THlE MICHIGAN DAILY SATUR DAY, MAY 12, 1962 2 "Imrr-r -.r Volverine By PETE DILORENZI Nine Edges Hoosiers, 5-4 AT MICHIGAN STADIUM: Gridders Hold Annual Finale 0 Joe Jones, counted upon more for his singles and his speed on the bases than for his extra-base and RBI power, came through with a booming triple in the bot- tom of the ninth inning to drive home Fritz Fisher with the win- ning run in Michigan's thrilling 5-4 Big Ten victory over Indiana yesterday afternoon at Ferry Field. The Wolverines will try to make it three straight weekend sweeps this afternoon at 1:30 as Dave Roebuck (6-1) and John Kerr (5-0) take the mound against Ohio State's Buckeyes in a crucial home doubleheader. Score Tied With the score tied 4-4 going into the bottom of the ninth, Harvey Chapman led off and bounced out third-to-first. The next scheduled batter was Fisher, a very good hitting pitcher who had already collected one hit off Hoosier starter Dick Sparks in the third inning to break up what was then a no-hitter. Lund elected to let Fisher bat instead of a pinch-hitter even though Fisher was having control troubles and seemed to be lacking the big strikeout pitch, a usual part of his mound repetoire. Justified Decision And Fisher justified the decision with a. clean single behindsecond. This set the stage for Jones, and the speedy secondbaseman got' rave notices from the partisan Buckeyes Today crowd for his performance. Hav- ing run up the count to 3-1, Jones caught hold of one of Spark's hard ones and drilled it on a rising arc to the farthest grass-patch of left-center field. Before the fateful ninth, the game was a squeaker all the way, with Fisher on the ropes .several times. Both teams scored a run in the fourth, the Wolverines got three in the sixth, and the Hoos- iers followed with three in the seventh. Indiana's first run came after first baseman Max Bailey reached first on an error by Chapman. Luke George followed with a walk, and, with two out, catcher Bill Bohnert bounced a ground-rule double over the right-center field fence, scoring Bailey. Wolverines Retaliate The Wolverines followed with their first when Dennis Spalla walked, went to second on Joe Merullo's single, and scored on Dick Campbell's ground-rule double to straight-away center. Two innings later, the Wolver- ines collected three more runs. Jim Steckley led off with a high pop between home and first which dropped midst the gaping mouths and open gloves of Indiana's first- baseman, catcher, pitcher and thirdbaseman. Spalla delivered a long triple to left-center, scoring Steckley, and was followed by Merullo, who hit a double to the same spot, driving in another run. Merullo Scores Merullo took third on Camp- bell's deep fly to left and scored on Fisher's infield bouncer. That put Michigan ahead, 4-1. The lead was very short-lived, indeed, however, as Indiana jump- ed on Fisher for three quick runs in the top of the seventh on Terry Flannagan's single to right, Bill Elyea's ground-rule double to cen- terter and Ed LaDuke's homerun to deep left center. That ended the scoring until the fateful ninth. The win upped the Wolverines' Big Ten record to 9-1 and main- Big Ten Standings W L Pct. MICHIGAN 9 1 .900 Illinois 8 2 .800 Ohio State 8 2 .800 Indiana 5 5 .500 Wisconsin 4 5 .444 Purdue 4 6 .400 Northwestern 3 6 .333 Iowa 2 4 .333 Michigan State 3 6 .333 Minnesota 0 5 .000 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Michigan 5, Indiana 4 Ohio State 6, Michigan State 3 Illinois 6, Purdue 0 Northwestern at Iowa (rain) Wisconsin at Minnesota (rain) Stained their one-game lead over Illinois and Ohio State, who also won single games. The loss drop- ped Indiana to fourth with a 5-5 mark. The game was unusual in that neither team made any substitu- tions, pitching changes, or use of 1 pinch hitters. Lund had Dave Roe- buck and Kerr warming up t throughout the latter part of the game, but chose to stick with Fisher. Fisher was helped out of a ser-+ ious eighth inning jam in which Indiana had two on and only one out when Spalla made a running catch of Jerry Flannagan's sink- ing liner behind second and flipped to Honig covering the bag for a double play. Netters Host Ohio State By GEORGE WHITE Undefeated and nearly unoppos- ed, Michigan's tennis powerhouse appears as certain and lethal as death and taxes, as they look for their eighth straight victory over Ohio State this afternoon. The Buckeye racquetmen will have a tough time disputing this fact when they go against the Wol- verines here in Ann Arbor, at 1:30 p.m. The red-hot Wolverine net- men will travel to Wisconsin next week in preparation for the West- ern Conference Meet in Minneap- olis, Thursday. Strong in Singles Although the Buckeyes appear fairly strong in their two singles positions, they will find themselves hard-pressed to garner any games from high-flying Senkowski, Fau- quier or Dubie. Jim Tenney will be no push-over either. Each has yet to suffer defeat. Two seniors and a sophomore will go against the Maize and Blue in the top three singles spots for OSU. John White, a senior from Lima, O., will go against Senkow- ski. Jim Weaver, another senior,j will back him up in the numberj two slot. The Buckeye's will place their faith in four sophomores for the remaining positions. Ohio State downed Purdue early in the season, 6-3, but then drop- ped a lopsided contest to Indiana, 6-3. Ci By JERRY KALISH The Wolverines didn't make it to the Rose Bowl last season, but they're having their own bowl game-the Steak Bowl-this after- noon at 2:00 p.m. .Coach Bump Elliott has divided his coaching staff to handle the White and Blue units in the an- nual intra-squad game that marks the end of spring drills. Medium Rare And traditionally, the losing coaches must buy steak dinners for the winners. Hank Fonde and Jack Fouts will attempt a repeat of last spring's victory as they send their Blue team against the Whites TODAY'S LINEUP Another battle waging on the field will be that for the quarter- back position. Frosty Evashevski is slated to call signals for the Blue and will be opposed by Dave Glin- ka who has fought off all chal- lengers the past two years for the regular berth. Generals on Review But two other field generals are still in the running. Freshman Bob Timberlake, a powerful runner, will aid Glinka for the Whites, while veteran Bob Chandler will support Evashevski. Incidentally, Evashevski was one of the outstanding performers last year when he completed a 47 yd. pass play to Raimey that led to his team's only score. Evashevski was pressing Glinka for the job when he injured his knee in a scrimmage early in the fall before the first game. This game could turn into what they call a "real pitcher's duel." Remember? And speaking of quarterbacks, converted halfback Tom Prichard will be starting for the Blues. Prichard's fine running ability was one of the main reasons Elliott experimented with the change in hopes of utilizing a throwing half- back. Minoso Hurt ST. LOUIS QP)-Minnie Minoso, veteran St. Louis Cardinal out- fielder, suffered a skull fracture tonight in crashing headlong into a concrete fence in pursuit of a three-run triple by Duke Snider of Los Angeles. BLUE Brown Keating Minko Muir Kurtz Brown Wiley Evashevski Prichard Laskey Anthony Kickoff t LE LT LG C RG RE RT QB3 LH RH FB WHITE Farabee Houtman Hahn Green Marcun Simkus Yanz Glinka Rindfuss Ward Dodd Los Angeles. time: 2:00, Michigan Stad. INDIANA Flanagan, cf Elyea, ss LaDuke, 2b Kaufman, If Bailey, lb George, rf Ryser, 3b Bohnert, e Sparks, p Totals AB R H RBI 5 1 2 0 5 1 x3 2 4 0 1 0 5 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 1 1 3 0 0 0 35 4 9 4 -Daily-Bruce Taylor JOLTIN' JOE-Joe Jones, whose triple in the ninth inning yester- day, defeated Indiana, 5-4, is shown here swinging against Mich- igan State in last weekend's doubleheader. Jones tripled in pitcher Fritz Fisher yesterday. Today Michigan plays Ohio State in a crucial twin bill. PURDUE, OSU, MSU: Golfers Play Host InFor-WaMeet By GARY WINER MICHIGAN AB R H RBI Jones, 2b 4 0 1 1 Honig, ss 2 0 0 0 Tate. rf 4 0 0 0 Steckley, If 3 1 0 0 Spalla, cf 3 2 1 1 Merullo, c 4 1 2 1 Campbell, lb 4 0 1 1 Chapman, 3b 2 0 0 1 Fisher, p 4 1 2 1 Totals 30 5 7 5 Indiana 000 100 300-4 MICHIGAN 000 103 001-5 E-Honig, Chapman, Bohnert. DP -Sparks, Bohnert, and Bailey; La- Duke, Ryser, and Bailey; Spalla, Honig. LOB-Indiana 11,-Michigan 6. 2B--Bohnert, Kaufman, Elyea, Campbell, Merullo. 3B-Jones, Spal- Ia. HR--LaDuke. SB-Honig. SH- Jones. who are coached by Bob Holloway, Jocko Nelson, and Don Dufek. Fonde and Fouts won their first free dinner in three tries when Doug Bickle kicked a 23 yd. field goal in the fourth quarter for a narrow 10-8 win. Today's contest should be equal- ly as close with the opposing coaches having chosen up sides earlier in the week. "They've been split up pretty evenly," said the bi-partisan El- liott. Yardstick Elliott will use the game as a yardstick to measure the progress and improvement that has taken place this spring. In accord with this, the Meyer W,. Morton Trophy will be awarded to the most im- proved player in spring practice with future promise. Recent recipients of the award have been Dave Raimey, last sea- son's winner who went onto be- come high scorer for the team, Bill Freehan, Jim Van Pelt, Ron Kra- mer, Roger Zatkoff, and freshman coach Dufek. Strong Bids Several freshmen are putting in a strong bid for the annual honor. Halfbacks Bill Laskey and Dick Rindfuss have run well so far and will be facing each other in rival backfields, Starting Blue fullback, Mel Anthony is another newcomer that undoubtedly wil be considered. ATTENTION! Prepare properly for your tests and final exams! " MONARCH REVIEW NOTES-The fastest growing name in review outlines are now available in the following subjects. " These outlines are geared to the material covered in your textbooks. Check below to see how Monarch review notes can aid you in study- ing for your courses! * Review Notes for PALMER-HISTORY OF THE MODERN WORLD * Review Notes in AMERICAN HISTORY SINCE 1865 keyed to HOF- STAADTER-The American Republic, Vol. 2 * Review Notes in ECONOMICS keyed to SAMUELSON * Review Notes in PSYCHOLOGLY keyed to HILGARD-with sample exam questions and answers * Review Notes in SOCIOLOGY-with sample exam questions and answers * Review Notes in BIOLOGY-with sample exam questions and an- swers * Review Notes in CHEMISTRY-with solved problems * Review Notes in POLITICAL SCIENCE (American Government) * Review Notes in MUSIC HISTORY SOLD AT: MICHIGAN BOOK STORE F 3L 32 SouthState St., Ann Arbor r7 I Sparks (L) Fisher (W 3-4) IP H R ER BB SO 8% 7 5 4 6 4 9 9 4 3 7 3 Last year, at Ohio State, the Bucks found themselves on the short end of the win ticket against Michigan, 8-1. MI' Tracksters Travel to East Lansing; Take On Ohio State, Notre Dame, MSU By STAN KUKLA Special To The Daily EAST LANSING-There is only one school that has fewer track meets than Michigan and that is its upstate rival, Michigan State. Today Michigan will be one of the four competitors in State's sole meet of the outdoor season, which starts at 1:00 p.m. They are running against State, Ohio State and Notre Dame-and will prob- ably lose. Says Coach At least that is what coach Don Canham thinks. "Our chances don't look too good," he said, "but I couldn't care less. We are just warming up for th' Big Ten championships next weekend." Canham cites three big reasons for his pessimistic attitude-broad jumper Dave Raimey and sprinters Ken Burnley and Mac Hunter.,- These three men are in fine shape actually, but Canham doesn't want to press his luck. All three have been having trouble with their legs and -are just get-i <0 ting over the effects and back into shape. "With these three men," Can- ham went on, "we would probably walk away with the meet, but it doesn't look good. Picks MSU "I think that State will win. Ohio is strong where we are - in the field and the distance events. State is weak here anyway, so it doesn't make any difference to them. "But State has power in the sprints and hurdles. With our sprinters gone, State has all the power, and will pick up most of their. points here while we'll have to fight for ours," he continued. "State always wins these small meets because they are able to pack away at their opponents. In the big meets, however, the oppo- sition is able to withstand their attack and soundly defeat them," he concluded. Big Guns The Spartans have five big guns who have led them to victory in past meets. Two sprinters, Sherm Lewis and John Parker, are soph- omores while sprinter Zack Ford is a senior. Rounding out the 'Big Five' are hurdler Herm Johnson and two-miler Jerry Young. Michigan will be throwing Big Ten champion Bennie McRae against Johnson and Paul War- field of Ohio State. High-flying Rod Denhart, who set a Michi- gan varsity and Ferry Field record of 15'1% "in the pole vault, will be out to break the Ralph Young field record of 14'4" set by Tom Reichert of Notre Dame and Mike Kleinhans of MSU in 1960. Warfield took three first - in the 100-yd. dash, the low hurdles, and the broad jump - to lead Ohio State to victory over Illinois last weekend, 772 to 541/. T S f s V r s "The hands of the clock are straight up," commented golf Coach Bert Katzenmeyer. Indeed they are for today is the final Big Ten golf match for the University of Michigan before shooting for all the marbles next Thursday and Friday in the Big Ten Golf Championship at Cham- paign. Ohio State, Purdue and Michi- gan State will be guests of the Wolverines today in a 36-hole match held over the Blue course starting at 8:00 a.m. Resume Match Tom Weiskopf, Buckeye sopho- more, and Jerry Steelsmith of the Boilermakers, are expected to re- sume their individual dual for medalist honors. The pair met two weeks ago in a quadrangular meet hleld at Champaign in which the Wolverines finished third behind victors Purdue and runnerup Ohio State. Weiskopf then turned in rounds of 72-74-146 while Steel- smith finished only one shot off the pace with an aggregate score >f 75-72-147. Hopefully, Michigan's Captain Bill Newcomb will be able to make the medalist title a three-way )roposition. Playing last week on he University course, Newcomb ired rounds of 74-75-149 for his best performance of the season. Home Advantage? Going with the home course ad- 'antage for the second consecutive week, the linksters hope to make up for last week's setback at the hands of Northwestern, 22-14. For today's meet, Katzenmeyer vill send Newcomb at the number >ne tee off spot; Chuck Newton, Second; Tom Pendlebury, who shot Michigan State's Buddy Badger is expected to give the medalists a run for their money also. Badger averaged 75.6 strokes per round last Near in competition and fin- ished eleventh in the conference meet. On Monday, the Wolverines will play their last non-conference match against the University of Detroit over the Oakland Hills Golf Course. In last week's tri- angular meet here, Michigan downed the Titans 28-8. The Michigan lineup will be Chuck Newton, Tom Pendlebury, Dave Cameron, Bill Hallock, Tom Ahern and Ray Levandowski. Both New- comb and Mouw have exams and will be unable to participate. L im- L a first Dave Mouw, sixth. round 74 last week, third; Cameron, fourth; Gary fifth; and Bill Hallock, SENIORS . GRADUATES * JUNIORS Invest - Protect Your Education Get a Better Job. . . Permanent - Summer Circulate your Availability Write for Brochure S-6 Employment Counselors, Inc. 33 West 42 st., New York 36, N. Y. LOOK SMART with ONE-HOUR SERVICE 9-4 P.M. ONE-HOUR MARTI N IZI NG Arborland Store Hours 9 A.M.- 7 P.M.Daily MALOLOO TIKE STRIPE terry lined jacket MALOLOO KEY WEST terry lined jacket in printed with rows of authentic Tiki Gods. *orange and green color combinations $8.95. Hawaian cut trunks $5.95. Both woven of seagoing 100% cotton $8.95. of 200% -;otton in colors of *orange. Teamed with Hawaiian cut cotton trunks green or blue on white. $5.95. SPINNAKER STRIPE launches brilliance in knitcombo of 'navy/red and brown/yellow. Cotton blazer $8.95 over Hawaiian trunks $1.95. Cotton and rubber square ridknit trunks $6.95. ME ORTAlagme (with an All-American Look) I Brighten the shoreline scene in brilliant swimwear created in the great American tradition... guaranteed to command raves from your admiring crew! Major League Standings 11 NATIONAL San Francisco Los Angeles St. Louis Philadelphia Pittsburgh Cincinnati Milwaukee Houston New York Chicago LEAGUE W L Pct. 22 8 .733 19 11 .633 16 10 .615 13 11 .542 14 12 .538 14 13 .519 13 14 .481 11 16 .407 5 17 .227 6 21 .2221 AMERICANl LEAGUE W L Pct. GB 3 4 6 6 6 9,j 13 14Y2 G YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Philadelphia 12, Chicago 2 Milwaukee 8, New York 5 Cincinnati 3, Pittsburgh 2 (10 inn.) Los Angeles 8, St. Louis 5 Houston 7, San Francisco 0 TODAY'S GAMES Philadelphia at Chicago Milwaukee at New York (2) Pittsburgh at Cincinnati Los Angeles at St. Louis (n) San Francisco at Houston (n) New York 15 8 .656 Cleveland 15 9 .625 x-Minnesota 15 12 .556 2 x-Chicago 15 13 .536 3 x-Los Angeles 12 11 .522 3 Detroit 12 12 .500 3 Baltimore 13 13 .500 4 Boston 11 13 .458 4 x-Kansas City 12 16 .429 6 Washington 6 18 .250 9 x-Denotes games incomplete. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Washington 12, Baltimore 1 Cleveland 7, New York 1 Detroit 5, Boston 1 Kansas City at Minnesota (inc.) Chicago at Los Angeles (inc.) TODAY'S GAMES Washington at Baltimore (n) Kansas City at Minnesota New York at Cleveland Chicago at Los Angeles (n) Boston at Detroit GB 1/ 21/ 3 3Y 3Y 4 I TRANSPACIFIC sets sail in bold color and stripes. Fleece lined pullover $5.95 atop knit trader length deck pants $7.95. *Yel- low or red combinations of seaworthy 100% cotton. MALOLOa KON TIKI rugged woven jacket with embossed, authentic Tiki head on jac and trunks $8.95. Hawaiian trunks $7.95. Both of cotton in colors of *natural, yet. low, pewter or blue. MALOLO@ MIDSHIPMAN, banded with bold trim. In *white, natural, pewter or navy. Windworthy jacket of cotton gab $7.95. Hawaiian length Lastex cord trunks of acetate, cotton and rubber $6.95. *featured color Catalina, Inc., Los Angeles, Calif., Another fine Kayser-Roth Product. ANNOUNCING! VOLKSWAGEN SERVICE NOW IN ANN ARBOR Headquarters for CATALINA Swimwear A man with Alopecia Universalis*