,:: X~~~~u{"T: .. . . . . .i:::"di ". :.... .4,.:"' second. However, he was tagged out an instant before Hosler cross- ed the plate. The run, which probably would have been scored had. Hosler not hesitated at third, was negated. And at the time it loomed very important. In the top of the seventh, the Clay Fight Voted Down By The Associated Press CARSON CITY, Nev.-The Ne- vada Athletic Commission, at the urging of Gov. Paul Laxalt, re- fused yesterday at an emergency meeting to license the proposed -heavyweight championship fight April 25 between champ Cassius Clay and former title holder Floyd Patterson. Laxalt said the fight would be a mis-match. He was successful in getting the commission to revoke its tentative agreement, made last Wednesday to sanction the bout, which would have been the sec- ond in Las Vegas between Clay and Patterson. Commission chairman James Deskin said the revocation was final. Y"':i" S"r{...4,.4W 4 . ..%.... .. :... 4.. Billboard * There will be an 'M' Club meeting at the Union at 8:30 to- night. The recipient of the Doe Losh Trophy will be named and the election of officers will be held. Sophomore lettermen are invited to attend. Irish pulled ahead when Kwaia- towski doubled in Tom Tencza from second base But in the bottom of the same inning, Rick Sygar scored on Les Tanona's single to once again tie the score, setting the stage for Nelson's blow. Strategy Pays Off After Hosler and Fisher had grounded out to start the eighth, catcher John Craft unloaded a double to deep center. The Irish chose to walk the next hitter, Chuck Schmidt, in order to face Joe Notz, the pitcher. Benedict Notre Dame 101 000 100 3 7 1 Michigan 002 000 13x 6 12 0 Batteries - ND: Cuggino and Kernan; Mich.: Zepp, Notz (6), Kerr (9) and Craft. W-Notz (2-0), L-Cuggino (1-1). HR- Tencza. then brought in pinch hitter Nel- son, who greeted opposing hurler Tom Cuggino with a single up the middle to provide the margin of victory. Glenn Redmon and Sygar followed with insurance singles,. increasing the lead to three runs. Relief pitcher Joe Notz was credited with the win, bringing his season's record to 2-0. Bill Zepp, 'who started and worked the first five innings for the Wolver- ines, and Joe Kerr, who mopped up in ninth, also turned in good jobs. (Together the trio recorded fifteen strikeouts, highest total by Michigan moundsmen this year. Eight different men in the Wol- verine lineup collected hits, six scored runs, and six picked up RBI's. Thus, Nelson's two-out single in the bottom of the eighth capped a team effort to win the game for Michigan. DOUG NELSON BILL ZEPP Birds Open Title Defense with Win By The Associated Press BALTIMORE -The Baltimore Orioles, world champions of 1966, scored four runs in their first time at bat In 1967, and went on to de- feat the Minnesota Twins 6-3 yes- terday in an, American League opener. A two-run homer by Brooks Robinson, just inside the left field foul pole, capped the outburst be- fore Minnesota's Jim Kaat retired a batter. Kaat, a 25-game winner last season, hit Curt Blefary with a pitch to ignite the rally. Blefary scored when left fielder Bob Al- lison misjudged Luis Aparicio's soft liner in a stiff breeze for a double and Frank Robinson's single scored Aparicio. Replay Robinson then connected with his two-run blast, just as he did opening day last year when the' Orioles started on the way to their first American League pennant. Brooks also contributed three sparking fielding plays at third base in the first three innings, and left fielder Blefary started a double play in the first irnning after reaching above the left field fence to rob Rich -Rollins of a homer. Baltimore starter Dave. McNally struggled even with the support .and finally was chased as Minne- sota scored three runs in the fifth. * * * Johnny Callison, Tony Gonzalez and Clay Dalrymple and Cookie Rojas' squeeze bunt.. Bunning finally weakened in the fifth, wielding the first Cub run on Dick Bertell's triple and Adolfo Phillips' double. * * * - Pirates Beat Mes NEW YORK - Jesse Gonder's run-producing double broke a 3-3 tie in the ninth inning. yester- day and lifted Pittsburgh to a 6-3 victory over the New York Mets in the opening game for both Na- tional League Baseball teams. Gonder, a former Met, drove a, pitch off the scoreboard in right field, scoring Gene Alley, who had opened the frame with a double. A squeeze bunt by Matty Alou, a stolen base and another single by Maury Wills accounted for two more Pittsburgh runs. The Mets, who never have won an opening-day game, committed five errors. A crowd of 31,510 on a cool, clear day in Shea stadium saw the Mets take a 3-1 lead in the fourth on Jerry Grote's two-run homer. Ron Swoboda led off the inning with a dodble and one ,out later, Grote slammed Bob Veale's pitch into the lower left field stands. The Pirates tied -the score in the sixth helped by two Met errors. Shortstop Bud Harrelson let Ro- berto Clement's grounder go through him. Don Clendenon singled and when right fielder Cleon Jones let the ball get away, Stargell scored and Clendonon reached third. Bill Mazeroski'§ double to left tied it. Repoz scored. Repoz was running a-er, protested because of the for Joe Rdui, who reached first white shoes worn by Nash, which base on a walk with one out. Adcock claimed distracted the hit- Steal ters. The other A's also wore white Repoz stole second and two shoes. walks filled the bases before Web- Cleveland had tied the count at ster batted for winning pitcher 3-3 in the sixth inning on Chuck Jim Nash. Hinton's double, a walk and a two- The Indians played the game run double by Duke Sims. under protest after Nash's first The A's had taken a 3-1 lead pitch. Cleveland Manager Joe Ad- on Joe Nosseks two-run single in cock, in his first game as a man- the third inning. By The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA - The Phila- delphia 76ers battled from a 16- point second period defiict to bury the Boston Celtics 140-116 last night and capture the National Basketball Association's Eastern Division final playoff series, 4-1. The victory sent the 76ers into the NBA finals against the win- ner of the current San Francisco- St. Louis series and ended Bos- ton's 10-year domination of the East. Boston had won 10 straight Eastern playoff titles and eight consecutive NBA crowns. Boston opened strong, building a 37-28 first period lead, and with five minutes gone in the second quarter the Celtics were up 53-37. Comeback But Chet Walker and Wilt Chemberlain led a 76er comeback that sliced the margin to 70-65 at halftime. Walker scored 13 and Wilt 11 points in the surge. Wally Jones who was benched early by coach Alex Hannum came alive in the third quarter with eight-for-nine from the field as the 76ers gained the lead for the first time. The score was tied five times in the contest that was punctuated by periodic egg-throwing from the stands. Chamberlain, who scored 29 points, grabbed 36 rebounds, handed out 13 assists and blocked seven shots, helped to turn the game into a rout. Hal Greer led the winners with 32 points while Walker chipped in with 26 and Jones 23. John Havlicek tallied 38 and Larry Siegfried 24 in Boston's los- ing effort. Leafs Take Lead TORONTO-The Toronto Maple Leafs, given a second straight job of great goal-tending by Terry Sawchuk, walloped the Chicago Black'Hawks 3-1 last night to take a 2-1 edge in the best-of-seven Stanley Cup semifinal series. Sawchuk, 37-year-old veteran NEED CARFARE HOME? SELL, YOUR USED BOOKS, at STUDENT BOOK SERVICE. with 100 regular season shutouts, had a whitewash going until three-and-a-half minutes :emain- ed in the final period when Bobby Hull scored on a power-play. While Sawchuk was keeping Chicago in check, Ron Ellis, Frank Mahovlich and Jim Pappin pumped in goals for the Maple Leafs in the fi!'st two periods. The Hawks will attempt to even up th eseries in Toronto tomorrov night after which the two teams journey to Chicago for game five Saturday afternoon. * . . Montreal Over N.Y. NEW YORK - Claude Larose and Jean Beliveau stunned New York with goals in the opening minutes of play sparking the Montreal Canadiens to a 3-2 vic- tory last night that pushed the Rangers to the brink of elimina- tion in the National Hockey League playoffs. After Larose and Beliveau gave Montreal a 2-0 jump with the game only three minutes, nine seconds old, the defending Stanley Cup champions held off a desper- ate Ranger rally for their third straight victory in the best-of- seven games semifinal series. The Rangers now must win four straight to gain the Cup finals in the first post-season appearance since 1962. The fourth game will be played tomorrow night in New i) II 11 Major League Standings i' AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. NATIONAL LEAGUE GB New York 1 0 1.000 -- Baltimore 1 0 1.000 _ Kansas City 1 0 1.000 - x-California 0 0 .000 f. Chicago 0 0 .000 Y x-Detroit 0 0 .000 1/ Boston 0 0 .000 Cleveland 0 1 .000 1 Minnesota 0 1 .000 1 Washington 0 1 .000 1 x-Late game not; included. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Baltimore 6, Minnesota 3 Chicago at Boston (ppd, cold) Kansas City 4, Cleveland 3 California 4, Detroit 0 (4th inn) Onl~y games scheduled Final 1966 AMERICAN LEAGUE Cincinnati Chicago Pittsburgh Houston St. Louis Atlanta San Francisco Philadelphia' New York Los Angeles W L 1 0 1 0 10 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 Pct. 1.000 1.000 1.000' 1.000 1.000 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 GB 1 1 1 1 i YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Pittsburgh 6, New York 3 Chicago 4, Philadelphia 2 Houston 6, Atlanta I St. Louis 6, San Francisco 0 Only gamcs scheduled Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE i ' 'J { i AIRPORT LIMOUSINES for information call 663-8300 Tickets are available at Travel Bureaus or the Michigan Union why cart all those clothes home? s Call Greene's Cleaners todayl We'll deliver a storage box- Fill it with your winter garments-, We'll pick it up-clean your garments- Store them in our air conditioned vault.. Next fall-give us a call. We'll deliver- fresh and clean-beautifully pressed. A It's so convenient-and cheaper than shipping Still only $4.95 plus regular cleaning charges. Call and reserve your box today. 44# Cubs Top Phils Baltimore Minnesota Detroit Chicago Cleveland California Kansas City Washington Boston New York W 97 89 88 83 81 80 74 71 72 70 L 63 73 74 79 81 82 86 88 90 89 Pct. .606 .549 .543 .512 .500 .494 .463 .447 .444 .440 GB 9 10 15 17 18 23 25%2 26 26 V2 Los Angeles San Francisso Pittsburgh Philadelphia Atlanta St. Louis Cincinnati Houston New York Chicago w 95 93 92 87 85 83 76 72 66 L 67 68 70 75 77 79 84 90 95 Pct. GB .586 - .578 1%,/ .568 3 .537 8 .525 10 .512 12 .415 18 .444 23 .410 283 2 Greene's Cleaners NO 2-3231 - § §§ - - § $ § § .;.'"' §§§ § ' . § 41 § Our Lightweight Jackets §. § . You will find this one of the most interesting selections § § of Spring jackets we have ever offered. The materials are all sea-proofed and the workmanship I § and styling are the finest. $ § § §front. $1850 to $3500 / I Read and Use Daily Classified We'd rather you wouldn't. Sip- Spingis for wine. It's the best way to appreciate the delicate taste of a fine vintage. But not beer. Especially not Budweiser. Bud® is a hearty drink brewed with lots of character, and the best way to enjoy it is to drink it. (Not chug-a-lug... just good healthy beer- drinker's swallows.) Give it a try. Open a Budweiser and pour it into a glass ... smack-dab down the middle to get a healthy head of foam. Now ... take a big drink. No sips. Good? You bet. This is how beer should taste. As we keep saying, Budweiser is brewed with exclusive t i Announcin El U. TOWERS JORDAN n w .... STOCKWELL A. LLOYD SPECIAL OFFER to all residents of COUSINS SMALL PIZZA +10 MEDiuMt150 LARGE t 1001 I I