THE MICHIGAN DAILY Team Meets Michigan State LIMITS ROSTERS: Kefauver's Proposal Hit by Baseball Brass Michigan State has two pitchers with ERA's under 2.00 but their team batting average is hovering around the .225 mark. In addition to Sinks, State's Don Sackett owns a 1.88 ERA. But catcher Bob Mon- czka is the only State regular hit- ting above the .300 mark. He owns a .346 average. Michigan, on the other hand, has been getting shaky pitching in Big Ten play but their booming bats have kept them at the .500 mark. Five .300 Hitters The Wolverines have five regu- lars hitting .300 or over for the season. Left fielder Dave Brown leads the parade with a .404 aver- age including six hore runs and 25 RBI's. Right fielder Wilbur Franklin is right behind Brown with a .380 average. Michigan's team average is still around the .300 mark in seasonal play. Today's clash at Old College Field is the 127th in the ancient rivalry that started in 1884. Michigan leads with 79 wins to 46, with one tie. NEW YORK (M--Baseball's big- wigs denounced a Congressional bill introduced by Sen. Estes Ke- fauver (D-Tenn) yesterday as one that would kill the minor leagues, stifle all incentive and reduce the quality of play. Led by Commissioner Ford Frick, the majors' top brass denied Kefauver's claim they were hoard- ing players and refuted his charge that some of the clubs were con- trolling as many as 450 players. A club-by-club inventory show- ed that the majors actually owned or controlled 3,084 players, an average of 193 a club. The most owned by any club are 275 players by the Los Angeles Dodgers. Kefauver's bill would forbid any club to own or control more than 100 players, and would require them once a year to offer at least 60 of then for unlimited draft to other clubs.. The bill also is designed to give minor league players some choice as to which major league team to play for, and make it easier for the new Continental League to obtain necessary playing talent for its proposed start in 1961 The strongest statements were made by Frick, League Presidents Warren Giles and Joe Cronin, and General Managers George Weiss of the New York Yankees and Frank Lane of the Cleveland In- dians. STATE STARTER-Michigan State pitcher Don Piemann will face the Wolverines in either the first or second game of Satur- day's double-header on Ferry Field. Picmann is the number three hurler on the Spartans pitching-rich staff. This Weekend in Sports Today BASEBALL-Michigan vs. Michigan State at East Lansing TENNIS-Michigan vs. Illinois, here, 2:15 Tomorrow BASEBALL-Michigan vs. Michigan State (2), here, 1:30 TENNIS-Michigan vs. Wisconsin, here, 2:15 TRACK-Michigan vs. Western Mic an, here, 1:30 GOLF-Michigan vs. Ohio State and Purdue, here, 1:30 FOOTBALL-Spring intra-squad game, Stadium, 1:30 WHITE SOX, INDIANS WIN IN AL: Pirates Whip Cubs To Pad NL Lead By The Associated Press The Pittsburgh Pirates padded their National League lead two games yesterday, scoring seven runs in the last three innings for a 9-7 victory at Chicago that ruined Lou Boudreau's debut as Cub manager. Second place San Francisco blew a two-run lead and lost 4-3 to the Cincinnati Reds, who swept the two-game series. The Los Angeles Dodgers pulled out of a four-game losing streak by dropping the Milwaukee Braves 4-3. St. Louis defeated Philadel- phia 3-1. Pinch-hitter Bill Virdon's two- run triple with two out in the ninth broke a 7-7 tie and gave the Pirates the victory., The Pirates' big seventh started as Bob~ Skinner singled, took sec- ond on an error and scored on Dick Groat's single. Roberto Cle- mente drove his No. 5 homer into the right field stands. Dick Stuart's double chased Morehead and brought in Elston who was greeted by Don Hoak's single, scoring Stuart. Banks dropped Hal Smith's pop fly and Cimoli's single brought Hoak across from second with the tying run at 7-7. Hobble finally put out the fire, getting the next two men on pop flies. Fleet Vada Pinson stole two aN ) ,j 33 N0 N NCS t t N I 381 3 ~12i 3 0Ot1 V t3 8 NV i dW aN y 3 I 0d w .LNVA 3W () :| n---.n9 1 bd dS bases and scored the winning run on a sacrifice fly today as Cin- cinnati completed a two-game sweep over San Francisco with a 4-3 victory. A crowd of 11,457 watched re- liever Stu Miller lead off the eighth by hitting the Reds' Eddie Kasko. The base runner took third on Pinson's single and scored on a bad throw in from Willie Mays. A two-out, two-strike single by rookie Bob Aspromonte with the bases loaded won it for the Dodg- ers, who had dropped four straight. It was the fourth con- secutive hit for Aspromonte, one a seventh-inning homer, his first in the majors. Don Demeter also homered in the two-run seventh, junking a five-hit shutout by Mil- waukee starter Lew Burdette. Don McMahon (1-2) lost it in relief, Larry Sherry (2-3) won it with four innings of two-hit shutout relief. Starter Johnny Podres gave up seven hits, two of them homers -one a two-run shot by Mel Roach, his first, and the other Hank Aaron's solo fifth. Philadelphia righthander Jim Owens allowed only five hits as he defeated the Cardinals, 3-1. It was just the third defeat for the St. Louis club during a 12-game home stand in which the Red- birds previously had averaged better than seven runs a game. In the American League, Chi- cago beat Washington 5-3 and Cleveland took Baltimore 11-6. Tito Francona's first homer of the season and his two doubles led a 15-hit Cleveland offense tonight for an 11-6 victory over the Balti- more Orioles who scared the In- dians briefly after their rookie pitcher Wynn Hawkins was hit by a line drive on his right shoulder. Roy Sievers walloped a two-run homer that launched the Chicago White Sox to a 5-3 victory over the Washington Senators. The victory lifted the Sox into a virtual tie with the idle New York Yankees for first place in the American League. Starter Bob Shaw received credit for his second triumph of the season, although Manager Al Lo- pez called on Turk Lown to finish after Billy Gardner and Lenny Green opened the eighth with con- secutive singles. Lown preserved Chicago's lead of 5-2 at the time, letting the bases fill but forcing Reno Berola to pop for the third out. 2000 WEST STADIUM 5TbDimh Iheft C~.wv Show t,il WwSude, NBC-TV-44. Pot Boos. Chev Slowro'm w~kivl, ABC-TV Major League Standings Ip AMERICAN LEAGUE STANDINGS w New York.......S Chicago......... 9 Cleveland.......S Baltimore....... 9 Washington .... 7 Boston ......... 6 Kansas City .... 6 Detroit.........S YESTERDAY'S L Pet. 5 .615 6 .600 7 .533 8 .529 8 .467 7 .462 9 .400 8 .385 RESULTS GB 1 1 2 2 3 3 NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDINGS W L Pct. GB Pittsburgh ....13 5 .722 San Francisco ..11 7 .611 2 Milwaukee...... 9 7 .563 3 St. Louis .....9 85 .529 34 Los Angeles .... 9 10 .474 4% Cincinnati......58 11 .421 5 Philadelphia .... 7 12 .368 6 Chicago ........6 12 .333 7 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Pittsburgh 9, Chicago 7 Los Angeles 4, Milwaukee 3 (10 innings) Cincinnati 4, San F ncisco 3 Philadelphia 3, St. Louis 1 TODAY'S GAMES Pittsburgh at San Francisco (N) Milwaukee at Chicago Philadelphia at Lps Angeles (N) St. Louis at Cincinnati (N) I P E Chicago 5, Washington 3j Cleveland 11, Baltimore 6 TODAY'S GAMES Kansas City at New York Chicago at Washington (N) Cleveland at Baltimore (N) Detroit at Boston S L R ---" KDL KROSSWORD No. 13 - S - I - I - I - U U - I - V - I - ACROSS 50. Kismand make up 1. The season for DOWN a head cold 6. Ii___.-: 1. Longhair he smokes (It.) 2. Resorted to 10. Feel like low humor gelatin S. Wicker 11. Stone with 4. The Prexy NewYork inside 5. They're bound 12. Den Linden's to spread first name 6. Dude, like 18. Pig (French) 7. Closed 14. Less than 8. Oodles a gnat 9. Surpasses 15. stinae 17. Only Kool gives lstsain you real 16. Lots, in Mento paper talkMetl 18. Make a - 18. French gal's change to Kool name 19. Poetess Millay 20. Koois _- 20. You need help the brand 23. They're the for you last word 21. Ego's alter ego 24. Tough knot 22. Understand to crack 25. Sizable saline 27. You'll __ olution a real change 26. Heart penetrant with Kool 27. Horsed around, 80. Alexander's but petulantly land 28. City with wine 34. Swiftly in the middle 85. Flake out 29. There's one 86. Little in the town governor 31. Fair, lovable 87. Plowed land chick 41. Museum piece 32. Best buy your 42. Description of Kooks by it Koolpackage 88. For this you (8 words) gotta reach 45. Raison d'.......- 38. It's skinny 46. Middle of as Sinatra Dinah 89. - Magnanl 47. This comes 40, June 6, 1944 aoon 43. Electrical 48. Juan, Amech engineers Cornell 44. He puts up 49. Place on antennas 1 2 3 4 5 10 12 DARE YOU KGDL ENOUGH TO KRACK THIS?" 6 it 7 8 -4i I4 9 ---- "9 A C -1?I 20 2i 22 25 26 30 I~11 K S % minateZ most-likely-to-muceer .,.ovemrheimingl y eeted! k s p 11pers lead the -polfo the reaSsos ,.. guys look sharper Inpencil-shim ipers They }ike the loer ride on the hips a.the side buekles that replace belts . .. the Continental slant of the front pockets. $4.95 to $8.95, in' a host of wash- able fat~rics at on-the-bull campus shops. at A 27 28 29 I w A - i a - I.-v aI - S - S - '~ - ~Y - 34 36 42 I 35 I F--.-4*- -- #1 I I 111 -I-f4- v4 a . I~ TIL T 11 44' 47 I'a 48 .9 CL7 I [ * * - S p~S - - - - When your thoat tWII you its time for a change, ' you need. a alchange... " L G N E C r'rTno exrv+irtrrisatr nvfr+5 miln gram acrnr r tra7lnt s rirl fiDaR9/ Di@ rtf'.S#!'+ jtttl 71T1 SiQ I i I