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May 13, 1962 - Image 6

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1962-05-13

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___THEMICHIGANDAILY

SUN DA

PETITIONS for
Ed. School Student Council
NOW AVAILABLE
at Undergraduate Advising Office
1203 U.H.S.

Spartan Tracksters Triumph
Over Wolverines and Buckeyes

ILLINOIS SECOND:
M' Retains First Place

By STAN KUKLA
Special To The Daily
EAST LANSING-The Wolver-
ines bowed to Michigan State on
a rainy afternoon by a score of
75% to 65% in a track meet which
followed the outline predicted by
Coach Don Canham.
Ohio State finished third in the
triangular meet with a total of
31% points.
Canham said Michigan would
lose big in the sprints but would
take most of the field events (with
the exception of the broad jump).
tI

(Continued from Page 1)

Ohio State would take several val-
uable points from Michigan but
would not harm the Spartans at
all. He couldn't have been closer.
No Question
Rod Denhart won the pole vault,
and set a field record in the proc-
ess, by leaping to an undisputed
15'0". (The measurement of his
jump of 15'1%" last week has been
questioned.) He missed out on
three tries at 15'5" but was hinder-
ed by a strong back wind which
blew the cross-bar off the stand-
ards at the slightest touch by the
leapers.
Ohio State took first and third
in the .shot put while Roger
Schmitt of Michigan took a sec-
ond. Schmitt then came back to
win the discus with a heave of
156'61/4" while teammate Ernie
Soudak took second.
Wilmer Johnson of MSU and
Steve Williams of Michigan tied
for first in the high jump at 6'5"
while footballer Paul Warfield of
OSU was leaping to a 24'61/" vic-

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tory in the broad jump, which set
a new record.
After the field events, Michigan
had a score of 23, Ohio State
was second with 16%, and State
third with 15%.
Chuck Aquino set a track record
in the 660-yd. run with a winning
time of 1:21.1. This event had
never been run on this track be-
fore, giving him the record.
Leps Superb
Ergas Leps of Michigan was his
same brilliant self again yester-
day. He used his patented last
Rained Out
The tennis match between
Michigan and Ohio State sched-
uled for yesterday afternoon at
the Wolverines' home courts
was postponed because of rain
and wet grounds.
curve kick to crush the hopes of
the Spartan supporters who saw
their boys leading going into the
curve and mistakenly thought that
they were going to win. Instead,
Leps won the mile and the 880-yd.
runs by at least three yards each
time.
Bennie McRae made it no con-
test in the 120-yd. high hurdles as
he beat straining Herm Johnson
by a good two yards. However,
MSU took the next three places.
cutting out the other competitors
from Michigan and Ohio.
Lead Fades
At the end of the field and dis-
tance events, Michigan led with
46 4points, State was second=with
33 , and Ohio third with 22%
points.
Michigan's dominance ended
here. Michigan State took a first
in the 440-yd. dash, a first, sec-
ond, and fourth in the 100-yd.
dash, a first, second, and third in
the 220-yd. dash, a third. in the
220-yd. low hurdles, and first
place in the mile relay.
That gave Michigan State 42
points in the sprints, Michigan
gained a meager 19 points, and
Ohio an even more pathetic nine
points.
Sparty Scores
HIGH JUMP - I (tie), Wimer
Johnson (MSU) and Steve Williams
(M); 3. Bill Berry (MSU); 4. (tie),
TonmPeckham (MSU), Ed White
(OSU), and Al Ammerman (M).
6'5"
BROAD JUMP-1. Paul Warfield
(OSU); 2. Sherm Lewis (MSU); 3.
John Parker (MSU); 4. Doug Niles
(M). 24'6" (track record).
POLE VAULT - 1. Rod Denhart
(M); 2. Jerry Dehenau (MSU); ,3.
(tie), Gerry Hockstetter (OSU),
George Wade (M), Steve Overton
(M). 15'0" (track record).
SHOT PUT-. Ron Weldy (OSU);
2. Roger Schmitt (M); 3. Bob Mid-
dieton (OSU) 4. Dave Mutchler
(MSU). 51'10%".
DISCUS-I. Roger Schmitt (M); 2.
Ernie Soudek (M); 3. Bob Middle-
ton (OSU); 4. Doug Frey (OSU).
156'6%".-
660-YD. RUN-1. Chuck Aquino
(M); 2. Bill Robinson (OSU); 3. Ron
Horning (MSU); 4. Ted Kelly (M).
1:21.1 (track record).
MILE RUN-1. Ergas Leps (M);
2. Jerry Young (MSU); 3. Don Castle
(MSU); 4. Dave Hayes (M). 4:16.1.
550-YD. DASH - 1. John Parker
(MSU); 2. Dan Paige (OSU); 3. Car-
ter Reese (M); 4. Bill Hornbeck (M).
:48.5.
100-YD. DASH-1. Sherm Lewis
(MSU); 2. Zach Ford (MSU); 3. Paul
Wartield (OSU); 4. Ron Watkins
(MSU). :09.8.
120-YD. HIGH HURDLES - 1.
Ben nie McRae (M); 2. erm Johnson
(MSU); 3. Tom Peckham (MSU); 4.
Bill Mann (MSU). :14.4.
880-YD. RUN-i. Ergas Leps (M);
2. Don Castle (MSU); 3. Chuck
Aquino (M); 4. Dave Hayes (M).
1:55.2.
220-YD. DASH - 1. Zach Ford
(MSU); 2. Sherm Lewis (MSU); 3.
John Parker (MSU); 4. Carter Reese
(M). :22.0.
220-YD. LOW HURDLES-1. Paul
Warfield (OSU); 2. Chuck Peltz
(M); 3. Tom Peckham (MSU); 4.
Joe Mason (M). .24.6.
TWO-MILE RUN-1. (tie), Jerry
Young (MSU) and Morgan Ward
(MSU); 3. Chris Murray (M); 4. Jim
Neahusen (M). 9:27.3.
MILE RELAY-. Michigan State
(Sherm Lewis, Zach Ford, Ron Horn-
ing, John Parker); 2. Michigan; 3.
Ohio State. 3:17.2.1

:....

Purdue Breaks Tie,
Nips Golfers 19-/2-16 2

tally. Ohio State did not allow its
winning streak to be broken with-
out a struggle. After Jones scored
the game's first run on a triple
and a throwing error in the third,
the Buckeyes squeezed a run home
in the fourth to even it.
Michigan added two more in the
fourth to go out in front, but the
Columbus crew belted out two
singles and a double for three runs
in the top of the eighth to regain
the lead and set the stage for the
Wolverines' late inning heroics.
After five straight victories,
Michigan starter John Kerr had
some trouble. He had to use a lot
of pitches and was behind the bat-
ters for most of the afternoon,
Reliefer Slusher came in during
the eighth inning outburst and
earned the victory, his second
against no losses.
Their spirits boosted sky high
after the previous one-run victory,
the 'M' nine rolled up its sleeves
to blast out 13 hits and 12 runs to
walk away with the seven-inning
game.
Pitcher Dave Roebuck continued
his diamond mastery. With his
curve ball breaking across the cor-
ners, consistently, the Wolverine
ace gave up only six hits and
walked two to win his seventh
game. His five straight conference
wins makes him the Big Ten lead-
er in that department.

Michigan had three big innings
in the first, second and sixth for
in the nightcap, scoring four runs
all of its scoring.
In the first, Jones doubled, ad-
vanced to third on a wild pitch
and scored on Honig's single to
left. Rightfielder Tate got two
bases on an error, with Honig tak-
ing third. Spalla then singled to
drive them both in, and advanced
to second on the throw. After an-
other wild pitch he scored on a
single by Campbell.
Michigan was aided by four
walks in the second inning, but
the big blow was a bases loaded
single by Spalla to bring in two
runs, putting the game out of
reach.
Pitcher Roebuck finished off the
scoring in the four-run sixth inn-
Big Ten Standings
W L Pct. GB
MICHIGAN 1 1 .917 -
Illinois 10 2 .833 1
Ohio State 8 4 .667 3
Wisconsin 5 6 .455 5%o
Northwestern 5 6 .455 51/2
Indiana 5 7 .417 6
Iowa 3 5 .375 6
Michigan State 4 7 .364 6%
Purdue 3 9 .250 8
Minnesota 0 7 .000 8%
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
MICHIGAN 5-12, Ohio State 4-2 (1st
game 10 inn.)
Illinois 2-2, Purdue 1-0
Northwestern 9-9, Minnesota 5-8
Michigan State 4-7, Indiana 3-4
Wisconsin 7-3, Iowa 2-4 (2nd game
12 inn.)

v.. .:.......... . ._,":>s:? :6:Ctti4z fi2;.:;Y55p.,+.:w.::rr.v,:.. _ . ..:::":..: :.: :mck

MICHIGAN
Jones, 2b
Honig, ss
Tate, rf
Steckley, It
Spalla, cf
Merullo, c
Campbell, lb
Chapman, 3b
Kerr, p
Slusher, p
Totals
OHIO STATE
Klein, ss
Mason, rt
Hess, cf
Peters, 2b
Machado, 3b
Zabinski, lb
Perdue, if
Miller, c
Sparma, p

ing. Merullo, Campbell, and third
baseman Harvey Chapman started
off the inning with three succes-
sive doubles scoring the first two
runs. Then 'Big Dave' stepped up
and rapped the first pitch over the
left-centerfield fence for his first
home run of the year, scoring
Chapman in front of him.
Buckeyes Bow
FIRST GAME

AB R H RBI
4 3 0
4 2 2 1
3 0 0 1
4 0
4 0 1 0
2 0 0 0
2 0 0 0
36 511 4
AB R H RBI
6 O 2 0
4 0 .0 0
4 0 1 0
600
5 2 3 1
5 0 4 0
3 0 1 2
5 0 0 0

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vim...;d i n caual fashion

By GARY WINER
With the Purdue-Michigan golf
match all even at the end of 27
holes, the Boilermakers overcame
the pressure and once again swept
the field in the quadrangular
golf match held here yesterday.
Michigan, however, managed to
down defending Big Ten titlist
Ohio State, 25-11, and beat arch-
rival Michigan State, 24-12.
The Boilermakers, b e s i d e s
squeaking by the Wolverines,
whipped Ohio State, '26-10, and
Michigan State, 23%-12%. It was
a bad day for the Buckeyes who
have been extremely erratic all
season. The Spartans picked up a
lone victory by handing the Bucks
their third loss of the lay, 21-15.
Pendlebury Tops
Tom Pendlebury pulled out all
the stops and put together the
best two rounds for any Michigan'
varsity golfer this year. Pendle-
bury fired a one-under par 71 in
the morning round and then came
back with a three-over par 75
in the afternoon to lead the en-
tire field with a 146 total. Gary
Barrett of Michigan State was
runner-up in the medalist depart-
ment with a total of 148 strokes:
Purdue's Jerry Jackson was third
with 149.
Michigan enjoyed its best day
on the links thus far this year.
The close loss to Purdue was a
heartbreaker, but the Boilermakers
haven't lost so far this year.' Ohio
State, who defeated Michigan two
weeks ago in a quadrangular
meet at Champaign, never got off
the ground. The Buckeyes' Tom
Weiskopf and Randy Thrasher
had the best rounds for their team
with identical totals of 154.
Newcomb Next
Captain Bill Newcomb was the
second lowest for the Wolverines.
Newcomb put together rounds of
77 and 78 for 155. Chuck Newton
followed with 77-79--156; Gary
Mouw, 77-80-157; Dave Cameron,
81-77-158; and Bill Hallock, 80-
84-164.
Pendlebury has been enjoying
two fine weeks of golf since action
shifted to the University's Blue
Course. Last week against North-

western and the University of De-
troit, he fired an opening round
of 74 but faded in the latter stages
of the meet to fire an 80 in the
second round. Yesterday he was
finally able to put two good rounds
together. Newcomb previously held
the best match total when he shot
a 74-75-149 just last week.
Travel to Detroit
Coach Bert Katzenmeyer will
travel with his team on Monday
to meet Detroit over the Oakland
Hills Golf Course. That will be the
last match on this season's sched-
ule.
The Big Ten Golf Champion-
ships will be held this Thursday
and Friday over the Illinois golf
course. Purdue will be the favorite
to capture the title after finishing
only fourth last year.
Katzenmeyer earlier in the year,
however, contendedthat Minneso-
ta would probably offer some
tough competition to the field also.
As for Ohio State, the losses of
Jack Nicklaus and Mike Podolski
cannot be taken lightly.

Totals 40 4 14 3
Ohio State 000 100 030 0-4
MICHIGAN 001 200 001 1-5
E-Spalla, Peters. DP-Jones and
Honig, Peters and Klein. gB--Klei,
Perdue, Zabinski, Steckley (2). 3B
-Jones. LOB-Ohio State 12, Michi-
gan 6. SH-Mason, Miller (2), Spalla.
IP H RER BBS O
Sparma (L, 5-4) 9% 11 5 4 2 8
x-Kerr 7 11 4 4 2 1
Slusher (W, 3-0) 3 3 0 0 0 1
x-Faced 3 batters in 8th.
SECOND GAME
OHIO STATE AB R H RBI
Klein, ss 4 0 1 0
Mason, rf 4 1 1 0
Hess, cf 2 1 0 0
Peters, 2b 3 0 0 0
Machado, 3b 3 0 1 0
Zablinski, 1b 3 0 2 2
Perdue, if 2 0 0 0
Miller,c 3 0 1 0
Furry, p 0 0 0 0
Farrington, p 1 0 0 0
Pond, p 0 0 0 0
O'Connell, p 1 0 0 0
Nozica, p 0 0 0 0
x-Elliot 1 0 0 0
Totals 28 2 6 "2
T-Grounded out for Nozica in 7th.
MICHIGAN AB R H RBI
Jones, 2b 5 1 1 0
Honig, ss 4 2 1 1
Tate, rf 4 2 2 0
Steckley, If 3 1 01
Spalla, of 4 1 3 4
Merullo, c 4 1 1 1
Campbell, lb 2 1 2 2
Chapman, 3b 3 1 1 1
Roebuck, p 2222
Totals 31 12 13 12
Ohio State 002 000 0- 2
MICHIGAN 440 004 x-12
E-Hess, Honig, Jones. DP-Jones
and Campbell. 2B-Klein, Jones, Me-
rullo, Chapman, Campbell. HR-Roe-
bucK. LOB-Ohio State 7, Michigan
5. SB-Hess, Campbell, Chapman.
IP H R ER BB SO
Furry (L, 2-2) ]/ 3 4 2 0 1
Farrington 1 2 3 3 2.1
x-Pond 3 1 1 1 3 0
y-O'Connell 3 5 3 3 4 1
Nozica 1 2 1 1 0 0
Roebuck (W, 7-1) 7 6 2 0 2 3
x-Faced 1 batter in 3rd.
y-Faced 3 batters in 6th.

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Stat StrSeet on the Camvsw

By ROBERT COHEN
With the outdoor track season
only a few weeks old, there have
already been several indications
that no track records will be safe
as bigger, faster, and better co-
ordinated athletes take dead-aim
on present standards.
Yesterday, the University of
Oregon four mile relay team broke
the world mark by 15 seconds as
the Dyrol Burleson-anchored quar-
tet covered the distance in the
phenomenal time of 16:08.9 with
Burleson clicking off an uncontest-
ed 3:57.9 leg. Meanwhile, Frank
Budd added to his growing list of
world marks, by tying Dave Sime's
six year old 220-record with a
:20.0 clocking despite pulling a leg
muscle 40 yards from home.

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In past weeks "fiber-glassers"
John Uelses and Dave Tork have
topped the mythical 16-foot bar-
rier in the pole vault, Tork having
gone highest with a 16'2" effort.
In addition, Robert Hayes from
Florida A & M recently equaled
Budd's :09.2 clocking in the 100-
yard dash and has been running
away from all opposition in the
sprints.
Some interesting individual en-.
counters loom for the near future.
Mammoth Gary Gubner, NYU
soph, and similarly gigantic Dal-
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next week on the West Coast in the
dual of the super-shotputters. Vil-
lanova's Budd and Hayes should
meet head-on some time during
the season to settle the question of
who is the world's fastest human.
Peter Snell, the New Zealand mile
record-holder, will be at the Mo-
desto Relays this month to take
on America's Burleson and Jim
Beatty in what could prove to, be
the greatest mile race ever.
The list of sub-47 second quar-
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Peter Weiss of 'Fordham, Earl
Young of Abilene, Ray Saddler of
Texas Southern, Dick Edmunds of
the Quantico Marines, Adrian
Metcalfe of Cambridge, England,
and Ulis Williams of Arizona
State. Williams has run :46.0, Just
off Glenn Davis' world record of
:45.7.
In the hurdles, Oregon's Jerry
Tarr has a :13.5 to his credit in
the highs and Michigan's Bennie
McRae, Maryland's Russ Rogers
and Don Styron are not far be-
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competition some real thrillers
could be staged here.
The 200-foot barrier in the dis-
cus might tumble under the as-
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Jay Sylvester, both of whom have
been around 198 feet. And so it
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