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May 02, 1964 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1964-05-02

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

'

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

RA*. JUtT J3 .5.'J.VMA s . h t) LO

...._._ _ cf[A T Vl'4L A Y Y A VO 1U13 A

V

mpbell Leads 'M' Nine Past Purdue

FACE NU TODAY:
Netters Win Two on Shutouts

By SCOTT BLECH
e Campbell slammed a 360-
ome run in the last half of
venth inning yesterday to
Michigan a 4-3 victory over
e and undisputed posession
t place in the Big Ten.
pbell also drove in the Wol-
s' first two runs on a two-
agle in the third inning and
d the day with three hits
r at bats.
re started shaky but came on
," said Coach Moby Bene-
after yesterday's triumph,
"shaky start" referred to
>ell's error in the first in-
vhich led to two unearned
or the Purdue Boilermakers.
Early Action
i one out in the first inning,
-arland hit a slow tap to-
short and Campbell failed
ne up with the ball. Roy
quickly followed by hitting
Barnhart's offering through
x for a base hit. Both run-
dvanced on an infield out
:ored on Mike Mathis' two-
ngle up the middle into
field.
hart then settled down and
the next six batters in a
s he waited for his team-
to produce some runs. '
Wolverines Score;
iomore righthander Mike
saw his 2-0 lead vanish ini
hird inning when Tom
) Laslo led off with a walk
,fter Barnhart's out, Bob

Gilhooley got a free pass to first
base. Laslo and Gilhooley advanc-
ed an extra base on Ted Size-]
more's infield out. The stage was'
then set for Campbell..The lanky
shortstop smashed a base hit past
Purdue's diving shortstop Joe
Chess and Laslo and Gilhooley
scampered home to tie the game.
The Wolverines got their third
run of the game when Earl Meyers
scored from third on George
Skaff's looping single to center
field. Meyers had reached first
base on a base hit and went to
third on a two-base error by
first baseman Bill Weiler. Weiler
fielded Chan Simonds' ground ball
and then threw the ball into left
field when he tried to force
Meyers at second.
Preserve Lead
Barnhart preserved this lead un-
til the seventh inning and then
the Purdue bats started ringing.
Gordon Teter started -things off
with a bang as he hit a hard
grounder down the third base line.
Skaff intercepted the smash with
a backhand stab behind third
base. He picked up the ball and
then fired a strike to first base-
man Chan Simonds who stretched
for the throw which just beat
Teter for the out. Skaff received
a round of applause from the fans
as he executed what, according to
coach Moby Benedict, was a "real
fine play."
The Wolverines continued their
"fine" fielding when Joe Chess,'

who had singled, tried to score on
Purvis' long double to right center.
Ron Tate fielded Purvis' blast
near the fence and threw the ball
to cutoff man Laslo in short
center field. Laslo completed the
play by throwing a strike to catch-
er Sizemore who tagged out the
sliding Chess.
Barnhart then bounced back
and completed the game for his
second Big Ten victory of the
season. Sizemore said that Barn-
hart was not quite as sharp as
when he shut out Wisconsin last
Friday but he had a real good
knuckle ball.
Benedict was very pleased with
the victory and especially the way
the team hustled. He plans to use
Bill Wahl and Marlin Pemberton
in today's 1 p.m. double header
against Illinois. The two hurlers
compose the same one-two punch
that beat Northwestern last week-
end.
Campbell Connects
PURDUE AB R H RBI
Lui, 3b 5 0 11
Garland, 2b 4 1 0 0
Hern, rf 4 1 1 0
McKenzie, c 4 0 1 0
Mathis, if 3 0 2 2
Weiler, lb 3 0 0 0
a-Sammons 1 0 0 0
Teter of 3 00 0
Chess, ss 4 0 2 0
Purvis, p 3 1 2 0
b-Schaefer 0 0 0 0
Totals 34 3 9 3
MICHIGAN AB R H RBI
Gilhooley, rf 3 1 0 0
Sizemore, c 4 0 0 0
Campbell, ss 4 1 3 3
Tate, cf 3 040
Meyers, If 4 1 2 0
Simonds, lb 4 0 0 0
Skaff, 3b 3 01 1
Laslo, 2b 2 1 1 0
Barnhart, p 3 0 0 0
Totals 30 4 7 4
a-Struck out for Weiler in 9th.
b--Ran for Purvis in 9th.
PURDUE 200 000 100--3 9 3
MICHIGAN I02 100 10x-4 7 1
E-Campbell, Mathis 2, Garland.
DP-Liu, Garland, Weiler. LOB -
Michigan 6, Purdue 7. 2B-Purvis.
Hi- Campbell. SAC-Purvis.
PITCHING SUMMARIES
IP H R ER BB SO
Barnhart (W, 3-3) 9 9 3 1 1 5
Purvis (L, 2-1) 8 7 4 3 3 4
II~.-Barnhart (Teter).

.,.

Special To The Daily

EVANSTON -Michigan's net-
men picked up their second and
third consecutive shutouts of the
season yesterday by whitewash-
ing both Purdue and Minnesota.
In their last dual meet effort,
Coach B i1I Murphy's netters
trounced Western Michigan by a
score of 9-0. These victories give
the team a Big Ten record of 3-1,
and an overall mark of 5-3.
The rain that washed out this
week's meet with Notre Dame fol-
lowed the team to Evanston where
play had to be shifted indoors
shortly after the matches had
started.
Murphy explained, "We were
rained out, and played on hard
surfaced courts in the fieldhouse.
We were pressed for time and
therefore we only played one ten-
game set. We had some good
matches and everyone played
well."
Fauquier Wins
Against Purdue, Murphy played
Canadian Captain Harry Fauquier
against the Boilermakers' John
Powless. Fauquier had little trou-
ble in disposing of his opponent,
beating him 10-4.
Soph Karl Hedrick handily
dumped Wayne Svobda by a score
of 10-0 on the second court. Hed-
rick and Canadian John Fraser
beat Powless and Svobda in first
doubles, 10-2.
Hal Lowe, playing in the third
slot, took on Mike Hannas and
doubled his opponent's score, 10-5.
Brian Flood, one of the quartet
of juniors, beat soph Eric Schmidt
of Purdue iby a score' of 10-4.-
Michigan's sophomore duo of
Bill Dixon and Jim Swift each
w e r e victorious, beating Joel

Leisch and Bruce Brodie
10-2 respectively.

10-5 andI

The two then played third
doubles and beat their singles op-
ponents by a count of 10-4.
In the second doubles position
Fauquier and Lowe teamed to-
gether and won 10-5.
The Wolverines dominated all
play against Minnesota as they
had against Purdue. Although
some of the individual matches
were closer, the end result was the
same, 9-0.
Close Match
Fauquier topped Jerry Noyce, a
sophomore, 10-7, then teamed
with Lowe once again for a win in
second doubles, 10-8, in the closest
match of the day.
Hedrick met with little opposi-
tion, losing only one game to the
Gophers' Dave Rosenberg. Hed-
rick and Fraser formed Murphy's
first doubles squad, and they
dumped Noyce and Brian Lawson,
10-6.
Swift won for the third time
Friday by trouncing Gerry Krause,
10-3.
Michigan's sophomores t h e n

V

teamed together and won going
away, 10-3 over Lutz and Krause.
Michigan's two victories yester-
day set up today's match with de-
fending Big' Ten champion North-
western. The Wildcats have lost
only one dual meet this year, fall-
ing 5-4 at the hands of the Saluk-
Twin Win
- PURDUE
SINGLES: 1. Fauquier (M) def.
Powless, 10-4. 2. Hedrick (M) def.
Svobda, 10-0. 3. Lowe (M) def.
Hannas, 10-5. 4. Flood (M) def.
Schmidt, 10-4. 5. Dixon (M) def.
Leisch, 10-5. 6. Swift (M) def. Bro-
'ie, 10-2.
DOUBLES* 1. Hedrick-Fauquier
(M) def. Powless-Svobda, 10-2. 2.
Fauquier-Lowe (M) def. Hannas-
Schmidt, 10-5. 3. Dixon-Swift (H)
def. Leisch-Brodie, 10-4.
MINNESOTA
SINGLES: 1. Fauquier (M) def.
Noyce, 10-1. 2. Hedrick (M) def.
Rosenberg, 10-1. 3. Lowe (H) def.
Lutz, 10-3. 4. Flood (M) def. Law-
son, 10-6. 5. Dixon (M) def. Mik-
kelson, 10-2. 6. Swift (A2) del.
Krause, 10-3.
DOUBLES: 1. Hedrick-Fraser (M)
def. Noyce-Lawson, ,10-6. 2.- Fau-
quer-Lowe (M) def. Rosenberg-
Mikkelson, 10-8. 3. Dixon-Swift (M)
def. Lutz-Krause, 10-3.

Y

4'

4

indermen Take on
ittany Lions Today

DAVE CAMPBELL GEORGE SKAFF
EVEN TEAMS:
Inttras quad'Grid Tilt
Ends Spring Drills

'

By JIM LaSOVAGE
enty-eight men of the Wol-
e track team arrived at State
ge, Pennsylvania, to face the
State team in a dual meet
higan will be looking for a
t of last year's 102-38
cing of the Nittany Lion
lads. This year's version of
indermenrests its hopes on
egulars who have been plac-
igh in earlier meets.
Dashes
;hing 100 yards will be Ken
ey and Willie Brown. Burn-
long with Mac Hunter and
Romain, will be running in
220-yard dash also. Kent
ird, an Olympic hopeful from
lad, will go the quarter mile
teammates George Wade and
Lin.
de Soudek, one of Michigan's
consistent performers of late,
e putting the shot and throw-
he discuss, as will be captain
Schmitt. Bill Yearby will also
bute his biceps towards the
shot put endeavors, and Fred
ert will be heaving the dis-
high jumpers, Michigan's
track coach Don Canham will
ing with Al Ammerman, the
'en champion, and Bob Den-
who cleared 6'10" early in
:idoor seasn.
Leaping Lizzards
n Rowser and Tom Sweeney
eap the broad jump for the
rines, while Dick Wells and
e Canamare try their luck at
vaulting.
the 120-yard high hurdles,
Nuttall, Norm Kohns and
Ioodton will be entered, with
Mason going with Woodton
ia j-or League
Standings

and Kohns in 330-yard inter-
mediate hurdles.
Ted Benedict and Chris Murray
will race in the two-mile event,
and to round out the meet's races,
Des Ryan, Dave Hayes and Jay
Sampson will compete in the mile.
RuggerS Seek
To Equalize
Sping Record
The Michigan RugbyClub will
seek its fifth and sixth wins of
the season today and tomorrow
against Minnesota and the Ujniver-
sity of Chicago in the Midwestern
Rugby Tournament at Chicago.
The ruggers, currently with a
4-6-1 record, have been plagued
with injuries this spring. Nine
men are out of the regular lineups
to date, with several others ex-
pected to see only limited action.
Today the club faces off against
Chicago, a team which beat Michi-
gan here earlier in the season 6-0.
Chicago has improved, according
to Michigan club president John
Auten, and 'now stands 5-3 for the
spring.
Tomorrow Michigan will face a
tougher challenge in a' team
which; is "stronger than Chicago"'
says Auten. Minnesota came away
from the St. Louis Regional
Tournament with' an unblemished
record, and is still among the un-
defeated. This will be the first
meeting between, 'the two clubs,
with 'a trophy, the "Little. Brown
Jug" of rugby, being at stake.
Also represented among the 12-
team tournament field are Notre
Dame, Wisconsin and undefeated
Illinois.

I

Scores

!

, COLLEGE BASEBALL
Michigan State 5, Illinois 2
Wisconsin 4, Indiana 1
Bowling Green 2, W. Michigan 1
Minnesota 9, Iowa 2
Ohio State 15, Northwestern 2
TRACK
Illinois 69, Idniana 63
TENNIS
Northwestern 9, Purdue 0
Northwestern 9, Minnesota 0
Koufax Ready
To Pitch Again
LOS ANGELES (A") - S a n d y
Koufax was pronounced fit yes-
terday and may pitch again for
the Los Angeles Dodgers as early
as Monday.
Koufax, baseball's No. 1 pitcher,
last season, has been out of action
since he strained the muscles in
his left forearm during a game at
St. Louis April 22.
Johnny Podres, another Dodger
left-hander who has been ailing,
is listed as a probable starter for
Sunday's game with the San Fran-
cisco Giants.
A sore arm kept Podres from
starting until April 25. In that
game at Milwaukee he was struck
on the arm by a pitch and dis-
abled again.
Ron Perranoski, the Dodgers'
left-handed relief ace, pulled a
thigh muscle covering first base
the same day Podres was hurt.
Perranoski hasn't pitched since
and still can't run well.

By LLOYD GRAFF
Two evenly matched football
teams meet today at 2 p.m. at
Michigan Stadium in the final
scrimmage of spring practice.
Coach Bump Elliott has split his
team up in an effort to force. top
spring performances out of next
season's Michigan standard bear-
ers. He will be looking particularly
closely at the interior line which
lost two stalwarts by graduation,
Tom Keating and {Joe O'Donnell.
Charles Kines and Gerry Mader
will play tackle for the Blue team
with Tom Mack and Chuck Ruzi-
cka at the position for the White
squad. Dave Butler and John Mar-
cum are slated to start at guard
for the Blues and Rich Hahn and
Bill Keating will be playing for
the Whites.
Rough Workout
New interior line coach Tony
Mason has been pushing the line-
men hard. "I had them take off
their helmets the other day and
I looked at their faces. If they
weren't bruised, they went out
and hit until they were," remarks
Mason.
Another area where Elliott will
have more than the usual interest
is in the backfield where Michigan
hopes to come up with some speedy
halfbacks which have been chron-
ically' deficient recently. The fast-
est of all the prospects will not
be playing, however. Freshman
Carl Ward is sidelined with a leg
injury sustained in practice. His
position on the Blue team will be
manned by Mike Bass, also a
freshman. Another newcomer, Jim
Detweiler will be stationed at the
other halfback. Mel Anthony will
be at fullback with Bob Timber-
lake calling signals for the Blues.
White Backs
Freshman quarterback Dick
Vidmer will lead the Whites with
Tom Brigstock and Jack Clancy
a~s his halfbacks and Barry Deh-

lin carrying the bacon from the
fullback slot.
Tom Cecchini will play center
for the Blue with Brian Patchen
holding the spot for the Whites.
Both are proven Big Ten lineback-
ers. Cecchini appears to have re-
covered fully from the leg injury
which idled him more than half of
last season.
At the end spots Captain Jim
Conley and Craig Kirby will be
playing for the Blue team with
Steve Smith and Ben Farabee
toiling for the White squad.
Pros To Draft
College Stars,
NEW YORK (P)-The nation's
top senior college basketball.play-
ers go up for grabs Monday at the
annual draft meeting of the Na-
tional Basketball Association.
The New York Knicks, who fin-
ished the season with the lowest
percentage of the nine teams, get
first choice and the feeling is that
they will claim Lucious Jackson,
the 6-foot-9 Little All-America
from Pan American College in
Texas.
The Knicks have been seeking a
"big guy" to firm up their rebuild-
irjg program and Jackson has been
proclaimed as one of the best by
NBA scouts /scouring the country
for pro prospects.
Another "big guy" likely to- be
taken on the first round are Jim
(Bad News) Barnes, 6-8 of Texas
Western now in Russia with the
touring U.S. team.

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Sl .U ETCON

:._._...

AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pct.
land 6-43-.667
Lesota 8 6 .571
tgo 5 4 .556,
York 5 4 .556
nore 6 5 .545
it 7 6 .538
Angeles 6 7 .462
ington 6, 9 .440
rn 5 7, .417
is City 4 7 .363
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
York 1, Washington 0
esota 10, Kansas City 5
land at Baltimore (wet)
ngeles at Chicago (rain)
games scheduled
TODAY'S GAMES
ington at New York
land at Baltimore
ngeles at Chicago"
It at Boston
esota at Kansas City (t-u)

GB
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NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pct. G
Iphia 10 2 .833
Francisco 8 3 .727 1
kee 8 6 .571 3
~is 9 6 .600 2?
rgh 7 7 .500 4
nati 7 7 .500 4
on 7 9 .438 4
Angeles 6 10 .375 51
go 4 7 .364 .5
ork 2 11 .154 8
ayed night game.
E STERDAY'S RESULTS
phia 5, Milwaukee 3
is 6, Pittsburgh 2
iati 4, New York 3
ancisco at Los Angeles (Inc)
oat Houston (inc)
TODAY'S GAMES
arcisco at Los Angeles (n)
rgh at St. Louis (n)
n at Houston (n)
irk at Cincinnati
Iphia at Milwaukee

B
13
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Selections from 15 Years
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Including Works of
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Douglas C. Sprigg

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