Monday, April 22, 1968 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 5 ANOTHER ONE FOR THE JAYHAWKS Photo by Bruce Patterson Dave Stevens, KU hurdler wins the university-college division 120-yard high hurdles in 13.9 Saturday afternoon at the Relays. Behind Stevens are (from left) John Dvorak, Hastings College; Lee Adams, KU, fifth place; Dave Kudron, NU, second; and Jeff Glasgow, Oklahoma State, third. Ryun, Greene, Rogers top Relays By Steve Morgan Kansan Sports Editor KU's middle distance ace Jim Ryun showed he had recovered from his pulled hamstring muscle by running the fastest 1,500 meters in the history of the Relays, Charlie Greene equaled the world record in the 100 meters and Colorado's Chuck Rogers became the first Big Eight vaulter ever to clear 17 feet as the 43rd annual KU Relays came to a close under surprisingly sunny skies Saturday. Outstanding performances in these and other individual events almost stole the spotlight from the relays themselves. All relays in the university division were won by Big Eight schools. Kansas and Kansas State won two each and Missouri and Oklahoma one each. The open 5,000 meters, another of the headlined events, failed to produce a record but provided one of the afternoon's most exciting finishes. 1964 Olympic 10,000 meters champ Billy Mills, who had misjudged the finish line by about 50 yards, realized his mistake and tried to overtake Air Force lieutenant Jim Murphy in the last 25 yards. Murphy, who had won the 10,000 on Thursday, held on to win in 14:23.6. Randy Matson, world record holder in the shot put, won the open shot with a peg of 67-11, slightly shorter than what he had hoped to do, but still good for this early in the season. Greene and Ryun, most highly touted of the invited competitors, produced the outstanding performances an estimated 20,000 spectators had come to see. Greene's duel with Jim Hines, formerly of Texas Southern, was not to be. Hines was disqualified after two false starts. The former Nebraska speedster apparently didn't need the competition. He sailed to the record tying time of 10.0 with Fort Scott junior college's Mel Gray and Murray State's Jim Freeman eating his dust. Gray himself set a national record for junior college sprinters with a 10.1 clocking. He broke a 27-year-old record. Ryun made his first outdoor appearance of the season in the Glenn Cunningham 1,500 meters and it was a good one. Facing formidable competition and testing his injured leg, Ryun ran to a record 3:42.8 time comparable to about a 3:58 mile. Rogers cleared 17-0 $ \frac{1}{2} $ on his Think about the cities. About the civil war ripping our nation apart. About violence and crime and despair. About the need for both the rule of law and the light of hope. About the new statesmanship needed to Think about your children. About their schools. Their college. Will there be a place for them? And the world they inherit. Will it be worth inheriting? Will they have a world to inherit? Think about your dollar. Weakened and shrunk by buy-now-pay-later politics, eaten by taxes, threatened by the balance of payments and the gold drain. It's going to take skill and understanding to get an $800 billion economy back on the track—and keep it there. THE THINKING MAN'S CHOICE... You can't just wish your way out of the kind of problems we've got today. You've got to think them through—and that takes a lifetime of getting ready. Think about the one man who is best qualified for that office. With the sure hand, the balanced judgment, the combination of seasoned experience and youthful vigor. The one man who has gained a perspective on the Presidency unique in our time—from 20 years in public life, eight of them at the very center of power—followed by a rare opportunity to reflect and re-study, and to measure the pressing needs of America and the world in this final third of the 20th Century. The one man prepared by history for the world's toughest job—the one man who can really make a difference in these troubled, dangerous times. Think about Viet Nam. A brutal conflict that tears the nation. A new kind of war against a new kind of enemy, that requires new concepts of concerted military, political, and diplomatic effort. This is a time when we must explore every avenue toward settlement –but keep up our guard against the temptations of a camouflaged surrender. first vault to break the Relays pole vault record and then narrowly missed making 17-4. KU's Think about the Presidency. Its awesome powers and its lonely responsibilities. The range of things a President has to think about, know about. The great decisions that he alone can make, and that may determine the fate of freedom for generations to come — and even the survival of civilization. Auth. & Pd. for by Youth For Nixon, 1726 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 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