AY, MAX 27, 1962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE S ~Y, MY 27 196 TIN MICIG-N-AIL iamondmen Sweep Doubleheader from Broncos ree, Straight Over Western; Kerr, Roebuck Sparkle GROSSE POINTE, MUSKEGON HEIGHTS: Two Tie in State Track Meet (4> (Continued from Page 1) next man, also stole third. Dave Post then hit a long fly to left and Merullo tagged up and came in for Michigan's first run of.the after- noon, tying the score. The Wolverines took; control in the sixth by exploding for five big runs. Shortstop Jim Newman was hit in the foot to start it off. Har- vey Chapman sacrificed him to second. After Steckley flied out, Spalla walked. Newman and Spalla then advanced on a wild pitch. Catcher Merullo came up again and laced a double into cen- terfield scoring both runners and putting Michigan out in front. Although two were out the inn- ing was far from over. First-base- man Dave Campbell walked. Then Post drilled a single down the third base line to score Merullo with Campbell taking third. Pitcher Final Big Ten Standings Roebuck singled Campbell home for the final run of the game. On the mound Roebuck hand- cuffed the Broncos the rest of the way to register his eighth victory against only two losses to conclude the season as the team's leading winner. Hurlers Clash The second game developed into quite a pitcher's duel. Western ace Bill Ortleib, who hadn't lost a reg- ular season game in three years on the mound for the Broncos, re- tired the first nine batters who faced him. Kerr also was in top form, setting the Broncos down consistently, with only a few stray runners reaching first base in the early innings. That tenth batter proved to be a tough one for Ortleib. He was Joe Jones, who drilled a leadoff dou- ble to left at the start of the fourth inning. Jim Newman then took a called third strike for the first out. Chapman kept it alive with a single past third with Jones tak- ing third and Chapman moving to second on the throw to the plate. Steckley's slow bouncer to third brought home the run as the third baseman threw high to the plate allowing Jones to slide in under the throw, and score what proved to be the game's winning run. The Broncos stamped their hoofs menacingly after two were out in the fifth inning. Third base- man Dan Predovic walked and Al Drews moved him to second with a single through the box. Michi- «, By GEORGE WHITE Lots of things happened in yes- terday's State Track Meet that have happened in past meets: little guys beat big guys, near- winners slipped at the finish line, batons got dropped, bars jiggled, then fell on record tries, and a single man's pulled muscle his high school's chances for win- ning, but . . . never, not in the 55 years that the meet has been held, have two teams tied for top honors. It all happened yesterday at Ferry Field. Few records fell in yesterday's wet outing, but when all the cheer- ing and shouting was over, Grosse Pointe and Muskegon Heights emerged with 30 points each to share the state title. Flint North- ern. finished third, garnering 27 points. Just One First The winners took only one first between them, that of Muskegon Heights' :10.0 clocking of Joe Par- ham in the 100-yd. dash. Grosse JOE MERULLO DICK POST ..-,.vet comes through ... has big day Illinois MICHIGAN. Ohio State Wisconsin Indiana' Michigan State Northwestern Iowa Purdue Minnesota W 13 12 9 8 6 6 5 5 41 3 L 2 3 5 6 8 8 9 9 11 10 Pet. .867 .800 .643 .571 .429 .429 .357 .357 .247 .231 GB 1 3% 4! 6j 61/z 7/ 7 Y 9 9 gan's Joe Jones ended it by grab- bing a bounder by Gatza and tag- ging the bag to end the inning. Do or Die Western gave it a last fatal ef- fort in the sixth. With two outs Pat Bidelman, the second base- man, walked. First baseman Bill Ihney lined a single right down the line near third, moving Bidel- man to third and taking second on the throw. With the winning run on base Kerr bore down and got the next batter to bounce one back to the mound for an easy out. Pitching was the whole contest until the last of the seventh. Just when the fans were thinking that YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Minnesota 4-1, Iowa 3-5 (1st game 11 - inn.) NEW BIG TEN SPORT: Judo's Popularity Increases By PETE DiLORENZI A man walks down the street. loe is suddenly attacked by a man 70 pounds heavier than him- self, yet, by somehow grabbing and twisting the aggressor's wrist, the innocent man manages to send him hurtling through the air, evnetually to crash to earth and lim away, muttering something about how his opponent cheated by using "judo" instead of fight- ing fairly. Judo No, Jiu Jitsu Si The man did not use judo. Per- has he used jiu-jitsu, or, had he been trained in it, he might have used karate, but, in all probabil- ity, he did not use judo. For judo is a sport, and, unlike either of the other two suggested methods, is not intended to be used for street fighting or for self-defense. And this year, it has gained even wider 'recognition as a sport by being included in the list of cometitive events for the 1964 Olympic Games to be held at- Tokyo. As a result of this, a group of Michigan, students and their "in- structor", Peter Goebel, a Ger- man-born student who has been learning and practicing judo for eight years, has banded together for the purpose of first, learning judo well enough to compete against experienced foes, and sec- two runs for the Broncos in their last bats would win it, Michigan's offense tore into the previously invincible Ortleib in the top of the seventh. Tate walked to start the inning. Merullo was then called out on strikes. Campbell stepped up and hit a two-and-one pitch deep to left field. Outfielder Drews leaped as high as he could but missed it. It Didn't Count With Campbell circling the bases for a home run the Western outfielder seemingly reached un- der th fence and brought the ball back into play. The umpire, who was watching the proceedings from first base, suddenly decided to rule the hit as a triple, robbing the Wolverine first baseman of his circuit clout. Despite the rounds of discussion after this move, the Michigan batsmen became even more ag- gressive. Another single by Post, this time a bounder to right, scored Cambell, officially, and the Wolverines went three runs in front. Pitcher Kerr was up next and reached first safely on an error by the second baseman with Tate holding at second. Ortleib struck out Jones, but shortstop Newman singled Post home a few seconds later with Kerr holding up at third. Sophomore Chapman in- flicted the final blow with a hard hit single to center which scored both Kerr and Newman to put the game out of reach. Kaline Hurt, Sidelined for, Two Months NEW YORK 0P) - Al Kaline sustained a broken collar bone yes- terday while making a game-sav- ing catch in Detroit's 2-1 victory over New York and will be lost to the Tigers for about two months. The loss of the outfield star rep- resents a-major blow to the Tigers' chances of overhauling the Ameri- can League leaders. Kaline was hitting .345 with 38 runs batted in and 13 home runs, second best in the league, going into yesterday's game. Dr. Sidney Gaynor, Yankee phy- sician who treated Kaline at a hos- pital, said he sustained "a lontidu- dinal fracture of the edge of the right clavicle." He said the break was at the point where the collar bone joins the shoulder. A cast was put on the shoulder and Kaline hospitalized overnight. A Detroit spokesman said the out- fielder may return to Detroit to- day. HAIRSTYLING TO PLEASE YOU Compare our: " Personnel * Workmanship " Sanitation 0 Service Air-conditioned The Dascola Barbers Near Michigan Theatre JOHN KERR ... still undefeated Great Comeback FIRST GAME MICHIGAN AB R H RBI Jones, 2b 5 0 0 0 Newman, ss 3 1 0 0 Chapman, 3b 2 0 1 0 Steckley, if 5 0 0 0 Spalla, cf 4 1 1 0 Merullo, c 4 2 2 2 Campbell, 1b 2 1 0 0 Post, rf 3 1 1 2 Roebuck, p 4 0 2 2 Totals 32 6 7 6 WESTERN MICHIGAN Predovic, 3b Drews, If Gatza, cf Michaiski, ss Kwiatowski, rf lBidelman, 2b Ine, lb Austry, c a-Theder, c Salo, p Cooley, p b-Keniston Bitante AB R H RBI 4 1 0 0 5 0 2 1 2 0 0 0 3 00 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 10 00 00 Pointe shared a first with Mum-! ford in the 880-yd. run, George+ Thomas of G.P. and Ted Mc- Burrows hitting- the wire together at 1:57.9-only .7 second off the state mark. Flint Northern, on the other' hand, walked off with three big firsts and a third, but couldn't place the men in the other events to bring home an overall victory. The deciding event for all three schools was the last: the mile Loken on TV Newt Loken, Michigan's gym- nastics coach, will be a featured guest on ABC-TV's "Wide World of Sports" program to- day. The show can be seen on Channel 7 at 5:00 p.m. relay. Going into the mile even, Northern and the Blue Devils 26 points each. About a hair behind with 25 points was Muskegon Heights. Downpour Twenty-five schools entered. As the teams lined up for the first of five heats, it became obvious that the state mark of 3:26.1 was go- ing to be difficult to break; rain had fallen lightly in the early part of the afternoon and now was coming in a steady pour. Bloom- field took the first heat with a 3:32.6. Thurston, who eventually won the event, came closest to the state record with a 3:28.1, edging Detroit Easter in the last twenty yards. About this time, puddles formed along the corners of the track. Flint Northern grabbed the lead early in the third heat and coasted to a 3:31.2 win over rival Flint Central. In the fourth heat, Grosse Pointe traded the lead in a hard- run contest with Ann Arbor, pull- ing ahead on the last corner to win with a 3:29.5. In the fifth and final heat, Muskegon Heights was faced with beating highly- rated Mumford, who ran a 3:24.8 during the year, in order to tie for first. Detroit Northwestern jumped to an early lead with Muskegon and Mumford trailing by yards. On the third 440 leg, Muskegon surged forward, fought off a last-second effort by Mumford, to finish third overall with a 3:28.7. Perhaps the finest performance of the day came from dimunitive Louis Scott of Detroit Eastern in the one-mile run. Scott, only 5'6" and 1272 pounds, beat highly- rated Dick Sharkey of Detroit Redford, to smash the state record of 4.21.8 by more than four full seconds. The race opened, oddly enough, with Jim Smith of Pontiac Cen- tral setting a 440 pace. He prompt- ly died on the second lap. The duel between Sharkey and Scott didn't appear until the middle of the second lap. Sharkey had a lead of five yards which Scott began to close going into the third lap. Scott Shoots Ahead Sharkey began to speed up and Scott dropped back, still close. At the beginning of the last lap, signaled by a gun, Scott made his move. He shot past Sharkey on the first corner and the race was as good as run. The large crowd, stood and cheered as the little runner lengthened his lead and won haondily by more than 20 yards. Cleveland New York Minnesota Detroit Los Angeles Baltimore Chicago Kansas City Boston Washington W 23 23 24 19 20 20 21 19 16 11 L 15 15 18 17 18 19 20 24 23 27' Pct. .605 .605 .571 .528 .526 .513 .512 .442 .410 .289 GB 3 3 3Y 3Y2 6Y2 7 12 Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Totals 31 1 6 1 a-Grounded out for Austry in 8th. b-Singled for Cooley in 8th. MICHIGAN 000 015 000-6 7 1 W. MICHIGAN 100 000 000-1 6 1 2B-Merullo. E-Chapman, Predo- vic. SB-Merullo (3) Roebuck. Sac- Chapman, Post, Drews, Michalski. DP -- Chapman - Jones - Campbell. HBP-Newman (Salo), Michalski (Roebuck), Salo (Roebuck). MICHIGAN 7, Western Michigan 11. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Boston 12, Baltimore 6 Detroit 2, New York 1 Minnesota 4, Chicago 1 Kansas City 8, Los Angeles 7 Washington 8, Cleveland 6 TODAY'S GAMES Los Angeles at Kansas City (2) Minnesota at Chicago (2) Detroit at New York (2) Cleveland at Washington Baltimore at Boston I (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf","The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", tc.) PITCHING SUMMARIES IP H R ER BB SO Roebuck (W. 8-2) 9 6 1 1 7 7 Salo (I,, 1-1) 52y! 5 3 4 3 3 Cooley 213-1 1 1 0 2 SECOND GAME MICHIGAN AB R H RBI Jones, 2b 4 1 2 0 Newman, ss 3 1 2 1 Chapman,'3b 4 0 2 2 Steckley, If 3 0 0 1 Tate, rf 2 1 0 0 Merullo, c 3 0 0 0 Campbell, lb 3 1 1 1 Post, cf 2 11 1 Kerr, p 3 10 0 NATIONALl San Francisco Los Angeles St. Louis Cincinnati Pittsburgh Milwaukee Houston Philadelphia Chicago New York LEAGUE W L Pct. 31 14 .689 29 15 .659 24 16 .600, 23 16 .590 21 18 .538 '18 24 .429 17 25 .405 16 24 .400 14 28 .333 12 25 .324 GI$ 1% 44/ 5 7 111/ 12% 12% 152 15 I TILL WE MEET AGAIN -Daily-Bruce Taylor HE FLIES THROUGH THE AIR - Pete Goebel, instructor of the local judo club, demonstrates a basic throw on one of his proteges, Dave Dorff. The club. hopes to perform during halftime at next year's basketball games. "So far this year, we have only 16 members in the group. This is really the number I wanted in it. I don't believe I could teach a larger group as well as I can one this size," admits Goebel. "Next semester, however, I shall try to get someone more advanced than I to take over as instructor, and the resent group and myself can also do some teaching." As of now the clubrhas learned to fall, and has learned to use some of the basic throws and holds. Although it may seem mi- nor, falling is the first thing taught to aspirants. In Japan, where judo is a religion, they spend three or four months learn- ing to fall properly," notes Goebel. Prevents Injuries This is done mainly because it is highly to a person's advantage to know how to land if he finds him- self flying through the air. He could get hurt. Falling, per se, also helps learn- ers to acquire a necessary loose- ness of the muscles during a match. The actual matches are' begun by the "kotau" or official greeting.; This involves a mutual grabbing of uniforms, or GI's. Each man holds onto the other's GI, above the left elbow and on the left side of the chest. The GI's are strongly made, consisting of a air of baggy pants an'd a loose blouse, held of the wearer by a cloth belt. It is the color of this belt which denotes the wearer's rank as a judo expert. There are some 16 of these ranks above the beginner class. On With the Dance After the kotau, the match is begun. In some ways, a judo match re- sembles a waltz - that is, until one man or the cther decides to try for a fall. Then the resem- blance ceases, unless the waltzers are very clumsy indeed. The opponents circle around, gripping GI's, until one tries to trip or throw the other to the mat. Should he succeed, the match would be over. If he manages only a partial fall, or one judged infer- ior by the referee, he will have to apply a hold. To win with a hold, it must be maintained for 30 sec- onds or until the opponent can no longer withstand the pressure. Started Young Goebel himself began studying judo at an early age. "I began with judo in 1949. I was living in Ham- burg at the time, and judo was de- clared illegal for German citizens by occupation forces. It was con- sidered a weapon. I was twice city chamion of Hamburg in my weight class and was once second in Ger- many. The prizes for those who finished high in the competition were awarded a two-week course taught by members of the Kodi- kon, the Japanese judo institute which establishes worldwide rules and which raises judo to near per- fection," reminisces Goebel. "When I was in the service, people always wondered why I didn't use judo when I got into a fight, or when a friend of mine was in one. I did not'use it be- cause I respect it too much as a sport to use it in street fighting," he explains. Totals WESTERN MICHIGAN Predovic, 2b Drews, If Gatza, cf Michalski, ss Kwiatowski, rf Bidelman, 2b Ihne, lb Theder, c Ortleib, p a-Keniston 27 6 8 6 AB R H RBI 2 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 20 10 0 3 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 3 01 0 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS San Francisco:7, New York 6 (10 Inn.) Los Angeles,6. Philadelphia 3 St. Louis 4, Milwaukee 3 Houston 2, Pittsburgh 0 Cincinnati 11 Chicago 6 TODAY'S GAMES Philadelnhia at Los Angeles (2) New York at San Francisco (2) Pittsburgh at Houston (2) Milwaukee at St. Louis Chicago at Cincinnati ZINDELL OLDSMOBILE For Complete Collision and Body Shop Service Call- Ann Arbor NO 3-0507 -Free Estimates- All Makes of Cars Totals 24 0 4 0 a-Flied out for Ortleib in 7th. MICHIGAN W. MICHIGAN 000 100 5-6 8 0 000 000 0-0 4 2 2B-Jones. 3B-Campbell. SB- Post. E-Predovic, Gatza. LOB -- MICHIGAN 3, Western Michigan 6. PITCHING SUMMARIES IP H R ER BB SO Kerr (WV, 6-0) 7 4 0 0 4 3 Ortleib (L, 4-1) 7 8 6 5 3 4 This is the final column of my eighth year of writing for the makers of Marlboro Cigarettes, and this year, as in every pre- ceding year, when I come to the last column of the season, I come to a problem. My contract with the makers of Marlboro calls for me to write a humor column and, truly, I do the best I can-all things considered, I am not, I should explain, a jolly man by nature. Why should I be? First of all, I am shorter than everybody. Second, there are moths in my cashmere jacket. Third, I work in television. All the same, when it comes time to write this column, I light a good Marlboro Cigarette, put aside my trauma, and try with all the strength in my tiny body to make some jokes. Some- times it works better than others, but on the last column of the year, it just flatly doesn't work at all. Even in the very beginning this was true-and that, you will re- call, was eight years ago when I was relatively young and strong and had not yet developed that nasty knock in my transmission. Well do I remember sitting down to write the final column of my first year. Day followed barren day, and not a yock, not a hoff, not a zinger did I produce. I was about to give up humor and take a job selling mechanical dogs when all of a sudden, in a blinding flash, I realized why I couldn't think of any jokes! I leapt up from my typewriter and ran as fast as my little fat legs would carry me to the makers of Marlboro Cigarettes, and I tugged my forelock, and I said, "Sirs, I am well aware that you have engaged me to write a humor column, but today, as I approach the final column of the season, I am far too misty to be funny, for the final column of the season is, after all, a leave-taking, and when I think of saying goodbye to my audience -the swellest audience any columnist ever had-the college students of America-wonderful human beings, every man and IY , 9 woman of them-wise but kindly-astute but compassionate- perspicacious but forbearing-when, sirs, I think of saying good- bye to such an audience, I am too shook up even to consider levity, and so I ask you, sirs, to let me, in the final column of the year, forego humor and instead write a simple, dignified, straightforward farewell." Then I took out my bandanna, wiped my eyes, ears, nose, and throat and waited for a reply from the makers of Marlboro. They sat around the polished board room table, the makers, their handsome brows knit in concentration, puffing thought- fully on the Marlboros in their tattooed hands. At length they spoke. "Yes," they said simply. I never doubted they would say yes. People who make a cigarette as good as Marlboro must themselves be good. People who lavish such care on blending tobaccos so mild and flavor- ful, on devising a filter so clean and white, on boxing a flip-top box so flip-top, on packing a soft pack so soft-people like that are one hundred percent with me! And so from that day forward, the final column of the year --including the one you are, I devoutly hope, now reading-- makes no attempt to be funny, but is instead a simple thank you and au revoir. Competitive Sport "Judo has become an Olympic sport. Since most of the competi- tors from the U.S. will be coming from universities, we are trying to emphasize it here at Michigan as a competitive sport," says Goebel, explaining the reason for the group's formation. "We know for certain that there are regular -judo clubs at Illinois, Wisconsin, Ohio State, and Michi- gan State, and we hope to be able to get scheduled competition throughout the conference," he adds, voicing the biggest aspira- tion of the group. The opportunities to make this dream of a Big Ten judo league ever come true will soon be out of the group's hands. "I shall ap- ply for University backing as an official sport," states Goebel. "Then, I shall write to the clubs at other universities and also those which have no clubs and try to get +h4mhnal] ol +fe+ o'Ptinta-vn1in f a SUMMER JOBS FOR MALE STUDENTS Applications now being accepted for summer jobs with major national corporation. 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