TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE. THIRTEEN TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THIRTEEN . nrr u i rr 0 I. Third Round Blues Down Golf Title Bid I I By CHARLIE TOWLE Sports Editor Leading by two strokes after the first day of play Michigan linksters fell 35 strokes off their first round scores and placed third at the Big Ten golf champion- ships, 741-776-1517. Consistent Purdue with a first day score of 743 and a second day score 744 for a total of 1487 claimed the championship by 18 strokes over second place Indiana, 1505, in the meet held last May 22nd and 23rd on the University of Minnesota's home course. Newton Misses Michigan also watched a chance for individual honors go down the drain when Bill Newton who had carded a tremendous one-under par-70 matched with a two-under- par 69 the first day for a six stroke lead over the field stumbled badly in his second day of play. Newton fired rounds of 79 and 78 and finished in a tie for third with Terry Winter of Purdue at 296. Medalist honors went to In- diana's Byron Comstock who card- ed a 290 for his four rounds of 294 on his home course. Each team was allowed to enter six men with the best five scores counting towards the final stand- ings. Following sophomore Newton's 294 was junior Pete Passink's 298 on rounds of 72, 75, 73, and 78 for a sixth place finish in the individual standings. Junior Frosty Evashevski shot 77-72-77-77-303, Captain Gary Mouw hit rounds of 78-76-79-75-308, sophomore LYRIC *R~ICES FROM $125 TO- $1500 Sc~/anderer & sOW 208 S. MAIN ST. -- - - I -- - m i BILL NEWTON BYRON COMSTOCK r Chuck West was eight strokes farther back with 84-72-81-79- 316, and finally senior Tom Clark, whose score did not count, had a 80-81-81-86-328. Hot Putter Newton had 14 one putt greens in his one day bid for top honors. , Michigan's third place finish was an improvement of one over last year's fourth place. Defending champion Minnesota, meanwhile, fell to fourth. The new champion, Purdue, placed five of its six golfers among the top fifteen competitors. It was the eighth Big Ten golf crown for the Boilermakers since 1950. King for a Day 880-YD. RUN-1. Kelly (M); 2. Martens (MSU); 3. Casto (M); 4. Thronson (Minn); 5. Fulcher (M- - SU). Time-1:51.3. 220-YD. DASH-1. Jackson (III); 2. Blanheim (I11); 3. Yavorski (Ill); 4. Washington (Pur); 5. Goldston (1a). Time-:21.3. 330-YD. INTERMEDIATE HUR- DLES-i. Smith (OSU); 2. Beatty (W); 3. Azikiwe (MSU); 4. Craig (Ind); 5. A. Johnson (NU). Time -:37.3. TWO MILE-i. Murray (M); 2. Pe- terson (Minn); 3. Tuilberg (W); 4. Zemper (MSU); 5. Carius (Ill). Time -9:15.9. POLE VAULT-i. Bergemann (WV); 2. Albrecht (NU); 3. Netzling (OSU); 4. Chaffee (Ind); 5. Seiber- lich (W). Height-14'8". HIGH JUMP-i. Miller (Ind); 2. Densham (M); 3. Amnmerman (M); 4. Holden (W); 5. McKoy (MSU). Height-6'7"1. SHOT PUT-I. Schmitt (M); 2. Hendrickson (W); 3. Yearby (M); 4. Barnes (Minn); 5. Cavotta (OSU). Distance--53'iilA4". MILE RELAY - MICHIGAN (Ro- main, Hughes, Wade, Bernard); 2. Wisconsin; 3. Iowa; 4. Indiana; 5. Northwestern. Time-3:10.2 (breaks Big Ten record of 3:11.2 set by Iowa in 1963). TEAM STANDINGS-Wisconsin 64; MICHIGAN 52; Illinois 33; Michigan State 22; Northwestern 16; Iowa 12; Indiana 11; Minnesota and Ohio State 9; Purdue 2. NetmeEn By TOM ROWLAND Fate, like the tennis ball, some- times takes funny bounces. Northwestern, the team that without a doubt was supposed to reign supreme at the Champaign, Ill. courts in last May's conference tennis tourney, never got its ten- nis machine off the ground and struggled to a third-place finish. Michigan roared through the the opening day's action without a single taste of defeat to lead the pack at the onset, then ran into a brick wall of defeat in the final day. Indiana then picked up the tempo where the Wolverines left off and crowned three singles champions and two doubles to clinch the Big Ten crown. The Hoosiers finished with a booming 69 points, far out- distancing the once-menacing Wolverines, who had 48. North- western came up with a 42-point effort and Michigan State ended up in fourth 25 points. Flood Alone While the Wolverines had four singlists and a doubles team in the final action, only third man Brian Flood managed to capture an individual trophy. Meanwhile Northwestern's Marty Ri e ssen made some Big Ten history by winning his third straight singles and doubles championship. Riessen took the number one singles crown by defeating In- diana's Dave Power, 6-1, 7-5 and then teamed with second man Clark Graebner to cop the first doubles from Power and Rod Mc- Nerney, 6-4, 6-2. Michigan's first singles hope senior Harry Fauquier was knock- ed off by Riessen in the semifinals, 6-3, 6-0. The Wolverine headman made the semi bracket after downing Indiana's Dave Straus, 6-4, 6-1, and then going three sets with MSU's Tom Jamieson, 0-6, 6-2, 6-1. Graebner, Too Graebner won the second singles for Northwestern by outsing Wol- verine sophomore Karl Hedrick in the finals, 6-3, 6-3. Hedrick pair- ed up with John Fraser in the Wolverines' first doubles duo, and it was only after a tough 7-5, 8-6 semi final duel with Indiana's Power-McNerney team that the Wolverines were knocked out of the running. During the regular season play the Hoosiers also beat Fraser and Hedrick-that time 8-6, 7-5. Flood swept to the third singles title after a stunning 6-3, 6-3 up- set of Northwestern's top-seeded Bill Rice in the second round of the opening day. It was the same Wildcat who beat Flood out of the fourth singles crown back in 1963. The new Wolverine champ had to go three with Indiana's Charlie Kane in the finals to win it, 6-4, 6-8, 6-2. On the road to the win- ners' circle, Flood downed OSU's John Thomas 6-3, 6-1, and Dwight Shelton of Michigan State, 6-3, 6-2. In Doubles FIVE FIRST PLACES: High Finishes Give 'M' Sports Trophy .. .w-..- -... Jim Binkley and Charles Fichter, 6-4, 6-8, 9-7, after a pair of early wins. Hal Lowe, Coach Bill Murphy's fourth man, beat Illinois' Tom McCullum in the opening round, 4-6, 6-0, 6-3, then fell to Hoosier Alan Graham, 10-8, 6-2. Perhaps the biggest single blow to the Wolverines' tennis title hopes was Lowe and Fauquier's loss of their second doubles crown to MSU's O'Donnell-Shelton pair in the semi-finals, 7-5, 6-2. In the 1963 tourney, the Lowe- Fauquier second doubles win was the only team individual medal. Soph Pair A pair of Michigan sophomores in the fifth and sixth singles slots made it all the way to the finals, but both Bill Dixon and Jim Swift fell in the final action. Dixon beat Tom Benson of Iowa in the opening round, 6-2, 6-2, and followed with a 6-3, 7-5 decision over Wally Eisman of Wisconsin in the semi's. On the final day the Wolverine newcomer was' bounced by Binkley in three, 6-3, 3-6, 6-2. Swift was defeated by Fichter in the finals, 5-7, 6-2, 6-1. He beat MSU's Dave Click, 8-6, 6-3 and Jerry Krause of Minnesota, 6-2, 10-8, in the earlier rounds. The strong second-place finish for the Wolverines capped off a season that saw the netmen pile up an 8-2 record following the Southern tour. The late spring weather forced Murphy's crew to the indoors and confined practice there until the season competition was under way. Beaten twice by powerful Miami and then smash- ing Princeton, 7-2, the Wolverines returned to the home habitat and promptly whipped Wisconsin, 7-2. Only Two The only two season losses came at the hands of Northwestern and Indiana as the Wolverines gained victories in six other meets by 9-0 scores. With most of its personnel back from its championship team of a year ago, everyone had North- western pegged for the top team in the conference, and the race was on for second place. Michi- gan, Michigan State, and Indiana all had eyes on the spot. Grab Second By CHARLIE TOWLE Sports Editor With three second places and a third place in the spring sports competition Michigan rapped up its fourth consecutive Big Ten all-sports crown. The seconds in track, tennis and baseball and the third in golf gave Michigan 35 points based on a system of ten points for a first, nine points for a second, etc. The Wolverine teams ended up with 98% points. Runnerup was Michigan State with 88/2 points. Using the more refined quality points system which divides the total number of points each school earns by the number of sports they compete in gives Michigan an even more impressive looking margin. Michigan had 8.95 quality points to second place Michigan State's 6.81. Last year Michigan's margin of victory for the all-sports cham- Impressi BIG TEN ALL-SPC (Fall, Winter, S SCHOOL to to x 00 pionship was only 7.54 to second place Wisconsin's 6.88. Besides the spring sports Michi- gan got its other points for first place finishes in gymnastics, hockey, indoor track and wrest- ling, a tie for first in basketball, a second place finish in swimming and a fifth place finish in football. Michigan competed in eleven of the thirteen recognized Big Ten sports the only two they did not compete in were fencing and cross country. The only school which competed in all thirteen sports was Michigan State. The Spartans were the last team to take away the mythical trophy from Michigan turning the trick back in 1959-60. The order of finish in the Big Ten, going by the quality points system, was Michigan and Michi- gan State followed in order by Wisconsin, Minnesota, Indiana, Ohio State, Illinois, Purdue, North- western and finally Iowa. f' ve Record )RTS STANDINGS spring, 1963-64) IL I - ii e t o In third doubles George Russell fell Flood and to Indiana's WEEJUNS* ยง{ by FORMEN.. and WOMEN FOR MEN 1595 FOR WOMEN Pn"50 Prepare now for "Back-to- MICH. 5 X 92X 10 10 9 10 10 9 8 9 9 98/S.95 MSU 8% 10 6% 81/ 88 86 8 1 6 4 7 7 88% 48 Wise. 5 9 1 5 7 X 5 9 5 6 6 6 10 74 6.16 Minn. 2 8 8 X 5 9 7 6 4 10 7 3 2Y271% 3.96 Ohio St. 8% 5 9 7 3 X 8 4 2 8 5 5 2% 67% 5.63 Illinois 10 6 41 10 6 X 1 5 6 1 2 4 8 63% 5.29 Purdue 7 X 612X X X 2 7 8 6 10 1 1 4344.83, N'wtrn. 6 324% X X X 4 2 72 2 3 8 6 45Y24.5 Iowa 3 3N C 2 82 9 X 3 1 9 32 1 2 5 50Y24.24 X-Did Not Compete **Quality points are obtained by dividing the number of points accumulated on the basis of 10 for a first, 9 for a second, etc., by the number of sports in which each school entered a team. Key to abbreviations of sports: FB-football; CC-cross country; TR-I-indoor track; FEN-fencing; GYM-gymnastics; SW-swimming; WR-wrestling; HOC-hockey; BB-basketball; TR-O-outdoor track; GO-golft; TEN-- tennis; BASE-baseball. r ii IF -11 i 1j U N I' 'U t y I, - i - KODAK t1fi&tli Cameras Bright new day in the pleasure of picture-taking! With a Kodak-Instamatic camera, you load instantly, auto- matically, so it's easier than ever to take good pictures. No threading, no fumbling-Kodapak film cartridges drop right in! There are four camera models-all with built-in flash units- and they all take color slides, color snaps. and black-and- - IULVI&aE IE = -I I UK It', i I