8IX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, MAY 30,1960 SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, MAY 3,1960 r - Late Notre Dame Rally Overcomes Wolverines, 8-4 rish Tally Six Runs in Final Frames, St. Louis Ends Pirate Win Streak, 4-3 By HAL APPLEBAUM Notre Dame exploded for six runs and eight hits in thedlast three innings to take an 8-4 deci- sion over Michigan yesterday at Ferry Field. The loss was the Wolverines' third straight, leaving them with an overall 14-8 record. The Irish are now the owners of a 14-3 slate. With the score tied 2-2 at the end of six innings, Notre Dame scored twice in the seventh at the expense of starting pitcher Jack Mogk, added another off of Mogk and reliefer Joe Brefeld in the eighth, and then their final three in the last frame off Brefeld. The Wolverines in the mean- time threatened, but were held at bay until the ninth when they scored their final two runs. The Irish actually began their uprising in the sixth when right fielder Frank Finnegan led off with a single and then traveled all the way to third base when NOTF Gent Howa Scarp Haga Caree Finne O'Lea Lenn( Wojc Palin Fitzp TO MICA Hood Struc Roma Brow Fran! Mars] Syrin Meru Mogk Brefe: x-De TO Irish Hot RE DAME AB R ,epo, 2b. . 4 2 rd, 2b .......... 0 0 itO, SS......... 5 0 n, 3b ............5 1. ta, lb......... 5 1 egan, rf......... 4 1 aW, if ..........4 1 on, Cf........... 5 0 4k, C............ 3 1 Lich, p........... 4 1 atrick, p....... 0 0 TALS .......... 39 8 nGAN AB R , ..........., 4 1 :Zewskl, s . 5 0 a, lb.......... 4 0 n,If ........... 4 1 klin, rf.......... 4 0 hall, 2b.........4 0 g, C............ 4 0 llo, 3b ......... 4 0 , p ............. 3 0 ld, p...........0 0 T Lamielleure .. 1 TALS ....... 37 41 H 4 0 1 0 2 2 2 0 0 1 0 12 H 2 0 1 1 0 0 2 2 0 0 1 10 RBI 2 0 1 0 2 1 I 0 0 0 0 7 RBI 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 4 left fielder Dave Brown let the ball roll past him. However, Mogk held the Irish in check as he fanned the next two batters and then after an intentional walk to catcher Ed Wojack retired pitcher Nick Palinich on a weak tap to third baseman Joe Merullo. Same Pattern The visitors appeared to be repeating the same pattern in the seventh. Second baseman Jack Gentempo led off' with a double (the second of his four hits) and remained there as Mogk fanned Bob Scarpito and Dan Hagan. Mogk again appeared to have escaped without a run being scored against him when John Caretta lined a shot towards cen- terfielder Ed Hood for an appar- ent out. Hood, however, seemed to have trouble following the flight of the ball and it sailed over his head for a triple, scoring Gen- tempo with the tie-breaking run. The next batter, Finnegan, walked and then Dick O'Leary brought Caretta home with a line single to center to end the Notre Dame offensive activity in the seventh. Walks Two In the eighth, Mogk walked the first two batters and was then removed in favor of Brefeld. Gen- tempo, attempting to sacrifice, beat out his bunt down the third base line to load the bases. Brefeld then aided the visitors' offense by walking Bob Scarpito to force in Wojick and bring the score to 5-2. Michigan was relieved of any further woes in the eighth when Hagan's fly ball was turned into a double play as Palanich was called out for not tagging up at third before heading for home plate. This disputed play caused one of many delays in this game which ran over three hours. The Irish put the game out of reach in the ninth when Finnegan homered, O'Leary wdlked, Palan- ich singled and Gentempo tripled, making the scoreboard read 8-2. When the Wolverines finally came to life in the last of the ninth it was too little, too late. Pinch-hitter Dick DaLamielleure and Hood started the inning with back-to-back doubles good for a run. Jim Fitzpatrick was brought on the scene to bail out Palanich and began the job by striking out Gene Struczewski for the first out. Bill Roman kept the home fans' slim hopes alive with a single to right, but then Fitzpatrick got Dave Brown and Wilbert Franklin to ground into force outs, ending the game. Notre Dame had opened the scoring in the third when they combined a walk, two singles and an error by Franklin for two runs. Michigan Retaliates The Wolverines retaliated in a similar manner an inning later. Brown led off with a single and moved to second when Bill Roman was safe at first on an error. After Franklin was retired they moved to second and third respectively on a double steal while catcher Dick Syring was fanning for the second out. Joe Merullo then re- sponded with a ground single to right to even the score. Each team had runners on base in every frame, but the Irish were better at moving them around. Of the pitchers Palanich was by far the most impressive. Superb control and an ability to hit the corners kept the Wolverine bat- ters off balance throughout the game, although he appeared tired in the latter stages. Control Trouble Mogk was in trouble mainly be- cause of his control. His six walks and a hit batsman kept Notre Dame runners on base throughout the game. Shaky fielding by the Wolverines added to his woes. Brefeld, who appeared to be aiming, rather than throwing smoothly, was bothered by re- sultant wildness. The Wolverines travel this after- noon to Detroit to meet Wayne State in a return match. Michigan won the first encounter at Ferry Field two weeks ago by the score of 16-0. 'Sailing Club Elinminated Michigan was eliminated in its quest for the Midwest Sailing championship last weekend when they placed fourth in the Michi- gan area eliminations held in De- troit. The Wolverines had won the area title the past five years. The University of Detroit won the title with 50 points followed by Wayne St. with 42, and Michi- gan State with 40 points. Michi- gan had 39 points. On May 14-15 the first three finishers in the area champion- ships will compete with other schools from the midwest for the midwest sailing championships, this year to be held at the Cres- cent Sail-Yacht Club in Detroit. LEAD IN LOSING CAUSE-Sophomores Ed Hood (left) and Joe Merullo led the Michigan attack in a losing cause yesterday afternoon by rapping out two hits apiece. Hood also added another stolen base to his team-leading total. Merullo contributed two RBI's in the fourth inning which gave Michigan a short lived 2-2 tie. By The Associated Press , Ex-teammate Ronnie Kline ended Pittsburgh's winning streak at nine games last night, pitch- ing a seven-hitter as the St. Louis Cardinals defeated the National League-leading Pirates 4-3. In the only American League games scheduled, Cleveland made it five straight with a 3-2 victory at Washington and gained a first- place tie with the Chicago White Sox, who lost 11-6 at Baltimore. The Chicago Cubs put together a three-run ninth, capped by Don Zimmer's two-out single, for an 8-7 victory over Philadelphia in a NL game. The Cardinals, winning eight of their last 10, came from three runs back against Pirate starter Harvey Haddix and Face, who gave up the tying run when George Crowe lined a pinch single in a two-run seventh. A single by Stan Musial, Daryl Spencer's double, his fourth consecutive hit, and an intentional walk to Leon Wagner loaded the bases in the ninth. Face then walked pinch- hitter Carl Sawatski on a 3-1 pitch. AMERMIAN w Chicago .....«. 7 Cleveland ...7 Baltimore ..... 8 New York.... 6 Boston......... 5 Detroit......... 5 Washington ... 5 Kansas City ... 5 YESTERDAY'S LEAGUE L Pct. 5 .583 5 .583 6 .571 5 .545 6 .455 6 .455 7 .417 s .385 RESULTS 2 1iY 2 2% It was the second loss in two decisions for Face, last year's relief ace who won his first 17 and finished with an 18-1 mark. Kline, a right-hander swapped to the Cardinals last winter, blanked= the Bucs after Smoky Burgess' solo homer made it 3-0 in the fourth. He walked three and struck out three for his first decision and first complete game in three starts. Two-out singles by Vic Power and Johnny Temple scored Cleve- land's three runs in the seventh against loser Pete Ramos (0-2). JHKajor League Standings The Senators, blanked on one hit for six innings, then got their two in the seventh on pinch-hitter Julio Becquer's double before Gary Bell (2-1) put away his sixth in a row over Washington with a six- hitter. The Orioles, just .012 points be-, hind in third place, made it seven out of eight while ending the White Sox' streak at five. The birds managed only six hits, but bunched four of them with three walks against losing reliever Don Ferrarese (0-1) for a clinch- ing five-run fourth inning. MarY Breeding's two-run, double was the big blow. Jim Gentile added Baltimore's final runs-with a two= on homer in the sixth. It was his third and upped his AL leading RBI total to 17. Arnie Portocar- rero (2-0) won it in relief. [TONIITE] I' GB SPORT SHORTS: Palmer, Collins in Houston Playoff a-doubled for Brefeld in 9th Notre Dame 002 000 213 8 12 4 MICHIGAN. 000 200 002 4 10 2 2b - Hood, DaLamielleure. 3b -- Gentempo, Caretta. HR -- Finne gan. SB -- Hood, Franklin, Brown, Gentempo. LOB - ND-11, M-10. DP - Gentempo, Scarpito, Caretta; Scarpito, Gentempo, Caretta. HP - Wojcik (by Mogk). PITCHING SUMMARY IP H R-ER BB SO Palinich (W) ........8 9 4-2 3 11 Fitzpatrick ...... 1 1 0-0 0 1 Mogk (L). .....7 8 5-4 6 7 Brefeld..........2 4 3-3 0 1 By The Associated Press HOUSTON-Masters champion Arnold Palmer, golf's greatest win- ner, banged in two birdies on the last four holes to tie Bill Collins, the towering ex-Marine, for first place in the $35,000 Houston Classic Golf Tournament yester- day. They will play it off today over 18 holes starting at noon. In a glittering stretch duel in which Collins, the big man from Baltimore, never was behind but was twice tied, Palmer shot a 1- over-par 73 on the final 18 while Collins had a 75 and the two wound up with 280 for 72 holes. There was drama aplenty in the last holes of this tournament. Palmer, who had birdied 15 with a 20-foot putt and 17 with an 8-footer. then looked at the score- board at 18 where it was shown that Collins was tied with him as the result of a bogey on 17. He pitched within 10 feet of the pin and could sink it for a birdie and go ahead. But he missed it. Collins then came into 18 and was fifteen feet away. He could sink it for a birdie and win the tournament. But he was a foot short. Collins started the final round with 205 for 54 holes. Palmer, in second place, had 207. Jack Fleck of Los Angeles was third with 209. Down the stretch they battled and at the eleventh hole they, were all tied for first place al- though Palmer had a double bogey on the third hole where he over- shot the green and 3-putted. Schmidt Signs DETROIT -- Linebacker Joe Schmidt, the Detroit Lions' Mr. Everything, yesterday signed his 1960 football contract along with end Jim Gibbons. Both players agreed to terms after discussions with President- General Manager Edwin J. Ander- son. Gibbons signed a two-year pact, becoming the second Detroit player to do so. Alex Karras, the huge tackle who wrestles in the off-season, recently signed a two- year agreement. Schmidt, captain of the Lions for four season and the club's most valuable player three times, has been an all-pro and a pro bowl selection six times. Gibbons led the Lions in pass receiving last year, snaring 31 for 431 yards and one touchdown. Baltimore 11, Chicago 6 Cleveland 3, Washington 2 TODAY'S GAMES Detroit at New York Chicago at Baltimore Cleveland at Washington Kansas City at Boston NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. Pittsburgh ....12 4 .750 x-San Fran. ...10 5 .667 x-Milwaukee .. 8 5 .615 x-Los Angeles 8 7 .533 St. Louis....... 8 7 .533 Chicago ....... 5 10 .333 Philadelphia .. 5 11 .313 a-Cincinnati 4 11 .267 x-playing night game YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 8, Philadelphia 7 St. Louis 4, Pittsburgh 3 Los Angeles 3, Cincinnati 2 (5 innings) San Francisco 0, Milwaukee S (2 innings) TODAY'S GAMES Milwaukee at San Francisco Cincinnati at Los Angeles Philadelphia at Chicago The Fabulous GB 1% 21/ 3% 3% 62 7 FRESHMEN Stars f Capitol-Records FOUR PEASE WIelcom Students! Try us today for: * CREW CUTS t PRINCETONS 9 FLAT TOPS * IVY CUTS THE DASCOLA BARBERS Near Michigan Theatre Auditorium Ypsilanti, Mich. Tues., May 3 8:00 P.M. Tickets _2.00, 1.50 r 1 y NEXT TIME YOU MAIL MONEY TRY A PERSONAL MONEY ORDER Planning to send money through the mail? Then drop in at the nearest Ann Arbor Bank office and ask for a Personal Money Order. You sign the money order ... you designate the payee yourself. And the cost is low-jvst fifteen cents service fee for amounts up to $250.00. There's no safer-or surer-way to send moneys This Week in Sports TODAY Baseball-Michigan vs. Wayne State at Detroit. THURSDAY Tennis-Michigan vs. Western Michigan here, 2:15 p.m. FRIDAY Baseball-Michigan vs. Michigan State at East Lansing. Tennis-Michigan vs. Illinois here, 2:15 p.m. SATURDAY Baseball-Michigan vs. Michigan State (2) here, 2:15 p.m. Track-Michigan vs. Western Michigan here, 1:15 p.m. Tennis-Michigan vs. Wisconsin here, 2:30 p.m. Golf-Michigan vs. Ohio State and Purdue here. Football-Spring Intra-Squad game at the stadium. I I The General Co-Chairmen of HOMECOMING-1960 Announce Petitioning for Central Committee Positions 1. Pick up information in Homecoming Office 2nd floor, North Wing of Union, 2-5 P.M. Monday-Thursday. 2. Petitions due Friday, May 6 3. Interviews, Sunday, May 8 on sole at Bob Marshall's 211 S. State Phone NO 2-4786 for Michigan Daily Classified Ads I-M I SCORES 1' 7- -1 I RESIDENCE HALLS SOFTBALL Gomberg 9, Van Tyne I Anderson 9, Adams 4 Wenley 17, Michigan s Chicago 11, Lloyd 10 Willams 10, Scott 2 Reeves 14, Greene 7 Winchel 11, Kelsey 9 Taylor 6, luber 4 "I' Cooley 8, Wenley 7 Scott 15, Lloyd 10 Adams 20, Michigan 5 Strauss 16, Anderson 11 Hinsrale 24, Reeves 6 Gornberg over Chicago (forfeit) .. CANOE TRIPS An exciting vacation of fishing and camping In the Quetico-Superior wilderness. For everyone, and no ex- perience necessary. Only $6 per Fday. Write now for complete information to Bill Rom, CANOE COUNTRY OUTFITTERS, Ely, Minnesota. I wl p Phone NO 2-4786 t III I i I 1 d I0 11 #1.111 for Classified Advertising 4 $ I ARE PROUD TO ANNOUNCE A NEW AR RIVAL JOIN THE NAME: INTERNATIONAL BROTHER PROGRAM Here is your opportunity to become an American Brother to an International Student. You may build a lasting friendship while helping him adjust to campus life. If you are interested, fill out this form and send it to International Affairs Committee, Stu- dent Offices, Michigan Union, Ann Arbor. For additional infor- SIZE: PAPERBACK ROOM 1500 Different Titles Arranged by subject H EIGHT: VISITING 8:30 to 5:30 Monday thru Friday Ii 11 i I -- - - -- I -