Jayhawks bag Indoor crown Jim Ryun came back from two painfully blistered feet and a near disqualification to lead the Jayhawks to the NCAA indoor track title Saturday. Ryun won his third straight Jumping Jayhawk NCAA indoor mile title by edging Marty Liquori of Villanova in a photo finish. Both were clocked at 4:02.6. After three laps of the 2-mile Friday, Ryun limped from the track complaining of blisters and an aching knee. Jim Elliott, Villanova coach, charged that Ryun should be disqualified from further competition in the meet because he had not put forth an honest effort. The meet's jury of appeals ruled against Elliott and certified Ryun for the mile competition. It was a battle between Ryun and Liquori all the way as Ryun took the lead at the start and held it until the fifth lap of the 11-lap race. The Villanova star jumped in front and stayed there until the final turn. Ryun turned on his kick and the two matched strides down the last 30 yards. At the tape Ryun lunged ahead to win by inches. The Jayhawks scored a record 41½ points to beat the old mark of 35-1/3 set by Villanova last year. Villanova finished second with 33 points. Villanova took four firsts to KU's three but the Hawks had a stronger supporting cast. KU swept the first three places in the shot put and the first two places in the long jump. Karl Salb heaved the shot 66-feet $ \frac{8}{2} $ inches breaking the old record of 63 feet $ \frac{2}{4} $ inches set by Randy Matson in 1965. Mar. 17 KANSAN 7 1969 Steve Wilhelm finished second with a throw of 61 feet. Doug Knop broke the 60 foot barrier for first time in competition with a toss of 60 feet $ 9 \frac{1}{2} $ inches to take third. KU is the first university ever to have three shot putters who have surpassed the 60 foot mark. Ron Jessie and Stan Whitley dominated the long jump. Jessie won the event with a jump of 25 feet $ 2 \frac{1}{2} $ inches and Whitley took second with 25 feet 2 inches. After Ryun won the mile KU held a 35 to 31 lead over Villanova. The Hawks' mile relay team-Bob Burnkessel, Jim Hatcher, Randy Julian and Julio Meade-contributed an unexpected four points when they finished second. That put the Jayhauks out of reach with only the pole vault competition left. Bob Steinhoff vaulted 16 feet and finished third in the pole vault. George Byers took third in the 60-yard high hurdles with a time of :07.3. The KU distance medley relay team turned a time of 9:56.4 for fifth, Paul Mattingly, Neal Caterson, Thorn Bigley, and Doug Smith ran on the team. Other Big Eight teams scored well in the meet. Kansas State's two-mile relay team blazed to a 7:32.2 clocking to win that event. Missouri took fourth and Oklahoma State took fifth in the two-mile relay. Wayne Long finished second in the 60-yard dash in the time of .061. In the team standings Nebraska finished sixth, Kansas State tenth, and Oklahoma fifteenth. Shot put-1, Karl Salb, KU, $66-8\frac{1}{2}$; 2, Steve Wilhelm, KU, 61-0; 3, Doug Knop, KU, $60-9\frac{1}{2}$; 4, Dick Benka, Harvard, $60-1\frac{1}{4}$; 5, John Haley, Hanley of Maryland, $59-2\frac{1}{4}$. 8 80 - yard run -1, Carl Trentedue, Southern California, 1:52.8; 2, Frank Murphy, Villanova, 1:53; 3, Larry Kelly, Tennessee, 1:53.4; 4, Phil Tobin, St. John, 1:53.5; 5, Ron Kutschinski, Michigan, 1:53.9. Long jump-1, Ron Jessie, KU, 25·2½; 2, Stan Whitley, KU, 25·2; 3, Marion Anderson, San Jose State, 24·9½; 4, Hal Oswalt, 24·9¼; 5, Mike Gregory, Oklahoma, 24·5½. High jump—1, Rod Jordan, Florida, 7-0 3/4; 2, Chris Cellion, Brigham Young, 6-10 (fewer misses); 3, Tie, Ray McGill, Kansas State; Scott English, Texas-El Paso; Gary Haupert, Indiana; all 6-10. New record. Old record 7-0 by Otis Burrell, Nevada; Ted Downing, Miami of Ohio; and Steve Herndon, Missouri. Mile relay-1, Tennessee. SUA is offering: Two month flight to Europe... Via New york to Paris-June 12 Return trip-August 13. cost-$270. Mile run—Jim Ryun, KU, 4:02.6; 2, Marty Liquori, Villanova, 4:02.6; 3, John Baker, Maryland, 4:04.4; 4, Dave Kerf, Ball State, 4:05.3; 5, Howell Mitchell, 4:07.2. For information call: 60-yard dash-1, John Carlos, San Jose State, :06.0; 2, Wayne Long, Oklahoma, :06.1; 3, Herb Washington, Michigan State, :06.1; 4, Mike Grodrich, Indiana, :06.2; 5, Earl Harris, Oklahoma State, :06.2 Jim Portwood v.1.2-7193 Ed Pugh v.1.3-9811 Jim Morley v.1.3-9811 SUA Office UN4-3977 60-yard high hurdles—1, Erv Hall, :07. 0; 2, George Carly, San Jose State, :07. 2; 3, George Buers, KU, :07. 3; 4, Jeff Howser, Duke, :07. 3; 5, Kwaku Frempong, Yale, :07. 4. Final team standings—Kansas, $41\frac{1}{2}$; Villanova, 33; San Jose State, 19%; Southern California and Tennessee, 16; Nebraska, 10; Harvard and Michigan State, 9; Brigham Young and Kansas State, 8; Michigan, 7; Florida, Miami of Ohio, St. John's, Wisconsin, and Oklahoma. $s$ 3:14.6; 2, KU; 3:16.9; 3, Catholic University; 3:17.2; 4, Villanova; 3:17.5; 5, Oklahoma, 3:17.6. Distance medley relay-1. Pole vault—1, Lee Smith, Miami of Ohio, 16-6; 2, Bob Seagren, Southern California, 16-6; 3, Tie, Bob Steinhoff, KU, and Sam Caruthers, 16-0; 5, Bob Spring, Tennessee, 16-0. Places based on fewest misses. Villanova, 9:45.8; 2, Southern California, 9:48.1; 3, St. John's, 9:48.4; 4, Drake, 9:51.5; 5, KU, 9:56.4. 600-yard run—1, Bill Wherwein, Michigan State, 1:09.8; 2, Audry Hardy, Tennessee, 1:10.1; 3, Danny Tague, Texas-El Paso, 1:10.8; 4, Garth Case, Nebraska, 1:10.9; 5, Carl Frazier, Iowa, 1:11.1. Texas-El Paso, Yale and Navy, 5; Indiana, Oklahoma State, Maryland, New York University, Notre Dame and William & Mary, 4; Ball State, Colorado, Drake, Duke, Missouri, Northwestern and Penn State, 2; and Furman, Iowa, and Kent State, 1. Two-mile relay-1, Kansas State, 7:32.2; 2, Notre Dame, 7:32.9; 3, Michigan, 7:33.0; 4, Missouri, 7:33.8; 5, Oklahoma State, 7:36.9. 1,000-yard run-Ray Arrington, Wisconsin, 2:08.0; 2, Byron Cyce, New York University, 2:08.1; 3, Jutis Luzins, William & Mary, 2:08.3; 4, Ralph Schultz, Northwestern, 2:09.3; 5, Keith Colburn, Harvard, 2:09.4. Ryun turns it on Make your house happy by giving it some new furniture, draperies, or carpeting (it deserves attention now and then, too). Chet Johnson has the perfect gift for your house. Stop by and let him show you his selection of fine quality furniture. Make your house more beautiful, more comfortable. What more could it ask? 724 Mass. VI 3-2448 What's so special about Beechwood Ageing? We must be bragging too much about Beechwood Ageing. Because we're starting to get some flak about it. Like, "Beechwood, Beechwood . . . big deal." And "If why don't you tell everybody what it is?" So we will. First, it isn't big wooden casks that we age Budweiser in. But it is a layer of thin wood strips from the beech tree (what else?) laid down in a dense lattice on the bottom of our glass-lined and stainless steel lagering tanks. This is where we let Budweiser ferment a second time. (Most brewers quit after one fermentation. We don't.) These beechwood strips offer extra surface area for tiny yeast particles to cling to, helping clarify the beer. And since these strips are also porous, they help absorb beer's natural "edge," giving Budweiser its finished taste. Or in other words, "a taste, a smoothness and a drinkability you will find in no other beer at any price." Ah yes, drinkability. That's what's so special about Beechwood Ageing. But you know that. But you know that. Budweiser is the King of Beers. (But you know that.) ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. - ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA • HOUSTON • COLUMBUS 9