THE MICHIGAN DAILY SA' - - I Tomorrow at 8 at HILLEL FACULTY and GRAD STUDENTS Present (Ninth InningRally.Nips Indiana, 7-6 4 ibbi Harry Kaplan, D.D., LL.D. Director, B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, Ohio State University Director, Midwest Region, Hillel Foundations "THE PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION" Trackmen Favored Against Purdue, Ohio State Today, Roman Collects Three Hits; Mogk Stars in Relief Role B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation 1429 H ill Street W ume I By BILL PHELPS Tom Robinson, Ergas Leps and Bennie McRae will lead the Mich- igan track team against Ohio State and Purdue this afternoon at Lafayette, but the question of who -if anybody-in the Conference can beat the Wolverines will have to wait at least until next week to be answered. A conservative estimate would give the Michigan team a mini- mum of eight firsts in the 14 events of today's meet. Several of them should be reinforced strongly with seconds and thirds. Robinson should not be threat- ened by anyone but the weather- man in the 100 and 220-yard races in which he has been supreme in Golf Course Closed The University 'Golf Course will be closed until 3:00 p.m. to- day because of the all-campus I-M golf tournament. EARLY REGISTRATION ( ontinued from Page 1) PASS are gunning for places on their respective national teams as 400 meter competitors in the Olympics. The race today should have an exceptional time -- possibly good' enough to qualify at least one of them for the Olympic event. The 880, broad jump and mile relay will see Michigan entrants as top contenders. Tony Seth is recovered from his fight with the flu, and Lester Bird's tempera- mental leg seems to be giving him plenty of spring for a "long jump." New Relay Team The relay team will feature the speed of Bryan Gibson, Leps and Seth along with its latest new member, John Twomey. It seems that the same quartet never gets together for two meets in a row as coach Don Canham is explor- ing all the possibilities. Team captain Earl Deardorff will try his hand at the mile today for the first time in two years. Along with him will be Dave Mar- tin, the junior who has been com- ing closer and closer with each meet, and who is bound to come up with a big win pretty soon.. As a team, the Wolverines are quite relaxed going into the meet, being more concerned with the Conference meet next weekend. Canham said, "I'm just going to relax and rest for the pressure of the Big Ten Championships." He added that, "As long as the honoraries don't bruise our boys anymore like they did Leps and McRae last week, we are all ready -despite the weather." Wolvxerines to within one run again in the seventh. Got Stronger Meanwhile, Mogk, who got stronger as the game wore on, set the Hoosiers down in order in the seventh, and managed to work out of a jam in the eighth when Indiana had a runner on second with only one out. After he set the side down in order in the ninth, the stage was set for the hectic Wolverine rally. With the score already tied and Brown on second base, Indiana Coach Ernie Andres brought in lefthander Ernie Wilholt to pitch to the left handed hitting Frank- lin. But the strategy backfired when Wilhoit, after fielding Franklin's easy tap to the mound, threw wide to first base. Then, when Barry. Marshall droppeda bunt in front of the plate, Wilhoit threw too Big Ten Standings I Cha rmanship and Committee i Information Available at S.C.G. C Offices S. A. B. the Big Ten for two years. McRae is in good shape and ready to take on all comers in the high and low hurdles. He will be severely challenged in the lows by Dick Cephas this afternoon, but that would still give Michigan another first. Next weekend in the Big Ten outdoor meet at East Lansing, the story might be a little different for the men in Maize and Blue, but today they have top billing in these events and several others as well. Big Race The big contest of the day will be in the 440 between Leps and Purdue's Dave Mills. The Boiler- maker speedster has a bit faster time over the one lap distance, but will have to really stretch to beat Leps. Last week he preferred to try the 100 and 220 rather than take on Illinois' George Kerr, but with a choice between Robinson and Leps, he will undoubtedly take on the Canadian middle-distance star this week. It is conceivable that this will only be the first of several meet- ings for the two this season. Both W L Minnesota. .........6 1 Northwestern.....3 1 MICHIGAN ........ 5 4 Indiana.-............. 3 3 Purdue....... 2 2 Wisconsin. ........1 1 Michigan/ State ..... 3 4 Ilinois ............. 3 6 Ohio State..........1 2 Iowa ..........0 3 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS MICHIGAN 7, Indiana 6 Purdue. 10, Illinois 3 Michigan State 4, Ohio State Northwestern 11, Iowa 5 Minnesota 8, Wisconsin 4 PCL. .750 .555 .500 .500, .500 .428 .333 .333 .000 -Daily-Gerry Abronheim LINES HIT,-Bill Roman, Michigan's first baseman, lines a long double to the left field fence in the ninth inning of yesterday's game with Indiana. Roman scored the tying run on Dave Brown's double as the Wolverines came from behind to win, 7-6. late to catch Brown and the bases were loaded. Almost Won Michigan almost won the game without lifting a bat a moment later. Bob Bradley, Indiana's third pitcher of the inning, apparently committed a balk with Syring hitting, but in spite of protests from Lund, the umpires held firm on their ruling that no balk had been committed. With the Hoosier infield in on the grass for a possible play at the plate, Syring then popped to first, giving Merullo the chance to win the game with his sacrifice fly to center. The victory was the fifth in nine Big Ten games for Michi- gan, and Indiana absorbed its third loss, evening its record at three and three in the Conference. This afternoon, Lund will send Denny McGinn and Al Koch to the hill to face Ohio State in a doubleheader at Ferry Field start- ing at 1:30. Close Caull INDIANA AB R H E REBI LaDuke,2b ...... 3 0 1 0 0 Renhart, 3b .5 2 2 0. 0' Foreman, f......5 2 2 1.1 Mounts, rf........3 2 2 0 3 Gross, rf..........0 0 0' 0 0 Micheals,if.......4 0 2 0 2 Smith,1b ........ 5 0 1 0 0 Packss..........5 0 1 2 0 Gates, ea.........5 0 0 0 0 Deem, p.......... 2 0 0 0 0 Kyff, p.......... 2 0 0 0 0 Wilhoit, p........ 0 0 0 1 0 Bradley, p........ 0 0 0 0 0 TOTALS.......39 6 11 4 6 MICHIGAN AB R H E RBI Hood,of........4 0 0 0 0 Struczewski, ss .. 5 0 2 1 0 Roman, li........ 5 2 3 1.1 Brown,if ........ 4 3. 1 0' 1 Franklin, rf ....... 4 0 2 0 1 Marshall, 2b .4 0 1 0 1 Syring, a ......... 5 0 0 0 0 Merullo, 3b....... 4 1 1 0 2 Marcereau, p ..., 1 0 0 0 0 Mogk, p.......... 3 1 1 0 0 TOTALS........39 7 11° 2 6 Indiana.........203 001 000 - 6 11 4 MICHIGAN ....200 200 102 - 7 11 2 2B - Roman (2), Brown, Rein- hart, Foreman, Mounts; HR - Mer- ullo, Mounts; SB =- Marshall, La- Duke, Reinhart; HP - Franklin (by Kyff); LOB - Indiana 11, MICHI- GAN 11. PITCHING SUMMARY IP H R-ER BB S0 Marcereau .....3 5 5-3 1 0 Mogk (W) .....6 6 1-1 4 5 Deem...........3% 6 4-3 1 3 Kyff (L).......4% 5 3-1 1 1 x-Wilhoit ....0.0' 0-0 0 0 Bradley .... % 0 0-0 0' 0 x-pitched to two batters in ninth ./a * - a. MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Reds Win Ninth Straight, Pirates Third 44~ (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf', "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) EUROPE MADE SIMPLE: No. 1 By The Associated Press The Cincinnati Reds beat Phila- delphia, 1-0, for their ninth vic- tory in a row and the comeback Pittsburgh Pirates smashed Mil- waukee, 8-2, last night in the Na- tional League. In the only other National, League game, the Chicago Cubs won their first game for their new manager, Lou Boudreau, by down- ing the St. Louis Cardinals, 4-1. It was the Cards' 11th straight loss away from home. In the American League, the Chicago White Sox lengthened their lead to a full game by beat- ing Cleveland, 4-2, on the eight- hit pitching of Billy Pierce. The New York Yankees after losing three straight in overtime, thump- ed Washington, 7-3. Jim O'Toole stretched the score- less innings he has pitched to 19 when he shut out the Philadelphia Phillies on seven hits. The loss was the Phillies' fourth straight and the third straight by a 1-0 score, tying the major league record. The winning run for the Reds came on a triple by Vada Pinson, scoring Billy Martin, in the fifth. Ruben Gomez was the hard luck loser. The Pirates, bounding back from four straight losses on the Pacific Coast which cost them the lead, continued a new streak with their third straight victory. It was their fourth decision over the Braves since losing the opener. In a 14 inning thriller, Detroit nipped Kansas City, 4-3, when A's catcher Harry Chiti dropped a throw to the plate with the bases loaded. Shortstop Ken Hamlin had jug- gled Eddie Yost's grounder, but made a good throw to the plate for what should have been the second out. However, Chiti erred and that was the "old ball game." Summer vacation is just around the corner, and naturally all of you are going to Europe. Perhaps I can offer a handy tip or two. (I must confess I have never been to Europe myself, but I eat a lot of Scotch broth and French dressing, so I am not entirely without qualification.) First let me say that no trip to Europe is complete without a visit to England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, France, Germany, Spain, Portugal, Italy, Lichtenstein, Holland, Belgium, Switzer- land, Luxembourg, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Po- land,. Czechoslovakia, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Russia, Greece, Yugoslavia, Albania, Crete, Sardinia, Sicily, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Lapland, and Andorra. Let us take up these countries in order. First, England. The capital of England is London-or Liverpool, as it is sometimes called. There are many interesting things to see in London-Chiefly, the changing of the guards. The guards are changed daily. The old ones are thrown away. NORT H CMU MAIN MAY 13-15 Engineers' Weekend 1 A tl 11 Major League Standings it I NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. San Francisco 18 7 .720 Pittsburgh . 16 9 .640 Milwaukee .... .11 9 .579 Cincinnati .....13 11 .542 Los Angeles ....11 15 .423 St. Louis ........9 14 .391 Chicago ........ 7 13 .350 Philadelphia ... 9 17 .346 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Pittsburgh 8, Milwaukee 2 San Francisco 3, Los Angeles 0 Chicago 4, St. Louis 1 Cincinnati 1, Philadelphia 0 TODAY'S GAMES Los Angeles at San Franciscc Pittsburghat Milwaukee Philadelphia at Cincinnati St. Louis at Chicago GB 2 4 4 7IA 9% z AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. Chicago .......13 8 .619 Boston.....10 7 .58 New York 11 8 .579 Cleveland.......11 9 .550 Baltimore ......11 10 .523 Detroit..........8 10 .444 Washington .... 8 13 .381 Kansas City .... 7 14 .333 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS GB 1 1/ 2 5 6 B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION. ANNUAL HONORS NIGHT AND INSTALLATION OF OFFICERS Tuesday, May 17, at 8:00 11 'OPEN HOUSES EXH I BITS t *1 )I .. ,1 . '-- - .d 4- , l Chicago 4, Cleveland 2 Detroit 4, Kansas City 3 (14 innings) New York 7, Washington 3 Baltimore at Boston (postponed, rain) TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Cleveland Baltimore at Boston New York at Washington Kansas City at Detroit Cubs, Phils Deal Players By The Associated Press CHICAGO' - The last . place Chicago Cubs traded Tony Taylor and Cal Neeman to the Philadel- phia Phils yesterday for Don Card- well and Ed Bouchee as new Cub Manager Lou Boudreau almost entirely revamped his infield. The struggling Cubs got what they needed desperately in right- hander Cardwell, a first - line pitcher. The Phils, in turn, got a good second sacker in Taylor and a potential regular catcher in Nee- man. Bouchee, a .280 hitter, takes over first base in a Cub infield which Boudreau just about turned inside out today. Open to All SPECIAL ON SIMONIZING, 10 J nc. chrome by appointment: FREE WASH WITH EACH SIMONIZE Stadium Automatic Car Wash 1 block east of Daily 8:00 to 6:00 1000 South Main Sunday 8:00 to 4:00 1429 Hill Xi' S I - f'&~-r. ~ Another "must" while in London is a visit to Buckingham Palace. Frequently in the afternoons Her Majesty the Queen comes out on the balcony of the palace and waves to her loyal subjects below. The loyal subjects wave back at the Queen. However, they only continue to wave as long as Her Majesty is waving. This of course is the origin of wave lengths from which we have derived numerous benefits including radio, television and the A&P Gypsies. Be sure also when you are in London to visit the palace of the Duke of Marlborough. Marlborough is spelled Marlborough, but pronounced Marlboro. English spelling is very quaint but terribly disorganized. The late George Bernard Shaw, author of Jo's Boys, fought all his life to simplify English spelling. He once asked a friend, "What does g-h-o-t-i spell?" The friend pondered a bit and replied, "Goatee." Shaw sniggered. "Pshaw," said Shaw. "G-h-o-t-i does not spell goatee. It spells fish. Gh as in enough, o as in women, ti as in motion." It must be remembered, however, that Shaw was a vegetarian --which, all in all, was probably a good thing. As Disraeli once remarked to Guy Fawkes, "If Shaw were not a vegetarian, no lamb chop in London would be safe." But I digress. We were speaking of the palace of the Duke of Marlborough-or Marlboro, as it is called in the United States. It is called Marlboro by every smoker who knows flavor did" not go out when filters came in. Be sure you are well supplied with Marlboros when you make your trip abroad. After a long, tiring day of sightseeing, there is nothing so welcome as a fine, flavorful Marlboro and a foot bath with hot Epsom.salts.. Epsom salts can be obtained in England at Epsom Downs. COMING TO CHICAGO FOR THE WEEKEND? Students (men or women), Couples, Families, Groups on Tour. 04 , rI 1t 11 I i When thingsget too close for comfort" I : STAY AT THE YMCA HOTEL e At the Edge of the Loop e AccommodatIons for 2,000 e Rates: $2.0 and up " For Reservations, write Dept. IR, 826 South Wabash Ave., Chicago S, N1. Monthly payments based on manufacturer's suggested factory delivered price with .' down payment, 36 months at 6% Interest, with Federal taxes paid. your best friends won't tell but your opponents will ! * Old Spice Stick Deodorant brings you safe, sure, all-day protection. * Better than roll-ons that skip. you... I I I &I ,.. .. I I