T#E MICHIGAN DAILY SAIl tiDAi4, lMtAY 26, 1551 'cE.wOn, Double winner; i M Ohio Nines Split Twin Bill h - )oote zna,,in ffroaa jump Indiana; 5. Vieth, Illinois. :14.8. 880-YARD RUN,-1. Makielski, Mich- igan State; 2. Waiter, Michigan State; 3. Reynolds, Illinois; 4. Rodibaugh, Purdue; 5. Whiteman, Indiana. 1:56 (even). 220-YARD LOW HURDLES-I. Tho- mas, Michigan State; 2. Henson, Mich- igan State; 3. Martin, Indiana; 4. Deuel, Iowa; 5. Slack, Illinois. :23.8. 220-YARD DASH-1. Gonzales, Illi- nois; 2. McSween, Ilinois; 3. Henson, Michigan State; 4. Ingram, Michigan State; 5. Konrad, MICHIGAN. :21.8. HIGH JUMP-1. Harper, Indiana, 6 feet 3% inches; 2. Weik, Iowa, 6-3; 3. Harmet, Indiana, 6-2. 4 and 5, Schae- fer, Ohio State, and Floyd, Illinois (tie) 6-even. DISCUS-1. Anderson, Indiana, 153 feet, 3 inches; 2. Berchet, Illinois, 150 9%; 3. Holm, Minnesota, 14914; 4. Roberson, Indiana, 143 21/.; 5. Bleck- wenn, Wisconsin, 142 i114. MILE :RELAY - 1. Illinois (Swank, Ciders, Gilbertson and McSween); 2. Iowa; 3. Purdue; 4. MICHIGAN; 5. In- diana. 3.21.7. POLE VAULT-1. Laz, Illinois, 14 feet 10 inches; 2. Carroll, Minnesota, 14 feet 8 inches; 3. tie among Elmblad, MICHIGAN, Coleman, Illinois, and Welbourn, Ohio State, 13,feet 6 inches (breaks Conference of 14 feet 2j inches set by Cassells, Chicago, 1937). Hogan Leads In GolfMatch FORT WORTH, Tex.-(P)-Ben Hogan blew cool yesterday but not enough to lose his elad in the $15,000 Colonial National Invita- tion golf tournament as he came in with a one-over-par 71 to make his 36-hole total 139. Hogan, the first-day front-run- ner with a 68 over the tough 7,035- yard Colonial C o u n t r y Club course, finished in the last three- some in the field of 42 and nipped Johnny Palmer of Badin. N. C., for the lead: CARY MIDDLECOFF of Mem- phis, Tenn., playing with Hogan, also finished ahead of Palmer, shooting a 71 for 140. Palmer had a 70 for a 141 total. Tied at 142 were Ed Oliver of Seattle, Wash., the day's low scor- Carter Tops Williams, NEW YORK-Jimmy Carter, a virtual unknown from the Bronx, scored a bruising fourteenth-round technical knockout over Light- weight Champion Ike Williams in a major boxing upset at Madison Square Garden last night. Williams, holder of at least part of the crown since 1945, under- went a torturous 90-minute ordeal this afternoon making the 135 pounds class limit. Carter weigh- ed 133, THE NEW CHAMP, born in Aiken, S.C., 27 years ago, but raised in the teeming ronx, dropped the old champ four imes before referee Petey Scalzo stop- ped it to save groggy Ike from serious injury. Because Carter was ranked 12th among the contenders in1 its latest ratings, the National Boxing Association refused to sanction this as a title bolt. But the New York State Athletic Commission gave its blessing. Carter, biding his time whi« Williams shot the works early, dumped Williams for five with a long right to the left temple mid- way in the fifth. AFTER THE first knockdown, Carter poured punches at Ike. Down he went again from two jarring rights to the jaw. Carter swarmed over Williams with a body attack that sent him sailing through the ropes onto the ring apron in the tenth. He got back at the count of four. In the 14th Carter, who )eemed to have been coasting for a couple of rounds, rocked Williams with a left-right-left and down he went for six. He came up groggy. As Carter poured it on for the kill, Scalzo stopped it. Wolverines Triumph 6-3, Atfer Losing Opener, 4-1 -Photo by Jim Butt ILLINI FLASH-Cirilo McSween, Illinois' record-breaker in the 440 at yesterday's conference track meet, edges Art Ingram of Michigan State in a trial heat of the 220 Thursday. McSween, who set a new record over the rainswept Evanston track of 47.7, also ran on the winning mile relay team which cinched the meet for the Illini. (Above photo was flown here from Evanston in time for today's edition.) CLASS B, D COMPETITION High School Cinder men Vie By BOB LANDOWNE Special to The Daily COLUMBUS -- Michigan split its double header with league- leading Ohio State here yesterday by grabbing the second, game, 6-3, after being stopped 4-1 in the opener. Duane Hegedorn went all the way for the victory in the night- cap even ' though he was on the ropes in the last two innings. THE WOLVERINES " jumped out in'front with a four run first in- ning as they knocked out the Buckeyes' starting hurler, Paul Williams. Frank Howell led off with a single, and after Bruce Hay- nam's sacrifice Leo Koceski sin- gled off the third baseman's glove and Pete Palmer walked to load the bases. Al Weygandt lined a single to right for two runs and took sec- ond on the throw to the plate. Catcher Jack Gannon tried to nab Weygandt with an unsuccessful throw to second and Palmer alert- ly raced home from third. GERRY DORR then singled to knock out Williams, Weygandt stopping at third. After Bill Mogk fouled out, Gil Sabuco= singled home the fourth run of the in- ning. Michigan picked up two ex- tra tallies' on single runs in the third and sixth. In the third, Weygandt and Darr got their second .,consecutive hits, this time off reliefer Dave Bechtel, who then walked Mogk and Sabuco to force in a run. IN T H E SIXTH, Hegedorn reached second on pitcher Bech- tel's two base wild throw and then scored on Haynam's single. Ohio State's first two runs came on a freak home run by Stew Heyn in the fifth. With one out and Bob 4ontebello on second via a single and error, Heyn lined one to left,, that, Koceski charged in to take on the bounce. The ball veered sharply to his right and rolled too far behinid him to retrieve in time. That was the only 'four-bagger of the day, and left Michigan with, a 5-2 margin, Leading 6-2, Hegedorn-ran into trouble in the eighth, when the Buckeyes loaded the bases on two singles and a base on balls. WITH ONE AWAY, 'clean-UP hitter.Elbie Gutzwiller hit... a hard grounder on which first baseman Weygandt made a diving atop. Weygandt regained his feet too late to beat the sliding Gutzwiller, but only one run scored. With the atying runs on bases Carl Parrill slapped into a dbh- ble play to end the inning. In the ninth, the Buckeyes again loaded the bases with one away, this time on a single, Dorr's er- ror, and a walk to pinch;-hitter Jack Jones. But Hegedornlhung in there and got Montebello to hit into a fast double play to end the final Buck- eye threat. BOTH THE DOUBLE plays in the eighth and ninth were neap started by shortstop Haynam, whd fielded flawlessly in both games. The first game belonged eat- elusively to OSU's lefthander hick Hauck, who pitched and batted the Buckeyes to their eighth conference victory* The bespectacled. southpaw- held. Michigan to four singles and had a shutout until the ninth inning. Hauck tripled home the first, two Buckeye runs in the second inning off the Wolverines' Bob Larsen. Hauck was also driven home by Montebello's single im- mediately following. Larsen yielded #' the fourth run in the third as Parrill walked, stole second, and scored on Jacle Kauffman's single. Larsen left the game after pitch- ing five innings, and was charged with his third conference defeat. He has won two. Bill den Houter finished off, preventing any fur- ther Buckeye scoring. ;k Vim' For State Tt With all four of Michigan's varsity teams out of town for the week-end, the local scene will be taken over today by nearly 400 high school trackmen competing in the State class B and D cham- pionships at Ferry Field. An overflow of entrants and !e Here Today schools this year made it neces- sary to move part of the meet from East Lansing; where it has been held since its inception in 1925. Classes A and C are in East Lansing today. NILES, the defending champion in class B, is expected to haveA a tough time hanging onto its title today. Alma, w uch qualified 11 ) UNITED AIR LINES is now accepting a limited number of applications from June graduates for the position of MAINLINER STEWARDESS. Successful candidates will be given five weeks' training at our expense, and must possess the following minimum quali- The University golf course will be closed all day tomorrow because of the I-M golf tour- nament. --Bert Katzenmeyer men in last week's regionals, and Ecorse, a perennial threat, are bath r rated high. Cadillac and Greenville can be counted on to 'figure in the outcome. Class D champion from 1950, Benton H a r b o r St. John's, shares the favorite's spot with Michigan School for the Deaf, Baroda, Bloomfield Hills, and 4tisville. Preliminaries w i 11 begin at 10;30, with finals at 2.00. Major League Standings* --I AMERICAN New York Chicago Boston Detroit Washington Cleveland Philadelphia St. Louis W 24 20 18 16 15 15 9 9 LEAGUE " L Pct. 9 .725 9 .690 13 .581 14 .533 16 .484 16 .484 24 .273 25 ,265 GB 2 5 6 8 8 1.5 15Y2 Brooklyn Chicago St. Louis Boston New York Philadelphia Cincinnati Pittsburgh W 21 17 18 18 18 16 16 15' L 13 1d 16 18 19 19 19 19 NATIONAL LEAGUE° Pet' GB .818 . .515 31/2 .529 3 .500 4 .487 41/2 .457 51/2 :457 5 .441 6 fications: I Attractive appearance and personality 21-26 years of age 5'2"-5'7" in height Single Able to pass rigid physical examination, with 20-30 vision in each eye, without glasses. Please contact your Placement Office for details, or write to UNITED AIR LINES, Inc., 5959 South Cicero Avenue, Chicago, Ill. 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