THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, 4TTOGO TO rackmen Impressive in Penn Rela JAY 1, 1960 ys Four-Mile Relay Team Takes Title; 440 QuartetSecond in Photo Finish (Continued from Page 1) 7 ion was unable to overtake Wil- liams' long lead and had to settle for second place again. The winner's time was a very good 1:24.5. The Wolverine runners picked up their third second place in the# two mile relay, finishing behind the top Yale team ofaBill Leggatt, Ed Slowik, Jim Stack and Tom# Carroll. Foursome Pushes Yale The quartet of Frank CGeist, Earl Deardorff, Tony Seth and Leps (back for his third job as anchor) pushed the Elis to a new meet record. Yale's time of 7:27.4 was considerably under the old record of 7:30.1 set by Michigan State in 1938. Michigan was defending champ- ions in this event, and will have a good chance at regaining its crown next year as three of this year's starters will still be eligible. The mile relay team was the lone entry which didn't fare well. It fell before Villanova, Morgan State and Yale. The crew was made up of Cercone, Bryan Gib- son, Marsh Dickerson, and Seth -two of whom were tired from previous events of the afternoon. Sixth In Row The win for Villanova was their sixth in a row in the climactic event of the meet and was ac- complished in a very good 3:12.2. McRae didn't run in- the 120 high hurdle final for which he had qualified Friday afternoon be- cause coach Don Canham was saving him for the sprint relay finals. While all the excitement was centered on the track, the action by the high jump area was in- creasing. Here Boston University's outstanding 19 year old sopho- more, John Thomas, was leaping as no athlete had before in out- door competition. A crowd of 42,138 saw the mist hanging over Franklin field be- tween the bar and Thomas' arch- ing form as he cleared 7'11/" on his first try. Betters Record This bettered by half an inch the record set by Russia's Yuri Stepanov in 1957 when he was wearing the notorious "elevator" sole on his jumping spike. Steve Williams of Michigan managed a tie for third place be- hind Thomas and Indiana's Reg- gie Shepard. His best jump was 6'4". Back on the track in the Olym- pic Development events for post- college athletes, Ray Norton of the Santa Clara Youth Village Blue Team Takes Practice; Bushong Leads 18-0 Win beat' Duke pre-med student Dave Sime by three yards as he equalled the world's record of :20.6 for the 200 meters around a curve. The record is shared by three, other American sprinters. On another of the metric ser- ies of events, Eastern Michigan's Hayes Jones once again beat Lee Calhoun of Winston Salem in the 110 meter high hurdles. His time was :13.6. Two evenly balanced squads of Michigan football players slogged their way through a two-hour scrimmage in the Michigan Sta- dium yesterday with the Blue team emerging a muddy 18-0 victor. Scoring twice for the Blue team was halfback Reid Bushong. In the first quarter he plunged over from 'the one-yard line 'and then in the opening minutes of the sec- ond he raced 65 yards on an off- tackle play. The Blue's final touchdown came in the fourth quarter when freshman end Bob Filar picked off a stray pass in the White backfield and raced 20 yards into the end zone. A steady rain throughout the' game prevented either side from mustering much of an aerial at- tack. The game was mostly a defensive battle between the two lines with long offensive gains held to a minimum. Next Saturday the Wolverines will conclude their 20-day practice session with the annual Spring Game in the Stadium. The contest will be played under regular game conditions and the public is In- vited to attend. 4 i ' Yankees Maul Orioles; Pirates Retain NL Lead in the second inning off ex-Cleve- land star Cal McLish and Jim Bronsan, and then had to hang on as the Reds knocked out 'Pirate starter Bennie Daniels and reliever Paul Geil in the sixth and eighth innings. Ace Elroy Face came on to preserve the victory. 1ajor League Standings- !I AMERICAN w New York ..... 6 Chicago........ 5 Detroit......... 5 Baltimore....... 6 Kansas City ... 5 Washington ... 5 Boston........ 5 Cleveland.......4 LEAGUE L Pct. 4 .600 4 .556 4 .556 6 .500 6 .445 6 .455 6 .455 5 .444 GB I/ 1 GLORIOUS WEATHER?-Wally Schaefer, a Michigan two-miler, is shown at the end of his event. The.cold rain, the dinging mud, and the sloppy track and field were generally conducive to poor showings and overall discomfort to all present. Rain Dampens Open, Three Events to 3M' I 1I YESTERDAY'S. RESULTS Cleveland 2, Kansas City 1 Boston 2, Washington 1 New York 16, Baltimore 0 Detroit at Chicago, postponed (rain) TODAY'S GAMES Detroit at Chicago (2) Kansas City at Cleveland (2) New York at Baltimore Washington at Boston (2) NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. Pittsburgh ....11 3 .586 x-San Francisco 9 5 .643 Milwaukee .... 7 5 .583 x-Los Angeles .. 8 6 .571 St. Louis.....7 6 .537 Philadelphia .. 5 9 .357 Cincinnati .... 4 10 .286 Chicago........3 10 .230 x-Playing a night game GB 2 3 3 3l/ 6 7 7q YESTERDAY'S RESULTS St. Louis 5, Chicago 4 San Francisco at Los Angeles (N) Pittsburgh 12, Cincinnati 7 Philadelphia at Milwaukee, post- poned (rain) TODAY'S GAMES Pittsburgh at Cincinnati Philadelphia at Milwaukee Chicago at St. Louis Only games scheduled By OTTO PENZLER The annual Michigan Open was held this afternoon despite the usual Ann Arbor "spring" weath- er. The sparse 'crowd became spars- er with each downpour of icy rain, of which there were many. Some excellent times were recorded in sprints from the grandstand to the shelter beneath them as the tor- rents increased in intensity late in the afternoon. Paul Jones of Wayne State set the only record of the day as he ran the high hurdles in :14.7. His time betters the old Michigan Open record set by Walt Atchison of Michigan in 1950 by a tenth of a second. Not Threatened Jones, the defending champion in this event, was never seriously threatened. Wayne also had the winning 880-yard relay team as they defeated Western Michigan and third place Eastern Michigan. The Michigan 440 quartet of Quint Sterling, Don Chalfant, Jack Steffes and John Twomey ran away from Eastern, and the West- ern freshmen, in the good time of :44.7. Bill Hammerstein of Michigan turned in another impressive per- formance today as he romped to victory in the 880-yard run. His time of 2:00.7 was considered quite good considering the poor condi- tions., Together with his record set at the Ohio Relays last week, this The two-mile run was won by surprising Bruce Kidd of the East York Athletic Club. Kidd is a 16 year old junior at Malverne Col- legiate in Toronto. He holds the Canadian high school one - mile record and last year won both the one and two-mile events in the Ontario high school meet. Today, competing against men four and five years his, senior, he won his event in 9:29.7, a full 300 yards ahead of the second place runner. The honors student will attend the University of Toronto in 1961. Jack Steffes' broad jump of 21'8/4" was good enough for a sec- ond as last year's champion, Dan Watkins of Detroit, defeated him on the very last jump of the day. Jerry Gerich placed third in the. high jump, and Radford was sec- ond with Jerry Bushong third in the discus to round, out the Mich- igan scoring. Wol verines Star in AAU Special to The Daily WEST POINT-Michigan soph- omore Tom Osterland picked up a second place in the rebound tum- bling event of the National AAU gymanstics meet held at West fi Issue 0 1ii 11 y I,.. or.ow x .%o s. . !.I. II* 1 1