A i, MAY 15,1960 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pi PAGE S ~Y, MAY 15, 1960 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1' . 'M' Nine Splits with SU ; Tenn is Team Wins Tw Wolverines Post Shutout of Purdue H ave More T rouble with Wildcats Fhree Michigan Homers Win Opener; rown's Solo Shot Can't Save Second (Continued from Page 1) Dick Syring, Joe Merullo, and pinch hitter Jack Mogk in order to end the game. SThe Wolverines were able to collect only three hits off the two Buckeye 'hurlers. In addition to Franklin and Brown, pitcher Den- nis McGinn had a double in the third inning. McGinn had pitched hitless ball until the fourth inning when he walked Dave Mason and then pitched the gopher ball to Apple. Ohio picked up their other two runs off the tiring hurler in the sixth inning on a walk, a double by second baseman Jim Wiezbiski, another walk, and an error. Yields Four Hits McGinn gave up only four hits in the game but suffered his sec- ond loss of the season. He has won five. Marty Karow, Ohio State coach, was ejected from the field in the fifth inning when he vigorously protested an interference call by the plate umpire. But not to be outdone he continued to direct his team from the left field bullpen, much to the displeasure of the Michigan fans. In the first game, Michigan home runs brought the Wolver- ines from, a three run deficit to a 6-3 victory. Behind 3-0 in the fourth, Dave Brown gave Michigan its first run with an opposite field home run to right. Broke Open In the fifth the Wolverines broke the game open. Dick Syring reached first on an error, and Joe Merullo pushed him to second with a base on balls. After Al Koch and Ed Hood struck out, Struezewski put Michigan ahead 4-3 with his blast. Roman then played copy- cat as he lined a home run over the left center field fence. The Wolverines put frosting on the cake in the sixth when Frank- lin singled, and scored when Buck- eye shortstop Jim Herbstrete threw Marshall's ground ball over the first baseman's head. Rocky First Wolverine starter Al Koch -had to survive a rocky first three in- nings before he could claim the win. wIn, the first, State scored once on a walk and a single, climaxed by a run-down play. Koch trapped Apple off first but before he could tag him out Mason had raced across the plate with the Buckeye's first run. Ohio added two more in the third on a walk and three singles. But from that point on Koch set- tled down and allowed only two Drop Nightcap singles in the final six innings to gain his fifth win of the year. He has lost two. The next action for the Wolver- ines will come Tuesday afternoon against Western Michigan. In the previous game this year at Kala- mazoo, the Broncos beat Michigan 8-6. MSU, Irish Blea~t Alurns By The Associated Press EAST LANSING, Mich. - A third-string quarterback came off the bench to throw a touchdown pass in the last second and give the Michigan State varsity a 14-12 win over the oldtimers yesterday in a game which drew 10,561 spec- tators. Leroy Loudermilk, a junior from Wilkinsburg, Pa., threw the win- ning pass, a play that covered 701 yards to end Wayne Vontes. Halfback Herb Adderley, voted most valuable for the varsity, passed to end Art Brandstatter for the first score of the game. The varsity was on the oldtimer 15-1 yard line at the time. Adderly drifted back and hit Brandstatter just over the goalline. Then Tommy Yewcic, a former Detroit Tiger farm club baseball player now trying to get back into football, threw a pass from behind his 15 to Henny Young in'the end zone for an oldtimer touchdown. Al Durrow, the balding oldtime pro quartereback who played mostly for the Washington Red- skins, put the oldtimers seemingly in complete command with a sec- ond score. * * * SOUTH BEND - Rookie quar- terback Ed Rutkowski and a sub- stitute halfback of last season, Ray Ratkowski, combined today to fire up Notre Dame's varsity for a 27-15 victory over the oldtimers in the Irish's annual spring foot- ball game. Ratkowski of Glendale, N.Y., a senior in the fall, scored twice in a three-touchdown third period that assured the varsity of its 24th triumph in the 30-year history of the spring practice climax. He returned a punt 82 yards for one touchdown and scored on a 32-yard pass play from Rutkow- ski, 6-1, 195-pound prospect from Kingston, Pa. In the second quarter, a 65-yard runback of a pass interception by Ratkowski was nullified by a clip- ping penalty. Rutkowski looked the best of a trio of sophomore-to-be quarter- backs unleashed before the 12,742 fans by coach Joe Kuharich, seek- ing to improve on his 5-5 record of last year when he took over the Irish coaching reins. -Daily-Mike Gillman OUT OF THE GAME?-Marty Karow, Ohio State coach, was given the thumb by the officials in the second game yesterday. But he retired only as far as the edge of the stands and watched the proceedings from there. Moments after this, the head umpire ruled that even Karow'so legs hanging over the field were too much and the Buckeye coach had to haul them in. Tigers End Batting Sum Belt Five Homers, Tos EVANSTON--Michigan's power- erful tennis team tuned up for next weekends Conference champ- ionships by rolling past North- western and Purdue yesterday for a sweep of the two day match. The Wolverines were unbeatable against the Boilermakers as they won all the singles and' doubles to post a nine to nothing shutout win. Against Northwestern they en- countered a little more trouble as both first and second singles play- ers Gerry Dubie and Frank Fulton lost their matches and Dubie and John Wiley dropped their number one doubles match, but everyone else won enabling Michigan to post a six to three victory. Won Friday Friday the Wolverines beat the fourth team in the match, Min- nesota, eight to one. Michigan lost only one set to Purdue throughout the day, that a 6-4 loss by Dubie and Wiley in the first doubles to Jack Buchman and Bill Tonlinson. Wiley and Jim Tenny scored shutouts in their singles matches, both winning without working up a sweat, 6-0, 6-0. Bruce MacDon- Double Win Summnaries: MICHIGAN 9, PURDUE 0 ESingles-Dubie (M) def. John- son (P) 6-2, 6-4; Fulton (M) def. Buckman (P) 6-4, 6-0; Wiley (M) def. Tomlinson (P) 6-0, 6-0; Tenny (M) def. Reynolds (P) 6-0, 6-0; Mike (M) def. Piper (P) 6-1, 6-2; Mae- Donald (M) def. D. Berg (P) 6-0, 6-2. Doubles - Dubie and Wiley (M) de. Buckman and Tomlinson (P) 4-6, 6-3, 6-2; Fulton and Mike (M) def. Johnson and Reynolds (P) 6-2, 6-2; Tenny and MacDonald (M) def. D. Berg and S. Berg (P) 6-0, 6-2p. MICHIGAN S.NORTHWESTERN 3 Singles - Konicki (N) def. Dubie (M) 6-3, 6-2; Missick (N) def. Ful- ton (M) 6-3, 6-3; Wiley (M) def. Hibben (N) 6-1, 6-3; Tenny (M) def. Lockhard (N) 8-6, 6-2; Mike (M) def. Pari (N) 10-8, 8-6; Mac- Donald (M) def. Bard (N) 6-3,, 6-3. Doubles -- Dubie and Wiley (M) def. Misseck and Hibben (N) 7-5, 2-6, 10-8, Konsicki and Lockdard (N) def. Fulton and Mike (M) 10-8, 6-2; Tenny and MacDonald (M) def. Bard and Strommel 6-3, 6-2. Special to The Daily EARLY ald lost only the second game of the final set in his 6-0, 6-1 win over Dick Berg. Ken Mike, who has been hot and cold during the course of the spring, had one of his good days yesterday as he posted a 6-1, 6-2 victory in the morning over Larry Piper of, Purdue, and then came back with one of Michigan's four singles wins in the afternoon. This one over Shir Pori of Northwestern in a hard fought battle, 10-8, 8-6. In the warm Illinois sun the afternoon match against the Wild,. cats was a bit slower than the fast victory over Purdue in the morning. With the number one and two REGISTRATION PASS Chairmanship and Committee singles men. losing, Coach : Murphy had to rely on the loi half of the order, and all four n came through with wins. Wiley won over Gay MWssick E 6-3, and MacDonald beat St Bard by the identical scores 6-3, 6-3. Tenny had trouble the first game with Chuck Lo hard winning 8-6, but came stronger in the second set to S easily 6-2. Meet Irish The Wolverines meet No Dame Monday at South Bend, s then have the rest of the week before the Conference meet East Lansing next Thursday, I day and Saturday. FIRST GAME OHIO STATE AB R H RBI Herbstreit, ss ........4 0 0 0 Thomas, f ....... 5 0 0 0 Mason, b ..........41 1 0 Apple, 3b............2 1 1 0 Wiezbiski, 2b ........4 1 1 0 Perdue, rf 4 .0 2 0 Stens, If............4 0 1 2 Peters, c.......4 0 2 0 Drobnik, p ..........1 0 0 0 Koblentz, p ......... 2 0 0 0 TOTALS .......... 34 3 8 2 MICHIGAN AB R H RBI Hood,cf ............ 3 0 1 0 Struczewski, ss ....4 1 1 3 Rompan,lb ...........3 1 2 1 Brown, If.. ......4 1 1 1 Franklin, r .........4 1 2 0 Marshall, 2b .........3 0 0 0 Syring, c ............4 1 0 0 Merullo, 3b. ... 3 1 0 0 !Koch, p........ Kucher, 2b. .. 0 0 0 0 TOTALS .... . 31 6 7 5 Ohio State ..'...102 000 000 3 8 3 MICHIGAN ......000 141 DOx 6 7 0 E-Herbstreit (2), Drobnik; HR-- Struczewski, Brown, Roman; SB-- Sterns, Roman, Franklin; LOB - OSU 9, MICHIGAN 4. PITCHING IP HRERW SO Drobnik (L) .... 4% 5 5 1 2 2 Koblentz .......3 2 1 0 2 2 Koch (L) 9 8 3 3 5 2 SECOND GAME OHIO STATE AB R' H RBI Herbstreit, ss ..... 4 0 0 0 Wentz. cI........... 3 '0 0 0 Mason, If............2 1 0 0 Apple, 3b............2 2 2 2 Wiezbiski, 2b........ 3 1 1 0 Purdue, rf .......... 3 0 0 0 Haverkamp, lb.....,..2 0 1 1 Peters,c............ 3 0 0 0 Walton,p...........1 0 0 0 Seitz,-p-............. 1 0 0 0 Thonmas,cf... ..0 0 0 0, TOTALS. .......... 24 44 3 MICHIGAN AB R H RBI Hood,.cf. 3 0 0 0 Struczewski, ss,..... 0 0 0 Roman, lb.. ....2 1 0 0 Brown,... .3 1 1 2 Franklin, rf .........3 0 1 0 Kucher, 2b ........ 2 0 0 0 a-Marshall, 2b .......1 0 0 0 Syring, C............10 00 Merullo, 3b.3 0 0 0 McGinn, p .......... 2 0 1 0 b-Mogk............. 1 0 0 0 TOTALS ...........232 3 2 a-Grounded out for Kucher in 6th b-Struck out'for McGinn in 7th Ohio State.........000 202 0 4 4 0 MICHIGAN .......000 002 0 2 3 1 E - Merullo; 2B - Wiezbiski, McGinn, Franklin; HR - Brown Apple; LOB - OSU 4, MICHIGAN 4. PITCHING IP H RER WS0 Walton (W) .... 5 3 2243 Seitz...........1Y, 0 0 0 0 3 McGinn (L) .... 7 4 4 3 5 4 By The Associated Press The Detroit Tigers broke out of their extended batting slump yes- terday with five home runs and extended their winning streak to four games beating Kansas City 7-6, and two home runs by rookie Tony Currie gave Philadelphia a 5-2 victory over Cincinnati snap- ping the Reds' winning skien at nine. In the first all afternoon slate of ball games on a day other than Sunday, Pitts4urgh made it two straight over Milwaukee, beating the Braves 6-4 in extra innings and the Los Angles Dodgers be- hind the two-hit pitching of Stan Williams beat the San Francisco Giants 2-1. In the other National League game, Chicago downed St. Louis, 4-0. Indians Win Over in the American League home runs by Jim Piersal and John Romano plus other effective slugging gave Cleveland a 10-9 win over Chicago and Camilo Pas- cual tossed a four hitter, as the Senators shut out New York, 4-0. And Baltimore scored five runs in the top of the ninth inning to snap Boston's four game winning streak 5-2. Held to five singles for eight scoreless innings, the young Orioles jumped on starter Bill Monbou- quette for doubles by pinch-hitter Albie Pearson and Jackie Brandt, and then poured it on against three relievers sending 10 men to bat in the inning. John Fisher, who relieved starter Jerry Walker in the eighth was the winner. Five Homers The Tigers, who at one time trailed 6-2, scored all their runs on homers by Frank Bolling, Al Kaline, two by Neil Cristly, and the game winner in the eighth by Norm Cash who was playing first in place of the slumping Steve Bilko. The Pirates won in spite of four Milwaukee home runs, their fifth in a row over the Braves since Milwaukee took the season opener. A two run triple by Roberto Cle- mente in the 11th gave little Elroy Face the win, his second against three defeats. Chicago's Cubs won behind the stout six hit pitching of rookie Dick Ellsworth, handing the Cards their 12th consecutive road loss. And in San Francisco, before a near capacity crowd of 41,733, Williams bested Billy O'Dell in a pitching duel. Maury Wills scored the Dodgers winning run on a single by Don 'Demeter in the ninth. Information Available at S.G.C. Offices 'I S. B# _____:.. b The Dramatic Arts Center presents 6DA V,011 NEW MUSIC for Various sound-producing Devices YOUNG REPUBLICANS present Republican State Chairman LAWRENCE LINDEMER a I Major League Standings I AMERICAN W Chicago ........13 Cleveland.......12 Boston.........10 New York ......11 Baltimore.......12 Detroit........9 Washington .:.. 9 Kansas City .... 7 LEAGUE L Pct. 9 .591 9 .571 8 .556 9 .500 10 .546 10 .474 13 .409 15 .318 GB 3 1 1 I 2f 4 6 Tickets: Bob Marshal's The Disc Shop Ann Arbor High The Little Theater Monday, May 16 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Washington 4, New York 0 Detroit 7, Kansas City 6 Baltimore 5, Boston 2 Cleveland 10, Chicago 9 TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Cleveland (2) New York at Washington Kansas City at Detroit (2) NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. GR San Francisco ..18 8 .692 Pittsburgh. 17 9 .654 1 Milwaukee .....11 9 .550 4 Cincinnati .....13 12 .520 4 Los Angeles.... 15 .444 6 Chicago......... 8 13 .381 71 St. Louis........9 15 .375 8 Philadelphia ...10 17 .370 8Y~ YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 4, St Louis 0 Pittsburgh 6, Milwaukee 4 (11 innings) Los Angeles 2, San Francisco 1 Philadelphia 5, Cincinnati 2 TODAY'S GAMES Los Angeles at San Francisco Philadelphia at Cincinnati (2) Pittsburgh at Milwaukee (2) St. Louis at Chicago (2) Phone NO 2-4786 for Michigan Daily Classified Ads TUESDAY May 17, 1960 M. Union Room 3B $1.65 8:30 Baltimore at Boston (2) '1 CREATIVE ARTIS slr vA L p resents The Works and Goals of FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT" featuring EUGENE MASSELINK Secretary to the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation ยง4 NEV SUMMER LUXURY For quiet luxury, infinite ease, and coolness there is nothing as satisfying as the natural distinction of Van Boven clothes. Softly tailored for us in uncommon shades and patterns. 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