PAGE FOUR TUESDAY, MAY 23.1933 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Kansas Trackmen Establish Record in Big Six Meet Jayhawkers Show Strength in Taking Ten of 15 Possible First Places Although placing only second in the Big Six Conference outdoor meet at Lincoln, Nebr., last Saturday, the University of Kansas track team by winning 10 out of the 15 possible first places establishing a record, stamping the Jayhawkers as possessing the greatest aggregation of individual champions produced in a single season by any conference team in this section. Coach H. W. Hargiss in his first season as head mentor of the Jayhawker tracksters produced a team that placed second in the outdoor meet, third in the indoor and put three new University of Kansas school records on the book. Coffman to Compete Next Year These new marks were 1.522 in the 880 yard run by the great middle distance runner Glenn Cunningham; 50 feet 9 inches in the shot by Elywyn Dees, sophomore; and 3.199 for the one mile relay using Harold Gay of Gardner, Hall Taylor of Lyons, Theo Graves of Lawrence and Edwin Hall of Fulton, Mo. Prospects for next season seem bright as only three men of this season's squad graduate. They are Capt. Raymond Flick of Kansas City, Mo., and Jay Plumley, Arkansas City, Kan., hurters; Danny McClure, of Kansas City, Kans., half-miler. Freshman material this season is fair, and next year Clyde Coffin of Ford, Kans., former Big Six pole vault champion and a member of the United States team, will compete in the Olympics last summer, will take his final year of track competition at Kansas. Cunningham the "Iron Man" The feat of Glenn Cunningham, the Elkhart, Kans., iron man and Olympic team member, in winning the 880 yard, mile and two-mile runs in the Big Six meet last week caused Coach Henry Schulte of Nebraska to call the Jayhawker to the center of the Nebraska campus and crowd around its feet, and introduce Cunningham as "the greatest runner ever produced in the middle west." Cunningham in the one afternoon甩了mile in the 4:18.4, the 880 yard run in 1:52.2, and the two mile run in 4:9.85. Ed Hall, the Kansas sophomore spinner, also had a great afternoon and proved himself as one of the conference's greatest by winning the 100 yard dash in 9.8, and the 220 yard dash in 21.7, both races against a stiff breeze; placing third in the broad jump with 23 feet $7 \frac{1}{2}$ inches, and overcoming a 20-yard handicap in the anchor lamp of the mile relay to win by inches after showing a great fighting heart against seemingly unsurmountable odds as has ever been exhibited by a Jayhawker athlete on the track. JAYHAWK JABS Last Saturday saw 20 men fighting for Kansas and performing in a sport that they loved, only to have it end in a heartbreaking result. Heartbracing in that the Kansas truck team took 10 first places and yet failed to win the game because of the valliant fight necessary to gain some of those firsts. Glenn Cunningham, ace of the country's quarter mile, half miles, milers, and two milers, broke the record in the half mile which he himself had set. This he did with apparent ease after he had run a 418.4 mile. Cunningham set out behind an Iowa State man whose express duty was to set a burning pace so that Labertue, the Iowa State hope, could defeat the Kansas star. Cunningham let the Iowa State man set his pace until the last 220 yards. He then stepped out about 20 yards ahead of the Iowa State man, and was so far ahead of the rest of the field that he coated in a dirt disguise for his new role. He jumped a second to find out his time, then ran to the top of the Nebraska stadium to tell his coach, H. W. Harg琉, what the time was. Later in the afternoon he ran the two mile, and following this, begged to be entered on the mile relay team but Coach Harg琉 would not let him. Ed Hall, the Kansas sprint star, who scored 13 points individually, made an "impossible finish" as anchor man on the relay. He started out 20 yards behind the Iowa State anchor man, was still four or five yards behind on the ground, and came up to finish where the Cyclone needed only one, yet with a final desperate lunge that almost upset him, he won first place for Kansas in the mile relay. Graves ran the fastest quarter of his life as a member of the relay team . . . Gray won his first in the pole vault on the third trial just after Roby of Nebraska. had missed his third trial . . . Plumley pushed Lantertus of Nebraska all the way in the low hurdles and finally won out after the Husker stumbled over the last hurdle . . . So on down the line every man fought valiantly for what resulted in a second place in the Big Six track meet. It's really a sad tale. But the story of the track meet was not only a sad one for Kansas. Oklahoma had the same sort of a deal, placing fourth while Kansas State placed third. However, the score-sheet showed that Oklahoma tallied two first places to none for Kansas State and got three second places to only two for Kansas State. Yet by virtue of a good many fourths and fifths tallied by the Wildcats, the Sooners were squeezed out of third place into fourth. —Sidney Kross. First Game of Play-Off Goes to Phi Delta Theta Phi Kappa Psi Defeated in Initial Encounter by 12-13 Score Phi Delta Theta won a close contest from Phi Kappa Psi yesterday in the first game in the final series of the inter-organization playground ball elimination tournament. The score was 13:12 in favor of the Phi Delts. The winner of two out of three games in this final series will be the playground ball champions and receive the tournament cup. The second game in the series is being played this afternoon and unless the Phi Delts win today the last game will be played tomorrow at 4:30 p. m. Phi Delta, Theta—13 AB H Chambers, 2b 4 2 Van Cleave, lf 4 2 Moore, p 4 2 Brienenthal, 3b 4 3 Shaeffer, cf 4 4 Shepherd, c 4 0 Hess, cf 4 4 Maris, rf 4 0 North, 1b 3 2 Claflin, ls 3 2 Totals 37 20 Phi Kappa Pai–12 AB H M. Allen, lb 4 3 Grant, ls 4 1 F. Allen, cf 4 4 O'Roke, 3b 4 4 Curre, bv 4 1 Fegan, if 4 1 O'Donnell, rs 4 1 Stiles, p 4 0 Nesmith, rf 3 1 Stanley, c 3 2 Totals 29 19 Totals To Get Film Instruction Oklahoma High School Football Coach Will Attend Novel Demonstration Norman, May 20—Oklahoma high school football coaches will learn by motion picture in the second annual Free Coaching school sponsored by the University of Oklahoma here May 24, 25, and 27. Movies of most of the Sooners' 1933 games, which clearly show offensive and defensive formations of each team on every play, will be used in the football theory course, says Lewis Hardge. Sooner head coach, who with John "Bo" Rowland, his line mentor, will handle this phase of the school. "Those pictures not only give a clear view of team tactics, but also every important individual fundamental in football and whether the players are executing them correctly," said Hardage. "If we encounter a certain play in which we wish to analyze closely, we slow down. If we play slow motion over and again until everybody has a complete understanding of what is right and wrong. Last year 112 coaches and 30 athletes from all over the state were registered and attended regularly, while scores of others came for part of the sessions. This was the largest coaching The school is absolutely gratis, Sooner sports officials have pointed out. If a state high school coach wishes to improve his knowledge of a sport, he has only to load up his bedding, his old athletic equipment, a notebook and freshly-sharpened pencil and drive to the Memorial stadium for his school. Sleeping space beneath the west wing of Memorial stadium will be furnished visiting coaches free. Ames, Iow., May 23—(Special)—Bob Hess of Cresco, who has wrestled his last match for the Cyclones, is passing along his knowledge this week to aspiring candidates for the 1934 grappling team. Hess and Coach Hugo Otopalik are co-operating this week in a special 6-day "wrestling school" for the more than 20 men who hope to make up next years squad. CYCLONE MAT STAR TO AID IN DEACQUISITION 40185067 Hess was the American Olympic representative in his weight, 174 pounds, last summer, and was champion last season in the five major tournaments. He is a Big Six Midwest, A.A.U., National Collegiate, and National A.A.U. Oklahoma Wins Big Six All-Sports Championship Kansas Places Fourth in Tabulation Including Nine Sports The University of Oklahoma stands as all-sports champion of the Big Six Conference for the 1922-'33 school year with a grand total of $25\%$ points, while the University of Nebraska comes second with $27\%$ points. The other four members finished with this standing; Kansas State College $28\frac{1}{2}$; University of Kansas 29 points; Iowa State College $33\frac{1}{2}$; and the University of Missouri 45. The totals are arrived at on the pentathlon system of scoring, the champion in each sport receiving one point, second place two points and so on down, with the low total winning. The figuring of an all-sports champion in the conference was started on this basis by Dr. F. C. Allen, director of athletics at Kansas, in 1922, with a view toward stimulating the coach in each conference sport to make as good a showing with his team as possible. In championships Nebraska led by winning the football title and the outdoor track championship, and tying for the title in swimming and indoor track. Kansas was the only other school winning more than one championship, the Jayhawkers taking the crown in basketball and tennis. Iowa State won the title in swimming and tied for the title in swimming; and Kansas State won the title in two-mile team racing and tied for the championships in base-ball. Oklahoma tied for the championship in indoor track and in baseball but did not win a championship undisputed. Nebraska and Kansas did not compete in baseball, which brought their all-sports standings down considerably. The all-sports table: Ok. Neb. Ks. S. Ks. Ka. Ia. Mo. Football 2½ 1 1 4 1 6 1 Ballpark 2½ 1 4 1 4 1 2 Mile Race 4 3 1 1 6 2 Ind' Track 1¾ 1½ 4 3 5 6 Wrestling 3 5 2 4 1 6 Swimming 3 1½ 2 4 1 6 Track 4 1½ 4 2 3 6 Tennis 2 4 6 1 3 5 Baseball 1½ 5½ 1½ 5½ 4 Men's Intramurals TOTALS 25 $ _{1/2} $ 27 $ _{1/2} $ 28 $ _{1/2} $ 29 33 $ _{1/2} $ 45 Final drawings have been made in inter-organization handball singles and doubles and horseshoe singles and doubles. They are as follows: Handball singles, Morrison, Kappa Sig vs. Johnson, Theta Tau; Buckingham, Beta s vs Shaffer, Phi Delt; Vermin, Phi Gam s vs Benson, Beta; Kiel, Kappa Sig vs. Bye; Marshall, S. P. E. s Leidig, Kappa Sig; Dodge, Beta vs Phi Delt; Hoover, Theta Tau vs Case, Betai; and Skiles, Phi Pai vs Bee. Handball doubles, Hess-Chambers, Phi Delt or Stiles-Elletty, Phi Psi by Bye; Brink-Robinson, Beta vs Morrison- Leiding, Kappa Sig; Mgruder-ran Theta Tau vs bye; Case-Morncick, Beta vs kai-Grims, Kappa Sig. Horseshoe singles, Fountain, Sigma Nu or Bruneflea, Beta vs Bye; Dvorak, Acacia vs Robinson, Beta; McKinnell, Horseshoe doubles, Dvorak, McKinnell. Acacia vs Lueck-Gresser, Kappa Sig; Rain-Micklefs, Theta Tau vs Robinson- Greenleaf, Beta; Johnson-Walters, Acacia vs McCormick-Rickenbach, Beta; Steeper-Lieurance, Kappa Sig, vs Case-Morgan, Beta. The first round in handball singles and doubles is due today, the second round is due Wednesday, May 24, and the last round is due Thursday, May 17. The finals are doubles of the horsehoe finals are being played off this afternoon. Acacia vs Morgan, Beta; Benz, Theta Tata vs Bye. The Big Six telegraphic track meet for freshmen starts today. Coach Hargiss has invited any eligible man to compete with the freshmen. The intramural department will give a gold intramural charm to the individual winner of the meet, which will be run on an individual basis. The order of the events are as follows: Tuesday, one mile run, 440 yard run, 100 yard dash (preliminary), 120 yard high hurdles (preliminary), pole vault, and shot put; Wednesday, 880 yard run, 100 yard dash (final), 120 yard high hurdles (final), discus throw, 120 yard high hurdles (final), javelin throw, 220 yard low hurdles (final), 220 yard dash (final), javelin throw, and broad jump. Oread to Hold Track Meet Inter-Class Contest to Be Held at K. U. Stadium Tomorrow The boys' inter-class track meet of Oread Training school will be held at the K. U. stadium tomorrow afternoon starting at 2 o'clock. The events to be run are the 50, 120 and 240 yard dashes, the 440 and 880 yard runs, discs, shot put, javelin, pole vault, high jump, DOUBLE YOUR DOLLAR'S WORTH OF FUN! FOLLOW THE "50 TIMERS"* for a LOW-COST SUMMER in EUROPE *People whohave travelled at the Atlantic 50 times or more via the White Star Line. AS SOON as you step aboard for an ascent, you will grow to grow. . . When you go the "50 Timers" on a European vacation, you will be at for the time of your life— even when you're tired. And when you follow the "50 Timers," you are going on the ships chosen by sesame seeds to have chosen White Star's stary masters line up for their cruise. 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