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April 18, 1962 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1962-04-18

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

THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY
CHIGA MEN!! Michigan Outlasts Wayne State, 4-3, in Ope
ES STAFF of the MICHIGAN UNION

, APRIL 18, 1962
ner

--Daily-Ed Langs
IT'S SPRING AND YOUNG MEN'S FANCIES LOOK TOWARDS FALL-Spring football practice began yesterday and Coach Bump
Elliott has 19 lettermen returning to next fall's squad. In addition to Bob Chandler, Frosty Evashevski, Tom Pritchard and Dave
Glinka, Elliott will have sophomore prospect Bob Timberlake vying for the quarterback spot. He is not so fortunate on the line
though. Gone are two tackles, two starting ends, the starting cener and the starting righ guard from last year.

the shortstop and centerfielder
made errors on.
The next Michigan run was un-
earned also and came in the fifth
inning to make the score 3-2. Joe
Jones reached first on an error,
stole second, went to third on Ron
Tate's single to center, and scored
on the centerfielder's error.
What turned out to be Michi-
gan's one-run margin of victory
was scored in the sixth. Newman
Two Straight

MICHIGAN
Jones, 2b
Honig, ss
Tate, rf
Steckley, If
Spalla, of
Merullo, c
Campbell, lb
Newman, 3b
Kerr, p
Babel, p
a-Heavenrich
Roebuck, p
Totals
WAYNE STATE
Grondin, 2b
Spivey, rf
Riggs, ss
Rucker, of
Branch, if
Odorico, 2b
Lavin, lb
Stubbs, 3b
Nagel, p
b-Goodwin
c-D~udek
d-Ruggiroli
Totals

AB R H RBI
3 0 2 0
4 0 1 0
4 1 1 0
4 0 1 1
3 1 0 0
1 0 0 0
1110
2 0 0 0
33 4 6 2
AB R H RBI
4 0 3 1
4 0 0 0
3 1 3 1
4 0 0 0
4 000 0
3 0 0 0
1 1 1 0
3100
1 0 0 0
343 4862

walked, stole second, and came
home on Jones' single to left.
a-Flied out fdr Bobel in 4th.
b-Singled for Stubbs in 7th.
c-Pinch-ran for Goodwin in 7th.
d-Struck out for Dudek in 9th.
MICHIGAN 000 211 00x-4 6 2
WAYNE " 000 200 100-3 8 5
2B-Merullo, Riggs, Branch (2).
DP-Honig to Jones to Campbell,
Honig to Jones. E-Campbell, New-
man, Riggs (2), Rucker (2), Lavin.
SB-Branch, Newman (2), Jones,
Steckley, Campbell.
PITCHING SUMMARIES
IP H R ER BB SO
Kerr 3 3 0 0 0 2
Bobel 1 2 2 1 0 0
Roebuck 5 3 1 1 4 5
Nagel 8 6 4 2 4 3
East Backs
NCAA Plan
For Sports
NEW YORK (P) - A special
meeting of the Eastern College
Athletic Conference unanimously
backed the NCAA plan to form
new sports federations in basket=-
ball, gymnastics and track and
field yesterday.
The body, consisting of 132
eastern colleges, voted for a reso-
lution that supports the NCAA
move, which has threatened to
turn jurisdiction of amateur sports
in the country into an open battle.
The voice vote, with 85 repre-
sentatives present, came after Col.
Donald S. Hull, new executive di-
rector of the Amateur Athletic
Union, delivered a plea to turn
down the resolution.
Hull warned that the move for
new federations could result in
hundreds of U.S. college athletes
becoming ineligible for the Olym-
pic Games

By The Associated Press
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. - Lew,
Hyman, the injured Michigan
gymnast, has been taken off the
critical list, but his condition re-
Iaains serious.
He regained consciousness Sun-
day and has been able to leave his
bed and feed himself.
NEW YORK -- Eleven players'
were named yesterday to the foot-
ball Hall of Fame.
None named were from Michi-
gan and four were from the pre-
1900 era.
They will be inducted officially.
at the Annual Awards Dinner of
the National Football Foundation
next December. The Hall now has
154 players, including 15 from the
pre-1900 era, and 49 coaches.
The modern players named to
the Hall of Fame are Benny Lee
Boynton, quarterback at Williams
for three years beginning in 1917;
Guy Chamberlain, halfback and
end at Nebraska, 1913-15; Dan
Hill, Duke center from 1936-38;
Robert (Cal) Hubbard, end and,
tackle for Centenary in 1922-24,
and Geneva (Pa) in 1925; John
McEwan, Army center 1916-18; Jo-
seph Routt, guard at Texas A & M
1935-37; and W. E. Spears, Van-
derbilt quarterback in 1925-27.
* * *
LOS ANGELES-The beautiful
new $18 million Dodger Baseball

SPORT SHORTS:
Hyman'1s Condition
No Longer Critical

Stadium has everything but drink-
ing fountains. .
City Councilman Edward R.
Roybal, a longtime Dodger foe,
demanded an investigation.
"I was first told that the only
two drinking fountains in the en-
tire" stadium seating 56,000 per-
sons are in the players' dugouts,"
Roybal said.
"Later I found out there is
third-in Mr. O'Malley's private
office."
Walter O'Malley owns the Dodg-
ers.
A Dodger spokesman countered
that there are 221 cold water fau-
cets available to the public in the
stadium, some of them in rest
rooms, some in concession stands.
. He said there were paper cups
available in some of the lounges.
"And I'm sure concession stand
workers wouldn't turn down a re-
quest for a drink of water," an of-
ficial said.
* * *
ST. LOUIS-Larry Foust, 12-
year veteran of the National Bask-
etball Association and With. the St.
Louis Hawks for the past three
years, announced his retirement
yesterday.
He wound up his career as the
10th leading scorer in NBA history
with 11,198 points in 817 games,
Foust played only 57 games last
season.

THE NEW SOCIAL DISEASES
are
OVERKILL EUPHORIA
and
NUCLEAR PROSTRATUS
EXTREMIS
Either one will satisfy your
Secret Death Wish .III
Write World Constitution
2310 No. 15th Ave. Phoenix, 7,
Arizona

ATTENTION
STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN

You Can Win The Following Prizes By Saving Empt
ra
WIN:. 1st PRIZE-Sylvania 19" Portable TV

y Packages Of:
treyton

2nd PRIZE-Emerson Hi-Fi Tape Recorder
3rd PRIZE-Zenith, Royal $500 Transistor Radio

RULES:
1-All students of the University of Michigan are eligible to participate.
2-The individual student turning in the most empty Pall Mall, Lucky Strike and/or Dual Filter
Tarreyton packages will be awarded the Sylvania 19" portable TV; student turning in the
second largest number of packages will be awarded the Emerson Hi-Fi tape recorder; student
turning in the third largest number of packages will also be awarded a Zenith, Royal 500
transistor radio.
3-Only Pall Mall, Lucky Strike and Dual Filter Tareyton may be used. They must be tied in
bundles of 25 packages, and each bundle must bear the name and address of the student
turning them in.
4-Bundles of packages can be turned i'n at the Union Building Travel Desk on Monday, May 28,

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