THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Spartans, Wayne Lead Field In State Intercollegiate Meet v GV Ypsilanti Star Sets Record In Broad Jump Tolmich Qualifies In Four1 Events To Lead Wayne; Spartans Place 14 Michigan State and Wayne Univer- sity led the field in the 21st annual State Intercollegiate Track and Field. Meet, finals of which will be held today on Ferry Field, as the result of qualifying trials yesterday. The Spartans, headed by a strong weights entry, led the qualifiers with 14 places while Wayne, led by the versatile Al Tolmich, has 11 qualifying places. While Michigan State and Wayne were making bids for team recogni- tion, Bill Hawthorne of Michigan Nor- mal carried off individual honors with a record-breaking effort in the broad jump. A pole vaulter by preference, Hawthorne bettered the favoredFran- cis Dittrich of State with a leap of 23 feet 7% inches to break the former state intercollegiate record of 23 feet 51/4 inches made in 1931.by Zull of Detroit. Tolmich Wins Easily The Spartans placed their weight team of Orr, Jenkins and Ten Eyck in the discus trials, and all but Orr doubled in the shot put. Dittrich and Colina qualified for the javelin. Carl Mueller led all qualifiers in the hundred as he finished in :09.9 and repeated for a place in the 220. Other Spartan qualifiers were Clare Mc- Durmon in the low hurdles and Cal- uroy in the quarter. Tolmich, taking things easily, won his heat in the hundred in :10, ran the high hurdles in :15.1, and quali- fied without trouble in the 220-yard dash and the low hurdles. His team- mate, Connie Eizak, led qualifiers in the shot put and discus. Other Wayne finalists include Ross Wellwood, broad jumper, Bruce Lawson in the 220, and Don McElroy in both hurdles. Michigan Normal, besides Haw- thorne, qualified for eight places, and Western State placed seven in the finals. Olympics Candidates Run Four of Michigan's outstanding Olympics candidates will be featured in special Olympic events today, in the 440-yard hurdles and in the 5,000 meter run. In the hurdles Eugene Beatty, former Michigan Normal star and John Lewis, former Detroit City College star, will be featured. Finals today begin at 1:30 p.m. Ad- mission to the finals will be 65 cents, 25 cents of which will go directly to the Olympic fund, the meeting being a designated Olympic preliminary evBct.re Box Score Michigan State Overwhelms - - / rl 0% Third Doul des The HOT Team Scores i {( E i t Plays Capt ain.Curti. Wolverine (olfers Meet IiI ni Today In Last Home Tilt Tennis Feats Of Micigan Immortals Recalled As Olympics Near Team, 8-1 S T OV E I Lone By BILL REED LL 1TITH RESULTS of the Michigan- Indiana track meet coming in as we write, today's column may not be expected to be just the essence of optimism. However, with our un- bounded provincialism, mixed with a pretty deep-seated faith in Hoyt- coached track teams, we still refuse to concede that the Conference meet next week is going to be any less than a four-way battle with Mich- igan still very much in the running. Object of conjecture this week will .e Don Lash, who holds the key to Indiana and Michigan for- tunes. For with Lash at his best the Hoosiers will have to be fa- vored even over the fast-starting Ohio State team, and will at the same time cut Michigan out of just that many possible points. Lash, unquestionably one of the country's ranking stars in the dis- tances, has given rise already to many hypotheses. First that he is a "front runner, that pressed at all he will collapse. In the indoor dual meet with Michigan, Lash was badly har- rassed and failed to show, but that may possibly be attributed to lack of condition at that time. Secondly, it has been said that with an exceptional race a week before the Conference, Lash can- not come through in that event. After two of the greatest indoor races of the year against Purdue the week before the indoor Con- ference meet, Lash faded to get just one point. But in that meet Lash was unquestionably ill, suf- fering from a throat infection. What it adds up to is that this writer is really pretty discouraged after seeing the results of the mile and two-mile in yesterday's meet, but that it will take pretty strong chains to keep us away from Columbus next week-end. SPEAKING of conjecturing on runners, the case of Ray Ellin- wood, of Chicago, comes to mind. After Ellinwood had run his stir- ring world-record quarter in the indoor Conference meet last win- ter, the word began to go around that it was as fast as he could run, that curves didn't bother him andsthat their elimination out- doors would mean nothing to him. But his mark of :47.5 last week rather silenced that talk. Track is a very interestingsport. It is safe to bet that DeGay Ernst, starter at the State Intercollegiate track meet, will have trouble in find- ing poker opposition if he should be so inclined to seek a game among the coaches and officials present at the. drawing of lanes for today's meet. Pulling the numbered pills out of a bottle, Ernst drew in consecutive order from six through one, a dis- tinguished accomplishment in any draw game. Today's meet will have an add- ed feature net on the books, a race for weightmen suggested by Ralph Young, director of athletics at State. The race will be a 100- yard sprint between the goal lines on the sod of the gridiron, and competition will be restricted to entries in the shot and discus, thereby ecluding such ringersas Mr. Young himself. The event will be staged while the 5,000 meters feature event is being run. BASEBALL SCORES Iowa 8, Wisconsin 6. Minnesota 6, Northwestern 0. Kahn Drops C rIr 1.linzin Keeps Slier- Victory~ Clo'se Match ger; IlInss, J flood 0 iii Neither Over JRoast Team Given Edge Other Invaders Strong Qiartet By CARL GERSTACKER Michigan State's strong tennis team completely routed a favored Michigan net squad yesterday at Fer- ry Field to win by an 8-1 score and make a clean sweep of the season's matches between the two teams. Willard Klunzinger, the Spartan's number one man, took the measure of Capt. Howie Kahn, 1-6, 6-2, 6-2. in the best match of the day. Kahn won the first set easily and seemed to be in his best form of the year I as he repeatedly pulled Klunzinger up to net with perfect drop shots and then drove beautiful passing shots for the point. Changes Tactics Klunzinger, however, switched his tactics from a soft defensive gameI after losing the first set and adopted a forcing offensive game that was good enough to take the next two sets, 6-2, 6-2. After the match, Coach Charles Ball, the Michigan State mentor, rushed up to Klunz- inger and congratulated him on playing the best tennis of his career. Jarvis Dean, moved up to the num- ber two position to take the place of Miller Sherwood who was unable to play because of a sudden illness, found the going too tough in his4 battle with Captain Rosa of thej Spartans, and lost a game fight, 6-3, 6-1. Rosa defeated Kahn in the l other match between the two teams this season. Persistence Triumphs After Klunzinger and Captain Rosa, the Michigan State netters had nothing to offer but persistence, but persistence alone was enough to win against the listless brand of tennis displayed by the last four men on the Wolverine team. The Spartan players, all pat ball artists, succeeded in working the Varsity net men into endurance con- tests in which the greater steadi- ness of the Michigan State men turned the tide in their favor. SUMMARIES Singles: Klunzinger (M) df. Kahn (M), 1-6, 6-2, 6-2. Rosa (MS) df Dean (M), 6-3, 6-1.j Scholtz, (MS) df. Flick (M)), 6-4,' 12-14, 6-3. Stonebraker, (MS) df. Rodriguez, (M), 9-7, 6-3. Hyatt, (MS) df. Thorward (M), 6-3, 6-4. Eissler (MS) df. Levenson (M), 6-4, 0-6, 6-2. Doubles: Klunzinger and Scloltz (MS) df. Kahn and Levenson (M), 8-6, 6-3. Rosa and Stonebraker (MS) df. Dean and Flick (M), 0-6, 7-5, 6-0. Thorward and Rodriguez (M) df. Hyatt and Eissler (MS), 7-9, 9-7, 6-3. Carl Fischer, Michigan Inter- colegiate singles champion, will lead a favored Western State tennis team in their return match with Michigan's netters, Monday, at the Ferry Field tennis courts. Fischer defeated Captain Kahn in an early season meeting of the two teams. Track Summaries Michigan's National Collegiate championship golf team appears at home for the last time this season today, meeting a strong Illinois quar- tet over the University Course. Doubles will be played in two best- ball foursomes beginning at 8:45 a.m. and four singles twosomes will go out at 1:30 p.m. While Michigan defeated North- tvestern. conqueror of the Illini, the Wolverines can not be rated as fa- vorites because the Northwestern- Illinois match was a twelve-man af- fair in which the men from Cham- paign scored more points than their Wildcat opponents in the first four positions, but lost out by dropping five of the six points in the fifth and sixth matches. With only four Illinois men here, Coach Ray Courtright is making no prediction for a victory for the Var- sity. By GEORGE J. ANDROS Although their most serious worry at the present moment is next week's Conference meet, some of Coach Charlie Hoyt's Varsity trackmen are already being mentioned as good prospects for the American Olympic team - and back of them is a glor- ious heritage of fine performances- made by Michigan men in the inter- national Games since the turn of the century. Heading the list of the Wolver- ines who have represented the Unit- ed States against the world are three record-breaking double winners in the 100 and 200-meter sprints: Eddie Tolan in 1932 at Los Angeles, Ralph Craig in 1912 at Stockholm, and Archie Hahn in 1904 at St. Louis. The immortal Hahn was even more outstanding in his day than his two successors in that he turned in a third victory in 1904 in the since dis- continued 60-meter run, and then came back in the 1906 games at Athens to repeat in the 100. Rose Was Star In Shot Ralph Rose, Wolverine behemoth from California, was the greatest in history until Louisiana State's Jack Torrance came along to shadow his performances in the one-hand and two-hand shot put. Rose won the shot for America and Michigan in the 1904 Games and in 1908 at Lon- don. i t i i a i C 1 1 Mile Run: Won by Lash (Ind.); second, Deckard (Ind.); third, Smith (Ind.). Time, 4:13.5. High Jump: Won by Caldemeyer (Ind.); tied for second, Robinson (Mich.' and Baldwin (Ind.). Height 5 feet 10 inches. Shot Put: Won by Townsend (Mich.); second, Schneiderman (Ind.); third, Etchells (Mich.). Dis- Michigan man, failed to place in the sprints. Accompanying Craig to Stockholm in 1912 was Carroll Huff, captain of the Varsity in 1913, who reached the final heat in the 400-meter run. In 1920 at Antwerp ,the late Carl Johnson, also a Varsity captain, gave America a second in the broad jump. "Duke" Dunne in the javelin and Joe Baker in the pentathlon were al- so on the team. Michigan returned to the top of the victors' stand in 1924 at Paris when the great DeHart Hubbard took first place in the broad jump with a record-breaking effort, despite a stone bruise on his heel that later served to kep him out of the hop, step and jump entirely after he had been rated the likely winner. Turner Places In 1932 On the 1932 team along with the be-spectacled Tolan was Ned Turn- er, .stellar middle-distance perform- er, who came through with a fifth in the 800-meter run. Although there is no real stand- out on the present Varsity team, and it is to be remembered that any prognostication must be tempered by the realization that today's stars may fade in the next few weeks and present unknowns may round into form that will earn them a trip to Berlin, four Michigan men are cap- able of causing much trouble at the coming Olympic trials. They are Sam Stoller, Bob Osgood, Stan Birle- son and Walt Stone in the steeple- chase. SHE WEARS THE PANTS Mrs. McLarnin has l'uled Jimmy must quit the ring. The COLONIAL INN 303 N. Division - 8876 Luncheons - 11:30 - 1:30 Dinners - - 5:30 - 7:30 Sunday Dinners 12:30 -2:30 Room For Private Parties t -d The first doubles match between Capt. Chuck Kocsis and Woody Mal- loy of the Varsity and Will Kokes and Johnny Hobart of the Indians should be as thrilling as the match Ifaun /ihian ctnr nl dvith tance, 46 feet 6% dium Record.) 440-yard Run: (Mich.); second third, C. Miller :48.6. 100-yard Dash: (Mich.); -second, inches. (New Sta- Won by Birleson Patton (Mich.); (Mich.). .Time, Won by Stoller Coller (Ind.); third, Baldwin (Ind.). Time, 9.8. 120-yard High Hurdles: Won by Caldemeyer (Ind.); second, Osgood (Mich.); third, Neely (Ind.). Time, 14.2. (New Stadium Record, Ties World Record). 880-yard Run: Won by. Hobbs (Ind.); second, Gill Ind.); third, Starr (Mich.). Time, 1:54.3. 220-yard Dash: Won by Collier (Ind.); second, Gunning (Ind.); third, Stoller (Mich.). Time, 21.5. Discus Throw: Won by Etchells (Mich.); second, Savage (Mich.) ; third, Schneiderman (Ind.). Dis- tance, 141 feet 3 inches. Pole Vault: Tied for first, Droul- ard (Mich.), Morgan (Mich.), Shoe- maker (Ind.), Baldwin (Ind.). Height, 12 feet. Two-mile Run: Won by Lash (Ind.), second, Deckard (Ind.); third, Smith (Ind:). Time, 9:10.7. (New Stadium Record). 220-yard Low Hurdles: Won by Osgood (Mich.) ; second, Baldwin (Ind.) ; third, Caldmeyer (Ind.). Time, 24.2. Javelin Throw: Won by Dworsky (Mich.) ; second, Stevenson (Ind.) ; third, Stone (Mich.). Distance, 182 feet 7 inches. Broad Jump: Won by Stoller tt 1 1 k t 1 T f f i thie two) ± Iicnig stars iayea wi Also on the 1908 team were John- Fred Haas and Paul Leslie of Lou- ny Garrels who placed second in the isiana State here last week-end. Ho- 110-meter high hurdles and Gayle bart is Illinois State Amateur cham- Dunn, member of the second-place pion and Kokes has defeated Pick three-mile team. Wagner of Northwestern, conqueror of Captain Kocsis. Four Michigan men were in the Allen Saunders and Bill Barclay 1900 Games at Paris, being sent will complete the Wolverine team, there, curiously enough, by contri- meeting Dean Zahn and Capt. Elton butions obtaed in a drive instigat- Hill in the second best-ball match". ed by the Board in Control of Ath- In singles Captain Kocsis will meet letics after the Big Ten meet. These Kokes, Malloy will clash with Hobart, men reached Paris independently of Saunders will be opposed by Zahn, the regular American team just five and Barclay will be sent after Cap- days before the meet, but succeeded Lain Hill of the invaders. in winning three second places for tam illof he ivadrsthe United States. J. F. McLean was a close second (Mich.); second, Pekelma (Mich.); in the hurdles, Chuck Dvorak took third, Baldwin (Ind.). Distance 23 second honors in the pole vault, and feet 2 inches. H. W. Hayes was just behind the Mile Relay: Won by Michigan winner in the 800-meter handicap (Birleson, Patton, Aikens and Stiles). after defeating 28 men to reach the Time, 3:25.4. finals. H. C. Leiblee, the fourth II 1 Michigan (11) AB Rudness, cf ........3 Ferner, 3b ........5 Brewer, ss ........4 Uricek, 2b ........4 Jablonski, c ........4 Lerner, lb........3 Patanelli, 1b ......1 Kremer, If ........3 Heyliger, rf ........5 Fishman, p .......3 R 2 1 0 1 3 1 0 1 1 1 H 1 1 0 2 2 2 0 0 2 0 O 1 0 3 3, 8 6 3 1 2 0 27 Totals..........35 11 10 Purdue (3) AB Malaska, cf..... ..4 Barthe, rf........3 Mitchell, rf .......1 Lucas, 3b........2 Armon, 3b ........2 Young, lb........4 *Klicka ..........1 Mangas, If . ......5 Sines, ss ..........3 Krause, c.....:...3 Waling, 2b ........4 Martin, p ........0 Rosser, p ......... 4 3R H O 1 3 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 f 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 1 0 4 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 2 A 0 3 3 4 0 0 0 0 0 2 12 A 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 3 1 2 0 4 14 E 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 5 Ea 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 5 30c little money I I What d You Pay in ANNOYANCE FOR Hot Water. Do you get hot water ONLY after a dash downstairs to light an old- fashioned water heater? After waiting, for what seems to be hours, for the water to reach the right temperature? Or, does your faucet suddenly stop giving hot water at a most inop- portune time? INVESTIGATE THE HANDLEY BROWN Automatic Gas Water Heater I 1! Totals........36 3 5 *Batted for Young in ninth. 7 Michigan ..........062 102 000-11 Purdue...........000 000 003- 3 Two base hits - Jablonski, Lerner. Stolen base -Kremer. Sacrifice hit - Lerner. Bases on balls - Fishman 4; Martin 2; Rosser 4. Struck out- Fishman 7; Rosser 3. Hits off: Martin, 4 in 1 2/3 innings; off Rosser, 6 in 71/. Passed ball -Krause. Wild pitch - Rosser. Hit by pitcher - Brewer, by Rosser; Krause, by Fishman. Losing pitcher -Martin. Umpires -Cramer and McCullough. (r. I-M GOLF TOURNEY All fraternities entered in the Interfraternity golf tournament must hand in the individual rank- ings of each man to the I-M de- partment by 5 p.m. today. University TENNIS Service EXPERT STRINGING South University opp. the Den AUTOMATIC HOT WATER SERVICE is now very inexpensive under our low optional rate i I But you can have lost articles returned thru the Michigan Daily's Classified Columns for as little as 30c. Call 2-214 i I 1N5TALA HANDLEY BROWN AUTOMATIC GAS WATER HEATER FOR 60 DAYS F REE TR IAL! Convince yourself how little it costs to operate. If, at the end of 60 days, you are not satisfied, we will remove the heater at no expense to You. Fifty gallons of hot water per day, sufficient for a family of four, can be had for as little as $2.17 per month. The HANDLEY BROWN HEATER can be purchased on small monthly payments with a $1.75 down paymnent after the trial period >r ;:=; rhas expired. .. Stop in our office and let us tell you about this wonderful hot SATURDAY ONLY Two Lemon Frosts for 15c Be comfortable when it is hot outside. Just I I