THE MICHIGAN DAILY uAA Playoffs Begin Tomorrow Dayton Frosh Denies Scandal Implication 0------ > By BRIAN MacCLOWRY 'our of the nation's best college eball teams open their bid for Iwestern baseball supremacy to- rrow when they meet in the t -round of the NCAA District ir playoffs at Ferry Field. 'or the winner of the double nination affair, the reward'will a trip to the college world series' Omaha, June 9-14.. vidently none of the coaches is king past tomorrow, however, ause each is going with his best. n the 1 p.m. opener, Mid- erica Conference champion stern Michigan will send ace Playoff Tickets Tickets for the NCAA base- all playoffs will go on sale to- iorrow at 12 noon, and can be irchased at the booth on State treet, between the Athletic Ad- inistration Building and Yost ledhouse, before entering ser- r Field. Tickets are priced at 1.50 for general admission and 5 cents for students. There will e no advance sale. thander Bill. Orlieb: (8-0) ainst the University of Detroit's Dave Debusschere. Joyce To Pitch !nd in the second game,, start- 20minutes after the end of the it, Big Ten champion Michigan 1 pin its hopes on sophomore se Joyce (8-2), who will be op- sng Missouri. Valley winner Ci- atti, and'flame-throwing right- nder Bill Faul (7-0). k team will have to be beaten ce to be eliminated from the irnament. On Tuesday, tomor- v's losers will play the first game I the winners the second. t'he Wednesday opener, will tch the winner of Tuesday's t game with the loser of the ond, with the beaten team being minated. This will leave one un- ten team to fight it out with % once-beaten winner of Wed- iday's first game. Gin or lose tomorrow, Michigan. ach Don Lund will come back Tuesday with southpaw Fritz her (6-1), who hurled a one- ter in his last regular season start against Illinois. If the Wol- verines are still in the thick of it on Wednesday, Lund will probably use either senior lefthander Bob Marcereau (2-0) - or come back with Joyce. Joyce has been Lund's "first game" pitcher all year, and' al- though Fisher looked sharper in the Illinois doubleheader last weekend, the Wolverine mentor will continue to follow the pattern that brought Michigan its first Big Ten baseball title since 1953. Joyce finished with a 5-1 mark in conference play, and needed re- lief in only one of his five starts. That was last Saturday against Illinois when he lost his only Big Ten decision, 4-1. He, won one game in relief against Michigan State. By being paired with Cincinatti in the first game, Michigan will avoid meeting either of the teams that have accounted for three' of the Wolverines nine lossesonthe season. Beat 'M' Twice Detroit has whipped Michigan twice, 3-2 and 8-7, overcoming a 7-0 lead in the second game. Last Tuesday, Western bested the Wol- verines 7-5 after having an earlier game rained out. For Cincinatti it will be the sec- ond playoff series of the season. Earlier, the Bearcats shut out Tulsa twice for the Missouri Val- ley conference championship. In the first game, which took only one hourand 39 minutes to play, Carl. Bouldin pitched a four-hitter to give the Bearcats a 1-0 victory. Whiffs 12 In the seven inning second game, Faul struck out 12 and pitched an, other four-hitter as Cincinatti won 2-0. Detroit goes into the playoffs with the best seasonal record of any team. The Titans have won 18 games this year while dropping only one. Michigan will be spurred by the, return to action of catcher Bill Freehan. Freehan sat out the last five innings of the Western Michi- gan game after being spiked on the left arm, a wound that almost brought tears to the eyes of the 20 some-odd'major league scouts bidding for his services. -Daily-David Giltrow A CLOUD OF DUST-The NCAA Championship hopes of three teams will go up in a cloud of dust this week as Michigan, West- ern Michigan, Detroit; and Cincinnati square off for a double elimination playoff series beginning Monday at Ferry Field. The Wolverine player shown is shortstop Dick Honig. SPORT SHORTS: Boston Breaks Record; Villanova Takes IC4A DAYTON, O. (P)-A University of Dayton freshman ball player, named as an "intermediary" in the college basketball scandals, said yesterday he positively did not take $250 from a man accused of fixing games, but admitted he did take smaller amounts. The player, Roger Brown of Brooklyn, N.Y., made the com- ments in an exclusive interview with Si Burick, sports editor of the Dayton Daily News. Earlier, the university announc- ed that it was not taking any ac- tion against Brown because it lacked official notification from the New York district attorney's office as to his part in the scan- daih. The university said Brown will continue in "good standing among his fellow students." Brown was one of 12 players named Wednesday when the New York grand jury returned an in- dictment against Joseph Hacken of New York, involving him in fixing basketball games. None of the 12 players was indicted, how- ever. Brown, who has not played var- sity ball for the Flyers but would be eligible next season, was named in the indictment as an "inter- mediary." He was said to have accepted $250 for his "good of- fices." Yesterday, in the interview with Burick, he denied being involved in any basketball fixes.. "I never took any money for an introduction or to ask any- body to do anything wrong on the basketball floor," he said. That was his reply to a ques- tion on whether any funds, aside from eating and gasoline money, were ever given to him. He was asked if he ever took smaller amounts that could add up. to $250, and he answered : "I don't see how. They bought me a meal now and then, and gave me gasoline money and sometimes I took a friend along to eat or maybe I had a date who was in- vited along." He did not identify the "they" who did these things for him. "Once in a while," he went on, "maybe I'd go out to eat and have a date with me. They'd pick up the check and ask if I wanted to see a show, or go somewhere. Then they'd give me a couple of dollars." Did he consider this irregular? Burick asked. "No," Brown said, "that even happened in high school before I ever knew these people. People who were interested in us and happy we won a game would give us a little money to have a good time on." Untouchables Beat Evans BICYCLE STORAGE $1.50 per month " INDOOR STORAGE for Air and Ship Reservations to EUROPE and all points in the U.S. Available any date. Call TRAVEL BUREAU, INC. NO 5-9151 MODESTO, Calif. UIP)-Olympic and World Champion Ralph Bos- ton last night became the first man ever to broad jump past the 27 foot mark. The collegian from Tennessee A&I leaped 27 feet 1/ inch at the California Relays to break his own world record of 26 feet 11% inches. Before Boston set that record last year, the 26 foot 81/ record had stood since Jesse Owens set it back in 1935. Villanova Takes Five NEW YORK (WP)-Powerful Vil- lanova won five events-two of them by Frank Budd-and swept to an easy victory in the IC4A Track and Field Championship yesterday with 46 points. Budd, co-holder of the world 100-yard record (9.3) and prob- ably the finest sprinter ever pro- duced in the east, won the 100 in 9.6 and the 220-yard dash in 21.4. rado State College a 16-12 vic- tory over Wyoming yesterday and send the NCAA District 7 Base- ball Playoffs into a clinching game today. Suydan's grandslam homer came in the bottom of the eighth. The victorious Bears have suf- fered one loss in the double-elim- ination playoffs. Wyoming was unbeaten. Clutch hitting by Bob- SchneiderPR T C ON F O ,TH T and courageous pitching by Don * PROTECT ION FROM THEFT Nast enabled the Untouchables to and DAMAGE defeat. Evans Scholars 1-0 for the a dQ M G independent softball league cham- pionship. " REPAIRING, IF DESIRED In' the last of the eighth inning Bob Schneider singled home Terry Feethum who had gotten on base on an error and had advanced to Truck pick-up $1.00 extra, less in groups second on at bunt. This was Schnei- der's second hit of the game and only the third off the Evans NO 2-0035 pitcher. Always cool under fire, Nast pitched a strong game for the Un- touchables and was aided by four double plays executed by the slick fielding Untouchables. c If Evans Scholars would have cBIKE & TOY won the game they would have captured the overall Independent 514 E. William St. - near Maynard - NO 2-0035 League I-M championship by four points. FEWNER GLASS & PAINT CO. 216 W. William'Street Ann Arbor, Michigan: Telephone NO 8-8014 5 Outstanding 'M' Athletes .eceive Yost H onor Awards By JIM BERGER [wenty-five Micpigan student 7letes were recently recipients the Yost Honor ,Award. [he award, initiated.in 1940, nmemorated Fielding H. Yost's tieth. year of service to the iversity. Since then the award s been given annually. n order to be a recipient, the .dent must be either a junior or dor, who has completed not s than five semesters of under- ,duate work or its equivalent. High Requirements n the words of the original se- tion committee, "those. selected students who were outstand- for their moral character and )d fellowship, scholastic ability, ;ellectual 'capacity and achieve- nt, physical ability and vigor, dwho showed real capacity and )mise of leadership and suc- ' Colorado State Wins Thomas N. Osterland, Thomas A. LARAMIE, Wyo. (A')-Shortstop Robinson, Gerald Smith, William Al Suydan slammed a home run R. Stine, Eugene F. Struczewski, with the bases loaded to give Cobl- and Richard S. Youngberg. The winners for the year 1960- 61 were: Blaker, Joseph B. Bre- feld, James R. Brown, Ronald L. Clark, Donald B. Corriere, Wil- liam T. Darnton, Fitzgerald, Gil landers, Ergas Leps, Joseph E. P- Lunghamer, Lorne D. MacDonald, Martin, Montpetit, Osterland, Rob- G. CUR, inson, Walter E. Schafer, Jon B. U S. 23 Schopf, Smith, Stine, John W. Tidwell, and Youngberg. NOW at LUMBARDS 1225 South University World 's Largest Selection of PAPERBACKS and POCKET BOOKS in a DRUG STORE.. Come in and look 'em over We Have All Kinds of Glass-Mirrors andFurnture Tops We Have the Nationally Advertised Paints AlSO, we have complete glass service for foreign cars Free Parking in Front of Our Store WE HAVE BEEN SERVING THE COMMUNITY FOR 75 YEARS I Last year due to lack of finan- ;al means, there was, no awards anquet. However, this year ath- etes for both 1959-60 and 1960- 1 were honored, with many of hem repeating in 1960-61. The 1959-60 winners were: raines R. Blaker, Jared L. Bush- ing, John A. Everhardus, Joseph ). Fitzgerald, J. David Gillanders, 3avid M. Martin, Jr., Richard Kontpetit, Bernard L. Nielson, COLLEGE MEN EARN $2000 THIS SUMMER! Largest company of its kind has several interesting job opportuni- ties for personable college men in following areas: 1. "DETROIT 2. GRAND RAPIDS 3. SAGI NAWV 4. Michigan resort areas 5. Several summer European assignments No experience necessary but you must be neat appearing and enjoy meeting people. No car necessary. Participaton in our Summer Earn- ing Program will provide weekly paychecks over $100 and also en- title you to compete for the fol- lowing awards: 1. $2000 cash scholarship to school of your choice.' 2. Several $1000 cash schol- arships. 3. To win one of several AROUND THE WORLD S If you have Used Books EtoSell-Read This! As the Semester end approaches - bringingwith it a period of heavy book selling by students - ULRICH'S would like to review with you their BOOK BUY-BACK POLICY. Used books fail into several categories, each of which - because of the law of supply and demand - has its own price tag. Let's explore these various categories for your guidance. CLASS 1. A textbook of current copyrights-used on our campus-and which the Teaching Department involved has approved for re-use next semester--has the highest market value. If ULRICH'S needs copies of this book we will offer 50% of the list price for copies in good physical condition. When we have sufficient stock of a title for the coming semester, ULRICH'S will offer a "WHOLESALE PRICE" which will be explained later in this article. (THIS IS ONE REASON FOR SELLING ALL YOUR USED BOOKS AT ONCE.) CLASS II. Some of the above Class I books will be offered which have torn bindings, loose pages or other physical de- fects. These will be priced down according to the estimated cost of repair. i, r t, - !You're needed.'just as your father and grand' (father were. It's an obligation that a lot of qualified college men have to meet...that of serving your counj try, when and where you are needed. And the Air Force needs college-trained men as officers. This is caused by the rapidly expanding tech.J nology that goes with hypersonic air and space flight. Your four years of college have equipped you to han. dIe complex jobs. Youhave the potential to profit from advanced training... then put it to work. There are several ways to become an officer. First there is Air Force ROTC. Another program; ,relatively .new, is Officer Training School. Here the Air Force commissions certain college graduates, both men and women, after three months' training. The navigator' training program enables you to win a' flying rating and a commission. And, of course, there's [the Air Force Academy. An Air Force officer's starting salary averages out to about what you could expect as a civilian. First there's your base pay. Then add on such things as tax-free rations and quarters allowances, free medical, and dental care, retirement provision, perhaps flight] pay, and 30 days' vacation per year. It comes to an attractive figure. One thing more. As an officer, you will become eligible for the Air Force Institute of Technology. While on active duty many officers will win graduate degrees at Air Force expense. Why not contact your local Air Force Recruiter: Or write to Officer Career Information, Dept.: SC15, Box 7608, Washington 4, D.C., if you want further information about the navigator training or Officer Training School programs., CLASS 111. i Each semester various professors decide to change texts for a given course. These decisions on change of textbooks are made in echelons of THINKING AND AUTHORITY far above the level of your local book retailers,. AND ULRICH'S HAS NO PART IN THE DECISION. (QUITE OFTEN WE HAVE MANY COPIES OF THE OLD TITLE OF WHICH YOU HAVE ONLY ONE.) However, ULRICH'S DO enter the picture with our WHOLESALE connections. Somewhere there may be a professor who will adopt a cast-off book from Michigan. WHOLESALE BOOK JOBBERS take a gamble on this and offer to buy our over-stock and yours. If the dropped title is a current edition, and from a well known publisher, the Jobber offer to us is usually, 25% of list. AS A SERVICE TO YOU, ULRICH'S WILL BUY THESE DROPPED TITLES FOR WHAT THE JOBBER OFFERS. CLASS IV. Authors and publishers frequently bring out new editions. When we "get caught" with an old edition, let's accept the fact that it has no value on the wholesale market, and put it on the shelf as a reference book or sell it cheap for a bargain reference book,