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April 13, 1965 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1965-04-13

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TUESDAY, 1 APRIL 1965

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

PAGE SEV M

TUESDAY, 13 APRIL 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY

a rava:O UL' fLIIs

I

Sixtee:
Tigers Beat
Athletics 6-2;
Yanks Lose
By The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY-Two-run hom-
ers by Jerry Lumpe and rookie
John Sullivan lifted the Detroit
Tigers past the Kansas City Ath-
letics 6-2 last night before the
smallest crowd in the club's 11
seasons here.
Detroit got strong pitching from
starter and winner Mickey Lolich,
a left-hander who won 18 games
last season, and righthander Larry
Sherry, who went the last three
innings.
The Tigers trailed 2-1 against
A's starter Moe Drabowsky until
Dick McAuliffe singled and Lumpe
lined a 1-2 pitch to the right field
bank.
Sullivan's homer was a 410-
foot drive which nearly cleared
the concrete wall atop the right
field bank. The rookie also singled
across a run in the ninth.
* *
ST. PAUL - MINNEAPOLIS -j
The Minnesota Twins cashed in
an 11th-inning run after a three-
base error and beat the New York
Yankees 5-4 yesterday in a season-
opening battle of misplays.
The Yanks made five errors and1
the Twins three in the game be-
fore 15,388 fans, many of whom
had to skirt floodwaters to reach
Metropolitan Stadium.
The Twins, capitalizing on
shaky Yankee fielding, scored four
runs in the early going and had
one strike to go for a 4-3 victory,
but Tovar dropped a routine pop
up and enabled New York to tie
the score in the ninth.
* * *
WASHINGTON - President
Johnson tossed out the first ball
yesterday and the Boston Red Sox
socked it all over the lot, wallop-
ing five home runs in whipping
Washington 7-2.
Lennie Green hit two home runs
and Felix Mantilla, Tony Conig-
liaro and Lee Thomas had one
each. Thomas' came with two men
on base.
The Senators snapped Bill Mon-
bouquette's string of 37 scoreless
innings against them with Don
Lock's leadoff home run in the
second, but that was about all
they could do against the Red Sox
right-hander who now has beaten
them five straight times.
* * *
LOS ANGELES-The Cleveland
Indians-Los Angeles Angels base-
ball game scheduled for last night
was postponed because of rain.
The American League opener
was rescheduled for today in Cha-
vez Ravine.

Teams

Play

on

Opening

Day

REED STARTING HURLER:
M ' Hosts Broncos
In Diamond Opener

Major League Standings

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Detroit
Boston
Minnesota
Baltimore
Chicago
Cleveland
Los Angeles
Kansas City
New York
Washington

W L
10
1 0
1 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 1
0 1
0 1

Pct.
1.000
1.000
1.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000

GB
'/
Y2
1
1
1

NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pet.
Philadelphia 1 0 1.000
Los Angeles 1 0 1.000
Milwaukee 1 0 1.000
Pittsburgh 1 0 1.000
x-Chicago 0 0 .000
x-St. Louis 0 0 .000
Houston 0 1 .000
Cincinnati 0 1 .000
New York 0 1 .000
San Francisco 0 1 .000
x-Tie--to be replayed.
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS

GB
'4
V2
1
Z
1
1

Cubs Tie Cardinals, 10-10;
Pirates in Pitching Duel

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Boston 7, Washington 2
Minnesota 5, New York 4 (10 inn)
Cleveland at Los Angeles (rain)
Detroit 6, Kansas City 2
TODAY'S GAMES
Chicago at Baltimore
Detroit at Kansas City
Cleveland at Los Angeles

Pittsburgh 1, san Francisco 0 (10 inn)
Los Angeles 6, New York 1
Milwaukee 4, Cincinnati 2
St. Louis 10, Chicago 10
Philadelphia 2, Houston 0
TODAY'S GAMES
St. Louis at Chicago
Milwaukee at Cincinnati (n)
San Francisco at Pittsburgh (n)

BILL MONBOUQUETTE

SPRING DRILLS END:
Elliott Cites Grid Progress

By CHUCK VETZNER
The helmets have been stored
away, the play diagrams have
been taken down from the bulletin
boards, and only the track team
is practicing in the field behind
the IM Building.
Wolverine football has been put
in mothballs for the summer.
Saturday's intrasquad scrim-
mage marked the end of the grid-
ders spring campaign-a period
that saw the team shackled in
dungeon-like Yost Field House for
most of their practice sessions.
Charge Denied
Some authorities feel that the
confinement will hurt Michigan's
chances for a second straight Big
Ten title next fall, but head coach
Bump Elliott denies the charge.
"We're not going to win because
of our spring practice, but we're
not going to lose because of it
either," says Elliott managing a
grin.
"Under the conditions, we got a
lot done. We set out to analyze
our personnel and find the best
positions for them. There are still
a couple of spots not yet solved,
but we did make some changes
that should help."
Guard Problem
Before spring practice began,
Elliott had listed the offensive
kguard and center spots as two
major problem areas. The guard
positions are now being held by
Bill Keating and Don Bailey while
Jerry Danhof, Paul D'Eramo, and
Joe Dayton are fighting for the
job at center.
Keating and Bailey both letter-
ed last season, but specialized on
defense. Keating, who was prev-
iously a tackle, won the Meyer
Morton Trophy as the most im-
proved player of the spring while
making the switch.
Elliott says both men are fairly

good bets to start next season un-1
less they are needed back on de-
fense.
Danhof, a 230-pound sopho-1
more, also underwent a transi-
tion, shifting from tackle to cen-
ter.
Two Up from Frosh
D'Eramo and Dayton are up
from the freshman team which
Elliott considers "a little better
than I expected it to be."
The head coach started listing,
some of the newcomers who had,
made rapid progress this spring,,
and before he had finished, half
the freshmen were incluuded.
The ones with the best chance
of seeing action would appear to
Tree Hit
By NCAA
Probation
KANSAS CITY (Y)-The NCAA
Council placed Southern Metho-
dist, Texas and Arkansas on pro-
bation yesterday, imposing penal-
ties in football parallel to those
dealt by the Southwest Confer-
ence last year for recruiting vio-
lations.,
SMU was put on two-year pro-
bation and prohiibted from play-
ing in post-season bowl games.
Texas and Arkansas were, in ef-
fect, slapped on the wrist. Each
is on probation for one year, with
no bowl ban.
"The NCAA Committee on In-
fractions commends the South-
west Conference for its actions
and its complete investigation of
recruiting violations in each case,"
said Art Bergstrom, assistant to
the NCAA director.
Identical penalties had been
imposed by the conference last
year, so the NCAA was simply re-
affirming the Southwest Confer-
ence action.
Texas and Arkansas were penal-
ized for excesses involving visits
to the campus by high school ath-
letes.
SMU was cited for recruiting
athletes with offers to their par-
ents, with excesses involving cam-
pus visits and for paying trans-
portation for two athletes from
the campus to their homes and
return in late winter, 1963.

be the defensive linemen. The
Wolverines are sorely in need of
a defensive tackle and a defensive
guard where freshman Paul John-
son is leading the pack.
The defensive end picture is
even more nebulous, especially
with prime candidate Jeff Hoyne
missing spring drills with an in-
jury.
What About QB?
The position most fans are con-
cerned with is quarterback. Wally
Gabler and Dick Vidmer split the
starting assignment in Saturday's
scrimmage, but the ingredient
they lack is experience. Gabler,
a senior-to-be, saw very little ac-
tion last season, and Vidmer is
still a sophomore by virtue of
a broken leg that sidelined him
all last season.
Vidmer, a sensation a year ago,
is still rusty according to Elliott.
"He hasn't completely recovered
from his injury yet, and his speed
and ability is hampered some-
what," he adds.
"As yet, he hasn't reached the
point he was at last spring, but
he's still doing a pretty good job."
Gabler also pleased Elliott with
his work. In Saturday's scrim-
mage, he gained the most yards
passing and was also the leading
ground gainer.
Another quarterback possibility
is freshman Terry Salmi who
scored two last quarter touch-
downs after switching from the
reserve White team to the Blue
regulars.

By The Associated Pressf
CHICAGO-The World Cham-
pion St. Louis Cardinals and the
Chicago Cubs struggled to a 10-10
Opening Day tie yesterday with"
the game being called after 11
innings on acount of darkness. .
The game will be replayed later
on this season.
Each club pushed across a run
in the 11th after Ernie Bank's1
three-run homer with two out inj
the ninth had tied it for the Cubs.
The Cardinals had grabbed the
early lead with four Chicago er-
rors helping St. Louis score four1
unearned runs.
Larry Jackson, a 24-game win-
ner for the Cubs last year, failed
to survive a five-run Cardinal
first and Bob Gibson, St. Louis'
World Series hero last October,
blew 5-0 and 7-4 leads.
* * *
PITTSBURGH - Bob Bailey's
home run leading off the tenthj
inning broke up a brilliant pitch-
ing duel between the Giants' Juan
Marichal and Pittsburgh's Bob
Veale and sent the Pirates to a
1-0 season-opening victory over
San Francisco yesterday.1
Bailey's shot over the left field1
wall was only the fifth hit off
Marichal, who had a no-hitter1
through 31%/ innings and hadn't1
allowed a previous runner past
second.
* *' *
CINCINNATI-Joe Torre crash-
ed two runs and Eddie Mathews
one in support of the two-hit
pitching by Tony Cloninger yes-
terday and led Milwaukee to a
4-2 victory over Cincinnati in
their National League opener.
Cloninger yielded a lead off
single to Pete Rose in the first
inning and then didn't give up
another hit until Johnson's hom-
er in the sixth.
NEW YORK - Don Drysdale
tamed the New York Mets with
a four-hit pitching performance
and hit a two-run homer yester-
day in leading the Los Angeles
Dodgers to a 6-1 victory, making
the Mets 0-for-4 in season open-
ers.
Drysdale, with Willie Davis pro-
viding chief offensive support, beat
New York for the 14th time in 15
decisions as the Dodgers ran their

record to 48-7 over the club that
has become the National League's
perennial tail-ender. The Mets
haven't won their lead off game
since joining the league in 1962.
HOUSTON-Richie Allen drove
in both Philadelphia runs with a
home run in support of Chris
Short's four-hit pitching as the
Phillies shut out the Astros 2-0
last night, marring Houston's
first opener in its roof-covered
$31.6 million Astrodome.
It was the fourth capacity
crowd in as many days in this.
plush, air-conditioned planetar-
ium.
Gridder Killed
In Spring Drills
Mike Moore, 20-year-old Purdue
football player from Marion, Ohio,
died from injuries received in
spring practice yesterday. Moore,
a junior, was playing defensive
guard when he was blocked and
swallowed his tongue. Both his
heart and breathing were stopped,
but were restored at the Purdue
Health Center. He died 12 hours
later at Methodist hospital ap-
parently from a brain stem injury
without regaining consciousness.

By BOB TRACEY
Michigan's baseball team will
make another attempt to open its
home season today against West-
ern Michigan at 3:30 p.m. on
Ferry Field.
The starting pitcher for the
Wolverines will be Bob Reed, a
hight handed sophomore from
Flint Southwestern. A physical
education major, Bob was a mem-
ber of last year's Detroit Adray
National Baseball Championship
team. Reed was the only pitcher
to post a victory on the spring
trip this year, coming home with
a 1-1 recordrand an earned run
average of 5.12, giving up 11 earn-
ed runs in 191/3 innings. In that
time he struck out 18 while walk-
ing only eight.
Other Half
The other half of the battery
will be junior Ted Sizemore, this
year's team captain. Other sure
starters today will be sophomore
Dick Schryer in centerfield and
juniors Chan Simonds and Bob
Gilhooley who will play first base
and shortstop respectively.
The rest of the team will depend
on whether the Broncos start a
right or left handed pitcher. The
remaining two outfield positions
will be made up from sophomores
Carl Cmejrek and Les Tanona,
junior Al Bara or senior Earl
Meyers.
Skaff or Volk
George Skaff and Rick Volk are
in the running for the third base

assignment while either Rick Sy-
gar and Dan DiNunzio will start
at second base.
Coach Moby Benedict, in his
third year at the helm of the
Maize and Blue, will have a young
team composed of mainly sopho-
more and juniors. The only mem-
bers lost from last year's squad,.
which finished second to Minne-
sota in the Big Ten with a 10-4
record, are outfielder Ron Tate,
shortstop Dave Campbell, and
second baseman Tom Laslo. This
year's team has 12 returning let-
termen. Benedict declined to com-
ment on how he would rate this
year's team except to say that
based on the Arizona trip "the
team had a long way to go."
Bara Leads Hitters
The Wolverines go into today's
action with a 1-7 record compiled
on its Arizona trip. The leading
hitter in Arizona was Al Bara with
a .474 batting mark. Other play-
ers who hit over .300 were Frank
Nunley, .400; Earl Meyers, .333;
Ted Sizemore, .308; and Dick
Schryer, .300. Schryer also led
the team with five RBI's. Clyde
Barnhardt topped the pitchers
with an earned run average of
4.50.
The invading Broncos whipped'
Michigan twice last year by scores
of 3-0 and 7-0 and hope to keep
the string going with a young
team that split a two game series
last weekend with Ohio Univer-
sity.

do'n't!
don't!
don't.
don't!
don't!
don't!
don't!

'.S

T ioDD'S ,X

Coaching Staff Entertains
Thirteen Cage Superstars

By JIM LaSOVAGE
Thirteen of the nation's out-
standing prep basketball stars
were hosted last weekend as Mich-
igan's recruiting program reached
its peak.
Most of the preps were treated
to a night at the movies on Friday
night, the football scrimmage on
Saturday afternoon, and the an-
nual Basketball Banquet that
night, with the varsity basketball
team as their guides.
Most Noticeable
The presence of Lew Alcindor
among the prospective freshmen
was probably the most notable, or
at least the most noticeable. His
71" frame was prominent even
next to Craig Dill, the Wolverines'
6'10" sophomore center. Alcindor,
from Power Memorial High School
in New York, still has three
schools on his list after seeing
UCLA the weekend before last.
According to head coach Dave
Strack, the giant star has not
picked a university yet, despite
rumors which have been circulat-
ing recently.
Another. New York product pres-
ent was Dick Grubar, from Bishop
Gibbons, Schenectady.
Michigan high schools were
represented by five players, three
from Ann Arbor schools. Tom
Lick, a 6'10" center from Gaylord,
and Lee Lafayette, from Grand
Rapids South, are two highly-
touted and widely-sought seniors.
Three from Ann Arbor
From University High, All-State
Bob Loughno was here. Ann Arbor
High sent Pete Hansen, and Den-
nis Dyer attended from St.
Thomas.
Ohio was the only other state
with two guests as Dave McClel-
lan, a product of DeVillbus in
Toledo, and Tarry Hisle, from
Portsmouth, were present.
Little Ken Maxey, 5'8" guard
f r o m Chicago's Carver High,
Jerry King, a Louisville, Ky., pros-

lost any of them yet, either."
He remarked that this year's
recruiting was on a par with the
years which produced Bill Buntin,
Cazzie Russell, and Dill. None of
the preps can sign tenders until
after the first of May, but Strack
felt that Michigan was in a solid
position.

m' M"

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additives,pleasel
We have nothing against salt. On radishes. Or french fries. But
not in beer.
Putting salt in your beer, some say, perks up the head ... or
livens up the taste ... or makes the beer "drier." With Budweiser,
though, all salt can do is make it salty. Budweiser is complete ...
a ready-to-drink beer if there ever was one.
Keep an eye on your Budweiser as it goes splashing down the
center of the glass. That fine head of foam is a sure sign of some-
thing special below.. . wonderful clarity, real beer aroma, a taste

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