mx THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY.,M Netmen Seed Four from Preliminaries opponent until the finals in their respective divisions.'In these po- sitions, Michigan drew one brack- et all to itself and left the other three contending teams to fight it out for the other final berths. To add salt to Northwestern's wounds, Charlie Lockhart, the Wildcats' defending number four singles titlist and the co-favorite with MacDonald, has been ex- pelled from school for disciplinary reasons and is not competing. In number four and five sin- gles, Indiana and Northwestern men met in the preliminaries and split. Jim Erickson of Northwest- ern eliminated Dick Martin of In- diana, 6-4, 6-4 in number four singles. Denny Lortz of Indiana turned back Northwestern's Bill Kreml, 8-6, 7-5 in number five. Spartan Threat Tomorrow, Michigan, S t a t e meets Northwestern in the quar- ter-finals of number four singles and Indiana in number five. If the Spartans win all three they will emerge as a serious threat to Michigan. Because of today's ac- tion, both Northwestern and Indi- ana cannot afford to lose any more matches and remain in contention. In the quarter-finals for Michi- gan, Senkowski should have no trouble with Dan Mesch of Illi- nois. Tenney plays Ross Helft of Purdue. Helft gave Peaccock a battle royal two weeks ago in Co- lumbus. Peacock plays Larry Eng- er of Minnesota. By virtue of his default win, MacDonald sits out singles and will play the winner of the Dick Berg (Purdue) -Dick Pease (Wisconsin) match in the semifinals. Vogt, who advanced from the preliminaries on a similar default, takes on Vince Rideout of Wiscon- sin. Maentz plays Roger Mitchell of Ohio State. Doubles Seeding In doubles, Michigan State and Northwestern are seeded in every division. The seedings rwere made on the basis of season's records and Michigan's new combinations have never played together. In the most important quarter- final match for Michigan, Mac- Donald and Vogt meet Lortz and Bob Ewald of Indiana. Senkow- ski and Peacock meet Cohen and Nick Sawacki of Wisconsin. Ten- ney and Maentz play the winner of the Illinois-Minnesota prelim- inary match. Irish By BRIAN MacCLOWRY Special To The Daily SOUTH BEND-Michigan pla3 ed Notre Dame one day too earl: and because of It Irish eyes ar smiling today. The Irish couldn't have bee: as ferocious on meatless Friday a they were here yesterday. The clincher came in the tent' inning when third baseman Jir Woolwine's triple scored Jac Gentempo from first base as Nc tre Dame handed slumping Michi gan its second straight defeat, 6-! And it wasn't even St. Patty Day, either. Earlier, the Irish had erased 5-2 Michigan lead with three rum in the sixth inning. Wolverine southpaw Bill Br feld replaced starter Franz Neu brecht in the seventh and ha shutout Notre Dame on one h until the tenth. Gentempo Scores Brefeld retired first basema Take M' Nine, 6-5 - Dick O'Leary on a grounder to' third to start the tenth, but then Gentempo singled and Woolwine sent a long drive to right-center between Dennis Spalla and Jim Newman. Gentempo scored stand- ing up. Mickey Walker, a' sophomore who somehow found his way to Notre Dame from Detroit, turned the tables on his home state by going the distance for his fifth win against two losses. The righthander yielded eight hits, including doubles by Joe Jones and Neubrecht. But after a shaky first five innings which saw Michigan score all of its runs off five hits and four Notre Dame errors, Walker settled down and blanked the Wolverines on three hits for the final five frames. Just Six Hits Neubrecht and Brefeld held the Irish to only six hits, but three Michigan errors accounted for three unearned runs. Brefeld took IM SOFTBALL: Delt Sigs Move Into Championship Game I By BOB BENSON Delta Sigma Delta downed Nu Sigma Nu yesterday at Ferry Field and moved into the finals of the professional fraternity "A" soft- ball tournament; The dentists were led by the fine hitting of catcher Ron Evasic who picked up four RBI's on a two-run homer, a double, and a sacrifice fly. Pinch hitter Bill Knapp put all the runs across the plate for the doctors with a three- run homer in the sixth inning. The Delta Sigs broke the game wide open in the second inning when they scored four times, being led by Evasic's two-run homer. They scored three more times in the third and once more in the fourth to give themselves a com- fortable 8-0 lead going into the sixth and last inning. Three-Run Homer It looked as if the doctors might make a strong comeback in their half of the sixth inning when Knapp hit his three-run homer, but Delta Sig pitcher John Logan ended the threat by causing the his first loss of the season to even his record at 1-1. Michigan jumped into a quick 3-0 lead in the first inning. Jones led off with a walk, and after Newman and Bill Freehan forced runners at second, Jim Steckley singled to put runners on first and second. With Merullo at bat, Irish catcher Walt Osgood tried to pick Freehan off second but threw the ball into center field and Freehan scored, Steckley moving to second. Three Walks Merullo, Spalla, and John Hal- sted then walked in order, to force in another run. When Walker tried to quick-pitch Honig, he was called for a balk and the Wolver- ines had their third run. Michigan tallied another when Steckley singled, went to second on a grounder and scored when Notre Dame's second baseman, George Sescik booted Halsted's bouncer. In tie fifth, the Wolverines made it 5-2 on Freehan's single, a walk to Steckley and error on Walker, who dropped the throw while covering first base on Spal- la's ground ball. The Notre Dame fans were real- ly a on Freehan yesterday. The morning South Bend Times had printed an article characterizing him as one of the most sought after young players in the nation by major league scouts. And after the big catcher went hitness his first two trips, in ad- dition to allowing a passed ball in the third inning, the Irish par- tisans really hurled the abuse. Freehan Answers Freehan answered with a sin- gle in the fifth inning, but it was his only hit of the afternoon in five at-bats. With the temperature in the low fifties and dark clouds hanging overhead, the team seemed almost, :ii . ivt} ;sr *.' \ rs 1y anxious to forget the error-filled loss and look forward to today's Big Ten crucial game with Pur- due. Don Lund hasn't changed his righthander Mike Joyce (8-1) against the Boilermakers. The loss to the Irish was the sec(nd setback Michigan sustain- ed yesterday. Before the Wolver- ines even left Ann Arbor they were informed that long-ball hit- ting first baseman Barry Marshall would not make the trip. Marshall is still suffering from a pinched nerve in his leg which he sustained in the Wisconsin game last Friday. Yesterday, Lund replaced Marshal with outfielder Halstead. Halstead was hitless in two trips, and drew a walk. l i next batter to pop up for the final out. Logan pitched a fine game, al- lowing only four hits all of which came in the last two innings. Ironically enough, Nu Sig pitcher Dennis Tibble was the man who broke Logan's no hitter with a single through the middle with two out in the fifth inning. The doctors added their other three hits in the 'three-run sixth. In residence hall "A" softball, Taylor handed Reeves its first loss of the season with a 7-2 victory. Paced by Meinz Pitcher Mary Meinz paced the Taylormen with a fine pitching and hitting performance by driv- ing in three runs in the second inning with a bases loaded triple, and giving up only three hits. Reeves picked up its two runs in the fourth inning when left fielder Bob Worden singled with two men in scoring position. OTHER GAMES - Social Fraternity "B" Phi Delta Theta 15, Chi Psi S Pi Lambda Phi 11, Zeta Psi 4 Theta Chi 33, Phi Sigma Kappa 20 , Alpha Delta Phi def. Phi Kappa Theta (forfeit) Professional Fraternity Alpha Kappa Kappa 8, Gamma Alpha 8 Delta Sigma Phi 11, Delta Theta Phi 4 Phi Rho Sigma 10, Phi Delta Phi 4 Residence Halls Cooley (A) def. Scott (A) (forfeit) Taylor (B) 5, Wenley (B) 4 Adams (B) 9, Huber (B) 4 MICHIGAN Jones, 2b Newman, rf Freehan, c Steckley, It Merullo, 3b Spalla, cf Halstead, lb DeLamlelleure, lb Honig, ss Neubrecht, p Brefeld, p Totals NOTRE DAME AB R H RBI Hanson, if 2 2 0 0 Sefeik, 2b 5 0 2 2 Hagan, rf530 00 Brutvan, ef 3 1 0 0 O'Leary, lb 4 1 0 0 Gentempo, ss 2 2 1 0 Woolwine, 3b 5 0 2 2 Osgood, c 3 0 0 0 Walker, p 4 0 1 1 Totals 33 6 6 5 MICHIGAN 301 010 000 0- 3 3 Notre Dame 001 013 000 1--6 6 4 E-Jones, Meruilo, Honig, Brut- van, Osgood, SE-Jones, Neubrecht. 3B3-Wooiwine. DP-Honig, Jones and Halstead (2), Halstead, Honig and Merullo. LOB-M-7, ND-5. PB-- Freehan. PITCHING SUMMARIES Neubrecht Brefeld (L) Walker (W) Balk--Walker. IP H RERSOBS 6 3 5 2 1 6 3Y3 3 1 1 2 1 10 8 5 25S f WP-Neubrecht. AR R H RBI 4 0 1 0 s 0 0 0 s 2 1 0 3 0 3 0 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 z 0 2 0 0 0 39 5 $ 1 . Read Daily Classifieds I i Sports car spice never came in so many varieties ...Chevrolet! 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