THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, Nine, Tennis, Track Squ ds Impressive onT our NSTEIN THROWS NO-HITTER ON TRIP: iseball Team To Face Western Michigan Today 4 e , << > i y CARL RISEMAN baseball teams with suc- ;pring trips will clash to- :alamazoo. rn Michigan with a 4-2 oasts a Michigan team that from a Florida tour with cord. Game time will be Fisher Pessimistie in Wolverine coach Ray is pessimistic about his uture. "The opposition in was quite weak. Western At on par with Big Ten nd should be a real test." entered the Rollins Col- eball tournament at Win- , Fla. witl a sophomore- am. Spring performances ast have not always been rate gauge for Michigan i 'the regular season, but rs that Fisher found some solutions to his problem-ridden squad.' John Herrnstein, the outfielder- pitcher, appears headed for a big season. Thus far he is the team's best batter, power-hitter, and the leading pitcher. His batting aver- age is .391 including two home- runs, but. one washed away by rain after only two innings of play. His no-hit shutout of Bradley was the best mound performance Same Old Pitch!' The value of the dollar has changed more than a little in the meantime, but the 1911 and 1958 Michigan baseball teams have had similar sad experi- ences with the bucks. Last week, while the Wol- verine nine was winding up spring training at Winter Park, Fla., a thief broke into the team's locker room and made off with $700 in cash. Noting the incident, Norm Hill of Pontiac, captain and first baseman of the 1911 squad, reports that he and his team- mates ran into the same diffi- culties on a trip to Ohio Wes- leyan. The thief didn't leave a dime that day, either. The theft was doubly hard to take for Ray Fisher's crew. They were losing to Bradley while they were being robbed. 13ranch Rickey's 1911 outfit salvaged the game, 13-2, but it was little consolation. on the trip. Herrnstein gave up only two earned runs in 14 innings on the mound. Sophomores are also helping solidify the team. Dave Brown atj third base is perhaps the biggest find. His .370 batting average ranked right behind Herrnstein. Brown also knocked out two doubles and a triple and was sen- sational around third base. Sophomore Bill Roman was a pleasant surprise at first base as he compiled a .322 average. The third sophomore in the infield, Bob Kucher at second base, got off to a slow start and ended up with only a .207 average. How- ever, Kucher collected several of' his hits in the last two games. Myers Starts Slow Ernie Myers, the only veteran in the infield, had a disappointing spring trip and ended up with a .174 average. The pitching staff included sev- en sophomores on the 10 man squad going south with several pitching good ball. Dean Fink- beiner had a 1-1 record and gave up but three earned runs in his, 14 innings on the mound. Veterans Finkbeiner and Herrn- stein should furnish the core of the Michigan pitching staff with sophomores Nick Liakonis, Jim Jernigan and Jim Bradshaw being rated as good prospects. Another top sophomore prospect, Gordon Rinckey, came up with a sore arm after only two innings on the mound. AVERAGES Batting Nh .... ... y rE , sk, y o F a "' Brown Herrnstein Roman Hutchings Dickey Snider Kucher Sealby Myers Liakonis Herrnstein Finkbeiner Liakonis Bradshaw Hearin Jernigan ABl 27 23 28 26 23 13 29 16 29 3 Pitching R-ER' 5-2 6-3 5-2 1-1J 3-0 4-0 R H 3 10 4 9 1 9 4 9 3 7 23 1 6 2 3 4 5 1 2 W K' 6 13 5 6 1 7 5 5 10 0 3 2 Avg. .370 .391 .321 .346 .304 .231 .207 .187 .173 .667 WL 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 JOHN HERRNSTEIN . .. throws no-hitter Les Canadiens, Favorites In Cup Finals BOSTON -) - The Montreal Canadiens were back in the role of heavy favorite to win their third straight Stanley Cup while marking time today before resum- ing the best of seven champion- ship series with the Boston Bruins. The odds soared upwards on the basis of the Canadiens 3-0 victory which gave them a 2-1 advantage in games Sunday night at the Garden. Originally 5-1 favorites, the odds dipped to 7-5 after the Bruins split two games in Mon- treal. "Remember we have a game to- day and those Bruins will be just as tough as they have been," was Coach Toe Blake's warning to his National Hockey League charh- pions. The players themselves figured they are over the hump in the se- ries, but aren't taking lightly the Bruins, who finished fourth dur- ing the regular season. Wolverine Netters Win Notch 45th Straight In Washington Meet By PAUL BORMAN Tennis Coach Bill Murphy took his netters outdoors for the first time this year last week, and the results were resounding wins for the defending NCAA-Champion Wolverines. Two victories stretched their win streak to 45, tops in the na- tion. Georgetown and George Wash- ington were the victims as Mich- igan advanced into the finals of the Cherry Blossom Festival Tour- nament against-Notre Dame, only to be rained out. Notre Dame also won its two matches over the eastern schools. The two teams will settle for the title when they meet later in the season. Have Easy Time The Wolverines, who are re- building after losing five letter- men through graduation, had an easy . time. George Washington was able to win only one match, losing 8-1, while Georgetown was shutout 9-0. Jon Erickson, 6'5" junior from Kalamazoo led Michigan's attack from the first singles position. Captain John Harris played the second slot while Bob Sassone, George Korol and Frank Fulton rounded out the top five. The sixth singles position was split between John Wiley and Wayne Peacock. Wiley played against Georgetown while Peacock faced George Washington. Doubles Squads Erickson and Harris combined to form the first doubles team. Vogt and Fulton were on the sec- ond team while Peacock and Wiley concluded the doubles squads. Michigan's tennis team will practice and play challenge rounds until My 1 when it travels to De- troit to open its season against the University of Detroit. Buffalo Bisons Agree To Play Ball in Havana MIAMI, Fla. 03) - The Buffalo Bisons, in an about-face move, announced yesterday they would open their International League baseball season in strife-ridden Havana tomorrow. John C. Stiglmeier, the Bisons' president, advised Frank J. Shaughnessy, the league president, dent, of the decision. "The situation is cleared u," said Shaughnessy,. "Every club in the league is ready to go." SEE JAPAN A SPECIAL TOUR DESIGNED * FOR STUDENTS " BY STUDENTS in cooperation with Japan's largest and most experi- enced travel agency. CA 1 " See ALL Japan with a Japanese college student as your guide and host. You may live with his family if you wish. The most com- prehensive student tour of Japan ever offered. $1,260. Write-NOW-Td SHURE {TOURS 198 Yo4 Street NEW HAVEN, CONN. -Daily-David Arnold DON MATHESON .. .helps break record Golf Team ,stymied Rain prevented Michigan's golf team from playing competitively during its annual southern trip last weekend. The Wolverine golfers were sup- posed to meet Duke last Thursday and North Carolina Friday, but the bad weather forced cancella- tion of both these matches. Thus, Michigan was thwarted for the seventh year in a row in attempting to win at match on the southern tour. But at least this time the golf- ers did not have to return to Ann Arbor brooding over their losses. Wrestlers Ambrose Wilbanks, 136-lb., and Dennis Fitzgerald, 174-1b of Michigan were eliminated in the fourth and fifth rounds, respectively, in the National AAU Wrestling Championships held at San Francisco last week. Cindermen Outstanding ~At Qatc Sprint Relay Team Sets Meet Record By AL JONES Michigan's track team opened its outdoor season last week on a far brighter note than it closed the recent indoor campaign. On the Big Ten indoor cinder circle the Wolverines finished a dismal eighth. But this last week the 'M' men romped over the field in a quadrangular meet, and made themselves known in the larger Quantico Relays which followed. Take Nine Firsts In the four-team contest on April 7 Coach Don Canham's Wol- verine thinclads copped nine first places and shared the honors in a tenth to score 94% points, com- pared with second-place Purdue's 47, Penn State's 42%: and host Quantico Marines' 34. Hurdler Pete Stanger was Mich- igan's only double-winner, taking his section in both the 220-yd. low and 120-yd. high hurdles. However, he had plenty of company in the winners' columns. The Wolverines dominated the two 100-yd. dash sections, as Pete Parker and Free- man Watkins placed first, and Joe Christie and Lou Williams were second. Williams also won with a 21- 101%" leap. Michigan ha'd three victories in the longer distances, plus Don Matheson's triumph in the 220-yd. dash. Earl Deardorff copped the 880 - yd. run, Dick Schwartz took the mile run, and Geert Keilstrup won the two-mile run. O'Reilly Tied The first place that Michigan shared was in the high Jump, where 'M' Captain Brenden O'Reilly and Quantico's Jim Gard- ner each cleared 6' 3". In the Marine dorps' Relays on April 11 and 12, the Wolverines sprint relay bearn broke the meet record in the preliminaries, and again in the finals with a 3:28.2. Sophomores Star Three sophomores, Jim Simpson, Joe Christie and Earl Deardorff, and one senior, Don Matheson composed the record breaking quartet. Deardorff ran the 880-yd. anchor leg in 1:56.3 to sail tothe tape with the record. Michigan also placed second in the 440-yd. and 880-yd. relays. In individual events Stanger was third in the 120-yd. high hurdles. Dave Martin, an 'M' freshman, placed second in the mile run, and fifth in a strong half mile field. Mamon Gibson tied for third i the pole vault. 4 aftr e y Splash on Old Spice-After Shave Lotion. 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Muzyczko, who became eligible April 1, scored 32 2,points for the Spartans. His total included a first on the parallel bars. Adding steady performances by Cal Girard, Dick Becker and Stan Tarshis, the underdogs got the spurt they needed to tie the heavi- ly favored Illini. The Spartan win marked the first time in history that a Mich- igan school captured the NCAA title. Although the sensational trans- fer student was a surprise to viewers of the meet, he couldn't capture the spotlight from Jlli- nois' great Abe Grossfeld. The Olympian, fully recovered from an injury suffered in the Big Ten Meet, captured firsts in the free exercise, high bar and all-around events. He outscored Muzyczko by over 10 points. Michigan's trampoline team ac- counted for the largestpart of the Wolverines' point total. Ed Cole finished third, Dick Kimball tied for fourth and Chuck Clarkson finished tenth. Jim Hayslett, Nino Marion and Dana Larson also starred for Michigan. Hayslett finished fifth in the all-around event while Marion followed him in sixth po- sition. Marion also finished tenth in both the high bar and free ex- ercise events. Larson was the Big Ten's only rope climber to make the finals and he tied for ninth with a time of 4.5. Sailing Team Wins at Purdue The Michigan Sailing Club beat three teams in a regatta held at Lake Schaeffer near Purdue last weekend. Michigan finished with 76 points to handily whip the host Purdue team by 16 points. Wash- ington of St. Louis finished in third with 42 points and 'Wayne State was last with 39. The victors won 13 of the 16 races they entered. 34 There are more ways than one to be a leader AS OUR NAME clearly indicates, we are in the telephone business. We own and operate 1,696 central offices in 30 states. We manufacture telephones, switches, relays and other communications equip- ment, for our own use-and for the 4,400 other "independent" telephone companies in the United States. 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