SUNDAY, MAY 24, 1953 Wolverie THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE ine Moves into First Place in Big TrIl Ritter, Yirkosky Record Wins in Double Victory (Continued from Page 1) * fly to deep left that fell for a game winning double. Northwestern's two run first nning rally off Ritter, started when Don Eaddy threw wide on "lyde Schoenneman's leadoff bunt. rack Tosh, who collected four hits iff Michigan hurlers, then bounced bunt past Ritter for an infield single. AFTER RETIRING the next two men, the Michigan southpaw stumbled off the rubber while winding up and Schoenneman who had moved to third on an in- field out, came home on the balk. Then Stranski walked. With men on first and third the Wildcats tried a double steal and it clicked to give them their second and final run of the game. The Wolverines got one run back in the bottom of the initial inning, on Frank Howell's double and Eaddy's tremendous triple to left centerfield. THE SCORE remained 2-1 un- il the sixth when Michigan scored he tying and winning markers. Following Ritter's leadoff strike- f ut, Bruce Haynam bounced a ingle through the box. He raced o third on Bill Mogk's bloop ouble into short right. After Howell was walked in- FIRST GAME NORTHWESTERN Final Michigan Batting Averages AB R H Pct. Billings 26 2 9 .346 Lepley 87 13 , 29 .333 Tadian _ 3 0 1 .333 Haynam 79 13 24 .304 Sabuco 85 9 25 .294 Harrington 7 1 2 .286 Howell 67 15 19 .284 Corbett 54 8 15 .277 Eaddy 81 15 21 .259 Cline 37 9 9 .243 Mogk 85 22 20 .235 Leach 73 14 15 .206 Ritter 18 2 3 .167 Pavichevich 12 0 2 .167 Wisniewski 12 1 1 .083 Virkosky 9 2 0 .000 Woschitz 3 0 0 .000 Fancher 1 0 0 .000 tentionally to load the bases, Sehoenneman,4 Tosh, if Dellefieid, rf Renicke, rf Blaha, lb Stranski, 3b Burson, ss Kurka, 2b Zitek* Woodworth, c Nlepokoj** Calloway, c Barvinchak, p AB R H PO cf4 1 0 5 4 1 2 0 3 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 4 0 1 0 3 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 20 0 8 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 1 4 1724 A 0 0 0 4 I I 4 2 0 0 0 1 9 E 0 0 0 0 1 Q 0 0 4 0 0 1 Eaddy lofted a fly to deep center scoring Haynam with the tying run. With men on first and third, Lepley smashed a liner to right and Mogk trotted home to give Michigan the lead it never relinquished. Wisniewski, pitching for the first time since he stopped Illinois on eight hits, April 26, started the second game for, the Maize and Blue. He showed the effects of the long layoff, giving up two Northwestern runs in the open- ing frame. SCHOENNEMAN led off with a walk, stole second and came home on Tosh's one base blast to left. After Zig "Niepokoj forced Tosh, and a groundout sent him to sec- ond, Dellefield drove him home with a liner to center. The Wolverines tied it up in the bottom of the frame on two walks, a double steal and two singles by Lepley and Dan Cline. After Wisniewski yielded a walk and a single in the second inning, Fisher yanked him in favor of Yirkosky. Then Northwestern pitcher Mark Engdahl blasted the new hurler's first pitch into left- field for a single to give the Wild- cats a temporary one run edge. THE SCORE was retied in the fifth. Howell was hit in the thigh, to open the inning, and moved to third on Lepley's third straight single. Cline followed with a long fly to left, scoring Howell. The winning markers resulted in the sixth from a double, two walks, and an error. With one out, Yirkosky grounded to the shortstop and reached second when Bill Haviland threw over the first baseman's head. Mogk was then walked. Jack Corbett was sent up to hit for Howell and produced the long double to left that provided the margin of victory. * * . BIG TEN BASEBALL Iowa 10-1, Ohio State 2-2 Illinois 0-5, Minnesota 1-4 Purdue 5-12, Indiana 4-3 Wisconsin 10-1, Michigan State 3-5 The Dancer Takes First In Preakness By the Associated Press BALTIMORE - Native Dancer. the Vanderbilt express who was derailed by Dark Star in the Ken- tucky Derby. got back on the main line yesterday to win thet$113,750 Preakness Stakes in a thrilling finish before 30,756 bet-crazy cus- tomers at Pimlico. This time Dark Star went in front again at the start, but he couldn't do it the second time and7 tired to wind up fifth in the field, of seven three-year-old colts in this 77th and exciting Preakness. * * * THE DANCER, second grey to win this Maryland turf classic since it was first raced in 1873, took command on the final turn of the mile and three sixteenths race, pulled away in the stretch for home, and outfought the fast clos- ing Jamie K., owned by the Spring Hill Farm of Jim Norris, Inter- natonal Boxing Club boss. Jamie K. ridden by Eddie Ar- caro who was seeking his fifth Preakness victory, was six lengths ahead of the third horse, Eugene Constantin Jr's. Royal Bay Gem, as the Dancer and the Norris colt made this a two horse battle to the wire. Bruce Campbell's Ram O'War was fourth, followed by Dark Star, Ben Whitaker's Tahitian King, with Mrs. Gordon Guberson's Cor- respondent last. EajorC League Standings A.MERICAN LEAGUE Illinois Crumbles Before Wolverine Netmen, 8-1 Michigan Captures Six Singles Matches; Paulus and Paley Triumph in Doubles Match By DICK BUCK Reversing the previous day's score against Indiana the Michi- gan net squad bounced back to slaughter an Illini team at Cham- paign yesterday, 8-1. The Wolverines lost only in the number two singles match where the not too consistent Al Mann and Bob Curhan bowed to an Illi- nois combination of Walt Hulvey and Dave Stewart, 6-4, 6-2. -* * * A CLEAN SWEEP of the singles matches was led by Michigan's Mann in the number one slot. Mann beat Bill Dankert, a soph- omore from Indianapolis and one of the Illini's two lettermen. Playing in the number two spot Pete Paulus also had to go to three sets to capture his match. He grabbed a 6-2 victory in the first set but Hulvey came back for a 6-4 win in the sec- ond. Paulus then staged his us- ual late surge and put it on ice. Paulus and Bob Paley had trou- ble in a very close number one doubles match. The duo faced Dan- kert and sophomore Don MicDon- ald, who jumped off with a 6-4 tri- umph in the first set. The Wol- verines were in hot water all through the following set but fin- ally managed to record a 9-7 win to keep themselves in the running. The final set was close again with Michigan fighting from a dead- lock to a 6-4 victory for the set and match. ILLINOIS' Harold Stafford, the only letterman on the team other than Dankert, had an unimpres- sive day. Dave Mills racked him in singles by a lopsided, 6-0, 6-1. With teammate Steve Hill, Staf- ford swallowed the bitter pill in doubles as Mills and Bob Neder- lander smashed through for a 6-3, 6-2 victory. In the remaining three singles matches the Maize and Blue net- ters won easily. Maury Pelto and his two-handed shots baffled Stewart, 6-2, 6-2. Bob Paley and Nederlander had even less trou- ble, downing MacDonald and Hill by identical 6-2, 6-1 mar- gins. The meet was the last for the Wolverines before next weekend's Big Ten meet at Northwestern, giv- ing them an 8-3 record for the dual meet season By PHIL DOUGLIS Pi Lambda Phi came from be- hind yesterday to down Sigma Phi Epsilon, 6-5, to win the fraternity IM softball title. Drawing first blood in the first inning, the Pilams fell behind in the fourth, and then came back with two runs in the sixth to win. * * * THE PILAM RUNS in the sixth inning came as Mary Cherin got on base on Syd Cook's error and went to third on Bernie Kimmel's single. Then Kimmel stole second, the Sig Eps catching Cherin off third in a run-down. But the Sig Ep catcher, Paddy Haas dropped the ball, and Cherin scored with Kimmel going to third. Kimmel then scored on a fielders choice, to give Pilam the title. Sid Amster, the Pilam hurler, gave up only three hits, though he was rather wild. He issued nine walks, and hit two bats- men. On the other hand, Sig Ep hurler Bob Schmidt walked only one man, struck out 11, and gave up only five hits, but lost the decision. The Pilams jumped off to an early 2-0 lead in the first, as Am- ster blasted a towering homerun into center field with a man on. But the Sig Eps came back in the second, scoring a run as Haas was hit by a pitch, went to second on a wild pitch, stole third, and went home on a dropped third strike.j * * *I PI LAMBDA PHI increased their lead to 3-I in the third, as Jerry Hirsch walked, went to second when Dave Schlafman was hit by a pitched ball, and scored when Schmidt threw the ball over the first baseman's head on the next play. Then came the big inning for Sigma Phi Epsilon, as it scored four runs in the fourth to go ahead, 5-3. Amster lost control, walked the bases loaded, and then walked Joe Hipfel, forcing Schmidt across the plate. Jim Carwright then flew out, Lorne Norton scoring after the catch. Jack Main then broke up Am- ster's no-hitter with a single to right, scoring Hipfel and Frank Spenc. It was the third no- hitter that Main has spoiled this year. The Pilams narrowed the gap to 5-4 in the fifth as Schlafman slapped a single down the right field line, and Sig Ep right field- er Spencer let it go through him for a three base error, as Schlaf- man raced around the bases to score. IN THE SIXTH, Pilam scored the tieing and winning runs, and Amster settled down to hold the Sig Eps fairly quiet from there on. Sig Ep hurler Bob Schmidt suffered his first defeat in any social fraternity softball game by the loss, but looked great even in losing. The only Pilam to get more than one hit off him was Jerry Rovner who poll- ed a double and a single. IN OTHER softball games yes- terday, Newman club'- took the Trojans into camp, 9-7, to win the independent softball crown. In the independent second place final, the Hawaiians downed Les- ter Co-op, 3-1, in extra innings. In a fraternity fourth place,, playoff final, Theta Delta Chi shelled Phi Gamma Delta, 14-6. Pitcher Phi Hogan led the Theta Delts. Last Thursday, the Strauss house horseshoe squad took the residence hall horseshoe crown by defeating Cooley house, 2-0. The teams of George Majoris and Carl Sarnacki, and Roger Peake and Themie Majoris took the matches. Retain those summer memories witha s a s o DEFEAT SIG EPS, 6-5: Pilams Win Fraternity Softball Crown * Fanned for Kurka in ninth ** Singled for Woodworth in seventh New York Boston Chicago Cleveland Washington Philadelphia St. Louis Detroit W 19 20 16 17 16 12 10 L 10 14 15 12 17 20 19 7.5 Pct. .688 .576 .571 .571 .500 .444 .387 .286 GB 31 3 4 6 8 MICHIGAN (il f Haynam, ss Mogk, lb Howell, cf Billings, cf f Eaddy, 3b Lepley, If Corbett, rf j Cline, rf Sabuco, 2b Leach, c Ritter, p at p Northwestern Michigan SE( NOR AB R H PO A 3 1 1 2 4 5 1 1 8 0 3 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 2 1 2 3 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 4 0 2 4 3 33 3 9 27 11 E 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 200 000 000-2 7 100 002 00x-3 9 COND GAME RTHWESTERN 1: Schoennemnan Tosh, 1 NiepokoJ, rf Renicke, rf Blaha, lb Dellefield, 3b Haviland, ss Kurka, 2b Stranski, 2b Calloway, c Engdahl, p Pitt, p Otto, p Burson* * Popped up AB R H PO A i,cf3 1 1 0 0 4 0 2 2 a0 3 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 10 0 3 0 2 0 3 1 0 0 2 2 1 1 0 1 2 2 0 0 0 1 1001 2 0 0 0 0 0 26 3 8 18 10 for Otto in Seventh YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 4, Detroit 2 New York 3, Boston 2 Cleveland 5, St. Louis 1 Philadelphia 8, Washington 6 TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Detroit-Fornieles (2-1) vs. Gray (0-5) Boston at New York-Brown (3-1) vs. Sain (3-2) St. Louis at Cleveland (2)-Holloman (1-1) and Cain (0-1) vs. Wynn (4-1) and Garcia (3-3) Philadelphia at Washington-Martin (2-3) vs. Marrero (3-2) * ** NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. GB Milwaukee 17 10 .630 -- Philadelphia 17 11 .607 i/ St. Louis 17 12 .586 1 Brooklyn 18 14 .563 12 New York 17 16 .515 3 Pittsburgh 12 19 .387 7 Chicago. 9 17 .346 7, Cincinnati 9 17 .346 71,! YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Milwaukee 5, Chicago 3 Pittsburgh 8, New York 4 Brooklyn 2, Philadelphia 0 Cincinnati 6, St. Louis 0 TODAY'S GAMES Milwaukee at Chicago (2)-Antonelli (2-1) and Buhl (2-1) vs. Klippstein (2-2) and Chacker (1-6) Brooklyn at Philadelphia-Meyer (3-1) or Loes (5-2) vs. Simmons (6-2) New York at Pittsburgh-Jansen (3-3) vs. Lindell (2-4) Cincinnati at St. Louis-Nuxhull (1-0) vs. Staley (5-1) UH EQTTarrE SOUTH STATE STREET PHONE 2-3109 BIG TEN BASEBALL STANDINGS W L MICHIGAN 10 3 Illinois 9 3 Iowa 8 3 Ohio State 9 4 Minnesota 7 5 Wisconsin 6 5 Michigan State 6 7 Northwestern 2 9 Purdue 2 9 Indiana 0 11 Pct. .769 .750 .727 .692 .583 .545 .462 .182 .182 .000 MICHIGAN Haynam, ss Mogk, lb Billings, cf Howell, cf Corbett, cf Eaddy, 3b Lepley, If Cline, rf Sabuco, 2b Leach, c Wisniewski, p Yirkosky, p Northwestern Michigan AB R H PO A E 2 0 0 2 3 0 2 2 0 5 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 2 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 3 2 1 4 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 4 2 00 3 0 0 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 2 0 210000 0 0-3 8 1 200 012 x-5 5 1 I I Van 6oven £~iA [we I~l «;' ( - . - ........r~ L I V I N G DESIGN ED E 0R SU M M E R U The Collegiate Cut SPECIALTIES " CREW CUTS s FLAT-TOPS " NEW YORKERS " HOLLYWOODS 8 Artists - No Waiting The Dascola Barbers Near Michigan Theatre GOLFERS Have fun at the Partridge Practice Range We furnish clubs and balls -212 miles out Washte- now - right on U.S. 23 for 1 mile. 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