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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

April 13, 1960 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1960-04-13

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

TIDE MICHIGAN DAILV

'--VIv t4%i- a -

---- ~ Y11 aLaea w

EDNESDAY, APRIL 13,1960

I:

Nine

Whomps

way ne, 16-0

IN NIO

TIES

'hree Pitchers Yield Only Two Hits;
rarshall, Brown Bat in Seven Runs

Averaging at least one hit per
inning and scoring in every stanza
but the second, the Wolverines
built up a 10-0 lead before putting
the game into the realm of fantasy
with a six run burst in the seventh.
Again it was walks that paved
the-way. The hosts had only two
hits in the inning, singles by Hood
and George Fead, but five free
passes and an error resulted in
the six tallies.
Michigan now rests until Friday
when they host Eastern Michigan
at Ferry Field.

SPORT SHORTS
.Boros
* Optioned
By The Associated Press
LAKELAND, FLA.-The Detroit
Tigers yesterday optioned Steve
Boros, ex-Michigan star to*"their
Denver farm club along with four
other players.
He is subject to 24-hour recall
by the Tigers.
The Tigers also traded third
baseman Steve Demeter to the
Cleveland Indians for utility in-
fielder-outfielder Norm Cash.
NORMAN, OKLA.-Pole vaulter
J. D. Martin of the University of
Oklahoma broke the world record
yesterday when he cleared 15' 9%"
but there is a doubt as to whether
it will be accepted.
Martin's mark, which broke the
indoor and outdoor records will
be submitted for recognition, but
because of tape being on the
standard pegs that held the bar,
and because of the bar being in
front of one standard and behind
the other, it may not be recog-
nized as a record.

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always priced at
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347 Maynard St. Ann Arbor
on the Campus - Across from Municipal Parking Garage

WAY?
Lappe
Hassi]
Dunco
Reggi
Thou,
Cook,
Inmar
Kaum
Agin,
Neuba
Lavin,
Conra,
Strai
Joleso
TOT
MICHIG
Hood,
Struc2
Ziegle
Roma
Brown
Danov
Frank;
DeLan
Marsh
Kuche
Syring
Murell
Fead,
McGir
Koch,
Marce
TOT

Home Opener
NE STATE AB R
us, 2b ........ 2 0
nger, 2b........ 1 0
an, s ,. 3 0
O, ss ..........1 0
If ............ 4 0
lb ............ 4 0
n, f...... .......3 0
1p rf........... 2 0
rf ............ 1 0
achr, 3b....... 2 0
,3b ............1 0
d, c............ 3 0
usberger, p ... 2 0{
>n, p .......... 1 0 1
rALS .......... 30 0;
,AN AB R I
,cf ........... 4 3
zewsid, 'ss......3 2
r, s........... 2 01
n, lb .......... 4 2
n,1If............ 3 3
vich, If .........1 1
un, rf ........ 4 2 I
mnleure, rf .... 1 01
all, 2b......... 4 1.
er, 2b .......... 0 1 1
g, c ........... 4 0
lo,3b ......... 4 01
3b .......1 0 1
nn, p .........1 0 1
p ............. 2 0
rean, p........ 1 1
rALS .......... 39 161

i

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1
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0
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0
0
0
0
0
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r
e
1
0
0
1
0
0
3
0
1
0
1
1
1
0
2
11

RBI
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
RBI
0
0
0
0
4
0
1
1
3
1
1
0
2
0
0
0
12
6
1

-Daily-David Giltrow
GET SET-Dick Syring, Michigan catcher, waits in the first
inning for a fast ball from Wayne State's Larry Strauusberger.

National League Opens Season

Wayne st. 000 000 000 0
MICHIGAN 401 121 260 16

1]

By The Associated Press
Chicago 2 Los Angeles 2
(7 innings)
San Francisco 3, St. Louis 1
SAN FRANCISCO - Sad Sam
Jones gave the 15 million dollar
Candlestick Park a happy inau-
gural yesterday, setting down St.
Louis on 3 hits as the San Fran-
cisco Giants won their opener 3-1.
Big Orlando Cepeda crashed a
triple and a single his first two
times at bat knocking in all three
San Francisco runs before a sell-

IP H E-ER SO BB

McGinn (3-0) .......3
Koch............... .3
Marcereau .........3
Straussberger (0-1) 6
Joleson .............2

2
0
0
9s
2

0-0
0-0
0-0
10-5
6-5

4
4
3
4
1

1
0
5
5

Habs Clobber Leafs,

5-2;

Lead 3-0 in Cup Playoffs

TORONTO (P) - The Montreali
Canadiens powered by their third
and fourth forward lines, over-
whelmed the Toronto Maple Leafs
5-2 last night to take a 3-0 lead
in their best-of-seven Stanley Cup
final.
The odds-on favorite Canadiens,
seeking their fifth consecutive
cup, virtually wrapped it up last
night following their 4-2 and 2-1
decisions in the opening games at
Montreal last week.
The fourth game will be played
here Thursday and the fifth, if
necessary, in Montreal Saturday.
Phil Goyette, rangy center on
Montreal's third line, paced the
Canadien snipers with two goals-
his first of the Cup playoffs this
season. Don Marshall, center of
the fourth line, got one and the
others went to the Richard broth-
ers, Henri and Maurice.

Johnny Wilson and Bert Olm-
stead were the Leaf scorers, but
their counters came when the
game was practically lost. Wilson
got his late in the second period
after the Canadiens had built up
a 3-0 lead and workhorse Olm-
stead scored with only 13 seconds
of the game remaining and Can-
adiens in front 5-1.
The Leafs made it an interest-!
ing game for two periods but they
wilted under pressure in the final
20 minutes and were a well beaten
club at the final gong. They had
their share of puck control in the
opening periods but lacked finesse
around the nets.
Exhibition Baseball
Boston 3 Detroit 0
Kansas City 3 Baltimore 0
Chicago 5 Waeaington 0
Cleveland 7 New York 4

out crowd of 42,269. Each hit came
off the first pitch to him by Larry
Jackson, Cardinal righthander
who was charged with the loss.
Sunny but windy weather pre-
vailed in San Francisco's sparkling
new stadium beside the bay. Vice-
President Richard M. Nixon de-
scribed it as "the finest baseball
park "in America." Gov. Edmund
G. Brown, Baseball Commissioner
Ford Frick, and the presidents of
both major leagues, were among
the notables witnessing the na-
tional league opener.
Milwaukee 4, Pittsburgh 3
MILWAUKEE-A towering two-
run homer by Joe Adcock in the
eighth inning boosted the Mil-
waukee Braves to a 4-3 victory
over Pittsburgh yesterday.
Adcock picked out the first pitch
from Pittsburgh relief specialist
Elroy Face and sent the ball soar-
ing over the right field fence to
score Hank Aaron ahead of him as
a partisan crowd of 39,888 roared
approval.
The Pirates, held scoreless for
seven innings by Warren Spahn,
caught up with the southpaw ace
in the top of the eighth to tie the
score at 2-2. That set the stage for
Adcock's dramatic blow.
Don McMahon, who relieved
Spahn in the eighth, was pounded
but managed to escape further
damage in the inning.
* * *
Cincinnati 9, Philadelphia 4
CINCINNATI-Home run blasts'
by Roy McMillan and rookie Tony
Gonzalez backed up brilliant re-
lief pitching by Jim O'Toole in the
Cincinnati Reds 9-4 victory over
the Philadelphia Phils yesterday.
A crowd of 30,075 sat in 75-de-

gree temperature under cloudless
skies for the National League
opener in which the Reds pulled
out of a four-run deficit for their
victory.
McMillan drove in three runs
with his homer and brought an-
other home later with a sacrifice
fly.
O'Toole, who pitched six innings,
got credit for the victory. He al-
lowed only two hits before yield-
ing to a pinch hitter in the eighth
and Bill Henry finished. O'Toole
walked two and fanned four.
Robin Roberts, the first of four
Phil pitchers, was saddled with the
loss.
IM Softball
FRATERNITY "A"
Zeta Beta Tau 12 Trigon 8
Alpha Tau omega 12 Sigma Phi 3
Phi Kappa Psi 11 Chi Phi 9
Delta Kappa Epsilon 12 Sigma Chi 8
Phi Sigma Delta 12 Delta Chi 3
Beta Theta Pt 9 Sigma Nu 0
(forfeit)
Kappa Sigma 9 Kappa Alpha Psi 0
(forfeit)
Delta Tau Delta 9 Alpha Sigma
Phi 0 (forfeit)
Sigma Alpha Mu 9 Triangle 0

I

11

I.

I.

i

SPRING INTO WARM WEATHER WITH

FOR A COMPREHENSIVE SELECTION OF SUITS-IT'S REDWOOD & ROSS

HuShPoppI@s
BREATHIN' BRUSHED PIGSKIN BY WOLVERINE
, $895 $995

WOOL AND DACRON-WASH N' WEAR BLENDS

I

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111

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