Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, June 9, 1959 Tidwell Paces Kansas To Milwaukee Sweep MILWAUKEE—Kansas scored a record 98 points Saturday, paced by Charlie Tidwell, to win the Central Collegiate conference track and field championships here. The victory was an unprecedented fourth in four years. KU's track performers won three events and anchored a winning relay team. Tidwell, a top candidate for an Olympic team berth, set a meet record of 21 seconds for the 220-yard dash around one turn, won the 100 easily in .99.6, and set a meet standard of .23.3 in the 220 low hurdles around a turn. He became only the third man in the 34-year history of the meet to win three individual titles. Others were Jesse Owens in 1935 and 1936 and Harold Stickel of Pittsburgh in 1942. Bill Alley of Kansas set a meet and stadium record with the javelin, which he threw $226\frac{1}{2}$ feet, shattering a 31-year mark. The Kansas 440-yard relay team, anchored by Tidwell, set a meet and stadium record of 41.4 seconds in defeating Ohio University. Kansas won 10 of the 18 collegiate events. Another Javhawker, Cliff Cushman, took honors in the 400-meter hurdles by edging Karl Sturtzen of Marquette :51.5, Jesse Nixon of Wisconsin won the 440 in :47.9, followed by Bob Lida of Kansas. Tidwell won the 100-yard dash in .09.6, a tenth of a second off the meet record. He then came back to set a meet and stadium record of 21 seconds in the 220-yard sprint. KU Psychologist At Michigan Panel Roger G. Barker, professor of psychology, was one of 15 participants invited for the June 5-7 University of Michigan Symposium on Children, Youth and Family for research workers in the behavioral sciences and applied social sciences The symposium is being financed by the Ford Foundation. Wilt Visits KU Talks of Future Wilt Chamberlain, two-time Kansas basketball All America, plans to complete his college education in night school and correspondence at Penn or Temple. Here to secure his academic transcript and visit friends, the Dipper said "...I always wanted to get a degree. When I left here (Chamberlain waived his final season of competition last year to play with the Harlem Globetrotters) I had one of the best talks with Chancellor Murphy I've ever had with any man. He influenced my thinking on the educational aspects of life. I'm sure I can get the work completed on a nightschool-correspondence plan." Freshly signed with the Philadelphia Warriors, the 254-pound Stitl said he thought he would like professional basketball better than the Trotters "because of the competition." He also disclosed that a Wilt Chamberlain outdoor model basketball will be on the market. It is being manufactured by Spalding. Chamberlain holds Big Eight single game records in scoring with 46 and rebounding with 36. His 28.3 average in 1958 also is a conference high as is his career mark of 26.5 in 23 league games. Although missing one full season, his 1,433 total points is the third highest in conference history. Overall, he holds 20 school records. KU Ends Second In All-Sports Floyd Temple's baseball club surprised Oklahoma with a 2-1 edge in the closing series to climb to sixth place. This put Kansas in second place for the sixth time in the last seven years in the 1958-59 Big Eight All-Sports derby. Not counting Oklahoma State, which won four championships, but cannot be eligible for this race since it will not play a league football schedule until 1960, the Jayhawkers scored their eighth consecutive triple in cross country, indoor and outdoor track to trail only Oklahoma State in total titles. The Cowpokes, full-fledged competitors in every sport save football and swimming, bagged wrestling, tennis, golf, and baseball. Oklahoma won football and swimming, and Kansas State basketball to account for the 10 team flags. Missouri would have finished out of the cellar had it not forfeited seven conference baseball victories because of use of an ineligible outfielder. Oklahoma State played virtually half a league schedule in football, beating both Kansas clubs while losing to Oklahoma for a 2-1 mark. It plays the same trio next season. Answer to Crossword Puzzle Cell Function Exhibit Opened at Dyche Hall An educational exhibit depicting the structure and functions of the cell—the building block for all life—has been opened at the Museum of Natural History. The display, which occupies a prominent position just to the right of the main entrance to Dyche Hall, honors the late Dr. William J. Baumgartner, professor emeritus of zoology, who died April 12 at 87. Cellular structure and growth was his special scientific field. The central portion of the 12-feet-wide wall exhibit is a legend explaining the structure and function of the cell and the process of mitosis by which in nine basic steps cells divide and reproduce. At the left is a lrage plaster model of a cell and its components, and the constituents of the fluid in which the cells live. This represents a huge enlargement of what would be seen through a microscope. At the right is a display featuring intricately interwoven colored lights supplemented by actual photographic enlargement of microscopic views. These show the nine basic steps in cell reproduction. Dr. Baumgartner was a student at KU and then a member of its faculty for 40 years, retiring in 1944. The Baumgartner exhibit was planned by Dr. A. B. Leonard, professor of zoology and former colleague of Dr. Baumgartner. Bret Waller, staff artist for the museum, and George P. Young, taxidermist, did the execution. Oklahoma Miler To Enroll at KU A fine future four-mile relay team has been assured KU with the announcement that Ted Reisinger, Oklahoma cross country champion, will enroll here. Reisinger's announcement followed by only two days the disclosure by Wichita East's Archie San Romani that he would attend KU. Reisinger holds a 4:19 low in the mile and a 1:55.6 in the half while San Romani's best this year in the mile in the AAU at Mission was a fancy 4:10. Concert Course To Show Variety The KU Concert Course for 1959-60 will feature the Philharmonia Hungarica, made up of musicians from symphony orchestras in Hungary who fled during the 1956 revolution. The group was organized by Zoltan Rozsnyai and Antal Doriati. Dorati will conduct the orchestra on its first American tour. Other attractions in the Concert series will be the National Ballet of Canada with a company of 75 and full orchestra; Leonard Rose, cello virtuoso; Victoria de los Angeles, soprano of the Metropolitan Opera, concert, radio and television, and Julian Bream, English guitarist and lutenist. As an extra attraction the Concert Course will feature Katherine Cornell and Brian Aherne in a new play, "Dear Liar," by Jerome Kilty. It is based on the relationship between George Bernard Shaw and Lady Patrick Campbell. The play will end its tour with a four-week Broadway run. The Chamber Music Series will present four attractions. The first will be the Camera Concerti, a chamber orchestra of 14 winds and strings. Also scheduled are appearances by the Vegh Quartet from Hungary, and return engagements of the Netherlands Quartet and the Trio di Bolzano. At KU the place to dine and dance is The Dine-A-Mite Dancing after 8 p.m. For dining and dancing in air conditioned comfort it's the Dine-A-Mite. We suggest you try our Business Men's Lunch, only 90c. And for that Lone Star Picnic we have Foil-Wrapped dinners to go. THE PLACE WHERE MOM IS ALWAYS WELCOME MENU Steak, Chicken, and Chops T-Bone Steak (12 to 14 oz.) ... $2.50 Sirloin Steak (A Student Special) ... 2.00 Chicken Dinner ... 1.50 Chicken Fry Steak ... 1.10 Pork Chops ... 1.10 Sandwiches Cheeseburger ... 30 Hamburger ... 25 Chicken Salad Sandwich with French Fries ... 50 Drinks Malted Milks ... 25 Beer ... 30 Coffee ... 10 Salads Russian Salad ... .85 Combination Salad a la Carte ... .35 Cottage Cheese & Tomato Salad ... .30 Desserts Home Made Pie ... 20 Ice Cream ... 15 Open 10:00 a.m. to Midnight — Closed Monday THE DINE-A-MITE 23rd and Louisiana