L.j APRL 14, 194.5 THE AltIIGAN4 DAILY BroncosSurprise Wolverines in Opening Sports Pay Tribute to Dead Chief NEW YORK, April 13-(I)-Sports- dom paid its respect to Franklin De- lano Roosevelt today by announc- ing a virtual cessation of activity un- til after his funeral tomorrow. Only the Pacific Coast Baseball League, where all games were post- poned last night; the Women's Na- tional AAU Swimming Champion- ships in Chicago and the Stanley Cup Hockey playoffs in Toronto planned to carry on. Prayers will be said before the "Play Ball" cry at each of the coast games tonight and tomorrow. In Chicago, AAU executive Lyman J. Bingham said that inability of contestants to change their train reservations for the return home made it impossible to delay the meet. However, tomorrow afternoon's events were shifed to the fdrenoon, leaving the funeral hours devoid of athletic action. The National Dinghy races, to be held at the Larchomont, N. Y., Yacht Club of which the late Pres- ident was an honorary member, were set over to April 21 and 22. Ford Frick, president of the Na- tional Baseball League, asked his club owners to cancel all their exhibi- tions for tomorrow, the day designat- ed by President Truman as a day of national mourning. All games for today except two were wiped out by independent actions of the owners. Yale, Columbia, New York and Notre Dame Universities postpon- ed {baseball games and the Irish also announced that their Saturday afternoon football drills would be dropped. Oriental Race Track in Havana, will be shuttered for the day and may not open Sunday. The Tia Juana track in Mexico also will shut down tomorrow with racing resuming Sun- day.. In South America athletes show- ed their respect by shifting to Sun- day the South American Track and Field Carnival originally scheduled for tomorrow. It will be held in Montevideo, Uruguay. River Rouge Tenders Track Meet Tonight More than five hundred high school athletes will compete in the sixth annual River Rouge Invita- tional Track Meet at Yost Field House tonight. The meet will be sponsored by the River Rouge Department of Physical Education under the direction of Frank Weeber and, will feature en- trants from twenty - seven high schools scattered dver the Lower Peninsula. To give some idea of the magni- tude of this year's track and .field games, there will be seventy-eight entrants for the 60-yard dash alone. The preliminaries of this event will be run in eleven heats. In conjunction with the meet, the Michigan track team, under the sup- ervision of Coaches Chester Stack- house and Ken Doherty, will offer a track 6inic this morning for the contestants. At 10:30 a.m. EWT (9:30 a.m. CWT), movies will be shown the trackmen in the auditorium of Uni- versity High School, and at 1:45 p.m. EWT (12:45 p.m. CWT), the Wolver- MOSELEY TYPEWRITER AND SUPPLY CO. 114 SOUTH FOURTH AVE. Complete Typewriter Service Phone 5888 Michigan Makes Valiant Ninth Inning Effort Big Te Track Records Ruled ByWolverines Michigan ndermen Hold Indoor Honors; Capture Five Titles Michigan track squads have not only dominated the Big Ten cham- pionships during the past years, but the individual members of these teams have added many records to Wolverine track history. Only one other school, Ohio State, holds more Big Ten records than Michigan'at this moment. The Buck- eyes have cornered 9, with the great Jesse Owens garnering 5. The Maize and Blue performers follow closely with 8 records now residing in the hands of Wolverines. In indoor competition, Michigan holds five of the 12 records. The mile relay team of 1939, consisting of Breidenbach, Balyeat,hHayes and Faulkner stepped off the distance in 3:18.9. That meet also found Bill Watson putting the shot a distance of 51 feet, 8 and 3/8 inches. In 1940, Ralph Schwarzkopf, great middle distance runner, added the two mile record to the'Wolverine tro- phies, when he breasted the tape in 9:10.7. The other indoor record came to' Michigan in 1942 when Bob, "Bullet" Ufer ran a :48.1, 440 yard dash. Ufer not only annexed this record, but went on to add many more to his total. Sam Stoller, holder of most Mich- igan 60 yard dash records, succeeded in equalling Owens famous time of :06.1, when, in 1936 he flew over the 60 yards to defeat all opponents. Thus the fifth indoor record caine Michigan's way. In outdoor competition the Wol- verines have not done as well. They have managed to cop three out of 14 records. Again it was the mile relay team that led the way. In 1939, the quartet composed of Jack Leutritz, Douglas Hayes, Phil Baly- eat, and Warren Breidenbach cover- ed the distance in 3.14.4. It was Watson again who brought the outdoor shot put record to Mich- igan, when in 1938 he heaved the shot 52 feet, 112 inches to win handily. Robert Osgood succeeded in bring- ing the only hurdle record held by Michigan to the trophy rooms when he ran the 120 yard high hurdles in :14.0. Thus with the exception of Ohio State, paced by the never-to-be-for- gotten, Jesse Owens, Michigan has far outdistanced all competitors in records as well as in championships. All officials of the River Range Track Meet! The preliminaries have been moved up to 1 p.m., due to the University ruling, in respect for the President's fun- eral. Ken Doherty me thinclads will present a demon- stration at Yost Field House. A competitive two-mile relay is planned, with Charles Birdsall, Walt Fairservis, Dick Barnard and ,oss Hume opposing Dick Gehring, Bob Thomason, Archie Parsons and Bob Hume. Asin previous years, members of the track team will also act as offi- cials for the meet to facilitate han- dling of the unusually large number of contestants. The preliminary heats are sched- uled to start at 3:30 p.m. EWT (2:30 p.m. CWT) and the finals will begin at 7:30 p.m. EWT (6:30 p.m. CWT). The final event should be finished by 11 p.m. EWT (10 p.m. CWT), ac- cording to Coach Doherty. Tom Rosema Wallops Two-Run Homer over Left Fielder's Head To Keep Teamii in Game PitcLhers, Bowmian and Maxwell, Hold N~uder oHflits to Nine, Aided by Wind Dy BILL LAMBERT After Michigan's baseball team tied the score in their half of the ninth, Western Michigan came back, chalking up a run in the tenth to edge out the Wolverines 5-4 in the Pon-Conference season opener at Ferry Field yesterday. High winds kept the hits at a minimum, with the result that Western Michigan collected only five safeties off Lefty Bo Bowman, who grew stronger as the game progressed. Thev Maize and Blue club garnered four singles off Al Maxwell, Bronco south- paw. Maxwell pitched no-hit ball un- til the eighth inning, when his rival on the mound, Bowman, singled, getting the first Michigan hit for the year. He scored his club's first run seconds later on Jack Weisen- burger's single. Although the ninth inning saw Michigan on the short end of a 4-2 BILL GREGOR count, Tom Rosema, new first base- man, knotted the score when he rap- ped out a Wolverine four bagger. Bill Nelson, zightfielder, who had just ET TU BRUTE? Seer Ha1iltonii Gains Bouqu el lit Predictionts NEW YORK, April 13.-(/P)-Pre- dictions have a habit of coming back to slap the face of the prognosticator until it is a nice, fire-truck red, so Brutus (CQ) Hamilton, famed track mentor now in the service, can take a bow for forecasts of track and field performances he made ten years ago. In 1935 Hamilton, forming his con- clusions after a study of scientific research data compiled by Finnish mathematicians, went on record as setting theoretical limits on perfor- mances in certain track and field events, and to date he hasn't had to blush. In fact, he's been almost un- believably accurate in most instan- ces. Among his predictions were: That the best any runner could hope to do would be to clip 27 hun- dredths off the 100-yard dash rec- ord of 9.4 seconds. That if anyone ran the mile in 4:01.66 he would be turning in an unbeatable performance. That the seven-foot highiump mark never will be reached. That a pole vault of 15 feet is possible. That a leap of 27 feet in the broadjump can be made. Let's see just how those forecasts stack up after athletes have been trying for ten years to prove he was talking through his hat. The world 100-yard dash record, jointly held by Frank Wykoff and Jesse Owens, still stands at 9.4 sec- onds. The recognized mile record, held by Arne Andersson, is 4:02.6, al- though Andersson has run the dis- tance in 4:01.6; which approxi- mates the best time Hamilton pre- dicted could be made. The seven-foot highjump mark never has been reached, although dumped a Texas Leaguer behind first, scored ahead of Rosema. The Broncos went to work in their half of the tenth to put across their winning run. Harold Throop, first up, flied out. Next, John Selvo, strong armed third baseman, pounded out a long triple, and scored two plays later on an error. Michigan couldn't find the ball in their half of the last frame, and the game ended when Weisenburger, Gregor, and Lund went down in or- dero Bowman, who last year turned in the best average in the Conference, showed flashes of his 1944 form, as he fanned eight batters in the ten innings. Maxwell struck out four, and issued only one base on balls to display plenty of control. Coach Fisher's club showed their speed on the base-paths, as the total of stolen bases reached five. Lund and Weisenburger grabbed two, and Walter Kell stole one. Providing that the nation-wide ob- servance of President Roosevelt's death doesn't cancel the game, the two clubs will meet here again to- day at 2:00 (EWT) in the second tilt of the series. Ray "Red" Louthen, who last year hurled for Western Michigan, will start against his former team-mates for coach Fisher, while the Broncos have not named their batteries. _Baseball SchedilesI April 14: Western Michigan at Ann Arbor. April 21: Illinois at Ann Arbor. April 27-28: Notre Dame at South Bend. May 4-5: Minnesota at Ann Arbor. May 11-12: Notre Dame at Ann Arbor. May 18-19: Indiana at Ann Arbor. May 25-26: Wisconsin at Madison, May 30: Western Michigan at Kal- amazoo. June 1-2: Purdue at Lafayette. June 8-9: Ohio State at Columbus. Lester Steers' world record is just one inch short of that mark. The 15-foot pole vault has materi- alized, but only one man has been able to do it. Cornelius Warmerdam holds the record at 15 feet 7% inches. The 27-foot broadjump has yet to be made. Jesse Owens has comec the closest with his leap of 26 feet 8 inches. Two performances which Hamil- ton rated as "perfect" at the time he made his predictions have not been improved upon, an indication he was right. They are the time of 46.2 sec- onds for 400 meters, made in the 1932 Olympics by Bill Carr of Penn- sylvania, and Jack Torrance's shot- put mark of 57 feet 1 inch, set in; Oslo, Norway, in 1934. So the predictions have held up to date. The two that seem in most danger of going wrong involve the mile and the highump, as the cur- rent records in those events are so close to the ultimate as forecast by Hamilton it doesn't seem too improb- able that some highjumper will come along with that extra grunt neces- sary to get another inch and hit the seven-foot mark, and some runner have that extra something to cut a second or two off the mile. Constantino Will Box DETROIT, April 13-(W)-Lulu Constantino, veteran New York featherweight, was signed today to meet Leroy Willis, once-beaten De- troiter, in the 10-round headliner of an April 20 fight card at Olympia, matchmaker Nick Londes announced. BUY WAR BONDS Retu rned Servicemllen From Detroit Suburbs To Display Experience EAST LANSING, April 14-(!P)- Returned servicemen at Michigan State College, who as football candi- dates are doing some of the things they dreamed of while in service, are largely responsible for the college's three week extension of spring foot- ball practice. Coach Charley Bachman says "the boys want it. They get out here and practice in the farm sun and it seems like heaven to them." For example there's Walter Vez- mar, a 225-pounder from Detroit who has seen service in Africa and Sicily and was discharged because of shrapnel wounds suffered at Anzio. While playing center at Northwest- ern High School he was named to All- City and All-State teams. Then there is Chet Kwiatowski I of Detroit who was hit in the leg at Bougainville. IHI played left hialf for Chadsey High before joining the Marines. Milt Haitman of Lansing and Louis Kitzman are two more who have finished military duty. Haitman was discharged from the Marines because of wounds received at Saipan. Kitz- man, discharged from the Army, is 27 and the oldest football candidate. Some other candidates are: Tino Barbas who played end for Cooley High School in Detroit and was a reserve last year at Georgia; Glen Hatfield, a Flint lineman last year who is trying for a backfield position, and Arvil Bowman of Centerline who is seeking a guard position. ' ^s '! ---- - ----- DON LUND TERRE HOUTE, Ind,, April 13- (R)-Art Houtteman, 17-year-old De- troit sandlot product and the only one of nine Detroit Tiger pitchers unscored on in training camp games, and Bill Pierce, 18-year-old lefthand- er, were manager Steve O'Neill's nom- inees to pitch Saturday against a Ter:re Haute federal prison nine in a practice game. and ride throug h WHAT CAN YOU SPARE THAT THEY CAN WEAR? LOVELY WOODED BRIDLE PATHS GROUP OF HANDSOME NEW HORSES * Look through your clothes closetsand Rttic. Get out Rl the serviceable used - .~ - - _ UNITED NATIONAL rPl nT~IJIVEni rilrinu ' I v Al 1 I:Kll:l i+r r r, tf-n# inr, ft-%r hnir^ n +ko 1 :.1