SUNDAT, APSM 20, 19158 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE SUNDAY. APRIL 20. 1958 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREU I ine Defeats Wayne State,9-, in 10 In n ings Hi Dickey's Triple Decides Overtime Game; Michigan Hurlers Blow Seven-Run Lead 'M' OVERPOWERED: Indiana Wins Ohio Relays t By TOM WITECKI Special to The Daily DETROIT-Michigan's baseball team blew a 7-0 lead against Wayne State University yesterday, but came fighting back to win a 9-7 decision in 10 innings. Up until the seventh inning, Wayne State was held hitless and scoreless and it looked as if the Wolverines would shut out the Tartars again, as, they had Friday. But in the seventh inning the Wayne, State batters jumped on hurler Jim Bradshaw for three runs to cut the Michigan margin to four runs. Tartars Load Bases and Coach Ray Fisher protested vigorously that the batter should be out for interfering with the play. However, the umpire stood In State single the ninth inning, Wayne put together two walks, a and a fielding miscue by Correction Delta Sigma Phi beat Theta Chi 14-8 in I-M softball instead of the erroneous score printed in yesterday's Daily. pitcher Denny Den Houter to score one run' and load the bases with two away. Wayne State first baseman Walt Kopke came up to bat in this cru- cial situation and hit a little pop- up in front of home plate. As Michigan catcher Gene Snider rushed out to catch the fly, Koepke blocked his path and the ball hit the ground bouncing into foul ter- ritory before Snider could get his hands on it. A rhubarb developed as Snider Statistics MICHIGAN AB R H Myers, s55............... 2 1 0 Kucher, 2b .. .... 5 1 2 Dickey, r!............ 6 2 1 Herrnstein,cf...........4 1 3 Brown, 3b.. ..... 6 0 1 Hutchings, If ............ 3 1 0 Struczewski, lb.........4 0 1 Snider, c ................ 4 1 1 Sealby, p...............2 1 1 Hernigan, p ............. 0, 0 0 Bradshaw, p .............. 1 0 0 Koch, p .................. 0 0 0 Den Houter p...........0 0 0 Weemhoff, p ............. 0 1 0 TOTALS ............37 9 10 Wayne Sate ....000 000 304 0-7 6 3 Michigan .......103 030 000 2-9 10 1 scoring two runs and putting the Tartars only one run behind. As Don Houter pitched to the next batter, Koepke broke for second base, drawing a throw from Snider; the Wayne State runner on third immediately raced forI home plate. A return throw from second baseman Bob Kucher to Snider got to the plate at the same time the runner did and the ball got away with the runner scoring. With the score now tied, South- paw George Weemhoff came in. from the bullpen to get the first batter out that he faced and the, potential winning run for Wayne State died on third base. Weemhoff Hit by Pitch In the top of the tenth inning Weemhoff led off and was hit by a pitched ball. Ernie Myers and Kucher made outs in succession bringing Jim Dickey to the plate. Dickey, who had gone hitless in five previous attempts came through in the clutch as he smash- ed a long triple over the left- fielder's head to score Weemhoff. John Herrnstein followed with a'h infield single, driving in his fifth run of the afternoon. Weemhoff finished his fine relief performance by getting the Tar- tars out in order in the last of the{ tenth. BASEBALL RESULTS Penn State 7, Ohio State 2 (first game) Ohio State 9, Penn State 4 (second game) Special to The Daily COLUMBUS - Indiana, taking firsts in four events, led 24 col- leges and track clubs and a host of unattached athletes in the 16th annual Ohio Relays at Ohio State University yesterday. Michigan favored in the sprint medley relay and expected to do well in the two-mile relay and the 440-yd. and 880-yd. relays found the competition stiffer than antic- ipated. The Wolverines failed to take a first in any event, although assistant track coach Elmer Swan- son stated, "The boys ran better today than they did last week when they were so impressive at the Quantico meet." Five records were shattered in the hotly-contested 20 event meet. The Hoosiers in leading the at- tack broke a meet record in the 880-yd. relay and added victories in the distance medley relay, the 440-yd. relay and the broad jump. No team points are awarded in the relays. Jones Wins for Hurons Hayes Jones of Eastern Michf- gan broke the mark he held in the 120-yd. high hurdles, in 13.6 sec- onds defeating Ohio State's Glen Davis. Mark Smith competing for the Detroit Track Club, established a new mark in the high jump with a 6'7" leap.. The previous mark of 6'6 and three-eigths inches was set by Milt Mead of Michigan in 1952. Ohio State came home on 3:14 to top the mile relay mark and Doug Kyle, Michigan graduate student competing unattached, covered the one and a half mile run in 6:40.2. Michigan, favored to take the sprint medley relay could do no better than third. Notre Dame's 3:26.2 clocking bettered the Wol- verines' best by almost two seconds. Tom Robinson, sensational Michigan freshman running un- attached, placed a close second to Ira Murchison in the 100-yd. dash. Murchison, Western Michigan's -Daily-Karl Hok Olympic dash star won in 9.4 sec- onds only one-tenth of a second short of the meet record. Robinson finished in 9.6. Other individual standouts for Michigan were Dave Martin, fin- ishing third in the mile run, Pete Stanger who finished behind Jones and Davis in the 120 high hurdles, Lou Williams placing fifth in the broad Jump, Geert Keilstrup tak- ing third in the one and one-half mile run and Brendan O'Reilly with a fifth place tie in the high jump. Motpetit Tops Gym FreseOn Now that this season has ended for the Michigan gymnastic squad, eyes are being cast on the fresh- man prospects for next year. The overall outlook is bright, since only captain Ed Gagnier and trampolinist Jack Eckle will be missing next year. But help will be needed from the freshman team if the gymnasts hope to improve on this year's fourth place finish in the Big Ten meet and fifth place finish at the NCAA meet. Loken Praises Montpetit Freshman Richard Montpetit, an all-around gymnast who has earned Coach Newt Loken's praise, appears to have the ability to help the varsity squad the most. Gagnier, who was injured for most of the season, has been tutoring the promising jymnast. Gagnier said, "If Montpetit de-. velops to his full potential, he will be good enough to beat Illlinois' Abe Grossfeld." Other freshmen gymnasts who figure in Coach Loken's plans for next year are Jim Brown, Stu Bradley, George Reynolds and Pete Gottschalk. HARD RUNNING HALFBACK-Darrell Harper f ights his way over a defensive linebacker in yes- terday's long scrimmage at Ferry Field. Harper aided Bob Ptacek and Fred Julian in providing a running attack to supplement the passing of Stan Noskin, John Spidel and Jim Sytek. Fifteen touch- downs were scored during the afternoon, which m arked the opening scrimmage for the rebuilding Wolverines. Ofen Shines in rid Scrimma-e Nosliin, SpidelPace Aerial Assault-, JOHN HERRNSTEIN ... blasts Tartars his ground, maintaining that Koepke wasn't out and play was resumed. Given a second chance Koepke stepped back into the batters box and lashed a single to centerfield - " 1, SPORT SHORTS: MacKay Advances Into TourneyFinal WAYNE STATE AB R Thow, if ................. 5 1 Snowden, 2b...........4 0 Cook, 3b........... . 1 ,0 Kowalczyk, 3b.............3 1 Montecillo, c ............ 1 0 Soluk, e .......3 0 Koepke, lb............. 5 1 Hertenstein, as .......... 4 1 DiPaola, rf .............. 4 1 Lequier, cf ........... 1 0 Conrad, cf ............... 3 1 Car, p................0 0 a-Kelley ............. 0 0 Fagan, p........... .. 0 0 b-Kye ................... 1 0 Hoover, p ................ 1 0 Francis, p...........-..... 0 , 0 e--Indreica .......... 1 1 Wright, p..............0 0 d-Hassinger............ 1 0 TOTALS ............36 7 a--walked for Carr in third b-popped out for Fagan in fifth e--singled for Francis in ninth 6--struck out for Wright in tenth H 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 R 1 0 0 Q 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 6 By The Associated Press HOUSTON-Barry MacKay, for- mer Michigan star, turned back Bernard Bartzen and Louis Ayala, Chilean National Champion, de- feated top-seeded Dick Savitt yes- terday to enter the championship finals of the River Oaks Invitation Tennis Tournament. MacKay, seeded fourth and ranked No. 5 nationally, collected 14 service aces while eliminating Bartzen,. former National Clay Courts Champion, 6-3, 6-3, 7-5. Ayala thrilled a crowd of 2,000 withclever backhand placements in defeating Savitt 6-4, 6-4, 4-6, 6-4. The doubles team of Billy Tal- bert of New York and Sammy Giamalva of Houston upset the tpp-seeded team of Mervyn Rose and Warren Woodcock of Aus- tralia 7-9, 6-2, 7-5. In semifinal play Maria Bueno, San Paulo, Brazil won the women's cham- pionship by defeating Nancy Richey of Houston, 6-4, 6-2. Close Overshadows Delany NEW YORK-Peter Close of St. John's (N.Y.) overshadowed Olym- pic Champion Ron Delany in the Queen-Iona Relays yesterday by anchoring his team to two vic- tories. St. John's, with Close doing some real hustling, won the four-mile and the distance medley. Delany, for a change, was no ball of fire. He anchored Villanova to victory in the sprint medley, but his team lost the mile relay to Manhattan when he blew a' lead as third man. Woodhouse Beats Morrow ABILENE, Tex.-Bill Woodhouse of Abilene Christian equalled the world's records for the 100- and 200-yard dashes today as he sped the distances in 9.3 and 20.0 in leading his team to victory in a triangular meet. Both were wind-aided and can't be submitted for records. In winning the 100, Woodhouse defeated his teammate, Bobby Morrow, the Olympic spring cham- pion, by inches. Morrow didn't run the 220. Abilene Christian had 86 points to win the triangular meet over North Texas State (39) and Texas Tech (17). Jewel's Reward Wins NEW YORK - Jewel's Reward, one of the Kentucky Derby favor- ites, won the $59,500 Wood Me- morial at Jamaica yesterday. Nou- reddin was second and Martins Rullah third in the field of seven three-year-olds. By JIM BENAGH Michigan football coaches had reasons to smile after viewing yes- terday's 15-touchdown onslaught against reserves in a heavy, long offensive scrimmage before an es- timated 250 spectators, at Ferry Field. "We were more than pleased with the scrimmage," voiced Head Coach Bennie Oosterbaan about the two and one-half hour, pass- happy practice. The statement got a quick nod of approval from Line Coach Jack Blott, who got sound performances out of his youngsters. The chief mentor added, "we have lots of competition at every position." Seven TD Passes Seven touchdown passes were thrown during the workout. Stan Noskin passed for three of them and John Spidel added another, pair. Noskin hit consistently through- o the day, including four straight completions from the start of practice. Before the defensive reserves could dig their cleats into the turf, Noskin had dropped a pass into right halfback Fred Julian's hands. Julian quickly picked up a block from running mate Bob Ptacek, and coasted into the end zone. Moments later, Julian, subbing for Brad Myers who was ill, was in the scoring zone again, as his 10- yd. dash off left tackle ended a sustained drive. Groce Stars on Run Following Julian's example, little Al Groce sped for a spectacular 65-yd. broken field touchdown and punched over a two-yard score, giving him two tallies for the af- ternoon. Spidel pegged to freshman, end Joe Brefeld on a short pass and to halfback John Batsakes on a long toss for his touchdowns. Between Noskin's passes, Ptacek continued his hard running and continued to earn Oosterbaan's praise. Darrell Harper, Ptacek's understudy at left half, also proved a strong runner. Netmen Like Clay Courts By AL SINAI "No tennis court is better than another," stated Michigan tennis coach Bill Murphy. "However, some players prefer certain courts simply because they play better on them." There are four major types of tennis court construction that a player may happen to play on during the course of his career. Courts are either made of wood, grass, cement, or clay. "Fast and Slow" Of these four, the "fastest" are wood, cement, and grass courts, and the "slowest" being the clay ones. A fast court is one which is especially adapted to a hard- hitting player such as the former Wolverine star, Barry MacKay, while a slow court favors the con- sistent, weak-hitting type of net- man. "Different courts don't have much effect on a man's game," Murphy said. "A good player will adjust himself to whatever the conditions may be.". Murphy is of the opinion that the present Michigantennis squad benefits more from clay courts. Players like Captain John Harris, Jon Erickson, and George Korol are not booming hitters as McKay was. Their style of play is more effective on a slow court. This is especially true in Har- ris' case as shown by his sixth place finish on wooden courts in- doors last year. Outdoors, Harris was a much improved player on the comparatively slow clay courts used by Michigan. BIG TEN TENNIS RESULT Indiana 5, Wisconsin 4 This Week in Sports Monday, April 21 BASEBALL-Notre Dame-Here, 3:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 22 BASEBALL-Notre Dame-There Wednesday, April 23, GOLF-Detroit-Here Friday, April 25 BASEBALL-Michigan State--There TRACK-Penn Relays-Philadelphia; Drake Relays-Des Moines Saturday, April 26 BASEBALL-Michigan State (2)-Here-1:30 p.m. TRACK-Penn and Drake Relays-There AIR CONDITIONED The BROWN JUG 2ยข .9etaurant 1204 South University Jim Byers and Myers missed the complete practice, while linemen Don Deskins and Al Callahan were pulled out early for minor injuries.' Due to a strained ankle Friday,' Byers hasn't had a chance to scrimmage yet from the center position. Mike Dupay, a sophomore in eligibility next fall, handled' the chores for the starting eleven' yesterday. I I I SPAGHETTI AND RAVIOLI OUR SPECIALTY Hours - 10:30-7:30 Closed Saturdays I ---. I f Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. GB New York .....4 1 .800 Detroit ........3 2 .600 1 Chicago .......2 2 .500 1/ Kansas City ...2 2 .500 1% Baltimore .....2 2 .500 1/ Washington 2 2 .500 1 Cleveland . 2 3 .400 2 Boston.....1 4 .200 3 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 4, Baltimore 3 Detroit 9, Cleveland 1 Washington 4, Boston 3 Chicago at Kansas City, rain TODAY'S GAMES Baltimore at New York Chicago at Kansas City Cleveland at Detroit Boston at Washington NATIbNAL LEAGUE W L Pct. Chicago .......4 0 1.000 Milwaukee....3 1 .70 Cincinnati . . ..2 1 .667 San Francisco 3 2 .600 Los Angeles ...2 3 .400 Philadelphia ...1 2 .333 Pittsburgh .. ..1 3 .250 St. LouisT. 0 4 .000 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS GB 1 1% 2/ 2 % '3 4 Chicago 6, St. Louis 3 Milwaukee 5, Philadelphia 0 Cincinnati 9, Pittsburgh 6 San Francisco 11, Los Angeles 4 TODAY'S GAMES St. Louis at Chicago Milwaukee at Philadelphia Cincinnati at Pittsburgh San Francisco at Los Angeles 1 r AU UNION LIFE MEMBERSHIP Now available at the Business Office, first floor, of the Michigan Union. I-D Card must be presented. err gli ERM STORE HOURS DAILY 9 to 5:30 HI SUMMER CLOTHES for budget buyers WASH and WEARABLES SUITS. Dacron blend cords in the popular dark tones, $29.95. TYPEWRITERS ALL MAKES Standard, Electric, SPORTCOATS. SOLD RENTED Polished cottons, leathers trimmed, $17.95. Cotton cord coats, $16.95. """""" I w [4T A -"1T7 n .k? 111i CT A CT(C I II I '1 Ar K% Cnttnt, erras- ct Th-1h A I II I I II 11 I