TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 1961 THE MICHIGA Y DAILY IiMM1' 4+'IiVVY* T U E S A Y , M A R C 28 196 T ~ E M I I F I I N & I L rAu tE x The m:x Margin for Error Gi Samberg Well, here we are again folks. Back in sunny, snow-stomped southeastern Michigan for another close-up of the pre-season goings on across the country in preparation for the 1967 installment of the Great National Pastime. Today we're reporting to you from one of the big little towns in The Circuit and we'll be giving you a pre- view of a team which looks to be a real comer around here as the talent gets thinned out with expansion. The Ann Arbor Insurgents. And as you probably all remember, fans, it was just last season that it was first said of this tough, spunky little squad, "Although it isn't true generally there are a few of them that will make trouble." But let's get the inside dope on the coming year from their manager. How does it look, Buck? Pretty good, Gil. Pretty good. That was quite a testimonial for a team like yours which readily admits its own lack of power. It appears that in spite of the Insur- gents' finishing in the cellar last season, your opposition has come to respect your potential ... Yeah, well you could say that, Gil ... Would you? Well. . . probably not in front of my friends. But if you want I'll. . Yah. Well, let's leave that, Buck, and go on to some other things. A lot of the fans out there would sure like to hear your own, per- sonal, really truly views on your young club. What would you say have been some of the problems in getting the Insurgents surging? .. . Wel ... If you'll pardon the little play on words ... Yeah, nice play, Gil. I'd .. . Really truly, now ... Right. Well as you know, Gil we've had our personnel problems. .. Like personal private ... Uh-huh. Personnel problems have been big. Like, as you know, we almost lost a couple of fine prospects to the draft last winter Luckily they weren't really draftable at the time because of the league's rules on .... Yeah, Buck. And speaking of drafts and things. What have the Insurgents been doing in the off-season to better their position. I mean in terms of trades and stuff. Well, Gil. As you certainly know, in this modern game there really is no "off-season." We keep working all the .... Yes, I know, Buck. We're a little dormant, maybe. But ... But gettin back to the Insurgents, Buck. Certainly. Well, yah Gil, we tried to get a few trades moving and like that. But unfortunately we found out we really didn't much yet that the other teams figured was worth trading for. That was a problem. I can see that. Yeah, well we. were also considering some cash deals. But those didn't quite work out either. Probably our biggest stumbling block was, well, no ... No cash ... .. . cash. Yeah, that's it. But one kinda bright spot there was that we did get some feelers from the other clubs on money deals for our men. As a matter of fact, the Amazons seemed to think we had some talent, and picked up a couple of our boys.. You mean the Candor Island club? Yep. They bought a couple of our men just recently ... Of course we sorta wished they'd told us about it. Well . I mean here were these guys passing on our signs and stuff to another team. I mean that isn't right. Did you appeal to the Commissioner, Buck? Well, I guess not. Cause he hasn't done a thing about it since I talked to him. As a matter of fact, I'd have to say that one of our biggest problems is all the flak we seem to get from those front office guys. I mean, like with draft, for instance ... How come we're the only team that can't pick any men? You got me there, Buck ... Well, that's the problem, Gil. We don't got anyone. We just keep losin' people. That doesn't help build a strong team, that's true, Buck. But I'm sure the Commissioner's office has your best interests in .. . Well, Gil. I mean it's not only that. What about right in the beginning of last season, remember? As usual we turn in our roster to the office, see. And what do those, guys up front do? They hand it over to that phony insurance conpany just like that. A free mailing list. That "Help Unemployed Athletes Col- lect" bunch with their "pension plan." The Commissioner says they told him they wanted "to see the players get what they really deserve." So the Commish doesn't want to make any trouble for us. So he gives it to them. So now we got all kinds a nuts calling us all the time ... Maybe you heard about it? I do remember something .. . And there are a couple of other things too ... Well Buck, I don't know ... Well let me ask you this. How come at our games the umpires never wear uniforms? How come? To tell you the truth, I really hadn't .... But, I mean if you can't tell the players from the umps, it Just sorta takes something out of the game, doesn't it? Certainly, Buck, that is a problem. And I'm sure that many of our fans out there will be waiting to see how the Insurgents lick it ... I mean, I don't want to make trouble or anything. I don't want to rock the boat, Gil. It's just ... We understand, Buck. It's the kind of thing that we each have to face alone, isn't it? That's the way we've always done it, right sports fans? But looking ahead a little, Buck. What plans do the Insurgents have for the coming year? I mean what brilliant scheses and strategies is that tough, grizzled,. experienced old theoretician's mind of yours devising to bring your club up into the sunlight? How do you think this group of talented players will fare in the coming season? Well, thanks Gil, and all that. But, we're really not planning anything spectacular for this year. One thing we were thinking about, though, was eliminating our four-day seventh inning stretches ... Your four-day, seventh inning, stretches? Well, yeah. I mean you get pretty tired after seven innings & in this league. Especially since they started seeding up the game. These business managers figure that someday they'll be able to play a double-header in two hours. Swell, but what about ... Yes Buck, the fans have been asking about .... Well that's nice, Gil. 'Cause usually after the stretch, most of the fans are gone too ... I guess you have to build yourself a reputation before the fans + will flock to .... Well the Mets didn't have to. I mean, it's gotten so that most of the teams we face don't even bother taking the field until after the four-day stretch. Then they get out there - laughing it up - and Just wait for us to come apart. Well that is unfortunate, Buck. I guess that's one more thing Wrestlers Excel in NCAA 's By RUSS ROJAKOVICK "Don't worry, Pete, they'll stop the match if he gets too rough with you. And forget what you heard about him eating meat raw, he likes it warmed up." That's how Geoff Henson "con- soled" Pete Cornell about his next opponent on the second morning of the NCAA wrestling champion- ships in Kent, Ohio. The Michigan wrestlers were obviously loose, and they were confident. The Wolverines were in first place, and six of their men were undefeated after their first two matches. r Killing time before the after- noon's activities started, Henson, Cornell, and Gordy Weeks played hearts in a lower bunk while Burt Merical kibitzed from the upper. Bobby Fehrs, Big Ten 123-lb. champion, looking almost tiny next to the heavyweights, drank a high-protein malt and watched as teammate Jim Kamman, who went on to win the national 152-lb. tite, had his injured knee heavily taped. Disheveled Then Dave Porter, who had just woken up, stumbled in, his hair disheveled, one eye red and par- tially closed, his mouth swollen from a four-stich gash. When Porter is seen that close, it's easy to understand why opposing wres- tiers run from him. About an hour before the after- noon matches started, coach Cliff Keen, one of the nation's most highly respected wrestling coaches, and one of the very few to hold a law degree, gathered the team to- gether for a short talk before they left for the gymnasium. But the Wolverines were not as successful on Friday as they had been on Thursday Fred Stehman's disputed loss in the last two sec- onds and Merical's narrow over- time defeat in the afternoon, along with Cornell's loss in the evening, following a near-perfect 29 sec- ond pin, a meet record, dropped Michigan into third place behind arch-rival Michigan State and Oklahoma. Bright Spots The day held some bright spots for the Michigan wrestlers, how- ever. Fehrs and Kamman ad- vanced undefeated into the finals, and Porter won a consolation match. The final day of the meet, Sat- urday, climaxed the finest show- ing by a Michigan wrestling team in recent years. In the afternoon's consolation matches, both Porter and Cornell went undefeated, fin- ishing third in their weight class- es, and Stehman ended up a high- ly respectable fourth. The strong finishes of Cornell and Stehman were pleasant sur- prices, but Porter's third place finish was somewhat of a disap- pointment. As a sophomore last year he had won the title, and a repeat performance was expected. Saturday night's finals were, in the words of assistant coach Rick Bay, "What it's all about." And apparently the fans also knew that this was what it was all about. Thirty minutes before starting time the stands were full, and the subdued but powerful roar of the crowd didn't stop until after the last match. The single mat at cen- ter court was flooded in the bril- liant light necessary for color tele- vision as 22 wrestlers limbered up in full uniform. The crowd, the lights, the ath- Scores EXHIBITION BASEBALL Baltimore 4, Washington 3 Atlanta 6, Boston 1 Chicago (A) 12, New York (A) 7 Kansas City 2, Philadelphia 2 (tie) (9 innings, rain) Cincinnati 7, St. Louis 4 Pittsburgh 5, Los Angeles 4 Chicago (N) 5, Cleveland 4 San Francisco 3, California 2 (10 inn) Houston 7, Minnesota 6 (11 inn) New York (N) vs. Detroit at St. Pe- tersburg (cancelled, rain) WORLD HOCKEY Czechoslovakia 5, Sweden 5 (tie) Russia 2, Canada 1 COLLEGE BASEBALL New Mexico 10. Illinois 4 Michigan State 10, Duke 10 Arkansas 5, Wisconsin 3 Wisconsin 14, St. Mary's (Tex) 4 Colorado 11, Iowa S Arizona 8, Colorado 2 NBA No games scheduled NHL No games scheduled letes in the center all brought to mind an image of the ancient Coliseum. But no lions were needed, the wrestlers provided ac- tion enough. The Fehrs-Mike Caruso match was the second of the evening. Caruso had defeated Fehrs twice previously in NCAA finals, and Saturday was the last chance for the Michigan wrestler to gain re- venge. The match was superb, the finest of the evening, but once again Caruso ended on top, cap- turing his third national title. 'Hail to the Victor' Three matches later, in the last contest of the tournament involv- ing a Wolverine, Jim Kamman met Wayne Wells of Oklahoma. In a see-saw battle, Kamman emerged the victor, and Michigan was assured a second-place finish. Kamman was elated, and he didn't care who knew. As soon as the final buzzer sounded, he threw his headgear into the lights, drop- ped to the mat exhausted for no more than one second, and then, sporting an enormous smile, half- ran, half-jumped to the sidelines and into the arms of his team- mates. There were five more matches that night, but they were anti- climatic to Michigan followers. Coaches Keen and Bay and the whole team, especially Kamman, had been rewarded for a year of hard work. Cazzie Reports To Fort Dix FT. DIX, N.J. WP)--Cazzie Rus- sell, star rookie of the New York Knickerbockers and former Michi- gan All-American, reported to Ft. Dix yesterday for six months ac- tive duty as a National Guards- man. The collegc basketball's player of the year in 1966 scored 24 points Sunday night as the Knicks won a National Basketball Asso- ciation playoff game from Boston. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: BILL LEVIS - - - - - - - TODAY DR. ELIEZER SCHWEID Faculty of Philosophy{ Hebrew University SPEAKS 4:15 p.m.--Auditorium A, Angell Hall, auspices Office of Religious Affairs "THE CONSCIOUSNESS OF JEWISH DESTINY" 8 p.m.-Auditorium C, Angell Hall auspices, Committee on Comparative Literature and B'nai Brith Hillel Foundation "AGNON-NOBEL NOVELIST OF THE YEAR" PhD, Hebrew U. Former member of Kibbutz Zoraa. Author, THE ETHICS OF MAIMONIDES; SHA- LOSH ASHMUROT, a volume of literary and philosophical essays in numerous journals. Member, Hebrew Writers' Association in Israel, The World Union of Jew- ish Studies and the Societe In- ternationale Pour'Etude de la Philosophie Medievale. I' /1/del -Rick Kurtzman MICHIGAN'S JIM KAMMAN, who went on to win the NCAA wrestling crown in the 152-pound division, applies the pressure to Charlie Seal of Portland State in a match Friday. Kamman led the Wolverines to a second place finish in the nationals. SWEEP TWIN BILL: Wolverines Win 5-3 in Arizona FInale REFORM SABBATH SERVICE Using the Union Prayer Book FRIDAY at 8:00 P.M. DR. SAMUEL E. KARFF Rabbi, Sinai Temple, Chicago "TO BE OR NOT TO BE: THE QUESTION OF JEWISH IDENTITY IN OUR TIME" Oneg Shabbat and Discussion Follows JOHN PLANER, Cantor Choir Directed by STEVEN OVITSKY JOAN SPITZER, Organist 1429 HILL STREET ALL WELCOM Special To The Daily TUCSON-Michigan's baseball team ended its Southwestern tour on the upbeat Saturday night, de- fending Arizona 5-3 to sweep a day-night doubleheader from the Wildcats. Michigan won the first game 7-1. The victory left the sophomore- laden Wolverines with a 7-4 rec- ord heading into next Tuesday's home opener against Bowling Green at Ferry Field. In the nightcap Michigan relied on the experienced pitching arm of senior JoeKerr to lead them to their second straight 'victory after dropp . g.our straight to Arizona. Sophomore starter Jack Hurley, who missed an earlier scheduled pitching assignment because of back trouble, started the second game for the Wolverines but two wild pitches and five walks got him into trouble and Kerr was called in by coach Moby Benedict to eradicate the situation. With Michigan ahead 3-2 on three runs in the second, Kerr wild pitched a run home to knot up the game, but then settled down, finishing 51/3-innings of shutout, two hit pitching. A misplayed fly ball of the bat of senior Les Tanona in the sixth inning fell for a double. Then Jim Hosler followed with a single, giving Kerr the only run he need- ed for his second win of the trip against one loss. The Wolverines then managed to get an insurance run in the sev- enth on walks to Glen Redmon and Tanona and singles by Rick Sygar and Keith Spicer off loser Pat O'Brien. Linescore MICHIGAN 030 001 100-- 7 2 ARIZONA 001 200 000-+3 5 2 Hurley, Kerr (4) and Nelson; Ken- nedy, O'Brien (5), Udel (9) and McMackin. WP-Kerr. LP-O'Brien. The Student ZIONIST Organization Regrets That its LECTURE DISCUSSION scheduled for Tuesday, March 28th at 8:00 P.M. WILL BE CANCELLED. El _ _- _iII. JOE KERR II, 11 All This Week THE ROLLING STONES All Stone. albums a:t STEREO $3 49 MONO $288 "Big Hits" Slightiy More Next week we'll have another special. so watch for it. IFE Magazine has described Julian Bream as "the successor to the great Andres Segovia himself." Nnhaps ithrlla mna r -. v ienmvrl h, nin