THE MICHIGAN DAILY :tnksters Travel South for Practice Week PARENTS AT BEDSIDE: Hyman Remains Critical 'C I' By JIM BERGER A young and unexperienced Michigan golf,. team leaves today for Pinehurst, N.C., for its annual spring trip. The trip will serve to get the team into condition for the rigor- ous dual meet schedule which be- gins the. week after spring vaca- tion and continues until the Con- ference Meet at Champaign, May 18-19. At Pinehurst, the team will play 36 holes a day. In addition, the team will sched- ule Duke and the Hope Valley Country Club in matches. The match' with Duke will be played next Thursday. Pleased With Progress Michigan coach, Bert gKatzen meyer, is happy; with the progress of the team thus far. "I am very happy with the way the team has improved since we began our prac- tice. But we still have an awful long way to go,'' said Katzenmey- er. "Of course we haven't played CO, e ap Collegians Predominant In AAU Meet BARTLESVILLE, Okla. (IP)-Col- legians are predominant in the 1982 AAV swimming meet start- ing here today, but a galaxyof high school boys and freshmen will keep it from being a rerun of last week's DCAA meet. Most coaches expect this to be a better *meet than the NCAA event in Columbus, which saw five NCAA, two intercollegiate and one Americanrecord beaten. The NCAA swimmers will com- pete here, but so will a lot of tal- ented freshmen and schoolboys in- eligible for intercollegiate swim- ming. Also here will be members of Indiana University's swimming team, called by one coach "the outstanding team in the world," which was barred from NCAA competition. From Indiana , are . defending AAU champions Chet Jastremski in the breaststroke, Mike Troy in the butterfly and Ted Stickles in the individual medley, plus back- stroker Tom Stock and freestyler Alan Somers. Also competing here is Indiana freshman Fred Schmidt, a top butterfly swimmer. any golf yet," he continued, "we just have been hitting balls." The team has been outside for two weeks. Previous to going out- side, the team had approximately a month's practice indoors. Take Seven Men Katzenmeyer will take a squad of seven men to the Southland. Captain Bill Newcomb, juniors Chuck Newton, Tom Pendlebury and Bill Hallock, sophomores Gary Golf Course Opens The Athletic Department has set the opening day of the Michigan Golf Course for to- morrow. The starting time is 8 a.m. for all weekdays through the spring, summer and fall. On Saturday, Sundays and holidays the course will open at 7 a.m. Mouw and Dave Cameron, and senior Jeff Balfor will constitute the Michigan team. As to the starting lineup, Kat- zenmeyer is not completely sure yet, buthe tentatively plans on using Newcomb as number one. man; Newton as number two man; Pendlebury and Mouw will be three and four but not necessarily in that order while Balfor and Cameron will be at five or six. Hallock will be number seven man. Shown Improvement Pendlebury, a two letter hockey forward, has shown a great deal of improvement since coming out for theteam three weeks ago. "I'm very happy with the way his swing has improved," said Katzen- meyer. Katzenmeyer is hoping for bet- ter weather than last year when his team never had the chance to get their jackets off. It wasn't until the third reg- ular meet of the season last year that the Wolverines got good golf- ing weather. SATURDAY-APRIL 21 8:30 P.M. Trueblood Aud. HOOTENANNY FINEST FOLK ARTISTS performing Blues, Ballads, Breakdowns, Bluegrass Tickets: Disc Shop & Door ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. OP)-The condition of Michigan gymnast Lew Hyman remains unchanged. He is still critically injured. "There's nothing we can do. He's still critical. The doctors told me all we can do is wait." Those were all the words Sidney Hyman could force yesterday as he tried to talk about his 19-year- old son Lew. I Lew,a Michigan sophomore, suf- fered a severe brain injury Satur- day night in a fall from the tram- poline during the NCAA gymnas- tics championships at the Uni- versity of New Mexico. Exhibition Scores New York (A) 2, Detroit 1# Minnesota 5, Baltimore 0 Milwaukee 9, Boston 2 Chicago (N) 6, Los Angeles (N) 5 St. Louis 7, Philadelphia 5 Pittsburgh 2, washington o New York (N) 6, Chicago (A) 4 Kansas City 3, Cincinnati 1 San Francisco 18, Cleveland 17 Houston 20, Los Angeles (A) 5 He was making the 12th and final bounce of his routine - a triple twisting back flip. He veered off to the side, and fell nearly 30 feet. Hyman finished ninth in the rebound tumbling even though he was penalized for his critical fall. He was third in tumbling after the preliminary round and told his coach, Newt Loken, he felt he could win it. But he never got the chance. Could Have Won Could he have won. an NCAA title Saturday night? "He was capable," Loken said of the 5-foot-8, 150-pounder who started tumbling while a junior in high school Hyman's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Hyman of Wantagh, N.Y., have been here since Sunday shortly after he underwent brain surgery. "We're spending most of the time in his room," Loken said quietly. Loken is planning on returning to Ann Arbor today if the condi- tion of Hyman undergoes no change. Br own Traded CHICAGO (J) - Ed Brown, a quarterback with the Chicago Bears for eight seasons, was trad- ed to the Pittsburgh Steelers yes- tel'day. In return, the Bears will receive a first-round selection in the 1962 National Football League draft and another player to be named later. STUDENT GROUPS A Wide Variety of Tours: MUSIC and DRAMA ART and ARCHITECTURE COLLEGE CREDIT MICROBUS ... ISRAEL , DRIVE YOURSELF and 1ow-prico "ECONOMT Tours or Form Your Own oup Ask for Plans and profitable Organizer Arrangements Specialists in Student Travel Since 1926 IUTR for folders and detalls se Your eloal travA lwent or write us PETITIONING open for S.G.C. Standing Committees ' Committee on the National Student A Committee on Student Concerns * Committee on the University * Committee on Student Activities Petitions are available from the Adrministrative Secretary, 1546 Student Activities Building PETITIONS MUST BE RETURNED BY FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 1962' at 4 P.M. For further information - CONTACT RICHARD G'SELL, Executive Vice-Presi 663=0553 FORE-Chuck Newton, one of Michigan's returning lettermen, will travel with the team to Pinehurst, N.C., for the spring prac- tice week. Newton has already been named by Coach Bert Katzen- meyer as a probable number two when the Wolverines open their schedule at Columbus, April 21. discount records, inc. 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