Softball vs. Michigan State Today, 3 p.m. 'M' Varsity Diamond SPORTS Men's Tennis vs. Indiana Saturday, 1 p.m. Track and Tennis Page 7 The Michigan Daily Wednesday, April 17, 1985 Michigan Baseball Statistics Hitting Batsmen hope to feast on Hurons M' to take on EMU Name, Pos G Eric Sanders, C .............................. 15 C. J. Beshke, 2B.............................24 Randy Wolfe........................... 16 Ken Hayward,CB-P......................29 Casey Close, OF-P ...........................28 Barry Larkin, SS ............................ 29 Jeff Minick, OF ............................. 21 Mike Watters, IF-OF ........................ 29 Chris Gust, OF .......................... 24 Eddie Woolwlne, OF...................... 19 Kurt Zimmerman, OF ....................... 25 Matt Siuda,3B............................... 28 Dan Disher, OF .............................. 24 Hal Morris,1B...............................16 AB 23 54 34 80 78 86 55 91 37 23 63 60 44 34 R 5 16 4 22 23 26 9 29 13 17 15 14 11 7 H 11 24 15 30 28 30 19 31 12 7 19 18 11 8 2B-3B-HR 4-0-1 5-1-2 5-0-3 5-0-4 3-2-6 2-5-5 1-2-0 3-3-2 4-0-2 1-0" 3-1-2 5-0-1 0-1-1 3-0-1 SB 0 4 0 1 4 11 4 10 2 4 3 0 5 0 BB 7 11 '3 17 17 18 3 18 5 6 11 8 7 1 RBI 6 -12 9 20 21 26 13 19 11 9 13 9 7 AVG. .478 .444 .441 .375 .359 .349 .345 .341 .324 .304 .302 .300 .250 .235 i MICHIGAN ................................. 29 803 Opponents ...................................29 729 219 279 46-15-31 48 136 194 87 164 32-3-16 26 110 80 .347 .225 Pitching Name G Paul Kasper.............................. 6 Mike Ignaslak.......................... 7 Jim Agemy..........................6 Greg Everson ............................. 10 John Grettenberger........................ 5 Dave Karasinski........................ 5 Kevin Gilles .........................4 Scott Kamieniecki ......................... 6 Ken Hayward ............................. 8 Casey Close ............................... 4 Paul Wenson .........................5 Dan Disher ............................ 3 CG 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 4 0 0 0 0 SAV 0 2 0 3 1 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 W-L 2-0 3-1 4-0 1-1 1-1 4-0 1-1 6-0 0-0 1-1 1-0 0-0 IP 12.0 25.0 33.0 11.3 10.3 22.7 10.0 40.0 13.7 9.0 10.3 4.0 H 16 28 9 5 18 8 33 14 4 13 9 BB 6 14 13 5 7 10 7 18 2 7 12 9 SO 15 22 10 7 14 12 37 7 8 12 3 ERA 0.00 1.80 2.18 3.18 3.50 3.57 3.60 3.83 3.94 6.00 8.74 20.25 aft e r By BRAD M( After opening the steady diet of home gar team will continue tog on the road when the M to Eastern Michigan B to battle the Hurons in at 1 p.m. today. Michigan opened wit games after the Sprin but is now in the mid road trip that started a four wins, and continu Ferris State. While the conference for both head coach Ron C tomorrow's games wil important than usual. "I THINK A defin developed over the Oestrike of his cross-to While there may b Huron's head man ha the fact that the g conference. Eastern overall, but is 4-2 and t in the Mid-American{ MICHIGAN ..........................29 7 9 24-5 201.3 164 110 155 3.67 Opponents................................. 29 11 2 5-24 192.0 279 136 71 8.30 weekend sweep RGAN that in mind, Oestrike is inclined to rest his front-line pitchers. season with a "We have to point our pitching mes, the baseball towards our conference games," said get a taste of life Oestrike. "I know Michigan doesn't Volverines travel have any conference games this 3aseball Stadium weekend, so they'll approach it dif- a doubleheader ferently." RON Rightnowar, a junior out of h 13 of its first 17 Toledo, will pitch the first game of the g Trip at home, twinbill, while Oestrike is unsure of who 1st of a 12-game will go in the second. Rightnowar is 1-4 t Ohio State with on the season. ued yesterday at While the pitching may suffer, games are non- Eastern will still have a potent hitting teams, Eastern attack, led by senior third baseman )estrike thinks Tony DeMarti and sophomore catcher 1 be a little more Chris Hoiles. DeMarti is batting .339, and leads the site rivalry has team in home runs and RBI's with 6 and years," said 26. Hoiles is second on the team in home wn neighbors. runs with 5, and is clipping along at .350 e a rivalry, the with 18 runs scored. Designated hitter sn't lost sight of Jed Shilling leads the team with a .359 ames are non- average in 39 at-bats. is only 12-17-1 "OUR strength is our offense," said ied for first place Oestrike. "We've really been hitting the Conference. With ball well." If hitting has been the strong suit of this Huron team, 19-year veteran Oestrike feels pitching and defense has been the weak spot. "We've had trouble with (those), so we've been working on shoring them up," he commented. THE PITCHERS for Michigan are still unknown, but on offense the trio of Ken Hayward, Barry Larkin and Casey Close should continue to provide punch. The three had big weekends in Colum- bus, and so far this year have collected 15 of Michigan's 31 home runs and 67 of its 194 RBI's. C.J. Beshke leads the team regulars in batting with a .444 average. At Ohio State on Sunday, the batsmen finished off a crucial weekend by downing the Buckeyes twice, 3-1 and 13- 4. The wins gave the Wolverines a four- game sweep of the weekend trip in Columbus. In the first game. Close's fifth home run of the year, a two-run shot in the first inning, provided freshman Jim Agemy with all the support he needed to pick up his fourth win (4-0). Agemy struck out five while only allowing five hits, and Greg Everson came in to get the final out and earn his third save of the year. Randy Wolfe nailed his first home run of the season in the second to give Agemy an insurance run to work with. In the second game, Michigan ex- ploded for 17 hits to rout the Buckeyes, 13-4. All but two Wolverine starters drove in runs, including two each from Mike Watters, Larkin, Hayward, Close and Matt Siuda. Hayward, Close and Beshke each had three hits, including home runs from Close and Hayward. Larkin also homered, his fifth. Beshke ... leads the way at .444 THE 1985 HOP WOOD AWARDS The Kasdan Scholarship in Creative Writing The Jeffrey L. Weisberg Freshman Poetry A ward The Arthur Miller A ward WILL BE ANNOUNCED WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 4:00 P.M. RACKHAM AUDITORIUM (main floor) LECTURE BY E. L. DOCTOROW AUTHOR OF: The Book of Daniel " Ragtime " Loon Lake " Lives of the poets OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. Dave Karasinski went the distance to pick up his fourth win against no defeats, allowing seven hits and striking out three. .. , . , a .. ... .,,_ ., . . Associated Press Alan Trammell is Milwaukee. congratulated at home plate after his fifth-inning homerun in last night's Tiger 2-1 victory over Tigers top * Brewers, 21 By JIM LANTOS Special to the Daily DETROIT - The Tigers won their sixth consecutive game last night with a 2-1 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers. Detroit jumped out to a 1-0 lead on Lou Whitaker's triple to right-center. The Tiger second baseman scored on an -Alan Trammell sacrifice fly. Both sides were silent in the third, but in the fourth Brewer centerfielder Doug Loman tripled to left-center and then scored on a passed ball by Tiger catcher Lance Parrish. In the bottom of the inning, the Tigers threatened to score after a Parrish single and walks to Darrell Evans and Larry Herndon. Milwaukee shortstop Ed Romero stab- bed Chet Lemon's smash fly, though, to get pitcher Ray Burris out of the jam. Trammell saved Tiger pitcher Walt Terrell from a Milwaukee threat in the fifth. With two men on base, the Detroit shortstop made a diving catch of a Robin Yount line drive. The Tiger fifth was marked by a two- out Trammell home run into the lower deck in left. Terrell picked up the win with seven strikeouts to his credit. Lopez got the save and Burris took the loss. ZONTA CLUB of Ann Arbor announces its ANNUAL RUMMAGE SALE National Guard Armorv NEED ADVERTISING EXPERIENCE FOR YOUR RESUME? THE MICHIGAN DAILY is looking for responsible, en- thusiastic, and creative salespeople for FALL TERM POSITIONS. Call Dawn Willacker at 764-0554 for more details. S E M E S T E R . S. STER .* T HE W OR L D IS YOUR CAMPUS Study around the world, visiting Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka, India, Egypt, Turkey, Greece and Spain. Our 100 day voyages sail in February and September offering 12-15 transferable hours of credit from more than 60 voyage- related courses. The S.S. UNIVERSE is an American-built ocean liner, registered in Liberia. Semester at Sea admits students without regard to color, race or creed. For details call toll-free (800) 854-0195 or write: Semeste'r at Se THOMAS M, COOLEY LAW SCHOOL announces that applications are being accepted for the George Martin Class beginning September 3, 1985 The George Martin Class will be a morning division program, with classes scheduled before 12:00 noon each week day during the law school's standard year- round academic calendar. Students may also elect to enroll in a traditional two semester program with a 4 month summer break. Candidates for admission should hold an undergra- duate degree from an accredited college or university, must have taken the LSAT, and must comply with the law school's admissions policies. The Thomas M. Cooley Law School is a fully accre- dited graduate professional school dedicated to prac- tical scholarship in the law and committed to an ad- missions policy of open opportunity, without regard for race, color, creed, sex, age, handicap or national origin. THE THOMAS M. COLEY LAW SCHOOL For information, please contact: Admissions Office Thomas M. Cooley Law School I I i