SUNDAY, MAY 1, 1155 'I'llk AlICIA16AN IpAt]L* .t AGE. TRUER S1JNDA~. MAY 1, 1~5 'iiiI~ ~ixq.,iiItA~ bAil A VMIL ThREE Wolverine Nine is 7-0, oses, 5-3, at Purdue Thurston Baffles Enemy; Pitch Strikes Eaddy in Head - Diamondmen Suffer First Big Ten Defeatd After Cline Sparks Onslaught in Opener Frosh Aces Impress'ive 'ONE OF THOSE DAYS': Golfers Lose to Purdue, Tie Ohio State (Continued from Page 1) v By AL KONOP third stanza when it scored three runs. John Brideweser and John Enrietto singled and Ron Jecha ' doubled them both home. Bob Gos- ling followed with a single which scored the third run. Howie Tommelein singled in the fourth inning, took second on an error by Jim Peter, the centerfield- er, reached third on a ground-out, and scored on a sacrifice for Michigan. In Michigan's last threat, Thurs- ton, who pinch-hit for pitcher Don Poloskey, hit a double and scored on an error by Peters. Moby Ben- edict flied out, then Fox hit his second double of the day. Cline walked to put the tying run on base,but Frank Ronan hit into a game ending double-play. Branoff Batting 1.000 x, Eaddy's hitting pace slowed down considerably during the first game as he went one-for-six. Branoff is still batting 1.000 as he went two-for-two in the first game It was a beautiful day for a. after replacing Tommelein in left- round of golf or a few sets of ten- field in the seventh inning. nis, but Bennie Oosterbaan's foot- Minnesota won both games of a twin bill against Iowa. It wasn't until the tenth inning that the Go- phers were able to gain the vic- tory by scoring three runs, taking the game 5-2. In the second game Minnesota scored nine runs in the first two innings as pitcher Jerry Thomas made it five wins in a row winning this one 11-5. Illini Take Two Winning its first conference vic- tories of the season, Illinois swept both ends of a double-header with Michigan State, 7-1 and 9-5. The Spartans were held to only two earned runs in both games. In other Big Ten games Wiscon- sin split a twin-bill with Indiana, 4-2 and 1-4. Ohio State beat Northwestern, 2-1, in the first game, then took the nightcap by a 3-1 margin. Still in First FIRST GAME MICHIGAN AB R Benedict, ss ... 3 2 Fox, cf ........ 6 1 Cline, rf ....... 4 1 Eaddy, 3b.......6 1 Tippery, 2b..... 5 2 Tommelein, if 4 1 Branoff, If 2 1 Vukovich, lb .. 2 3 Ronan, lb ... 2 0 Snider, c.1 3 Szalwinski, c, 2 0 Thurston, p ... 4 2 TOTALS ....41 17 H 2 2 1 1 2 1 2 1 1 0 0 2 16 H 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 7 E 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 E 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 SECOND GAME MICHIGAN AB R Benedict, ss .... 2' 1 Fox, cf ....--.. 4 0 Cline, rf ....... 4 1 Eaddy, 3b ... 0 0 Ronan, 3b ..... 3 0 Tippery, 2b .... 2 0 Tommelein, if . 2 0 Vukovich, lb ... 2 0 Snider, c ..... 2 0 Clark, p........2 0 Poloskey, p .."" 0 0 Thurston ...... 1 1 H 0 4 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 4 0 1 TOTALS .,..24 3 E 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 E 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 bait cnar gspaid noheed to TOh weather as they ran through a spirited two-hour scrimmage yes- terday at Ferry Field. Two freshmen, Jim Van Pelt and Jim Pace, showed that they would be in serious contention for starting berths next fall. Van Pelt Shines Van Pelt completed three con- secutive passes and ran excep- tionally well from his quarter- back spot. One of his passes was a thirty-yard touchdown toss to Terry Barr. Living up to advance notices, the Arkansas speedster, Jim Pace, came up with the play of the day. The first time that he got his hands on the ball, Pace raced thir- ty-five yards around end, and just as he was about to be tackled, he lateraled off to Ed Shannon. Pace then threw a key block that sprung Shannon loose for the touchdown. He also was on the receiving end of two passes. Runs Consistently The most consistent runner of the afternoon was letterman George Corey. Averaging some six yards per carry he was a constant offensive threat. Terry Barr picked up the long- est run of the day on a sixty-yard end sweep that went for a touch- Penn Relays Dave Owen, Michigan's sophomore shot putter, placed third in the Penn Relays yes- terday with a toss of 53' 7Y" The Wolverines also came in fourth in the mile relay behind Villanova's speedy 3:17.6. down. Barr also pitched a thirty- yard pass that was good for six points. Big Ten Standings TEAMS W L T Pct. MICHIGAN .....5 1 0 .833 Minnesota........5 1 0 .833 Michigan State . . 3 3 0 .500 Northwestern ....3 3 0 .500 Indiana .........2 2 0 .500 Illinois ..........2 2 0 .500 Ohio State ......2 2 0 .500 Purdue ..........2 4 0 .333 Iowa .............1 3 0 .250 Wisconsin .......1 5 0 .166 BUFFET LUNCH for $1.00 GOLDEN APPLES TOWER HOTEL Phone 2-4531 --Daily-John Hirtzel HALFBACK TERRY BARR appears to be frozen in his tracks during yesterday's spring football scrimmage at Ferry Field. Barr's "stay away" attitude was actually an attempt to avoid an uni- dentified Red tackler on an end run by the offensive Blue team. M' Performance at Drake Proves Disappointment Special to The Daily DES MOINES, Ia. - Oklahoma Oklahoma A&M also managed A&M continued its domination of to set a Drake Relays record in the the Drake Relays here yesterday, mile relay as the Illinois mark of as expected, when it yalked off 13:12.6 set in 1954 was reduced to with the spectacular mile and two31.7ith afeno'clsg mile relay events against keen na- event. tion-wide competition. John Johnson of Michigan col- Special to The Daily LAFAYETTE, Ind. -Michigan's golfers had "one of those days" here yesterday, and fell before the host Purdue squad, 272-8%. The Wolverines weren't alone in their miseries, however, as they tied Ohio State, third team in the triangular meet, 18-18. The Buck- eyes lost to the Boilermakers by a 26%-9% count. Second Tie It marked the second Saturday in a row that Michigan tied with the Columbus team. Last week both squads were also edged out by Purdue, at Columbus. Purdue, led by soph star Joel Campbell (71-73-145), gleefully watched its opponents fight a los- ing battle with the tricky greens and rough fairways. Francis Car- Phils Acquire Green grass PHILADELPHIA MP)-The Phil- adelphia Phillies and Cincinnati Redlegs swung a three-for-three straight player deal Saturday. Spokesmen called 27-year-old outfielder Jim Greengrass the key man in the deal. Along with him came veteran catcher Andy Semi- nick and 24-year-old Glen Gor- bous, also an outfielder, who hails from Drumheller, Alberta, Can- ada. To get these three, the Phillies gave up pitcher Steve Ridzik, catcher Smoky Burgess and young outfielder Stan Palys. Greengrass hit only .280 last, year but had 95 runs batted in, and had 100 RBI's in 1953. Hours later, the Phillies added another player, picking up vet- eran infielder Roy Smalley from the Milwaukee Braves for an un- disclosed amount of cash plus a minor league player to be de- livered later. 3nAV ALIn Lir4T Michigan pushed the Aggies in the two mile relay, only to be nipped at the tape by one tenth of a second. The winning time was a strong 7:40.5, while the Wolver- ine quartet of Dan Walter, Pete Gray, Hobe Jones, and John Moule followed with 7:40.6. lected a :10.2 third place in the 100-yd. dash. Jim Golliday of Northwestern had the winning time of :09.9. Ron Wallingford, the Maize and Blue's only other hope- ful entrant, was unable to do any better than a sixth in the gruelling open two mile race. UA £ i AFNiJ 1°11 .71'7I HORTH ANDI CLASSES FORMING. in 6 EEKS peed%. ti.. TYPING OPTIONAL Over 400 Schools in U.S. will assist you in review or placement. ENROLL TODAY IN MAY CLASS. HAMILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE Founded in 1915 Phone NO 8-7831 State and William Sts. di led Ohio State with a not-too- sensational 157, while Fred Mick- low's 155 was the best the Wolver- ines could do. John Schubeck, Skip MacMi- chael and Henry Loeb checked in with 160's, but Bob McMasters had an unusually sombre look on his Cheerl eading Chearleading tryouts will be held in the I-M Building gym- nastics room, May 2-7 starting at 4 p.m. face after the completion of 36 holes. He had two 85 rounds for a 170 total. Lack of Adjustment For Michigan it was simply a case of not adjusting to the condi- tions of the course. When Coachj Bert Katzenmeyer and his sextet toured the course Friday in a prac- tice round the greens were much slower than they were yesterday. Major Leagues AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit 11, Washington 7 (called in eighth) Chicago 3, Boston 1 Cleveland 5, Baltimore 7 NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn 7, Chicago 5 Milwaukee 4. Philadelphia 2 St. Louis 6, New York 2 Pittsburgh , Cincinnati 4 Yesterday, thanks to the fates (and, of course, Purdue's grounds- keepers), the areas surrounding the flags were hard and fast, and heavily grained. The fairways, on the other hand, were mowed long. Since this course is to be the site of the Conference championships, May 27-28, there wasn't much joy in the Michiganbcamp. Katzenmeyer believes that Pur- due and Michigan aren't really as far apart in team strength as the score indicates. The Wolverines ;.ope for a bet- ter turn of events tomorrow, when they play Northwestern and Wis- consin at Evanston. Fisher Talks On TVToday A collegiate coach's ideas about baseball strategy will be told over WWJ-TV, Detroit, at 1 p.m. today as the University Television Serv- ice continues its series of regular one-hour presentations. Ray Fisher, Michigan baseball coach, says that the pitcher ac- counts for about 85 per cent of the success of a collegiate team. He also will tell of other consider- ations when he talks with H. 0. "Fritz" Crisler, athletic director, on today's telecast. PURDUE AB Peters, cf ...... 4 Nelson, c....... 3 Brideweser, 2b . 3 Enrietto, 3b ... 3 Sexson, If .. 4 Jecha, 1b ...... 4 Reichert, rf .... 4 Gosling, ss .... 4 Teunis, p ...... 1 Khoenle, p .... 1 White, p ....1 Emde, p ....... 1 TOTALS ... .33 R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 PURDUE Peters,cf . . Crandall, rf Brideweser, Enrietto, 3b Sexson, If Jecha, lb . Walker, e .. Gosling, ss Hawthorne, Blind, p ... TOTALS Michigan Purdue AB .. . 3 F... 3 2b .3 .... 3 .... 3 .... 3 p .. 2 .... 0 R 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 H 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 3 0 0 .. . . " 1 i S T O R E H OUR S v/ Michigan 000 0105 002-17 15 0 Purdue 000 000 000- 0 7 1 000 110 1-3 7 113 000 x-5 7 1 2 HASPE The origli .4.} D A I L Y 9 TO 5:-3 0 L CORDS nal cotton cords e in the deep South where refreshable ies have been used for years on end ... r style, better fit, and perfect wash- ty. ado cord coats . . . $18.50 ado cord suits . . . $26.50 Be sitre it's HASPEL E STREET AT LIBERTY i The gift she'd miss the most! kC ? .>>::' .fk<;. MOTHER'S DA BROILED steaks, chops, and live lobster TRY OUR TOWN & COUNTRY ROOM fPr that important party or banquet Mad( cloth bette abilit xjmwajk C A NDIE S IMPORTED BEER AND WINE Open 12 noon to 9:30 P.M. Daily Camp Positions Waterfront Director Program and Dramatics Specialist Coed Camp - Michigan CAMP NAHELU 19647 Roslyn, Detroit 21 FA c-?.1:t 1 4 _ _ _ _ Pr Pr I_ 3715 Jackson Rd: Call NO 8-8760 We6eli Open Daily 12 to 9:30 P.M. I S T A T HOPHEAD CONTEST!! 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