WIIDAY;M"A""^ 193" THE MICHIGAN DAILY Hurons Down Netters 5 To 2 As Johnstone Saves Re, AGE ""REE gulars Regulars Rest For 'Iron Man' Schedule Ahead Verdier, Barowsky Win As Mates Fail In Return MichiganNormal Meet By JOHN H. HILTON Michigan Normal's tennis team de- feated the University of Michigan by a score of 5-2 yesterday afternoon on the Ypsilanti courts. In order to rest his regular players for the hard schedule immediately ahead Coach Johnny Johnstone used a number of his reserve players in the meet. In the number one match Tony Sargenti of the Normal defeated Jarvis Dean, 6 0, 6-3. Sargenti con- tinually outsteadied Dean who was in some difficulty because of an in- jured back he was trying to protect. Normal also captured the second and third singles, when Romine Minard downed Neil Levenson 8-6, 4-6, 6-1, in the longest and closest match of the day and Capt. Ed Bernard of the Ypsi squad handed Bob Edmonds a 6-0, 6-3 defeat. Michigan's two points came in the last two singles matches. Leonard Verdier outlasted Merlin Schultz, chop stroke specialist of the Normal, to win 6-4, 4-6, 6-1, while Mike Bar- owsky experienced no difficulty in taking Raeberg, 6-1, 6-0. Sargenti and Minard outplayed Dean and Barowsky to win the first doubles, 6-2, 6-4, and insure the Hurons of a victory in the meet. Schultz and Bernard teamed to- gether to defeat Levenson and Ver- dier, 6-1, 1-6, 8-6, in the loosest match of the day, the last set of which was completed in a light rain. SUMMARIES Sargenti (N) df. Dean (M), 6-0, 6-3. Minard (N) df. Levenson (M), 8-6, 4-6, 6-1. Bernard (N) df. Edmonds (M), 6-0, 6-1. Verdier (M) df. Schultz (N), 6-4, 6-1. Barowsky (M) df. Raeberg (N), 6-1, 6-0. Doubles: Sargenti and Minard (N) df. Dean and Barowsky (M), 6-2 ,6-4. Schultz and Bernard (N) df. Lev- enson and Verdier (M), 6-1, 1-6, 8-6. Lusk's Two Hit Hurling Downs Z.B.T. Nine, 10-1 D.U.'s Trim Phi Kappa Sigma 15-7 As Bolas Stars; Chi Psi's Lose Following up the fine performance yesterday at Dwight Butler, Pat Lusk, Sigma Phi hurler led his team to a 10 to 1 victory over Zeta Beta Tau when he struck out 14 and al- lowed only two hits. Lusk finished off the affair by fanning the last six players. Meanwhile his mates gar- nered ten hits to tally in every in- ning, easily touching the delivery of Ben Aaron. Dick Cohen, Z.B.T. out- fielders proved to be outstandin in the field with his fine running catches. Stan See clouting two doubles led the winners at bat. George Bolas' fast steady delivery was too much for the Phi Kappa Sigma team as the Delta Upsilons won 15 to 7, the last few innings be- ing played in a fine rain. Although mixing up a sizzling fast ball with a change of pace slow one and strik- ing out many Grant Nault could do little when his teammates did not give him the necessary support. Clar- ence Eldridge, Phi Kappa Sigma looked well at the plate while Dick May of the other team showed up well in the outfield. In the hottest fought battle of the day Kappa Sigma edged out Chi Psi 15 to 14. Dick Evans starting on the mound for Chi Psi was knocked out in the first inning to be relieved by Jack Palmer, when the Kappa Sigs found his delivery to their taste and scored five runs, Evans, though was the star of the game in the field and at bat by means of his many hits, including a home run, and his fine stops. Jack Stein was the win- ning pitcher, going the route for Kappa Sigma. Today's Results Trigon 15, Tau Kappa Epsilon 1 Geography 8, Chemistry 6 (faculty) Sigma Alpha Mu 12, Theta Xi 9 Hermitage 12, Kappa Delta Rho 11 Acacia 6, Phi Delta Theta 5 Sigma Phi Epsilon 21, Alpha Omega 20. NEUN BOSSES NORFOLK The HOT STOVE -- Br BILL REED pROVINCIALISM is when a college sports writer claims that the star sprinter from his school can beat the world's champion. With that preface we proceed to the discussion of the day, the 100-yard dash at the Big Ten meet, and in that discussion we propose to be so pro- vincial as to say that Sam Stoller, if he does nou beat Jesse Owens, is going to come so close to it that the judges will have to huddle as only finish' judges can. Our predictions in the field of track competition this year have been based to a censiderable extent on intuition, and we admit the present prediction is of that sort. However, there is this time ample background in fact upon which one can base such an apparently rash judgment. In the first place there is the relative condition of the two, Stoller and Owens. Owens, it is well known, is still approximately a month from his peak after the winter's layoff. That is, it is highly unlikely that he can du- plicate any such performance as his in the 1935 Big Ten meet (if anyone ever can), but that he will probably be in his best shape for the Olympics. Stoller, on the other hand, is in ideal trim, and getting keener every day. The question remains whether Owens four weeks from the peak can be beaten by Stoller or almost anyone else in their prime. But that is the very question in hand, and it is circumvention to raise it as an answer. The only answer will of course come in about ten days. In the second place there is the race between the two in the Ohio State-Michigan dual meet. In that meet Stoller was the actual leader for better than 90 yards, at which point Owens busted to the front to win by a margin of no more than ten inches. And the time in the race was as fast as man has ever been timed, :09.4, with a back wind to be sure but on a rain bogged track. After that race the genial Jesse turned to Sam, "Holy Gee, Sam, you scared the stuff out of me. I used to be able to run fifty and coast the rest but that's all over." Stoller, according to Coach Charlie Hoyt, lacked strength, and so for a week worked him hard at 120 yards, giving him that extra zip near the tape. The results of that work were graphically demonstated Saturday when Stoller won going away from Bobby Grieve, no mean sprinter and much stronger than Stoller, in :09.7. The best part of the race, of course, being Stoller's finish, the strongest of his career. In other words, Stoller appears to be developing the very finish which might have meant the race at Columbus. There are admitted circumstances under which Stoller is at his best. Chief of these is his lane position, there being no question that he is at his best beside Owens. That was proved at the Penn Relays when he ran second in the next lane to Owens and in the dual meet when he was again next to Jesse, those two races being the best of his career. Given such a break as a draw which places the two together, our money goes on Sam on what they call a hunch bet, not because we underestimate the abilities of the great Jesse, who has few more sincere admirers than ourselves, but because things are ripe for Sam to get the break which he really deserves. State Colleges Decide Track Championships Here May 15-16 Miller Defeats Two Regulars In Fast Quarter Sopliomore Beats Aikens And Stiles Reeling Off Distance In 49.3' Michigan's hopes for a successful defense of their Western Conference1 track laurels rose a notch yesterday when Chuck Miller, sophomore sprinter, ran 49.3 to defeat both Fred Stiles and Capt. Frank Aikens in a quarter mile time trial. Stiles was clocked in 49.4, only a stride in back of his Petoskey rival. Coach Charlie Hoyt has named Miller among 24 men to make the trip to Bloomington Thursday where the Wolverines ard scheduled to meet the vaunted Indiana track squad the following day in the final dual meet of the season. Michigan holds two nods over In- diana already this year, having tak- en the measure of Don Lash and Co. one in a dual meet indoors and again in the Conference meet in Chicago. The dual meet score was uncomfortably close and was decid- ed in the hurdles when with Dan Caldemeyer out, Bob Osgood and Moreau Hunt garnered some much needed Michigan points. If the Michigan milers can force Don Lash to do 4:14 or better to win the mile Saturday, Hoyt's two- milers will have a good chance to take the longer grind. This strategy appears to be one of Michigan's best bets to gain points in the Confer- ence and Friday's meet will provide an unexcelled opportunity for test- ing it out. Among the twenty-four men whom Hoyt has potentially named to make the trip are three men who may not go. There still seems to be some doubt as to whether BobPeckelsma and Orlen Zahnow will accompany the team, and the sore back which has been bothering Steve Mason of late may force him to remain at home. In the event that these men do not make the trip, Hoyt may take Tom Fisher, shot putter who placed third in the Illinois meet Saturday with a toss of 42 feet 8 inches. Rain Halts Contest Wit1Western State By FRED DeLANO KALAMAZOO, May 12.-A mid- afternoon downpour today thwarted Michigan's attempt at its 13th win of the current baseball campaign after one inning of the scheduled tilt with Western State had been played. The opening session was scoreless for both teams, with Capt. Berger Larson striking out two of the Hill- toppers. The game was opened in a slight drizzle and as soon as the storm reached its height was called by Um- pire-in-chief Ernie Vick. The Wolverines will play Purdue Friday in the next game and have a double-header with Illinois listed for Saturday. None of these games will be played in Ann Arbor. Captain Lar- son is sure to pitch in one of the Illini struggles, and Johnny Gee and Herm Fishman will work the other two assignments of the week-end. R[S[RVATIONS Any Steamet m Adversed IRIP.TOURCRUISE COMPLTD FREE a HER =g EU ROPE BERMUDA, CALIFORNIA, CHINA, ETC. BOOK NOW txspvsAd fm.. L tcened Sin. 191. R eer.ene-Ay Loc.i a KUEBLER TRAVEL BUREAU AN AaOR --1 Breaking The Tape' Myth Exploded By Exact Science Of Modern Timers By FRED BUESSER With assaults and claims upon ex- isting track records becoming almost a daily occurrence until each sec- tion of the country has established a favorite son in the role of 'record smasher,' sports followers through- out the world have been hard put to tell the difference between a really outstanding performance and a med- iocre performance clocked by a par- tisan or amateur timer. To appreciate and understand the precise science of accurate timing it is, not necessary to go beyond the confines of Ferry Field, the stamp- ing ground of Charlie Hoyt's Wol- verines and the retreat of Professors Art Van Duren and Phil Diamond. Recognized Clockers Diamond and Van Duren are, to- gether with George Moe, the recog- nized expert clockers of this section of the country, and their ability was duly acknowledged when both were invited to act as timers in the Con- ference meet last year. There are two schools of timing. Both of course, start not with the sound of the gun, but with the ap- pearance of the puff of smoke, and it is probable, according to Van, Duren, that the time lost while the puff of smoke forms is compensated for by the reaction time of the clocker when he stops the watch. It is in the stopping and not in the starting of the watch that the difference of the two methods of im- ing becomes apparent. There is a certain ambiguity in the rules them- selves as to just when a man has crossed the finish line, but the ac- cepted standard is that the body of the runner must have passed the mark. Amateur Timer's Error The amateur timer is prone to consider that the finish has been reached when the chest or torso breaks the tape, but the fallacy of this method can readily be seen were a man to lean forward at the con- clusion of the race. Obviously his body has not crossed the line, but the tape has been broken and a record is claimed. The scientific and approved meth- od of timing has to do only with the feet of the runner ,and it is not until the foot has crossed the mark that a real timer will click his watch. A vivid illustration of this principle may serve to illustrate the point. In ,ie 1932 Olympics held atLos An- geles, Eddie Tolan and Ralph Met- calf raced almost a dead heat in the 100 meter dash. Metcalf broke the tape ahead of Tolan because he was a bigger man, and the majority of the officials credited the Marquette speedster with the victory. A special- ly equipped camera lad caught the finish however, and the picture de- veloped that evening, showed that while Metcalf had broken the tape, his foot was just going down while crossing the finish line while Tolan's foot was coming up, showing that he had already completed his stride. The Olympic committee studied the picture and reversed its decision. Feet As Indicators Both Van Duren and Diamond use only the feet as indicators in tim- ing and have become so proficient that they invariably get the same time in any event under a quarter mile. In the longer distances the difference in watch mechanisms be- gins to enter in. Four watches are used to time with, one being designated as a spare and used only in the event that one of the regular watches goes haywire. It is seldom that the watch will stop exactly on the tenth of a second mark, for instance, and it is here that the opportunity for discrepancy or bias enters in. The instant a tenth second marker is passed, say if the hand is barely past 9.6, the time im- mediately becomes 9.7 and it is the failure of timers to take this factor into consideration that results in so many strangely phenominal times. In establishing world records each of the three timers must turn in his DANCE SCHEDULE I.M.A. AUDITORIU-M - FLINT, MICH. Second Avenue and Saginaw Stteet May 16 IACK HYLTON and his International Review May 23 InoaRRcy I R Hutton s Melodears Unfinished Spartan Track Causes Meet To Be Held! At Ferry Field By RICHARD A. FORSYTH The twenty-first annual State In- tercollegiate Track and Field Meet will be held Friday and Saturday afternoon, May 15 and 16, at Ferry Field. This is the first time. in twenty-one years of the meet that it has not been held at Michigan State College, due to the fact that their new track has not yet been completed.p Last year the meet was won by Michigan State by a two and one- half point margin over Western State. According to Ralph H. Young, Michigan State College track coach, the meet this year should be pretty much of a four-way proposition with Michigan Normal, Wayne University, Western State, and Michigan State dominating the field. Other colleges competing will be University of De- troit, Kalamazoo College, Central State and several of the junior col- leges, chief among them being Grand Rapids Junior College. Seek Olympic Rating Application has been made to have the State Intercollegiate meet des- ignated as an official Olympic try- out meet, with the winners of the first three places in each even qual- ifying for the U. S. Olympic semi- finals. Active Olympic candidates to compete include Abe Rosenkrantz of Michigan Normal, winner of two events in the Jewish Olympics in Asia Minor last year, Allen Tolmich of Wayne University, William Haw- thorne of Michigan Normal, Harvey Woodstra of Grand Rapids Junior College, and James Wright and Major Leagues American League Detroit 5, Boston 0 St. Louis 7, New York 0 Washington-Chicago, rain Philadelphia-Cleveland, rain National League Cincinnati 6, Philadelphia 4 Brooklyn 5, St. Louis 2 New York 5, Chicago 4 Pittsburgh 6, Boston 6 (called in tenth because of darkness). Francis Dittrich of Michigan State. Besides the regular course of track and field events, two open events will be added to the program this year and will be run off at the con- clusionof the finalsonSaturday. They are the 5,000 meter run and the 440 yard hurdles, and will be open to all men eligible for places on the U. S. Olympic team. The lead- ing candidates so far entered in the 5,000 meter run are William Daly, formerly of University of Detroit, and William Zepp, former Michigan Normal athlete. Beatty Files Entry Last winter Daly turned in a 4:12 mile in Madison Square Garden. Zepp took part in the Sugar Bowl running events in New Orleans dur- ing the Mardi Gras. Gene Beatty, former Michigan Normal star, is the first man to file his entry in the 440 yard hurdles. Beatty won this event at the Penn Relays for three straight years. All three of these men will be active candidates for the U. S. Olym- pic team. The preliminaries of the meet are scheduled to start at 2:30 Friday afternoon, and the finals will begin at 2:00 p.m. Saturday. State Baseball Team Leaves For Eastern Trip Michigan State's slugging baseball team, which has tallied 30 runs in its last two shutout victories, head- ed eastward yesterday to play Col- gate and Cornell Universities. Coach John Kobs selected 19 men to make the first eastern invasion a Spartan nine has ever made. Blaine Henkel will make his mound debut today at Hamilton, N. Y., against Colgate. Warren Walters will hurl against Cornell at Ithaca Thursday. En route home State will meet Mich- igan Normal at Ypsilanti. -Prices Within Reach of All - LADIES 25c GENTLEMEN 55c Hours of Dancing: 9 to 1 HEAR THEM -SEE THEM W I -I. . 7 / 5 In Friday's Daily CLASSIFI ED ADS will rent your a* rooms for Summer, 'since 4,000 copies of The Daily will be mailed to prospective Summer School Students.... IMMEDIATELY NOGAA--- t"; V[t must have tli - "zprrtettce; one wh I-ntle dttlca desalts an r-xrt ve matt preferred; tuts ra rttculara, salary. st 4_0 world. uptown T FN'O iRAp ER and ty r abke to operate Re lnpt9n machlae, take (it tlon rnpidly. food opport it Y, State age- ex parlance, t ary. Address S BCti W Cxi 6T .'T" afrayg UM'I NLy BN V M3 w' i yaav+ vv tnf rcu OS.IVVawS \A " ° t1 t U) I R wi Festival- The rhythm of form, The harmony o color, Caught in fine Portrai ture, Did you ever read the want ads and say "There is the very posi- tion I would like to have, if I could fill it." Our instruction 11 I E I I I I I I I