THE MICHIGAN DAILY ti Wings Tie Series with 2-1 Win it II Major League Standings 11 AMERICANl MacGregor Gets Winning Detroit Tally By The Associated Press DETROIT (P)-Bruce MacGre- gor, a 19-year-old rookie less than two months out of the minor leagues, dramatically burst the De- troit Red Wings back into conten- tion for the Stanley Cup cham- pionship last night with a third period goal that beat the Chicago Black Hawks 2-1. The best-of-seven series now is tied at 2-2. MacGregor, a red-haired fireball who received the highest bonus ever paid a Detroit hockey player, got the first goal of his National Hockey League career and It broke up a tense duel that had a crowd of 13,975 on its feet much of the time. ... Climax The goal.came with a little less than seven minutes to play in the game and. climaxed Detroit's gal- land bid to square the series. The Red Wings, who now have won both- games played on their own ice and. lost both times on Chicago ice, outplayed the Hawks almost from start to finish. But , Glenn Hall's superlative goaltending, plus some last-second heroics by the Hawks' burly de- fense, turned back many a Detroit flurry. Worth Every Penny The Red Wing front office would not, disclose how much money MacGregor got for signing but Ann Arbor Rugby Club Faces Foe By DAVE GOOD Michigan's football s e a s o n doesn't start until next fall, but fans looking for something a lit- tle different may be interested in the home opener of the Ann Arbor Rugby Club this Saturday. Made up of nearly 30 graduate and undergraduate Michigan stu- dents the club will try to spring an upset over the Toronto Irish at 2 p.m. on Wines Field. The locals, who won all four of their games last fall, have varied backgrounds to carry into the sport, which many American ob- servers have called a compromise between football and soccer. Football Players Jim Orwig, Michigan's 1957 captain at tackle, Harry Newman, former Wolverine halfback, and Dave Dingham, one-time Dart- mouth back, all boast experience in college football. Four exchange students are no strangers to rugby, having taken up the game in their native lands. Whata Winiata, captain of his FENCERS MEET The Fencing Club will have its first meeting tonight at 8:00 in the I-M building for all those interested in the sport. team at Wellington University in New Zealand, will act as player- coach for the club. Terry Robin- son, of Queens University in Northern Ireland, will join New- man and Dingham as top running backs. Mike Burrows and Terry Davis, both from the University of London, will see lots of action. Forward Pete Bowman will take one of the eight forward, or lineman, po- sitions, and John Niehuss will be utilized as a place-kicker from one of the seven backfield spots. Rugby parallels football in that the ball can be advanced by run- ning, and it is similar to soccer because the ball can be kicked ahead. It differs from the Ameri- can game, however, by prohibit- ing lateral passing. "Themost interesting aspect of the game," explained Froncie Gutman, another of the local players, "is that there is continu- ous action." He said that the ball is always in play, providing rugby fans with an exciting game to watch come Saturday. 'GIANTS WIN 2-1: Hit Batter in Eighth Defeats Pittsburgh Chicago Los Angeles Minnesota Cleveland Kansas City New York Detroit Boston Washington Baltimore LEAGUE W L Pct. 1 0 1.000 1 0 1.000 1 0 1.000 1 0 1.000 0 1 .000 0 1 .000 0 1 .000 0 1 .000 0 1 .000 0 1 .000 GB I' 1 1 1 1 NATIONAL: Cincinnati St. Louis x-Los Angeles -Philadelphia Pittsburgh San Francisco Chicago Milwaukee LEAGUE W L Pct. 1 0 1.000 1 0 1.000 1 0 1.000 1 0 1.000 1 1 .500 1 1 .500 0 1 .000 0 1 .000 GB 1 1 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Los Angeles at Baltimore (rain) Chicago at Washington (rain) TODAY'S GAMES Minnesota at New York Cleveland at Detroit Kansas City at Boston Los Angeles at Baltimore Chicago at Washington YESTERDAY'S RESULTS San Francisco 2, Philadelphia 2 Philadelphia 1, Los Angeles 0 (at end of 5 innings) Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Pittsburgh at San Francisco Philadelphia at Los Angeles St. Louis at .Milwaukee SAN FRANCISCO ('P) -Rookie manager Alvin Dark gambled and won with veteran right hander Billy Loes yesterday as the San9 Francisco Giants' pitcher, who hadn't started since 1958, beat the world champion Pittsburgh Pi- rates 2-1 yesterday. Pirate hurler Vern Law hit Or- alndo Cepeda with the bases loaded to force in the winning run in the last of the eighth. Loes worked eight innings, giv- ing up eight singles before Dark brought in left hander Billy O'Dell to start the ninth. The Pirates got men on first and second with two out in that final frame after Bob Skinner singled and Rocky Nelson walked. Rookie Jim Duffalo re- lieved O'Dell and got Roberto Clemente on a grounder for the final out. Small Crowd Pittsburgh opened the scoring in the sixth. Clemente singled, went to third on Don Hoak's single and scored on an infield out. Rookie catcher Tom Haller, re- maining alive when Clemente dropped his foul in right field, homered for his first major league hit in the seventh to even the count at 1-1. In the eighth, with one out, Har- vey Kuenn singled to center and reached third on Willie Mays' sin- gle. Willie McCovey drew an inten- tional pass, filling the bases. With the count one and two on Cepeda, law hit him on the shoulder and forced in pinch runner Ernie Bow- man. The Pirates made their big bid in the sixth. Clemente lofted a high fly back of second that the wind whipped around. Second baseman Charlie Hiller misjudged the ball and it fell for a single. Hoak singled through the box to center, his third straight hit, send- ing Clemente to third. Clemente scored on Bill Mazer- oski's grounder. Smokey Burgess was walked intentionally and Loes hit Law to fill the bases. Bill Vir- don, whose homer yesterday nip- ped the Giants in the ninth, slam- med a grounder that hit Law for the automatic third out. The contest was the only after- noon affair in either league, with Philadelphia playing a night game at Los Angeles. The other sched- uled games were rained out. Orioles, A's Trade BALTIMORE (A - The Balti- more Orioles last night traded pitcher Jerry Walker and outfield- er Chuck Essegian to Kansas City for pitcher Dick Hall and out- fielder Dick Williams in a straight player deal. U MARCEL PRONOVOST ...back in action Delicious Hamburgers...15c Hot Tasty French Fries...10c Triple Thick Shakes...20c 2000 WEST STADIUM nl the kid was worth every penny of it last night. His winning goal de- cided a game that had been dead- locked by Red Hay's score for Chi- cago and Alex Delvecchio's goal for Detroit. Both came in the second period. MacGregor's goal followed a spirited rush in the Chicago end with the redshirted Detroiters swarming the net and refusing to let the Hawks clear the puck. Defenseman Warren Godfrey, playing on an injured knee, passed the puck to Val Fonteyne who was camped 25 feet to Hall's left. Fon- teyne fed a short pass to Mac- Gregor who was at center ice and the Rookie fired a backhander that struck Hall's pads and tricksled across the goal line as Hall toppled backward into the net. Detroit's Howie Glover had Hall partly screened out. Ends Drought Hay ended more than 27 minutes of scoreless, but furious hockey when he flicked a high shot over the arm of Detroit goalie Terry Sawchuck. Hay took a pass from Bobby Hull at the corner of the. goal crease and had a simple shot. Just 74 seconds later-and just 36 seconds after Hull went to the penalty box for high-sticking Howie Young-Delvecchio tied the score. The goal followed a faceoff to the left of the Hawk goal. Delvec- chio tried a slapshot, but Reg Fleming stopped it. The puck bounced in the air, Delvecchio knocked it down with his gloved hand and let fly with a 40-footer that zoomed under Hall's leg. Third Goal It was the third goal of the series for Delvecchio, who now is the leading goalgetter in the Stanley Cup showdown. The defeat was a heart-breaking one for the Hawks, seeking to take a 3-1 lead in the series on foreign ice, then go back to friendly Chi- cago Stadium and wrap up their first crown since 1938. But MacGregor was the man of the hour to give Detroit the chance to move ahead 3-2 when the teams meet at the Stadium, resuming their battle for hockey supremacy. The Hawks battled hard for the equalizer last night after Mac- Gregor's goal, but couldn't beat Sawchuck. MERCEDES- BENZ Factory authorized sales and serv- ice. Good selectionsto choose from. Now taking orders for European delivery. Be assured of delivery by placing your order now for the coming summer. ARCURE MOTOR SALES NO 3-3309 617 Detroit St. Ann Arbor y At NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH Cafe Promethean 508 E. 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