Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday. April 21. 1958 11 Relays Records Fall Despite Rain OU, Texas Men Set Top Marks Oklahoma and Texas were the top performers in the 33rd KU Relays Friday and Saturday as each registered two record-breaking victories and each set a new intercollegiate record. Texas wounded up the 2-day track and field carnival with a 3:09.1 in the mile relay. Eddie Southern set an unofficial anchor of :44.6. The former record of 3:11.6 was set by Oklahoma State in 1955. The intercollegiate record of 3:09.4 set in 1941 by California was also broken. It looked early Saturday morning as if the Relays were to be swum instead of run but rain, which fell all morning, subsided and all events were run on schedule. Texas captured the 440 relay in record time of :40.3 Saturday morning. Oklahoma's records came in the spin, medley—a new intercollegiate time by the Sooners of 3:19.5 Friday. In the distance medley the Sooners' time of 9:50.8 erased the 10:04.3 mark set by Texas last year. Gail Hodgson. Oklahoma's South African runner, Saturday ran a 4:07 anchor mile to defeat Texas by 70 yards. The 2-day attendance was 16,000 with 13,000 watching Saturday. A 21-year-old record which was set by a Texan was broken by another on Saturday. Bruce Terry of Texas threw the javelin 232 feet, 2 inches. In 1937 Alton Terry of Hardin-Simmons set the old record 232 feet. $ \frac{1}{4} $ inch Willie Attebury anchored the Michigan State team that set a record in the 2-mile. The Spartans ran 7:24.8 breaking the 7:32.3 record set by Kansas last year. Former Houston runner John Macy broke the steeplechase record of 9:20.5 with a 9:12.5. Meanwhile a record-hungry Texas track team looked today to a tentative lineup shuffle as a possible means of acquiring a third world relay record in Saturday's Drake Relays. The Longhorns, world recordholders in both the quarter and half-mile relays, have ambitious designs on the sprint medley record set last weekend by Oklahoma. Texas coach Clyde Littlefield indicated he may go for the title Saturday by switching brilliant Eddie Southern from a normal 220-veg leg to a 440. Southern was named the most outstanding performer in the relax. With three members of last year's team back that set world records of 39.9 in the quarter mile and 12:27 in the half mile relays, Littlefield could follow Southern with proven sprinters Wally Wilson and Hollis Gailey on the 220 legs and bring Joe Villareal on for the final 880. Gail Hodgson, a South African enrolled at Oklahoma, was second in the most outstanding performer voting following the final Kansas Relays event. He anchored the Sooners to the new sprint medley mark with a 1:48 time for the final half mile and was also instrumental in Oklahoma's meet record time of 9:50.8 in the distance medley. Eleven records were shattered in the 27-event 1958 running of the Relays. Eight fell in the University division, two in the College, and one in the Decathlon. Al Oerter, Kansas discus thrower, became the first double winner weight man since Darrow Hooper of Texas A & M in 1933. Oerter, we meet giant Rink Babka of USC in the Drake Relays this weekend, won both the shot and discus. Phil Mulkey, formerly of Wyoming and now representing the Memphis Olympic Club, took the decathlon in a repeat of his 1956 performance. A sizzling 1:48.0 anchor carry by Oklahoma's Gail Hodgson in the sprint medley relay Friday pulled the Sooner team over the line in 3:19.5 to knock off the 3-week-old world record for that event of 3:19.9. A crowd of 3,000 people watched this performance under skies which alternated from bright and sunny to dark and rainy. In the same race, two other teams timed in under the world mark while three others finished faster than the 1955 Kansas Relays record of 3:22.8 One other University class relays record was set in the 400-meter hurdles by Gene O'Connor of Kansas State who finished in .51.3. Second was Javawhaker Cliff Cushman who held the previous record of .51.6. Kansas, by running the second fastest four-mile relay in the records, picked up a first place. Don Greenlee clocked 418.7; Dale Lutes, 421.2; Tom Skutka, 416.3 and Jerry McNeal 418 for a total of 1714.2. Two other KU stars were unable to get their names in the 1958 record book but still finished first. Broad jumper Ernie Shelby, hampered by a pulled muscle, won his event with one 24-foot 9-inch leap. Charlie Tidwell put Kansas in the 100-yard dash finals by clocking a .099.5 in the preliminaries. His time was the fastest in the Friday trials. One of the day's bright moments Missouri University defeated KU, 25-14. Friday in a Big Eight Conference baseball game that lasted three hours and eight minutes. Wiley, Hanson Give Tigers 20 Hits MU battered the Jayhawkers, who now have a 4-3 record, with 20 hits while Kansas got 16 off MU hurriers, for a game total of 36. Fifteen of was furnished by Concordia High School miler Bill Dotson. He became the fastest Kansas high school runner in history as he finished in 4:20.2. This clocking was eight seconds faster than the high school division relays record in the 880-yard relay national record. High schoolers destroyed one other relays record in the 88-yard relay. Shawnee Mission nicked 2 second off the old mark by clocking 1:31. The only junior college activity of the day resulted in a new record for that division in the sprint medley. Coffeville went the distance in 3:32.4 to erase the 1957 time of 3:34.9 Other Jayhawkers busy in the university class events were Brian Travis, fourth in the 2-mile run and Kent Floerke, second in the broad jump with a 23-foot 11-inch leap. those went for extra bases and each team got three home runs. The big inning for the Tigers was the fifth when, with the score 11-8 in their favor, they collected 10 runs. Righthander Ron Wiley started for KU and took the loss after a 4 2/3-inning stint on the mound. Centerfielder Bob Marshall and catcher Carl Lauerjung led KU with three hits each. Hitting homers for KU were Wiley, Larry Miller and Lauerjung. The double header scheduled for Saturday was cancelled because of rain. The box score: KANASAS ab h rb Muegler, j 6 0 0 Robertson, ss 6 2 0 Tornado, ss 6 2 2 Wiley, p, 3b 2 1 3 L. Miller, if 4 1 3 A. Miller, if 2 2 0 Donaldson, 3b, c 3 0 2 Lauterjung, c, rf 6 3 1 Mackillah, cf 6 3 1 Hanson, p, rf 2 1 2 Ash, 3b 0 0 0 Yocum, p 0 0 0 a-Nickols 1 0 0 b-Schmidt 1 1 0 Totals 43 16 14 MISSOURI ab h rbl Uriarie, 3b 3 0 1 Stehr, 2b 4 1 0 Lewis, 2b 2 0 0 Starr, cf 6 4 2 Toff, tf 6 4 5 Slebert, 1b 5 2 0 Hochgrebe, ss 6 4 4 Haas, f 4 0 1 Meyer, if 4 2 1 Kohmhann, c 6 2 5 Lambert, p 4 1 0 Rittman, p 1 0 0 Totals 49 30 21 a—Fanned for Ash in 6th. b—Singled for Hanson in 7th. Kansas 1 0 3 4 0 0 5 0 1-14 New York 1 0 3 4 0 0 5 0 1-14 a—Fanned for Ash in 6th b—Singled for Hanson in 7th. Kansas 1 0 3 4 0 0 5 0 1-14 Missouri 4 0 4 3 (10) 2 0 5 2-4 5 Tiger-Indian Series Hotter By The Hour KANSAS CITY, Mo.—(UF)—The Detroit Tigers move to Cleveland for a 4-game series April 25, and it promises to be a pip. Flashy dealing Frank Lane said Sunday night he'd have Detroit righthander Jim Bunning ducking if he was field pilot instead of general manager. Bunning hit one Cleveland batter in Sunday's 4-2 Cleveland victory at Detroit and "low-bridged" several others. Lane asserted. He called it a "rare coincidence that every time one of our boys hit a homer, the next guy had to duck." Manager Bobby Bragan said "It's Bunning's prerogative to throw like he pleases, but he's the guy who takes the consequences." Uiggett & Myers Tobacco Co. Nothing satisfies like the BIG CLEAN TASTE OF TOP-TOBACCO MEN OF AMERICA ON SEA DUTY White spray pounding! Wind a-blowing free! Keen eyes look For danger on the sea! With the ships on patrol, You'll find a man Stops to take big pleasure When and where he can... CHESTERFIELD Live-action shot— U. S. Coast Guard REGULAR KING