PAGE six THE MICHIGAN DAILY T!TF~iAY. MAY 1'7, 1966 Vi+k:7i/tA .i f. IYXZA .1.x/7 LZFUV p Wolverine Nine Topples Eastern, 11-9 BEAT STATE, WESTERN: Golfers, Netmen Wmin Meets It was a hitter's holiday yester- day at Yost Field as the Michi- gan baseball team downed next door neighbor Eastern Michigan 11-9, after splitting a conference doubleheader with Minnesota on Saturday. Included in the nine hits by each team were three home runs. Wolverine right fielder Al Bara slammed a homer over the left- field fence with Bob Gilhooley on base to produce the first two of Michigan's five first-inning runs. In the fifth inning Wolverine starting pitcher Nick Radakovic, follewed suit by putting another ball over the fence with catcher Jim Berline on base. Radakovic had a perfect day at the plate with a single, walk and the home run. Hot-Hitting iPtcher Radakovic also led the team in runs batted in, driving in two with his first inning single and two more with the homer. Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE For Eastern, Lonnie Head hit a solo round-tripper in the seventh off relief pitcher Geoff Zahn. Besides Michigan's five runs in the first and two in the fifth, the diamondmen scored once in the second, twice in the sixth, and once in the seventh. The second-inning tally came without a hit on two errors, a stolen base and a sacrifice by Chan Simonds. In the sixth frame Les Tanona scored Bara with a single to left field and came home himself on Keith Spicer's double. Berline scored in the seventh on miscues by the Hurons. He sin- gled, took second on a wild pitch and reached home on an error by Eastern's third baseman. Conference Split In Saturday's Big Ten action the Michigan nine split a doublehead- er with Minnesota at Minneapolis to drop to third place in the standings. The Wolverines took the second game 1-0, on a two-hitter by jun- ior pitcher Jim Lyijynen after los- ing the opener 5-4, in 12 innings. Michigan also managed to get only two hits in the second game but put them together in the third inning to bring home the lone run. After Bara's single, Sygar was safe on an error and both men were mover up on Lyijynen's in- field out. Bara was picked off trying to score on Bob Gilhooley's ground- er but Ted Sizemore hit a line single to center to drive in the one run. in the 12th on a walk, a sacrifice, and shortstop Steve Schneider's single to center. The Wolverines had taken an early 2-0 lead on Bara's walk, sin- gles by Rick Sygar and Dick Schryer and an error in the third inning. The Gophers put together two runs in both the fifth and sixth innings to take a 4-2 lead, Michigan got one run back in the sixth on an error, a passed ball and a sacrifice fly, and Schryer sent the game in to ex- tra innings with his 380-foot home run in the eighth. The Wolverine golf and tennis squads both downed intra-state opponents yesterday in warm-ups for the Big Ten championships this weekend. At East Lansing the golfers handed Michigan State a 620-623 defeat while the tennis team was whitewashing Western Michigan, 9-0, at Kalamazoo. At the Michigan State golf course where, according to Coach Bert Katzenmeyer, "conditions were anything but ideal with 20- 30 mile per hour winds and a lot of casual water on the course," sophomore John Schroeder was again low man for the Wolverines as he carded a 38-36-74. Tying Schroeder for medalist honors in the meet were Michigan State Captain Ken Benson and his teammate Doug Campbell. The second best round for Mich- igan was shot by Captain Bill Newton who wound up with a 36- 39-75 for the day. Bob Barclay shot a 39-38-77, John Richard carded a 39-39-78 and Chuck West scored a 41-37- 78. The Wolverine scoring was Extra Inning Loss. Minnesota won the first gameI DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Cleveland Baltimore Detroit California Chicago Minnesota Washington New York Kansas City Boston W 18 17 16 17 14 13 10 10 9 8 L 6 9 10 12 11 11 17 18 18 20 Pet. .750 .654 .615 .586 .560 .542 .370 .357 .333 .286 GB 2! 3 314 4Y 5 10 10% 12 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Minnesota 2, Washington 1 Only game scheduled TODAY'S GAMES California at Kansas City (n) Chicago at Minnesota (n) New York at Detroit (n) Washington at Cleveland (n) Boston at Baltimore (n) NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. San Francisco 22 9 .710 Houston 18 12 .600 Los Angeles 17 14 .548 Pittsburgh 15 13 .536 Philadelphia 13 13 .500 New York 1 12 .478 Atlanta 15 18 .455 Cincinnati 12 15 .444 St. Louis 12 15 .444 Chicago 6 20 .231 (Continued from Page 2) Placement ANNOUNCEMENTS: VISTA (Volunteers in Service to America): Representatives will be in the Lower Lobby of the Mich. Union Mon. and Tues., May 16 and 17, to give information about their program Men and women 18 yrs. or older for 1 yr. assignment. 4-6 week. trng. Posi- tions in 50 states, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands, and Trust Territ. No appoint- ment needed. Federal Service Entrance Examina- tion: Special exam, no application nec- essary, only call the Bureau of Ap- pointments to , be scheduled for the one at 8 a.m. or 1 p.m. this Saturday, May 21. On the spot scoring for posi- tions at U.S. Army Tank-Automotive Center careers in Warren, Mach. If pass your name will be sent to the regular available listfor all of the Chicago region. The test will be given in Room 2003 Angell Hall, call 764-7460 to be scheduled.. POSITION OPENINGS: Federal Water Pollution Control Ad- ministration, 13 States and Wash., D.C. -Look for staffs of enlarged research offices, planning projects ,and 9 new laboratories. Administrators, lawyers, statisticians, diverse tech. professionals encl. canitary engineers, hydrologists, chemists, biologists, microbiologists, limnologists, geologists and mathema- ticians. See Bureau of Applications for next Civil Service Exam. Mobil Chemical Co., Plastics Division, Macedon (Rochester area), N.Y.-Indus- GB 3 5 5, 6'/x 8 8 8 13B trial Engineer, BSIE or equiv. exper. Prefer 1-2 yrs. industrial exper. Veterans Administration, Regional Of- fice in Detroit-Present position open- ings in fields requiring legal training. New G.I. Bill makts more veterans eli- gible for financial, educational and medical assistance. W. R. Grace & Co., N.Y. City-Expan- sion of Chemical Group Engineering Dept. needs process and project engi- neers. mechanical design, metallurgical inspection and cost specialists. MEor ChE desired with minimum of 5 yrs. exper. for most positions.. Diversey Corp., Chicago-Industrial company for metal cleaning and fin- ishing needs man for sales in Detroit- Toledo territory. Limited travel, no Chem. degree necessary, any will do, some sales exper. preferred. Sarkes Tarzian, Inc., Bloomington, Ind.-Openings in all areas of engineer- ing, some training positions with no ex- per, necessary, others extensive ex- per. and degrees wanted. Accountants, personnel, programmer and machine shop workers and supervisorsalso. Management Consultants, West Coast -Firm manufacturing line of heavy mobile equipment. Need Test Engineer, Bachelor's in Mech. Engrg., knows. phys- ics and statistics. 3-5 yrs. exper. in testing heavy mobile equipment. Local Finance Firm-1 Opening in Ann Arbor and others elsewhere. Man- agement trainee leading to office mgr. BA with no exper. * * For further information please call 764-7460, General Division, Bureau of Appointments. 3200 SAB. EDUCATION DIVISION: The United States Office of Educa- tion is recruiting prospective teachers for the National Teacher Corps. These teachers will be working with poverty children in both urban and rural areas, serving under the local school boards. A three month pre-service training program for credit at a college or uni- versity will begin in June. Teacher- interns will take part in a two year graduate training program leading to1 an advanced degree. Applications must be sent in by, May 31. For additional infornmation and ap- plication blanks, contact Miss Collins, Bureau of Appointments. 3200 SAB, 764-7462. Thinclads Stop Ohio, Chicago lin Triangular The Michigan track team scored 97 points in romping over the Chicago Track Club and Ohio University Saturday at Ferry Field but was forced to, share the spot- light with the Ann Arbor Track Club which was competing in ex- hibition. The highlight of the meet was the mile relay in which the Ann Arbor TC team anchored by Kent Bernard ran the combined mile in 3:12.2 to set a Ferry Field rec- ord and edge Michigan. Michigan freshman Gary Knick- erbocker, also competing for the track club, set a new Ferry Field and personal mark of 6'71." in the high jump. Michigan swept all the field events in the official results, withj Jack Harvey winning the shot put, George Canamare taking the pole. vault. Bob Donnelly placing first in the discus, and Rick Hunt and Bob Densham winning the high jump and long jump, respectively. Michigan also had a two-event3 winner in hurdler Nelson Graham. Graham won the 120-yard high hurdles in :14.6 and came back a few minutes later to take the 440-yard intermediates in :54.5. The Chicago Track Club, which placed second in the triangular meet with 39 points, had two dou- ble winners in former Big Ten stars Al Carius and Trenton Jack- son. Carius put on a strong fin-a ishing kick to come from behindl in both the mile and the two mile runs. Jackson, formerly of Michigan State, topped the field in the sprints, winning both the 100- and 220-yard dashes. John Tillman contributed 10 Points to the Ohio total of 35 by winning both of the intermediate distance events. the 660- and 880- yard runs. His tmie was 1:18.5 in the 660 set a new Ferry Field record. Gilhooley ss Bara rf Schryer cf Tanona If Simonds lb Spicer 3b Wakabayashi 2b Berline c Radakovic p Zahn p EASTERN MICHIGAN AB R H Henegar ss 4 0 0 Olech ph 0 0 0 Bowen 2b 2 1 1 Wright ph 1 0 1 Clay cf-p 4 1 1 Banwart ph 1 0 0 Rastigue c 3 0 0 Moulton rf 4 0 1 Head 3b 4 11 Schwalm if 2 1 0 Rose ph IlIlI Patterson lb 3 2 1 Hinmian ph 1 0 0 Shafer p 0 0 0 Shough p 1 0 0 Sterling ph 1 1 0 Maynard ef 2 1 2 Giffin p 0 0 0 Casteel c 0 0 0 Totals 34 9 9 MICHIGAN rounded out by Dave Graff and Chip Groves, each with a 79, and Dave Graff with an 80. In tennis Michigan whitewashed its third opponent in four days by trouncing Western Michigan. Western won only one set in the nine matches. Last weekend the netters ex- tended their Big Ten win streak by defeating both Ohio State and Wisconsin by 9-0 scores. The Wol- verines now have a commanding lead in the conference standings having won 70 matches and lost only seven. Ron Teeguarden, who did not compete against Western Michi- gan, has the best dual meet 'ec- ord in the conference, having dropped only one set in his eight conference matches while alter- nating between the number four and five slots. The one setback came in the Wisconsin meet on Saturday in which Teeguarden needed three sets to down Pug Schroen, 3-6, 6-3, 7-5. WESTERN MICHIGAN SINGLES Hedrick (M) def. Havrilenko, 6-1, 6-3; Stewart (M) def. Germain, 6-1, 6-2; Waits (M) def. Seifert, 9-7, 6-1; Dixon (M) def. Sykes, 6-4, 6-3; Burns (M) def. Essenburg, 6-1, 6-1; Pritula (M) def. Ripelis, 4-6, 6-3, 9-7. DOUBLES Hedrick-Stewart (M) def. Havri- lenko-Seifert, 6-0, 6-2; Waits-Dixon (M) def. Germain-Hughes, 6-4, 6-3; Burns-Pritula (M) de. Essenburg- Sykes, 6-1, 6-4.. Totals 31 11 9 E. MICHIGAN 002 003 202- 9 MICHIGAN 510 022 100-11 E - Rastigue, Head, Patterson, Shough, Clay, Radakovic. LOB - Eastern 12, Michigan 7. 2B-Bowen, Patterson, Wright, Spicer, Bara. HR -Bara, Radakovic, Head. RBI-Bow- en 2, Wright, Moulton, Maynard, Head 2, Bara 2, Tanona, Simonds, Spicer, Berline, Radakovic 4. PITCHING SUMMARY IP H R-ER BB SO Rtadakovic 5r';? 5-3 9 11 Radakovic jI 2 5-3 9 11 Zahn 3": 7 4-4 2 7 Shafer", 2 5-5 4 1 Shough 51:; 5 5-3 2 3 Clay 1 ? 1-1 0 1 Giffin 1 0 0-0 0 1 WP - Radakovic, Zahn, Shough, Clay. Welcome Students Open 6 Days a Week U-M BARBERS Near Kresge's OR DASCOLA BARBERS Near the Michigan Theatre -AIR CONDITIONED- JOHN SCHROEDER SPORTS MACHINE The Honda Sports 50's price is only half the story. It's a gas sipper:. 200 mpg. Flashy but sturdy: over 50 mph from 4-stroke 50cc OHV engine. Other virtues: 4-speed trans- mission, manual clutch, cam- type brakes. Sheer fun to own. HONDA NEW LOCATION. Downtown Honda 310 E. Washington Ann Arbor-665-8637 RON TEEGUARDEN 4' 4l AB R H 5 3 2 5 0 0 5 2 2 3 1 0 3 0 1 2 1 0 :3 2 2 2 1 2 1 0 0 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled TODAY'E GAMES Cincinnati at New York (n) St. Louis at Philadelphia (n) Atlanta at Pittsburgh (n) Houston at Chicago San Francisco at Los Angeles (n) tlotf Street en the Campus !i I 1111 2000 W. Stadium Blvd. Iw 1 '-ARROMW" Decton Perma-Iron The shit that's born ironed... and stays ironed. Here's the shirt that travelled *round the world to prove it could take it. ARROW tested it, and ap- proved it so that you could wear it. See our collection in a wide variety- of collar styles and colors. The luxurious blend of 65% I Dacron' polyester. 35% cotton isi completely machine washable and tumble dries to a wrinkle-free finish. "Sanforized Plus" labelled, of course. $5.00 "'" f ,,, , p " e.~ . '" , < / l f.. /j / ., fi f' % y ,: o / $ 3 ..f : Y :. f1 / . ORGANIZATION NOTICES USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMEN9'S is available to official- ly recognized and registered student or- ganizations only. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. Michigan Christian Fellowship, Lee- ture-discussion (informal), Tues., 7:30 p.m., 3rd fl., Union. India Student's Association, A film, "Gumrah," May 21, 7 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. a This Arrow sport shirt meets aU your standards. Except one. (1)100% cotton. (2) Softly flared button-down collar, (3) 11" sleeve. (4) Back collar button. (5) Box pleat. (6) Shoulder to waist taper. (7) "Sanforized". (8) $4.00. That's the exception. Less than the standard price for a shirt with all these standards. Bold New Breed by -ARROWF fl r YU. , ~j 1