THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY',' APRIL 27, 1961 THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1961 Slugging First-Sacker Heads 'M' Attack M1 Batters Outhitting Rivals By PETE DiLORENZI ting with averages of .388, .344, after having been rained out in ophomore Bill Freehan's blist- .339, .291, and .274, respectively, their previous three games - a .g bat continues to dominate Jones is runner-up in RBI's doubleheader with Iowa, and a .verine hitting statistics. with 11, followed by Ed Hood with single game with Western Mich- eading in every category ex- nine, and Spalla and Merullo with igan. t at bats, the big catcher-first eight. To date, the Wolverines have cman is hitting opposing pitch- Joyce Top Hurler outhit their cross-state rivals. offerings at a .462 clip, bet- State's average is .275. ,even than Wally Moon's aver- Mike Joyce leads pitchers with Saesaeaei 25 a 4-0 record and a 1.22 ERA. Fritz Fisher has a 3-0 record, with a Team Statistcs ncluded among his 25 -hits, ac- 417 ERA. Dennis McGnn follows GBATTING iulated in 54 at bats, are threew4.17 Re c, na.oEAFwsnG AB R H HR RBI Pct. bles, two triples, and six hom- with a 1-1 record, and a 2.51 ERA. Freea 13 54 20 25 6 22 .462 -a bit below Moon's total, but The Wolverines now have a 10- Jones 13 56 15 19 0 11 .339 -a it elo Mon'stotl, utNewman 8 18 5 7 0 4 .388 it Freehan hasn't encountered 3. overall record, and are hitting spalla 9 29 5 10 2 s .344 ny 250 ft. left field screens. .291 as a team, while opponents Syring 8 30 7 8 1 3 .266 have been held to a .253 aver- DeLam'eure 9 31 4 2 6 .258 22 RBI's age. The staff ERA is 4.29 as cm- Steckley 6 19 5 5 1 6 .263 1reehn ha als knokrdlnl2213 51 11 14 2 8 .274 'reehan has also knocked in 22 pared to the opponents' ERA of Hood 13 50 9 10 1 9 .200 lverine runs. 7.22. Marshall 7 24 5 7 1 6 .291 im Newman, Joe Jones, Den- The Wolverines are now prepar- Halstead 3 6 2 1 0 0 .166 Spalla, Barry Marshall, and ing for their three game series PITCHER'S HITTING 1 Merullo trail Freehan in bat- with Michigan State this weekend Fisher 4 9 3 4 0 0 .444 Brefeld 2 6 2 2 1 4 .333 ________________________________________________ V Joyce 6 12 2 4 0 2 .333 Marcereau 4 8 1 1 0 0 .125 McGinn 5 6 1 0 0 0 .000 Neubrect 3 3 1 1 1 2 .333 Kr _.0 TODAY'S SPECIAL Keurct340 Totals 13 467 108 136 19 96 .291 on Rye Opp Totals 13 442 73 112 5 63 .253 IP W L SO BB H ERA with kosher dil slices . . 45c Gnn14 2.51 Joye 36% 4 0 22 15 23 1.22 Fisher 23 3 0 27 23 26 4.17 Kerr 6 0 1 5 2 5 4.50 Marcereau 17% 1 0 9 4 21 5.19 Neubrecht 7 0 0 8 13 8 9.53 - J eOI de U LBreTold 13%1 1 1 4 4 15 1.96 Totals l31/% 10 3 80 65 112 4.29 120S7thUnje/styOp'nents 113 3 10 75 57 115 7.22 201 South University ______!__,_____ NCAA Bans Off-Season > tC age Games j 4 WASHINGTON WP)-The Coun- Zfz ;},.;t cl of National Collegiate At- t etic Association yesterday banned organized summer basketball cm- F petition. Players taking part in such summer basketball cannot play college basketball under the 4 proposal by the NCAA council. ,.Most organized summer basket- ";ball is played either in the Los f> Angeles area or in the Eastern United States. In other NCAA action, the Council refused to delay by one r / Y year a new ban on participation C ou te d of high school football players in 4 all-star football games. ' .ic The Council is expected to end 0001 - probation of Auburn University N .. - ~today and permit it to take part Ours r't N in NCAA-sponsored championship games. sleeve shirts, 60 S.F.A's cotton dress shirts are cut on our own patterns NOW OPEN to our own exacting specifications. With a meticulous FOR look of distinction. These with comfortable short sleeves , are for warmer weather: (A) Button down mesh weave LUNCH oxford; blue, tan or grey. (B) Tab collar batiste; white, blue or bone. Also available in batiste oxford; white, blue CAFE PROMETHEAN or flax, 5.50; or in Dacron® polyester and cotton; white cSo E. William or blue, 0.50. All 14-16% sizes.r SAKS FIFTH AVENUE BACK AGAIN 332 S. State Street Sensational Ann Arbor A'rrBeachcombers New York . White Plains . Springfield . Detroit t Cambridge . New Haven . Princeton . Chicago cafe promethean rcr ,rfs4 <'e ,r tt~h~n4 v " r CL' '7 ' s ' "'"mF n .-1" a "t. Freehan Has Six Homers By DON BURNESS Wearing number 14 on his back and handling the bat as if it were a toothpick, Bill Freehan has ap- parently lived up to the billing that he was a sure-fire profes- sional prospect. Freehan sacrificed what is thought to be a sizable bonus to get a college education. No less than 16 major league teams have shown interest in the Royal Oak- born slugger and a glance at this year's statistics show him leading in virtually every department. In the 13 games played, Free- has hit at a .462 clip and has clouted six home runs as well as driving in 22 runs. He leads the Wolverines in runs scored with 20, doubles with three, and hits with 25. The record speaks for itself. Prepped in Florida Freehan played high school ball at Bishop Berry High School in St. Petersburg, Fla., where he first attracted attention botti as a sure handed end on the gridiron and as a talented catcher. He hit over .400 his last two years in leading the team to the state finals his senior campaign. During the summers, he, along with Dick Honig and Fritz Fisher, played on the Lundquist Insurance Grid Managers Football managers are need- ed for the 1961 season. All in- terested persons should contact Dick Asel, any day, at football practice at Ferry Field after 3:00 p.m. He said that this is one of the best ways to get to know the inside of the sport without actually playing it. nine that won the National Ama- teur Baseball Federation two years running. Freehan saw action only as a catcher until this season where he has split his duties be- - tween first base and behind the plate. Freehan's level swing and ten- dency to pull the ball remind one of Roger Maris of the Yankees. The 6'3" sophomore admits that he will have to learn to hit the outside pitch to right field in or- der to be a better hitter. Bill Freehan is not just anoth- er college athlete destined to either make the grade or not; he is a team ball player as evidenced by his admiration for the other players who comprise this year's squad. Most of the starters played in the same summer league, and there is a mutual respect for each one's abilities. More Than Capable Freehan is a more than capable student, having made the Big Ten All-Scholastic football team as an end where he started the last few games of the season. But baseball seems to hold his future, for he is hopeful of playing in the big leagues. The Sigma Alpha Epsilon ath- lete said as he watched Joe Jones belt a pitch over the fence, "Our hitting is pretty good this year.'} Bill Freehan's bat does most of the talking, though. The Inside Corner with Dare Andrews WOLVERINE SLUGGER-That's Bill Freehan, one of the big factors in the Michigan baseball squad which has erupted for a 10-3 mark, including a current four-game winning streak. Free- han's smoking bat has accounted for 25 safeties, including a half-dozen homers. This Weekend in Sports TOMORROW BASEBAILL-Michigan vs. Michigan State, Ferry Field, 3:30 TRACK-Penn Relays, at Philadelphia TENNIS-Michigan, Ohio State, Northwestern, Indiana; at Indiana SATURDAY BASEBALL-Michigan vs. Michigan State, there (dou- bleheader) TRACK-Michigan Open, Ferry Field, 1:00 Penn Relays, at Philadelphia GOLF-Michigan vs. Detroit, here, 11:00 TENNIS-Michigan, Ohio State, Northwestern, Indiana; at Indiana I .4" Ri fle Club Set for Camp Perry Meet After nearly four months of practice, the University of Michi- gan Rifle Club is prepared to com- pete in the Sixth Annual Inter-yY> Y collegiate .30 Caliber Cup Matches to be held at Camp Perry, Ohio, on; May 4,5, and 6. This is the sixth consecutive : "*..4:;>, '. year that the club has sponsored the event. In last year's meet the Wolverines finished second be- tween third plac eMichin State and first place Ohio University. The matches are open to any collegiate team in the nation. To date, applications have been re- ceived from Illinois, Dayton, Penn- - sylvania, De Paul, Ohio Univer- sity and the University of Ken- tucky. V1 The competing teams will use' 30.06 caliber M1 rifles and 10,000 rounds of ammunition supplied by the Federal Director of Civilian Marksmanship. Teams will use the fourth for (; practice; the fifth for individual shooting, and the sixth for team shooting. The local sharpshooters have three members returning who have '"= :.;:. participated in two previous-." matches. They are Fred Bleicher, Daily-Larry Vanice Bill Beyerman, and Larry Vanice. RIFLE CLUB-The University of Michigan Rifle Club is preparing bau, MarkRoembertand BillBob for the Sixth Annual Intercollegiate .30 Caliber Cup Matches at Baseler. Two more members have Camp Perry, Ohio. Members (left to right) are Larry Vanice, Bill yet to be chosen. Beyerman, Bill Vorbau, and Fred Bleicher. ARRO W OXFORD*S featured at eRA STATE STREET AT LIBERTY OUT OF THE RAIN emerged a winner. But even more important on that nasty day in Columbus, the Michigan golf team showed signs of returning to the top of the Big Ten golfing world for the first time since way back in 1952., Sometimes in water up to their ankles the Wolverines came from the depths to take charge. Ohio State, Purdue and Indiana all suc- cumbed on a course that might well have been used for the Confer- ence swim championships. MAYBE THE WOLVERINES are simply tremendous "mudders," because their other victory, over Detroit, also came in the rain. From here they appear to be more than that. It has been a long, long time since '52. The fall was rapid and the climb back has been slow. Two years agotheWolverines made a token run at the crown on the University course, but Purdue finally found the range, leaving Michigan back on the tee, a distant second. Really Can't Say. . . YOU REALLY COULDN'T SAY that Michigan left its opponents on the tee Saturday. In fact you really couldn't say that they "swamped" anyone, though they played in marsh-like grass. The margin over Ohio State was a meager one stroke. But a victory over the Buckeyes on their own course, long a burialgrounds for Michigan teams, simply can't be brushed aside. The total score wasn't bad, considering the conditions, 460 swings. Matched with last year's winning score, by Purdue, it stacks up pretty well. The Big Ten Champion Boilermakers, on a dry course, averaged 76 blows apiece for a five man team. Taking the top five men for Michigan Saturday, the Wolverines averaged an even 76 also. A CHAMPIONSHIP FOR Katzenmeyer, to say the least, would be a pleasant surprise. The years since '52 have been rugged ones as his teams have sagged as low as ninth. Ohio State is good, and it takes a good golf team to beat the Buckeyes. It takes a great golf team to win the Big Ten, a team with the guts, shots, luck, and then something else, to survive all the funny bounces the little white bal might take in the course of a 72 hole tournament. The Wolverines have the guts. They proved it last week in the rain. They have the shots. Luck comes to a good team, but Michigan appears to have an added asset in the form of team balance. Blessed With . . THE WOLVERINES ARE BLESSED with a blend of senior experi- ence, a touch of sophomoric exuberance, and a few fence riding juniors. Combine that with an eternally pessimistic coach and you've hopefully found the "something extra." "We've got to get better," says Katzenmeyer, "we're not good enough yet." The best part of it seems to lie in the fact that his team realizes it, and is practicing harder. They even hit balls last Sunday, usually their only rest day of the week, THE OLD GUARD of Capt. Joe Brisson and Dick Youngberg have been through it all, twice. Both have seen the Conference from the top and the bottom, and both have placed in the top ten, individually. They will tell yot the picture looks much better from the top. Bill Newcomb, Tom Ahern, and Mike Goode hold down the mid- dle, classwise, of the lineup. Newcomb is the only letterman, but both Ahern and Goode have been around, playing as front line reserves last year. Yet to Break Loose .. . OF THE THREE ONLY AHERN has yet to break loose. Newcomb had his day last week, tieing for medalist with Ohio State's Mike Podolski. Goode was hot against Detroit, touring the course in 70. Giving the sophomores a place on the top six is home-grown product Chuck Newton. Raised in Ann Arbor High School's winning tradition, Newton seems to be one of those guys who just doesn't know how to lose. . There are no stars, just a team that wants to win. The slim vic- tory did more for them than just boost morale, it emphasized the fact that a single stroke-maybe a short putt-can make the difference, especially if they want to emerge a winner in the big one. It's a lesson many players learn too late, and let's hope the title- hungry Wolverines have learned it well. Tonight at Hillel at 8 P.M. DR. GERHARD L WEINBERG'S last lecture in series "National Socialism and the Jews" "The Impact on the Persecutors" Dr. Max Kapustin, recently returned from Germany, will join Prof. Weinberg in the personal report. 1429 Hill Street All are Welcome SHAVING ACCESSORIES 4o OXFORD m ..y..for comfort..*. quality... .appearance The rich texture of fine oxford skillfully tailored gives the assurance of being well- dressed. Case in point: the Arrow University Fashion B.D. with the authentic roll of the classic button-down. Your wardrobe is incomplete without a selection of these casual Arrow shirts in both long and short sleeves. SPECIAL SUBSCRIPTION RECORDING First Concert CONTEMPORARY MUSIC FESTIVAL Presented in Hill Auditorium, Fri., April 14 STRAVI NSKY . .. Symphony of Psalms University Choir and Orchestra Joseph Blatt, Conductor DALLAPICCOLA ... Songs of Captivity Michigan Singers and U. Orchestra Maynard Klein, Conductor . . $5.00 ii