THE. MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, APRIL 15, 1961 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, APRIL 15. 1961 WORE THEIR HITTING SHOES: Wolverines Clobber Wayne State (Continued from Page 1) five innings and was touched for 10 runs on 10 hits, including hom- ers by Dennis Spalla and Dick De- Lamielleure. Neuman didn't fare any better. In four innings Michi- gan battered him for four runs on five hits, climaxed with a homer by Franz Neubrecht. The victory went to senior Bob Marcereau who hurled the fifth, sixth and seventh innings. But ac- tually it wouldn't have mattered if the equipment manager pitch- ed, the result would have been the same. Wayne Walloped MICHIGAN AB R H RBI Jones, 2b 5 1 2 1 Honig, ss 4 2 1 1 Freehan, 1b 5 3 3 1 DeLamielleure, rf 3 2 2 2 Merullo, 3b 4 1 1 1 Spalla,If 4 1 3 3 Hood, cf 5 0 0 0 Syring, c 4 10 0 McGinn,p 2000 Marcereau, p 2 1 0 0 Neubrecht, p 1 1 1 2 Halstead, rf 0 0 0 0 Steckley, If 1 0 1 2 Marshall, c 1 1 1 0 Totals 40 14 15 13 WAYNE AB R H RBI Grondin, 2b 5 0. 2 1 Inman, c 5 2 1 1 Riggs, rf 5 2 2 2 Agin, lb 3 1 1 0 Vermersch, lb 1 0 1 0 Spivey, ss 4 0 1 0 Regg:o, ss 1 1 0 0 Rucker, of 4 0 1 2 Branch, If 3 0 0 0 Neubacher, 3b 2 0 0 0 Odorice, 3b 2 0 0 0 Stansberger, p 2 0 0 0 Neuman, p 1 10 0 Norman 0 1 0 0 Totals 38 S 9 6 E - Grondin, Agin 2, Spivey, Branch, Merullo, Syring. 2B-Hon- ig, Syyring. 3B-Spalla. HR-Spalla, DeLamielleure, Neubrecht. LOB- Michigan 10, Wayne 6. Wayne 000 211 022- 8 9 5 Michigan 013 123 22x-14 15 2 PITCHING SUMMARIES IP H R ER SO BB McGinn 4 3 2 2 1 0 Marcereau 3 2 2 1 4 2 Neubrecht 2 4 4 2 3 1 Strausberger 5 10 10 9 2 4 Neuman 3 5 4 4 1 3 After a runless first inning Spal- la put Michigan in front to stay when he massaged a fast ball over the right-center field fence leading off the second. The Wolverines picked up three more in the third on a walk to shortstop Dick Honig, a single by Bill Freehan and DeLamielleure's towering home run which almost decapitated an unwary tennis player some 400-plus feet from congratulations. By the time Strausberger de- parted in the sixth with the bases loaded and nobody out, the Wol- verines had scored six more and home plate was taking more of a beating than the Wayne State righthander. Big Sixth In the three run sixth, Freehan singled, DeLamielleure walked, Merullo singled scoring Freehan, and sophomore Spalla exercised everyone with a long triple to right center, his third hit of the afternoon. Exit Strausberger, en- ter Neuman, who surprised every- one by retiring the side peacefully -for one inning. He was greeted in the seventh' with a single by shortstop Joe Jones, walked Honig, became somewhat flustered when Freehan sent a hard single-his third of the day to left scoring Jones, and still more depressed when reserve outfielder Jim Steckley tallied Honig with a single. 'M' Hurlers Tall right-hander Dennis Mc- Ginn had started on the mound for Michigan, toiling four innings. and allowing two runs on three hits. Marcereau gave up two runs on only one hit during his stint. Despite the lopsided victory there have been no cries as yet from the Big Ten to break up the Wolverines. If there were it wouldn't make much difference, it would only give Coach Don Lund two pennant contenders instead of one. Lund seems to have players hidden away he doesn't even know about. In the eighth inning yes- terday he produced a big sopho- more named Frantz Neubrecht to pitch the eighth and ninth in- nings. Yesterday Neubrecht was not much of a pitcher-he was belted for four runs in two in- inngs--but he turned out to be a helluva hitter. In the home half of the eighth he hit a clothesline shot that whistled over the center-field fence and headed for the freight yards. Scoring in front of him was Barry Marshall, a semi-retired second-first baseman who owned a .398 average last year as a reg- ular, but who is having trouble breaking into this year's lineup. Marshall had doubled batting for catcher Dick Syring. Today the Wolverines can ex- tend their winning streak to three games when they meet Central Michigan in a doubleheader at Mount Pleasant. B'nea B'rith Hillel Foundation 1429 Hill Street Petitioning for office is now open (Pres., Vice-Pres., Secy., Treas. Petitions may be obtained at the office. inquiries may be made of: Al Berkun, Pres. Bob Berger, Vice-Pres. 5-9280 2-4580 Debra Horwitz, Secy. Barry Sherman, Treas. 5-7711, Ext. 4434 2-1650 BASEMENT BOOKnSALE Continues All Week Long at State St.t fN. University Hawks Whip Wings; Lead Playoffs, 3-2 By The Associated Press CHICAGO - Stan Mikita and Murray Balfour, scoring two goals each, last night led the Chicago Black Hawks to a 6-3 victory over the Detroit Red Wings and a three-to-two lead in their Stanley Cup Championship playoff. The Black Hawks, seeking their first championship in 23 years, can wrap it up in Detroit Sunday night. If they fail the series returns to Chicago for the seventh and final game Tuesday. Mikita's two goals came in the final period. The first goal broke a 3-3 tie and put the Hawks ahead Tigers Rout White Sox, 7-0 As Lary Twirls One-Hitter to stay while Howie Young was serving a tripping penalty. Young had tripped Balfour who slid into the net post and had to leave the ice with an injured arm. Twenty nine seconds later Mikita scored his first goal. The Hawks made it 5-3 on a goal by Pierre Pilote at 7:02 and 6-3 on Mikita's second goal at 13:27. In all, the Hawks fired 24 shots at Detroit Goalie Terry Sawchuck in the final period. It was blood-and-thunder hoc- key in the first two periods. Detroit took its only lead on a goal by Leo Labine with the game only 2:14 old. Chicago then tied it up on Mur- ray Balfour's first goal at 9:36 and moved in front 28 second later on Ron Murphy's disputed goal. Mur- phy took a pass from Eric Nester- enko at the mouth of the goal and put it in. The Wings insisted Mur- phy caught the puck and dropped it in past Sawchuck, but were overruled by referee Frank Udvari. With Elmer Vasko in the penalty box, Howie Glover tied the score at 2-2, less than five minutes re- maining in the period. The two teams battled on equal terms in the second period. Bal- four scored his second goal at 16:25 for a 3-2 Chicago lead only to have Vic Stasiuk tie it at 18:49 after taking a pass from Gordie Howe. With less than a minute left in the second period a fight broke out between Detroit's Pete Goegan and Chicago center Red Hay and be- fore it was over all the players on the ice with the exception of the goalies were involved. By The Associated Press DETROIT-Jim Landis's scratch single in the fifth inning ruined Frank Lary's bid for a no-hitter yesterday as he pitched the De- troit Tigers to a 7-0 triumph over the Chicago White Sox. Landis' hit bounced off short- stop Chico Fernandez's glove and the official scorer promptly ruled it a hit. Fernandez was forced to go far to his right to make the play. If he had fielded it cleanly it appeared he might have caught Landis at first. Lary had no complaints about the call. Rookie Jake Wood and veteran Al Kaline led the Tiger attack with three hits apiece, while "Iajor League Standingys Rocky Colavito hit a two-run homer in the four-run Tiger third. The Tigers knocked out Bau- mann, an old nemesis, with three runs in the first two innings. Wood led off the Tiger first with a sin- gle and Kaline chased him home with a double just inside first base. Singles by Fernandez and Wood and Lary's double produced two more runs in the second. The one-hitter was the best per- formance in Lary's seven-year ma- jor league career. The righthand- er, who usually saves his peak per- formances for the New York Yan- kees, previously had pitched a pair of two-hitters. Ruggers Host Toronto Today At Wines Field How the Ann Arbor Rugby Club fares against the powerful Toron- to Irish this afternoon could de- pend on how well placekicker John Niehuss and running backs Harry Newman, Dave Dingham and Terry Robinson do. The locals meet the Irish at 2 p.m. on Wines Field. In rugby, place-kicking can eas- ily spell the difference between winning and losing, because for every three-point try (touch- down) a team scores, it gets a chance at a two-point conversion. In addition, a team is awarded a three-point penalty kick from the spot on the field of rules in- fraction and can attempt a three- point drop-goal (field goal) at any time. The effect of a good passer is minimized, because the only legal pass is the lateral. Tareyton delivers the flavor... NATIONALI Cincinnati x-Los Angeles x-San Francisco Chicago Milwaukee x-Philadelphia x-Pittsburgh x-St. Loigs x--Playing night LEAGUE W L Pct. 3 0 1.000 2 1 .667 2 1 .667 1 2 .333 1 2 .333 12 .333 1 2 .333 1 2 .333 game. AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. Minnesota 2 0 1.000 Kansas City 1 0 1.000 Los Angeles 1 0 1.000 Chicago 1 1 .500 Cleveland 1 1 .500 Detroit 1 1 .500 Washington 1 1 .500 Boston 0 1 .000 New York 0 1 .000 Baltimore- 0 2 .000 LAST NIGHT'S GAMES American League Minnesota 3, Baltimore 2 Washington 3, Cleveland 2 Detroit 7, Chicago 0 National League Chicago 3, Milwaukee 2 Cincinnati 7, St. Louis 3 GB 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 GB -2 1 1 1 1 2 U Professor Freewheeler's Exam Questions: 1. Chains rusted? 2. Brakes broken? 3. Gears won't work? At ... ANSWER: w Oft-8M s It N - D oft . ?;;;. cvxr v.};nr "v.;.".w ". -s .:a". a{ r o:r' { e ,rtyiot t v 4S ' .....:h .:"n" r. "Xv.: if:C"::":'".xs.{ :iv , } 1:1 :"} :' . rti r ":vx7r r:+ '' iS 4+ err..?r.5 33'. ':., ^.".3' ' "'.. . 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