UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FOUR WEDNESDAY; APRIL 6; 1940 Phi Gams Win Swim Crown As Betas Take Second Spot Winning five of eight first places and piling up 53 points Phi Gamma Delta Tuesday night copped the intramural swimming championship for the second straight year. Although trailing far behind with only 31 Beta Theta Pi finished second. In administering their sweeping victory the Phi Gams placed in every event, Diminutive Dave Lockhart, one time Wichita East High school standout, took individual scoring honors with $13\frac{1}{2}$ points. Lockhart, Phi Gam, splashed his way to victory in the 100-yard free style event, followed with a first in the 100-yard back stroke, and anchored the first-place Phi Gam four-lap relay team. Dee Roy, Phi Psi, ran close behind Lockhart in the race for high-point honors. Roy personally accounted for the entire Phi Psi total meet points=12. Roy, an ex-Wyandotte High school star, won the special 50-yard medley event and also chugged to victory in the 50-yard breast stroke. He received two qualifying points. quarterly. They issued out Bill Stratton, Sigma Chi and Gordon Stucker, Phi Gam, in the individual medley event which was the most exciting race of the evening. The first three places were separated by less than a yard. Phi Delta Theta won third place with 13 points and Phi Psi captured fourth with 12. Sigma Chi had 11. John Cress, Independent, won the diving event to finish in sixth place with six tallies. The results: The results: 4-lap relay: 1-Phi Gam; 2-Beta; 8-Sigma Chi; 4-Phi Delt. Time 1:08.9. 50-yard breast stroke:1-Roy, Phi Psi; 2-Eulich, Phi Gam; 3-Payne, Phi Gam; 4-Irwin, Phi Delt. Time 30.9 seconds. 100-yard free style: 1-Lockhart, Phi Gam; 2-Stewart and Floyd, Beta, tied; 4-Davis, Phi Kappa Tau. Time 1.02. 100-yard back stroke: 1-Lockhart, Phi Gam; 2-Carey, Phi Gam; 3-Ranson, Phi Gam; 4-Wright, Kappa Sig. Time 1:15.9. 50-yard free style: 1-Stucker, Phi Gam; 2-Stewart, Beta; 3-Cross, Sig Alph; 4-Floyd, Beta. Time 26 seconds. 50-yard medley relay: 1-Roy, Phi Psi; 2-Stratton, Sigma Chi; 3-Stucker, Phi Gam; 4-Carey, Phi Game. Time 30.5 seconds. 150-yard medley: 1-Phi Gam; 2- Beta; 3-Phi Delt; 4-Sigma Chi. Time 1:35.5. Diving: 1-Cress, Ind.; 2-Irwin, Phi Delt; 3-Kendall, A.T.O.; 4- Payne, Phi Gam. Locksley Duo Wins Table Tennis Match Shirley Jane Hoffman and Betty van der Smissen, Locksley hall, smashed their way to victory in the women's table tennis finals by defeating Doris Then and Grace Gwinner, Gamma Phi Beta, 21-17, and 21-7 Monday. The Locksley duo qualified for the finals by defeating Nancy Smart and Jeanne Hellyer, Kappa Kappa Gamma, 18-21, 21-13, and 21-19 in the semifinals. Gamma Phi Beta had previously defeated Elsie Lemon and Patricia Young, Alpha Omicron Pi, 15-21, 22-20, and 21-19 in the semifinal tilt. Call K.U. 251 With Your News. 33 Entries In For Relays Thirty-three schools have sent in preliminary entries to K.U. relays director Bill Easton for the 24th annual event Friday and Saturday, April 22 and 23. No entry is official until the complete roster of the school's representatives has been filed with Easton but almost invariably the institutions that fill out the preliminary cards wind up in the relays. cars wind up Nine schools are entered in the university class, 16 in the college class, seven in the junior college class, and one in the high school class. The universities are Wichita, Wisconsin, Bradley, Texas, Wyoming Missouri, Iowa State, Drake, and Denver. Denver. The college division includes Drury, Sterling, Kansas State Teachers, Washburn university, Baker university, College of Emporia, Tarkio, William Jewell, Nebraska State, East Texas State, Abilene Christian, Howard Payne, Bethany, Missouri Valley, Central College (Mo.), and Fort Hays. In the junior college bracket are Chanute, Fort Scott, El Dorado, Hutchinson, Wentworth Military academy, Haskell Institute, and Dodge City. The lone high school entered so far is Arkansas City. A total of 26 universities, 31 colleges, and 108 high schools competed in the 1948 relays. NCAA May Want Income Statements Chicago, April 6—(U.P.) — College athletes may some day be required to "sign a statement as to the source of their incomes" while in school, the president of the National Collegiate Athletic association said today. Six Men Chosen For Fencing Team Six men have been chosen for the Fencing club competition team, Raymond J. Garcia, fencing coach, said today. The men were chosen after several weeks of competition among members of the club. There are five men on a regular collegiate fencing team. The sixth man is an alternate. The men chosen for their high scores are Clark E. Akers, engineering; Clarence B. Francisco, College senior; Richard E. Barnard, College junior; Preston E. Hunter, College sophomore; William L. K. Schwartz, College freshman; and Norman C. Ellis, graduate student. At the present time the University has only a men's competition team. Augusta, Ga., April 6—(U,P)—A small but elite field of 56 was poised today for the 13th Masters Golf tournament, hoping that clear weather will permit a few final practice licks before Thursday's first round. 56 Golfers Ready For Masters Play Driving rains and a whipping wind prompted tournament officials to close down the course Tuesday. But they said such weather should put the course on just the proper edge if it doesn't continue too long. The talk was tinged with disappointment because neither Jones, the old master of them all, nor Ben Hogan, the tiny Texan who can beat almost any of them, will be playing this year. Jones underwent a spinal operation recently and will sit out his first Masters. He never has been a threat, because the first Masters in 1934 was played after his official retirement. They spent the rainy day discussing the tricks and the angles of the unique Augusta National course. Bobby Jones and some of the game's best architects laid out the course for experts only in the early thirties. The hot favorites, the Master "specialists" such as defending champion Claude Harmon and the old-timers who always feel young again when it's April in Augusta, were all restless for action. Hogan, never a Masters champion but twice the runner-up, was badly hurt in a winter auto accident and has been making a slow climb to recovery. The leading dark-horse is Sam Snead, White Sulphur Springs, Va. 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