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May 11, 1962 - Image 6

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1962-05-11

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six

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

FRIDAY MAY 11. 1962

a. TEMIHGA AIs ia'RcflAV. AY it 19R2 uww

.

COACH'S GREATEST MOMENTS:
Katzenmeyer Reminisces

INDIANA, OSU HERE:
'M' Squad's Tough Task

8-1 VICTORY:

A

Wolverine Netmen
Lash Notre Dame

(EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the
ninth in the series of the greatest
moments in sports of Michigan's'
coaches. Today's story relates Michi-
gan's golf coach Bert 'Katzenmey-
er's greatest moment. Katzenmeyer.
is currently in his 17th year as Mich-
igan's golf mentor. His teams have
won three Conference champion-
ships and many others have finished
high in the Conference.)
By BERT KATZENMEYER
As Told to Jim Berger
My greatest moment will have
to be as a coach.
And I suppose my greatest
moment was during the 1949 sea-
son. The season was an exception-
ally fine one for us, and we had
a really good team.
Our number one man was Ed
Schalon, and the rest of the team
we had Roger Kessler, Bob Olson,
Pete Elliott, Leo Hauser and our
number six man was Chuck Mac-
Callum.
That year the Conference meet
was here at Michigan. The week
before the meet we had played
a dual meet with Ohio State here
and we averaged 73.8 shots a man.
We felt we were both physically
Gugieli i NOW
With Giants
NEW YORK (P)-The New York
Giants yesterday obtained quar-
terback Ralph Guglielmi from the
St. Louis Cardinals in exchange
for rookie Sherman Bilbett and a
high 1963 draft choice.
With the Giants, Guglielmi, a
five-year NFL veteran, will back
up veteran Y. A. Tittle. New York
also has holdover Lee Grosscup
at quarterback.
Strauss Si!
Scott No!
Contrary to previous mention,
Strauss House rather than Scott
House finished on top in this
year's Intramural rifle-shooting.
Strauss shot 777 in winning by a
46-point margin over second place
Evans Scholars.
Probe Boxing
In N ew York
NEW YORK tom)-A state legis-
lative committee will begin pub-
lic hearings May 21 in a wide-
spread probe to determine if box-
ing should be abolished in New
York.
The committee said the inquiry
could be considered an investiga-
tion of state athletic commission
policies.
Another aim, the committee
added, is to eliminate known crim-
inals from the sport.

and mentally for the meet.
Our goal was to break 1500
strokes. The previous team record
was 1523. Besides winning the
meet which we wanted very much,
we wanted to set that record.
As it turned out we did set the
record with a score of 1499. We
ran away. from the entire field.
We took the championship by 58
shots. It was the largest spread
that a team ever won by. That
in itself was quite a thrill.
Individual Star
We also had Eddie Schalon tie-
ing for the individual title. Eddie
shot a 297. Two years before as
a sophomore Eddie tied with Bob
Saunders of Ohio State for the
title.
It was about the tightest match
you could imagine. Both Eddie and
Wampler were tied going into the
72nd tee. Wampler hit his drive
into the .trees while Ed hit his
straight down the fairways.
Wampler had an opening but a
very small opening out of the
trees. It would have taken a very
fine golf shot.
Wampler made the shot but he
was a little strong. The ball ran
across the green and stopped three
inches short of the trap. Eddie

been a three way tie. He didn't
make the putt and ended one
stroke behind at 298.
Meanwhile Kessler had already
come in with a 299. Hauser had a
302 and Olsen had a 303. Mac-
Callum had a 312 but his score
was thrown out since you only
count the top five.
It was a tremendously fine team
effort and a great personal thrill.
and was one stroke behind. Well,
on the last hole he hit a beautiful
drive and was only a three-
quarter iron from the green.
Then Peter hit a tremendously
fine golf shot that landed no more
than 10 feet away from the pin.
Major League
Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE

By JERRY KALISH
With the Big Ten baseball title
still up for grabs, the Wolverines
will seek to tighten their slim
grip on first place in the Confer-
ence standings.
They hope to do it at the ex-
pense of Indiana which invades
Ann Arbor this afternoon in a sin-
gle game and Ohio State which
will be here tomorrow for a double-
header.
With the Hoosiers currently
lodged in fourth place with a 5-4
record and the Buckeyes tied for
second with Illinois with an iden-
tical 7-2 mark, to say that this is
a crucial weekend is no exaggera-
tion.
On Top
Michigan's hold on the confer-
ence lead is only by virtue of one
game, the Blue having an 8-1 rec-
ord. Its only loss was to the Illini
in the opener by a score of 1-0.
Coach Don Lund plans to use
Fritz Fisher today and Dave Roe-
buck, the conference's leading
hurler with a mark of 4-0 and an
ERA of 2.42, and John Kerr, also
undefeated with three victories, in
the all-important twin bill.
Fisher has suffered two 1-0 de-
feats this season. He took the
opening loss at the hands of Illi-
nois when an unearned run was
tallied in the very first inning.
The other one was in a ten-inning
battle. He has, however, gotten
back on the victory trail since

then and still remains a top-rank-
ing pitcher on this year's squad
in spite of his won-lost record.
Branch's Boys
Indiana will go with sophomore
Dick Sparks on the mound. Sparks,
center on the basketball team, is
one of four hurlers that Branch
McCracken has lent to baseball
coach Ernie Andres for the spring.
The other three are basketball
captain Charlie Hail, Dave Grang-
er, and'Ernie Wilhoit. Wilhoit has
an ERA of 4.50 which is almost
what he averaged during the hoop
season.
Interestingly enough, the Hoos-
iers ld the conference in fielding
i ercentages and batting average as
a team last year but still wound
up third in the final standings.
Bart's Back
They have the nucleus of last
season's sluggers back, including
Bart Kaufman, who finished sec-
ond in the batting race to Bill
Freehan, Michigan bonus catcher
now with the Tiger organization.
Kaufman hit a lusty .452, but the
stocky outfielder is currently at
the .282 mark.
While the Wolverines are on the
field against Indiana, Ohio State
will be battling it out with Michi-
gan State, before Saturday's possi-
ble title determining double head-
er.
Walk Softly, and.,.
The Bucs typify the "good hit,
no field" adage with their stand-

ings in the statistics, but the Blue
could be classified in like manner,
too.
Ohio State leads in team batting
with a .311 mark with Michigan
close behind at .306. In team field-
ing the Wolverines are only in
fifth slot with a percentage of .951
as compared to the following Bucs
at .950.
Lund is not sure who will start
for Ohio State in tomorrow's
games, but he does have some
other definite opinions on the
pitching situation.
The determining factor in the
title race will probably be depth
in pitching," he said.
The Blue seems well fortified in
this position with its three top
flight pitchers and reliefer Wayne
Slusher.
But Lund added that Illinois,
for example, "has only Doug Mills
and Tom Fletcher (both with 3-0
records), and both their losses
came on the third day of the'rota-
tion when neither one could work."

Special To The Daily
SOUTH BEND-Bring on Ohio
State's tennis team.
Yesterday afternoon the Michi-
gan netmen trounced Notre Dame
8-1 on the Irishhome courts,
which were slow due to rain.
The loneNotre Dame-victory
came in second doubles 6-2, 2-6,
6-1, as Jim Whelan and Bob Fitz-
gerald downed Jim Tenny and
Jerry Dubie.
Number one singles man Ray
Senkowski over-powered his op-
ponent, Joe Brown, in two straight
sets, 6-3, 6-1.
Harry Fauquier downed the
scrappy Fitzgerald in three sets,
2-6, 6-1, 6-0. Jerry Dubie won
easily over number three man Al-
lan Davidson by scores, of 6-2
and 6-0, crossing up his opponent
with frequent drop shots. Jim
Tenny took the first set 6-1 but
had to kill a come-back attempt
before defeating Whelan 7-5.

Tom Beach went three sets be-
fore winning 5-7, 8-6, 6-2 over
Jim Demis in the longest match
of the afternoon. Ron Linclau
then bested Murry Dewald, 6-0,
6-4.
Both first and third doubles
won by identical 6-4, 6-3 scores.
Senkowski and Facquier whipped
Davidson and Brown, while Lin-
clau and Beach combined to down
Demis and Dewald.
Cat Gut Rhythm
SINGLES: 1. Senkowski (M) def.
Brown, 6-3, 6-1; 2. Fauquier (M)
def. Fitzgerald, 2-6, 6-1, 6-0; 3. Dubie
(M) def. Davidson, 6-2, 6-0; 4. Ten-
ney (M) def. Whelan, -6-1, 7-5; 5.
Beach (M) def. Demis, 5-7, 8-6, 6-2;
6. Linclau (M) def. Dewald, 6-0, 6-4.
DOUBLES: 1, Senkowski and Fan-
quier (M) def. Davidson and Brown,
6-4, 6-3; 2. Whelan and Fitzgerald
(ND) def. 'Dubie and Tenney, 6-2,
2-6, 6-1; 3. Linclauaand Beach (M)
def. Demis and Dewald, 6-4, 6-3.

New York
Cleveland
Minnesota
Chicago
Los Angeles
Baltimore
Boston
Detroit
Kansas City
Washington

w
15
14
15
15
12
12
11
11
12
5

L
7
9
12
13
11
12
12
12
16
18

Pct.
.682
.609
.556
.536
.522
.500
.478
.478
.429
.217

GB
1-
2Y2
3
3112
4
41/
41/
6
10Y2

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Chicago3, Washington 1
Cleveland 9, Minnesota 4
Los Angeles 6, Detroit 4
Baltimore 5, Kansas City 2
(Only games scheduled)
TODAY'S GAMES
Washington at Baltimore
New York at Cleveland (n)
Boston at Detroit (n)
Kansas City at Minnesota (n)
Chicago at Los Angeles (n)
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB
San Francisco 22 7 .760 -
St. Louis 15 9 .640 3
Los Angeles 18 11 .620 4
Pittsburgh 14 11 .560 5
Philadelphia 12 11 .522 6%
Cincinnati 13 13 .500 7
Milwaukee 12 14 .462 8
Houston 10 16 .385 9%
New York 5 16 .238 12
Chicago 6 20 .231 14
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Milwaukee 4, Pittsburgh 3
New York at Chicago (ppd.-cold)
San Francisco 6, St. Louis 0 (called
in 9th)
Los Angeles 6, Houston 2
(Only games scheduled)
TODAY'S GAMES
Philadelphia at Chicago (n)
Milwaukee at New York (n)
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati (n)
Los Angeles at St. Louis (n)
San Francisco at Houston (n)

I

BERT KATZENMEYER
.,..veteran coach

meanwhile had his shot right on
the pin and he landed about 12
feet from the hole.
They both took two putts and
tied for the individual title at 297.
Another sidelight about this
meet was Pete Elliott. Until this
season Peter never really took
golf seriously. With the rigors of
football and basketball, he always
looked more to golf as relaxation.
This year though he took it
seriously. While Schalon and
Wamapler were battling it out in
front of them, Pete was only one
stroke behind them going into the
72nd hole.
In fact the three were all d'-d
at the. 71st hole. But Pete got a
four on the par three 17th (71st)
If he made the putt it would have
nd in Sports

This Weeke

TODAY
BASEBALL-Indiana, here, 3:30 p.m.
TOMORROW
BASEBALL-Ohio State, here, 3:30 p.m.
TENNIS-Ohio State, here, 1:30 p.m.
GOLF-Ohio State, Purdue, Michigan State, here
8:00 a.m.
TRACK-Notre Dame, Ohio State, Michigan State, at
East Lansing.

TV'S"BEN CASEY":WHY HE'S
BITTER ABOUT SUCCESS
At 33, Vince Edwards has hit the
jackpot in the role of Ben Casey.
"Big deal," he snarls, "I'm an
eleven-year overnight sensation."
In thisweek's Post, you'll learn why
Edwards is sore at Hollywood. How
he struggled for years as a life-
guard, a chorus boy and a motor-
cycle racer. And why he says: "In this
business, they don't want actors."
The Saturday Evening
SMAY12
ON SALE O

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lacks change of pace, we strongly suggest this one at 29.50. . Cu ROSS
1208 S. University

I

Good food ... expertly served, in pleasant
surroundings, to the most exacting taste.
Luncheons, 11:30 to2:00 Dinners, 5:00 to 7:00
Sunday: Dinners, 12:00 to 3:00 Closed Mondays O
We suggest that you telephone O
for reservations.
Vhe Corner JNouie
Ct , S. Thayer at Washington in Ann Arbor
A block west of Rackham Bldg.-NO 8-6056 C
1:}O--OC--C<--o --yo<-.o om o<- O<:< ><>

DEL RIO BAR
Freshly Remodeled - New Management
Beer, Wine, Liquor and Cocktails

Dine and

FIVE MOTHER A TREAT .. .
ON MAY 13
c
o 0
Enjoy the Finest
CANTONESE
FOOD
Take-Out Orders Anytime 11_

Specializing in Delicious Pizza Pie

Phone NO 2-9575

122 W. Washington

Relax

- * .

Sandwiches

to the
music of
Paul
Tompkins

THOMPSON'S RESTAURANT
9a1rou4 f'p 9hte 9 ,d
offers you a taste treat
of a traditional Italian dish
IPIZZA
will be served doily from
12 Noon to 2 P.M. and 5 P.M. to 2 A.M.
CrDC C n UnIEDV

4l r
4k9
'I bA, VA

"

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