FRIDAY, MAY 13, 1955 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE FRIDAY, MAY 13, 1955 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TElLER 'M' Baseball, Net, Track Teams Net Squad Face Big Weekend aN Diamondmen Host MSC In Series Opener Today By JIM BAAD Seven more baseball games to play and they all have to be vic- tories. This is the situation Michigan's ball team faces as it heads for a crucial three game weekend series with Michigan State. The home Sgamehere today and the double- header at MSC tomorrow with the Spartans are called by coach Ray Fisher "the biggest hurdle we have in front of us." With Michigan and Minnesota coming down the home stretch of the race all tied up, the pressure is really on. Both teams face schedules of approximately equal strength, but Fisher feels the Wol- verines' is a little weighted be- cause of the Michigan State games. Tied For Fourth Michigan State, although cur- rently sharing fourth place with Northwestern, was last year's Conference champion and the team "still contains tremendous potential." "State could be one of the best. teams in the circuit, man for man," said Fisher, "but they have ? played too poorly in the field to expect many victories. Their hit- ting, however, is far above any other team's in the league." The statistics back Fisher up. The Spartans are currently lead- ing the league with a phenomenal .339 hitting average, but all this is wasted when you find that they have committed 33 errors in nine games, a ridiculous figure. Therefore, if Michigan State continues its batting prowess and comes up with three good defen- sive games, Michigan's title chanc- es may be blotched. Names Starters Fisher has picked Mary Wis- niewski and Jim Thurston as his pitchers in the first two games, but hasn't yet decided who he will start in the third one. He named Walt Godfrey, Ed Hobaugh, and Dick Idzkowski as the Spartan pitchers most likely to start against Michigan. "I seem to know more about State's pitchers than my own," he quipped. A problem Fisher is facing now is a "more than slight" lack of, hitting on the part of a couple of his players. He would like to make some shifts in the lineup, but feels that he can't without weakening the team even more. Eaddy Leads Hitters Other than this, Michigan's hit- ting is nothing to get glum over. They now rank second in the con- ference with a .311 average. Third baseman Don Eaddy has collected 14 hits in thirty-four official trips to the plate to lead Michigan's hit- ters with a hefty .412 batting av- erage. Winning all three games would' certainly be a feather in the Wol- verines title-bid cap, but no one is looking for an easy time. Just for the record, State beat Michigan two out of three last year; Michi- gan wound up in third place. Encounters Irish, OSU By HECTOR DONASTORG After a spectacular 5-4 victory against Western Michigan, the Wolverine tennis squad meets No- tre Dame and Ohio State here this Cubs' Sam Jones Hurls No-Hitter Against Bucs MICHIGAN'S DON EADDY sharpens his batting eye in prepara- tion for this weekend's games against Michigan State. Eaddy leads the Wolverine batters with a .412 Conference average. MichiganTr Enter TrcsesBig Ten Relays Tomorrow weekend. Michigan, which has not lost a match this season, and has a 2-0 Conference record, will try to ex- tend its winning streak against Notre Dame at 2:00 this afternoon and Ohio State University tomor- row morning at 10:30. MacKay in Top Spot Coach Bill Nxarphy will send the brilliant sophomore Barry Mackay in the number one singles, either against Notre Dame's Walter Clarke or Maurice Reidy. Mark Jaffe will occupy the number two' spot. In the other singles matches Coach Bill Murphy has selected Dick Potter, Al Mann, Bob Paley and Pete Paulus for the numbers three, four, five, and six spots. They probably will battle against the Irish's Bill Reale, Dean Rich- ards, Harry Smith and James Rich. Although Murphy has not se- lected the starting line-up for the Ohio State, match, it is probable that he will place Bob Mitchell in the number one singles position. Mackay and Potter will be in the number one doubles match in both meets, while the number two and three doubles will feature Jaf- fe and Paley, Mann and Bob Ned- erlander respectively. Standings . .. all set BOB MITCHELL By The Associated Press CHICAGO - Sam "Toothpick" Jones, towering Chicago Cub right- hander, hurled a dramatic no- hitter against the Pittsburgh Pi- rates yesterday 4-0, striking out the entire Pirate side in the ninth inning after walking the bases full. Jones faced 31 batters, walk- ing 7, as he fashioned the first no-hitter at Wrigley Field in 38 years. He struck out six. In pitching the season's first no- hitter, Jones also became the first Negro to hurl one in the majors. Standing before television cam- eras immediately after the game, Jones said: "I was just out there throwing fast balls and curves. Clyde Mc- Cullough, catcher deserves all the credit. He knows all the batters and kept telling me how to pitch to them. I just threw what he told me* * BRAVES 2, DODGERS 1 MILWAUKEE - Del Crandall broke a drought at the plate last night in spectacular fashion with a 12th-inning home run which gave the Milwaukee Braves a 2-1 triumph over the Brooklyn Dodg- ers. Crandall won the extra-frame affair by blasting the second pitch AMERICAN W Cleveland ....19 Chicago ....16 New York. 14 Detroit.......15 Washington . 11 Kansas City . .10 Boston........11 Baltimore .... 8 TODAY'S LEAGUE L Pct. 8 .704 9 .640 10 .583 11 .577 15 .427 'I5 .400 17 .393 19 .296 GAMES GB 2 71. 11 from reliefer Ed Roebuck over the centerfield fence about 410 feet out. SENATORS 3, INDIANS 0 WASHINGTON - Mickey Mc- Dermott outpitched Herb Score in a brilliant pitching duel last night as the Washington Senators knocked off the league-leading Cleveland Indians 3-0. The game marked the end of baseball's longest current playing streak. Eddie Yost, the Washing- ton third baseman, sat it out as the result of an attack of tonsil- litis. He had appeared in 838 con- secutive games over a six-year period. * * * RED SOX 12, ATHLETICS 7 BOSTON -- The run-starved. Boston Red Sox ended the famine by banging out 15 hits-including home runs by Gene Stephens and Jackie Jensen-for a 12-7 victory over the Kansas City Athletics. * * * WHITE SOX 6, ORIOLES 2 BALTIMORE - Chicago ex- ploded for four runs on as many hits in the ninth inning to break a 2-2 deadlock and whip the Bal- timore Orioles, 6-2 last night, be- fore 14,014 fans in the opener of a three-game series. 1-31 SCORES PROFESSIONAL FRATERNITY SOFTBALL Nu Sigma Nu 11, Delta Sigma Pi 8 Phi Rho Sigma 18, Alpha Rho Chi 8 Tau Epsilon Rho 18, Alpha Chi Sigma 16 Delta Sigma Delta 8, Delta Theta Phi 3 Phi Delta Epsilon 13, Phi Alpha Delta 3 By BILL GRANSE The second annual running of the Big Ten Relays will be held tomorrow afternoon at Northwest- ern. "The whole reason for drawing up the meet was to give more play- ers a chance to participate," said Assistant Track Coach Elmer Swanson. Each team participating in the meet is required to place at least two men in each event which it enters. Unlike other track meets, the Big Ten Relays are not scored on a point basis, but on a team basis instead. The winner of the most events wins the meet. The Wolverines face extremely CONSISTENT SOPHOMORE: Miclow Proves Value as Steady Golfer stiff competition as they plan to enter men in both hurdles, all the relays, and all the field events. Running in the Open 100-Yard Relay will be the dangerous Jim Golliday of Northwestern. The Wolverines are entering John Johnson in this event. Ron Wallingford is running in the two-mile relay, while Jim Love, Jessie Blount, and Junior Stielstra will respresent Michigan in both the high and low hurdles. Swan- son predicted that Michigan, In- diana, and Ohio State would be the toughest teams in the two-mile relay. Kramer To Throw Discus Ron Kramer will throw the dis- cus for the Wolevrines and Dave Owen will enter the shot put. IMark Booth and Howard Liver- ance will participate in the high jump. Bob Appleman and Tom Skimming will participate in the pole vault, and Steilstra and Hen- dricks will be entered in the broad jump. Swanson predicted that Michi- gan would make a good showing in the distance medley, the 880 re- lay, the one-mile relay, and the two mile relay. He picked Illinois and Michigan State to make the best showing in the sprint medley, and Minnesota to win the 440 re- lay. for a Sensational New Haircut 1 715 N. University Detroit at New York Cleveland at Washington (night) Kansas City at Boston (night) Chicago at Baltimore (night) NATIONAL LEAGUE New York .....13 11 .542 9 8 Milwaukee ....14 12 .538 8 Chicago ......15 14 .519 8!' St. Louis ...10 12 .455 10 Pittsburgh ...11 16 .o07 111% Cincinnati . 9 16 .360 121 Philadelphia 8 17 .320 13!h TODAY'S GAMES By TOM BEIFRLE Fred Micklow may not be the greatest golfer ever, but as far as the Wolverine golf team is con- cerned he certainly rates. Even though he has had his ups- and-downs during the season as has the golf team as a whole, his play has been consistent enough to give him the number three berth' in the lineup for a ma- jority of the matches. On occa- sion, Coach Bert, Katzenmeyer has moved him up to the number one position. Purdue Jinx Micklow has been defeated In individual scoring matches only twice this season, both losses com- ing in matches against high-rank- ing Purdue. When he did manage to down a Boilermaker he did it in fine style, as he earned team scoring honors for the day by fir- ing a 155 on the Lafayette course. Micklow's chances to play in the coveted number one spot came in the Michigan State meets, in which he played the morning rounds while Bob McMasters sub- stituted for him in the afternoon. In the meet at State, Micklow put on a one-man show as he blazed around the 18 in a one-over-par P n 73. Putting Weak Putting has been one of Mick- .. low's sore spots this season. In the matches against Purdue and Northwestern, his poor putting was the decisive factor in his game as it sent his 18-hole scores soaring to a near 80 average. This trouble in mastering the greens has been with Micklow for more than just this season. Last year, playing in the State Ama- teur tournament he was tied for first at the end of the regulation 18 holes. In a sudden death extra hole he lost by three-putting a three-footer. Impressive Record Micklow's impressive record as a golfer extends back to his high school days during which he play- ed three years of varsity golf. He qualified for the National USGA Junior championship tournament three years in a row, and got to the quarterfinals in '52 and '53. In 1952 he won the state cham- pionship in the Hearst National golf tournament and placed fourth in-the national. The golfer's thrill of a lifetime came early to Micklow and in unusual abundance. When he was twelve, he got his first hole-in- one on a 135 yard hole. Four years later he got another one while playing in a high school match in Toledo. Micklow is rated by Katzen- meyer to be one of his top sopho- more prospects and if performance to date is any indication his game will be a welcome addition to the potential of the Michigan link- sters. RECORD RELEASE Sixteen favorites by THE PSU RFS 55 Gulantics Winners LIBERTY MUSIC STORES DICK'S RECORD SHOP J. McDermott, Low Club i 1' [ J .".t'."":r*,. ~.. r h '{. ..v : . .: ,. --... . . .... . . . . . . ... ...................} ..... ......... ... ..r.v.. ...... .................,.. f . . . . F......:.'.. : .... .... .X.}.. . ...{ .. . .....: . ....n. ...........*.*... .... ............................ ... . ................ .... .......:.{:.::nm w{?;- :. NOW FINER 'THAN EVER IN QUALITY and STYLING L O A F E R S I Read Daily Classif ieds of MEN'S 0 "ACTIVATED: CHARCOAU FILTER, TOOL" HERBET TAEYTON CIGARETTES I"DRAINS FREE AS A BREEZEI" *I .' . 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