Weather Occasional showers and warmer today, fair tomorrow. f 155 ft. 2 in., went unchallenged today and the two new marks came when Michigan's mile relay team of Jack Leutritz, Doug Hayes, Phil Bal- reat and Warren Breidenbach, broke the old mark of 3:15.2 by five-tenths >f a second and when Chicago's Bob Cassels soared 14 ft. 2% in. to break a nine year old mark by four and. one-quarter inches. A cloudburst prevented Breiden- bach from erasing another 23-year- old mark, Binga Dismond's 47.4 quar- ter. Immediately after Myron Piker of Northwestern won the first event the hundred, in 9.9 with Ohio State's Bob Lewis second and the favored Al Smith of Michigan, third, the overcast clouds let loose a torrent of rain that drove the quarter-milers to shelter and 9,300 spectators under the stands. The downpour continued for fifteen minutes and left the track covered with little lakes of water. But Breidenbach, who had run a 47.2 quarter last week, was off in front and a yard ahead of Jack Sulz- man of Ohio at the furlong with Ross Faulkner a close third. Sulzman made his bid at the 300-yard mark but Breidenbach poured it on and won, like a true champion, going away. Balyeat came up fast on the- back stretch and his drive just failed to nip the Buckeye. Faulkner, who was troubled with a leg injury, limped home in last place while Leutritz beat off defending champion Harley How- ells of Ohio for fourth. The time, which Charley Hoyt called remark- able considering the wind and the track, was 47.6. Bill Watson, in his final appear- (Continued on Page 6) Kentucky Miners Call OffMeeting HARLAN, Ky., May 20.-('P)-Unit- ed Mine Workers (CIO) tonight called off a scheduled Sunday mass meeting n this troubled soft coal mine area following issuance of a military order )f restrictions. William Turnblazer, president of the Harlan district UMW, issued a lengthy statement in which he said: "in order to prevent wholesale ar- rests- we shall not attempt to have a mass meeting in Harlan county on tomorrow." Hero Of 'American Landscape' Supports Federal Theatre Plan Michigan Sailing Club Embarks On Third Year Of Organization By ROBERT SOLOMON Running before the wind, the Uni- versity of Michigan Sailing Club isc rounding the buoy which marks the second year of its existence. As the only sailing club in the Big Ten it owns four cat-boats and expects with- in a week to come into possession of a fifth boat, a sloop. The 30 members of the club, rang- ing from law students to engineers, started from scratch last spring, snnnnred h yQuarterdeek honorarv According to Commodore Tony de Palma, president, there are three classes of seamen in the club: neophy- tes; -crewmen, who are a little more experienced than the neophytes, and the skippers, who are the highest ranking members. In order to reach the rank of skipper the neophytes and crewmen must be proficient in the arts of knot-tying, splicing, jib- ing, tacking and in general, must be able to maneuver a boat under any ceircmstances By HERVIE HAUFLER A veteran actor recently requisi- tioned to play in a Federal Theatre project, Harry Irvine believes that "the conception of Federal Arts Pro- jects is unquestionably a very fine one." Mr. Irvine, who will head the cast of Elmer Rice's "American Land- scape," to be offered here next week by the 1939 Dramatic -Season, ob- serves that there are many people, out-of-work through no fault of their own, who want work instead of re- lief. These include not only factory workers and mechanics, but thous- ands of writers, painters and players. The Federal Arts Projects permit these artists to do work they are capable of doing. EshtabiAs eHurrielv By a rush program of organiza- tion; however, Mrs. Hallie Flanagan built up the project and asked Elmer Rice, author of next week's play here, to head it. These two succeed- ed in meeting the Congressional time limit and so won the appropriation. The outstanding contribution of the Federal Theatre, Mr. Irvine de-+ clared, undoubtedly ihas , been the+ "Living Newspaper," a series of plays each showing some modern American problem. An example cited is "One Third of a Nation," dealing with the housing problem. No Text-Book To Private Shows There is no question of real com- petition between Federal Theatre projects and commercial productions, Mr. Irvine claims, since the Theatre