&GE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY reehan Ready for NCAA Opener By BRIAN MacCLOWRY better. In posting a 7-0 record with the school strikeout record for one The old Cincinatti strikeout record All was not gloomy yesterday as a 1.55 ERA, Faul has averaged 15.3 game three times in two years- of 18 in one game belonged to 3 Michigan baseball team va- strikeouts a game, a figure that 19 as a sophomore, 22 in his first Sandy Koufax, now with the Los bed rain soaked Ferry Field to will probably make him the NCAA start of the 1961 season, and 24 Angeles Dodgers and co-holder of i ld a short workout on the fresh- leader in this department When against Jacksonville Naval Air Sta- the Major League strikeout mark, an diamond in preparation for final statistics are in. tion. In this game he struck out also 18. mnday's - NCAA playoff opener The rest of Faul's biography the side in six innings, and whiffed Besides all this Faul is hitting th Cincinatti. reads like a testimonial from two men in each of the other three .333 with one home run. Coach Don Lund revealed that Wheaties. His 7-0 mark includes innings. Faul's battery mate, captain Ed e Big Ten's leading hitter, Bill seven complete games, with shut- Faul's strikeout "low" this year Wolf, is Cincinatti's answer to eehan, will be ready to play outs in his last three. He has set has been eight against Bradley. Freehan. The 6'1" 195 lb. junior ainst the Bearcats. During a 7-5 * to Western Michigan on Tues- is the Bearcats leading hitter with y, Freehan sustained a gash on a .430 average, including six home s left arm that required six runs and 28 runs batted in. Wolf tches to close. It had been touch has been voted most valuable d go as to whether 'the big player by his teammates, as he teo w ud be able to play virtually monopolized the catching in the playoffs. duties.« Marshall Back Iron Ed Another welcome addition to . He caught every inning of every actice yesterday was first base- y game, except five in the final loss an Barry Marshall, who has been >.~to Dayton, and fielded .980. rs de combat ever since he z The Bearcats are not strangers In recentw eeks yourLegi5IatU e ha5!nd Ica riched~~~~~~~~~ a«ev nhsle unn ~ . to NCAA tournament play. In 1956 I e e t w e s o r L g sau e h s idc t _chthey wereeselectedlas annat-large tt a double in the Wisconsin. hywr elce'sa tlag n n s o pr sd v rt ede ln fhg e me two weeks ag team for the District four playoffs.reside over the dec ne o gher Lund said he hopes Marshall will "'They were eventually eliminated ready for, action on Monday, by Ohio University. t added that he's just going to In 1958 Cincinatti won the Mis- ye to wait and see how the big souri Valley title and qualified for aior progresses before making a ; . -the playoffs again. But the Bear- cision on whether to insert him I cats did not participate, however, the lineup or not. I . s.because the squad included such And from the looks of this Cin- j sa large number of freshmen that , 'e going to need, both Freehan tive team of upperclassmen alone. d r cl nrs o sb ef rt e a a d ne to Berct GoodNCAAtounamet, irectly responsible for the abandonment of C tdMarshall Freshmen are not eligible for the e ps[ ef rt eo 'he earcats, winner oftheMis- Five Ineligible creases in ton the ofeezing f Enr Imen uif Valley Conferce title, Cincinatt is also going to bethtu io ,fe znen o m ni glsteasn and3-hrcd in4-the hurt this year because these play- o h niimkber of facul1ty, positions, and the ~ular season and had a 4-game ~ "i er participated in varsity ball as IIV %/I1' IE nning streak going until theyk a freshmen. Five players, including opped a 2-1 non-conference de- "rythree pitchers with a combinedlethal exodus ofisiC shed scientis an ion to Dayton in the last game season record of 10-3, are not eli- th esn gible for Monday's game becausefoou st e. F he first ti e i t erhistc They actually copped the East- thyaepaigthi1orhya th"aoalycpe teEs-ey are payng therfortm ear f om ou r State. For the frt tim e in their h~ n Division pennant of the con- - of varsity ball. rn defeated Western ivisir n BEARCATS' VERSION OF FREEHAN - Cincinatti catcher Ed Alsouppert (.28)e nd utilityasemanan co egesand universities are being forC der Tulsa twice in a row in the Wolf, whose batting average (.430) and power (six homers) are outfielder Mike Honold (.323). yoff series to wind up as undis- reminiscent of Michigan's Bill Freehan's hitting statistics, will But then if Paul and Wolf have aw ay qua iie stuents. ted Missouri Valley Conference have the fun of catching the pitches of Bill Faul, Bearcat ace who one of their good days, who's going ampion. averaged 13.9 strikeouts per game in the regular season this year. to need infielders and outfielders? r e e Cincinatti coach Glenn Sample If + n 11'11, re 1+pC /" nn Alf3/ Mr'f d n, f SATURDAY, MA ed its will- education ted by the stators are ourses, in. s, freezinc slow and di scholars ry, Michi- ed to turn ri rm;U fl Giants Whip Cubs; Pad Lead Major League StandingAs AMERICAN LEAGUE a-Detroit Cleveland New York Baltimore Minnesota Washington Kansas City Boston Chicago -Los Angeles a--Playing night W: L] 27 12 23 15 20 15 22 18 19 20 19 22 15 18 15 20. 14 24 13 23 game. Pct. .692 .605 .571 .550 .487 .463 .455 .429 .368 .361 GB 5 9 1212 1234 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Washington 4, Minnesota 3 Kansas City at Cleveland (rain) Chicago at New York (rain) Boston at Baltimore (rain) Detroit at Los Angeles (inc.) TODAY'S GAMES Boston at Baltlmre (N) Chicago at New York Minnesota at Washington Detroit at Los Angeles (N) Kansas City at Cleveland NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. GB San Francisco 23 13 .639 -- Pittsburgh 20 14 .588 2 Los Angeles 24 17 .585 1% Cincinnati 20 16 .556 3 Milwaukee 17 17 .500 5 St. Louis _ 16 19 .457 6% Chicago . 12 24 .333 11 Philadelphia 11 23 .324 11 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS San Francisco 3, Chicago 2 (13 Inn.) St. Louis 12, Pittsburgh 2 Milwaukee 10, Los Angeles 2 Philadelphia at Cincinnati (rain) TODAY'S GAMES Philadelphia at Cincinnati (N) San Francisco at Chicago Los Angelesat Milwaukee Pittsburgh at St. Louis victory over the Chicago Cubs yes- terday while Pittsburgh and Los Angeles, in a virtual tie for second place, were walloped but good in a major league schedule curtailed by rain and cold. St. Louis trimmed the Pirates 12-2, with Ken Boyer driving in six runs as Bob Friend lost his fifth in a row as a starting pitcher. And Milwaukee hammered Los An- geles 10-2 behind Warren Spahn, who won No. 293 with his second success of the year over the usually frustrating Dodgers. The Giants made it six out of six over the Cubs with a pair of unearned runs in the 13th. Harvey Kuenn, who drove in an eighth- inning run for a 2-2 tie, singled in the lead run for the Giants, who then scored the clincher on a wild throw by outfielder Billy Williams. Sam Jones (4-3) was the winner in relief. Don Elston (5-4) was the loser. Boyer, after going 15 games without an RBI, blasted a pair of homers for the Cards, deciding it with a three-run shot off Friend (5-5) in the first inning. The' Bucs contributed five unearned runs with six errors. Southpaw Curt- Simmons (2-3) . of the Cards pitched his first, complete game while allowing 10 hits. Spahn (5-3) allowed seven hits,. but three were bunt singles. The Braves backed him with four dou- bleplays against the Dodgers-the only club with a lifetime edge (31-16) over the superb southpaw. Hard hurling Jim Biel, stocky moundsman for Phi Alpha Kappa pitched a one hitter to lead his team to an 11-0 win over Delta Sigma Delta for the professional fraternity "A" championship. Biel also blasted a home ,run and two singles to aid his own cause as the Kappas rolled up the runs with a' steady barrage of singles throughout the contest. The Delts couldn't cope with Biel's fast pin-point pitching as he registered numerous strikeouts and struck out' the side in the sixth. With the aid, of an error, good for three bases Sigma Alpha Mu edged Phi Sigma Kappa' 4-3 in the bottom of the sixth to move into the finals of the social fra- ternity "A" playoffs. Ih the Sammy half of the sixth with one out, Robert Vollen'singled and ran for second. The ball was thrown by the first baseman into centerfield and the hustling Vol- len brought home the win as he circled the bases for the winning run. Dick Mandel brought ' home SAM's first run in the first as he beat out a bunt, stole second, ad- vanced to third on another bunt and soored on a ground ball. PSK came back in the second inning with a single by Al Pol- lett and a double by Dale Geiger, advancing him to third. Pollett then scored on a ground out with Geiger moving to third. He then scored on an error to put his team in front temporarily 2-1. Clutch-hitting Vollen evened things in the last of the second as he singled and scored from first on an error. His identical per- formance in the sixth broke the tie and put SAM into the "A" fraternity finals. IM Scores SOCIAL FRATERNITY 'A' Sigma Alpha Mu 3, Phi Sigma Kappa 2 Chi Phi over Theta Chi (forfeit) Phi Delta Theta over Tau Delta Phi (forfeit), Zeta Beta' Tau and Sigma Nu (dou- ble forfeit) RESIDENCE HALL 'A' Hinsdale and Williams (double for- feit) PROFESSIONAL FRATERNITY 'A' Phi Alpha Kappa 11, Delta Sigma Delta 0 FACULTY. Willow Run 5, Psychology 4 Chemistry 8, Llochemistry 0 Milwaukee also had seven hits, off Twins-the ex-Senators who were loser Stan Williams (3-3) and booed by a good portion of the two relievers, but two were homers crowd of 14,033 in their first return by Frank Thomas and Hank to Washington's Griffith Stadium. Aaron. Rookie Joe McClain (5-3) was the A two-run single by Harry Bright winner, allowing seven hits. Jim did it for the Senators over the Keat (1-4) was the loser. PAK Dw)owns DSD forTte SAM Moves Into Finals f ABICYCLE iSTORAGE $1.50 per month FOLLETT'S will buy YOUR COLLEGE TEXTBOOKS for CASH ANY TIME IT'S SO EASY to sell your discarded books to FOLLETT'S. Textbook values decrease rapidly as new editions and more up-to-date books are constantly being published. SELL Y01 Iv PCR t ncc n a - ,- n.a. , I ..nA .n.r - INDOOR STORAGE " PROTECTION FROM THEFT and DAMAGE - REPAIRING, IF DESIRED