FRIDAY, MA Cif 22, i 40 THE MICHIGAN DAILY F A, G F, 'j-LH R E E FRID~Z MARCh 22, 1~4O PAQE THREE I - 2!2m", World, National, State Track Stars To Meet Here Saturday Schwarzkopf, Maki Will Run In Two Mile Don Canham Will Attempt New High Jump Mark; Bill Watson In Shot Put By HERM EPSTEIN One hundred sixteen young men representing some of the greatest ath- letic prowess the world, country, and state have to offer will take part in tomorrow night's Michigan A.A.U. Relays which are being held in Yost Field House for . the benefit of the Finnish Relief Fund. That was the count when the en- try list for the meet was closed yes- terday. Included among them were The entry of Doyle Rhoades, Pittsburgh's Central Intercollegi- ate pole vault champion was re- ceived and accepted by wire late last night. Rhoades, one of the Midwest's foremost vaulters, cleared 13 feet, six inches in the Centrals. world-record holders Taisto Maki, the Finnish distance star, Al Tolmich, ex- Wayne hurdle ace, and Sam Stoller, Olympic dashman. Maki, who is touring the country with the former Flying Finn, Paavo Nurmi, whose records have fallen be- fore the onslaught of his protege, will face the challenge of Michigan's captain and great two-miler, Ralph Schwarzkopf, who is rapidly becoming one of the two or three top two- milers in the country, if not in the world. The high and low hurdle events bring together Tolmich and a number of rising young stars, including Whitey Hlad, Michigan Normal's bril- liant sophomore, Jeff Hall, Michi- gan's junior timber-topper, and Mar- shall of Butler. In the special 50-yard dash, Stoller, co-holder with Jesse Owens of the world 60-yard record, will stack his speed against such mercury-footed individuals as Bill Carter and Harold Stickle, Pittsburgh's sensational duo who ran one-two in the Butler Re- lays last week, Wilbur Greer, Michi- gan State's former IC4A 100-yard king, Tolmich, and Michigan's senior sprinter, Al Smith. The crack Michigan mile relay team of Bob Barnard, Jack Leutritz, Phil Balyeat and Warren Breiden- bach will face the challenge of Pitts- burgh's and Marquette's quartets. Battles Finnish Star Capt. Ralph Schwarzkopf will attempt to make it two straight for American runners over Finland's world-record holder Taisto Maki in the two-mile feature of the Fin- nish Relief Fund track meet to- morrow night in Yost Field House. Walter Mehl, former Wisconsin runner, nipped Maki in Kansas City, Monday night. Pittsburgh led the Wolverines until the last turn in the Butler Relays last week, and only a sensational sprint by Breidenbach enabled the Wolverines to pull out victorious. Don Canham, Michigan's undefeat- ed high-jumper, will seek to better his own Field House record of 6 feet, 6 3/8 inches. Competing with him will be Michigan State's Negro ace, Walt Arrington, Arnold Cooperman of Michigan Normal, and seven other of the best the Mid-West has to offer this year. The one-mile run brings together almost as attractive a field as the two-mile, with Earl Mitchell and Bill Southworth of Butler, Ed Holderman of Purdue, Ed Barrett and Tommy Jester of Michigan, and several other of the state's best milers. In addition to these events, there will be special events in the half-mile, pole vault, shot put, mile walk and 35-pound weight, IN THIS CORNER By MEL FINEBERG_ Set For The Gala Occasion ... It'll be an entirely different Field House that you'll see when you walk into the House That Yost Built tomorrow night at the A.A.U. Relays. There'll be flags bedecking the walls and, for the first time in 12 years (since Cor- nell-Michigan meet in 1928) a track will be laid down the middle of the floor. The sprints and the hurdles will be run off on this center-piece while the distance events will have the regular track as their locale. In this way, the entire program will be speeded up. There'll be no lag be- tween events (for which everyone will give ardent thanks) and no sooner will one event be ended then the next will begin. It's an altogether wholesome improvement on the regular system Incidentally, Coach Ken Doherty thinks this will be the finest indoor meet ever held here. "It shouldn't be called a meet or Relays," Doherty says, "it's more like a carnival. It's unlike anything that's ever been held here before. And the caliber of competitors is exceptional. Without Taisto Maki (world's premier distance runner) it would be the greatest indoor meet ever held here. With him, it'll be even better." N yesterday's Daily we noticed, by pure coincidence, a story on the track meet which read: "Another feature of the meet will be the opening event-the mile walk. Very few Midwesterners have seen a walk, and they will be fortunate in seeing some of the country's greatest men in the event." To this we wish to murmur a hearty "amen." Ever since the last time we saw a walk (two years ago at the outdoor AAU's) we've been counting the days until another one turned up. Now, at long last, our chance has come. It's been our private opinion, and we now make it public, that there's nothing quite so aesthetic as a good walk. To see a man strolling along, stiff-legged, heel first and then toe-ah, there's nothing like it. You can have your art, your music, your literature but for pure aesthetic enjoyment, we'll take a good walk. One of the things that plagues us is that it is only a mile. We vet- erans, used to 5000 meters or more, aren't sure that we can work up an appreciation of this one in so short a time. As a member in good standing of the I Love A Good Walking Race Clb of America, we deprecate the lack of understanding of the authorities in limiting the distance to one mile. An official protest will be lodged at the next meet- ing of the local lodge. Of course the event is the first on the program (7:30 p.m.) and if we get there too late to see it it'll be because we were unavoidably detained. What else? THERE'S another event on the program that intrigues us-the 35-pound weight throw for height. It was found necessary to import four police- men from Detroit for this one (for the life of us we don't see why Ann Arbor policemen aren't hefty enough). But now that they've found four men silly enough to compete in it how the devil are they going to measure it? When we first saw that it was "for height" it occurred to us that it was a misprint, that it should have read "for Heydt," and thus become a benefit for Francis Heydt of the swimming team. But further investigation showed this hypothesis invalid. Well, we sleuthed about and discovered that they'd try to throw it up against a "bang-board" suspended from a pole vault standard. Now new complications arise: how to protect one's self after one throws the darn thing. 35 pounds is an awful lot to have come down on the konk. Or maybe you get extra points if you let it bump you on the bean. Kind of make it a miniature war games. Three points for a direct hit, two for a glancing blow and one point if it just scares you. It might be tough on the skull but it'd be easy on the scorekeeper. Anent our column of yesterday wherein we mentioned that there was an inconsistency in Maki's saving money by taking subways and then ar- riving in Detroit by airplane, both Ralph Schwarzkopf and Doherty inform us that his travelling expenses are being paid for him. Bruins Top Rangers, 4-2 Leafs Eliminate Hawks BOSTON, March 21.-(P)-After CHICAGO, March 21.--(P)-The being held scoreless for more than Toronto Maple Leafs, who finished 157 minutes by Dave Kerr the ars-third in the National Hockey League, ed Boston Bruins drove four tallies elimnated the Chicago Elackhawks, through that all-star goalie in about fourth place finishers, from the 35 minutes tonight as they came Stanley Cup playoffs tonight, 2 to 1. A crowd of 15,306 persons watched from behind for a 4-2 victory over the Leafs make it two in a row over the New York Rangers in a National the Hawks on unassisted goals by Hockey League play-off game. Gordon Drillon and Hank Goldup. Wolverine Trackmen To Run In New York Michigan's Capt. Ralph Schwarz- kopf and Warren Breidenbach will compete in the New York Finnish Relief Fund track meet, March 31 in Madison Square Garden. Schwarzkopf will run against Chuck Fenske, Walter Mehl, and Gene Venzke in a 1 % mile event. Breidenbach will be one of the Western relay team which will race an Eastern quartet. The other of the West's runners, it is rumored, will be Roy Cochran of Indiana, Will McCown of Illinois, and Jack Sulz- man of Ohio State. There is a possi- bility that Southern California's Er-. win Miller may run in place of one of these men. I-M All Star Cage Teams Are Selected Phys Eds, Wolverines, Sigma Nu, Theta Xi Dominate Positions The 1940 edition of the Fraternity and Independent All-Star basketball teams, selected by the Intramural tourney directors and referees, was released by the I-M department yes- terday. The Fraternity first team had Don Bruce, Sigma Nu sparkplug, and John Cory, a repeater froilast year's team, at forwards; Les Veigel, Theta Xi, who led the league in scoring, at center; and golf captain Bob Pal- mer of Chi Psi, and Paul Nielsen, Theta Chi, at the guard posts. Robert Jones of Sigma Nu and Ed Christanson, Theta Xi, won the for- ward posts on the second team; Rol- and Savilla, varsity tackle on the football team from Kappa Delta Rho, at center; and George Cornell, Delta Tau Delta and Bob Morrison, Zeta Beta Tau, at the guard positions. Phys Eds and Wolverine luminaries dominated the Independent All-Star team. Tommy Netherton of the Wol- verines and Davie Nelson of Phys Ed were selected for the forecourt berths; Ed Murphy, Hill Billy A.C., was named center; while Mike Rodnick, Phys Eds, and varsity pitcher Jack Barry of the Wolverine quintet, copped the guard positions. The second team lined up as fol- lows: Clyde Baily, Trojans, and Web- ster Patterson, Hill Billy A.C., for- wards; varsity gridder Ed Frutig, cen- ter; and Oscar Feldman, Varsity Band, and Joe Czudak, Polish En- gineers, guards. Sport Movies Will Be Shown Here Saturday Two prominent sport films will be shown at the Natural Science Audi- torium Saturday morning at 10:00 as a part of the University Athletic Department's fifth annual spring sports clinic for high school coaches and athletes. "Touching All Bases," the Amer- ican League's annual baseball sound movie, will open the program. Roger Peckinpaugh, former major league star and manager of the New Or- leans Pelicans, will introduce and comment upon the film. Following the baseball pitcures, colored movies of the 1939 National Collegiate track championships held at Los Angeles last June will be shown. At 1:30 p.m. Peckinpaugh and var- sity coach Ray Fisher will sponsor a baseball clinic entitled "Infield Work" at the Yost Field House. This will be followed by a clinic on track and field, featuring discussions by Coaches Ken Doherty and Chester Stackhouse and demonstrations by Bill Watson and Don Canham. The program is free of charge and University students are invited to attend. EXHIBITION BASEBALL Chicago (N) 402 200 301-12 14 3 Pitts. (N) 000 200 300- 5 9 3 Root Olson, Tubb and Todd, Mc- Cullough; Lanahan, Swigart, Lan- ning and Schultz, Mueller. L __________________ _ ,i Frosh Set New Relay Record Half-Mile Quartet Runs Distance In 1:32.6 Michigan's sensational yearling trackmen continued their assault on the freshman track records yesterday1 afternoon when the 880-yard relay' team of Bob Ufer, Norm Elson, "Chuck" Donahey and "Buck" Daw- son ran the half-mile distance in 1:32.6. The feat clipped nine-tenths sec- onds off the old mark of01:33.5 set by Stan Kelley, Fred and Carl Cul- ver, and Derwood Laskey in 1937. The freshmen had failed in an at- tempt to lower the same record only a half-hour earlier when a stick pass from Donahey to Dawson was drop- ped after Ufer had turned in a :22.9 from the blocks and Elson had fol- lowed him in :22.5. Exhibition Baseball New York (A) 000 202 00x-4 6 1 Boston (N) 000 000 000-0 1 2 Ruffing, Gomez, Chandler and Ro- sar; Posedel, Fette and Lopez, An- drews. I-M Sports Wenley House won six out of seven events and tied for first place in the remaining race to trounce Lloyd House. 42-19, and walk away with the first annual Residence Hall swim- ming meet at the Intermural Pool last night. Wenley, coached by John Zu- bon, staff assistant, set two new records when the 100-yard relay team of Dean Woodbury, Bob Haye, Richard Dunn and Wil- liam Swenson turned in a :49,0; and Woodbury, Dunn and Swen- son swam the 75-yard medley relay in :42.2. Lloyd managed to gain a tie for first in the 25-yard backstroke event when Bob Morrow finished in a dead heat with Wodobury of the winners. Howe of Wenley won the diving event. In churning their way to the title, Wenley kept alive the spirit of Robert Mark Wenley, former University history professor after whom the house was named, who was a famous Scottish swimming and diving champion. f? f ... _ _ _ ._.--....._ ___ _..__.._ _ I TODAY GOOD FRIDAY St. Andrew's Episcopal Church 12 Noon-3 P. M. Addresses by the REVEREND HENRY LEWIS We Carry a Complete Line of STETSON HATS $5.00 to $7.50 STADEL National Building & WALKER 205 South Main First .. .. I I i. 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