19, 1963 THE MICHIGAN DATT.V T~u . M C ~~1T l ~y---.. .---- a lA rst. Sr £554 !M= Volverine Linksters Drop to Second Day Scores Explode To Kill Hopes for Golf Title BY GARY WANR Special To The .Daily MADISON-Wisconsin blew a 14 stroke lead at the end of 54 holes. to enable Minnesota to win the - 44th annual Western Conference Golf Tournament here yesterday. Michigan began the day, with a two stroke lead over the host Badgers, with the Gophers in third; place, five shots behind, but the, Wolverines faltered when the pres- sure started mounting and wound up fourth. Windy Day Winds ranging as high as 40 miles per hour 'ripped the par 72 Maple Bluff Golf Course and sent scores soaring, especially in the afternoon. Wisconsin shot the best round of the tourney during the morning with a 368 total to go 14 up on Minnesota. Purdue and Michigan were 15 shots behind the leader. But in the afternoon, the Gophers turned in some steady golf with 381 shots while everyone else was out on the course giving ground to the weather. Jack Keohane of Minnesota L SU Fi rst In Southeast BIRMINGHAM (I') - Louisiana State won its' 19th Southeastern Conference track title yesterday as, Gary Ray of Auburn and Charles Moseley of Alabama stole the show with individual performances. Ray broke the SEC record for the 100-yd. dash with a :09.3 per- formance. Ray also won the 220- yd. dash in :21.0. Moseley, led all performers, scoring 19 points, as he won three events and placed second in an- other. LSU amassed 70 points. ' Defenders Second Mississippi State, the defending champion, placed second with 46 points and only two first places. Auburn, with three firsts, was third with 30 points. Alabama, with three firsts, was fourth with 35 points and Florida scored 23", points. iAU led in first place finishes- with eight. Six records fell and one other was tied. Moseley, the SEC's most versa- tile track athlete, set a record in the high hurdles with a time of -:13.9,, breaking the mark set in' 1936 by Spec Towns, now the Georgia track coach. He won the broad junip with a leap of 23'11 '" and the triple jump with 45-9%Z, also an SEC record.. Hardin First, Second: LSU's Billy Hardin, who led. scorers last year, finished first in one event, second in another, and ran on a winning relay team and, a second, place' relay team for 114 points-second to Moseley. Ron Hernandez, Bengal Tiger strongman, was the meet's only other double winner. He took both the shot put and the discus. dropped in a two-footer on the 18th hole to give, the victors a tea mtotal of 1523. Wisconsin was second at 1524; Purdue third, 1529; and Michigan, 1537. Keo- hane had a 74 for the afternoon round. High for 'M' Wolverine Dave Cameron had the two best rounds of the day among his teammates with 71- 79-150. Chuck Newton and Gary Mouw had 154.and 155 respectively for the day's scores. Wisconsin junior Roger Eber- hardt took medalist honors with 292 total while Minnesota's Dave Gumlia finished second with 298. Eberhardt'started the day at 146 and a one shot lead over sopho- more Gumlia. In the morning, he fired a blistering four under par 68 to stand at 214, nine shots ahead of the field. An afternoon 78 to Gumlia's 75 gave Eberhardt the victory. Newton was medalist for Mich- igan at 302 and wound up in a tie' for third place in the overall in- dividual competition. Mouw had 305 strokes for the tournament ~and finished in tie for tenth. ; Small Lead Going into the 'second day -of action Michigan held the.lead with 758 shots; Wisconsin was sec- ond at 760; and the eventual win- ners, ,third with 763. The Wolver- ines steadily, got worse yesterday with rounds of 885 and 393. Wis- consin, which had put together rounds of 371 and 268 following a first-day morning total of 389, fell apart after lunch and chalked up 396 Minnesota put together four scores of 378, 385. 379 and 381 for7 its winning total. Improving- on last year's fourth place finish, the Gophers entered this year's tour- nament with a 7-4 season recordl and only two -returning lettermen., Paced' by Rich Bulloch's 302 strokes, the Boilermakers moved up from, yesterday's foui'th place to take the third spot. Bulloch tied with Newton for third in the med- alist play. - Comeown TOPS FOR WOLVERINES-Chuck Newton, Michigan's golf cap- LOW MAN YESTERDAY-Michigan golfer Dave Cameron shot tain, showed that he should be yesterday by finishing up the Big a 150 in two rounds yesterday to be the low man for the Wol- Ten meet with a four-round total of 302, tops for the Wolverines. verines in the second day of the Big Ten golf tourney at Madi- This score was good enough to tie him with Purdue's Rich Bulloch son. Cameron finished out the meet with a four-round total of 308. for third in the meet AAUJ BATTLE: ENJOY THE WONDERFUL HONDA '50' F113A Submits Cage Soluton FNEWWORLDo FN t xW RIO DE JANEIRO (MP)r- The International Basketball Federa- tion, known as the FIBA, proposed a compromise solution yesterday to the jurisdictional dispute be- tween the Amateur Athletic Un- ion and the U.S. Basketball Fed- eration. The two groups have been bat- tling for control of amateur bas- ketball in the United States.. The FIBA suggested that, unless the two organizations get together voluntarily before the 'deadline] date, that the ffollowing plan be, put into effect Dec. 31: 1) The AAU continues as the of-1 ficial U.S. sanctioning agent with-+ in the FIBA but both groups be given the right to sanction inde- pendently competition at local, na- tional and international levels. 2) Events involving participa- tion of national teams remains un- der AAU control with the AAU having the right to select players from all national bodies. 3) The U.S. Basketball Federa- tion participate equally with the AAU in Olympic, World Cham- pionship and Pan-American tour- naments. 4) A coordinating body be' set up consisting of an equal number, of representatives from each group and one neutral member to be selected by the U.S. Olympic Committee. This body settles all disputes. The proposal is conditioned on the requirement that the Federa- tion amend its constitution to pro- vide for "volunteer and amateur leadership at legislative levels." Father Wilfred H. Crowley, vice- president of .Santa Clara Univer- sity and one of the Federation's four representatives, hailed the proposal as an advance. He stressed that the proposal was a" minimum for the Federa- tion, however. "It. is necessary that the Fed- eration be given recognition as A governing body," Father Crowley said. If the, two groups- don't reach a solution by the end of the year, they have three years to comply with the FIBA recommendation. INDIVIDUAL MEDALISTS Roger Eberhardt (Wis) Cace Gumlia ('Minn) CHUCK NEWTON' (MICH) Rich Bulloch (Put) Al McLean (NU) Joel Hirsch (Ill)~,. Les Peterson (Minn) Jim Brown (OSU) Jack Keohane (Minn) Terry Winter (Pur) GARY MOUlt (MICH) Jeff=' Jones (NU) Frank: Morse (NU) ' a EEME 292 298. 302 302 303 303 303 304 304 305 305 305 305 CH ECKMATE FOR BERMUDAS I UDASAL MICHIGAN SCORES Newton 76-72-77-77-302 Mouw 79-75-71-80--305 Cameron 78-80-71-79-308 Exashevski 76-79-81-77-313 Passink 81-76-82-81-320 Pendlebury 78-73-81-80-321 TEAM STANDINGS Minnesota 763-1523 Wisconsin 760-1524 Purdue 765"1529 MICHIGAN '758--1537 Northwestern 781--1545 Indiana 774-1552 Illinois 774-1562 Michigan State 769-1562 Iowa 785-1587 Ohio State 788-1590 CHEC KMATE. ON STATE STREET, THAT GREAT'STREET V Major League Standings 11 NATIONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE San Francisco Los Angeles St. Louis Chicago Milwaukee Pittsburgh Cincinnati Philadelphia Houston New York W 23 21 20 18 18 16 16 16. 17 16 L .14 16 18 17 19 18 19 21 21 Pet. .622 .568 .526 .514 .486 .471 .471 .457 .447 .432 GB 2 3Y2 4 5 5Y/ 6 7 Boston Chicago Baltimore New York Kansas City Cleveland Los Angeles Minnesota Detroit Washington W 18 20 20 17 19 14 17 13 13 14 L 12 14 14 14 15 21 20 20 23 Pet. .640 .588 .588 .586 .576 .483 .447 .394 .394 .378 GB 1 3 5 6% 7YZ YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Milwaukee 10, Chicago 6 Houston 3, Philadelphia 2 New York 4, San Francisco 0 Los Angeles 6, Pittsburgh 4 Cincinnati 9, St. Louis 7 TODAY'S GAMES Milwaukee at Chicago (2) New York at Los Angeles (2) Philadelphia at San Francisco (2) Cincinnati at St. Louis Pittsburgh at Houston YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Minnesota 8, Cleveland 1 Los Angeles at New York (ppd.) Kansas City at Boston (ppd.) Detroit 6-5, Washington 3-7 Baltimore 2, Chicago 1 TODAY'S GAMES Minnesota at Cleveland (2) Los Angeles at New York (2) Kansas City at Boston (2) Chicago at Baltimore (2) Detroit at Washington x_ One of the seven goldenkeys to brewing Budweiser. \' r "( ~s~~"s\ \ 1; j 0 r a.\ 1 U tlel1Q =w I. 'C.".. '' ...... -- R II~UIE 1NINE