"RIL is, 1963 THE MICHIGAN DAILY laseball Team Begins Home Season By BILL BULLARD Michigan's defending NCAA baseball champions under new head coach Moby Benedict will open the regular season this after- noon at 3:30 p.m. against Eastern Michigan at Ferry Field. The Wolverines returned Mon- day from Arizona where they com- piled a 5-3 record. Eastern Mich- igan' has a 1-1 record after de- festing Detroit and losing to Bowling Green. Veteran Team Benedict will go with practically an all-veteran team but was un- decided about who would be his starting pitcher yesterday after- noon. One veteran who will not play today is junior Dave Camp- bell who will be out of action for awhile with a fractured toe. Soph- omore George Skaff will replace Campbell.. Catcher is the only other posi- tion where a sophomore will def- initely start. "You can say that Adams will start at catcher," said Benedict. "I don't know whether it will be Pete or Chuck Adams, though." Both are sophomores who are attempting to fill the void left by the graduation of Joe Merullo. In the outfield, from left to right, are seniors Jim Steckley, and Denny Spalla and junior Ron Tate. Tate and Steckley lead the team in hitting with averages of .400 and .368, respectively. Spalla is hitting .259 but hit .367 during the 1962 Big Ten season. Veteran Infield 'Besides Skaff, the infield con- sists of junior Harvey Chapman at third base, and seniors Dick Honig and Captain Joe Jones at short- stop and second base, respectively. Chapman led the team in hitting for the whole season with a .313 airerage Jones had a Big Ten average of U-M Sbailors prepare for SpringSeaso The Sailing Club open meeting at? 7:45 tonight in the Union Ball- room signals the beginning of the spring season for the Michigan Sailing Club. With a fleet of ten Jet 14's and one MIT Dingy, the club offers pleasure sailing, lessons, inter- club and intercollegiate racing and comradship at their Base-Line Lake site outside Ann Arbor. A ride pool. system .provides transportation between . the lake and the side door of the Michigan Union for about 150 student mem- bers. Faculty, Ann Arbor and sur- rounding area residents also are members of the club, which pro- vides private moorings as well as a communal fleet. The club will open its facilities to all prospective members this weekend. Members will offer sails in the boats and rides from the Union on both Saturday and Sun- day. Further explanation about the club, slides picturing past ex- ploits of members, refreshments and general "sail-talk" will be featured at the open meeting, The Sailing Club offers a chance for many students to get acquaint- ed with sailing that would prob- ably never come in contact with it, Commodore Joe Buck said. Novices can learn all aspects of sailing, from trimming the sails to the finest points of racing. Members maintain and suport the entire fleet and grounds. The joy of feeling a boat lift with the wind is the same on a small lake as it is on the ocean, one member has said. One of the unique things about a University sailing club is that it provides the atmosphere for a "community of part time sailors" to thrive, another member said. Weekly meetings, which offer policy discussions, novice and rac- ing schools are held in 311 West Engineering Building each Thurs- da.r yat 7:45 p.m. New members are always welcome. The club's intercollegiate rac- ing team has won several national titles. n .362 last season and,Honig's aver- age was .345. Benedict said he probably would save his ace, Fritz Fisher, until Saturday's doubleheader at Mt.± Pleasant. Fisher was credited with three of the Wolverine wins in Arizona. Soph Pitchers_ "I'm seriously considering start- ing one of my sophomores," said Benedict. The three newcomers- Clyde Barnhart, Marlin Pember- ton, and Jerry Hribar-each pitch- ed about six innings in Arizona and Benedict would like to give them some more experience be- fore the Big Ten season starts. If Benedict decides to go with a veteran, he can start either senior Dave Roebuck or junior Jim Bobel.. Benedict regards the Hurons as a tough opponent. This seems to be an accurate description since Golf Anyone? The University of Michigan women's golf team will have an organizational meeting at the Women's Athletic Building to- day at 5:10 p.m. Golf Manager Arlene Alton emphasized that the meeting is not a tryout meeting for the team. Any woman is welcome who wants to learn about the opportunities involved in join- ing the team. Eastern defeated Detroit in its opening game. Detroit beat Mich- igan twice last season and the Titans reportedly have another good team this season. Coach Bill Crouch said he in- tends to start junior Fred Hurbert on the mound against the Wolver- ines. Ron Saunders, a 30-year old outfielder from Windsor, Ont., is one of the team's leading hitters. Saunders drove in both Huron runs with two hits in four trips to the plate in the 9-2 loss to Bowling Green Tuesday. His over- all average last season was .329. There are twelve lettermen re- turning to the squad and the big problem for Crouch is to find a third baseman and another out- fielder. Other standouts on the squad besides Saunders are Ken Mirer with a .339 average last season and Ken Johnson with a .333 average. Pennsylvania Holds Boxing Public Hearing HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP)-A State Senate committee agreed yester- day to tap public sentiment be- fore deciding whether to ban box- ing in Pennsylvania. The Judiciary General Commit- tee unanimously agreed to hold at least a one-day public hearing May 1 on a bill which would out- law both professional and amateur boxing in the state. The bill was introduced in the senate under bi-partisan sponsor- ship last month following the death of Davey Moore in a feath- erweight title bout in California. Cries to prohibit the sport be- came louder in Pennsylvania after amateur boxer Francisco Velas- quez was injured fatally in a bout at Carbondale April 6. COLLEGE BASEBALL Indiana 7, Cincinnati 4 Notre Dame 17, Ft. Lee 2 Detroit 6, Wayne State 3 Central Michigan 10, Kalamazoo 8 Iowa 8, Bradley 4 Nebraska 17, So. Dakota State 12 Connecticut 6, New Hampshire 0 Wake Forest 12, Georgia Southern 10 Queens (NY) 6, Brooklyn 5 VMI 5, Georgetown 0 JOE JONES ... team leader FAILS TO SECURE PATENT: Nelson's Stroke Stolen by Chet the Jet' 1. With graduation coming up, looks like we'll have to start thinking about the future. My philosophy is to live from day to day. $. Hardly likely, since 93 per cent of all men and women get married. Is that so? K" By DAVE GOOD When it happened to Alexander Graham Bell, he sued. Bit Richard (Breezy) Nelson couldn't get a patent, and when it happened to him, he just kept on swimming. Nelson, a 5'11", 165-lb. Mich- igan senior, might still be the best breaststroker in the country if he'd been able to protect his stroke from opportunists the way Bell did his telephone. When Nelson closed out his col- lege career earlier this month with a share of his third straight NCAA title at 100 yds., it went largely unnoticed by swimming f a n s around the country. Jet Commands Respect Instead, most chose to bow their heads in respect to another breast- stroker, Indiana's Chet (The Jet) Jastremski, who for two years has cleaned up in Big Ten and AAU championships but has never been eligible for the collegiate title, be- cause his school has been on NCAA probation since 1960 for football recruiting irregularities. Since Jastremski has defeated all comers for the past two years, he is considered, and rightly so, the world's premier breaststroker. But ears in Ann Arbor perk up when Jastremski is designated as the one who "revolutionized" the stroke, changing it from one of grace and rhythmic flow to one as violent-and almost as fast-as the others. Nelson Reaches Breakthrough The story goes back to April 2, 1960, when an unheralded Michi- gan freshman - Nlson - became the first breaststroker ever to break 1:03 for 100 yds. by win- ning the indoor AAU champion- ship in 1:02.4. He beat Jastremski. The scene then shifts to March 4, 1961, when a Michigan sopho- more-again Nelson, but not so unheralded - became t h e first breaststroker ever to break 1:02 for 100 yds. by winning the Big Ten championship in 1:01.8. Again he beat Jastremski, but this time by just a hair. It came almost as an anticlimax when Nelson won the NCAA cham- pionship at 100 yds. later that month in .1:02.1. Jastremski, of course, was not there. That made Nelson the Ameri- can, National Collegiate and Na- tional Collegiate championship record-holder and one of the hot- test pieces of swimming property around. Gets Better, But... Since that time, Nelson has low- ered his best 100 time to 1:01.3 and his National Collegiate cham- pionship record to 1:01.7. All the other records, however, now belong to Jastremski, who has become the first breaststroker to break 1:01, 1:00 and the only keep trim ARCADE BARBERS NICKELS ARCADE one to break :59. He has estab- lished new standards of :58.5 for the 100 and 2:09.0 for the 200. Jastremski didn't become a con- sistant winner until last year as a junior, and that's when national magazines started labeling him the "new" type of breaststroker, who looked more like a tugboat or a retreiver than a? swimmer because he used a shortened arm stroke and kick that made ,him take more strokes per lap. But there are those close to Michigan swimming circles who in- sist that Jastremski reached these major breakthroughs by copying Nelson's faster arm stroke. Don't Forget Glide Michigan Coach Gus Stager agrees that this might be true but chooses to emphasize that it was the use of Nelson's longer glide between strokes which helped.Jas- tremski more than anything else. "Both of them swam fairly fundamentally the same," Stager commented. "But the change you could really notice in Chet after Breezy beat him in the Big Tens two years ago was the way (In- diana Coach Jim) Counsilman stretched him out in the water and lengthened his glide like Breezy's." Then he made motions showing how Jastremski used to take his arm strokes-in close to his body. Nelson says he always used a faster-than-normal arm drive and that Jastremski carried it to an extreme - and a very successful one. Stay in First Gear "It's a fast, jabbing arm stroke and operates on the principle of 'turning over' faster," he explain- ed. "It's like a racing car going in first gear all the time. "You've got to give Chet a lot of credit. It takes guts to swim a 200 like that, but he's really strong and can drive himself." It is conditioning which Nelson openly admits is the difference between himself and Jastremski, a powerful 5'9", 170 lbs. "In high school I never really had to work out very hard, and swimming was a lot of fun for me," he explained. Wins State Meet (Nelson was state high school breaststroke champion his junior year for Grand Rapids South but was defeated as a senior by Jon Baker, now a teammate of his at Michigan.) "In college you have to throw out an hour a day with these new kids coming up," he continued. "It's not so much fun any more. Guys who worked out hard in high school are used to it, but for us who never did it's pretty hard." Nelson has always felt he could at least get by in the 100, but he's never had much success at the longer distance, and he's the first to own up. "You have to be in better shape to swim a good 200, and that's why I don't like it as much." Nelson's best 200 time is 2:17.0, and while he has consecutive NCAA titles at 100 yds. his best performance at 200 yds. came last year when he finished second to Minnesota's Virg Luken in the NCAA meet. Down a Little This season Nelson never did quite reach his peak of previous years. Besides having to settle for a tie for first with Princeton's Gardiner Green in the NCAA 100, he failed to qualify in the 200. "I think I was mentally fa- tigued," Nelson said. "With three big meets in a row (Big Ten, AAU, NCAA), I never really started to feel good the whole time until the last 50 yds. of the 100." It's a good thing he did start to feel good then. Nelson was dead' last in the six-man finals of the NCAA' 100 at the halfway mark and just did manage to catch Green, the man he had victimized the year before with his charac- teristic strong finish. Likes to Sprint "I almost always try to swim from behind, especially in the 100," he commented. "A lot of guys have a sense of timing, but I've never really learned to pace. myself in a race. By your senior year you get to know the strategy of the other guys, though." Since Nelson is a senior, he has swum his last race for Michigan, but he may not be through com- peting for good. He plans to take a fellowship at Ohio University next year and will help coach the team as part of his graduate work. After that he would like to return to compe- tition in the Navy, just as former Southern California backstroker Charlie Bittick did this year. No More Jastremski And if Nelson does make his comeback, Jastremski probably won't be around. Chet The Jet plans to retire after this year to enter medical school. "It'll take 11/2 years for the pack to catch up with Chet, providing he does retire," predicted Nelson. "If he doesn't, he'll probably go faster. I think the times in the 100 will start to level out around :57.5." And that's a far cry from the days B.B. (Before Breezy) when all it took to hold the American record was 1:03.0. SUMMER JOBS Send now for list of 1000 summer employers. Camps, hotels, U.S., Canada, Mexico. $1.00 to Stanley Assoc., Box 2144, Phila. 3, Pa. II Up to 18 Countries Up to 89 Days Have the time of your life on the tour of your dreams. Choose one of our many fascinating itineraries! The well known' CAMINO arrangements include, at no extra cost, a multitude of entertaining and cultural Special Features. Student meetings and great parties! Write or call for free brochures TRAVEL BUREAU INC. NO 5-9151 IT'S NOT TOO LATE! 5.I doubt that-after all, 90 per 6. First relax. 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