28,1963 c, t _ THE MIC2IGAN DAILY PAC AT PENN RELAYS: Sophomore Pole Vaults 16'5" 'M' Diamondmen Split Doubleheader PHILADELPHIA (P) - Soph- omore Brian Sternberg of the Uni- versity of Washington set an un- official world outdoor pole vault' record at the Penn Relays Satur-! day of 16 feet, 5 inches.? Sternberg, who recently vaulted 16-31{2 indoors, set the record on his first try outdoors to soar over the 16-foot barrier. His first jump of the day was 16-1, and his sec- end_ try was the world mark. Ammerman First Michigan's Al Ammerman leap- a towering 6'6" yesterday to pick up the lone Wolverine first place yesterday. The Michigan mile relay team finished sixth, and the two-mile relay squad was third. The Wol- verines didn't run in the sprint relay. Ammerman won first place in the high jump on fewest misses, clearing the 6'6" mark on the. first try over. In the two-mile relay third man Dave Hayes clock- ed the fastest time, finishing in 1:52.7. Other times: Rock Casto, 1:55.5; Ted Kelley, 1:53.8; and Charlie Aquino, 1:54.5. Relay Winner Villanova sped to victory in meet record time in the sprint Thinclads Smash Records In Open Federation Meet By RICHARD EISENBERG. While Michigan's top varsity athletes were competing at the Penn Relays yesterday, the re- mainder of the squad and fresh- TSC Takes Four Relays DES MOINES, Iowa (WP)-Lester Milburn and Ray Saddler helped little Texas Southern win four of the feature. relays at. the rain- splattered Drake Relays here yes- terday. Milburn had a hand in all four as the all-Negro team won the college mile relay in 3:12.9, the college 880-yd. relay in 1:25.9, the, college 440-yd. relay in :41.4 and the college sprint medley relay in 3:23.1. Stanford, which was supposed to challenge for the team title, won only the university distance medley yesterday with a 4:09.4 mile an- chor leg from Harry McCalla. Iowa's mile relay team of Gary Richards, Scott Rocker, Gary Hol- lingsworth and Roger Kerr timed 3:13.5 to win the university divi- sion of their race. Roger Sayers of Omaha defeated Purdue's Nate Adams and Illinois' Trent Jackson in the 100-yd. dysh as all three were timed in :09.6. Alonzo -Littlejohn- of Western Michigan won the high jump at 6'7.1", while Bill Holden, who set an indoor record of 6'10' for Wis- consin in the indoor Big Ten meet, settled for /a three-way tie for third at 6'4". Wisconsin inished second in the 480-yd. shuttle hurdle relay in :59.8 behind Air Force, and Big Ten mile champion Gary Fischer of Iowa finished only third in the mile, won by Western Michigan's Nell Browne in 4:15.7. Fred. Hansen of Rice broke the meet record by pole vaulting 15'- 711", and former Oregon State NCAA champion Dyrol Burleson broke his own meeet record with a 4:05.4 in the invitational mile, defeating Robin Lingle of Colum- bus, Mo. Other relay winners were Baylor, .42.2 in the university 440-yd. re- lay;; Oregon: State, 7:31.5 in the university two-mile relay; Loyola of Chicago, 7:39.9 in the college two-mile relay; and Abilene Chris- tian, 1:26.4 in the university 880- yd. relay. Major League Standings men were performing against the similar segments of teams from Michigan State, Western Michigan, Eastern Michigan, Wayne State, Bowling Green, and the Ann Arbor Track Club at Ferry Field in the Michigan Open Federation Track Meet. In the process the thinclads set six new meeet records in the' dis- cus, shotput, 660-yd. run, mile run, 330-yd. hurdles, and the mile relay. Ernst Soudek, the varsity dis- cuss man from Austria, threw the disc 169 ft., three feet farther than he threw in the Penn Relays a' day.earlier. In the high jump, Al Potratz from EMU, jumped 6'2". Bob Den- sham, a Michigan freshman, also jumped the same height but Po- tratz was awarded first place on fewer misses. R r New Record Roger Schmitt of Michigan set a new meet record in the shot put with a heave of 53'8". Michi- gan monopolized the pole vault, with George Wade and Steve Overton tying for first at 13'6".. Overton later jumped 14' after the competition. In the broad jump Bob Barnett of EMU leaped 23'5". Michigan's Tom Sweeney and Doug Miles placed fourth and fifth respective- ly. EMU also won the half mile with George Mason setting a new record with a time of 1:55.1. John Gregg, representing the AATC, won the 100 in :09.9. Gregg, a dental student at the University, also anchored the AATC's quarter mile relay team which placed fourth to the victorious WMU freshmen..Mike Gallagher, also of WMU, won the mile in the record- setting. time of 4:19.6. MSU freshman Mike Marten set a new record in the 660 with a time of 1:19.9. Burnley Scratched In the 220 yd. dash Gary Bar- ham of .WMU was timed In 22.4. Ken Burnley of Michigan, who won his heat in 22.7, was scratched from the finals by coach Elmer Swanson who stated Burnley has not fully recovered from a leg injury and he (Swanson) "did not want to push his luck." Cal Williams of WMU won the 440 with a time of :50.0 seconds. Talt Malone, who ran a fine :49. anchor leg on Michigan's mile relay team, finished fifth. In the last individual event of of day Dick Sharkey of the MSU freshmen won the two mile run with a time of 9:14.5. Jim Neu- hausen of Michigan finished a distant second. Chris Murray, the fine Michigan distance man who is recovering from a flu attack, finished sixth. medley relay and Michigan State won the 440-yd. relay. In scoring its first victory ofI the two-day competition the Vil- lanova quartet of Don Webster, Ron Hangey, Marsh Uzzle and Noel Carroll turned in a 3:20.1 clocking, smashing the old record of 3:22.5 set by a Villanova team in 1958. Oregon State was second, about 11 yards behind, with St. John's third. Michigan State's 440 team of John Parker, Walker Beverly,' Sherm. Lewis and Bob Moreland won by some 7 yards over Man- hattan, with Maryland State third and Navy fourth. The winners were clocked in 41.5 seconds. Earlier, Jim Keefe of Central Connecticut State opend the pro- gram with a record breaking per- formance in the 2-mile run. He was timed in 8:56.2. Second Event After about five hours of high school track events following Keefe's effort, the second major event of the day resulted in a vic- tory for Norman Tate of North Carolina College of Durham in the hop, skip and jump. Tate re- corded a 49 foot, 5 inch mark in the triple jump. Grant King of Albright was second with 47-2, and Charley Mays of Maryland State third with a 47-1. Keefe, the New England two- mile champion, wiped out the 9:01.7 mark set by Lew Stieglitz of Connecticut in 1957. He was followed across the finish line by Bill Straub of Army and Joe Lynch of Georgetown. DISCUS RECORD: Oerter Sets Toss Mark WALNUT, Calif. (A')-Al Oerter of the New York Athletic Club bettered his old world record in the discus throw yesterday with a mark of 205', 51/2". The 26-year-old Oerter, a two- time Olympics winner in the last two international games, broke his own mark on his second try in the Mt. San Antonio Relays. His recognized record is 204', 101/" set in Chicago July 1, 1962. This was in a meet between the United States and Poland. Earlier Bob Hayes, Florida A&M, ran the fastest 100 meters in track history-:09.9-but it won't count .as a .world's record because of an 11-mile-per-hour wind at his back. Running unattached, Hayes fin- ished about three yds. in front of Henry Carr of Arizona State and John Gilbert of the Southern California Striders, both of whom were clocked at :10:0. The world record of :10.0 is held by Armin Hary of Germany and Harry Jerome of Canada. The allowable wind assistance is 4.473 m.p.h. SJob 10 s >o w11Y -sN4 O ws3 d- L00-£ ON J~ UUM 1o 9o!A4S dogs Apog puo uospio) a49Idwo jd 3180WS7"O113ONIZ MICHIGAN Jones, 2b Newman, ss Tate rf Spalia of Campbell, lb Steckley, If Chapman, 3b P. Adams, c Roebuck, p Totals PURDUE, Buente, rf Bresnahan, rf Chess, ss Lui, 3b Weiler, lb Pugh, If Eby, cf Garland, 2b McKenzie, 2b Rezabeck, p Totals MICHIGAN PURDUE AB R H RBI 4 1 1 0 3 1 0 0 4 0,2 0 4 0 2 0 4 -1-1-3 34 3 9 3 AB R H RBI 4 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 3 1 1 0 4 3 3 0 4 0 2 1 4 0 2 3 35 6 1106 40 000 40 22 0 006111 By BILL BULLARD Special To The Daily LAFAYETTE-Michigan's base- ball team lost to Purdue here yes- terday in the first game of a double header, 6-3, but exploded for a 9-4 victory in the nightcap. After losing the opening game to Illinois 6-5 Friday, the Wol- verines now have a 1-2 Big Ten record. Improved Purdue is 2-1 in the conference after beating Slow Start FIRST GAME Michigan State on Friday. The surprising Boilermakers have a 12-5 overall record. Ron Tate was the goat of the first game and the hero of the second. With two outs and men on first ar4d second bases in the fourth inning of the first game, Tate dropped a fly ball that seem- ed to be a certain catch. One run- ner scored on the play and an- other Purdue run came after the next batter singled. This gave Purdue a 2-0 lead which Jim Steckley demolished with a three run homer in the sixth inning. The Boilermakers took the lead again in the bottom of the inning and never relin- quished it. Injury Puts Honig Out For Conference Sesn Tate's feat in the second game was hitting a grand slam home run to cap a six-run rally in the fourth inning. This gave the Wol- verines an insurmountable 9-1 lead. Both games were wild hitting affairs with mistakes and errors abounding. Michigan had two errors in each game. The Boiler- makers also had a total of four errors. Despite the raging offenses, pitching changes were few. Dave Roebuck and Allan Rezabek went the distance in the first game de- spite the fact that they gave up 11 hits and 9 hits respectively. In the second game, Jim Bobel went almost the entire distance with sophomore Clyde Barnhart coming in to face the last three batters of the game. Larry Van- derwielen was knocked out of the. box after pitching three innings and giving up three runs. Creigh- ton Burns relieved Vanderwielen in the fourth inning and gave up six runs, all of them unearned except one. The close 3-2 score in the first game became a 6-3 Purdue victory when the Boilermakers pushed across two runs each in the sixth and eighth innings. In the sixth, Roebuck walked the leadoff bat- ter, Bill Weiler. Two straight singles by Tom Pugh and Ken Eby loaded the bases, and then Dave McKenzie smashed a double to drive in two runs. Insures Win Rezabek insured his own victory by lashing a single to drive in two more runs in the eighth.. Despite getting nine hits against Rezabek, the Wolverines were con- tinually frustrated as they could never get more than two hits an inning. In the second'game the Boiler- makers got 11 hits off Bobel, but BULLETIN DETROIT (R - D i c k the Bruiser, his face blood-smeared, won his grudge wrestling match with suspended Detroit Lions football star Alex Karras last night on a pin after 11 minutes, 21 seconds. The Wolverines Jumped on Van- derwielen for three runs in the third inning. Bobel reached first on an error and with two outs was doubled home by Jim Newman. Tate got his first hit of the double header, a double that drove in Newman. Tate was driven home by Dennis Spalla's single. A six-run rally in the next inn- ing then clinched the victory. Michigan's overall record is now 8-6. just as in the previous game with Michigan, Purdue could never come up with a big scoring inning. The hits were so well scattered that Purdue made two hits each in the last five innings. of the game. They scored all four of their runs in different innings. I Special To The Daily LAFAYETTE--X-rays of short- stop Dick Honig's wrist taken yes- terday morning revealed a fractur- ed bone which will keep him out of the Michigan lineup for the rest of the Big Ten season. A cast was puton Honig's wrist yesterday morning after Honig was hit on the left wrist by one of Pat Holland's pitches in the Il- linois game Friday afternoon. The doctor who put the cast on says that Honig will have to wear it for a minimum of five weeks. If Honig's teammates can win the Big Ten championship he will possibly be able to play in the NCAA tournament which the Wol- verines won last season. E-Tate, Chess, Chapman. 2B- McKenzie. HR-Steckley. DP-Reza- beck to Chess to Weiler. SB-Mc- Kenzie. LOB-Michigan 5, Purdue 7. PITCHING SUMMARIES IP R ER H SO BB Roebuck (L, 1-1) 8 6 4 11 6 2 Rezabeck' (W, 4-0) 9 3 3 9 7 1 SECOND GAME MICHIGAN AB Jones, 2b 3 Newman, ss 3 Tate, rf 4 Spalla, cf 4 Campbell, lb 4 Steckley, lf 4 Skaff, 3b 4 P. Adams, c 3 Boebel p 3 R: 1 1 2 0 0 4 1 1 H RBI 1 0 xi 2 5 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 Honig stayed in the game Fri- day after being hit by the pitch in the eighth inning. He scored the tying run on an infield out by Denny Spalla. Illinois pushed across a run in the bottom of the inning to win 6-5, in the bot- tom half of the inning, Honig was replaced by Jim Newman. In his brief time on the field, Newman fielded two balls and threw the runners out at first base. Honig has been the regular Wol- verine shortstop for the past two seasons. He was the second lead- ing hitter on the team last season. Along with second baseman Joe Jones, he formed a double play combination that led the nation in that category. Honig was in uniform for yes- terday's doubleheader and serv- ed as a coach in the first and third base coaching boxes. Before the road trip, Newman was the second leading hitter onj the team with a .368 average al-j though he was not a regular start- er. Coach Moby Benedict said last week that he considered Newman as one of his four regular outfield- ers. Newman played in 26 games last season, hitting .271. He played both third base and shortstop but this season was switched to the outfield. Are you GETTING MARRIED? see the DOCTOR, NURSE, MARRIAGE COUNSELOR of PLANNED PARENTHOOD about Birth Control and Family Spacing Special pre-marital clinic Monday evenings. by appointment 201 East Liberty NOrmandy 2-9282 I I 77777777 APd' COeUNSELOR1 1] OENJINGSI~ Totals X32 9 7 9 PURDUE AB R H RBI Bresnahan, rf 3 0 1 0 Chess, ss 4 0 1 1 Lui, 3b 4 1 0 0 Weiler, lb 3 1 1 2 Pugh, 1! 3 0 1 0 Eby, cf 3 01 0 a-Stine 0 0 0 0 Garland, 2b 4 0 1 1 McKenzie, c 4 1 2 0 Vanderwielen, p 1 0 0 0 Hern, p 2 1 1 0 Totals 31 4 11 4 a-Walked for Eby in 7th. MICHIGAN 003 600 0-9 11 2 PURDUE 001 110 1-=411 2 E=-McKenzie, Skaff, Lul,' Hern, Boebe, Garland. 2B-Newman, Tate, McKenzie, Weller. HR-Tate. 'DP- Jones to Campbell. WP--Boebel (2). L9B-Mnichigan 4, Purdue 1Q. PITCHING SUMMARIESI IP 1L ER. H.SO BB a-Boebel (W, 2-3) 6 4 2 11 4 3 Vand'wielen (L, 1-2) 3 3 0 4 1 1 Burns 4 6 1 3 7 2 b-Barnhart 0 0 0 0 1 1 a-Faced 4 batters in 7th. b-Faced 3 batters in 7th.j UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS CM R. apt 19 & cMpleijoofas.aalyer 0140 0e) GRADUATE STUDENTS and FACULTY MEMBERS THE ASSOCIATION OF PRIVATE CAMPS . ... comprising 350 outstanding Boys, Girls, Brother-Sistoi and Co-Ed Camps, located throughout the Now England, Mid- dle Atlantic States and Canada. .. INVITES YOUR INQUIRIES conernzgsuuner employment as11od Counselors. Group Leaders, Speclalties, General Counselors. Write, Phone, or Call in Person Association of Private Camps - Dept. C Maxwll M. Alexander, Executive Director 55 West 42nd Street, OX 5*2656, New York 36, N Y. BOOKS for CHILDREN NEW TITLES ICAN, READ BOOKS DICK HONIG ...:broken wrist Dr. Seuss-Hop on Pop Bonsall -What Spot? . " i $1.95 . " " S *w * $1.95 cope $1.95 Selsam-Greg's Mi Myd ic k-The Secret C roS C Th ree $1.95 MAN OTHER NEW TITLES TO SELECT FROM OUR STOCK OVERBECK Bookstore 1216 SOUTH UNIVERSITY AVENUE 'Xr, " " ,, "v,.yo;ey S."."yrr}r" x r w; n+rva r rr !} vvr r.? :S":x tvs'."'.?'axi":"2'?'.'is A\{"2r2?fY:' "'r': 5'itiY.tS't.'vsdSX *'S"i.+, AMERICAN LEAGUE 1, emmmmaMmma CONTACT Baltimore Kansas ,City Chicago New York Boston Los Angeles' Minnesota Cleveland Detroit Washington W L 10 6 11 7 7 5 7 5 7 6 8 9 8 9 5 7 7 10 5 11 Pet. .&25 .611 .583 .583 .538 .471 .471 .417 .412 .313 GB 1 1 2/2 2% 3 .3% 4 TV RENTALS 21" TABLE MODELS LENSES $1000 per month. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Baltimore 4, Los Angeles 2 4 Boston 9, Chicago 5 Minnesota 9, Detroit 3 New York 8, Cleveland 1 Kansas City 7, Washington 3 TODAY'S-GAMES Minnesota at Detroit Kansas City at Washington Los Angeles at Baltimore Cleveland at New York Chicago at Boston (2) NATIONAL LEAGUE W L. Pet. GB Pittsburgh 10 5 .667 - x-St., Louis 11 6 .647 - Milwaukee 11 8 .579 1 San Francisco 10 8 .556 1YA x-Los Angeles. 10 8 .556 1% Philadelphia 8 8 .500 2'/ Chicago 8 10 .444 3Y2 Cincinnati 6 9 .400 4 New York 6 11 .353 5 x-Houston 6 13 .310 6% z--Played night game. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 4, Philadelphia 2 Pittsburgh 2, New York 1 Milwaukee 6, San Francisco 5 (12 inn) Cincinnati 1, Houston 0 St. Louis at Los Angeles (inc.) TODAY'S GAMES' New York at Pittsburgh Philadelphia at Chicago Milwaukee at San Francisco St. Louis at Los Angeles Cincinnati at Houston All sets guaranteed Free installation and service /! N EJAC NO 8-6007 CANNOT BE PRESCRIBED.. . INDISCRIMINATELY TO EVERYONE DESIRING THEM... NU-VISION ISPROUD OF ITS MANY YEARS OF CONSCIENTIOUSLY APPROACHING CONTACT LENS FITTING ! (I _ The krone is local currency in Norway. So is this. ... ask about our most unique Contact Lens Plan under the personal supervision of Dr. Richard Kinzie, Optometrist. $7, : ir}::{:ii}::.:::iii::'..vi++ ' .i'rv':i{YK4.vi. ,+a' «: : W:{ti' i'}lAV.:{'!~ + vV+Mw{v:'.+J:V? {':: w1Cw'a" "v.'Y'. . v.VN::' 1 v.vxA + ' Y ': Yl fiN :"1f1 \' i'i$