SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE mwnwnmmW I Ashenfelter Scores Olympic Steeplechase TWO CRUCIAL CONTESTS: Gridders Open Against Strong. Teams Record Breaking Race Completely Unexpected By IVAN KAYE (Another in a series) Michigan's first two football games will be crucial. The Wolverines must open against the powerful Spartans of Michigan State, and the follow- ing week must travel to Palo Alto, California to oppose the Stanford Indians. MICHIGAN STATE is current- ly riding the crest of a sixteen SERVING YOU THE KEY TO TOP VALUES a - ~1 Yt -- Unlock the door to opportunity! Do your buying and selling through want ads for . values, savings, pro- fits! Start the WANT- AD habit now! PLACE YOUR ADS TODAY! Just call 23-24-1 014 Uairiga I game winning streak and was con- sidered by many to be the best team in the land in 1951. Last year the Spartans buried a game but under-manned Michigan out- fit under a four touchdown ava- lanche, 25-0. The Spartans got a big break last year by playing an opening game at Lansing with 'Oregon state, one week before they came down to Ann Arbor. The value of having a game under their belts can not be over- stressed in the case of the Spar- tans of last year. The squad from East Lansing made its mistakes against the coast team, and had all the "kinks" ironed out when they played Michigan. This year however, the Spartans and Wolverines will both be play- ing their opening games against each other. This will present a great advantage to Michigan which the Wolverines did not en- joy last year. * s " MICHIGAN also has a score to settle with Stanford. The Indians became the first team from the West Coast to defeat a Michi- gan squadswhen they turned in a 23-13 victory here at Ann Arbor. Just to prove that their win was no upset, the Indians went on to capture the Pacific Coast Conference Championship. Up at East Lansing Coach Big- gie Munn has twenty-six return- ing lettermen from which to fa- shion his 1952 edition of the Green and White. The main prob- lem will be the replacing of the graduated Al Dorow. The Spar- tans also need replacements all along the offensive line. Gradua- tion of line-backer Bill Hughes will leave a large hole in the de- fensive set-up unless Munn can come up with adequate talent at that vital position. The Spartans will enter Big Ten football compe- tition beginning with the 1953 season. * * * COACH CHUCK TAYLOR of Stanford faces the laborious task of filling the gaps left by the graduation of twenty-five letter- men. Among the departed Stan- ford stars are All-American end Bill McColl, Gary Kerkorian, Har- ry Hugasian, Jack Rye, Eric Southwood and Bob Meyers. Taylor will probably build the Stanford running attack around big Bob Mathias, the Olympic THIS WEEK DEP'T OF SPEECH PRESENTS MAXWELL ANDERSON'S tJ~teset N.Y. Drama Critics Award WED.SAT. 8 P.M. $1.20 90c 60cf Box Office Open Daily 10-5 MENDELSSOHN THEATRE decathalon star who also plays football. Stanford will have played two games before Michigan meets them in their home stadium and accordingly the Indians will have that much more experience play- ing as a team. The stadium at Palo Alto seats 90,000 and is sec- ond in size only to the Michigan stadium. A sellout is almost as- sured judging from a heavy early sale of tickets. * * * WHAT the Wolverines do against these two tough early sea- son foes will be a strong indica- tion of what the team will do in the rugged Western Conference race. Bob Mathias Leads Field In Decathlon HELSINKI - (P) - Defending Champion Bob Mathias and two other versatile Americans led the field yesterday at the half-way mark in the two day Decathlon contest which decides the best all- around athlete of the Olympic games. * * * MILTON CAMPBELL, 18-year- old high school boy from Plain- field, N.J., was second with 4,111 points and Floyd Simmons of Los Angeles was third with 3,924. Behind the three Americans came Ignace Heinricg, France, fourth with 3,855 points, Goran Widenfelt, Swedon, fifth with 3,740, and Kell Tannander, Sweden, sixth with 2,989. It looked at this stage as though no one could catch Mathias in Saturday's final five events. *$ * * THE HUSKY Stanford student raced, jumped and heaved through a gruelling nine-hour test of speed, strength and endurance at a pace which no other athlete has ever equalled. And some of his best events are yet to come. Mathias began his busy day at 10 a.m. with the best clocking in the 100 meters sprint 10.9 seconds. Then he broadjumped 6.98 meters (22 feet 10.80 inches) before lunch, finishing sixth in this event. In the afternoon, he put the shot 15.30 meters (50 feet 2.37 inches) to top the entire Decath- lon field. He high jumped 1.90 meters (6 feet 2.81 inches), which was third best among the competi- tors and the highest he ever leaped. Then, at 8:30 p.m., tired from more than eight hours of com- petition and chilled by a cold wind, Mathias ran 400 meters in the classy time of 50.2 sec- onds, which no one of his com- petitors could even approach. Mathias still was 27 points be- hind his first day's pace of the Olympic tryouts when he estab- lished his world record of 7,825 points for all 10 events. But that difference could be made up Sat- urday, if he gets favorable weather. ANOTHER RECORD BROKEN - But this time it's his own. Adhemar Ferreira De Silva of Brazil leaped 53 feet 2.59 inches in the Olympic hop, step and jump to break his own world mark and a 16 year old Olympic mark. Kentucky's Sport Future In Hands ofConference By KYLE VANCE Im BIRMINGHAM, Ala.-(P-Ken- tucky's athletic future was placed in the hands of the Southeastern Conference Executive Committee last night. The six-member group was call- ed together to discuss a report of Commissioner Bernie Moore on his investigation of the school's sports program, which was brand- ed "highly systematized and com- mercialized" by a New York judge. THERE WERE indications the University will be made to pay a penalty for letting its program get out of hand and produce the re- cent scandal involving six of its basketball players. This stemmed from the consid- eration that school officials were called to appear before the execu- tive committee and answer charges contained in Moore's report: - Playing Saturday -- "AT SWORDS POINT" withM " CORNEL WILDE * MAUREEN O'HARA and- "RETURN OF THE TEXAN" with " DALE ROBERTSON " JOANNE DRU * WALTER BRENNAN Playing Sunday First Run Showing "THE FIGHTER" and "THE CAPTIVE CITY" He said a statement will be is- sued after today's meeting. The depth of his finds thus re- mained a secret and there was no indication of the nature of the penalty, if any, that Kentucky might face. CONFERENCE rules list just one specific action that may be taken against a member school. It involves violation of eligibility rules and sets a fine of $1,000 for each violation. Other punishments are broad-. ly prescribed and would give the Executive Committee, if it found a school guilty of an ex- treme infraction, freedom to ex- pell a school from the confer- ence. Kentucky's athletic troubles started when three star members of its great basketball teams of the late 40's admitted taking gam- blers' money to go over or under point spreads on betting sheets. MIajor League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE kNot including last night's games) HELSINKI-UP)--Horace Ashen- felter won the 3,000-meter steeple- chase yesterday for the most un- expected and spectacular victory the United States has scored in the thrill-packed, record-busting Olympic Games. The 29-xear-old special agent of the Federal Bureau of Investiga- tion from Penn State College did it by running the heart 'out of Vlacimir Kazantsev, of Russia, on the last lap. * * * ASHENFELTER was followed on the yictory platform and on the Olympic record-breaking list by Jamaica's George Rhoden, a stu- dent at Morgan State College in Baltimore. Ashenfelter's time of 8:45.4 was the fastest the steeplechase has ever been run. Rhoden won the 400-meter run from his teammate, Herb McKenley, in 45.9 seconds. A U. S. Army master sergeant, Huelet Benner, won the pistol- shooting gold medal with a score of 553 out of a possible 600, Rus- sia's Ivan Udodov won the ban- tamweight weightlifting cham- pionship, and Hungary won the team chimpionship in the modern pentathlon in which Lars Hall, of Sweden, was the individual winner. * * * THE 400 METERS was a scorch- er. The field undoubtedly was the best ever. It was headed by Rhoden holder of the world 400-meter record at :45.8; McKenley, hold- er of the world 440-yard record at :46.0, and Arthur Wint, third Jamaican, the defending Olym- pic champion. Then there was gallant Mal Whitfield, of Columbus, o., third in the 400 at London and winner of the 800 both there and here. He had his heart set on an Olympic double. The final times were Rhoden :45.9, McKenley :45.9, Ollie Mat- son :46.8, Karl Haase :47.0, and Whitfield :47.1. SLIM, PRETTY Marjorie Jack- son, of Australia, ran the women's 200 meters semi-finals in :23.4, Giants Defeat Cininnati, 3=1 NEW YORK-(k')-Jim Hearn pitched and batted the New York Giants to a 3-1 victory over the Cincinnati Reds in the opener of a four-game series ,yesterday. Hearn, in booting his season's record to 11-3 held the Reds to four singles. The big Atlantan also led the New York attack, slamming a home run with catcher Sal Yvars on base after two were out in the fifth inning. It was the Giants' fourth straight victory. Hearn's homer, his second of the year, broke a scoreless tie. The Giants went on to tally an- other run before the side was re- tired when Davey Williams sing- led and came in on Alvin Dark's double. The Reds got their lone run in the eighth on singles by Eddie Pel- lagrini and Roy McMillan and pinch-hitter Hank Edwards' long fly to center, Ken Raffensberger took the loss. LAST TIMES TODAY Anne Dale BAXTERROBERTSON s< 0 . "OU1~AST 1 OFLT 2* .y.P STARTING SUNDAY A Gay Musical SHE'S, WORKING HER WAY / THROUGH TCHNIC COLLEGE A,,,,RH ,,,,OS , PCTU bettering the world mark of :23.6 set by Stella Walsh, of Poland and the U.S.A., in 1935. Russia continued to pick up points in side arenas to run its total for the entire Games to 348 against 250 for the United States. Hungary is a distant third with 110, Sweden fourth with 85x/ and Germany and Switzerland tied for fifth with 58. Six events remain and the United States could win two or three of these. Never have track and field rec- ords been treated with such dis- dain. In all, 21 Olympic records have been exceeded and five world records lowered by the men and girls. Upset New Hoop Coach Will Be Named The University of Michigan will have a new basketball coach today. Announcement of the new appointee is expected to come this morning from H. O. (Fritz) Crisler, the University's direc- tor of athletics. Michigan has been without a basketball coach since early last month when Ernie McCoy resigned to accept a position as athletic director for Penn State. McCoy was also assistant athletic director and chief foot- ball scout for the Wolverines. The question would Kentucky be called from Birmingham to athletic house is arose: "Why administrators Lexington to be told their in order?" Dr. H. L. Donovan, university president, and Dean A. D. Kirwan, faculty advisor on athletics, were en route to Birmingham by train tonight to appear before the com- mittee tomorrow. - -* * MOORE declined to discuss his investigation other than to reveal it covered all sports, and not just basketball. He said he spent three days in Lexington late in May and devoted another three weeks to the probe upon returning to his Birmingham office. CLASSIFIEDSJ FOR RENT MICHIGAN DAILY AVAILABLE - A new 3-room de- Phone 23-24.1 luxe apartment which accommodates HOS one .M.24 1 four. Completely furnished, electric stove and refrigerator. Private en- CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING trance. $95 per month. Will rent for RATES summer. Need a car. Call 2-9020. ATTRACTIVE APT. near Campus to LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS sublet July 15 to Sept. 15. Real bar- 2 .60 1.34 1.96 gain for right tenant. 3-1479 evenings, 3 .70 1.78 2.84 4 .90 2.24 3.92 SINGLE APARTMENT to sublet August Figure 5 average words to a line. 2-Sept. Excellent location. Attractive. Classified deadline daily except Real Bargain. Call 2-6485. Saturday is 3 P.M., Saturdays. ROOMS FOR RENT 11:30 A.M., for Sunday issue. OVERNIGHT GUESTS?-Make reserva- LOST AND FOUND tions at The Campus Tourist Homes now. 518 E. William. Phone 3-8454. LOST-Gray Kitten in vicinity of East 4 STUDENTS-large, spacious 2 bedroom William and Thompson. Call No. on furnished ap't. twin beds, (practice his ta& or bring to 512 E. William, room available for music students.) Back apt. $125 a month. Also single room. 320 . FINDER OF CAMERA, Retina I, on Washington after 4 P.M. the date July 22 at the Michigan AVAILABLE-2 single bedrooms for two Union please notify Mrs. Pasanen, men, with kitchen. Phone 22038. Phone 2-2891. BUSINESS SERVICES FOR SALE ALTERATIONS - Woman's garments. ANTIQUE CHAIRS - 1 Hitchcock, 1 Prompt service. Catherine St. near Duncan Fyfe, 1 arm Windsor, I comb State. Call A. Graves, Ph. 2-278. back Windsor. I tilt top table. Mis- cellaneous objects: candle sticks, TYPING - Reasonable rates. Accurate, lamps, dishes, fixtures. 1918 Day Ph Efficient. Phone 7590, 830 S. Main. 2-1710. WASHING, finished work, and hand ART SALE private collection, oil, water ironing. Cotton dresses a specialty. colors, portfolios, books. 1918 Day, Ruff dry and wet washing. Also tron- Phone 2-1710. Ing separately. Free pick-up and de- Livery. Phone 2-902. HOUSE TRAILER-1 wall with built in book case. 30 ft. "cozy-coach", has RADI0 SERVICE natural wood finish throughout, elec- tric refrigerator, electric hot water Auto - Home - Portable heater. Very liberal terms. Can be Past & Reasonable ervice seen at 410 E. Jeff.Pat&RsoblSevc ANN ARBOR RADIO & T V STROMBERG-CARLSON Radio-Phono, "Student Service" apt. size console, mohogany cabinet. 1215 So. Univ., Ph. 7942 Ph. 3-8282 after 12 noon. Ii blocks east of East Engin. PRESCRIPTION DESK and Drug Coun- HELP WANTED ter with adjustable shelves and draw- - ers; instrument case with glass sides INTERVIEWERS for part time opinion and door and heavy removable glass surveys. College background preferred, shelves. Typewriter desk. Sectional not essential. Experience not neces- bookcase. Inquire, H. H. Loveland, sary. Answer fully. Box 18. M.D. 220 East Chicago Blvd., Tecum- TRANSPORTATlON seh, Mich. TA SOT TO YELLOW CONVERTIBLE - 1940 Chev. 3 WISH TO SHARE expenses, driving, to with 1948 motor, radio, heater $325. New England, preferably Maine, about Phone 6953. August 16t. Write Box 19. TO CALIFORNIA-Frisco, Fresno area. ~ Lv. Aug. 16, return Sept, 17. Refer- Read Daily Classifieds ences. Ph. 5539. 7Tohi*ht rnc uhdaV TONIGHT at 7:15 and 9:30 P.M. SUNDAY at 8:00 P.M. only Cihe rnaSL uIdd presents MONTY GRACIE WOOLLEY and FIELDS in HOLY MATRIMONY, a 20th Century Fox Picture Based on Arnold Bennetts Buried Alive." "Practically Perfect . .. Exceptional .. Downright Good" -The New Yorker "A literate comedy . . . Superlative Fun . . a charming picture full of sly humor." --N.Y. Times __________________Also Arturo Tosconini The New York Jan Peerce Philharmonic Orchestra in-VERDI'S Hymn of the Nation" "Tremendous" - Saturday Review EXTRA! U.P.A. COLOR CARTOON W Brooklyn ...61 New York ...56 St. Louis . ...51 Chicago ... .46 Philadelphia 46 Boston......39 Cincinnati ..38 Pittsburgh . .25 L 24 31 41 44 45 51 51 70 Pct. .718 .644 .554 .511 .505 .433 .404 .263 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN' GB 1 6 131 17%/ 18 24%/ 27%/ 41 GB 4 4 7 / 10, 20 24 AMERICAN' W New York ..56 Boston.....51 Cleveland ..52 Washington ,.50 Chicago ....50 Philadelphia 42r St. Louis ...37 Detroit .. ... 31I LEAGUE L Pet. 37 .602 40 .560 42 .533 42 .543 46 .521 44 .488 58 .389 60 .341 (Continued from Page 2) Events Today Motion Picture, auspices of the Stu- dent Legislature Cinema Guild. "Holy Matrimony," with Monty Wooley and Gradie Fields, and Verdi's "Hymn of the Nations," with Arturo Toscanini. 7:15 and 9:30 p.m., Architecture Audi- torium. Play, presented by the Department of Speech, Winterset, by Maxwell An- derson. 8:00 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. C 11 Beacon Picnic today. Meet at League main entrance 1:30 for swim at Is- land Lake Park. Return 7:30. Everyone welcome. The Intercooperative Council will hold a picnic at Bishop Lake on Sat- urday, July 26. Leave from Owen House at 11:00 a.m. The public is invited. All those interested should call 7211 by Friday noon and state whether trans- portation is needed, or whether they will be able to provide it. North Michigan College of Education, Marquette: Alumni and friends, league cafeteria-Saturday, 5:00 p.m. Watch League Bulletin for room assignments for evenings get-together. Coming Events Roger Williams (Baptist) Guild: Pic- nic and discussion, 4-8 p.m. Sunday, July 27. The Graduate Outing Club will meet on Sunday, at 2 p.m. at the Northwest corner of Rackham. Swimming, hik- ing and picnicing. Those who have bring cars. TRAVELER'S CHECKS ~ SAFE V CONVENIENT and can be v CASHED ANYWHERE QUICKLY COOL COOL STUDENT SUPPLIES Typewriters Repaired s Sold Bought Webster-Chicago Top* and Wire Recorders Fountain Pens Repaired by a Factory Trained Man MORRI LL'S 314 S. State Ph. 7177 11 A LL STARTS TODAY Late Show Tonight rModaftwomomms P SPECIAL DEMONSTRATION OF HIGH FIDELITY SOUND I Ii f J. A --1 1rr% %J -% -I 1v1 % ^ - I I 11 11 I I I I I I