THE MICHIGAN DAILY N NHLL UrirNE: Wings, Hawks Play Tie; Rangers Top Bruins 2-1 Law, Face (Continued from Page 1 NEW YORK (P)-The New York Rangers opened their National Hockey League season last night with a 2-1 victory over the Bos- ton Bruins. It was the first time the Rangers had opened a season at home since 1926, and the game drew a crowd of 13,475 to Madi- son Square Garden. Both teams scored in the first period. After 7:30 of the period, Andy Bathgate of the Rangers, IM Track Meet The I-M Social Fraternity Outdoor Track Meet will be held this afternoon at the Ferry Field track, beginning at 4:15. Members of the Michigan track team will officiate. standing in the crease, took a pass from Bill Gadsby and flick- ed the puck into the net. At 17:16, when the Rangers' Len Ronson was off the ice for hooking, Doug Mohns took a loose puck on a power play in front of the net and scored for Boston. There was no scoring in the second period, although the Rang- ers missed a golden chance. Bos- ton had two men in the penalty box for 50 seconds, but the Rang- ers could nothing about it. At 6:13 of the third period, Jim Morrisonl took a shot from the, blue line and Ronson tipped the puck into the net for his first NIL goal. Lorne Worsley, Ranger goalie, had a busy night and made some fine saves. He was credited with 28 saves, 13 coming in the first period. - * * * CHICAGO -) - Parker MaC- Donald's goal midway in the fin- al period enabled the Detroit Red Wings to tie the Chicago Black- hawks 1-1 in a National Hockey -League opener at the Stadium last night. Tod tSloan picked up Chicago's tally in the second frame. The night belonged to the riv- al goalies, however. Chicago's all- star netminder Glenn Hall turn- ed back 25 Detroit shots while veteran Terry Sawchuk in the Wing nets halted 27 Chicago drives. Sawchuk had the edge in spec- tacular stops. Only moments be- fore MacDonald, an ex-New York Ranger hand, netted the tying goal, Sawchuk made three fine stops within a period of 10 sec- onds, halting Chicago's Ron Mur- phy twice and Ed Litzenberger once. Sloan's marker came at the 8:52 mark of the second period. The fourth string center, who has been relegated to part-time work and penalty killing, took the puck at center ice, danced around two defenders and beat Sawchuk from five feet in front of the cage. ed they packed a wallop in the fourth when Bill Mazeros lowed a walk to Don Hoa a two-run homer off Coat the scoreboard in left into in Schenley Park, about 3 from the plate. Maas was clubbed for a the Pirate sixth whenrMa. singled to short left, took on Law's sacrifice and sco Virdon's first pitcl-4 doub the right field screen. A brief insurrection in the rocked Face but he surviv McDougald opened with a but was forced at second came the two-run homer b5 ard, who has been out of lately with an injured finge When Kubek followed th er with a single to center, ing the potential tying the plate, the crowd stopped ing toward the exits. Bu calmly choked off the ra making Hector Lopez boun a game-ending doubleplay,1 rates' third of the day, with due up next. The aggressive Pirates the Yanks how to run the and quickly jumped in t advantage of two Yank er Perhaps the best catch day was turned in by Virdo raced into right center, co with Clemente at the base wall, to drag down Berra foot blast in the fourth. were two men on and nobo verines LimitY ) at the time. Although Skowron ki fol- followed with his scoring single, k with Law made McDougald foul out es over and got Richardson on a fly to a tree center. 65 feet Skinner, supposedly an inferior outfielder, surprised Berra in the run in second when he came in to catch zeroski Richardson's short fly and dou- second bled Yogi off second base. red on Mickey Mantle, who walked le off once but was hitless in three of- ficial trips, ran into right center e ninth for a neat catch that robbed Groat ed. Gil of a third straight hit in the single fourth. Richardson reached into Then the stands to nab Clemente's foul y How- in the seventh. action Mazeroski, with his homer and r. single, and Groat, with his double e hom- and single, led the Pirates' eight- bring- hit attack. run to Manis was the big man for the d walk- Yanks with his homer and two .t Face singles although Kubek came tly by through with three singles and ce into Skowron with two singles. the Pi- Law, who has been troubled by Mavis a tender ankle, yielded 10 hits but only two runs in seven in- showed nings. There was nobody out in bases the eighth when he was replaced o take by Face. rors. In the Pirate clubhouse, Man- of the ager Danny Murtaugh singled out the catch by Virdon in the fourth n who as the "key play because it kept alliding them out of the big inning." of the 's 420- Murtaugh said he didn't think There Law had as much stuff late in dy out he game as he did earlier. He dyotnamed Bob Friend (18-12), an- other right-hander, for today's game. Casey Stengel named Bob Tur- ley as the Yankee starter today in the second of the best-of-seven competition. Turley, a 30-year-old takes right-hander, had a 9-3 record t great this season. He said he had been e team thinking of starting Coates but re the that was out when he had to use about him in relief today. - do the Stengel also agreed with Mur- ," Jer- taugh on Virdon's catch by say- anks ing, "If that ball had fallen safe a lot might have happened." The Yankee manager refused to single out anybody for blame on the failure to cover second base in the first on Virdon's steal ex- cept to say "somebody should have covered and I'm not going to say which one." to Game NEW YORK (A) Kubek, s Lopez, rf Marts, rf Mantle, cf Berra, c Skowron, lb Boyer, 3b a-Long McDougaid, 3b Richardson, 2b Ditmar, p Coates, p b-lanchard Maas, p c-Cerv Duren, p d-Howard Totals PITTSBURGH (N) virdon, ef Groat, ss Skinner, if Cimonli, If Stuart, lb Clemente, rf Burgess c Hoak, 3b Mazeroski, 2b Law, p Face, p Totals One AB R H Rbi PO A 5 0 3 0 2 4 5 0 1 0 0 1 4 2 3 1 3 0 3 0 0 0 3 .0 4 0 21 9 0 3 0 1 0 '1 1 4 1 0 0 2 2 o oo o 01 0 0 0 0 0 0 37 4 13 4 24 10 AB RHRbiPOA 3 1 1 1 3 0 41 2 1 2 3 3 1 1 1 3 1 4 0 1 0 9 0 4 0 12 0 2 1. 0 0 1 0 4 2 2 2 2 3 1 0 0 0 0 2 30 6 8 6 27 91 CASEY STENGEL .. unhappy after loss Captain Jerry Smith Sparks Woli a-Flied out for Boyer in 2nd. b-Grounded out for Coates in 5th, c-Singled for Maas ,in7th. d-Homered for Druen in 9th. New York (A) 100 100 002-4 Pittsburgh (N) 300 201 00x-6 E-Berra, ,Richardson. DP-Mazeroskl and Stuart; Skinner and Mazeroski; Mazeroski, Groat and Stuart. LOB- New York (A) 7, Pittsburgh (N) 6. 2B- Groat, Virdon. HR--Maris, Mazeroski, Howard. SB-Virdon, Skinner. S-Law. iP H R' E n B By DAVE ANDREWS After a year on the "redshirts" an another in the shadow of John Herrnstein and Gene Sisinyak, Michigan's captain for 1960, Jerry Smith, came into his ownr last year, not as a fullback, but as a standout center, linebacker, and leader. Not very big for a lineman he stands 5'11" and weighs only 190 pounds, Smith makes up for his lack of size with spirit, desire, ex- perience, and brains, When asked what he does when; faced with a 270-pound monster across the line, Smith quietly re- plied, "stay low, and hit him be- fore he hits you." Played Quarterback Back at Pershing High School in Detroit, Jerry was a quarter- back on the same team that pro- as Michigan captain, Smith it as an honor, but feels a sense of responsibility to th and to the coaches. "Befo season started, I worried whether or not I could c job, and I still do at times, ry commented, "but now we're on the field, I just best and try to keep the gi their toes." Off the field Smith is a unassuming history major literary college with intenti entering medical school up graduation in June. He loot anything but Michigan's f captain, but on the field a Michigan State and Orego last year's opponents will he has proved he is! x-Law W) 7 Face 2 Ditmar {L) Coates 323 Maas 2 Duren 2 x-Faced 2 batters in T-2 :29. A-36,676. 10 2 2 3 22 3 2 2 2 1 1 eishth. SO 1 3 0 2 10 1 2 0 1 1 1 when do my uys on quiet in the ons of on his ks like ootball s both n and verify, ATO Rolls Over Sig Phi; DU Crushes TDP in I- 4 ---.--. By KEN LARSON Phi Delta Theta won by forfeit Delta Upsilon routed Tau Delta over Acacia. Phi, 32-8, to head the "A" slate Four forfeits removed most of in social fraternity football yes- the action in "B" fraternity team terday, as Gary Joachim scored competition last night and of eight three TD's for DUJ. scheduled tilts, only two were Six shutouts were recorded In played. "A" action, including Alpha Tau Post Shutout Omega's 30-0 trimming of Sigma ' Ed Pear, varsity tennis player, Phi, connected for two touchdown Delta Tau Delta ran over Trigon, passes and one extra point toss to ALERT DEFENSE--Michigan's captain moves up behind defensive back Gary McNitt from the Wolverine secondary in last week's Michigan State game. Smith did this all day and caused the Spartans trouble all afternoon. All The fabulous SHELLEY BERMAN ANN ARBOR HIGH Wed., Oct. 12-8:30 p.m. duced last year's Captain George PRACTICE NOTES Genyk and halfback Fred Julian, One injured Wolverine, sopho- "I always wanted to play college more Ed Hood, returned to prac- football," he said, "but I never tice yesterday but two others, both thought I could make it at a big starters, remained as question school." He didn't make it at first, marks for Saturday's encounter as his year on the "redshirts." with unbeaten Duke. which accounts for his extra year Bennie McRae sat out the prac- of eligibility, shows. tice still nursing an ankle injury, But Michigan Coach Bump El- and fullback Ken Tureaud is still, liott will testify that he has made bothered by a bruised hip. it now. "Jerry's a fine leader and Hood, who suffered a broken a good, intelligent football player," jaw in pre-season workouts, was said Elliott, "and if he were a in uniform for the first time since' little bigger, he would be a great he suffered the injury as the Wol- one." verines ran through drills most of Pass Defender the afternoon and then closed the Probably his talent most ap- practice with a short scrimmage. preciated by the Michigan coach- The rest of the Michigan team ing staff is his apparent knack for has recovered from the bruises of intercepting passes. In what may last weekend and all are expected have been his best game as a to be ready to go on Saturday. Wolverine, Smith killed two Illi- nois drives with thefts last year as Michigan upset the Illini 20-15.. Then just last week he broke off a late Michigan State drive with lCFor s h c c uts a key interception deep in Michi- gan territory. However this talent hasn't come natural to him. He learned from scratch starting in high school as a defensive halfback. "We drilled a lot on pass defense, he said, and "I learned to always watch the ball. Now during a game I hope that they (the opposition) will throw into my zone," smiled Jer- ry, "as I always feel that I have a chance of swiping one and giv-; ing us a break." Possibly the fact that he was a quarterback had something to do with his defensive genius, Present Role Turning back to his present role 28-0, while Theta Delta Chi topped Zeta Psi, 20-14, in another early afternoon clash at Ferry Field. Chi Phi Wins It was Chi Phi over Theta Xi, 20-0, and Beta Theta Pi over Pi Lambda Phi by the same score, 20-0, Neither Kappa Alpha Psi nor Delta Chi could get an offenset rolling as KAP was downed, 16-0, by Psi Upsilon, and the Delta Chi's were defeated, 8-0, by Alpha Delta Phi. Use Daily I pace Sigma Alpha Mu to a 14-0 decision over Phi Epsilon Pi. SAM pass receivers in the only night game at Wines Field were Steve Schwartz and Elliot Pearl- man. Mike Dean caught the extra pointer. Phi Sigma Kappa shutout Delta Sigma Phi, 6-0, in the one "B" game at Ferry Field, In games won by forfeit, Beta Theta Pi beat Alpha Delta Phi, Theta Chi beat Triangle, Lambda Chi Alpha took Phi Kappa Sigma, and Phi Delta Theta beat Acacia. Cassifieds. PEUGEOT Buy Your PEUGEOT from Stanford Brothers Authorized Renault-Peugeot Dealers SERVICE 25900 Outer Dr. DU 6-0699 Lincoln Park - Outer Dr. of Fort Makes your haircut fit your head! No matter how you like your hair cut-you'll took better when you use Short Cut. This new, non-greasy hair groom odds body to the hair fibers, makes your haircut fit your head. Keeps hair neat, and helps condition your scalp into the bargain. Takes 2 seconds, costs a fast .50 ax @ka S e SHORT CUT HAIR GROOM S; " uJ L-ro N" We Carry a Complete Line of SHULTON PRODUCTS