SUNDAY, APRIL 9,,1967 THE MICHIGAN- 11~iiW SUND Y, PRI 9,1 6..?I -. Ta = '., aa - ,%IN L. la, K PAGE SEVEN 4 Thinclads Set VP!' Nine Orbits Titans Twice Meet1 By PHIL BROWN Special To The Daily LEXINGTON, Ky.-- Michigan's thinclads copped two firsts, a sec- ond, two thirds and two fourths in yesterday's windup of the Ken- tucky Relays. Wolverines accounted for two of the 12 field records set. No team standings are recorded in the meet. A world record performance by Western Michigan's shuttle hurdle relay team highlighted the day's competition. WMU's clocking of 0:56.7 erased both 'the American and world marks, previously 0:57.4 and 0:57.2 respectively. Tennessee's second place time of 0:56.9 also surpassed the exist- ing standards. Escalation Michigan's sophomore G a r y Knickerbocker cleared 6'8" in the high jump to better the old record by an inch. Illinois' Jim Borton reached the same height but fin- ished in second place, having more misses. Jack Harvey won the shot put competition with a heave of 5T7", but failed to better his own mark of 58'6'/" set during Friday's preliminaries. Ernst Soudek, of the Ann Arbor Track Club, outdistanced his rivals in the discus final with a record toss of 181'1", It was the fourth time in as many years that Sou- dek won the meet title in this event. Michiga~n's two-mile relay team, composed of Tom Kearney, John Reynolds, Alex MacDonald and Ron Kutschinski, finished a very close second behind Tennessee in one of yesterday's finest races. Both Tennessee's 7:27.7 clocking and Michigan's 7:28.5 broke the: mark of 7:32.6 set by Ohio Uni- versity in 1965. Third in Mile Bob Gerometta replaced Reyn- olds for the, Wolverines' third- place effort in the mile relay, while Tennessee won. the event with a time of 3:12.5. Southern Illinois' 3:13.6 clocking gave the Salukis second place. Kentucky State junior Clarence Ray, who ran a blistering 0:09.2 on Friday, won the 100-yard dash final with a time of 0:09.7. He was not disappointed with the time however, and remarked that "I was running to win today. I didn't expect to go as fast as yesterday." When asked about his goal for the season, he commented, "I want to run against the big guys." His only previous competition against well-known sprinters was at the NCAA Indoor Meet at De- troit, when he failed to make the finals. Tennessee's Richmond Flowers also failed to improve on his time of 0:13.5 set during Friday's 120- yard semi-finals in the high hurdles. A head wing held him to a time of 0:14.0 in yesterday's Frosh Excel In Gym eet Special To The Daily EAST LANSING - Michigan's freshmen gymnasts performing in the shadow of the varsity's sec- ond place finish in the NCAA championships, grabbed the spot- light yesterday with an over- whelming victory in the Michigan Gymnastics Association Meet. Michigan, with six firsts in seven events, topped runner-up Central Michigan 140 to 75. Michigan State's frosh followed in third with 54 points. Wolverine winners were: Parallel bars-Ron Rapper, 9.2: high bar-Sid Jensen, 8.95; rings - Jensen, 9.0; vaulting - Gary Balcombe, 9.25; trampoline-Don Portman, 8.95; all-around - Jen- sen, 51.05. 4ecords finals, but that was still good enuogh to give him a comfortable margin (0.4 second) over Bob White of Indiana. Wolverine Nel- son Graham skimmed the sticks in 14.7 seconds to grab fourth place in the event. Assistant coach Dave Martin, comented that he was "pleased"V with his team's performance in the first outdoor meet of the season. Matson Misses World Records COLLEGE STATION, Tex. UP)- Randy Matson, Texas' A&M's world-record shot putter, had his greatest double yesterday when he threw the shot 70'51/2" and the discus 213'9", both hovering on world records. Competing in a triangular meet with Texas Christian and Baylor, Matson threw the shot better than 70' three times. His best throw was 1%" under his world record of 70'7%/" and marked the' fifth time he has exceeded 70'. His discus heave lacked only 2%" of the world record of 213'- 11%" held by Ludvik Donek of Czechoslovakia. PLAYOFF ACTION: By JOEL BLOCK Michigan coach Moby Benedict had a hard time picking the stars of yesterday's 11-0 and 3-1 tri- umphs over Detroit. "Third baseman Glenn Redmon was outstanding," said Benedict in the locker room after the 5%2- hour twin bill. Redmon was five for seven for the day, collecting three doubles, knocking in two runs, and scoring five runs him- self. In addition, Redmon started two rally-killing double plays from his hot corner spot and took another sure double from Titan first baseman Ty Havard President Johnson may avoid taking sides in baseball's in- vasion of the North Monday when the Washington Senators host the New York Yankees at 1:30. Official sources indicate that trouble - shooter Hubert Humphrey will throw out the first pitch. in the second game when he made a diving stab of line drive over third base. Adding Flavor "But Keith Spicer also had a good day and both Les Tanona and Rick Sygar picked up four hits each," added Benedict. IIndeed, clean-up man Spicer did have a good day. The center fielder totaled six hits and four RBI's in eight at bats. But Benedict wasn't through with giving out plaudits. "Our over-all pitching was only fair, but you can't forget the shut-out by Lyijynen and Guidi." Jim Lyijynen, a senior left-hander, hurled the first five frames and yielded only two walks and a broken bat single. Junior Larry Guidi mopped up the rest of the way, getting touched only for a single in the sixth and a walk in the eighth. "All the fellows kicked out pretty good," Benedict summed up. But it was the Detroit infield which was kicking itself after the first inning of the first game. Free Pass After Redmon walked to open the game, Sygar sliced a single to right to send him to second. Then the rain-drenched infield grass took over. Tanona, Spicer and catcher Doug Nelson topped slow rollers past the out-stretched glove of pitcher Larry Saloi and by the time the mist had cleared Mich- igan had rolled up a four-run bulge. For the next eight innings Michigan improved its batting averages, notching 14 safeties. Repeat Performance The second game opened sim- ilarly with Redmon, Sygar, Ta- nona, and Spicer sending four straight shots through the infield to bring in two runs. Detroit's lone run of the day far to his left for a routine came on a hit batsman and an grounder and the ball slipped un- error by Sygar. With two out in der his mit. But the unearned run the top of the third and runners was Detroit's only consolation for on first and second, Sygar went their very disappointing day. The Line Scares FIRST GAME Detroit 000 000 000- 0 2 4 MICHIGAN 410,004 2x-1 14 0 Salci (L, 0-1), Randy and Yeo- mans, Moran; Lyijynen (W, 1-2), Guidi, and Nelson. SECOND GAME Detroit 010 000 0-1 5 0 MICHIGAN 201 000 x-3 9 2 McKelvey (L, 0-1) and Yeomans; Kerr, Kenkiewicz (W, 2-0) and Kraft. SIPP, SHARPE STAR: BluesPost 'White'-Wash .. I' ALEX MacDONALD Led by the powerful running of backs Warren Sipp and Ernie Sharpe, Michigan's "Blue" foot- ball squad walloped the "Whites" Ferry Field. Sipp, a fullback, and Sharpe, a yesterday 35-0 in a scrimmage at halfback, each scored two touch- downs in the rout. A 32-yard pass from quarterback Dick Vidmer to end Jim Berline accounted for the other tally. Sophomore place-kicker Mike Hankwitz converted on all five extra points. Hankwitz will be likely successor to Rick Sygar, who holds the Big Ten mark for con- secutive conversations from place- ment. Over and In The first touchdown was scored by Sipp on a one-yard plunge early in the contest. Later, the big fullback set up the Berline touchdown pass with a 40-yard run. Sharpe's first score was on a 20- yard gallop and came after a key Vidmer-to-Sipp pass of 20 yards. He added his second six-pointer from 10 yards out following an- other 20-yard Vidmer pass, this one to Berline. The final scoring drive covered 70 yards in six plays, with Sipp going the last five for his second TD of the afternoon. BEFORE YOU BUY See the JOHN ROBERTS College Ring ULRICH Sr Your Friendly Bookstore Canadiens Roll By The Associated Press MONTREAL - Third - period goals by tough John Ferguson and elusive Ralph Backstrom carried Montreal's torrid Canadiens to a 3-1 victory over the New York Rangers yesterday with a 2-0 lead in the National Hockey League semifinal playoff series. Ferguson, the NHL's penalty king cracked a 1-1 tie with a power-play goal at 7:46 of the final period and Backstrom, who had scored twice in Montreal's 6-4 first-game victory Thursday night, added an insurance tally with 6% minutes to play. The Canadiens, who now have an unbeaten string of 13 games Hogan Slams Record 66. In Masters AUGUSTA Ga. (W)-Bert Yan- cey, Julius Boros and Bobby Nich- ols wound up in a tie at 211 in an exciting see-saw battle for first place but an astounding 66 by the immortal Ben Hogan, a ghost from out of the past, provided the high drama yesterday in the third round of the Masters Golf Tour- nament. The 54-year-old Hogan, wincing from the pain of an'ailing shoulder and trudging along haltingly on legs shattered by anear-fatal automobile accident, reeled off six birdies in the space of nine holes in an astounding finish for a 54- hole score of 213. He tied two Masters records and broke another with this brilliant late surge. His 213 placed him in a tie with Gay Bremer who blew the title by thr: 3 putting the final hole a year ago. Brewer, one of the hot- test articles on the spring tour, had a par 72. String bean George Archer, with an eagle at the 13th,- followed at 214, shooting a par 72 and 22- year-old Tony Jacklin, the high school dropout from England, bogeyed the final hole to tie Lionel Hebert at 215. Jacklin shot 74, Hebert 67. beginning in the final weeks of the regular season, resume their drive for a third straight Stanley 'up title at New York Tuesday night. Hawks Rumble ST. LOUIS - The surging St. Louis Hawks, using a balanced attack, handed the San Francisco Warriors their second straight setback 109-104 last night to dead- lock the National Basketball As- sociation Western Division final playoffs at two gamhes each. Sal Francisco's high scoring Rick Barry, who injured his left ankle in, the second quarter and was used sparingly thereafter, had only 10 points. Joe Caldwell of St. Louis, who injured his back slightly in a hard fall near the end of the game, paced St. Louis with 24 points. Big Zelmo Beaty added 19 for the Hawks, including 10 crucial points in the last period. Jeff Mullins, a one-time Hawk, had his season's high, 40 points, to lead the Warrior attack. Mullins had 25 at the half. The fifth game of the best-of- seven series will be played in San Francisco Monday night. In the Eastern Division, the Philadelphia 76'ers seek to end Boston's long championship reign in decisive fashion with a sweep over the Celtics today in the fourth game of their NBA playoff finals. Scares COLLEGE BASEBALL Minnesota 7-5, Concordia Lutheran (lowi) 2-1 Illinois (Chicago) 5-1, Northwestern 2-3 Iowa at Western Illinois (2, cancelled) Ball State 6-1, Michigan State 4-3 Wisconsin 17-12, North Central Illinois 2-0 Southern California 3, Arizona 0 Ohio State 8-0, Cincinnati 4-2 Indiana 7, Northern Illinois 3 ALL-STAR BASKETBALL North 113, South 110 EXHIBITION BASEBALL Houston 2, New York (A) 0 Atlanta 4, Minnesota 0 Cleveland 8, Cinci nati 5 Washington 7, St. Louis 4 Boston 6, Detroit 2 New York (N) 4, Baltimore 0 Chicago (N) 8, Chicago (A) 5 Pittsburgh 6, Philadelphia 3 Los Angeles 4, Kansas City 2 California 6, San Francisco 3 (16 inn) v APRIL.9. 7 P.M See the TV Documentary A TIME* FOR BUR NING an actual attempt at black-white communication which failed- "The most accomplished and sensitive hour of television this season." -N.Y. 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RACKHAM LECTURE HALL on a good thing. i'll miss out d textbooks to use, frankly it needs your uy books that semester. The to make on A- t,- more books we get, the less we havet