--- PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1938 Kansas Scores Split In Tennis Matches With Washburn End in Three-Alt Tie; Two Singles, a Double To Each Squad Winning two singles matches and the first doubles match yesterday afternoon, the University of Kansas tennis team tied the Washburn netsters, three matches each, on the University courts. The match was originally scheduled to be played in Topeka, but, since the Washburn courts were not yet in condition, the match was switched and the Jay-hawker team will play the return match at Topeka, April 23. In the No. 1 match, Newt Hopwood started out strongly, winning the opening set, 6-1, and gaining a slight lead in the second set, but a change of tatics by Don Green, Ichabod first man, reversed the decision in the second set as Green finally went out 10-8. The third set then went to Green, 6-1, to give him a three-set victory. Kell Downs Nordstrom With a 1-1 lead against the Kansas squad, Kell out-steadied Carl Nordstrom of the Blue duck, 6.3, 7-5, to even the count with the No. 2 match. Kell went through the first set fairly easily, but found himself on the short end of the 5-3 score near the close of the second set. However, with the score at set point, Kell pulled the deciding game out of the fire and then won three more games in a row to determine the match in Kansas' favor and tie the count at one match each. Dave Scott again allowed the Jayhawk team to drop into the hole when he lost a three-set affair to Bud Hunter, Washburn No. 3 arm, 1-6, 6-0, 4-6. After losing the first set and gaining only one game, Steddain and handed the Washburn star a blank in the second set to tie up the match. However, after each man took his service to 4-all, Hunter broke through Scott's delivery and then went on to take the final game to make it the second victor for Washburn. Franks Gets Second Win Although he had heretofore been untried in match play for Kansas, Kermit Franks, No. 4 man, outplayed Wayne Friedburgh of the Icha-bods to come with a 6-4, 6-3 victory to tie up the singles at two matches each for the meet. Both players used a looping drive which is quite effective on a windy day, but Franks came through in the pinches and made fine use of a deep lob shot to win out. Going into the doubles play, Hoverstock and Kell had little difficulty in downing Nordstrom and Green under a 6-4, 6-1 tally to give the Jayhawkers a 3-2 lead with one doubles match left to play. Although Scott and Franks put up a game fight against the doubles team of Hunter and Friedburghouse, they were unable to hand Kansas a 4-2 victory and ended with the small end of a 10-8, 6-4 score. First Kansas Match The Washburn squad had had one match before this one, and this was the Jawhayners' opening match of the season. Nordstrom, Hunter and Friedburg屋 are all lettermen from last year, while Kell and Hovsstock are the only two lettermen returned. The Blue squirt is aaphorone who has climbed to No. 1 position atop the more experienced lettermen. Kansas' next match is scheduled for the coming Saturday against the Wichita University team, here. However, it is doubtful if the match will go through as scheduled, since the Jawhawk players may not have enough squad members, on hand during the vacation to "play the match. Washburn meets the Wichita team at Topaek on Friday, the day before its tour brings it to Lawrence. Men's Intramurals By Jim Bell, c'40 The feature of yesterday afternoon's intramural basketball game is the Dell's The Alph's cut loose with everything they had and annihilated their op- Bill Hall pitched masterful ball all afternoon and had a performance in several walks. He fanned 14 during the afternoon. When he was going, the Phil Diavis team rucked to the bucket. The Alph inflicted clicked beautifully. This writer's prediction is that it will be better to play before anyone Campus team stops them. The underdog Sig Ep's turned yesterday afternoon and beat Black of Sigma Ch. 5-3. Black was definitely not the man he was last year. didn't have to win. It wasn't right, they game tight all the way, both games doing all of their scoring in the first two innings and falling back on defense. The Sig Ep boys played Youth Can No Longer Threaten Glenn Cunningham's High School Mark By Horace Mason A 17-year-old boy died Sunday and his death cast a pall of gloom over the state. Sports lovers of Kansas stared dumbfounded at their newspapers Monday morning, unable to believe that the quiet, curly hairy boy, who was destined for the fame and glory that was Glenn Cunningham's, had died. But it was true. Warren Hayes, the brother of Rutherford B. Hayes, who was an all-Big Six end on the 1935 Kansas football team, had finally succumbed to an infection of the kidney, after three weeks of grim battling. The infection started from a blister on his toe. At the age of 16 Warren Hayes missed by only two-tenths of a second the state high school record in the mile which Glenn Cunningham set when he was 20 years old. That was Warren's junior year, and he joined for Hunter School, and in college he was expected to break all high school records for the mile at Beloit, where he moved last summer. Hayes intended to enter the University next fall, to run under Bill Hargris. Glen Cunningham's coach will carry out that dream. The young Hayes boy had to battle for everything he received. At Hunter he had no cinder track to practice on and had to do his training wherever possible. When he went to the state meet his sophomore year, he hitchhiked from Winterside to Winchester, then lacking truck stock in a period of borrowed tennis shoes. He finished fifth. Last year in the meet held a **gymnast** suit during the entire contest, and, if they continue to improve, they should be up among the best at all. The defense of Sigma Chi is the defense spark of his team and looks plenty good to us. Beta continued to pour on the state championship game, their second straight loss. Led by Poker-Face Geiger in the box, the Beta's had the contest in hand all the way through. The defense, and the McCaskill made some of the most remarkable catches of the final score was Beta 15 Phi Gm. The Galloping Ghosts won their second straight when they turned up the clock. The Ghosts hit well and won by sheer power. Both instances were ruthless. The 1200 Tennessee lads outlitt the Hellbounds to win 21-5 in what was the most successful teams looked good at times, and then would turn around and resemble a lot of grade school kids. Lack of allowing a large number of hits. The Campus Raiders proved to be better than the Jaybirds when they lost the game, fast, hotly contested, and interesting. The Raiders were able to send more men across the plain, but otherwise had little difference between the two squads. Lawrence, he overcame all obstacles to win the state high championship in the mile. This year, with the training advantages to be had at Beloit, it appeared that the road had been smoothed for this son of Kansas. Warren Hayes trained all winter, and then died without competing in a single meet. So today we pay tribute to one of the greatest and gamen runners who ever trod the cinder path. Preparations for the greatest mile race in Midwestern track and field history went ahead today with word from Glenn Cunningham that Gene Verakie, April 23, for the event of the sixteenth annual Kansas Relays. Definite On Cunningham's Appearance In a letter to Gwinn Henry, manager of the Relays, Glenn said that he had talked to Venzke recently and that the former Pennsylvanian ace had assured him he would run in the invitation mile run. This rounds out the field for the event, which will include Venzke, Cunningham, Archie San Romani, former Emporia Teachers star, and Don Lash, ex-Indiana distance sensation. Never before has such a field been assembled in this part of the country. For the sports lovers of Kansas it will not only be an opportunity for them to see a great track and field event, but it also will be their only chance to play in the state championship olympic Cunningham, run in his only appearance in this region. Although Cunningham runs a large number of races each year, his appearances at the Kansas Relays are the only opportunity for the bulk of Kansas people to see him run. April 22 has been designated as Glenn Cunningham Day in Lawrence and it is expected that a large crowd will be in the stands to honor this famous son of Kansas. This winter, Glenn ran the mile in 4,044, two full seconds faster than any human had ever run the mile before. He has always made his fastest times outdoors and with such stars as Venzek, San Romani, and Lash to push him, Glenn may approach the four minute mile. Indoor times are not counted as world records by the International Amateur Athletic Federation, and so, until Glen again betters Sydney Woodersen's mark of 4:06.4, the mile record will remain in England. The Kansas Relays will be Glenn's first race outdoors this spring and so his first opportunity to smash Woodenstein's record with the same score. In all three races during all winter. A new mile record is in the offing at Lawrence, it appears. Kansas Meets Huskers Saturday Despite Injury Jinx Harg Hopes To Mak k Nebraska W or k Hara for a Victory Coach H. W. Hargiss makes no predictions on the outcome of the meet Saturday afternoon when a crippled Kansas track team clashes with Nebraska on the stadium track Friedland, Jayhawker shot putter, and discus man, recently encountered a barbed-wire fence in the dark with disastrous results and had to have several stitches taken in his arm. He was spotted by the sprieter who has placed consistently so far this season, was called home owing to the serious illness of his mother. Don Bird has not competed since his accident in the pole vault at the Big Six indoor meet. Frosty Hardace has been troubled with an asthma attack. Huskers Beatable Despite the handicaps under which the Kansas find themselves, beating the Cornhuskers is not an impossibility. Although Hargiss has not been pushing his men hard during the past week in one of the poor condition of the track, and the poor condition of the track, he are hitting early-season form. Nebraka, defending Big Six champion, is far from invincible, as the Sonsera proved has last month. The Huskers have margin over the Huckers. Both Nebraska and the MODERN CLASSIC BY STETSON Take the new lines of tomorrow . . . wider, lower, more rakish . . . mould them into a hat of classic simplicity . . . and you have this sophisticated new Stetson! It comes in the distinguished new range of "Thoroughbred Colors," of course. The Kansas cities. 120-yard high hurdles: Knight Clark and Masoner. HERE'S A 220-yard dash: Foy, Hardacre, Nees and Richardson. This will be the first outdoor dual for the Kansans and little can be said of the strength of the team. Harguis has listed a group of men for the different events, but they may have played around considerably by Saturday. Jayhawkers have been at odds with the weather, which has offered them little opportunity for outdoor practice so far this season. Last week's wintry blust blasted both teams in a few games — two in favor. First Outdoor Dual 220-yard low hurdles: Wiles, Masoner, Knight and Clark. 440-yard dash: Wiles, Cox and Williams. 100-yard dash: Foy, Hardacre, Nees and Richardson. The Kansas entries: Try on "one of the new Stetsons Lightweight, Comfortable, and a Hat that "Can Take It" 800-yard dash: Klann, Heckendorn, Haslami, Replogle and Billips. Mile run: Klann, Heckendorn and Rvan. Two-mile run: Toberen, Hepner nd Ryan. Exclusive Agents Stetson Hats Spring Styles Selling $5 Milic relay: Williams, Cox, Clucas, Women's Intramurals Mile relay, Williams, Cox, Cucasa Wiles, Heckendorf, Nees and Foy. High jump: Cox and Bird. Pole vault: Lawrence. Shot: Friedland and Turner. Discuss: Friedland and Sullivant. Jav > Durand > Munus. < Cucasa, Mason伯 By Shirley Smith, ether By Shirley Smith, c'uncl In the women's intramural baseball games played yesterday afternoon Pi Beta Phi deflected Ci Omega W, team defeated the Independents. Kansas team members will practice twice before the meet Saturday, and the match promises to be intermittent. Spectators are invited to attend. Steeplechase-course at 1:30 p.m. The Kansas golfers will face a strong Wichita team led by Dick Price, who is one of the best golfers in the state. Low medialist for the day was Bob Busler, who shot a 73 on the 18 holes of the strange course. Close up of the place was Ray Watson with a 75. also have to go over other hurdles. Shuttle Relay Draws Many The shuttle hurtle relay, in which the four-man teams race back and forth over regulation flights of hurdles, has drawn entries from the State, Oklahoma A. & M., Emporia Schools and Westminster College. All have five teams and who the eventual winner will be is impossible to predict. Michigan State's team will be anchored by Harvey Woodstra, sophomore sensation. Nebraska's hopes will ride mainly with Gish and Frank, veteran hurdles. Emporia will have Sumner, Demott and Shepard as the mainstays of their team. Lamb Is Iowa Entry Golfers Beat Washburn In Dual Meet Bill Udell and Morton Jones, other University players, ran into difficulty, however, against Root and Miller. They won only $3\frac{1}{2}$ points, dropping $5\frac{1}{2}$ to the pair from Topeka. Bob Busler and Ray Watson, playing first and second positions for Kansas, made a clean sweep of their 18-hole match by winning nine straight points from Schuttes and Wormington, Washington men. Iowa is banking on Bush Lamb, burley senior, and Fleet, fleet sophomore, to carry them through. Oklahoma A. & M has a R. Burley senior, and Michigan as their anchor man. Westminster has no standout, but instead a quartet of evenly huddled hurlers. An interesting sideline on the entries in this event is the football players: Charlie Brick, Nebraska's backup, Tuskegee, Missouri State halfback, and Bush Lamb. Backfield ace. Jack Nessley was scheduled to play in fourth place on the team for this match, but at the last minute was replaced by Jones. In the tournament with Wichita University on Saturday, however, both Jones and Nessley will play. Watson and Udell will face each other in the team. Busler ranking first for Kansas, will be unable to participate. Meet Wichita Busler and Watson Lead Jayhawkers in $12\frac{1}{2}$ to $5\frac{1}{2}$ Victory Over Ischabo Link Squad Busler Low Man The University of Kansas golf team easily defeated a Washburn College four yesterday afternoon in Topeka by a score of 12½ to 51½. The meet Saturday will be played on the Lawrence country club ٣١٩ ٤٢٢ ٣٧٨