PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SA~i1nAYMA 5_ I, AQU1 Wolverines Lose Lead in Baseball... t t r; k , 4 0 Michigan State hitting bested Michigan pitching yesterday and the 6-3 result cost the Wolverines undisputed possession of first place in the Big Ten. Ohio State beat Iowa 3-0 to pull even with Michigan in the stand- ings. Both teams have 8-2 records, while MSU at 7-3 now trails the leaders by only one game. Today's contests are thus cru- cial to Michigan's championship hopes. The Wolverines face the Spartans again in a doubleheader at East Lansing and Ohio State plays a pair of games with Min- nesota. Juday Leads Attack First baseman Steve Juday led, a 15=hit MSU assault on ace Wol- verine righthander Bob Reed, handing him his first Big Ten loss. Juday, the Spartans' start- ing quarterback during the foot- ball season, was three for four, driving in three runs and scoring another. One of his hits was a double andnhe also sacrificed a run in from second base. The unusual play occurred when Juday laid a perfect bunt down the third base line while runners on first and second were both go- ifg., Wolverine third sacker Dan DiNunzio nailed Juday at first on arclose play, but Bob Speer crossed the plate before a relay could reach catcher Ted Sizemore. The Spartans kept Reed under pressure throughout the game, scoring twice in the second and third and once in the seventh and ninth. They left 10 men on base and it took righthander Bill Wahl to retire MSU in the last inning when Reed left with two on and none out. Krasnan Wins Michgian tagged John Krasnan for eight hits, but he went all the, way and was seldom in trouble. The Wolverines drew first blood on an unearned run in the open- ing inning. Bob Gilhooley walked and Sizemore was safe on a field- ing error by third baseman John Biedenbach. Dick Schyrer ground into a force, leaving runners on first and third, and Gilhooley raced home safely when second baseman Jerry Walker threw a cut-off relay over the head of catcher Bill Steckley. Michigan picked up its other two runs in the fifth when Carl Cmejrek was given credit for a home run with a man on. Cmej- rek's blow actually bounced over the rightfield fence, however ap- parently both right fielder Dick Billings, who seemed to have a chance at the deep fly, and um- pires Moyer and Nordquist lost The single Spartan score in the sight of the ball until is crossed seventh came in on Juday's bunt, the fence. MSU players contested and the tally in the ninth crossed the ruling violently, but to no the plate when Wahl surrendered avail. Juday's third hit, a double, after and fired to first by a step. to nip Schyrer The Spartans scored twice in the second inning on a walk and! three straight singles. Bruce Pet- tibone and Walker delivered the hits that drove in the runs. MSU added two more tallies in the third on a double, a single, a fielder's choice and two more singles. Juday, who scored one of the runs in the second, drove in one in the third, and Biedenbach drove in the other. Nicklaus' 69 Retains Lead NEW ORLEANS (A)-Masters champion Jack Nicklaus birdied three of the last fivekholes Friday for a second round 69 and a 134 total which gave him a two-stroke lead at the halfway point of the $100,000 New Orleans Open Golf Tournament. . Frustrated by a string of 13 straight pars, Nicklaus weathered a flash shower and climaxed his effort with a phenomenal shot from the rough on the next-to-last hole. At the 530-yard fifth, he hit a wedge to within eight feet of the cup and sank his first birdie. On the 390-yard dogleg sixth, he cut the corner with a towering shot over a clump of trees and half- wedged his approach to within 18 inches. Ten under par for 36 holes, Nicklaus overtook a quartet of new bloods on the professional tour-Ray Floyd, Sam Carmi- chael, Bill Martindale and Homero Blancas. They were tied for second at 136. Another stroke back at 137 was a group which included Australian Bruce Devlin, Canadian George Knudson, Bob McCallister, Jacky Cupit and Dick Lytle. Arnold Palmer and Tony Lema had to rally to escape the cutoff which reduced the field to the low 70 shooters and ties for the final two rounds Saturday and Sunday. Major League Standiigs AMERICAN LEAGUE Biedenbach and Speer had sin- gled off Reed. Walker and Biedenbach con- tinued to display the kind of bat- ting that has kept them in first and third place respectively in the Big Ten standings. They were both two for five to stay around their .500 and .420 marks. Cmejrek was Michigan's big gun with three hits in four at-bats. He drove in two runs and scored. once. Coach Danny Litwhiler's men made some spectacular plays in the field. Second baseman Walker broke up a potential Michigan threat in the second when he' made a diving stop of Al Bara's grounder and, while still lying in the dirt, threw to second for a force out on Chan Simonds, who had opened the inning with a single. In the third, shortstop Petti- bone raced into the hole to make a backhanded stop off a hard-hit ball by Schyrer. He turned around I T MICHIGAN STATE AB R I RBI Steckley, e 5 0 0 0 Manicre, cf 5 1 2 0 Biedenbach, 3b 5 1 2 1 Speer, if 3 3 1 8 Billings, rf 5 0 2 0 Juday, Ib 4 1 3 3 Pettibone, ss 5 0 2 1 Walker, 2 5 0 2 1 Krasnan, p 3 0 1 0 Totals 40 6 15 6 MICHIGAN AB R H RBI Gllhooley, ss 4 1 1 0 Sizemnore, c 5 0 0 8 Schryer, of 4 1 1 0 Cmejrek, If 4 1 3 2 DiNunzio, 3b 4 0 2 0 Simonds, lb 4 0 1 0 Bara, rf 4 80 00 Sygar, 2b 3 -0 0 Reed, p 3 8(00 a-Wahl, p 0 8 8 8 a-Tanona 1 0 0 8 Totals 36 3 8 2 a-Popped out for Wahl in 9th. MICHIGAN ST. 022 000 101-6 15 2 MICHIGAN 188 820 000-3 8 1 E-Biedenbach, Walker, Simonds. DP-Reed, Gilhooley, Simonds. LOB -Michigan State 10, Michigan 7. 2B3 --Maniere, Juday. HR-Cmejrek. S- Juday. SB-Gilhooley, Schryer. PITCHING SUMMARIES IP HI R ER BB SO Krasnen (W, 3-1) 9 8 3 2 2 5 Reed (L, 3-1) 8 14 6 6 3 7 Wahl 1 1 0 0 0 0 E JUDAY (LEFT) AND JOHN KRASNEN combined to pull Michigan down from undisputed ssion of first place in Big Ten baseball. Juday's three hits and Krasnen's eight-hit pitching ;ht the fast-rising Spartans a 6-3 victory at Ferry Field yesterday. . .And Gain Ground in Tennis 6 . You mean, Special To The Daily ton. Every point Michigan can COLUMBUS--Michigan netmen pick up now will make the title continued their bid to head into that much easier to get. the Big Ten Conference Meet on One Tough Match top of the league as they took 12 The Wolverines had only one straight matches yesterday at difficult match yesterday. Hal Columbus. Lowe was behind Illinois' Jerry Johnston 4-2 after dropping the The Wolverines played a regular first set 7-5, but he came back dual meet with Illinois, sweeping to take four straight games in most of the contests easily. They i the second set and won going away then went on to take three doubles with a 6-3 victory in the third matches from Ohio State. set. Coach Murphy juggled his line- Today Coach Bill Murphy's up for yesterday's games, resting squad will play the singles matches Jim Swift and moving his other that will finish the meet with the regulars up a notch. George Rus- Buckeyes, and, in the major event sell played in the number six of the, day, take on league-lead ng spot. Indiana in the match that will SINGLES Karl Hedrick (M) def. Tom Bauer, determine the Big Ten leader. 6-3, 6-4; Brian Flood (M) def. Steve Michigan presently trails the Simmons, 6-1, 7-5; John Fraser (M) def. Rick Wuretzel, 6-0, 6-1; Jerry Hoosiers, 66 match points to 58, Stewart (M) def. John Sisson, 6-2, but the Wolverines have played 6-4; Hal Lowe (M) def. Jerry John stan, 5-7, 6-4, 6-3; George Russell six fewer matches. (M) def. Jim Dawson, 7-5, 6-1. because I'm a student or teacher I get special rates at all Hilton Hotels in the U.S.? 1 Hilton Hotels Corporation, u I National Sales Office, Palmer House , * Chicago 90, Ill. I Please send the Faculty-Student I Rate Brochure that tells all. I am a Faculty Member Q Student Q !NAME HOME ADDRESS_ _ _ _ _ _ _ * STREET3 I CITY STATE T T COLLE CNAM ETYT r STREET CITY STATE Chicago Minnesota Detroit Los Angeles Baltimore Cleveland Boston New York Washington Kansas City W L 18 8 17 8 15 11 16 12 15 12 12 11 11 14 11 16 10 18 5 20 Pct. .692 .680 .577 .571 .556 .522 .440 .407 .357 .200 GB 3 3 4f 6/ 7'/z 9 121"Z Championship The Big Ten championship will be determ4ned by adding the point totals from season match play and individual performances at the conference meet in Blooming- ton, Ind., next weekend. A compli- cated scoring system at the meet] allows a team to win a miximum of 8.1-90 points, so even a several point deficit at the end of regular season play need not prevent a team from garnering the cham- pionship. However, as many of the matches in the individual meets will be identical to those played during the regular season, season play offers a good indication of what should happen at Blooming- ON THE BOUNCE Wolverine gymnast Fred Sanders has been selected to the third team of the 1965 Collegiate All-American Gymnastics Teams by a panel of past presidents of the National Association of College Gymnastics Coaches. The panel, chaired by Michigan gymnastics coach Newt Loken, selected Sanders behind Frank Schmitz of Southern Illinois and Dan Millman of California. Sanders fin- ished second to Schmitz in the NCAA individual contests at Iowa City March 20. Michigan Thinclads To Face Recovering Indiana Squad YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Detroit 12, Boston 8 (10 inn) New York 9, Baltimore 3 Minnesota 5, Kansas City 3 Cleveland 2, Washington 1 Chicago 2, Los Angeles 1 TODAY'S GAMES New York at Baltimore (n) Minnesota at Kansas City Los Angeles at Chicago Cleveland at Washiingtoni Detroit at Boston NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. x-Los Angeles 19 8 .704 Cincinnati 16 11 .593 x-Houston 16 13 .552 Philadelphia 14 13 .519 Milwaukee 12 12 .500 x-San Francisco 13 14 .481 x-Chicago 12 14 .462 St. Louis 12 14 .462 New York 11 16 .407 Pittsburgh 9 19 .321 x-Late game not included. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 5, Cincinnati 3 Philadelphia 5, Milwaukee 2 St. Louis 8, Pittsburgh 7 Chicago at Los Angeles (mc) Houston at San Francisco (inc) TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Los Angeles Houston at San Francisco St. Louis at Pittsburgh Cincinnati at New York Milwaukee at Philadelphia KARL HEDRICK GB 3 4 5 6 6%j 81 10 PUBLIC NOTICE Effective May 17, 1965 Regular Bus Service to Willow Run and Metropol- itan Airports will be increased to SEVEN ROUND TRIPS DAILY. Busses will operate from bus stations at Ann Arbor, Michigan Union, Arborland Shop-I ping Center, Ypsilanti Airport. Fare: Ann Arbor to Willow Run $.95; to Metro $1.75; Ypsilanti to Willow Run $.40; to Metro $1.25. Call your local bus station or Travel Agent for Additional Information. SHORTWAY LINES, INC.a DOUBLES Hedrick-Stewart (M) def. Bauer- Simmons, 6-3, 6-4; Fraser-Lowe (M) def. Bob Lewke-Sisson, 6-2, 6-3; Swift-Flood (M) def. Johnston- Dawson, 6-1, 6-2. The new novel by the author of VCAT'S CRADLE is at your bookstore! HURT Pearls Before Swine "A hilariously wacky comedy. ... Its chief target is inherited wealth, but Vonnegut takes pot shots at many varieties of folly." - Saturday Review N "Vonnegut is one of the most effective satirists of our day."-New York Herald Tribune 3rd LARGE PRINTING $4.95 Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc. m m m - m m m m - m 1. Now that graduation's getting close, have you given any thought to the kind of work you'd like to do? I want to work for The Good of Mankind. 3. Is it required? It helps. And Ill certainly need a pair of saidals. C 2. 1 might have suspected. I'll probably grow a beard. With two straight lopsided vic- tories behind them and the Big Ten outdoor track championships ahead-, Michigan's track squad faces recovering Indiana today. The Hoosiers are in the process of coming back after three im- portant injuries hit them earlier in the season. Despite their hurts, the Indiana trackmen placed a strong third in the Indiana Big State meet last weekend, and two of the injured Hoosiers should be back at full strength today, ac- cording to Indiana Coach Jim Lavery. The early-season injuries had tripped sprinter Randy Weddle, valter Wilbert Davis and middle- distance man Terry Shy, the team's co-captain. But Lavery thinks Weddle has recovered from a muscle pull and Davis from a bruised heel enough that they will be running at full strength in today's meet against Michigan. Michigan has wallopped the Chicago Track Club and Penn State back to back by lopsided 89-37 and 79-43 scores. Don Hughes in the 880-yd. dash and Kent Bernard in the 440 and 220 turned in particularly strong per- formances in last weekend's meet. 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