rAcr Ir THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, APRIL 7. 1964 PAGE 51T THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY. APRIL 7. 19C4 ,, 9 BGU Game Postponed Michigan's first regular season baseball game scheduled for to- day at Bowling Green has been called off because of wet grounds. No date has been set as yet for the makeup game. This was to be the first game for the Wolverines since their 4-8 trip in Arizona over vacation. Coach Moby Benedict and the Wolverines will open their home season Saturday in a doublehead- er against Central Michigan at 1 p.m. at Ferry Field. RUSSELL, BUNTIN AMONG LEADERS: Komives Captures NCAA Scoring Title Erwin To Head Gymnasts By The Associated Press NEW YORK-Howard (Butch) Komives, Bowling Green's hot- handed backcourt ace, is the ma- jor college basketball scoring champion. The only Michigan players to place among the individual scor- ing leaders were guard Cazzie Rus- sell and center Bill Buntin. Rus- sell was 24th with a 24.8 points- per-game average, while Buntin was 37th with a 23.2 average. Rus- sell also nailed down the 20th po- SPARTANS OPEN DRILLS: Michigan State Returns' To Three-Platoon Plan, sition among the free throw per- centage leaders with an .843 mark. As a team Michigan was 11th in team offense with an 86.4 points-per-game average. T h e Wolverines, were also among the team leaders in both free throw percentage and field goal percent- age with .726 for 19th and .470 for 11th places, respectively. The Wolverines also were 13th among the leaders in average scor- ing margin over all opponents with a 11.1 uoint spread. The 6-foot-1 senior fired at a 36.7 points-per-game -clip - third highest average in history - and headed a record list of seven col- legians with averages of better than 30 points per-game, accord- ing to final statistics released yes- terday by the NCAA. Werkman Second Nick Werkman of Seton Hall, last year's No. 1 -scorer, finished second this season with a 33.2 mark. Manny Newsome, W e s t e r n Top Ten The tpo 10 scorers: G FG FT Pts. Avg. 1. Howard Komives Bowling Green 23 292 260 844 36.7 2. Nick Werkman Seton Hall 25 320 190 830 33.2 3. Manny Newsome W. Michigan 20 262 129 653 32.7 4. Bill Bradley Princeton 29 338 260 936 32.3 5. Rick Barry Miami (Fla) 27 314 242 870 32.2 6. Gary Bradds Ohio State 24 276 183 735 30.6 7. Steve Thomas (Xavier (Ohio) 26 302 175 779 30.0 8. John Austin Boston Coll. 21 235 144 614 29.2 9. Jum Barnes Texas West. 28 299 218 816 29.1 10. Wayne Estes Utah State 29 309 203 821 28.3 Michigan, 32.7; Bill Bradley, Princeton, 32.3; Rick Barry, Mi- ami, Fla., 32.2; Gary Bradds, Ohio State, 30.6, and Steve Thomas, Xavier, Ohio, 30.0, completed the 30-point club. Komives vaulted from 45th po- sition a year ago to the top spot. He capped his college career with a record 50 straight free throws in his last five games. Only Frank Selvy, former Fur- man star, and ex-Utah gunner Bill McGill finished with higher season averages. Selvy averaged 41.7 points per-game in 1954 and McGill posted a 38.8 mark in 1962. Team Records A pair of team records fell. De- troit's 96.1 scoring average erased the mark of 95.8 set by Morehead State in 1956. Davidson shot .544 from the floor, eclipsing the field goal accuracy record of .521 held by Auburn's 1960 team. Terry Holland of Davidson led the individual marksmen with a .631 percentage. Tulsa's Rick Park missed only 13 of 134 foul shots for a winning .903 percentage in free throw accuracy. Bob Pelkington of Xavier, Ohio, won the rebounding title with 21.8 recoveries per game. Paul Silas of Creighton, the leader most of the season, stumbled during the 2NCAA playoffs and finished with 21.75 per game. Ten different players connected for 50 points or more in a game. Texas A&M's Bennie Lennox scored 53 against Wyoming for the single game high. Other Leaders Other team leaders were San Jose State in defense, with an av- erage of 54.5 points; Miami, Fla.; in free throw accuracy, with a .760 percentage, and Iona in percent- age of rebounds, with .640. Temple fouled the fewest times, 12.4 a game, and Seattle the most, 25.6. By BILL BULLARD . Acting Sports Editor Gary Erwin, a two-time NCAA Trampoline champion, was elected captain of the gymnastics team yesterday. As a sophomore, Erwin won the NCAA title on the Tramp as Michigan took the team cham- pionship in ea runaway. The Wol- verines had 129 points to the second place Southern Cal's 73. He repeated his first place effort a little over two weeks ago in Los Angeles but saw his team slump to third in the final stand- ings. The Chicago junior has been a member of two straight Big Ten champions. Erwin won the con- ference Tramp title this spring but as a sophomore placed second to teammate Fred Sanders. Misses 'World' Title The only title which has re- mained outside of Erwin's grasp has been the "World Champion- ships." The weekend before ,the NCAA -Meet Erwin and Coach Newt Loken went to London for a meet where representatives of 12 countries competed. Erwin was second at the meet to Danny Mill- man, a freshman at the Univer- sity of California at Berkeley. Erwin was optimistic last night about the team's chances for next AAU HOOPSTERS SURPRISE: Russell Fails in Olympic Bid; H'ard To, Make It on One Foot' EAST LANSING (P) - Coach Duffy Daugherty will try to start building three separate football elevens at lAichigan State today. Daugherty is going back to the platoon system of the greatest winning Spartan era. His plans are made possible by freer substi- tution rules this year. He plans to try to build sepa- rate offensive and defensive units A patch of . n ' i Waste-not-want- not, is the watchword of this establishment. Thus the proprietor assembles bits and pieces of hand woven India madras to create colorful sports jackets.< Theymustbe glimpsed to be appreciated. FROM $19.95 WILD'S STATE STREET and a third outfit able to go both ways. "This may be our only salva- tion," said Daugherty as the Spar- tans prepared to open 'five weeks of spring drills. There are a lot of holes to be plugged because of the losses through graduation to the team that had a 6-2-1 record last fall. State tied with Ohio State for second in the Big Ten after a 13-0 loss to Illinois in the final game that cost,-the Spartans the league title and a trip to the Rose Bowl. "The last time we had a strict platoon system was back in 1952," Daugherty recalled. That was when Daugherty, now starting his 11th season as head coach, was an assistant under Biggie Munn while Munn was en- joying a 28-game winning streak. L I[ Exhibition Baseball Detroit 8, Kansas City 7 Baltimore 1, St. Louis 0 Pits burgh 12e, Minnesota 4 Cincinnati 5, Philadelphia 3 Milwaukee 2, Houston 1 San Francisco 9, Chicago (N) 7 Los Angeles (A) 7, Cleveland 1 Chicago (A) 2, New Yorh (N) 1 Los Angeles (N) 5, New York (A) 1 1 By TOM WEINBERG No, Cazzie Russell didn't make the Olympic team. After more than a week of try- outs across the,. country by the best amateur players in the na- tion, a team was selected to rep- resent the United States in the 1964 Olympics, and Russell wasn't one of the chosen few. "It's pretty hard to make it on one foot," Russell said last night. "After all, I was the only soph- omore there," he added. Russell, along with Walt Haz- zard and a few others were given the best chance of making the team before the tryouts, but his ankle injury was too much of a handicap for the 6'5" All-Ameri- can to overcome. Ancient Injury Russell said that his ankle was no worse off than before, and that all he needs is rest. The injury dates back to February- 22 when he. was involved in a freak colli- sion at Wisconsin with Bob Can- trell. The team that was selected consists of six stars from the NC- AA, one from the NAIA, and sur- prisingly enough, five from the ranks of the AAU. The list of six alternates includes four college players and two from the armed services. Collegiate players on the 12- man squad are: Walt Hazzard of UCLA, Bill Bradley of Princeton, Jim (Bad News) Barnes of Texas Western, Mel Counts of Oregon State, Joe Caldwell of Arizona State, and Jeff Mullins of Duke. . Lucious Jackson of Pan Ameri- can College is the lone represen- tative of the small colleges on the squad. Five from AAU Of the five AAU players picked, three were from the AAU cham- pionship team, the Akron Good- year Wingfoots. The three were Dick Davies, Pete McCaffrey and Larry Brown. The other AAU play- ers were Jerry Shipp of the Phil- lips Oilers and George Wilson of the Jamaco Saints. Wilson, who was outshone on. the University of Cincinnati team for three years by Ron Bonham, was passed by in the original se- lections of the players who were to try out for the Games. He joined up with the Jamaco team, a squad out of Chicago, and was eventually selected as an AAU player, getting the nod ahead of his Bearcat teammate, Bonham. The Olympic squad will be coached by Hank Iba of Oklaho- ma State and his assistant will be the coach of the Goodyear AAU team, Hank Vaughn. The six alternate members of the squad who will make the trip to Japan only if someone on the 12-man team is sick or injured are: Gail Goodrich of UCLA, Fred Hetzel of Davidson, Willie Murrell of Kansas State, Cotton Nash of Kentucky, Dave Stallworth of Wi- chita, and Bunk Adams and Reg- gie Minton of the armed services. 9'' GARY ERWIN season. "We should have a terrific team next season," he said. "The team only loses three seniors (Captain Arno Lascari, Phil Bol- ton and Paul Levy) and we have a great group of freshmen now who will be competing next sea- son. As far as his own goals were concerned, Erwin says he would like to win his third NCAA title and also win the world Trampo- line championship. He says he expects tough competition from Millman and others at these meets. Still Compete Erwin and some of the other Wolverines still haven't completed this season's competition since the second annual National Gym- nastics Federation Championships are coming up in two weeks. The meet will be held in Iowa City on April, 17-18. Erwin has collected more na- tional medals than any Trampo- linist in Michigan history except Ed Buchanan. In 1949-50-51, Bu- chanan won three consecutive NCAA titles. He also won two AAU first places and a Big Ten title., Loken said that the choice of Erwin was an excellent one. "Gary is a great competitor," Loken says. "I'm sure he will set a fine ex- ample as an athlete of champion- ship caliber for the rest! of the team." M' Ruggers Split Games The Michigan Rugby Club split a doubleheader last Saturday, los- ing to Chicago in the first game, 5-0, but beating out Windsor in the second, 3-0. Both games were extremely close as indicated by the scoring mar- gins. Michigan's less experienced Blue team played Chicago close through the first half of their con- test, but ran out of steam in the second. The blue and white-clad Michi- gan ruggers dominated much of the match with Windsor, but couldn't mount a sustained scor- ing drive. The final margin came on a penalty kick. The split leaves the club with a 3-2 won-lost record for the spring. This coming Saturday the ruggers are scheduled to face an all-star team from Ontario. ti L - brisk as an ocean breeze I The one-and-only Old Spice exhilarates...gives you that great-to-be- alive feeling...refreshes after every shave...adds to your assurance... 1< and wins feminine approval every time. Old Spice After Shave Lotion, 1.25 and 2.00 plus tax. S - the shave lotion men recommend to H U LTO N other men! .f 3i CAZZIE RUSSELL ELECTION YEAR IS HERE! Get the facts and colorful stories at low, low student rates TIME 4.50 yr. 8.00 2 yr. NEWSWEEK 4.00 yr. 8.00 2 yr. LIFE 3.50 yr. CALL or WRITE TODAY-WE'LL BILL YOU LATER Student Periodical Agency Box 1161, Ann Arbor Phone 662-3061, DAYS or EVENINGS 2000 W. Stadium Blvd. x YZ WHICH ARE YOU? 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