T MI.CHIGAN AIL T, MY 2Y, TH WIIA JAL Hoyt's Last Michigan Team Captures Big Ten Track Crown Buxton Of Wisconsin Wins Half Mile 1 . -- IN THIS CORNER By Mel Fineberg Chicago Asks For Leniency From Big Ten COLLEGE BASEBALL Wisconsin 9, Chicago 0 Cornell 4, Princeton 1 Virginia 6, Navy 5 (15 innings) COLLEGE TRACK Army 80; Fordham 46 COLLEGE TENNIS Marquette 4, Loyola 1 Wisconsin 7, Iowa 0 Racer Injured i Triad INDIANAPOLIS, May 20.-(A)- Johnny Seymour of Escanaba, Mich., driving a rear-motored race car, crashed into an upper wall dhring a practice run on the Indiarnapolis Mo- for Speedway today but escaped with his life by jumping from the machine after it caught fire. I 'q -Daily Photo by Freedman Ed Buxton, star Wisconsin middle-distance man, is shown winning the 880 yard run in the fast time of 1:53.9. He beat out Lester Eisenhart of Ohio State and also Art Bodeau of Purdue, last year's champion, who finished fourth. it third, Gutting (Pur), fourth Hatha- way (N.W.), fifth, lielley (Mich.). Time: 14.4. 880-yard run: Won by Buxton t (Wis), second Eisenhart (OS, third Petrie (Wis.), fourth Bodeau (Pur), fifth Jester (Mich.). Time 1:53.9. Shot put: Won by Watson (Mich), second Harris (Ind), third, Hook (Mich), fourth Weber (Pur), fifth Sikich (Ill). Watson's distance: 52 ft. 6% in. Javelin: Won by Poorman (Pur), second Carlson (Wis), third Siefert (Wis), fourth Ell (Ohio), fifth Coop- errider (Ohio). Poorinan's distance: 193 ft. 3% in. 220-yard dash: Won by Lewis (Ohio), second Smith (Mich), third Elliott (Ind), fourth C. Culver (Mich), fifth C. Teufel (Iowa). Time: .21. Discus throw: Wcn by Watson (Mich), second Haviland (Ill), third Harris (Ind), f o u r t h Kulbitski (Minn), fifth Harkness (Iowa). Wat- son's distance: 160 ft. 10/a in. Breaks Big Ten record of 155 ft. 2 in. set by? Arlie Mucks of Wisconsin in 1916. l Two mile run: Won by Schwarz-I korf (Mich), second Mehl (Wis), ;hird Whittaker (Ohio), fourth Far- in (Wis), fifth Liljs gren (Minn). Time: 9:25.3. 220-yard low hurdles: Won by Cochran (Ind), second Gutting (Pur). third Lostetter (Minn), fourth Kelley (Mich), fifth Allen (Ind). Time: 23.4.t Mile relay: Won by Michigan (Leu-t tritz, Hayes, Balyeat, Breidenbach), second Ohio State, third Iowa, fourth. Purdue, fifth Indiana. Time: 3:14.7. (Betters Big Ten record of 3:15.2 set by Michigan in 1935.)9 Broad jump: Won by Watson (Mich), second Best (Wis), third f Hodgson (Minn.), fourth, C. Culvere (Mich), fifth Allen (Ind). Time: 23.4.e son's distance 25 ft. 51/2 in. made inf preliminaries Friday). High jump: Won by DiefenthalerV (III), second, Harrar (Wis), thirdI Butler (Minn), tied for fourth and fifth at 5 ft. 8 in. Burnett and Mikulas (Ind), Timmerman and Best (Wis), Smith (N.W.), Wilson (Iowa), Allen, Canham and King (Mich). Winning height 6 ft. 6 in.f PGle vault: 1st, Cassels (Chi), 2ndf Padway (Wis), third Davidson (Chi), fourth and fifth at 12 ft. 6 in. Thistle-s waite, (N.W.), Roberts (Iowa), Cush- ing (Mich), Gardner (Wis). Cassel's height 14 ft. 2/4 in. breaks Big Ten record of 13 ft. 10/ in. set by Vern McDermott of Illinois in 1930, and breaks Ferry Field record of 13 ft. 6 in. set by Irving Seely of Illinois in 1935.a Ave Aique JVale . .. The 39th annual Big Ten track mict yesterday belonged to Charley Hoyt. Every one of the 64 and three-fourths points that the Wol- verines rolled up yesterday belongs to Charley Hoyt. Next year, and in the years that will follow, when Charley has forgotten the encomiums that rolled glibly from the tongues of well-wishers and the pana- gyrics that flowed easily from the pens of sports-writers, he can turn memory's pages back to May 20, 1939. It was not, we hope, the expression only of the track team; we hope that it was a manifestation of what the entire school feels toward Charley Hoyt. For Hoyt, who never at- tended school here, has given more in spirit to Michigan than well-meant alumni money, or glib phrases piotesting never-dying fealty. Charley Hoyt has given, not to an institution, but to the men that have worked, not under him but with him. Hoyt means what other coaches merely talk about. Winning is not the important thing to him--perhaps that's why he wins. It is the boys that come first. The meet yesterday is an. example. Many coaches, on their way to a new position, would like, to go out leaving a brightly burning star in their wake, leav- ing a mark for their successors< to reach for. The opportunity f presented itself yesterday. Vic- tory itself was assured; a new t scoring record for Western Con- ference competition was a dis-l tnet possibility and would im- press the track world. But to try for a scoring record yesterdayt would be to endanger the future- of some of his boys. Elmer Gedeon could have run the low hurdles and picked up valuable points. But Gedeon hadn't trained for the lows and the added strain on his leg might have injured his professional baseball future. Hoyt never pressured Gedeon; on Hoyt's track team it is a pesonal matter for the individual. Bill Watson might have entered the high jump. He leaped six feet five last year and six feet three won second place this year. But Watson too might have suffered a recurrence of a leg injury and to Hoyt, a new record wasn't worth the possible toll. it isn't the first place winners that count with Hoyt. It's the kids that get out and plug and pick up the fourth and fifth place points that quicken his heart beat. When we entered the Field House to ask him for a statement after the meet yes- terday, he didn't talk about the Watsons and the Gedeons and the - Briedenbachs-they have the natural equipment. He said "Look at what Barrett and Wisner did in the mile; they ran better than they've ever done before. Look at those Culvers n the broad jump. Carl jumped a foot better than he's done to take fourth and Fred went a foot and a half farther to take fifth. Even Wat- son jumped six inches farther than he's ever done." Hoyt has often said it's a greater thrill for him to see a five minute miler doing his best than a 4:20 miler loafing. That is the stuff great coaches are made of. By STAN M. SWINTON Sympathetic Western Conference officials yesterday received from the University of Chicago a request that the Maroons be permitted to play graduate students and first-semester transfers because the move fits into the University's plans for "stream- lining" education and would at the same time bolster her pathetic ath- letic showing. No action was taken on the re- quest. Citing statistics to show that under present Big 'Ten eligibility rules, Chi- cago has barely 750 men eligible for intercollegiate competition, the peti- tion revived rumors that the school might withdraw from the Conference. Withdrawal Not Intended Despite a frank statement that the memorandum "is not to be construed as an implication of any intention to withdraw," newspaper men noted the petition asked Conference officials "If the University desires to extend participation in intercollegiate com- petition on the basis presented, will the Intercollegiate Conference wish the University to withdraw its mem- bership?" Under the proposal, Chicago would be permitted to apply her own eligi- bility rules-the ability to remain in school-to athletics. Officials said it would mainly affect minor teams, such as golf, tennis and the like. Desire Extension "Because of the obviously unsound educational basis of its intercollegiate athletic program, the University wish- es to explore the possibility of ex- tending the participation in inter- collegiate athletics to all bona fide students, except for limitations edu- cationally desirable," the statement declared. At the noon meeting faculty repre- sentatives ruled that only 55 play- ers at each school may be given the evening meal under the modified training table plan. Prof. Ralph W. Aigler of the Law School was assigned by the Conference to represent it in any informal discussions with other conferences or schools on subsidiza- tion rulings. i Quality I I F arFOR A PERFECT JOB ON YOUR UG CLEANING l 'N aud REPAIRING Our claim of perfection may sound more than a bit conceited ... but we believe that we are amply jus- tified in so doing. Iere's why! 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