PAGE EIGHT TIDE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1967 PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1967 i ,F F III III II II UNION-LEAGUE ANNOUNCING Homecoming '67 CENTRAL COMMITTEE SPECIAL EVENTS Alan Washner Lori Shingleton PARADE Robert Abrams Barbara Neuman PUBLICITY Robert Albertson Sandy Lee Driggin BOOKLET W. Marshall Slocum Valerie Cavin FLOATS & DISPLAYS Harold Phillips Barbara Robinson ENTERTAINMENT Gay Blanchard Mike Sternberg GRAPHICS Jim Tishler Kathleen Kennedy TICKETS Peter Benedek Sue Cooper ALUMNI RELATIONS James Fisher Anna Sophocles SECRETARY Laurel Davidson TREASURER Wayne Miller III t By FRED LaBOUR If the Michigan golf team proved anything in the Miami In- vitational last weekend, it was that golf is a mental as well as a physical game. Take John Schroeder as an ex- ample. At the end of 63 holes of tournament play, Schroeder was two strokes behind Bob Melnyk of Florida. The rest of the field was strung out far behind the leaders. Then, on the par five eleventh hole, Schroeder elected too much club for his second shot andI smashed into terrible luck. Coach Bert Katzenmeyer described what happened. "John knew he had to get a four on the hole if he was ever going to catch Melnyk. His drive was well-placed and he seemed to be in excellent shape. And then.... "His next shot, a three iron landed to the right of the green and rolled up against an out-of- bounds fence leaving him with an unplayable lie. By the time he'd dropped the ball out, wedged up I I,1 RETURN TO LINKS: 1' Golfers Work Out Kinks Rule Change Limits Pro Draft in College Baseball A L {t I. Don,'t MssTh is hne Your last opportunity to become a STUDENT SESQU ICENTENNIAL ESCORT come to the ASS MEETING Tonight 7:00 P.M. Rooms 3R & S MICHIGAN UNION ......N- E G UN ION-LEAGUE Ii -1 The Dept. of Romance Languages presents Jean Giraudoux' INTERMEZZO (in French) LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE Wednesday, March 29, 8:00 P.M. Thursday, March 30, 8:00 P.M. Tickets: $1.00, $2.00 at Box Office to the green, and putted out, he had a six. "Melnyk came through with a birdie and this was the turning point. The hole seemed to drain John's resources and he lost his sharpness." Melnyk capitalized on Schroed- er's bad luck on later holes also by playing conservative golf and finished 10 strokes ahead of him. "We were just not ready for. that caliber of tournament play," stated Katzenmeyer. "You've got to remember that last week was the first time we've played out- side this year. We just haven't had enough time to develop the finesse and confidence you need to win." The team's main problem seemed to be a lack of consistency, a fault that should be remedied as the golfers are able to get a little more tournament play behind them. According to Katzenmeyer, the most "graphic example" of this inconsistency appeared in the play of Rod Sumpter. Sumpter's scores fluctuated between a red-hot 70 and the high 80's. Captain Bob Barclay was not left out of the problem bag as he developed a frustrating shank. "Bob spent hours on the practice tee, trying to overcome his shank the only way you can: by hitting hundreds of golf-balls," said Kat- zenmeyer. "It paid off, too, as his game showed a definite improve- ment." Coach Katzenmeyer refused to put much stock in his team's eighth place finish saying, "There's a lot more in this golf team than showed down there. We thought we had a very good chance of catching both Rollins and Ohio State and finishing .in sixth place." Rollins ended up three shots up on the Wolverines and the Buckeyes seven. 'I By YVONNE COLVARD "What a team we could have with Reed, Cmejrek and Schryer." This was baseball coach Moby Benedict's reaction to the new major league draft rule that ar- rived too late to salvage three top Wolverine players. The rule, effective Sept. 1, states that each incoming freshman player will be ineligible to sign pro contracts until he completes his college eligibility or becomes 21 years of age, whichever comes first. Under the present draft law, diamondmen may accept major league offers in their sophomore years. relinquishing their college eligibility. An athlete, signing a pro contract, gives up his amateur standing in college ball. Three Leave Bob Reed, Wolverine pitcher for the past two seasons, led, the Big Ten conference last year in games won with six. The righthander, signed with Detroit Tigers in his sophomore year and is waiting for graduation this April before leav- ing for the Tiger farm. This season's captain, Dick Schryer, accepted a Los Angeles Dodger offer, leaving tie center- field vacant. Carl Cmejrek signed in 1965 when he led the Big Ten in hit- ting with a .453 average. Coach Benedict was bitter about the out- fielder from Flint because he wasn't consulted until after Cme- jrek had signed with the Minne- sota Twins. "I don't mind the boys signing, that much," admits Benedict. "It's when they don't talk to me before- hand that gets me mad!" All three men are awaiting April graduation before migrating to their respective training camps. The present draft rule places three' prospective college all-stars in the CARL CMEJREK U hilel stands instead of the dugout. The new draft rule does not affect any player currently en- rolled in college. Sophomore play- ers may still sign. But in the fall, and once enrolled in a college, the player will remain intact until at least his junior year according to the new rule. If a 20-year-old senior becomes 21 in January or February, he may not go through the December draft but must wait until the June draft. "So we'll have him for his sen- ior year," explains Coach Bene- dict. "Players may still be drafted out of high school, though. But this rarely happens." Because of the draft alone, Coach Benedict had to fill five vacancies on this year's team with sophomores and shifting of vet- eran fielders. The new draft law comes as manna from heaven to the Wol- verine diamond. Now the coaches may spend their time consolidat- ing rather than shifting. HILLEL DELI HOUSE MEET THE EDITOR Roger Rapoport Sunday at 5:30 P.M. ail 663-4129 for Reservationos $1.00 members $1 .25 others RAMBLIN' JACK ELLIOT 1429 HILL STREET ALL WELCOME Vanguard Fri., Sat., Sun. records recording artist ( - _ 8:00 P.M. $1.50 per person - . G II IM1yn tr OUSB 330 Maynard Street I E NO-DEPOSIT NOW..STROH'S ,NO ** NO-RETURN I.V..'. . ...Q U . A R T S Twist . * .Cap WEEKEND SPECIALS! AT discount records, inc. 6 '4 4 1235 S. UNIVERSITY MONO 6" 47 The sunroof works even when there isn't any sun. 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Other wagons only hold about half as much as a VW. Even if you hit the ceiling. But after the VW's all filled up, you can still go P/u4 'c MONO IP09 STEREO 71 DR. ZHIVAGO-Soundtrack A MAN AND A WOMAN-Soundtrack * FREAK-OUT-MOTHERS OF INVENTION i "Immmalumppp- i III