PAGLr sit THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, APRIL 2 PA~~E SIX SATURDAY, APRIL A ---- - --- ---I --- - Diamondmen Shut Out Wisconsin, 6-0 .,vY" ... .:.:v :" ": .v:4Yt".v.:"... . . . . . . . . . r..rx""..."Y .o. ... : Badgers Held To Four Hits y Barnhart By SCOTT BLECH special To The Daily MADISON - Clyde Barnhart's1 four-hit pitching and seven Wis- consin errors paved the way to a Michigan 6-0 shutout here in yes- terday's Big Ten opener. "The whole story was Barn- hart," coach Moby Benedict said after his lefthander blanked the Badgers for the second Wolverine whitewash in as many days. On Thursday Paul Schuldt blanked Notre Dame, 2-0. Yesterday's win puts the Michigan record at 7-10 for the season. 'Made Big Plays' "Clyde didn't throw many bad pitches and we tightened up de- fensively to make the big plays," Benedict added. The Wolverines drew first blood with a run in the third, when Chan Simonds led off with a broken bat single to right field. Tom (Butch) Laslo also split his bat as he followed with a smash off the pitcher's leg which car- romed into right-field for a single advancing Simonds to second. Then Barnhart bunted the first pitch to firstbaseman Hal Brandt who fired the ball to thirdbase- man Mark Rosenblum to force Simonds. But the Wolverines were not to be denied as Bob Gilhooley slam- med' Dave Tymus' second offering Whitewash MICHIGAN AB R H RBI Gilhooley, rf 3 2 1 1 Sizemore, c 5 2 1 0 Campbell, ss 5 1 0 1 Meyers, if 4 0 0 2 Skaff, 3b 4 0 0 0 Tate,cf 1 0 0 0 Simonds, lb 4 0 2 0 Laslo,2b 4 1 10 Barnhart, p 4 0 .0 0 Totals 35 E6 5 4 * * * Soudek Wins Discus In Penn Relay Finals MOBY BENEDICT GEORGE SKAFF I over the shortstop's head for a single and Laslo dashed in with the first run. The Wolverines scored their second two runs without a hit, as Wisconsin committed three errors and walked three Michigan play- ers in the affair started with a walk to Gilhooley after one was out. Gilhooley went to second when Ted Sizemore's routine grounder went between shortstop Joe Romary's legs. The next Wisconsin gift was presented to captain Daye Camp- bell whose popup to short left was dropped by Leroy Krajewski when he collided with Romary. When Gilhooley was scoring the second Michigan run, Fred Rei- chardt made an error throwing the ball wildly past second in an attempt to free Sizemore. Two Walks After Tymus had walked Ron Tate to load the bases, Lance To- bert came in to pitch and pro- ceeded to walk Earl Meyers on four pitches to force Sizemore home ' with the second unearned run of the inning. Wisconsin was not finished do- nating charity to the visiting Wol- verines, as the ninth inning fea- tured three more unearned runs to put the icing on the cake. Barnhart then completed his shutout by not faltering after Reichardt's leadoff double in the ninth. The hit was the fourth and last off the junior southpaw who then squelched the Badger scor- ing threat. All Flukes Wisconsin's first three hits were all slow infield taps that third- baseman George Skaff couldn't handle fast enough to throw out the runners. Barnhart finished the game with four strikeouts and three walks. Today, the Wolverines play a doubleheader at Northwestern with Bill Wahl slated to start the first game. Benedict has not yet decided on his second pitcher. By The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA - Michigan's Ernie Soudek took an individual championship yesterday in the Penn Relays by heaving the discus 175'3". The toss beat by almost nine feet the second man, John Bak- kensen, of Harvard. Although Soudek's performance was the Wolverines' only first in the first day of the two day meet, the distance medley relay team finished fourth. The team, con- sisting of Mac Hunter, Tel Kel- ly, Dave Hayes, and Des Ryan, turned in the distance in 10:04.8. Villanova raced to first in the event with a time of 9:55.8. In this event each runner on the team goes a different distance- one does the half mile, the second man does the 440, the third does a three quarter mile run, and the anchor man speeds a mile. Villanova's Vic Zwolak led his teammates to victories in both of the relay finals-the four-mile medley race, and the distance medley event. In the four-mile Scrimmage Coach Bump Elliott's spring gridders will hold their third scrimmage of the year this afternoon at 2 p.m. The action today will take place at Michi- gan Stadium, and spectators are welcome. DISCUS CHAMPIONSHIP - 1. Er- relay, Zwolak anchored by beat- ing his nearest competitor by over 40 yards, after starting his mile with a slight two yard lead. In other finals, Norman Tate, of North Carolina, won the broad jump with a leap of 24'11". Olney Croasdale of Harvard took a first with a,179'10" hammer throw, and Manhattan's Vin McCardle captur- ed honors in the 400-meter hurdles with a time of :51.5. nie Soudek (Michigan, 175-3. 2. John Bakkensen (Harvard). 3. Robert Stei- gerwald (Manhataan). 4. James Zaf- ferno (Temple). 5. Dick Jaskson (Southern Nniv.). HAMMER THROW CHAMPION- SHIP-1. Olney Crosadale (Har- vard), 179-10. 2. Thomas Gage (Cor- nell). 3. Robert Mead (Manhattan). 4. John Sonnors (Manhattan). 5. Warren sumoski (Conn.). DISTANCE MEDLEY-1. Villano- va (Noel Carroll, 1:50.3; Al Adams, 48.7; Jim Sullivan, 3:03.1; Vic Zwo. lak, 4:13.7). 9:55.8. 2. Georgetown. 3. LaSale. 4. Michigan. 5. Brown 4-MILE RELAY-1 Villanova (Dave Hyland, 4:14.6; Jim Orr, 4:16.3; Tom Sullivan, 4:12.5; Vic Zwolak, 4:07.3), 16:50.7. 2. Seton Hall. 3. Fordham. 4. Georgetown. 5. Michigan State BROAD JUMP COLLEGE CHAM-, PIONSHIP--1. Norman Ttate (N.C. College), 24-11. 2. Clifton Mayfield (Conn. Central St.). 3. Jerrold Ne- gin (Navy). 4. Henry Keller (Boston College). 5. Fred Moore (Maryland St.). 6. Chris Ohiri (Harvard). 400-METER HURDLES (Olympic dtvelopment)--1. Jay Luck (New Ha- ven Track Club), 51.2. 2. Chris Stauffer (Baltimore Olympic Club). 3. Leroy Crawford (Ft. Campbell, Ky.). 4. Russ Rogers (Grand St. Boys Club, N.Y.). 5. Ron Ablowich (Quantico Marines) 400-METER HURDLES-1. Vincent' McArdle (Manhattan), 51.5. 2. John Bethea (Morgan St.). 3. Ken Allen (Army). 4. Anthony Lynch (Har- vard). 5. Kent Allen (Army). PICK UP YOUII ::.. v{ }S C. {" JonThDENTDaBIyAbuINSsstaff 4 1 ASHAWAY PRO-FECTED For Club Play Approx. Stringing Cost Tennis.....:....$7 Badminton .... ..$6 Federation Open Features Local, State Track Talent. WISCONSIN, Romary, ss Nan, 2b Reichardt, cf Brandt, lb Morenz, rf Krajewski, If b-Schuman c-Zahradka Rosenblum, 3b d-Tadevich Beise, c a-Adler Smith, 'e Tymps, p Tobert, p Totals MICHIGAN WISCONSIN AB R H RBI 3 0 0 0 3020 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 40 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 '2 0 10 0 31 ,0 4 0 001020 0030-60 2 000 000000-0 4 7 a-Adler ran for Beise in 8th. b-Schumann walked for Krejewski in 9th. e-Zahradka ran for Schuman in 9th. d-Tadevich grounded out for Ros- enblum in 9th. B - Romary 2, Nau, Reichardt, Brandt, Krajewski, Rosenblum, Campbell, Barnhart. DP-Campbell, Laslo, and Simonds; Tymus, Romary, and Brandt; Romary, Lau, and Brandt. LOB-Michigan 8, Wisconsin 4. 2B-Brandt. SB-Tate. PITCHING SUMMARIES IPKHR ERBB SO Barnhart 9 4 0 0 3 4 Tymus 43 4 3 1 0 0 Tobert 4% 1 3 0 6 7 M' Ruggers In Tin Bill The Michigan Rugby Club will be seeking its fifth and sixth wins of the season this afternoon when it meets Indiana and the Wau- kegan Rugby Club in its fourth weekend doubleheader of the spring. The first team will face off against Indiana at 10:30 ajn., a team which the Michigan ruggers overwhelmed 18-0 earlier in the season. The match is expected to be closer, according to club presi- dent John Auten, due to several costly injuries to starters. Jim Swan, tied for the team scoring lead, and five others are hobbled for the remainder of the spring. Waukegan and the Michigan second team come to grips at 2:30 p.m. Michigan's record now stands at 4-4-1 with only away contests remaining after today. By MIKE RUTKOWSKI Move the merry-go-round and take apart the ferris wheel-the Michigan Federation Track Meet is going to take over Ferry Field this afternoon. The Federation Open will fea- ture over 200 athletes, both male and female, in the seventh edition of this annual event. The field events start at 1 p.m. today with the running events starting fifteen minutes later. Among the contestants will be members of the Michigan varsity track team as well as trackmen from the Ann Arbor Track Club, Western Michigan, the Detroit Track Club, Michigan State, and the Concordia Junior College. In the 100 yard dash Michigan freshman Dave Cooper is expected to be among the top finishers. Cooper ran a 9.6 in high school which is only two tenths of a second off the Michigan varsity record set by Eddie Tolan in 1929 and tied by Sam Stoller in 1936 and Tom Robinson in 1961. Also running in the 100 will be John Gregg, formerly from Mich- igan and now running with the Ann Arbor Track Club, Michigan's Mac Hunter, and Den Campbless of Michigan State. In the 440 there will be seven runners who have done :50.1 or better. These include Bob Jarema and Ken Burnley for the Wol- verines and Charles Draper. Draper is an excellent runner who has turned the quarter mile in :48.0. Draper will also be running in the second heat which boasts every runner having done 1:54 or bet- ter. Michigan's Jay Sampson will be representing the Wolverines this event. Sampson will be running in the mile as well as the 880. He will be running with teammates Chris Murray and Ted Benedict. Mur- ray and Benedict will also be doing double duty as they run in the three mile too. Wilkie Earns Big T'en Honor, Gordon Wilkie, captain and cen- ter of Michigan's 1964 NCAA and WCHA championship hockey team, has been awarded the Conference Medal of Honor for proficiency in scholarship and athletics. This award has been presented annually since 1914 at each Big Ten school to the student demon- strating the greatest proficiency in both fields. Wilkie, a senior in business ad- ministration, has maintained a "B" average throughout his aca- demic career. In the past hockey season, he has amassed a list of honors which includes the WCHA individual scoring title, a place on the all-league team, a berth on the NCAA all-tournament team, and being named to the collegiate hockey All-American team. i When it's hot in HONDA OF ANN ARBOR 1906 PACKARD RD. 665-9281 2 -~ * 4 . - . N. V. I- Pebble Stripes.,. - ~ -i * Gant oxford .. airy light.. i I Scores 1 . COLLEGE TENNIS Northwestern 9, Ohio State 0 Indiana 9, Illinois 0 Notre Dame 7, Iowa 3 COLLEGE BASEBALL Iowa 8, Illinois 2 Michigan State 13, Northwestern 7 Indiana 9, Ohio State 1 Purdue 3, Minnesota 2 el Major League Standings I AMERICAN LEAGUE W I Pct. 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