THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATTTRnAV_ APTEM Iii lQrft THE MICHIGAN DAILY~A"I'TTPn&V AD~TT Oft 1A~A tis[ix ilibilti.L El '341L .iV, lybV Frackmen Star at. Penn; Marcereau Blanks Iowa Bird Wins Broad Jump; Distance Medley 'First (Continued from Page 1) Lefty Allows EightScattered Safeties; Franklin Paces Hitters with 2 RBI's 9 Accordingly he stayed Just behind Georgetown's Bob Vinton until the final 200 yards at which point he made his customary bid and won by 15-yards, going away, in a total time of 9:56.8. Villanova Holds Record The record at the meet which was set by Villanova with the help of greats Charlie Jenkins and Ron Delany is only one half-second faster than this time. Two sprint relay teams in Maize and Blue also set the gallery buzzing with their performances. Dick Cephas, Bennie McRae, and Tom Robinson joined with Jeff Engel and Len Cercone in the 440 and 880 events respectively. They recorded the fastest qualifying times of the day in those events and set Michigan varsity records in both. Not Noted As Contenders Not even rated as contenders in the pre-meet selections, they bettered favored San Jose State's times by a tenth of a second in the shorter race and by three tenths in the longer one. Barring a repeat of the injury which Robinson suffered here last year, their performance yesterday leaves great hope for today's finals. The other Michigan entry yesterday was McRae in the heats of the 120-yd. high hurdles. He won his prelim in :14.6-two tenths of a second slower than Maryland's William Johnston's top time. May Not Run In Finals Whether McRae will run in the final today will depend on how the two Wolverine sprint teams fared last night in the draw for lanes for their finals this afternoon. Coach Canham decided that, "If we aren't lucky in this placing, we'll run Ben in the hurdles. But if we draw a good lane, we're not taking any chances on hisnot being in best possible shape." In a very exhuberant mood, Canham estimated, "That time of 1:27.1 in the 880 relay is thought to be one of the fastest in the coun- try this year." Commenting on the distance medley race with an eye on this afternoon's action he praised the team enthusiastically-particularly# Martin and Leps. "Ergas could have run that last mile faster," he estimated, "but I wanted him to save himself for those other races.- He's got a lot more running to do this weekend and we don't want him to be too tired.'' MichigLan To Host Open; h Vst DAVE MARTIN stars in distance medley M Golfers Host Titans FIRST WIN-Bob Marcereau, junior lefthander, responded with an eight-hit shutout of Iowa yesterday in his first Big Ten start of the year. The stubby southpaw gave up only one walk en route to his first Big Ten shutout. Until yesterday he had pitched only 15 innings and had no record. Netmen Win Every Match; Lead Ohio Wesley an7-U0 Special to The Daily IOWA CITY-Michigan, behind, the gritty eight hit pitching of little Bob Marcereau, and the timely hitting of Gene Struczew- ski and Wil Franklin, racked up a 6-0 shutout victory over Iowa in the opening game of a three-game weekend road trip played in dark, threatening weather.. This afternoon the Wolverines take on the defending Conference champion, Minnesota, in a twin bill with Coach Don Lund sending his two unbeaten righthanders - Denny McGinn and Al Koch-to the hill to face the powerful Go- phers. Yesterday Minnesota made Michigan State its 13th straight victim as they pounded out 20 base hits, including three home runs, as theynclobbered thehSpartans, 13-6. Yields One Walk Marcereau, who has been trou- bled by control troubles earlier this spring yielded only one walk while fanning seven in route to his first win of the year. He even had ahand in the Michigan scoring as he sacrificed Joe Merullo to second after Merul- lo had singled to open the inning. Then after Ed Hood flied to cen- ter, Struczewski collected the first of his two hits, a line single to left to chase home the first Wolverine run. This proved to be enough for the win, but Michigan picked up two more in the fifth on Hood's single and Struczewski's second clutch hit, a double to the fence in left. Merullo Doubles Merullo doubled to open the In- ning and Marcereau fanned. Then came the hits by Hood and Struc- zewski, but the budding Wolverine rally was snapped off by a brilliant stab of Bill Roman's vicious liner by Hawkeye second baseman Mike Bougdanos, who caught Struczew- ski off second for the double play. Michigan picked up another marker in the sixth on hits by Brown and Franklin, and then finished the scoring in the eighth with two more tallies. In that weird inning, Roman singled leading off and stole second base. After Brown filed deep to left, Franklin again came through with a run scoring single to right. Then Franklin stole second base, and when Iowa's third baseman hurried hi$ throw to first base on Marshall's bouncer, Franklin came in with what proved to be Michi- gan's final run. Inning Not Over However the inning was not over as Marshall stole second for the third Michigan theft of the key- stone sack in the inning and Syr- ing walked. But an infield ground- er by Merullo forced Marshall at third and Marcereau fanned to end the threat. Marcereau, although he gave up eight hits including a triple and three doubles, was only in trouble once. That came in the seventh as the Hawkeyes managed to get two hits in an inning for the only time in the game. Second Double After an infield out Rudeen slashed his second double of the game and catcher Gerald Mauren lined a single to center, but a fine fielding play by Hood held Rudeen. at third and Marcereau retired the next two Iowa hitters on strikes to end the threat and preserve his shutout. . Baseball Statistics MICHIGAN AB R H E RBI Hood,cof......... 5 1 1 0 1 Struczewski, ss .. 5 0 2 0 2 Roman, 1b........ 5 1 1 0 0 Brown, if........ 5 1 1 0 0 Franklin, 11 ...., 4 1 3 0 2 Marshall, 2b. 4 0 0 8 0 Kucher, 2b ...... 0 0 0 0 0 Syring, c ......... 3 0 1 1 0 Merullo, 3b....... 4 2 2 1 0 Marcereau, p ....3 0 0 0 0 TOTALS .......38 6 11 2 5 IOWA AB) R H E RBI Mauren, a ........ 5 0 1 0 0 Peden, 3b........5 0 2 3 0 Lewis, rf ......... 4 0 0 1 0 Klinger, of....... 3 0 0 0 0 Kennedy, 1b ..... 4 0 2 1 0 Bougdanos, 2b ... 4 0 1 0 0 Iilff, ss...........3 0 1 0 0 Landbehn, If. 4 0 0 0 0 Rudeen, p .....4 0 2 0 0 TOTALS .......36 0 8 50 MICHIGAN 001 021 020 - 6 11 2 Iowa..000 000 000-- 0 8 5 2b -- Struezewski, Brown, Merullo, Kennedy, Rudeen, (2); 3b - Peden; HP -- Klinger; SB -- Hood, Struc- zewski, Roman, Franklin, Marshall, (2). LOB -- Michigan 6, Iowa 11. IP H R-ER SO BB Marcereau (W) .....9 9 0-0 7 1 Rudeen (L)....... .9 11 6-5 6. 1 The whitewash job was the sec- ond turned in by the supposedly weak Michigan mound corps. The first came as McGinn, Koch and Jack Mogk combined to handcuff Wayne State, 16-0. Lawrence Wins Easily~l DES MOINES AM-Houston's Al Lawrence, alreadly qualified as an Australian Olympic contender, ran away wtih the two-mile. title yes- terday as the 51st Drake Relays opened in a dreary, damp setting. Lawrence, 28-year-old sopha- more, strode to a 130-yard victory in the first major -event of th- two - day Drake show which reaches aclimax today with a special AAU shotput showdown between Parry O'Brien, Bill Nie- der and Dave Davis. Lawrence, last fall's NCAA and National AAU cross country cham- pion, jogged the two-mile distance today in a modest 8:57.4, well be- hind the Drake mark of 8:51.3. .,Kansas won a thrilling victory over defending champion Illinois in the University sprint medley relay. On the 880-yard anchor lap, Kansas' Bob Tague overtook Illinois' George Kerr, 1959 NCAA half-mile champion, 30 yards from the finish and won by a stride. Kansas' quartet of Cliff Cush- man, running the 440, Paul Wil- liams and Charlie Tidwell, each running a 220, and Tague, was clocked in 3:22.14 Kerr, who last year led Illinois to a Drake record of 3:17.8 in this event, blew a 10-yard lead over Tague entering the final 440 lap. Special to The Daily Golf Coach Bert Katzenmeye will get a chance to evaluate hi team depth and give his sopho- mores needed experience today when his Wolverines meet Detroil in a 36-hole match at the Univer- sity Golf Course beginning at 8:3 am. Michigan's first three men, Joe Brissen, Dick Youngberg and Cap- tain Larry Markman, will remair on the sidelines as eight non-let- terwinners will see action. Sophomores Bill Newcombe and Tom Ahearn and senior Larr3 White, who saw service in las week's triple defeat at the hand of Ohio State, Purdue and Indiana will occupy the top three spots. Rounding out the team will be juniors John Everhardus and Pau Weyand and sophomores Mike Goode, Cliff Marks and Tom Wil- son. Detroit last saw action on Sat- urday when they were defeated by Michigan State, 162-4Y1. White SOX T Cards' 10 in 8 The Chicago White Sox tripped the Detroit Tigers to their fourth straight defeat, 3-1, behind the four-hit, shutout relief of Turk Lown. The Baltimore Orioles won their fifth in a row with a 2-1 decision over the Yankees. The last place Cleveland In- dians-Just 11 games behind the leaders-defeated the Kansas City A's 5-4 in the only other game scheduled in the AL. In the National League, first place Pittsburgh was rained out at Cincinnati while the Milwaukee Braves defeated Philadelphia 5-3 on Juan Pizarro's hitless, six-in- ning relief job; and the St. Louis Cardinals whipped Chicago's Cubs 16-6, scoring 10 runs in the eighth. Los Angeles, scoring eight un- earned runs in the fifth inning, beat San Francisco 10-2: The.Tigers, who won their first five, counted in the fourth inning against the White Sox when starter Early Wynn walked four men. Lown (1-0) then came in, and after striking out Steve Bilko with the bases loaded,. allowed only four singles the rest of the way. Roy Sievers drove in the first two runs for the White Sox and scored the third. An error, Minnie Minoso's single and Sievers' llla jor League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. GB Pittsburgh ....10 3 .769 San Francisco . 9 5 .643 1/ Milwaukee .... 7 5 .583 2 Los Angeles .. 8 6 .571 2 St. Louis ...... 6 6 .500 3 Philadelphia .. 5 9 .357 5% Cincinnati ... 4 9 .308 6 Chicago........ 3 9 .250 6 AMERICAN LEAGUE it By OTTO PENZLER Track teams from this area, in- cluding athletes from Michigan State, Western Michigan and Wayne State will challenge Mich- A igan this afternoon at Ferry Field in the Michigan Open at 1 p.m. Many freshmen from these schools will compete, as well as those varsity athletes who were not selected to enter the important Penn and Drake Relays. DP t 1gel , 3-1, th Shells Cubs ground out scored one in the first against loser Frank Lary (1-1) and after Nellie Fox tripled in the fifth, Sievers brought him home with a clinching single. A two-out single by ex-Yankee Gene Woodling gave the Orioles and Skinny Brown (1-0) the win- ning run in the fourth against loser Bill Short (1-1). The Birds, scoring in the third on Mary Breeding's single and three walks, made it 2-0 when Woodling's hit t followed a bunt single by Joe Ginsberg and a walk. Del Crandall batted in the first two runs, one with his second homer, theA singled and scored the winner as the Braves battled back with three in the sixth against loser Jim Owens (1-2). Starter Bob Buhl gave up the Phils' four hits and their three first-inning runs. Pizarro (1-1) went to work in the third and struck out nine before giving way ot Warren Spahn when he hurt his arm in the ninth. Johnny Roseboro hit the first grand slam home run of his major league career in the big inning after the Dodgers scored four runs on three consecutive errors by the Giants. Lefthander Johnny Podres scored his 5th straight victory over the Giants, stopping them on eight hits. Sad Sam Jones, who contributed a 2-run error to the fifth inning disaster, was the loser. Podres is 2-1 and Jones 2-2. The St. Louis Cardinals errupt- ed for a 10-run eighth inning- biggest inning in the major leagues this season-and blasted the Chicago Cubs 16-6 despite a pair of three-run homers by Ernie Banks. Michigan will have juniors Ray Locke and Terry Trevarthen en- tered in the shot put. Locke, as a senior in high school, broke the national record with a toss of 62' 2". The 200-pound Trevar- then has been the leading shot' putter for Michigan this season. No Pole Vaulter Coach Don Canham has high hopes for first - year man Steve Overton in the pole vault. Michi- gan has no pole vaulter this year, which will be a great handicap when they attempt to take the outdoor track title from Big Ten Champion Illinois. It is hoped Overton will at least partially fill the gap left by graduated stars Eeles Langstrom and Mamon Gib- son. The team of John Twomey, Quint Sterling, Larry Beamer (or Don Chalfant) and Jack Steffes will probably compete in the 440- yd. relay. As a possible alterna- tive,' they may run in the longer, more grueling one-mile relay. The hop,step and jump, an un- usual event, and not often in- cluded in regular American com- petition, today will feature Steffes, along with freshmen Dick Thel- well and Doug Niles. This same trio will also vie for honors in the broad jump. Niles will also be entered in the 100 and 200-yard dashes. He and teammate Ken Nicholson will pro- vide tough competition in these events. Quint Sterling will repre- sent the varsity. Cephaus, McRae Absent The 220-yd. low hurdles will in- clude Ron Trowbridge and Chal- fant along with freshman Chuck Peltz. This event is usually domi- nated by Bennie McRae and Dick Cephas, but today they are in Philadelphia representing Michi- gan in the Penn Relays. Bill Hammerstein carries Michi- gan's hopes in the 880-yd. run. Hammerstein set a new Michigan freshman record in the 800 meters last week at the Ohio Relays. He ran his heat in the excellent time of 1:54.8 which he is hoping to equal today. COLUMBUS - Under menacing skies, Michigan's tennis team opened its season in convincing style in a quadrangular meet with Ohio State, Ohio Wesleyan, and Indiana yesterday at Columbus. The Wolverines had swept all six singles matches and one doubles match from Ohio Wes- leyan before the proceedings were, halted by rain. At that time, the' other two Michigan doubles teams were leading and tied, respective- ly. Sophs Impressive This is especially encouraging since Ohio Wesleyan has beaten Big Ten rival Ohio State 7-2 earlier in the season. Even more encouraging was the work of sophomores Jim Tenney and Ken Mike who won each of their singles matches for a combined total of 20-4. Matches were scored in the manner of professional sets in which 10 games are required to win instead of the usual six. The winner must win by at least two games. Gerry Dubie, a junior, defeated Bill Poist of Wesleyan 10-6 in number one singles. Senior Frank Fulton, a three year veteran, defeated Dick Gor- din at number two singles,'s10-7. Captain John Wiley crushed Don Pierce of Wesleyan 10-1 at the number three singles spots. Win In Doubles Wiley and Fulton, last years Big Ten number 'three doubles champions, combined their tal- ents to take the measure of Don Jones and Warrell Lauer in num- ber two doubles by the score of 10-2. Sophomore Jim Tenney wallop- ed Jones 10-1 in number four singles in his initial varsity ap- pearance. Tenney is from Toledo. The other starting sophomore, Ken Mike of Detroit, won the number five singles defeating Lauer 10-3. Junior Bruce MacDonald com- pleted the clean sweep of the singles matches as he took Steve Falk of Wesleyan, 10-4. Michigan players thus won 60 of 79 sets of singles played. Rain Halts Matches In first doubles, Dubie and Mike were tied at 6-all with Poist! and Gordin of Wesleyan when the match was chased by rain. At CANOE TRIPS An exciting vacation orfiSshingan camping in the Quetico-Superlor wilderness. For everyone, and no ex- perience necessary. Only $6 per day. Write now for complete information to Bill Rom, CANOE COUNTRY OUTFITTERS, Ely, Minnesota. number three doubles, Tenney and MacDonald were leading Pierce and Don Peck 5-1. The squad will attempt to com- plete the tourney today by fin- ishing the two doubles matches with Ohio Wesleyan and then playing Ohio State and Indiana. Next week the Wolverines face two tough opponents as they tangle with Western Michigan on Thursday and perennial Big Ten power Illinois on Friday. Both of these matches will be played at Ann Arbor. 'Wolverines Scrimmage In Stadium Head Coach Bump Elliott will send his team out for its third game-type football scrimmage this afternoon in Michigan Stadium at 2 p.m. The 20 day spring practice will come to its conclusion next Satur- day with the annual spring Inter- squad game.- Elliott will use this afternoon's session to continue work on per- fection of offense. For the first time this spring the squad will be divided equally according to ability in an attempt to more closely simulate game type conditions. * t * I aI I Junior Year f r I New York I An unusual one-year college program : Writ* for brochure tot g uao ear a : Prof. j. W. Egerer 3j1 lg a Washington square in * College 'eWYo rk " a New York university : New York 3, NY. I - I I e .......M. . 6... Do Jbul ThAnk or rurseif? (DIG THIS QUIZ AND SEE IF YOU STRIKE PAY DIRT*) z4, .: (9: "You can't teach an old dog new tricks" means (A) better teach him old ones; (B) it's hard to get mental agility out of a rheumatic mind; (C) let's face it-Pop likes to do the Charleston. MICHIGAN UNION MICH IGAN UNION CREATIVE ARTS FESTIVAL PHOTO CONTEST PRIZES I ST PRIZE-Argus C-3 Camera and Flash Equipment Courtesy of Argus Camera Co. 2ND PRIZE-Argus C-20 Camera and Flash Equipment Courtesy of Ou inrrv Incr :."9 - When your roommate borrows your clothes without asking, do you (A) charge him rent? (B) get a roommate who isn't your size? (C) hide your best clothes? An BZ CLO When a girl you're with puts on lipstick in public, do you (A) tell her to stop? (B) refuse to be annoyed? (C) wonder if the stuff's kissproof? An BE] CE If you were advising a friend on how to pick a filter cigarette, would you say, (A) "Pick the one with the strongest taste." (B) "Get the facts, pal- then judge for yourself." (C) "Pick the bne that fotim. the m t " w Chicago ..:...., 5 Detroit.........5 New York ,.... 5 Baltimore.....6 Kansas City .5 Washington ... 5 Boston .........4 Cleveland .......3 L Pct. 4 .556 4 .556 4 .556' 5 .545 5 .500 5 .500 6 .400 5 .375 GB 1 I 1 i } I I * p,,k: AM~5 ~b ~~