Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 11, 1952 Kansas Beats Huskers By 901-3 To 402-3 Kansas' one-two punch in the distances—Wes Santee and Herb Semper—established new Kansas-Nebraska outdoor dual meet records here yesterday as the Jayhawks sped to a 90½ to 40¾ victory over the Cornhuskers. $ \textcircled{8} $ Santee broke Glenn Cunningham's mile mark of 4:17.4 that has been standing since 1833. The long-legged sophomore clocked a blistering 4:12.3 four quarters in a chilling wind. Semper reset his two-mile record of 9:23.4 which he set last year. The FIDGETY FEET FLY—Wes Santee broke Glenn Cunningham's 19-year old record yesterday as Kansas defeated Nebraska. 90%4+40%. rapid redhead was timed in 9:20 over the soggy track. Kansas pulled a clean sweep of the two-mile event and the javelin throw. Norm Bitner ran behind Semper in the two-mile. Lloyd Koby brought in a third for the Jayhawkers. Jim Swim won the javelin throw with a hurl of 172 feet, 11.2 inches. Bill Brown and Jim Potts placed second and third in the event. Jayhawker Captain Bob DeVinney split with Nebraska's Don Bedner in their hurdles dual. Bedner won the high timbre race in 15:2.—far short of Jack Greenwood's 14:7 record for the event. Bedner came back on November 24 in 24:1 tenents of a second short of the mark set by Henry Wiley in 1937 It was the third consecutive outdoor dual track victory for the Jayawakers over Nebraska. Not since the old Missouri Valley days has the Kansas club as many as three-in-a-row from the "Huskers." A second plate broad jump leap of 20 feet, 11 inches in 1949 by Al Bouchard gave the Jayhawkers their first win of the series, 66-65. Last year, at Lincoln, Kansas won, 72-59. Bob Smith leaped 22 feet, $4\frac{3}{4}$ inches to avert a Nebraska sweep in the broad jump as expected. Glenn Beerline won the event with a leap of 23 feet, 9 inches—only one tenth of an inch off the dual meet record. Ed Weir's Nebraskans avoided an expected Kansas sweep in the 880 race when Gene Yelkin pulled in with a third. Nebraska picked up all its firsts but the hurdles in the field events. The Cornhuskers won the shot put, broad jump and discus events along with Bedker's win in the highs. The Summary: Mile run: 1, Wes Santee, Kansas; 2, Herb Semper, Kansas; 3, Lee Moore, Nebraska; Time: 4:12.3 (new meet record); Time: 4:17.4 set in 1933 by Glen Cumpingham 440-yd dash: I, John Reiderer, Kans- bergen, Nebraska; Tine, Burle Bald- erson, Nebraska; Time, 49.6 100-yard dash: 1. Frank Cindrich, Kan- don Hess, Kansas; Time: 10.48, Hess, Kansas; Time: 10.48, 120-yard hairburles; 1, Don Bedker; Nebraska; 2, Bob Devinein; Kansas; 3 AND THE RECORDS FELL—Herb Semper clocked a 9:20 two-mile race to break his own KU-NU dual meet record of 9:23.4. Dan Tolman. Nebraska. Time: 15.2. 880-ydr run: 1, Art Dalzell, Kansas; S2as Nebraska; Time: 1:56.7, Gene Yelkin, Nebraska. Time: 1:56.7 220-yard dash: 1. Frank Cindrich, Kansas; 2. Greg Olsen, Kansas; 3. Wally Beak, Kansas; Time: 22:6. 2-mile run: 1, Herb Semper, Kansas; 2 Norm Bitner, Kansas; 3, Lloyd Koby Jones, Kansas; 29-20 (new meet record; old record of 18-24 set by Semper of Kansas in 1850). 220-vard low hurdles: 1. Bob Deviney, 3. Don Bedker, Nebraska; Time: 24:14. High jump: 1, Lyman Fraser, Kansas, braske, 5 feet 11½ inches; 3, way-tie- bob Sand, Nebraska; Darrell Moreland, and Bob Smith, Kansas, 5 feet 9¼ inches. Pole vault: 1, Jim Floyd, Kansas, 12 feet; 2, Jim Sommers, Nebraska, 11 feet 6 inches; 3, Jim Hofstratter, Nebraska, 11 feet. Javelin, 1; Jim Swim, Kansas, 172 feet 11½ inches; 2; Bill Brown, Kansas, 170 feet 7¼ inches; 3; Jim Potts, Kansas, 162 feet 1¾ inches. Broad jump! 1, Glenn Beertline, Nebraska, 23 feet 9 inches; 2, Irving Thode, Nebraska, 22 feet 94% inches; 3, Bobh Kansas. Mississippi, 22 feet 44% inches. Shot put: 1, Paul Grim, Nebraska, 48 feet 5 inches; 2, Larry Marsh, Kansas, 48 feet 10 inches; 3, Tom Stoup, Nebraska, 44 feet 7 inches. Discus: 1, Cliff Dale, Nebraska, 188 feet $^{6 \%}$ inches; 2, Merlin Gish, Kansas, 131 feet $^{4 \%}$ inches; 2, Larry Marsh, Kansas 130 feet $^{10 \%}$ inches. Mile relay: Won by Kansas (Bill Hawk- son), Sanite and John Reiderder). Time: $25.5. Jayhawkers Play Emporia In First Of Four Road Games By BOB NELSON Kansan Sports Writer The Jayhawker baseball team travels to Emporia tomorrow to meet Emporia State Teachers college in the first of four road games during the spring vacation. Kansas plays Rockhurst college a return game in Kansas City, Mo., April 16, and opens its 1952 Big Seven play at Nebraska with single games on April 18-19. Hub Ulrich's club will be seeking wins No. 3 and 4 in the Emporia State Teachers and Rockhurst games to complete its four-game non-conference slate with an undefeated record. Kansas owns a 6 to 5 win over Wichita university and a 13 to 4 trouncing over Rockhurst college in its only starts to date. Following the April 18-19 games with Nebraska at Lincoln, Kansas returns home to play six straight Big Seyen engagements which will determine the Jayhawkers' early season claim to the conference title. These home contests will be with Missouri on April 21-22, Kansas State on April 25-26 and Iowa State on April 28-29. Last year, Ulrich's men lost three straight to Missouri, won three of four from Kansas State and split even in a pair with Iowa State. Coach Ulrich has his three top hurlers ready for action and is expected to split the hurling chores between ace pitchers, Stonestreet and big Carl Sandefur, with southpaw John Brose ready to take over if needed. The Jayhawkers defeated Emporia State, 9 to 1, here last year in KU's only non-conference game. Jack Stonestreet shutout the Hornets with a two-hit performance in the five innings he worked to gain credit for the victory. To date, Kansas has shown promise both at the plate and in the field. The Jayhawkers have connected for 21 hits in 76 official appearances at the plate for a .276 hitting average. Considering the limited batting practice outside due to adverse weather this spring, the .276 mark indicates the club may develop into a powerful team with the stick. Last year Kansas' poor defensive play cost the team several victories and continually kept pitchers Sandefur and Stonestreet in trouble as they shouldered the major hurling chores. In the field, KU has committed five errors in handling 79 chances for a .937 fielding average. For limited infield drills to date, this figure is also impressive. Kansas' leading hitter in two The Jayhawkers' regular outfielders are all hitting 333 after two contests. Walt Hicks, right fielder, and Bud Laughlin, center fielder, have each collected three for nine. Left fielder E Billooch has two hits—including a two-run homer—in six times at bat. Brose, lanky sophomore left-hander, looked impressive in hurling no-hit no-run ball during his five inning chore against Rockhurst. In the KU opener against Wichita, Brose had trouble allowing three hits and two earned runs in the $1\frac{1}{2}$ innings he pitched. games is Bill Pulliam, freshman third baseman, who has four singles in 10 trips to the plate for a 400 mark. Sandefur, the Big Seven's top hurler in 1950 as a sophomore with a 7-1 record, has the been the club's biggest disappointment to date. In two relief assignments, the big senior righthander has given up 10 hits and six earned runs in $4% innings. His conference record was 3-4 last year. In the hurling department, Stone-street is off to an excellent start toward having a great season. In two appearances, the junior righthander has walked one, struckout six in allowing no runs and only two hits in seven innings. "CONGRATULATIONS COACH"-Hank Iba of the Oklahoma Aggies congratulates Phog Allen after Allen's Jayhawkers won the Kansas coach his 700th victory in a 42-year coaching career. There'll be no handshaking tomorrow night until the East-West Shrine game is finished. Iba will be seeking his 14th decision over the Kansas coach. Allen's teams have won 11 of the 24 games played between squads led by the two coaches. Allen coaches the West team in the Shrine game. Iba coaches the East Allen-Iba Rivalry Renewed Tomorrow One of the longest and most colorful rivalries in the history of basketball moves another notch tomorrow night when a Phog Allen-coached West team tangles with a Hank Iba-coached East squad in the East-West basketball game in Kansas City's Municipal auditorium. The 6-foot, 9-inch Indianan had a 21.8 point average in 1950, a 23.8 average in 1951 and a 28.5 average over the past season. Lvvellette scored 1.979 points during three years at Kansas and completed his collegiate career with a 24.7 points-per-game total. He hit 811 field goals and 357 free throws. Hougland and Kenney flipped in 452 and 661 points, respectively, for the Jayhawks during three years of play. Kenney completed this collegiate year as the nation's top man from the free throw line. During his three seasons with the Cornhuskers, Buchan anwound up with a total of 821 points. Stauffer collected a total of 807 points for his years with Sparky Stalcup's Tigers. The game, sponsored by the Aarat Shrine Temple for the benefit of crippled children, will bring the Kansas coach face-to-face with the Oklahoma A&M head man for the 25th time. Iba, thus far in the feudal series, has won 13 games. Allen has won 11. Big Seven conference stars are likely to be used to excess by Allen, and he's amply supplied with five. The 66-year old Jayhawker coach is expected to build his West club around his all-American center, Clyde Lovellette, the greatest scorer in the history of major collegiate basketball. Surrounding Lovelette from the Big Seven are teammates Bill Hougland and Bob Kenney, Bill Stauffer from Missouri and Jim Buchanan of Nebraska. He has been rated as possibly the greatest shot book artist in the history of basketball. Allen calls him "the greatest man in the history of the sport." Last season Lovellette hit 40 and more points in four games. He scored 42 against Southern Methodist early in the year, 41 against Colorado in the last game of the regular season, 44 against St. Louis in the NCAA Western Regionals in Kansas City and 45 against LaSalle in the Olympic semi-finals in New York. In his last Kansas City appearance as a collegian (though he may return with the Jayhawks later to play Peoria's AAU and Olympic champs before going to Helsinki, Finland, for the Olympic games in July), Lovellette will have the assistance of five other Westerners. Included on the West team, besides the Big Seven representatives, are Dick Haag of Wyoming, Jim Ramstead of Stanford, Jerry Romney of Brigham Young, George McLeod of Texas Christian and Glen Smith of Utah. Iba, meanwhile, is molding his East squad around two of his top Sowpoke players of the 1952 season—6-foot, 8-inch Pete Darcey and Don Johnson. Johnson, Iba's No. 3 rebounder, led Aggie scorers last season. Other than the two Pokes, Iba is counting heavily on the services of Dayton's Don Meineke, the nation's third top scorer behind Lovellette and Dick Groat of Duke. Sikes Schedules Final Scrimmage For 4 p.m. Today On Memorial Field The third and final intrasquid game-condition scrimmage of the year will be held at 4 p.m. today in Memorial stadium. The two previous games were one-sided affairs. The Whites beat the Reds 54-13 in the first game and ties 44-12 in the second encounter. Gil Reich was a sparkplug in both wins. In the first game, he combined his throwing and running talents, but in the second clash, it was his passing exclusively that highlighted the game. One of the bright spots in the second game was Reich's new passing partner, Jerry Bogue. Making the shift from his normal quarterback position, Bogue proved a shining light at the end post. He was Reich's chief target as the Reds trounced the Blues. Bogue outmaneuvered Blue defenders to make a phenomenal catch of a Reich pass for the final Red touchdown. After today's scrimmage, the Jayhawkers have only two more days of spring practice, both after Easter vacation.