MONDAY, MAY 14. 1951 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE FIVE Netmen Shutout Cyclones 7-0 For 6th Straight The Jayhawkter tennis team made it six straight Big Seven conference wins May 12 with an easy 7 to 0 defeat of Iola State at Ames. Kansas plays at Missouri in the last dual match before the conference meet May 18-19. Charley Crawford, KU.'s No. 1 singles man, had the easiest match of the day against the Cyclones 'Terri- rill Smith. Crawford won 6-1 6-2 Bob Swartzell, No. 2, had only slightly more trouble with Bill Hu-kill, winning on a 6-2, 6-2 count. Crawford and Swartzell have lost only one conference start, both to Kansas State entries. The Aggies' Roger Coad bested Crawford and Chris Williams defeated Swartzell. Kansas' No. 3, 4, and 5 men, Jack Ransom, John Freiburger and Bill Thompson are still undefeated this year. Ransom defeated Bob McEchron 6-2, 6-4. Freiburger stopped Dean Harper 6-3, 6-4, and Thompson bested Cherill Christian 6-3, 6-2 K. U.'s No. 1 doubles team of Crawford and Swartztell took a 6-2, 7-5 decision from Smith and Hukilk and Ransom and Thompson teamed up for a hard-fought 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 victory over Harper and Christian. Big Ten May Kill Bowl Pact Chicago (U.P.)—Only the legislative procedure established for the Big Ten's faculty meeting May 24-26 at Northwestern may preserve the conference's Rose Bowl agreement with the Pacific Coast, it was learned today. It was definite that five schools would vote against any legislation need simply at extending the Bowl agreement and this would be enough to kill renewal of the contract. Thus approval of such a measure might in effect be the death of the pact. It appeared that the only type of legislation which might be passed would be extension of the agreement on its present terms, that no team may compete more than once in three years, and its was understood that the Pacific Coast under no circumstances would accept this. The faculty representatives will vote on three alternatives, (1) simply to extend the pact without a binding agreement as to frequency of play; (2) extension with a condition that no school may compete more than once in two years; and (3) extension on the same basis as the expired agreement. Minnesota, Wisconsin, Northwestern, Purdue and Illinois were certain votes against simple extension. However, should the first proposal call for renewal on the once in two year basis, at least four schools, Northwestern, Wisconsin, Illinois and Purdue, probably will vote against the measure. Minnesota might vote against it as the fifth school, thus killing the proposal. Minnesota definitely would vote against it, should the proposal be phrased that a "yes" vote would be interpreted as approval of post-season football games. Should the first proposal be to approve renewal on its old basis of competition only once in three years, Wisconsin and Purdue would vote against it, and possibly Northwestern and Minnesota's vote again would depend upon the phrasing of the plan. Minnesota, a long time opponent of post-season games, may be the key to the renewal. The Gopher inspection believes that so long as its position against such contests is known, why should it be concerned with the frequency of competition? Thus while it will vote against any measure calling for approval of post-season games, it might vote for, or obstain from voting, on regulations as to frequency of competition. Ferris Fain Stars As A's Defeat Yanks In Twin Bill New York (U.P.)—That fancy price tag the Athletics have put on fancy fielding Ferris Fain must be up a pretty penny today but after the way he treated the Yankees they may never want to see him again—even as a teammate. The Yankees have been dickering for Fain in a deal that might put them in another world series, but in the meantime he is acting like a guy who would like to keep them out of it. Fain, an ever-hustling smoothie with a chronic loser, has been one of the most sought after players in the majors but the Athletics have turned down deal after deal for their handsome lefty first baseman from San Antonio, Texas. Those deals they didn't make, plus one they completed for Gus Zernial, enabled them to take both ends of a double header from the Yankees Sunday 5 to 4 and 9 to 6. Fain had a terrific day at bat, getting six hits in eight times up, including a triple and two doubles to boost his average to .384. Zernial, the slugger who came from the White Sox got four hits, including a pair of second game homers. Fain batted in five runs for the day and Zernial four. In the opener, Dave Philley, the other outfielder who came from the White Sox, also drove in a run so the A's looked like sharp bargainers—at least for one day. Alex Kellner, biggest loser in the majors last season with 20 defeats, won his third game against a lone loss thus far for the A's in the inoper with help from Carl Scheib while Morris Martin, an ex-Dodger picked up in the player draft, won the nightcap in relief. The second game was cut to eight innings because of the Pennsylvania curfew. In other American League games, the Brownies defeated Detroit, 13 to 10, then lost 5 to 3, while Cleveland rubbed Chicago 11 to 2 and battled to a 4-4 tie in the 10-inning second game, called to permit the Indians to catch a train. The Red Sox topped Washington, 10 to 1. Brooklyn moved into first place in the National league by outslugging Boston 12 to 6, while the Giants pushed last year's champion Phillies into seventh place by topping them 11 to 2 and 4 and 2. The Reds twice defeated the Cardinals, 7 to 2 and 6 to 3 and the Pirates beat Chicago, 2 to 1, then lost, 6 to 0. Bob Feller, moving along toward one of his best seasons, won his fourth straight game for the Indians, an eight-hitter, in which Al Rosen Major League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE | | W. L. | Pct. | G.B. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Brooklyn | 14 | 10 | .583 | | Boston | 15 | 11 | .577 | | Pittsburgh | 12 | 12 | .500 | 2 | | Chicago | 12 | 12 | .500 | 2 | | St. Louis | 11 | 12 | .478 | 2† | | New York | 13 | 15 | .464 | 3 | | Philadelphia | 12 | 14 | .462 | 3 | | Cincinnati | 11 | 14 | .440 | 3 | W. L. Pct. G.B. New York 16 | ... 8,667 Washington 13 | 8,619 1½ Chicago 12 | 9,571 12 Detroit 12 | 9,571 12 Cleveland 12 | 9,571 12 Boston 11 | 10,524 3½ Philadelphia 7 | 17,292 9 St. Louis 6 | 19,240 10 AMERICAN LEAGUE American League Philadelphia 5-9, New York 4-6 St. Louis 13-3, Detroit 10-5 Cleveland 11-4 Chicago 2-4 (2n Brooklyn 12, Boston 6 New York 11-4, Philadelphia 2-2 Pittsburgh 2-0, Chicago 1-6 Cincinnati 7-6, St. Louis 2-3 RESULTS SUNDAY National League oard, Chicago 2-4; 2-4 game he called after 9th inning to catch trains) TODAY'S PROBABLE PITCHERS American League Boston (Wight 0-3) at Washington (Moreno 1-0) Cleveland (Lemon 3-2) at New Cleveland (Lopat 5-0) night. National League (No games scheduled). supplied the chief punch, a grand slam homer. Ned Garver, though hit brutally in the late innings, stuck it out to win his fourth victory for the Browns in the opener. St. Louis made 18 hits including homers by Sherman Lollar and Hank Arft. Lefty Mel Parnell received home run support from Vern Stephens and Ted Williams to make his chore of beating the Senators an easy one. Stephens and Williams each batted in three runs. After spotting the Braves a 6 to 0 lead in two innings, the Dodgers burst loose against righthander Max Surkont, who was seeking his fifth victory and won going away. Carl Furillo hit a three run homer off reliever Dick Cole in the sixth to salt away the triumph. The Giants made it 10 victories in 13 games in a long home stand with twin wins over the Phillies behind the fine pitching of Larry Jansen and Sal Maglie. The Reds also cashed in on good pitching by Howie Fox and Willie Ramsdell to make it seven defeats in the last eight for St. Louis. Mel Queen shaded Bob Schuitz as the Pirates took the opener in which each hurler gave up only six hits. Johnny Klippstein had the better of Murry Dickson in the second game. Intramural Round-Up MAY 12 RESULTS Fraternity "A" Lambda Chi 21, Acacia 6 Phi Tau 7, TKE 0 (forfeit) Phi Gam-Phi Psi (double forfeit) Sigma Nu-AKL (double forfeit) Delta Chi-Triangle (double forfeit) Fraternity **B** ATO 7, Phi Gam “C” 0 (forfeit) Kappa Sig 7, K A Psi 0 (forfeit) Phi Gam-K A Psi (double forfeit) Phi Psi-Sigma Nu (double forfeit) SUNDAY'S RESULT Fraternity "A" Phi Kappa 9, Sig Ep 8 (9 innings) DU 4, Phi Delt 1 Kappa Sig 7, A Phi A 0 (forfeit) Sigma Chi 10, Sig Alph 2 Beta 11, ATO 0 (5 innings) Delt-Pi K A (double forfeit) **Independent A** Air Force 7, YMCA 0 (forfeit) Army 7, Battenfeld 0 (forfeit) Speeders 13, Navy 3 (5 innings) ASCE 7, KHK 0 (forfeit) Don Henry 7, A Chi Sig 0 (forfeit) Physics 7, Sterling-Oliver 0 (forfeit) Dix Club 9, Jolliffe 7 TODAY'S SCHEDULE Independent "A" 4:15 p.m. games Field 1 Delt Sig vs. KHK 2 ASCE vs. AIEE 3 Phi Chi vs. Battenfeld 4 Oread vs. Sportsmen 5 Dependents vs. Natural 9 5:15 p.m. game G2 Sigma Nu vs. Triangle 5:20 p.m. comes 5.30 p.m games G1 Sig Ep vs. Kappa Sig G2 Phi Kappa vs. Phi Delt T IKE vs. Phi Kappa Sig Phi Tau vs. Acacia Phi Gam vs. Phi Psi Sigma Nu vs. AKL Fraternity "B" Sig Ep vs. Phi Delt TUESDAY'S SCHEDULE Fraternity "B" 4:15 p.m. games Beta vs. Kappa Sig Sig Alph vs. ATO Phi Giam vs. Sigma Chi Delts vs. Delta Chi Independent A Hadacol Kids vs. Speeders MU Meet Cancelled; Run Regionals Today 5:15 p.m. games G1 Dix Club vs. Delt Sig G2 Jollife vs. ASCE 5:30 p.m. games AIEE vs. KHK Independent "B" Phi Chi vs. Oread Battenfeld vs. Dependents Natural 9 vs. Sportsmen The Kansas-Missouri track dual has been definitely canceled, Coach Bill Easton said today. Originally scheduled for May 17, the meet was tentatively postponed until today, but the schools were unable to make necessary arrangements. Neither team will see any action this week until the conference meet Friday and Saturday at Columbia. The regional high school meet will be run today starting at 4 p.m. as previously announced. Coach Easton has requested that all officials report promptly. Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers EXPERT WATCH REPAIR Electronically Timed Guaranteed Satisfaction 1 Week or Less Service WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. "A Transfer, Please." PROMPT PICK-UP and DELIVERY REPUBLIQUE FRANÇAISE FREE MENDING and BUTTON SERVICE LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and Dry Cleaners