--- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS APRIL 28,194 PAGE FOUR By BILL CONBOY Bob Reese, southpaw pitcher from Clements, Kan., owned the best earned run average among hurlers on the Oklahoma university squad up to the games Friday and Saturday with the Javahawk nine. Figures released by the Sooner sports bureau show that Reese has permitted this 2.64 earned runs a game this season. He has pitched 17 innings and allowed 5 runs. He has struck out 11 men and walked only two while receiving credit for one victory against no defeats. Elton Davis has pitched 23 2/3 innings for the Sooners, allowing 11 runs for an earned run average of 4.19. He has struck out 19 while walking 12. These statistics were computed before the weekend. Davis added another victory to his record by pitching the Norman team to a 4 to 3 triumph over Kansas Saturday. He has now won four and lost none. Other Sooner pitchers who have accounted for victories this year are Dan Burrell, Hal Cumberland, and Jack Venable. Venable was the winning hurler in Friday's game with the Kansans. Previously this season he had lost three games against no victories. The two week-end triumphs over the Javahawks brought Oklahoma above the 500 mark in conference play with a 3 won and 2 lost record. Coach Vie Bradford's Kansas crew dropped below the .500 mark by virtue of the double defeat and now own a two won and 4 lost record. The Jayhawkers outhit the Sooners in both games at Norman but were unable to convert the blows into enough runs. Oklahoma is the defending baseball champion of the Big Six, but the conference race this season looks to be a toss-up. When coach LuD Fisher's Kansas State Wildcats clawed the Sooners with a 20 to 6 victory this year, it was believed to be the worst defeat an Oklahoma baseball team has ever suffered at Norman. Oklahoma has exhibited a superb fielding team this season. Up to the week-end's twin bill with the Jayhawkers, the Sooner nine had averaged only 14 errors. The Oklahoma players had committed only 19 errors as compared to 34 miscues by their opponents. Over the weekend, the Sooners kept close to their record by making a total to four errors in two games as opposed to six for the Jayhawkers. The hitting has been weak on the Norman team this year. Before the Kansas series, the Sooners had a batting average of only .248 compared with a combined average of .266 for the teams they had played. Oklahoma had scored only 57 runs in this same time while yielding 78. 水 草 湖 It is interesting to note that a prediction made in Friday's column was fulfilled Saturday. The Kansas City Star carried an Associated Press release from Lawrence which said that University of Kansas student Tayla Thomas was in favor of admitting Oklahoma A. and M. to the Big Six conference. Nowhere in the news item was there the slightest mention of the racial issue. Nowhere in the news item was there the slightest indication that the resolution voted upon had been other than a straight yes or no ballot on the general question of admission. We prohesied Friday that the question of racial equality which prompted the balloting on the issue originally and which was the point of the resolution itself would be entirely disregarded when results of the voting were circulated elsewhere. To the framers of the resolution, to the students who voted on it, and to sources outside the University there will continue to be three entirely different interpretations of what happened at the polls Thursday. This corner sincerely doubts that the University administration will be influenced in its final decision by such confusion results. Kansas Places Six Times In Annual Drake Relays Jayhawker trackmen placed in six events at the 38th annual Drake Relays in Des Moines Friday and Saturday. The Kansas thinclads, under coach Rane Kahne, competed against 2,000 collegiate athletes in a meet which saw new records established in two hurdle events. Outstanding individual competitor for the Jayhawks was high jumper Tom Scoffield. He leaped 6 feet, 58 inches to tie for first in the event with R. J. Lennerton of Washington University of St. Louis. Karl Ebel, Kansas javelin ace, hurled the shaft 192 feet 9 inches to take second behind Herb Grote of Nebraska whose winning distance was 196 feet, 8 inches. Kansas Second In Javelin The Jayhawk distance medley relay team of John Jackson, Harold Hinchee, Hal Moore, and Bob Karnes placed fourth in the race at Des Moines. Indiana won the event, out-distancing Texas to give the Long-horn quartet its first defeat of the year. Bob Crowley gave Kansas a fifth by placing in the broad jump. He leaped 23 feet, $ \frac{1}{2} $ inch, three inches behind George Kailas of Wisconsin. Willie Steele of San Diego State won the event on a jump of 24 feet, $ 6\frac{1}{2} $ inches. K.U. Fifth In Mile Relay The Kansas mile relay team of William Binter, Jackson, Robert Hill, and Richard Shea placed fifth against a strong field in the Drake games. Ohio State won the event in 3 minutes, 14.3 seconds. The Jayhawker two-mile relay team of Hinchee, Moore, Karnes, Johnson, Johnson gained a fifth spot behind Indiana, Indiana, and Missouri in a close tag. Three other members of the Kansas squad qualified in preliminaries Friday but failed to place in the final. Frank Stannard qualified in the 120-yard high hurdles. In the final, he was clocked unofficially in the time of 14.5 seconds, but competition was unusually strong with victor Harrison Dillard of BaldwinWallace hitting the tape in 14.1 seconds. This mark set a new record for the Drake games, erasing the standard set up by Fred Wolcott of Rice Institute in 1938. Bruce Henioch and Clifford King qualified in Friday's javelin preliminaries. Both tossed the spear under 180 feet, however, and the fifth place the finals, James Cox of Arkansas, hurled it 183 feet, $4\frac{1}{2}$ inches. The second record which fell Saturday, was in the 440-yard shuttle high hurdle race. Ohio State hurlers sped over the wooden barriers in 59.4 seconds to crack the standard set up by Oklahoma A. and M. in 1941. Other Vets May Join Naval Reserve Ranks The Naval Reserve has been opened to all Navy Coast Guard and Marine Corps veterans of World War II who served honorably for six or more months according to a Navy department bulletin just released. Other persons eligible for acceptance are veterans of any other U.S. military service between the ages of 17 and 39 inclusive and non-veravers of the age group 17 to 39 inclusive since expiration of the Selective Service Act on March 31. The Naval Reserve offers courses to its members in most of the trades and skills. Periodic two-week training cruises of concentrated instruction are offered for those members who qualify. Training is available for members of the Naval Air Reserve and those who desire submarine duty. Ex-navy men of World War II who join the Reserve are enrolled in the rate they held upon discharge and for all members of the Reserve there is an increase of five per cent in base pay for each three year period of service. The status of any veteran under the G.I. Bill of Rights is not changed upon enrolling in the Naval Reserve Corbin, Kappa Win I-M Softbail Games Corbin hall stopped Chi Omega 17 to 7 in one of the easiest victories played on the softball diamond this season. Sleepy Hollow lost to Kappa Kappa Gamma in a close 4-3 game Wednesday. Jolliffe hall forfeited their game to Pibeta Phi. Outstanding players for the games were: Jones, Collidge, and Gabrielson for Chi Omega; McGee, Lamon, Myke, Yleko, and Larsen for Cortlandt; Holl, Kyle, and Stuckey, Stuckey, Kappa Kappa Gamma; and Rothenberger, Sleepy Hollow. Maxine Gunsolly, College junior was elected president of the Women's Athletic association at their meeting Thursday night. Gunsolly Elected W.A.A. President Other officers are vice-president, Frances Chubb; secretary, Donna Mueler; treasureur, Joan Anderson; business manager, Julia Fox, point system manager, Joanne Cooper; volebility manager, Josephine Stuckey; basketball manager, Marjorie Koff; baseball manager, Marie Horseman; hockey manager, Gerry McGee; swimming manager, Harriet Connor; minor sports manager, Pearl Leigh. 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