THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUa ESDAY, APRIL 17, HOME SWEET HOME: Hawks Have Advantage To Even Cup Playoffs WSU Ball Game Opens Season Jst Jo0 CHICAGO W) - The Stanley Cup Hockey Playoffs are proving there is no place like home, and the Chicago Black Hawks were preparing themselves mentally yesterday to follow this theme. After blanking the Toronto Ma- ple Leafs 3-0 Sunday night in the Chicago Stadium, the Hawks are thinking in terms of another home victory tonight to square the best-of-seven final series at 2-2. Toronto took the first two games in its bailiwick, just as the Cana-' diens did against the Hawks in the opening two matches of the semifinals in Montreal. Chicago then swept four straight from the Canadiens. In the nine playoff games in- volving the Hawks to date - six with Montreal and three with Toronto-eight were won by the home team. Coach Punch Imlach called a practice for several of his Leafs on Stadium ice yesterday while the Hawks were ordered to rest. By JOHN SCOCHIN "Our pitching was definitely a After a disappointing spring the problem. Our pitchers will have Michigan baseball team will be- to get the ball over the plate to gin its season in earnest when it allow the defense to have a chance meets Wayne State's Tartars at to throw the men out," stated the Michigan Stadium at 3:30 for Lund. the home opener. "Our hurlers have the ability but Coach Don Lund will use three they have to go to work and sharp- starters in stints tomorrow to give en their control or this will be a his hurlers a chance to get in long season for us," Lund added. shape. John Kerr, Dave Roebuck Wins First and Jim Bobell will all see action. Michigan lost the first game to Fritz Fisher will rest up with a Arizona State, 15-6, April, 9 but tight arm after some heavy work- came back the following day to outs on the tour. level the Wildcats with a barrage It was a long spring for the of hits for an 18-7 victory with Wolverine diamondmen who man- Wayne Slusher getting the win in aged to win only four of their ten relief of Jim Bobell. games in contests, with Arizona Kerr made it two in a row with and Arizona State on the annual a 6-3 victory the following day spring tour. jhwhile Dave Roebuck put Michigan Poor Pitching 'two games up by overcoming a The pitching wasn't there when streak of wildness to notch a 5-3 it had to be and despite fairly good win. hitting the Wolverines finished be- Even Series low the .500 mark in their 10-day The Sundevils edged the Wol- effort.ghes nd April edged st- There was a bright side to the verines, 7-6, on April 13 and post- ed a rare triple play. With runners avenge last year's 14-8 loss to the on first and second the hitter Wolverines in a season which saw popped a bunt which catcher Joe the Tartars win eight of 13 games. Merullo caught in the air. He This year the Detroiters will bring then threw to second baseman an opening day win over Albion Dick Honig to double off the run- into their game against Michigan. ner and Honig ran down the play- Wayne State's top starter, Ed er who was off first base for the Nagel, a former star for Detroit's third out. Pershing High, will be on the Wayne State will be seeking to mound against Michigan. VM . ...this calls for An Insuranco Comiany aree.r? Talk it over with an E.M. interviewer One of the major industrial insurance companies in the United States, Employers Mutuals of Wausau offers in- teresting, rewarding careers to hundreds of college men and women. Some who joined us majored in insurance, but most were unaware until they talked with our interviewers that their education could be applied and their aims realized in an insurance company. Talk with our representative about the opportunities we can offer at our home office and in more than 100 cities large and small throughout the country. Mr. W. D. Wallmo will be here Wednesday, April 18, to interview senior men for positions as claim adjusters and underwriters and senior women for audit reviewer posi. tions. Further information can be obtained from the placement office. Employers Mutuals of Wausau HOME OFFICE: WAUSAU, WISCONSIN Budweiser. tour. Michigan bested Arizona State in four games out of seven although the State nine, which had already played over 20 games, was rated among the nation's top 15 college teams a week earlier. Arizona Tough Arizona was the scourge. The powerful Wildcats, with only two losses and 17 wins, swept three in a row from the Wolverines to keep their number seven national rank- ing secure and run their victory total to 20. Ace pitcher Dan Schneider boosted his record to 7-0 with an opening 2-1 victory over Michi- gan's Fritz Fisher. An unearned run in the tenth inning was the margin which beat the Wolverines. The loss was a heartbreaker for Fisher, who had struck out 16 bat- ters while walking only four in his first starting assignment to open the 1962 seasona on April 6. Too Many Walks Fisher's opening day perform- ance was the only bright spot for the Wolverine moundsmen. Ari- zona came back to sweep the next day's doubleheader, 9-3 and 6-2. The Wolverine hurlers couldn't get the ball across and walked so many batters that Michigan gave the game away on free passes. Soviets join Davis Cuppers MOSCOW UP)-The Soviet Un- ion named a 4-man squad yester- day for its meeting with Holland May 5-7 in the first round of the European Zone Davis Cup tennis competition. It's the first time the Russians have tried for the tro- phy. Members of the team are Tom- as Lejus, 21; Mikhaid Mozer, 27; Sergei Likhachov, 22, and Rudolf Sivokhin, 24. ed a 9-7 decision to even the series at three wins each in the first game of a finale doubleheader the following afternoon. Michigan, behind Kerr, who fin- ished with a 2-0 record for the trip, took the nightcap and the series with an 8-4 victory. Managers Wanted Those desiring to become football managers contact Tony Klain at NO 2-8447. - 1' Any freshman or sophomore interested in becoming baseball manager report to Bruce Krop- schot at the baseball diamond any afternoon. The April 12 game with Grand Canyon College had to be can- celled so Michigan finished with a 4-6 record. Improved Hitting According to Lund the team showed improvement on defense and the hitting was much im- proved over the pre-season show- ing. The team will have speed this year. When opportunities arose the Wolverines did not hesitate to steal bases on the tour. Outfielders Ron Tate and Dennis Spalla were the leading hitters on the tour while Harvey Chapman did a fine job of filling in for injured in- fielder Dave Campbell. Chapman was also the fielding standout in the final game. In a clutch situation he started a double play by fielding a bounder down the first base line. He fired to the shortstop covering second, who threw to the pitcher at first for an unusual 3-6-1 double play. Chapman also leaped against the fence near first to catch a high pop fly and made two fine putouts on deep liners. Get Triple Play In the third game against Ari- zona State the Wolverines execut- -Daily-Bruce Taylor KAPOW!-The sharp crack of the ash meeting horsehide is fol- lowed by the familiar high are of a sphere taking to the air. This and much more awaits the spectator when the Wolverines open their home season against the Wayne State Tartars. M' PLACES THREE: Indiana TankersSweep fastest AAU Meet Ever iEnjoy the King of Beers! ---- e gse where there's life... there's Bud, ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC ST. LOUIS "NEWARK*t.OS ANGELES -TAMPA U~vo'ly Mar(,ylyn Prossor, PoMona WI4 By DAVE GOOD Indiana and a 17-year-old high school boy named Roy Saari made the AAU meet two week-ends ago the fastest in the history of Amer- ican swimming. But even so, Michigan freshman Ed Bartsch made the finals in both backstroke events, former Michigan diver Bob Webster won the one-meter springboard event and junior Pete Cox placed sixth behind him.. Bartsch swam a 2:14.8 for a third in the 220, won by Indiana sophomore Tom Stock in 2:09.0, a new American record. Then he timed :55.0 in the 100 for a fourth. Southern California freshman and Olympic bronze medalist Bob Ben- nett won that one in :54.1. Webster Beats Vogel Webster, the 10-meter spring- board winner in the Rome Olym- pics, beat Purdue's John Vogel for the one-meter title with 468.95 points and then came in eighth in the three-meter, .won by Indiana freshman Rick Gilbert. Cox was sixth in the one-meter and tenth in the three-meter, and freshman Ed Boothman wound up seventeenth in the one-meter and eleventh in the three-meter. The other two Michigan swim- mers who competed both swam fast times and just missed quali- fying for the finals. Misses Finals Sophomore Jon Baker lacked .3 VAN the GOOD HUMOR MAN will be at South Quad 8:30-9:00 P.M. East Quad 9:00-9:30 P.M. West Quad 9:30-10:00 P.M. .------ ------- Arrow i "PAR" -hits the mark for complete comfort of making the 220-yd. breaststroke field. His 2:34.1 put him second in his heat to Southern Cal's Rob- bie Greisser and seventh overall. Freshman Lanny Reppert swam a fast :53.8 in the 100-yd. butter- fly, but still lacked a full .8 of qualifying. He also did a good 2:06.9 in the 200-yd. individual medley. Besides Webster, Bennett and Minnesota junior Steve Jackman, who won the 100-yd. freestyle in :48.3, the only non-Indiana com- petitor to win an event was Saari, who hasn't decidedon ascollege to attend after he graduates from El Segundo, Calif. Sets Three Records Saari set American marks of 16 :54.1 in the 1500-meter freestyle; 4:14.6 in the 440-yd. freestyle and 1:58.6 in the 220-yd. freestyle. Indiana junior Chet Jastremski was the only other triple winner, setting American records of :59.1 in the 100-yd. breaststroke, 2:25.3 in the 220-yd. breaststroke (with another American mark of 2:11.3 at the 200-yd. mark of that race) and 1:59.4 in the 200-yd. indivi- dual medley. ,Rounding out the eight Indiana wins, sophomore Lary Schulhof set an American record of 2:10.7 in the 220-yd. butterfly and just missed one with a :52.1 in the 100-yd. butterfly, and sophomore Ted Stickles set a new mark of 4:18.1 'in the 400yd. individual medley. Pick NYC Site For Title Fight NEW YORK (A) - Heavyweight Champion Floyd Patterson prob- ably will defend his title against Sonny Liston either Sept.17 at Yankee Stadium or Sept. 26 at the Polo Grounds in New York, Tom Boland, president of Chempionship Sports, Inc., announced yesterday. Boland said there were two pos- sibilities that might prevent the fight from being held in New York. 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