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April 28, 1962 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1962-04-28

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

RATURDAY. APUTT. 21t_ 1ARI :.

THE MICHIGAN DAIL1~ ~ATT'r1?r~Av AX~DIT 90 ISIeG

19Mi JLPM.t, Mruu5. 40, Ly1U

Leps Anchors Relay Win

JONES, HONIG STAR:
Diamondmen Beat Iowa, 9-6

Wolverine Netmen
Face Weak Purdue

(4 - -

Special To The Daily
PHILADELPHIA - Michigan
sped to a repeat victory in the
four-mile relay with a time of
17:12.5, just :01.2 off the meet
record, in yesterday's Penn Relay
action.
Jim Neahusan led off the relay
and left Michigan teammate Jay
Sampson in third place. Sopho-
more Dave Hayes ran the third
leg and pulled to within seven
yards of the Penn State runner.
Captain Ergas Leps took the ba-
ton for the final lap, pulled up
with Penn State's Steve More-
head, and after staying w4th him
for most of his leg, kicked by him
for the finish.
Leps Loafs
"I was sort of loafing. I didn't
realize the others were so fast,"
commented Leps after the race.
Michigan's distance medley re-
lay scratched yesteday in order
Major League
Standings

x-Pitt
St. Loi
x -San
x-Los,
Houston
Philadei
Cinoinh
Milwau
x-Chic
New Y
x-Playe

NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L
sburgh 11 2 .8
uis 9 3 .7:
Francisco 10 5 .6
Angeles ' 10 6 .6
n 6 7 .4
iphia 6 7 .4
iati 7 9 A:
kee 7 9 .4
ago 4 11 .2
ork 112 .0
red night game.

Pct,
846
,67
625
461
161
438
A38
267
076

GB
-
2
5
5
54
8
10

to give the defending champion
two-mile relay a better chance
this afternton. Sampson, Hayes,
and Leps will run with Charles
Aquino in the two-mile relay.
McRae Qualifies
Bennie McRae won his heat
easily in the 120-yd. high hurdles
yesterday. He did not push him-
self in qualifying with a :14.7
clocking.
Dave Raimey did not travel to
Records Set
FOUR-MILE RELAY - 1. Nea-
husan, Sampson, Hayes, Leps, (M)
17:12.5, 2. Penn State, 3. George-
town, 4. Villanova, 5. Princeton.
BROAD JUMP - 1. Mays, Mary-
land State, 24'9", 2. Browie, Mor-
gan State, 3. Grantham, Penn
State, 4.,Tatnall, Delaware, 5. Coop-
er, St. John's, 6. Betts, Cornell.
120-YARD HIGH HURDLES -
(Qualifiers) 1. Rogers, Maryland
State, :14.2, 2. Sheperd, Winston-
Salem Teachers, 3. Luck, Yale, 4.
Bethea, Morgan State, and Bennie
McRae, (M), 6. Flippin, Yale.
TWO-MILE RUN - 1. Nourse,
Duke, 9:11.3, 2. Mack, Yale, 3. Met-
calf, Oklahoma State, 4. Quinn, St.
Joseph's, 5. Shirley, Slippery Rock.
DISCUS THROW -- 1. Kohler,
Fordham, 178'11%2", 2. Santio, Mary-
land State, 3. Gubner, NYU, 4. An-
derson, Oklahoma State, 5. Busch,
Colgate, 6. Toughill, St. Joseph's
(Philadelphia.)
HAMMER8 THROW - 1. Bailey,
Harvard, 188', 2. Dyer, Brown.
100-YARD DASH - 1. Johnson,
Western Michigan, :09.6, 2. Rich-
ardson, Abilene Christian, and Ash-
worth, Dartmouth, 4. Johnson and
Smartt, both Virginia State (Peters-
burg), 6. Thorton, Virginia State
(Norfolk).
880-YARD RELAY (Qualifiers) -
1. Manhattan (Minardo, Mcardle,
Mattis, Fernandez), 1:25.8, 2. Vil-
lanova, 3. Western Michigan, 4.
Morgan State, 5. Winston-Salem,
6. Pittsburgh.
440-YARD RELAY (Qualifiers)-
1. Villanova (Pras, Drayton, Rae-
more, Budd), :41.3, 2. Abilene Chris-
tian and Morgan State, 4. Manhat-
tan, 5. Western Michigan.
NCAA RULES:
Crisler Is
Neww Head
By The Associated Press
H. O. 'Fritz' Crisler, University
of Michigan Athletic Director, was
named yesterday as chairman of
the NCAA football rules commit-
tee.
He has held the position pre-
viously but replaces the late Gen.
Robert Neyland, who died in a
New Orleans hospital recently.
Crisler is a life member of the
rules committee. He was selected
at the NCAA meeting in New Or-
leans.{

Philadelphia owing to a pulled
muscle incurred last week in the
Ohio Relays.
High jumper Steve Williams
and pole vaulters Rod Denhart
and Steve Overton join the squad
to compete this afternoon.
Ed Kohler of Fordham tossed
the discus 178'111/2" to shatter the
mark of 174'3/4" set by Michigar's
Roland Nilsson in 1953. Russ Rog-
ers of Maryland State equaled an-
other meet record in the 400 meter
hurdles with a time of :51.5.
Other individual winners were
Charlie Rays of Maryland State
in the broad jump with a leaf of
24'9". ared Nourse of Duke in the
two-mile run with a 9:11.3 clock-
ing, and Ed Bailey of Harvard in
the hammer throw with a toss of
188'9 1/"
Villanova was strongly repre-
sented at the meet. but only man-
aged a victory in the distance
medl:y reiay yesterday.

Special To The Daily
IOWA CITY - Michigan's dia-
mondmen triumphed over their
Iowa counterparts 9-6 yesterday.
A four-run Wolverine sixth and
some snappy relief pitching which
ended a brief rally provided the
victory margin.
Two runs in the Iowa third
matched two for Michigan in the
top of that inning.
Jones, Honig Score
Joe Jones and Dick Honig each
scored once. Jim Steckley's sacri-
fice to center drove home Jones,
and Dennis Spalla's single scored
Honig.
In the sixth, Dave Campbell
walked, went to second on Harvey
Chapman's bunt, stole third, and
scored on pitcher Roebuck's sac-
rifice. Jones singled Chapman to
third. Honig then singled to the
centerfielder, who politely booted
the ball, allowing him to take

third while Chapman and Jones
scored. Ron Tate's infield single
brought in the fourth run.
Two Base Error
Iowa made it 6-3 in the seventh,
but a two base error by the third-
baseman put Jones on second, al-
lowing him to score on the short-
stop's throw on Steckley's infield
hit. Spalla then knocked in the
eighth run with another single.
In the ninth, Chapman doubled,
Iowa Husked
MICHIGAN AB R H RBI
Jones, 2b 4 3 1 0
Honig, ss 5 2 2 0
Ttate, rf 5 01 1
Steckley, If 4 1 2 2
Spalla, cf 5 0 2 2
Merullo, c 4 0 0 0
Campbell, lb 4 1 1 0
Chapman, 3b 5 2 1 0
Roebuck, p 4 0 0 0
Slusher, p 0 0 0 0
Totals 40 9 10 6
IOWA AB R H RBI
Krause, cf 5 2 2 3
Reddington, If 3 0 0 0
Isler, ss 4 0 0 0
Freese, c 300 0
Sherman, rf 3 0 1 0
Lee, 3b 4 00 0
Henning, 2b 4 2 1 0
Kennedy, lb 4 1 1 0
George, p 3 0 1 1
Prince 0 0 0 0
Stroup 0 1 0 0
Totals 33 6 6 4
MICHIGAN 002 004 021-9 10 3
IOWA 002 000 103-.6 6 8
2B--Chapman, Krause. 3B-Ken-
nedy, Krause. SF-Roebuck, Steck-
ley, Reddington. SB-Campbell. HBP
-Jones (George). PB-Freese '2).
BLK-George. E-Campbell, Chap-
man, Roebuck, Krause, Reddington,
Isler (3), Freese, Lee (2). LOB
Iowa 6, Michigan 9.
PITCHING SUMMARIES
IP H R ER BB SO
George (L) 9 10 94 4 4
Roebuck (W) 8Y6 6 4 5 3
Slusher % 0 0 0 0 1

but Slusher struck out the last posed of a team entirely of sopho-
man on three straight pitches. mores and juniors.
Defense Good Leading Purdue will be Robert
Jones and Honig were Michi- Powless, a sophomore, and Ross
gan's standouts with nine and Helft, a junior. Helft did not fig-
eight errorless chances, respect-' ure prominently in Big Ten com-
ively. In addition, Jones scored petition last year.
three runs and Honig two. Purdue lost to Ohio State March

First Three Units Oppose
Rest of SpringFootballers

took third on a passed ball, and
scored tte final run when the
catcher dropped the peg from the
shortstop trying to cut down the
run.
With two runs in, a man on
third and one out in the Iowa
ninth, Wayne Slusher relieved
Roebuck. A sacrifice fly scored
their sixth run on his first pitch,

The Michigan tennismen meet
a weak Purdue squad this after-
noon at Lafayette in their third
dual meet of the regular season.
Michigan rolled over its previous
two opponents, Ohio Wesleyan
and the University of Detroit by
identical 9-0 scores. Purdue,
plagued by inexperience is com-

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Philadelphia 11, New York 8
Milwaukee 2, Houston 1
St. Louis 14, Cincinnati 3
TODAY'S GAMES
Philadelphia at New York
Cincinnati at St. Louis
Pittsburgh at Los Angeles, night
Chicago at San Francisco
Milwaukee at Houston, night
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB
Cleveland 8 4 .667 -
Detroit 7 5 .583 1
New York 7 5 .583 1
Boston 7 6 .539 1%
Chicago 8 7 .533 1
Kansas City 9 8 .529 1V
Baltimore 7 7 .500 2
Minnesota 7 8 .467 2%/
Los Angeles 6 8 .429 3
WashingtonE2 10 .167 6
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Detroit 13, Los Angeles 4
New York 10, Washington 8
Chicago 7, Boston 4
Kansas City 14, Baltimore 5
Cleveland 7, Minnesota 2
TODAY'S GAMES
Los Angelesat Detroit
New York at Washington
Baltimore at Kansas City, night
Minnesota at Cleveland
Boston at Chicago
Big Ten Results
Michigan State at Minnesota (post.)
Michigan 9, Iowa 6
Illinois 8, Ohio State 0
Northwestern 2, Wisconsin 0
Purdue ', Indiana 5

24, 6-3. Last year Michigan ove"-
powered both Purdue and Ohio
State, 9-0.
Neither Ray Senkowski, Gerry
Dubie, nor Harry Fauquier, Mich-
igan's big guns, have been seri-
ously challenged in dual meet ac-
tion yet this year.
Senkowski, playing at first
singles, easily defeated Roger
Oberg of U. of D. 6-0, 6-0 Thurs-
day. Fauquier whipped Dick
Lightbody 6-2, 6-0, Thursday and
Dubie successfully downed Mike
Bodary 6-2, 6-3 in the third singles
spot.

By JERRY KALISHv
Coach Bump Elliot will be care-
fully observing the right tackle
spot in today's scrimmage in
Michigan Stadium, the second one
of the current spring practice.
"We're still observing the whole
team, but this is one of our trou-
blesome positions," he said.
In an attempt to bolster the
gap left by the graduating Jon
Schopf, a regular for three years.
Elliot -is contemplating shifting
over guard Joe O'Donnell.
Well-Stocked
The Michigan mentor can well
afford to do this with his stock of
experienced guards.
John Mtnko and John Marcum
appear .ilke the top candidates but
Dave Kurtz and Bob Lovell are
rated rigot up there by ine coach
Bob Holiway. Marcum was injured
in the final scrimmage before last
season's opener, but his knee seems
to be okay now.
Elliot is also watching two fresh-
men who were very impressive in
last weeK's scrimmage.
Talented Rookies
John Her deison, a rugged end
from Dayton, Ohio, caalght a
touchdowr pass from Frosty Eva-
shevski, but later sulfeied a
shoulder injury which will keep
him out of action this afternoon.
Bill Laskey, a fast 195 pound
halfback, broke away for some'
long yardage, and will be included'
in Elliot's starting backfield.
Quarterback Dave Glinka, half-{
back Bruce McLenna, and fullbackI

Jim Ward will comprise the rest
of the unit.
"We'll run the first three units
against the rest of the squad in
order to get a good looK at every-
one," Elliot explained.
"But the rankings of each team
is subject to change, and there is
opportunity foi everyone."
Any supporteis (or spies) of the
Blue may ettend today's workout
in the Stadium, which starts at
1:30 p.m.

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"An Equal Opportunity Employer' 25

Two approaches to the
"man's deodorant" problem
if a man doesn't mind shaving under his arms, he will probably
find a woman's roll-on satisfactory. Most men, however, find it
simpler and surer to use Mennen Spray Deodorant. Mennen Spray
was made to get through to the skin, where perspiration starts.
And made to work all day. More men use Mennen Spray than any
other deodorant. How about you? 64ยข and $1.00 plus tax

1

liil

,

TONIGHT-

AFTE RNOON-

The Michigras weekend climaxes with carnival and enter-
tainment in and around Yost Field House. You can't miss
Saturday night at Michigras-It's unbelievable.
Special Michigras KIDDY CARNIVAL. Reduced rates for
kidsof ALLages!
M ICHGRAS
The biggest all campus weekend ... anywhere.

4

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