PAGE FOUR 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1938 Baseball Scores AMERICAN LEAGUE R H E New York ... 020 000 003-5 | 3 F Boston ... 100 000 003-5 | 3 F Batteries: Minkey and Dickey, Ghem. Boston, Grove, Wagner, Marum and Desaillets, Berg. **R H I E** New York 000 000 000-0 Boston 010 004 10x-8 -6 Battierss: New York, Pearson St. Louis Winster, Ostermeyer and Berg. Philadelphia ... 100 100 100 ... 6 3 Philadelphia ... 001 100 90x - 11 3 Batteries: Philadelphia Thomas, Caitlin Washington, Washington, Weaver and R, Ferrell. R H E Detroit ... 000 110 001-4 7 Chicago ... 010 300 001-4 7 Batteries: Dartto, Lawson, Gill, Whitehatch, Whitehatch, Brown and Sewell, Sewell. R H I E St. Louis 100 040 010 001 Cleveland 000 010 001-211 Batties: St. Louis, Newswon and Silvyn, Cleveland, Allen, Hudlin, and Hollis. NATIONAL LEAGUE R H E Chicago 001 202 201-8 15 Cinemaid 104 000 101-7 14 2 Batteries: Chicago, Brentholt, Lone Wolf, Burritt. Cinemaid, Schoot, Hullgorse and Lonardi, V. Davis. R H I E Boston . 000 000 100 - 100 New York . 431 000 143 - 10 - 10 Batteries: Boston, MacFayden, Lee, Lepez. New York, Mellon and Lippez. R H D Brooklyn 100 300 602-12 15 0 Philadelphia 101 020 001-5 1 Battersea: Broadway and Cherinko, Spencer Philadelphia, Lamaster, Mulcaly, Siftov and Atwood. R H Pittsburgh 101 000 002-3 St. Louis 101 000 002-1 Battersea Pittsburgh. Blunton Bingham Ginger St. Louis Welland, Bingham and Owen What's Doing in Sports At Other Schools By Dale Hockendorn During an invasion of Texas by the Nebraska baseball team, Paul Amen, southpaw Nebraska first-baseman and aee basketball worked out with the New York Yankees in Dallas. He alternated at first base with Lou Gehrig during a practice drill. The University of Washington was the first mainland university basketball team ever to land in Hawaii. The Huskies were royally welcomed by co-ed beauty contestsants of the University of Hawaii. After a motor trip around the island the team went to Iolani palace as special guests of Gov. Joseph B. Poindexter. From the palace, the visitors were taken to the Moana Seaside hotel where they will stay while in Hawaii. Photographers from the LOOK magazine visited the University of Wisconsin spring football practice last week to get pictures for a feature that will appear next fall. The Badgers went through several plays for the photographers, who will run a series of pictures which will be titled "How To Watch a Football Game." Only the pictures of the Wisconsin football team will be used as illustrations. Texas, rated as one of the best collegiate baseball teams year after year, was severely jold if they bowed to the Austin Seven-Up Bottlers, 9 to 6. Jake Wilson, who formerly played with the Baylor football team which gave the Long-borns plenty of misery, was the whole show for the Bottlers. He made five hits, scored three runs, and batted in four more to trim the Steers. Stars in Relays Bird holds the KU. high school meet record in the pole vault at 12 feet, 6% inches, a mark he set in his career for Arkansas City high school. Don Bird To Attempt Comeback at Kansas Relavs A great comelack trial by a fine athlete will feature the entry of the host school in the sixteenth annual Kansas Relays Saturday. Last Saturday, with the elbow well wrapped, Bird tried his first vaulting since the accident, in a dual meet with Nebraska. Vaulting effortlessly, he soured over the bar at 12 feet, 8½ inches to defeat his Cornhusker opponents. Now his on eye on another, although it seems a long shot, he inay be able to achieve it. Another Big Six champion, Fen Durand, will compete in the javelin throw for the Jayhawks. Durand tossed the javelin 191 feet, 2 inches in the dual meet with Nebraska and should throw over 200 feet in the Relays. He will be up against stiff competition, but is expected to place well. Don Bird, University of Kansas pole vaulting ace, won his event with a vault of 13 feet, 6 inches at the Relays last year. He went on to win the Big Six championship, and this year appeared set for a great season. Lyle Foy, Jayhawk sprint star, Tune in "Strange As It Seems"—presented by Union Pacific every Sunday at 12:15 p. m. over MKC, Kansas City, Kansas Here's travel on you like it—free from worries about bad weather or highway hazards. On Union Pacific trains you can relax in your deep-coupled coach or Pulldown seat. . . rest or read. You can also price meals, all that makes a trip pleasant is yours on the train—and the coat is low. That's sensible travel! But tragedy struck during the Big Six indoor meet this winter and Bird suffered a dislocated elbow. It appeared that Bird was out for the season and might never be able to vault again. During the remainder of the winter and early spring he underwent treatments for the injured elbow every day and gradually it began to improve. For complete information about travel anywhere, consult your local Union Pacific Agent UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD will compete in the 100-yard dash. Foy qualified for the finals in the 100 at the Texas Relays, but was shot out in a blanket finish. Won both the 100 and 220 in the dual meet with Nebraska Saturday. Foy will anchor the Kansas 440- and 880-yard relay teams which should show up well. Other members of the teams will be Forrest Hardcase, Wayne Nees, and J. D. Richardson. Men's Intramurals By Jim Bell, c'40 --- Yesterday was another noveen field day as far as intramural baseball was concerned. The D.U. ace completely dominated play when he blanked the Triangle crowd, 20-0, pitching his second no-hit game in a row. As far as this writer knows this is the first time that any intramural pitcher has accomplished such a feat. He struck out 17 men in yesterday's performance, better than his first game. In the first D.U., encounter he set down 16 Acadie's. This makes his strike-out record 32 for two games. Sigma Chi became the second straight team to hand the Kappa Sig lookahead, a shellacking of the squirrel pitching of Souders to win 13-8. Kappa Sig looked for his games but Souder was able his last game again. The probable cause for this trouble is lack of power in the box. The problem is that posing teams never give these men a chance to handle them when offsprings take the Sig pitcher's offerings into the outer gardens. terrings. Sig Eg's continued their strong drive when they blasted A.T.O., 21-7. The Ep's have plenty of life and (heir) inief is one of the great players for Coris and Florl, two basketballists, are the backbone of this squad. Led by Dean McCoy, the Acacia team nosed out the FI K.A.'s, 5-3, in a tough scrape. Acacia's brilliant infield succeeded in making two of the finest backfields we ever saw this season. This group, which features the comic antics of Dick Martin, is plenty flushy. Mit Meier has brought them farther up the rankings, and 100 per cent better than they did in their opening game. Fih Pai clowned it way through a surprisingly easy triumph over the Sigma Alpha Mu team which had lost the game. The game was a riot all the way. The final score was 29-4. “Uincle George” Golay insists that he was the star, and although we don't know who played, we'll let him have his way. Phi Delta Theta won their first game when they rumped all over the DePaul. But even see McDonald's boys one, let alone connect with it. Chambers played well for the winners and got a tight boot shot to win it for Phi Delta's "ineffective pitching to be the trouble with the DeLitt." They used three men against Phi Delta, but were as ineffective as his professor. If you have lost some article you prized very highly, advertise your loss in the Kansan Want Ads. Along the Sideline Newt Hoverstock Kansan Sports Editor Kansas Sports Editor Kansas State's baseball team, with Ei Kilmek on the mound, poured on the Batheny Sweeps last Monday for a 12 to 2 victory. Kilmek pitched only four innings, but fawned of the 14 men who showed up in the game. No Kansas team can feel at all let down because of dropping half of their double bill to the Aggie nine during Easter vacation. Wyandotte went home last Friday night quite satisfied that they were victors in the day's triangular meet at Topeca. The scoring was announced as Wyandotte, 66; Topeca, 64; and Argentine, 13. However, some controversy hurried to the court's jump and pole赛, where several men tied but some were awarded the events for taking fewer trials than the others. E. A. Thomas, commissioner of the Kansas, High School Activities Association, when he was on Monday, said that the rule had changed back to him. There are good jobs with Esquire Each year ESQUIRE employs a num ber of men from college graduating classes. The publishing business is no linecine. Inexperienced people start at the bottom, of course. . . usually in circulation or merchandising department. It takes work and real ability to get to the top and stay there. But it's interesting . . . and men with ability climb fast. There's a special testing job—in the field . . . right where you're going to school . . . will be remunerative in proportion to results and will qualify outstanding performances to special consideration for permanent jobs with Injure-Cornet, Inc. Seniors write us for complete information. Write to the University 919 North Michigan Ave., Chicago {the old one where equal points are awarded to all those tied in such events regardless of the number of trials. If such is the case, Wyan-dotte will possibly find itself in second place when the championed, and Topkka will be the winner of the meet by 1-1-3 points.} The intramural baseball teams are going to have plenty of difficulty winning a game over the pitching obstacle set up by John Hoevor, Delta Upsilion hurler. In two games, against the Acacia's and Triangles, Hoevor has fanned 33 batters, and allowed not a single hit. If the D.U.'s can put up a good brand of low-error ball behind such pitching, there is no reason that they shouldn't emerge as the title winners this season. Read the Kansan Want Ads $ \textcircled{2} $J. B. 5. CO. TYROLEAN INFLUENCE IN YOUR STETSON Here's the tapered crown . . . the brim that curves up in back, steep as the Alps, and scoops down smartly over your eyes. It's the Tyrolean at its smartest . . . but with a regulation silk band so you can wear it in town as well as country. See it in Stetson's new "Thoroughbred Colors." "Try on" one of the New Stetsons Lightweight, Comfortable, and a Hat that "Can Take It!" Spring Sales Selling 55 Exclusive Agents Spring Styles Selling $5 CARL'S "Lefty...every day in the week Chesterfields will be telling'em about America's grand old game" Copyright 1938, LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO Co. PAUL DOUGLAS broadcasts Chesterfield's Daily Sports Column at 5:30 C. S. T. every day in the week 49 leading N. B. C. station Chesterfield opens the season with more pleasure and gives millions of smokers the same play every day ... and you'll want to hear Paul Douglas broadcasting the scores and highlights of the games—Lefty Gomez, first guest star. It's always more pleasure with Chesterfields . . . more pleasure for listeners . . . more pleasure for smokers. Chesterfield's mild ripe tobaccos—home-grown and aromatic Turkish—and pure cigarette paper...the best ingredients a cigarette can have ... THEY SATISFY. 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