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April 20, 1955 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1955-04-20

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL, 20, 1955

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

PACaT ITR.

W E N S -Y A P.R I. .20 , 1 9 5 5||TH E||MI C H I G||N||DA I|Y

ra a t .asa aarwa

estern Michigan Nine Defeats

Woolverines,

75

Broncos Overcome Early
Deficit With Late Uprising

FIRST BIG TEN FOE:
'M' Golfers Face TestI
With Spartans Today

Courtney Pitches No-Hitter in IM Play

Special to The Daily
KALAMAZOO -- Michigan's
seemingly insurmountable five run
lead melted in the late innings of
yesterday's baseball game here as
Western Michigan College surged
on to a 7-5 victory.
Starting off the first inning with
their five run barrage the Wol-
verines appeared to be on their
way to an easy win over the Bron-
co nine. Starter Jim Smith gave
All freshmen interested in
becoming football managers
should report to Ferry Field.
--Managers Council
up two singles and three walks
for three runs with no men out
before he was yanked from the
mound in favor of hurler Gary
Graham.
Graham Retires Side
The Maize and Blue rapped out
one more hit and two more runs
'off Graham before he was able
to retire the side to end the
stanza.
From that point on Graham
pitched two hit ball and held the
weakened, Wolverines scoreless
while Western fattened up on four
Upended

Michigan hurlers. This was Gra-
ham's second thwarting of the
local nine, his previous victory
coming last year when the six-
foot, three-inch pitcher downed
Michigan, 4-1, on a two-hitter.
Marv Wisniewski, the Wolver-
ines starting hurler turned in a
creditable performance allowing
only one hit and one run in four
innings before he was relieved.
Stalwart of the mound squad, he
garnered five strikeouts and is-
sued a single walk during this
time.
Fielding Collapses
At this point Michigan's for-,
tunes took a turn for the worse.
-The team's fine fielding record
collapsed miserably as five errors
were committed.
Relief er Don Poloskey was
pounded for six hits and four
runs by the Bronco batters in the
next three innings. This tied up
the ball game and put the Wol-
verines with their backs to the
wall.
The next Maize and Blue hurl-
er, Al Levy, faired even worse.
Levy surrendered three hits for
two runs in the eighth with no
outs. These vital runs provided the
winning margin and so the loss
of the game was charged to Levy.
Clark Relieves Well
At this point Coach Ray Fisher
inserted sophomore Jim Clark on
the mound and Clark furnished
much needed relief, setting down
three men in a row.
The loss was the Wolverines'
first in regular season play. Their
next scheduled game is a duel
and will be against Northwestern
at Ferry Field, Friday.

MARV WISNIEWSKI
... lone bright light
lIark .Broken
In Marathon
BOSTON (R) - Powerful little
Hideo Hamamura of Japarr con-
quered the hills in a stirring late
rush yesterday to establish a new
record of 2:18:22 in the 59th and
perhaps greatest Boston A.A. Mar-
athon.
Hamamura, a government office
worker, churned over the finish
line 29 seconds under the pre-
vious mark established by coun-
tryman Keizo Yamada in 1953.
MAJOR LEAGUE SCORES
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Milwaukee 3, Chicago 2
Brooklyn 7, Philadelphia 6
(night)
St. Louis 6, Cincinnati 5 (11
innings)

Michigan's promising golf squad
gets its first taste of Big Ten com-
petition, today, as it hosts Michi-
gan State on the University links.
The Spartans, who edged out the
Wolverines for the eighth spot in
the Conference tournament last
year, bring a virtually inexperi-
enced team into Ann Arbor.
Many Spartan Sophs
baOnly junior John Steimle is
back from last year's aggregation,
and MSC coach Ben Van Alstyne
will have to rely on sophomores to
fill the other five spots. Three of
these sophsr- Marty Hurd,Bob
Nodus and Jim Sullivan - have
been impressive thus far and will
probably start in today's meet.
The remaining three positions
will be filled from among Lanny
Johnson, Jim Raymond, Steimle,
Dick Bristol, Roger Fuller, Ron
Laug and Roger Prieskorn. Van
Alstyne hasn't indicated which
ones will see action today.
Two in Row?
Michigan, fresh from a thump-

ing victory over University of De-
troit last week, will seek to make it
two in a row today.
Wolverine coach Bert Katzen-
meyer has not indicated who he
will start in today's clash, but it
There will be a meeting of
the 1955 swimming team at the
Varsity Pool today at 5 p.m.
All swimmers who have not
turned in their equipment or
had their measurements taken,
should do so prior to the meet-
ing.
--Gus Stager
is likely that he'll continue to re-
shuffle his lineup in an effort to
find the best combination among'
his nine players.
MAJOR LEAGUE SCORES
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Kansas City 8, Cleveland 7
Washington at Boston (double-
header) -postponed, rain

By AL KONOP
You name it and the Social Fra-
ternity softball competition at
Ferry Field yesterday had it as a
no hitter, a protested ball game,
and two contests with last inning
rallies, featured the proceedings.
Dick Courtney, hurling for Phi
Delta Theta, bagged the no hitter
as his team took a 7-0 decision
from Alpha Sigma Phi.
Delta Chi's Paul DeMarrais
blasted a bases loaded home run
against Delta Kappa Epsilon but
his glory was short lived. The
fire works were yet to begin. The
umpire-in-chief ruled that De-
Marrais stepped over the plate be-
fore he hit the ball and none of
the runs were allowed.
As it turned out, Delta Chi lost
by that margin of four runs, 14-10.
Delta Chi has officially protested
the contest.
In a nip and tuck game cli-
4

maxed by a last inning rally Zeta
Beta Tau defeated Psi Upsilon
10-7. Psi Upsilon took a 7-5lead
in the top half of the last inning
but ZBT's Sam Dodak smashed a
bases loaded home run to gain
the victory for his team.
Phi Kappa Psi Wins
Phi Kappa Psi scored a run in
the last inning without a hit to
take a 5-4 decision from Tau
Delta Phi.
In other games Delta Tau Delta
defeated Phi Sigma Kappa 14-0,
while Alpha Delta Phi beat Chi
Phi 9-2. It was Delta Upsilon 7,
Sigma Phi 1; Theta Chi 12, Delta
Sigma Phi 10; Chi Psi 15, Acacia
3; and Sigma Chi 9, Sigma Nu 7
in the remaining games that were
played.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon won on a
forfeit over Zeta Psi.
OTHER I-M SCORES:
Pro Fraternity Horseshoes

Phi Delta Chi 2, Alpha Kappa
Kappa 1
Phi Alpha Delta 2, Phi Delta
Epsilon 1
Alpha Chi Sigma 2, Phi Chi 1
Pro Fraternity Tennis
Phi Alpha Delta 2, Delta Theta
Phi 1
Delta Sigma Delta 2, Tau Epsi-
lon Rho 0
All-Campus
This is the last week to sign up
for the all-campus spring sports
competition.
There is still need for more par-
ticipants in outdoor tennis and
horseshoes. Anybody interested
may sign up at the Sports Build-
ing.
Friday willalso be the last day
to sign up for the all-campus rifle
match. If interested, see Sergeant
Jones at the rifle range.

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WESTERN AB
Lajoie, cf ..........5
David, 3b .........2
Johnson, rf .......4
Nagel,lif ...........4
Krings, 2b .........4
O'Connell, ss ......4
Smith, Jack, lb ...3
LeNeave, c.......4
Smith, Jim, p ....0
Graham, p ........4
34
MICHIGAN AB
Benedict, s .......4
Fox, cf ............4
Cline, rf ..........3
Eaddy, 3b ........4
Tippery 2b ........3
Tommelein, ........0
Ronan..........3
Vukovich, lb ......2
Snider, c .........4
Wisniewski, p ....2
Poloskey, p ..:.....1
Szalwinski ........1
Levy, p .0.000..0
Clark,,p.,.......0

R
1
1
1
0
0
1
1
1
0
1
7

R
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

H
2
2
1
1
1
1
0
2
0
0
10
H
1
0,
0
2
0
0
0
1;
1
0
0
0
0
0
5
5
10

E
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
2
E
0
1
1
I
1
0
0
-1
0
0
0
0
5
0
2

-~

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SPRING
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See the 5c each, 6 for 25c books
SLATER'S

I

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through
SATURDAY

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