THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MAY 1 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MAY: Take Third;.Baseball Team Splits wc POLE VAULT-1, Charles Morrow, Minnesota, 15 feet. 2, Gary Wolff, Illinois, 14-S. 3, Jim Nelson, Wis- consin, 14-8. 4, STEPHEN OVER- TON, MICHIGAN, 14-4. 5, Robert Shaffee, Indiana, 14-0. MILE RELAY -- 1, Iowa (Gary Richards, Gazy Hollingsworth, Bill Frazier, Roger Kerr). 2, Wisconsin. 3, MICHIGAN. 4, Michigan State. 5, Illinois. Time--3:11.2. Betters Big Ten record of 3:11.7 by Indiana in 1958. 880-YD. RUN - 1, Bill Frazier, Iowa. 2, CHARLES AQUINO, MICH-. IGAN. 3, Tom Creagan, Wisconsin. 4, Michael Holbrook, Illinois. 5, Raymond Miller, Minnesota. Time-r 1:50.6. 220-1, Nate Adams, Purdue. 2, Bob Moreland, Michigan State. 3, Tren- ton Jackson, Illinois. 4, MAC HUN- TER, MICHIGAN. 5, Walker Beverly, Michigan State. Time-:20.8. Betters Big Ten record of 21.0 set in Friday's preliminaries by Adams. 330-INTERMEDIATE HURDLES- 1, Don Gardner, Iowa. 2, Wendell Grant, Illinois. 3, Paul Warfield, Ohio State. 4, Burton Ewing, Minne- sota. 5, William Smith, Ohio State. Time-:37.7. New event. 660-YD. RUN - 1, Roger Kerr, Iowa. 2, David Becker, Illinois. 3, Scott Rocker, Iowa. 4, James Math- er, Michigan State. 5, DAN HUGHES, MICHIGAN. Time 1:17.4. Betters Big Ten record of 1;18.2, set by Kerr in Friday's trials. Schmitt, Puce Cone in 1-2 in Shot Put; Nuttal Takes Other 'M' First in 120-Highs Tate Homer Wins Opener; Sparma Throws No-Hitter (Continued from Page 1) trast to Friday's disappointments that Canham called yesterday, "One of the best second days we ever had. Morale Problem "After having such a bad day Friday, the thing that I was wor- ried about was that it was going to wreck our morale," Canham commented. "But instead the kids came back. I didn't even think we had a chance to beat Michigan State for third. Why, we could have finished sixth. I'm very happy." The big letdown Friday came when Ernst Soudek the favorite in the discus throw, failed to earn a single point in his specialty. The other was a delayed disqualifica- tion of Kent Bernard late Friday night after he had won his after- noon 660-yd. run trial in record time. Besides the two firsts by Schmitt and Nuttal and the second by Puce, Michigan also got out- standing support from Charlie Aquino, second in the 880 in 1:51.4; Des Ryan, third in the mile in 4:14.7; and Jim Neahusan, third in the two mile in 9:26.1. Overton Fourth Rounding out the other Michi- gan scoring were Steve Overton, fourth in the pole vault at 14'4"; Mac Hunter, fourth in the 220 in :21.6; Dan Hughes, fifth in the 660 in 1:19.5; and Chris Murray, fifth in the two-mile in 9:27.4.' Michigan also produced its best time of the season (3:15.6) in a third place finish in the mile relay, which Iowa used to edge Wisconsin for the team title. The key was a fine :48.5 by junior David Romain, who had suffered disappointment after disappoint- ment all season running the open 440. Bernard anchored the team in :48.3 but lost a three yard lead to Wisconsin's Elzie Higgenbottom, who earlier had won the 440. Other Legs Dan Hughes and Mac Hunter ran the other two legs for the Wolverines. Records were set by Purdue's Nate Adams who broke his own qualifying record by tak- ing the 220 in :20.8; by Iowa's Roger Kerr who ran a strong 1:17.4 to break his own qualifying record in the 660; and by Iowa's mile relay team of Gary Richards, Gary Hollingsworth, Bill Frazier and Kerr, .who combined for a fine 3:11.2 in the deciding race. Wind Ruins Adam's also ran :09.3 in win- ning the 100, but an aiding wind of 11 mph illegimated it as a record. For Schmitt, producing upsets in the Big Ten meets is getting to be a habit. He had come up with personal best in placing second outdoors last year and third in- doors this year. But yesterday hethrew a fan- tastic 22" farther than he ever had before to lead the shot put qualifiers and then hold the mar- gin through the finals., Puce's throw marked the third time he had ever done 56' and gave him an outstanding double, he had thrown 167'9 1/2to place third in the discus Friday, won by Ezerins. Confident Nuttall surprised everyone but himself in shocking the field in the highs. He showed no sign of being handicapped by a sore foot that had slowed him for much of the season. He got off to a slow start and was well back at the half way mark but kept com- ing on and was unstoppable by the time he hit the tape, nearly a yard ahead of Wisconsin's Mil- ler. Aquino, who just yesterday was a doubtful entry in the 880, ran' a close second to Frazier in that event today. Aquino, the judges ruled, had run a dead heat with MSU's Don Castle in the qualify- ing section of the 880 and so both runners were allowed to compete. Aquino gave Frazier the stiffest battle the Iowa farmboy has yet faced in the conference sticking close to his heels all the way into the final turn. But then Frazier steped, out and carried a two yard margin into the tape to win in a good 1:51.6. Aquino equalled his best time ever and was never threatened for the runner-up spot. Strong Finish Ryan, a sophomore from Dublin Ireland, put on a specacular fin- ishing kick to place third in a strategic mile won by Michigan State's Jan Bowen in 4:14.3. Ryan, picking men off on the final turn, moved briefly into second place until Iowa's Gary Fischer, the favorite passed him five yards from the finish. Dave Hayes, the Michigan jun- ior, failed for the first time to earn points in a Big Ten meet. Another usual steady performer who failed to get points was high jumper Al Ammerman. Ammer- man could only manage 6'2" in' the event which was eventually won by Wisconsin's Bill Holden with a leap of 6'71/2". The two-mile was decided by a scant yard when Illinois' Al Car- rius fended off Iowa's Ralph Trimble in 9:15.3. Neahusan and Murray stayed in the running for four laps and then gradually drop- ped off the pace. Murray held fourth place but was out kicked by Iowa's Larry Kramer down the homestretch. Happy Note Overton ended his varsity career on a happy note by clearing his best height of the year. George Wade, who broke his pole last weekend, couldn't place in a good field led by Minnesota's Chuck Morrow, who came within %' of ex-Michigan vaulter Rod Den- hart's record of 15'%/4". In the 220 Adams completed his double win over Michigan State's Bob Moreland, who was a well- beaten second. Hunter ran a good race for fourth behind Illinois' Trent Jackson. In the 660 Hughes was last going into the final turn but finished strong along the inside lane for his fifth place. Michigan's Charlie Peltz was un- able to place in the 330-yd. in- termediate hurdles, won by Iowa's Don Gardner :37.7. KENT BERNARD ... disqualified -U---- I Judge Rules .Bernard Out By DAVE GOOD Acting Sports Editor Special To The Daily MINNEAPOLIS-Kent Bernard strolled into the hotel suite yes- terday where coach Don Canham was giving out his pre-meet in- structions to his team for the conference meet for the track championships. It was 11:15 a.m. and Bernard, the sophomore from Trinidad, had gone in to get his lane assignment for the afternoon's 660-yd. run finals. He and Iowa's Roger Kerr had each won their heat in record times. "You've been disqualified," Can- ham said calmly as Bernard took his seat, "we argued about it but there is not a thing we can do. I think it's a rotten decision." Delayed Nearly five hours after Fridays, preliminary heats had been fin- ished meet referee Tommy Deck- ard decided to disqualify Bernard for running out of his lane. No explanation was made until yes- terday morning, when Deckard said that Bernard's spike marks appeared along the chalk lane line about half the distance of the curve. In the afternoon, Minnesota's Creighton Fleming had run out of his lane in the 440-yd. dash preliminaries and had been dis- qualified immediately after the race. He would have finished fourth. "If you disqualify one you have to disqualify the other," said Deckard. "I just wanted some time to think about this one. He did win his heat." By TOM WEINBERG 1 Special To The Daily1 COLUMBUS - The exploding bats which powered Michigan to ae 5-4 ten-inning win over Ohio State1 in the first game of yesterday's doubleheader here were extin-i guished in the second by Buckeye< Joe Sparma's no-hitter. Parma's seven-inning master- piece followed Wolverine ace Fritz? Fisher's eighth win of the season and left Michigan a flickering1 hope of winning the Big Ten titlel and retaining the national crown. In the first game, back-to-back ninth-inning home runs by left- fielder Jim Steckley and Dennisi Spalla shot the Wolverines ahead 4-3. But the Buckeyes countered1 with a run in the last of the ninthJ to shove the game into extra inn-i ings. In the tenth, it again was the long ball which made the dif-] ference. Big Blast Ron Tate, slugging rightfielder, led off the tenth with a 370-foot blast over the right field fence and put the Wolverines in front to stay, 5-4. In the second game, the closest thing to a hit off right-handed junior Sparma was a shot to left field in the third inning by third baseman Dick Post. Post stroked a liner which looked like a sure double, but was robbed by Buckeye Jim Reed's diving stab. Sparma, a second-string quar- terback who was shelled last year by the Wolverines, walked three en route to the game which he called "by far the best game I've- ever pitched." He faced a scant 22 batters, one over the minimum, as two of the three base-runners were erased on the bases. Two Walks Joe Jones, Wolverine captain and second baseman drew two walks. He was wiped out in a double play in the fourth inning and in the seventh was forced out at second. The only other baserun- ner was Steckley who was nabbed trying to steal second in the sec- ond inning. Sparma was a bit shaky in the last inning, starting off with six straight balls. He put in the third pitch to shortstop Jim Newman for a, called strike, then fired an- other ball. With a 3-1 count, New- man grounded to second, forced the runner, Jones, but beat the relay to first. No Double Play Ron Tate followed with another grounder to second and it was only pinch-runner Bob Cantrell's body block which broke up the double play and kept the hopes alive. Spalla, the next hitter, popped out to the second baseman and the whitewash was complete. Dave Roebuck pitched the sec- ond game for Michigan and gave up only two earned runs. The Buckeyes scored two in the second when after two were out, catcher Al Silverman drew a walk. Reed followed with a bat-handle single to left and the runners moved to second and third when Steckley bobbled the ball. Centerfielder Steve Scott then hit a shot past Jones at second and both runners came in tO score. The third Ohio State run came in the seventh on a single, a sacrifice, and a run-scoring 'sin- gle off the bat of Silverman. In the first game aside from their big blasts, Steckley and Tate, the leading hitters for Coach Mo- I by Benedict's crew, each walloped long doubles. Tate's drove in the second, and then tying run in the eighth, while Steckley's was the lead-off hit in the sixth. The leading home run-hitter in the Big Ten, John Muchado, Ohio State third baseman, slug- ged his fourth in Conference ac- tion and twelfth of the year. The 400-ft. smash over the centerfield scoreboard was the first hit off Fisher and came in the fourth in- ning. Besides striking out five in his 10-inning stint, Fisher picked shortstop Bob Klein off first base twice in the same inning. Klein was fooled by the lefty's decep- tive motion to first base, but slid in under the throw in a run down. One pitch later, he was caught again and this time Fisher got him himself in a rundown. The Wolverines now have a 6-5 record in the Big Ten and trail first-place Iowa by one full game. The Splits Again FIRST GAME " . ' ... r v '' , >.v, ;t :::r-" r ; ,, . tu . . ; ,ry ' 'p\ l tiS '! . } . . ti '" ".4 qN.. it I' 1* i A HAIRCUT IN A HURRY? " 4 Master Barbers 0 Air-Conditioned Welcome to U-M BARBERS near Kresge's MICHGAN} v YAB R H RBI Jones, 2b 5 1 2 0 Newman, ss 5 0 2 1 Tate, rf 5 1 22 Campbell, lb 5 0 0 0 Steckley, If 5 1 2 1 Spalla,cf 5 1 1 1 Post, 3b 4 0 1 0 P. Adams, a 4 0 0 0 Fisher, p 2 1 0 0 Totals 40 5 10 5 OHIO STATE AB R H RBI Klein, ss 3, 1 0 0 Peters, 2b 5 0 0 0 Muchado, 3b 5 1 2 1 Zabinski, rf 4 1 2 0 Chonko, lb 4 0 0 0 Silverman, c 3 1 2 1 Reed,lIf 4 0 2 1 Scott, cf 0 0 0 0 Mentel, cf-If 4 0 0 0 Hay, p 3 0 0 0 Merrell, p 0 0 0 0 Durant, p 0 0 0 0 a-Frawley 1 0 0 0 Totals 36 4 S 3 a-Popped out for Merrill in 9th. MICHIGANT 100000 012 1-5 10 3 OHIO STATE 000 100 111 0-4 S 1 E-P. Adams, Fisher, Jones, Pe- ters. 2B-Tate, Steckley, Zabinski. HR-Steckley, Spalla, Tate, Much- ado. SB-Post (2), Klein, DP - Newman, Jones and Campbell; Post and Campbell. LOB-Michigan 7, Ohio State 6. PITCHING SUMMARIES IP H RERBB SO Fisher (W, 8-1) 10 8 4 2x4 5 x-Hay 8 8 4 4 1 2 Merrell 1 1 0 0 1 0 Durant (L, 1-3) 1 1 1 1 0 0 x-Pitched to two batters in 9th. SECOND GAME MICHIGAN AB R H RBI Jones, 2b 1 0 0 0 Newman, ss 3 0 0 0 a-Cantrell 0 0 0 0 Tate, rf 3 0 0 0 Spalla, cf 2 0 0 0 Campbell, lb 2 0 0 0 Steckley, If 2 0 0 0 Post, 3b 2 0 0 0 P. Adams, c 2. 0 0 0 Roebuck, p 2 0 0 0 Totals 19 0 0 0 OHIO STATE AB R H RBI Klein, ss 3 0 1 0 Peters, 2b 2 0 0 0 Muchado, 3b 3 1 1 0 Zabinski, rf 2 0 0 0 Chonko, lb 2 0 0 0 Silverman, c 2 1 2 1 Reed,f 3 1,1 0 Scott, cf 3 0 1 2 Sparma, p 2 0 0 0 Totals 22 3 6 3 a-Ran for Newman in 7th. MICHIGAN 000 000 0-0 0 2 OHIO STATE 020 001 x-3 6 0 E-Steckley, Campbell. DP-Chon- ko, Klein and Chonko. SB--Peters. LOB--Michigan 1, Ohio State 5. PITCHING SUMMARIES IP H RIER BBSO Roebuck (L, 3-2) 6 6 3 2 3 3 Sparma (W, 5-3) 7 0 0 0 3 7 I Coming Back Next Year? Then you will be interested in our box storage plan. Get with it! Why drag all your woolens or formal attire home when you can have them If' i 0 UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS M in.ge 19 &cempletiaofatleast1yearofcoege? GRADUATE STUDENTS and FACULTY MEMBERS THE ASSOCIATION OF PRIVATE CAMPS S* riUin 1 ou.standin Bov. Girl. 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