Page 7 Hawks, Tigers Meet Saturday In Cinder Dual Good as they are, seven Kansas-Missouri dual records will be in jeopardy Saturday when the two ancient foes run their 52nd annual head-to-head track and field match at Columbia. Under most pressure will be the Pole Vault and both relay marks, KU's Ken Olson hasn't been below the 13-33'-meet record in the former all spring, peaking at 14-6 for a second-place tie in the Kansas Relays two weeks ago. He skidded to 13-84," his second-lowest height of the year in tying for fifth at Drake last Saturday. With Paul Williams and Charlie Tidwell in the last two stations, Kansas has lowered its school record to :40.9 in the 440 haul. The Jayhawkers skated :41.6 for third at Drake, a few stides ahead of Missouri's .42.2. Jayhawker relay combines have been consistently below the :41.5 mark in the 440 and the 3:15.1 mile relay record all year. KU's foursome of Gordon Davis, Bob Tague, Tidwell and Clif Cushman has twice lowered the varsity mile mark this spring with a best of 3:09.7 behind Abilene Christian in the ACC Invitational three weeks back. This combine raced 3:13.7 for third at Drake in its latest outing. Contesting him will be MU's one-time NCAA co-champion, Dob Davis, who established the current record two years ago. Tidwell, Tague and Cushman will be shooting for individual marks. Tidwell matched Dick Blair's :09.5 meet record in winning the Drake 100-yard dash. He equalled his own school mark of :09.4 at Abilene. Tague will be aiming at his own meet 880 record of 1.513. established as a sophomore. He matched that mark in the rain at Drake in anchoring Kansas to a stunning conquest of Illinois in the Sprint Medley. And he was as low as 1.503 in a relay burst at Texas. Pitchers Combine For Kansas Win The pitching of Tom Holler and Jerry Waldschmidt plus some timely hitting gave Kansas a 4-0 victory over Emporia State yesterday in the Jayhawkers' final home game of the season. The scoring came early as Nichols and Tonge singled to open the Kansas half of the first inning. Kansas then worked a double steal, sending Nichols to third and Tonge to second. Bryant followed with a sacrifice fly scoring Nichols and Schick doubled to send Tonge home. Speak, the Emporia starter and loser, settled down to retire the next two men on ground-outs. Holler and Waldschmidt combined their efforts to fan 16 while giving up only three hits. Holler started and was the winner, striking out nine and giving up two singles in five innings. Waldschmidt relieved Holler in the top of the sixth, getting seven strike outs while giving up one hit in his four innings of work. The Jayhawkers picked up their final run in the seventh when Schick singled with one out and went to third on a hit and run when Mailen singled to center. With two out Mailen was caught in a run-down between first and second but allowed Schick ample time to score before being tagged out. In the fifth Nichols beat out a bum and went to second on a wild pitch Tonge singled him home and was thrown out at second while attempting to steal. Bryant then walked, Schick sent him to third with a single but Hensley forced Bryant out at home. Mailen ended the inning by flying out to center. Doyle Schick led the Kansas hitting attack with a double and two singles in four trips to the plate. Nichols, Tongge and Mailen got two hits apiece. The Jayhawkers displayed a sharp defense along with their 12 hit attack. Several good defense plays were turned in by Coach Floyd Temple's charges, Emporia, on the other hand, displayed a poor defense with several bad plays in their infield. Wednesday. May 4. 1960 University Dolly Kansan The infield play of the Jayhawkers yesterday showed much improvement with Schick doing a good job at third base and Nichols making several good plays at first base. E-State (0) | Kansas (4) a b r h rbi Goodell.cf 4 0 1 0 Nichols.lb 5 2 2 0 Mayer.3b 3 0 0 Tonge.fc 4 2 1 1 -Schtker 1 0 0 Bryant.sf 4 2 1 1 Schtekar 4 0 0 Bryant.sf 4 1 3 1 Nichols.cs 3 0 0 Iensen.sf 4 0 0 Flock.lok 3 0 1 Mailen.fc 3 0 2 0 Denny.ss 2 0 0 Dorney.c 4 0 1 0 Terrill.fl 2 0 1 Subc.b 0 0 0 0 H'rk'n'.s2b 3 0 0 Talley.2b 2 0 1 0 Speak.p 1 0 0 Holper.fc 2 0 0 0 Brake.p 0 0 0 Waldsch.t.p 2 0 0 0 Brake.p 0 0 0 >Qu'trin.p 1 0 0 Totals 27 0 3 0 Totals. 34 4 12 3 NEW YORK —(UPI)— Phil King's teammates on the New York Giants call him "The Chief." The big fullback-halfback holds the all-time rushing record at Vanderbilt University. 'The Chief' Horse Race RICHMOND, Va. —(UPI)—A newspaper clipping in the Virginia State Library here includes a notice of a horse race in Henrico County in October, 1678. H. B. Dairyland 23rd & Ohio Featuring Hot Fried Pies Malts, Sandwiches Bonus Pays Off; McCormick Stars United Press International That $60,000 bonus the Giants gave teen-ager Mike McCormick is paying off four years later. It was back in 1956 that the Giants signed the 18-year-old high school and American Legion ace from Arcadia, Calif., who had been groomed to be a big league pitcher since he was seven years old. At the time, they predicted he would some day become a major league star. It took four years but all the signs today are that the 6-foot, 2-inch, 195-pound left-hander has come into his own. He turned in his third straight victory Monday night when he pitched the Giants to a 5-0 win that snapped the Milwaukee Braves' four-game winning streak. 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