THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SE 'M' Track and Golf Teams Sweep to Victories Newcomb, Youngberg Lead Golfers To Upset of Three Big Ten Foes 'M' Wins Four Relays; Locke Victor in Shotput By JIM BERGER Special to The Daily COLUMBUS-In a magnificent display of team effort under un- believable circumstances, the Michigan golf squad literally stormed its way to victory, edging Ohio State by a single stroke in the quadrangular meet held yesterday. The final scores, based on the totals of all six men, had the Wol- verines with 460, second place Ohio State with 461, Purdue third with 467, and Indiana last with 487. Oh That Weather However, by far the mast amaz- ing aspect of this meet was the weather. The meet was scheduled to be- gin at 8:00 a.m. and 18 holes were to be played in the morning and 18 in the afternoon. But the weather man was not so obliging. After two starts which had to be called back be- cause of the downpour, the teams finally teed off at 10:30, but then at about 11:30 the clouds really opened up, and the meet was delayed another hour by a thun- der and lightning storm. With the greens completely waterlogged and the fairways sog- ged, the golfers set out where they had left off, and in spite of in- termittent interruptions, due to more rain, the golfers managed complete 18 holes, instead of the scheduled 36. Honors to Newcomb For the Wolverines Bill New- comb took top honors with a one over par 73. Dick Youngberg, who lost by a single stroke to Ohio State's Jack Nicklaus, shot a 75, Joe Brisson scored a 76, Chuck Newton and Mike Goode both notched 78's and Tom Ahern scor- ed 80. In all, the team average was a strong 76.6. As could be expected the match of the day was the number-one match featuring OSU's superstar Nicklaus, Michigan's Youngberg, Purdue's Steve Wilkinson, and In- diana's beared Dave Pelz. Then There Were Two However, after the first four holes this foursome quickly be- came a dual meet between Young- berg and Nicklaus. Youngberg quickly went two up as he parred the first two holes while Nicklaus suffered two bo- gies. The two men played the rest of the first nine nip and tuck, with Nicklaus gaining one stroke to finish one down. At the outset of the second nine Nicklaus came to life. In the tenth he came out of a trap six inches from the pin, for a par four as compared to Youngberg's bogey five. On the 11th Nicklaus one-putted for a birdie to take a one stroke lead. Youngberg Roars On the 14th and 15th Young- berg came roaring back as the OSU star had putter trouble. Youngberg birdied the par five 14th and on the 15th, Nicklaus shot a double bogey 6 and Young- berg found himself up by two. But it didn't last long for the upset-minded Youngberg. Nicklaus birdied the 16th for one stroke, and on the par three 17th, he sank a 60 footer for an- other birdie to take the lead as Youngberg shot a bogey. That put Nicklaus u one stroke and gave him the match as they both par- red the 18th. Hot Putter Newcomb's 73 was attributed to his hot putter. The Michigan jun- ior had a total of 31 putts on the soggy greens. His first nine total of 13 putts is almost unbe- lievable under the circumstances. Sam Voinoff, coach of the de- fending Big Ten champions Pur- due, described the Michigan vic- tory as, "Awful good, especially under these playing conditions." In commenting on Michigan's chances in the Big Ten Meet at Indiana, Voinoff said, "Indiana has a different kind of course, but Michigan has a real good chance." ERGAS LEPS . .. unbeatable anchor Pender Tops' Basilio in 15;_ Keeps Title By The Associated Press BOSTON - Artful Paul Pender retained his version of the world middleweight title last night, us- ing his rapier-like left hand as a double edged weapon for a unani- mous 15-round decision over stub- born Carmen Basilio. Pender twice floored the crusty former middle- and welterweight king. Basilio took an eight count when hammered off his feet by Pender's smashing left in the 13th. Paul used the left hook to send Basilio to the canvas again in the 15th round. Basilio earlier had claimed he had not been knocked down in 78 previous pro fights including 10 other title contests. Same Old Pender Pender, fighting his usual skill- ful, waiting, counter - punching game against a hard-hitting foe, had to withstand some Basilio bombs in the early stages before carrying out his pre-fight battle plan. Referee Eddie Bradley scored 148-135 for Pender on the 10- point "must" scoring system in Massachusetts while judges Joe Blumsack and Harry Sundberg called it 147-132 and 147-138 for the champ in this nationally tele- vised show from Boston Garden. Third Defense Making his third defense of a crown recognized in Massachu- setts, New York and Europe, Pen- der held off the feared Basilio power in the early stages and again in a late rally. The left hand served to keep Basilio off. stride and to land when Carmen crouched his way in close under Paul's stand-up style. Basilio came out in the 13th in a bold bid to take command. But Pender rallied quickly and sent Carmen down with a left. Carmen partially fell across the ropes and went down on one knee. After tak- ing an eight count he got up un- steadily just before the bell. Carmen had Pender in trouble in the second round with a flurry which began with a brutal right to the side of the head. Pender took a series of shots to the body and head and appeared to be hanging on momentarily from in- stinct. (Continued from Page 1) Aquino and Bryan Gibson ran the first two legs for Michigan, but Purdue's Dave Mills. American record-holder in the 440, pulled 15 yards out in front of the pack on the second leg. Martin Spurts Then Dave Martin got almost all of it back for Leps and the Torontoan hung back until the last lap, breezing past George Harvey on the homestretch to a safe-enough two-ward margin. In the 440-yd. relay, Bennie Mc- Roe, John Gregg, Don Chalfant and Dick Cephas were in a class by themselves, winning by ten yards. McRae and Cephas, ordi- narily hurdlers, left nothing to be desired in the flat race. Two-Mile Scare The two-mile relay team got a scare from Central Michigan when Wally Schafer went out with a two-yard deficit from Aquino and dropped back nearly 15 yards from the pace. He picked it right back up, though, and Martin stayed back a few strides until the final turn, when he pushed five yards ahead and gave the baton to Leps. Leps, running easily, increased the , margin to 20 yards as he crossed the finish. In the 880-yd. relay, McRae, Carter Reese, Gregg and Cephas each caught his man coming off the staggered starts and Cephas withstood a belated challenge from Indiana's Eddie Miles for a three-yard margin of victory. The sprint medley relay (440, 220, 880) was only slightly less successful, as Marsh Dickerson, Cancelled Due to the inclement weather yesterday both the baseball doubleheader with Iowa and the tennis meet with Notre Dame were cancelled. Bill Hornbeck, Chalfant and Frank Geist finished third, ten yards behind Central State (Wil- berforce, Ohio) and Indiana. The shot put and discus both went on under shelter, and Locke's heave w'as his best ever indoors. The other field men weren't so lucky. Les Bird and the others were all hampered by the slop- py runway. Bird was third at 22'9", only ten inches behind Michigan State's winner, Sonny Akpata. Overton Over tried his hand at the 600 and nearly caught Michigan State freshman John Parker, who led all the way. Both lunged at the tape, stumbled and fell together, in the most exciting finish of the day. The time was a good 1:11.7. Hayes finished second to Tom Sullivan, a high school whiz from Illinois, in the 1,000-yd. run. Sul- One Record The only record came in the colorful 3,000-meter steeplechase, when the Spartans' Jerry Young won the gruelling race in 9:30.6, well under Press Whelan's old, mark of 9:36.8. The race consists of 1.8 miles of hurdles (the kind that don't knock you down when you catch your toe on one) and a nice big water barrier, which seemed al- most unnecessary yesterday. The sentimental favorite of the meet was tiny sprinted Ira Murch- ison, former Western Michigan and Olympic star. Fully recovered from a serious case of amebic dysentery, he ran for the Chi- cago Track Club, and beat Pur- due freshman Nate Adams in the 100-yd. dash in :09.7. With one convenient ticket en- included. For free folder write joy the luxury of unlimited first Eurailpass, Dept. G-2 Box 191, class rail service through 13 N.Y. 10, N.Y. Buy Eurailpass from countries. See the real Europe, your travel agent. its friendly people, its historic For travel in Austria, Belgium, places. Go anywhere, Denmark, France, everywhere! Stop where Germa ny, Ho II and, you want, when you Italy, Luxembourg, wish. Be guided byglor- Norway, Portugal, ious impulse. Many bus, -Spain, Sweden, and boat and ferry services Switzerland. Two-month Eurailpass just $150; three months only. $180. BETWEEN MEALS 0 . , get that 'with Coke! refreshing new feeling -Daily--James Warneka ALMOST, BUT NOT QUITE-Dick Youngberg showed even better form than this yesterday, but still lost. A bogey on the 17th lost a one stroke lead, as Jack Nicklaus took full advantage. SPORT SHORTS: Marks Fall, at Kansas Relays By The Associated Press LAWRENCE, Kan.--North Texas State's Eagles put together four fast baton carriers to break the university distance medley record in 9:49.3 in the Kansas Relays today. It was the fastest distance med- ley this spring. John Cooper anchored the Eagles home with 4:07.1 mile. Richard Bothmer ran the 440-leg in :48.7, John Spencer the half mile in 1:53.6 and Richard Menchaca the three-quarters in 2:59.9. Menchaca's fine three - quarter trick enabled North Texas to whip Missouri by 30 yards and break the Relay's record of 9:50.8, set by Oklahoma in 1958. Break 440 Record For the second straight day, Texas Southern of Houston broke the, colleg division record for the 440-yard relay. Homer Jones, Bar, ney Allen, Charles Frazier and Lester Milburn won in :41.0, one- tenth of a second faster than their qualifying time yesterday. The old record was :41.4 by East Texas State. John Fry of Baylor became a double winner with a 57-3 shotput. He beat defending champion Mike Lindsay, Oklahoma; who had a put of 56-9%. Both were far off their best form. Fry won the discus yesterday at 170-7/. Wins Mile Jim Grelle, former Oregon Uni- versity athlete, representing the . - _ Emerald AC, Eugene, Ore., won the Glenn Cunningham mile ni 4:07.4. Ernie Cunliffe, former Stanford star, ran 4:11 for second, Jim De- Pree, Southern Illinois, 4:13.6 for third and Joe Mullins, a Canadian who finished his eligibility at Ne- braska, 4:18.7 for fourth. J. D. Martin of Oklahoma and George Davies of Oklahoma State had to settle their pole vault feud with a 14-10 tie well off the meet record. Fail To Win For the first time since World War II the host Kansas Jayhawks failed to win an event although one of its former greats, Cliff Cushman, captured the AAU 400 meters hurdles yesterday. Ralph Alspaugh of Texas, who ran third in the slow University- College 100, won the special 100 in :09.8. He beat second place Henry Wiebe, former Missouri runner, and Dave Styron of Southern Illi- nois. Charlie Tidwell, ex-Kansas athlete, was disqualified for false starts. Thompson Leads Houston HOUSTON-Peter Thomson lost a two-stroke lead and then sank birdie putts on the two final holes to rescue a tie with Ken Venturi and Tommy Bolt for the 54-hole lead in the $40,000 Houston Golf Classic. Thomson, the leader after 18 and 36 holes, had seen Bolt and Venturi surge into the lead on the sixteenth green. The Australian then sank a 15 footer on the sev- enteenth and a 4-footer on the ,final green for a two-over-par 72 and a 54-hole 208. Steve Overton went as high as Botted anybody, 13'6", in the pole vault, but on the basis of fewest misses, Purdue's Mike Johnson was the winner and Overton tied for third. r Freshmen Mac Hunter and Dave Hayes provided pleasant surprises, 'f both finishing second in their " events. Hunter, normally a sprinter,?"" Big Ten Standings W L Pet. GB OhioSate1 0 1.000 1 Michigan 1 0 1.000 1 Minnesota 2 1 .667 1 ,' Northwestern 2 1 .667 1 sia Michigan State 1 2 .333 2 Wisconsin 1 2 .333 2 Illinois 0 1 .000 2 Iowa 0 1 .000 2 ' Purdue 0 3 .000 3 YESTERDAY'S RESULTSr Minnesota 5-3, Michigan state 3-0 Indiana 19-2, Purdue 2-0 7 _y~ W T YVf YW V YVVVW W WW W T W Y V V 'U:. ~ W V V :",::4 'r4 3 4 $,' . +;:r { '! } .'4 5r4 ; jr.Cr: "' f sue i; :;: s: 4 i:'.14 { "!"4 ,{!.!4 f: 4 1' ': 4 rs ยข4 Ann Arbor, Michigan NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH CAFE PROMETHEAN 508 E. 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