THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 1958 TE M RiCHiAN DAILY *?1m 4..r Bruce Bennett Boros Happy at Birmingham; Eyes Fall Return to Detroit ,~r. frY ~ . }v.. " f'' . ;r" ,r'Y ~ CTfYAr" .~": ,!?f ',rri St. Louis Takes Lead in Playoffs ST. LOUIS (MP)-A 34-point third quarter made the difference here Bob Pettit, former NBA scoring last night for the St. Louis Hawks champion, was high scorer with as they took the third game 111- 32 points, 18 of them in that big 108 over the Boston Celtics in the third quarter. National Basketball Assn's. best of During that period the Hawks seven championship series. moved from a 49-49 halftime tie The Hawks lead 2-1 in the series, to an 83-75 lead. Of T iiic 7nA ,- ac -. m rr ...- Michigan's baseball team takes off from Willow Run tonight for Florida for ten days of spring training and when coach Ray Fisher herds his team onto an airplane for the first time in history, he'll be minus one worry he'd probably be glad to live with for the next couple of months. Steve Boros, captain-elect of this year's team, won't be aboard this time, so Ray won't lose any of his already sparse gray hairs fretting over whether the slugging infielder will make the plane. Steve was a notoriously late arriver for trips the last two years and if it hadn't been for the easy-going Fisher and the graciousness of his teammates, he might have been left at home more than once. Gains Major League Experierce .. . As most everyone knows by now, the reason Boros won't be in Michigan's infield this spring is that he forfeited his final year of college eligibility to sign a bonus contract with the Detroit Tigers last June. He appeared in 24 games for the Tigers last summer and hit a slim .146. Over the winter, the bonus rule, which shackles players receiving more than $4,000 for signing to the big league team for two years, was repealed and made retroactive. After subbing for the injured Frank Bolling at second base in several exhibition games this spring, Steve, who played ball all winter in Mexico, was assigned to the Birm- ingham Barons of the Class AA Southern Association for season- ing. Is Boros unhappy at the pro- ' spects of going to the minor leagues? Does he have any regrets about having grabbed the Tigers' bonus offer and passing up his final year of ball in college? Noty Steve Boros.v From reading the letter I re- ceived from the Flint athlete thisĀ£ week, I got the impression that he's tickled to be given the op- portunity to play every day at > Birmingham rather than ride the Detroit bench and that if he hadu it to do over again, he'd follow the same course he took last summer. He's looking forward to a fine, season at Birmingham and pos- sibly a September return to Briggsf Stadium. "I think minor league experiencef is definitely the best preparation ? for the majors," Steve says. "The||| biggest reason is that the minor league clubs play at least 140 STEVE BOROS games a year. This is the big ad- ... the Birmingham Baron vantage. It's not the coaching, because some of the most qualified men in baseball are in college coaching jobs." Steve went on to explain his reasons for turning professional last summer, saying that the extra year in school would mean that he'd be a year older when he started his professional career, that he'd possibly be inducted into the army immediately upon graduation, and that he might never have gotten a decent start on a career in the majors. Boros hopes to finish up his remaining two semesters of school during the off season, paying for it "with my substantial baseball salary and not requiring help from my parents." He still has the army ahead of him, but by the time he's inducted, he'll have some solid professional experience under his belt. Sees College Ball 'Boom' .., He expressed a keen interest in the possibility that -someday the colleges may play a summer-long schedule, pointing out that such an arrangement would keep many good ball players in college where they would be getting an education as well as good baseball experience. Steve hasn't been the oily college ball player to pass up remaining eligibility for professional careers. In fact, so many college players have signed contracts that college officials are crying loudly for legisla- tion that will restrict the pros from coming in and signing up college stars. Boros is emphatically against any such measure, saying, "This kind of set up would deny the college ball player the freedom to decide his own future." Boros makes some good sense with these comments. College base- ball officials are sometimes overly selfish in wanting to keep a player in school four years. Naturally, they have his education in mind. But after all, college really boils down to preparing young men and women for their future careers and if a boy seeks a career in baseball, there shouldn't be a rule restricting him from advancing it while he attends college. Freshman Wrestlers Outstanding By AL SINAI This year, for the first time in a long while, Michigan wrestling coach Cliff Keen was blessed with several outstanding and ex- perienced freshmen wrestlers who were former state high school champions. "I can't remember when we had so many boys who were state champions," said Keen. "If they develop, our prospects look ex- ceedingly good for next season." The men Keen refers to are 123-lb. Gordon Swix, 130-1b. Am- brose Wilbanks, heavyweight Guy Curtis, 160-lb. Don Courrierre, 157-1b. Dick Fronczak, 177-lb. Carl Fink, and 147-1b. Jim Blaker. All Champions Swix, W i l b a n k s, Fink and Fronczak were all Michigan state titlists. Swix is a little fellow who weighs only 115 lbs., but he is ex- pected to gain enough weight to reach 123 lbs. Fink saw action in the Michi- gan AAU meet in "Detroit two weeks ago and tied for second in the 174-lb. division, while the oth- er Michigan state champion, Fronczak, has seen little action thus far. From Pottstown The 160-lb. Courrierre hails from Hill High School in Potts- town, Pa. This is the same school that Conference Champion Max Pearson attended. Courrierre also wrestled in the AAU meet, win- ning the 160-lb. title. Finishing second in the 147-1b. class in the AAU meet was Bla- ker, an Illinois state champion, while heavyweight Curtis is an Indiana state champ. "What excites me most," said Keen, "is that we have several other boys besides these state champions who are outstanding." Two of these men, 147-1b. Wil- fred Hildebrand and 177-lb. Den- nis Fitzgerald won first, place in their respective divisions at the recent AAU meet. Born in Germany Hildebrand was born in Ger- many, came to Toledo, Ohio, when he was in the eighth grade. He be- came interested in wrestling there, finishing second in a state high school tournament. Fitzgerald's only grappling ex- perience came from the Marines, before his recent discharge. Coach Keen has high hopes for both these boys. Other wrestlers singled out by Keen as good prospects are 137- lb. Jay Young, and 123-1b. Bart Cruze. r U I Great buyl the trim-fitting ARROW Glen It's the shirt with the stand- out choice in collars - the regular, button-down, or per- manent stay Arrow Glen. Exclusive MitogaO tailoring carries through the trim, tap- ered look from collar to waist to cuff. "Sanforized" broad- cloth or oxford in stripes, checks, solids. $4.00 up. Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc. ARROW-. -first in fashion I a Look your best... the ARROW way : 4*; '