0 LY 7, 1950 THE MICHIGAN DAILY UpacmenUse SLJ;ine Stopped 13 y.Illinois Hoover Scores Double Win; Dendrinos Takes Shot-Put 0. By GEORGE FLINT Don Canham's well-balanced Michigan track squad refused to listen to the sad stories about their chances to defeat Ohio State's Big Ten indoor champs, and tripped up the powerful Buck- eyes, 69-63, in a windblown dual meet yesterday afternoon at Fer- ry Field. The Wolverines put together six firsts, including double wins by Don Hoover and Ekko Koutonen, to lead the Scarlet and Gray by * * * was slowed down to a 9:31.4, the worst of his young career, by the terrific cinder blast stirred up on the back stretch, but he still led the field by 220 yards at the fin- ish. Jus Williams couldn't hold on under the strong challenge of OSU's John Holloman in the stretch, and had to be content with a third. Bill Konrad and Rod Warren filled in admirably for the injured Arthur Henrie in the dash events, taking second and third, respectively, in each event. Koutonen tied for one of his firsts, in 'the high jump, but won the broad jump outright to help the Maize and Blue eke out just about all the points they could have hoped for. SUMMARIES 100 yard dash: 1-Cole, OSU; 2-Konrad, M; 3-Warren, M- Time: 9.8. 120 yard high hurdles: 1- Hoover, M; 2-Hamilton, OSU; 3-Atchison, M; Time: 14.4. 220 yard dash: 1-Cole, OSU; 2-Konrad, M; 3-Warren, M. Time: 21.7. 220 yard low hurdles: 1- Hoover, M; 2-Atchison, M; 3- Boelstler, M. Time: 23.3. (breaks Varsity record but disallowed because of tailwind) 440-yard dash: 1-Kunz, OSU; 2-Cogswell, OSU; 3-Ackerman, M. Time: 51.6. 880 yard run: 1-Truex, OSU; 2-Whitaker, M; 3-Kirkendall, M. Time: 1:58.3. Mile run: 1-Truex, OSU; 2- D'Arcy, OSU; 3-Parks, M. Time: 4:31.9. Two mile run: 1-McEwen, M; 2-Holloman, OSU; 3-Williams, M. Time: 9:31.4. Mile relay: 1-Ohio State (Jones, Truex, Furst, Cogswell); 2-Michigan (Ackerman, Lind- quist, Warren, Konrad). Time: 3:38.2. FIELD EVENTS Shot put: 1-Dendrinos, M; 2- Fonville, M; 3-Edwards, O. Dis- tance: 52 feet 7 inches. Broad jump: 1-Koutonen, M; 2-Wade, OSU; 3-Coleman, M. Distance: 22 feet 91 inches. High jump:1-Koutonen, M; Sexton, M; Schaefer, OS U (three way tie). Height: 5-feet 11 inches. Pole Vault: 1-Ulvestad, M; 2- tie between McKnight, OSU and Bruney, OSU. Height: 13 feet 6 inches. (New Meet Record) Discus: 1-Miller, OSU; 2- Fonville, M; 3-Dendrinos, M. Time: 157 feet 5% inches. -Daily-Wally Barth - PETE DENDRINOS 4 * * * 60-48 with the mile relay and discus throw results yet to be de- termined. * * . THEY FAILED to win the relay, but picked up a much needed sec- ond and third in the discus to sew up the victory. Peter Dendrinos of Michigan edged Charlie Fonville by a quarter of an inch in the shot put to give the former world champion his first defeat in con- ference competition. Dendrinos tossed the sphere 52 feet 7 / inches, and Fonville's last put missed the boat by a whisker. Leonard Truex and Gene Cole led Ohio State with two wins apiece. Truex took the mile and 880, while Cole won both sprint events with ease. Cole's 21.7 in the 220, with the aid of a 45-mile tail wind, was one of the meet's best marks. Don Hoover bested the Varsity record for the 220-yard low hur- dles with the aid of that same wind, but his 23.3 mark was of course disallowed by the rule book. DON McEWEN'S two-mile time Golfers Top Iowa; Wind Lifts Scores Special to The Daily CHICAGO - Michigan's golf- ers braved a 50-mile gale yester- day at Bob-O-Links Country Club here to defeat the Iowa Univer- sity squad, 16-11. The Wolverines offset a 5%- 3/2 Iowa advantage gained in the morning best ball matches, and won four out of six of the after- noon singles duels to gain the victor y. * * * LEO HAUSER was medalist for the Wolverines, posting a 77 in the morning and coming back in the afternoon for a 78. Most scores were high as the winds swept down from Lake Michigan and did queer things to usually-straight drives and chip shots- Hauser and Dick Evans started the Maize and Blue off on the right foot in the best-ball rounds, winning from Miller and Anderson by 21/2-1/2. Evans had an 82. But the rest of the Wolverines had some trouble on the tricky Bob-O-Links course, and the two other best-ball matches went to Iowa by identical 2%2-/2 scores. * * * IN THE AFTERNOON, Michi- gan's Keith Le Clair and Bob Fer- guson of Iowa tied with medal scores of 78, and Carlson of Iowa beat Wolverine Dean Lind, card- ing a 76 for Hawkeye medal hon- ors. Lind shot an off-form 84. But from then on it was all Michigan. Dick Evans with 77, Hauser with 78, Chuck Mac Callum with 82, and John Fraser with 83 out- classed the Hawkeyes to take their matches and win the meet for Coach Bert Katzenmeyer's golfers. Michigan goes on to Champaign tomorrow to practice at the Uni- versity of Illinois courses, where they'll meet the Illini in another Big Ten match Monday. Heavy Winds Stop Sailors At Whitmore Forty mile an hour winds pre- vented the regional eliminations regatta for the Mid-Western championship from taking place yesterday at Whitmore Lake. Michigan's Sailing Club was forced to postpone the meet till today because of the havoc the winds would have reeped on the little 112 foot dinghies. Purdue, Michigan State, Ober- lin, Wayne, Bowling Green, and Michigan will try again today at 10 a.m. weather permitting. The top three crews in today's regatta will compete in the Mid-West re- gatta at Ohio State on May 20, 21. Michigan's Tars are sticking with the teams that were sup- posed to race yesterday. In the A boat it will be Jim Johns as skip- per and Tena Lawrence as crew. Gene O'Connor will skipper the B boat with Bob Allen as crew. Big Nine Standings Michigan Wisconsin Iowa Illinois Ohio State Indiana Purdue Northwestern Minnsota * L Illinois Shocks Wolverines It. W L Pet. 5 1 .833 4 2 .667 3 2 .600 4 3 .571 3 3 .500 2 4 .333 1 2 .333 1 3 -250 1 4 .200 * -Daily-Alan Reid DOUBLE TROUBLE . - . For OSU-Don Hoover, tall Wolverine- hurdles ace, clears the last barrier on the way to the first of two victories in yesterday's dual track meet at Ferry Field. Hoover took this race, the high hurdles, in 14.4, and came back later to win the low sticks in 23.3. POWER THE BYWORD: Maj ors inHomer Spree; Yankees, Indians Split By The Associated Press NEW YORK sBig Luke Easter smashed two home runs - his first ones in major league compe- tition - as the Cleveland Indians divided a doubleheader with the New York Yankees yesterday. The Tribe took the opener, 5-4, but lost the nightcap, 7-4. Easter's first blast, a terrific line drive off loser Allie Reynolds, came in the third inning of the opener with two men on. WASHINGTON - The Detroit Tigers made it three straight yes- terday when they pounded two Washington pitchers, Ray Scar- borough and Joe Haynes, for 15 hits and an 8-6 victory over the Nats before 8,362 fans at Griffith Stadium. PHILADELPHIA - The Phila- delphia Athletics broke a four game losing streak yesterday by beating the St. Louis Browns, 12-4. Alex Kellner pitched six hit ball for the A's, and he was aided by home runs by Ferris Fain and Paul Lehner. BOSTON - The Boston Red Sox set off a six-home run bar- rage to crush the Chicago White Sox, 11-1, yesterday behind the four-hit pitching of bonus south- paw Chuck Stobbs. CINCINNATI - Setting a new National record for the number of home runs in three consecutive games, the Boston Braves con- tinued their murderous march through the West today with a 15 to 11 victory over the Cincinnati Reds. The Braves pounded Cincinnati pitchers for five homers today to run their total to 13 for the three game series here. PITTSBURGH - Andy Hansen turned in a great relief job yes- terday as the New York Giants won an uphill 9-8 decision over the Pittsburgh Pirates. CHICAGO - Preston ' Ward singled home Phil Cavarretta from third in the tenth inning yes- terday to give the Chicago Cubs a 5-4 victory over the Brooklyn Dodgers. It was the Cubs' second straight ten inning triumph over the Brooks. ST. LOUIS - One Cardinal hurler looked as good as another to the Philadelphia Phillies yes- terday as they pounded seven of the St. Louis pitchers for an 11 to 7 victory. YESTERDAY'S SCORES Purdue 6 Wisconsin 1 Ohio State 9,Indiana 5 (10 innings) Northwestern - Minnesota, Cancelled, Rain Hogan Widens Lead in Open Gol fTourney WHITE SULPHER SPRINGS, -(M)-Ben Hogan finished the first 54 holes of the Greenbrier Open Golf Tournament yesterday with a phenomenal, 17-under-par 193. Bantam Ben picked up a five- under par 65 to go with two pre- vious 64's in stretching his lead over second-place Skip Alexan- der of Knoxville, Tenn., to seven strokes with a single round re- maining. * * * NEVER HAS the historic, 6,368- yard Old White course taken such a sustained beating as that hand- ed out by the plucky Texan in his drive for the first title of his de- termined comeback campaign. Alexander, with his 132-68- 200, slipped four strokes off his own brilliant six-under 64 of yesterday because he was un- able to hole any putts of longer than five feet. Host pro Sammy Snead and Clayton Heafner of Charlotte, N.C., with 134-69-203 and 137-66-203, respectively, were tied for third and fourth. Then came Ed Furgol of Royal Oak, Mich., and Norman Von Moa of Sydney, Australia, with 205's. Hogan appears on the verge of scoring his first comeback victory since his near fatal accident in 1949, Sammy Snead prevented the Bantam's initial win earlier this year by defeating Hogan in an 18-hole playoff. Sp~ecial to The Daily CHAMPAIGN - Michigan suf- fered its first loss of the Big Nine season here yesterday afternoon dropping a 9-2 decision to Illi- nois and southpaw Juny Tang- man. The loss leaves Michigan with a record of five wins and one loss. os.* * * THE WOLVERINES, who had edged past the Illini, 6-5, in the opener of the two game set Fri- day entered the seventh inning tied 1-1. At this point Bob Hicks weak- ened and walked Gus Skizas. Tangman sacrificed him to sec- ond and Herb Plews and Bur- dette Thurlby followed with singles for two runs. An error by Leo Koceski aided in the scoring. In the eighth the Illini applied the clincher with a six run splurge highlighted by a three run homer to deep left center by Dick Raklo- vitz. John Neal opened the fateful eighth with a double on a mis- judged fly. Lou Krantz walked and a sacrifice advanced both run- ners. After an error by Gerry Dorr, Tangman beat out a bunt single and Thurlby also hit a one baser. With two down Raklovitz stroked his homerun. * * * AFTER ILLINOIS had opened the scoring with a marker in the first, Michigan came back to tal- ly once in the fourth on singles by Ted Berce and Pete Palmer and an Illinois miscue. The final Wolverine counter came in a futile ninth inning rally. Bob Fancett and Berce singled and Dorr walked. Fan- cett scored on a fielder's choice. Boax MICHIGAN A Bucholz, 2b Koceski, If Fryling, cf Wolff, ss Fancett, rf Berce, lb Dorr, 3b Palmer, c Hicks, p A-Grenkoski TOTALS3 A-Fannedf ninth. ILLINOIS A Plews, 2b Thurlby, rf Raklovitz, 3b Steger, lb Neal, If Krantz, cf Hoffman, c Skizas, ss Tangman, p TOTALS MICHIGAN ILLINOIS . AB 3 4 4 4, 4 4 3 4 3 1 34 for R HKOA E 0 0 3 4 1 0 0 1 0 2 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 1 1 2 0 0 1 4 11 0 0 0 0 232 0 2 3 1 Q 0 0 0 3 0 0 0'0 0 0 2 8 24 15 5 Hicks in the Michigan was plagued by slop- py fielding, making five errors that could be recorded on the books and a few other lapses that hurt pitcher Bob Hicks who dropped his first decision against two Big Nine wins. Hicks was touched for ten hits four by Thurl- by. Coach Ray Fisher, faced with a lefthander on the mound in the person of Tangman played the percentages and kept southpaw hitting Ralph Morrison and Lefty Morrill out of the starting lineup. Berce who handled the first base duties in place of Morrill hauled down batting honors for the Maize and Blue with four hits in four trips to the plate. The Wolverines were only able to cull eight hits off the offerings of the Illini hurler who fanned seven and passed three. Score With 6-Run Rally in Eighth ABR H O A0 5 1 1 1 3 1 4 2 4 4 0 1 5 1 1 1 4 0 5 0 1 9 4 1 1 Q00 2 1 0 2 .0 0 3 0 0 8 0 3 2 0 2 2 0 4 1 2 0,10 35 9 102710 .000 010 001-2 ...100 00 "26x-9 Baseball's BigSix I PLAYER AND CLUB G AB Hegan, Indians 10 33 R 6 H 15 Pct. .455 Musial, Cardinals Pafko, Cubs Westrum, Giants Majeski, White Sox Rizzuto, Yankees 13 48 8 21.438 10 33 6 14 -424 11 32 4 13 .406 11 42 6 17 .405 14 51 15 20 .392 Major League Scores AMERICAN LEAGUE Boston 11, Chicago 1 Cleveland 5-4, New York 4-7 Detroit 8, Washington 6 Philadelphia 12, St. Louis 4 NATIONAL LEAGin Boston 15, Cincinnati 11 Chicago 5, Brooklyn 4 (10 in- nings) New York 9, Pittsburgh 8 Philadelphia 11, St. Louis 7 -i k 161 Freshmen Star As Oosterbaan Directs Full Scale Scrimmage I °i Playing under game-time condi- tions, Coach Bennie Oosterbaan's 100-odd spring gridmen under- went a rigorous workout yester- day afternoon on south Ferry Field. Particularly outstanding in the scrimmage were Roger Zatkoff, Russell Roscorla, Lowell Perry, "Bud" Reeme, and Dave Hill. * * * ZATKOFF, RECENTLY switch- ed from fullback to center, look- ed like another "Killer" Kemp- torn on defense as he consistently smashed down the opposing in- terference to nail flying backs. Another Freshman hopeful, Russ Roscorla, a 180 pound full- back from Grand Haven, Mich- igan looked very impressive on offense. Perry, a pass snatching end, demonstrated that he can also carry the ball. Three times Lowell took a hand-off on the end-around and went all the way. Many a spectator, seeing Perry skirting the ends, likened him to Bob Mann, the famous Michigan wingman who ran the ends so successfully. "BUD" REEME is another end who played well in the scrimmage. Reeme's speciality is snaring pass- es, especially the long, floating kind. Once more Dave Hill showed his talents as a shifty runner. 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