___THEMICHIGANDAILY 'M' Nine To Meet Central) AT BRAZIL: Six 'M' Stars Entered In Pan-Am Competition Gridders To Hold Sceimmage By BILL BULLARD 1 By LLOYD GRAFF The Michigan baseball team ven- tures into the reservation of Cen- tral Michigan in Mt. Pleasant to- day for a doubleheader hoping to OSU to Test 'M' etmenl By MIKE BLOCK Michigan's tennis team travels to Columbus today to take on Ohio State in their second dual meet of the season.. Fresh from Monday's resound- ing 7-2 conquest of Wisconsin, the Wolverines don't expect much competition from the Buckeyes. Although last year's dual meet be- tween the two teams was rained out, the Wolverines proved their superiority by scoring 66 1/2 points in the Big Ten Meet, while the hapless Buckeyes finished dead last with 1/. Ohio State doesn't figure to be a much improved squad this year, either. Couldn't Schedule Originally today's meet was to have been a quadrangular one among the Wolverines, the Buck- eyes, Ohio Wesleyan, and Cincin- nati. However, since a schedule couldn't be worked out to satisfy all the participants, it has been reduced to a dual meet. Coach Bill Murphy's men will be looking for their second victory of the young season; as opposed to four defeats, all of which were suffered on their Florida trip. Murphy plans to go along with the same lineup that trounced the Badgers. Senior Ray Senkowski, as usual, will be in the number one position, followed by the quar- tet of Wolverine sophomores, John Fraser, Brian-Flood, Hal Lowe, and Bo Baker. Junior Ron Linclau rounds up the singles lineup at the number six slot., Returns Home Michigan returns home to the Varsity, Courts Monday to face Purdue, their third conference battle of the campaign. Last year's match with the Boilermakers yielded a 6-3 win for the Wolver- ines, and the men from Lafayettej finished just one notch ahead of OSU in the Big Tens. Major League Standmgs AMERICAN LEAGUE need help from reinforcements, ase winning streak.s Coach Moby Benedict will start lefty ace, Fritz Fisher, in the first game and probably Dave Roebuck in the second. The starters may1 need held from reinforcements, as the Chippewas have shown un-1 usual skill with the warclub, in amassing a 10-1 record this sea- son. Seven regulars are batting over .300 this year.] Paced Central Dave Keilitz has paced Central thus far, with a hefty .486 aver- age. Dick French, a broad-should- ered shortstop, has tomahawked four homers already this season to go with his respectable .316 batting1 average. Another hitter of note is pitcher-outfielder Chuck Gronda who boasts a .400 hitting percent- age 'to compliment a 1.50 earned run average and two complete game victories. Gronda will probably start against Fisher in the first game with the c o a che s matching strength against strength. Chip- pewa coach, Waldo Sauter, will go with either Dick Fogel or Fred Muntin in the finale. Both pitch- EYE RECORDS: Thinclads In Ohio Relays By DAVE GOOD Today's Ohio Relays will give Kent Bernard and Michigan's mile! relay team their first big test since their record-smashing perform- ance in the Big Ten meet last March.1 Don Canham, coach of the con- ference co-champions, takes someQ 30 men into Columbus today for Course Opens' The nine-hole, par three golf course is now open all day, from 10 a.m. until dark. The athletic department announced that the fee is 25 cents for students and 50 cents for adults. the giant track festival that will run some 1000 contestants through 33 events. The Wolverines will face stiff; competition from a number of schools, but Canham picks West- ern Michigan and Ohio University as among the best. Defend Titles Canham's relay teams will be trying to defend their titles in the two-mile and distance medley and spring an upset in the four-mile, but it is the mile relay which Canham is eipecting big things from this year. Bernard, the sophomore from Trinidad, ran the fastest 440-yd. relay leg tn the country during the indoor season (:47.0) when he anchored the Wolverine mile team to a second place in the Big Ten meet behind Iowa. Their time of 3:14.8 broke the varsity record and was fourth best in the coun- try. Available today are Dave Ro- main, Carter Reese and Talt Ma- lone. ,who ran ahead of Bernard last March, but Canham may choose to go with either Mac Hunter or Captain Charlie Aquino instead. Has Big Selection Canham also has a big selec- tion in the other relays. Aquino, three times Big Ten champion at distances from 660 to 1000 yds., will be the big man. Backing him up are middle distance men Dave Hayes, Ted Kelly, Dorr Casto, Dan Hughes, Jim Neahusan and two- miler Chris Murray. Murray and Neahusan are slat- ed for the open mile run and Hayes the colorful 3000-meter steeplechase. STUDENTS, FACULTY DASCO LA Hairstylists OPEN 3 NIGHTS MON., T H URS.,FRI. " Five Barbers " Free Parking " Campus Haircutting ARBORLAND ers are righthanders with 2-0 rec- ords. Beefier Attack Coach Moby Benedict is hoping to pit beefier attack against Cen- tral than the Wolverines could muster Thursday against Eastern Michigan. Michigan could notch only ten hits off the neighbors from Ypsilanti including an eyes closed homer by gamewinner Clyde Barnhart. George Skaff, a fill-in for injured first sacker Dave Campbell, chipped in with two val- uable hits, as did Ron Tate, team leading hitter, and captain Joe Jones. Nevertheless, just six runs may not be enough against a team with Central's power. The Chippewas have scored six runs or more in eight of their 11 games so far. Michigan takes a 6-3 record in- to today's double dip. By RICHARD EISENBERG Ed Bartsch, the Michigan sopho- more backstroker, and five other Wolverine athletes, with aspira- tions of international glory against some of the stiffest competition, will compete at Sao Paulo, Brazil, beginning today in'the fourth Pan American Games. The Games featuring competi- tion between 23 nations of the Western Hemisphere, will see 372 U.S. athletes, the largest contin- gent ever to represent the United States in an international con- test. On Swim Squad Featured on the swimming squad will be Wolverines Bartsch and4 Bill Farley. Bartsch, a sophomore Three Teams To Challenge Golfers in Columbus Meet By GARY WINER Special To The Daily COLUMBUS-Michigan's varsi.- ty golf team meets Ohio State, Indiana, and Purdue today in its first Big Ten quadrangular meet of the season.1 The Wolverines, who placed1 fourth in the Miami Invitational Golf Tournament at Coral Gables just a week ago, will be facing some stiff competition from the Hoosiers and the Boilermakers.1 Indiana, defending Big Ten golft champions, will be fielding almost1 their same team as last year. Last week they beat Purdue and Ohio State in competition held at Bloomington.t Purdue also has an outstanding team this year, according to Mich- igan golf Coach Bert Katzenmey-t er. The Boilermakers placed secondt in the Conference Meet last year, just five strokes behind Indiana's winning total of 1509. Real Competition! "I thnk the real competition this year will be right here int this match," Katzenmeyer, stated in reference to the Big Ten meet at Madison May 17-18. "PurdueI Belgian Wins Boston Race BOSTON (M) - A Belgian book- keeper, Aurele Vandendriessche, who couldn't sleep after midnight because of the time change, clock- ed a course record of 2:18:58 yes- terday in winning the 67th Boston A.A. Marathon in one of the great- est finishes in its history. The 30-year-old spinning mill employe, who holds the world 30,- 000 meter (about 19 miles) rec- ord, caught wobbling Olympic ti- tlist Abeba Bikila of Ethiopia with two miles left and won by about 500 yards. American ace Johnny Kelley of Groton, Conn., only domestic win- ner here in 18 years, was second in 2:21:09. England's Brian Kilby was third in 2:21:43. and Indiana will be rough again this year." Ohio State, on the other hand, has been steadily losing ground in golf circles since the memorable days of JackNicklaus and Mike Podolski. The Buckeyes played Michigan twice last year and won the first meet, 261/2-7%. The second encounter was in Ann Arbor where the Michigan squad took the victory, 25-11. The biggest humiliation for the Colum-, bus players came ,last year in the Big Ten meet when the Buckeyes finished ninth, 50 strokes off the winning pace. To Lead Wolverines Captain Chuck Newton, Dave Cameron, and Tom Pendlebury will lead the Wolverines as return- ing lettermen. The remainder of the squad is composed of three sophomores who will be making their Big Ten golf debut-Pete Passink, Mark Yahn, and "Frosty" Evashevski. Cameron fired a 300 total in the Miami tournament to place sixth, while Passink fired the team's lowest round in that same outing, a one-under par 70. The Ohio State Scarlet Course, par 36-35-72, is a long course which calls for some accurate shots with the long irons. The 36 hole match gets under way at 7:30 a.m. from Philadelphia, who holds var- sity records in every backstroke event, made the U.S. team by plac- ing second to Ensign Chuck Bit- tick in the AAU 100-yd. back- stroke. Since there is no competi- tion in the 200-yd. backstroke, Bartsch's strongest event, he was forced to concentrate in the 100, an event in which he placed only fourth in the NCAA champion- ships. Farley, only a freshman, won his position by placing second to Southern Cal's Roy Saari in the 1650-yd. freestyle. Farley, from Lacanada, Calif., has already gone faster than the varsity record in the 500-yd. freestyle. Keen Unsure Wrestling coach, Cliff Keen, ad- mits he is unsure of the chances of Michigan's three wrestlers in the games due to unfamiliar com- petitors. Jack Barden, the 191-lb. NCAA champion, will be wrestling in the 217-lb. division. Bill Riddle, an Ann Arbor boy who never went to college, but has worked out with the Michigan squad, will be wrestling in the 125-lb. class. Last of the three is Dennis Fitz- gerald, a former Wolverine, term- ed by Keen, "one of the greatest wrestlers in the country." Fitzger- ald, who will compete in the 191- lb. class, was named the top wres- tler at the Pan American trials. Tennis Captain Harry Fauquier, the present Michigan tennis captain, will be representing Canada as will Rich- ard Montpetit, former Wolverine gymnastics captain. Fauquier has played on the Canadian Davis Cup team and is a former Canadian junior champion. Montpetit, Mich- igan gymnastics captain in 1961, won five Big Ten championships in his senior year. He is now a grad student at the University. SCHOLARSHIP OPPORTUNITY Summer sales opportunity with scholarshiprprogram. Now inter- iengfor limited group this campus. Work in the area of your choice. Nationally advertised, AA- Al company. MEETING Tuesday, April 23 7:30 P.M. 1724 Traver Road With four days of spring football practice completed, Coach Bump Elliott will lead his players through a full-scale scrimmage at Michi- gan Stadium this afternoon. Spring practice will last for three more weeks with practice sessions Tuesday through Friday and game-type scrimmages on Saturdays. The "Spring Game" will be held on the last day of practice, Saturday, May 11. Equipment Manager H e n r y Hatch handed out 118 uniforms for the first drill and Elliott es- timated that about 100 were still out for the team as of yesterday. Despite yesterday afternoon's rain, the team conducted its regular workout. "After all we'll have to play next fall if it rains," Elliott said. "But if it ever rains bad enough that we have to cancel a practice, we'll reschedule it for a Monday." So far Elliott has been pleased with the way that practice has gone. "The whole team has a good; attitude and good spirit," he com- mented. "They've been working very hard and have been gaining toughness." Elliott said he intends to split up the squad for the scrimmage for an actual game-type situation. He said he would probably pit the first string against the third string and the second against the fourth to promote close competition. During the Tuesday through Friday sessions, the team is split into the small groups by positions . New York Baltimore x-Kansas City Chicago Boston Detroit Cleveland x-Los Angeles Minnesota Washington X-Night game. W 5 5 5 4 5 5 3 3 3 2 L 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 5 6 5 Pct. .625 .625 .625 .571 .556 .556 .426 .375 .333 .286 GB 114 2 21/ 2 %, YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Boston 3-5, Detroit 1-1 Kansas City 3, Los Angeles 2 (1st) Baltimore 8, Cleveland 5 Chicago 3, Minnesota 1 New York 8, Washington 4 TODAY'S GAMES New York at Washington (n) Los Angeles at Kansas City (n) Minnesota at Chicago Cleveland at Baltimore Detroit at Boston NATIONAL LEAGUE llK a x-San Francisco Milwaukee St. Louis Pittsburgh x-Chicago i-Los Angeles Philadelphia Cincinnati i-Houston New York xi-Night games. W L 6 2 7 3 6,3 5 3 4 4 4 5 4 5 3 4 3 6 1 8 Pet. .750 .700 .667 .625 .500 .444 .444 .429 .333 .111 GB - 1 2 2'/z 21/ 2Y/2 2% 531 One of the seven golden keys YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 5, Milwaukee 4 St. Louis 5, Philadelphia 1 Cincinnati'at Pittsburgh, ppd. 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