sl THE MICHIGAN UATT.v asas au i UTa!E pAi1 T L ( 1LI SUNDAY, APRIL 22,1962 M r W*lr-irA-*,L *wik - -w-rev I tIO RELAYS: Denhart Wmins Vault at 14 8.5"; Leps Sparks Relay Victories 'M' Downs Purdi - By DAVE GOOD Special To The Daily COLUMBUS-Stubby Rod Den-' hart nearly came up with the first 15' pole vault in Michigan history at the Ohio Relays here yeserday, taking three good cracks at the magic height before setling for the winning mark of 14181/21. Then Ergas Leps anchored the Wolverines to successful defenses of their sprint medley and two- mile relay titles. Feud Renewed From another point of view, however, it may have been a ,ru- cial meet in signaling a renewal of the track coaches' long-standing feud with the AAU, because it was the first open meet held in this part of the country which has not sought the AAU's sanction, an openly defiant move. An odd combination of events which subsequently developed gave the meet a melodramatic flavor, at leastas far as Michigan was concerned. 1) Ex-Michigan Olympic sprin- ter Tom Robinson, coming out of the 100-yd. dash preliminaries with the fastest qualifying time (:09.5), was advised by the starter lining 'the runners up for the finals that he had taken too long adjusting his starting blocks and would have to run the race in his sweat clothes. Robinson Withdraws, Robinson declined this gracious invitation and withdrew from the race, subsequently won by Purdue sophomore Nate Adams in a wind- aided :09.3. 2) All the favorites in the 120- yd. high hurdles were eliminated from the finals when ex-Indiana star Willie May and Michigan State's Herman Johnson couldn't make the meet; defending cham-' pion Bill Washington, from Cen- tral State, was disqualified for two false starts in his heat; and Michigan's Bennie McRae, who had the fastest qualifying time (:14.5) scratched from the finals. Raimey Pulls Muscle 3) Football halfback Dave Raim- ey, leading the qualifying round of the broad jump at 23'91/2", pulled a leg muscle running on the 440-yd. relay, didn't compete in the broad jump finals at all, but wound up second anyway be- hind the 24'61/2" leap of Ohio State halfback Paul Warfield. 4) Sophomore Chris Murray got a helping hand toward a. third- place finish in the 3000-meter steeplechase when Michigan State's Clayton Ward, who was just about to pass Murray with, 150 yds. to go, tried to vault the water bar- rier but -instead went tumbling ignominiously head-over-heels in- to three feet of water. Needless to say, he made the biggest hit of the meet.; Besides Denhart's win in the pole vault, teammate Steve Over- ton finished second with a vault of 14'4". Michigan placed high in all the other field events except the hop-step-and-jump. Steve Wil- liams finished in a five-way tie for third in the high jump at 6'41/2", Ernie Soudek placed third in the discus with a toss of 150'- 10", and Roger Schmitt hit 52'61/2" for third in the shot put. Cephas Second Besides this, Jim Neahusan and Murray came in fourth and sixth, respectively, in the mile run, and ex-Wolverine Dick Cephas took second in the 400-meter hurdles. In the distance medley, Carter Reese ran a strong 440 leadoff leg, but Jay Sampson and Dave Hayes couldn't match Penn State's Howie Deardorff and Steve Moore- head on the second and third legs. It was lett to Leps to pick up 20 yds. on Gerry Norman, winner of the three-mile by over 100 yds. Leps closed up the entire margin on the second lap and jumped Norman in the last 50 yds. to win. Sampson, Ted Kelly, Charlie Aquino and Leps won by some 50 yds. in the two-mile when Kelly turned a two-yd. deficit into an eight-yd. lead. The Wolverines also placed sec- ond in the sprint medley relay on a fine 880-yd. anchor leg by Hayes, (Continued from Page 1) The Michigan shortstop banged out two triples, knocking in four runs and scoring two more. Kerr scattered seven hits en route to his third victory in three varsity years of pitching. He was in trouble in only one inning, the fifth, when Purdue erupted for its two runs. The left-hander walked only one and struck out three. The dust from the first game had hardly settled when Honig lashed a long drive to deep right- center field which sent Jones scampering in from first. Chapman flied deep to right to score Honig and give Kerr a 2-0 lead in the first inning. Honig upped that margin to 4-0 in the fourth when he tripled home Dave Campbell and Dick Post, who had walked. Tate then singled him home. The Wolverines added their fin- al three runs in the fifth on con- secutive singles by Campbell, Post, Kerr, and Jones, an infield out, and another single by Tate, Lund persisted in his run, run,' run, style of attack and it paid dividends numerous times. The best thief was Campbell who pil-' fered two bases, one o a deliber- ate pitchout. Four of Lund's oth- er race-horses, Chapman, Jones, je Twice Merullo, and Spalla, each copped one in the first contest.: Mel Garland, better-known for1 FAMOUS FOR hiPxpotsZZAebaktbl court, was the Boilermakers' best. i He contributed two singles in each f game. There was another well- :AVE 45c known basketball player on the i 1 field in the person of Terry Disch- inger. The last time the Purdue w ith T H IS CO UPO N star was in Ann Arbor he shatter- 1 ed all sorts of records and beat i the Michigan cagers with a lasti on L r e and M d u second shot. This time, however. I U he contributed only a meaninglessPI Z singleII ig 4 Purdue Pounded Golfers Finis h Fourth In First Match of Year Special To The Daily COLUMBUS-Michigan's young inexperienced golf team turned in some good second round scores yesterday to finish fourth, only two strokes behind winners Pur- due and Indiana, in a seven-team meet over the Ohio State golf course. The Boilermakers and the Hoos- iers finished the regulation 36 holes with identical 785 totals; Ohio University was third with 786; and the Wolverines trailed with 787: Sophomore Dave Cameron put together rounds of 79 and 75 for a 154 total and medalist honors for Mibchigan. Coach Bert Katzen- meyer had stated prior to the be- ginning of the season that a lot depended on his sophomores. Team Captain Bill Newcomb and the other startingasophomore, Gary Mouw, each carded 15 7's to trail Cameron's performance by 3 shots. Newcomb fired an 81 in the morning but came back on the fin- al 18 with a 76. Mouw, on the other hand, played consistent golf with scores of 79 and 78. Following the match Coach Kat- zenmeyer stated, "I am very pleas- ed with this young team for its first time out. In particular, I am quite satisfied with the perform- ances of the two sophomores, Dave Cameron and Gary Mouw. The other varsity players who competed were Chuck Newton, 81- 77-158; Tom Pendlebury, 82-79- 161; and Bill Hallock 84-83-167. The other teams competing in the match were Kentucky, 799; Notre Dame, 804; and Ohio State, 815. Major Leagu Standings FIRST GAME PURDUE AB R H RBI Lui, 3b 5 0 1 0 Garland, 2b 5 1 2 0 Dischinger, lb 4 0. 1 1 McKenzie, c 4 0 1 Alexander, rf 2 0 0 0 Mathis, rf 3 1 1 0 Arnspiger, If 4 1 2 1 Bresnahan, cf 4 1 2 0 Chess, ss 4 0 0 0 Burns, p 2 0 0 0 Caggiano, p 1 0 0, 0 Dixon, p 1 0 0 0 Totals 39 4 10 3 MICHIGAN AB R H RBI Jones, 2b 5 1 2 1 Honig, ss 4 2 2 0 Tate, rf 4 1 1 3 Steckley, if 4 0 0 0 Spalla, cf 4 3 1 1 Merullo, a 3 2 2 2 Chapman, lb 4 1 3 2 Newman, 3b 4 0 1 0 Roebuck, p 3 1 1 1 Totals 35 12 13 10 PURDUE 020 001 001- 4 10 1 MICHIGAN 000 250 23x-12 13 0 2B-Arnspiger, Garland, Honig, Roebuck, Newman, Spalla, Merullo. HR-Tate. DP-Chess to Garland to Dischinger. E-Garland. SB-Chap- man, Jones, Spalla, Merullo. LOB- Purdue 10, Michigan 10. PITCHING SUMMARIES IP H R ER BB SO Burns 4 4 5 3 2 3 Caggiano 2% 6 4 3 1 1 Dixon 1%4 3 3 3 3 2 Roebuck 9 10 4 4 2 3 SECOND GAME PURDUE AB R H RBI Lui, 3b 3 0 1 0 Garlai l, 2b 4 0 2 0 Dischinger, lb 2 0 0 0 McKenzie, rf 3 0 1 0 Arnspiger, I 3 0 1 0 Bresnahan, cf '2 1 0 0 Casbon, c 3 1 1 0 Chess, ss 3 0 0 0 Holle,p 1 0 0 0 Rezabek, p 1 0 1 2 a-Yakubowski 1 0 0 0 Totals 26 2 7 2 MICHIGAN AB R H RBI Jones, 2b 3 12 0 Honig, ss 4 2 3 4 Tate, rf 4 0 23 Shirley, rf 0 0 0 0 Chapman, 3b 3 0 1 0 Spalla, cf 2 0 0 0 Hood,cf 1 0 0 0 Merullo, c 4 0 0 0 Campbell, lb 3 2 2 0 Post,If 3 2 1 0 Kerr, p 3 1 2 1 Totals 30 8 13 8 a-Struck out for Rezabek in 7th. PURDUE 000 020 0-2 7 1 MICHIGAN 200 330 x-8 13 0 2B-Campbell. 3B-Honig (2). DP -Honig to Campbell. E-Casbon. SB -Campbell (2). LOB-Puidue 5, Michigan 9. PITCHING SUMMARIES IP H R ER BB SO Holle 3 4 4 4 4 0 Rezabek 3 9 4 4 0 1 Kerr 7 7 2 2 4 1 ":.111^:::.1 :"::::.1 ::.:". .11 ........... ........: i::: i:.::::.:.1:"::::::.:":." :::':':::"::::::.11:1': ".". :::...:::::::.: ::..:.::::.:'. v;:.1V:: :411": "''":":":4':1":1:1^ ;tif .... n . ; . ::.:::::".: :::::::...:.::::. ::," r.,::": .":0:"11"x. ".. ; :. .. "::::::::.: :::::.a.':: :":.: :1"::. :::.: ::::::i .... .....: yy.......... .................. ........... .... :".......................... ~.':.' ."F:':'::::V:'::r:ti:'::::.':.1 x::::.:1.1 :':":..M1.1 ...... r ..11.. . 11 ..........................................::::. ........ ......., ... ..:....,......:::::.. ...........................: ....s................::tt.^::::.1^:......:}M1..r."::Cf.1 .". ::.1^:::'::": }.'.".".:::: :.1......1.11. {.:v.4{1 :::? The Wolverines remain at home for two more games, one Tuesday against Central Michigan, and the other Wednesday with N o t r e Dame. 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