FRIDAY, MAY 14. 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Beta Defeats Sig Ep In Feature I-M Game Beta Theta Pi capitalized on the wildness of Sig Ep hurler Bob McNeive to topple the 1947 softball finalists 9 to 4 Thursday in the feature game of the week, and establish themselves as leading contenders for the softball crown held by Phi Delt. fast-firing Sig Ep fanned 13 men while Bill Conboy, Beta ace, fanned nine, yielded seven hits, and walked four. McNeive limited the Beta's to four safeties but issued 12 walks. The fast-firing Sig Ep fanned 13 men$\textcircled{4}$ One of the largest crowds of the season saw the Beta's come from behind in the later innings. Hanging on to a 4 to 3 lead going into the seventh the Beta's sewed up the game by scoring five additional tallies. Sig Ep got off to a first-inning advantage when leadoff hitter Karl Kappelman scored a wild pitch but the Beta's were quick to retaliate. They knotted the count in the third. Sig Ep came back in the bottom of the frame to push in two more runs and command a 3 to 1 lead. Beta took the lead in the fifth with a three-run rally. Sig Ep scored its final tally in the last of the seventh. Karl Kappelman, Sig Ep, took hitting honors with three hits in four trips. Bill Conoby slammed out three of the Beta safeties, one seventh-inning triple. Tom Wregglesworth, Sig Ep, also poled out a triple and commutes Lee Garrish and Vernon immer bagged a double oprise. 001 030 5—9 4 2 102 000 1—4 7 2 Beta Sig Ep Alpha Chi Sigma, summer champion, established a new individual team scoring record in mauling Kappa Eta Kappa 44 to 0 in a five-inning game. The champions had a field day at bat, pounding out 43 hits. They scored in every inning but the fourth. A.C.S. (13) 3 (11) 1(16)-44 43 3 K.E.K. 0 0 0 0 -6 0 9 Dale Clark tossed six-hit ball for the winners and smashed out five hits in seven trips at the plate. Oliver Edwards, however, was the leading slugger, collecting six safeties in seven appearances. Al Lindenstruth had six hits to show for eight trips. Behind Warren Reigle's five-hit pitching Phi Gami downed Delta Tau 8 to 3. Nine Delt errors contributed to the Phi Gami win. The winners scored four runs in the opening frame. Earl Strong and Warren Reigle hit doubles and Jess Van Ert, Wally Miller, and Jim Lord followed with singles. Delta Tau broke into the scoring column in the second, Dick Nesch singling Clay Coburn home. The Delt's garnered two more runs in the fourth on doubles by Dick Nesch, Dick Dodson, and Hout Baker. Van Ert and Lord sparked the victors, each hitting safely three times in four appearances. Nesch's two doubles was high for the Delt's. Phi Gam Delt 403 000 1-8 14 010 200 0-3 5 Phi Delt nosed out Sig Alph 4 to 3 in fast-moving contest although Orval Kaufman, Sig Alph hurler, limited the Phi's to four hits. The win enabled the Phi Delt's to move into a first-place deadlock with A.T.O. in division one. Both have won three games while losing one. won three games while losing one. Loren Powell, Phil shortstop, starred as the center for severalerical nice stops. Don McIlhnail scored two of the winner's runs. Jay Humphries sparked the Sig Alph's, clouting a home run and a double. Clay Hedrick, Phil Delt pitcher, scattered eight hits to gain credit for the win. He walked one and struck out one. P.D. S.A.E. 120 010 0—4 4 010 010 1—3 8 Scoring in every frame but the second Smith hall nudged Aces Hi 17 to 12. The lead see-sawed until the sixth when Smith pushed in five runs. George Worrell started it off in the big sixth with a walk, John Hoppech strolled, and Claude Engleke doubled. Ray McMillen, Aces Hi flinger, then issued four straight walks. Maurice Stryker hit three for three to lead the slugging. Worrell collected three for five. Francis Galbraith homered for the losers in the fifth. Aces 201 525 2—17 18 221 223 0—12 15 Phi Kappa swarmed over Alpha KappaLambda 16 to 4 in an abbreviated five-inning tilt. The Phi Kiap's scored 11 runs in the third inning. Bill Hart clubbed two triples and a pair of doubles in four trips to pace the Phi Kap's. Vernon Lang, Phi Kappa, clouted a homer and a double. Dwight House homered for the losers in the third. Kenneth Dieker stopped the A.K.L's on two singles. He walked four and fanned three. House, A.K.L pitcher, was nucked for 14 safety. P.K. 10 (11) 40-16 14 5 A.K.L. 20 1 01-4 1 2 Green, McKinny To Attend Engineering Conference Charles H. Green and James T. McKinney, engineering seniors, will present papers at the annual student branches conference of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. The conference will be held in Tulsa, Okla. today and tomorrow. Harry L. Daasch, professor of mechanical engineering, will accompany the representatives from the University. The papers will be entered in a technical writing contest. Green's paper is on stresses in steam piping and McKinney's paper covers heating. They were chosen in an elimination contest held at the University. Attend the Topeka Drive-in Theater 25th and California First Show ... 8 p.m. First Show . . . . . 8 p.m. MEMO Cakes from Drake's are light...fluffy...and topped with our own smooth, creamy icings. New CORE Head Named Germany 35c up 907' Mass. Phone 61 DRAKE'S Other new officers are Ivan K. Johnson, executive secretary, and Henry Tinault, treasurer. Stanley Kelley, Jr., College sophomore, will replace Bob Stewart, education senior, as president of the Committee on Racial Equality for next year. Chemical engineers are said generally to be the best paid members of the engineering profession. "Maybe we'll have to move into your doghouse,Wags UNLESS you carry enough fire insurance on both your home and its furnishings—you, too, could be in the doghouse. STAND BETWEEN YOU AND LOSS! CHARLTON Insurance Agency Pho. 689 Across from Post Office GOODYEAR SUPER - CUSHION TIRES FRANZ CONOCO SERVICE 9th and N.H. Phone 867 Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers. IT'S being 'SERVICED' down at MORGAN-MACK! SERVICE----FORD----SALES 609 Mass. Ph.277 Suitcases in steel or plastic LUGGAGE VALUES $3.95, $4.95, $5.95 Plus Fed. Tax All-Steel Footlockers $7.50 and $8.50 Plus Fed. Tax All-Steel Trunks Three practical sizes $18.50, $19.95, $22.95 Coleman G.I. Pocket Stoves Brand New-A Camper's Need - Fancy T-Shirts 98c to $1.49 - First Quality White T-Shirts 69c LAWRENCE SURPLUS THE MOST INTERESTING STORES IN TOWN 740 and 911 Mass. Phone 588 or 669