Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, May 15, 1964 Jayhawkers Face Tough Competition Unusual pressure is upon the KU track and baseball teams this weekend. Coach Bill Easton's varsity trackmen face what Easton has termed the roughest league competition in years at the Big Eight Conference outdoor track meet at Stillwater, Okla., today and tomorrow. The Missouri Tigers are favored and will be depending heavily on their star middle distance man and miler, Robin Lingle. CHARLES MOORE, 6-3 Des Moines, Ia., outfielder who saw his first hit wiped out by the rare batting-out-of-turn ruling last Saturday, will draw his first starting assignment today as KU opens its final Big Eight road series at Colorado A featured event in the meet will be the pole vault which will feature a dual between Floyd Manning of KU, who became the holder of this year's collegiate vault mark two weeks ago in a dual meet with Southern Illinois at Carbondale, and Jim Farrell of Oklahoma. KU must rely upon the three-mile in one-two-three order. Bill Silverberg, Paul Acevedo and John Lawson are the KU runners in that event. in track, KU is expected to make things rough for Mizzou as are the Oklahoma Sooners. The Sooners will place their hopes in recently injured sprinter-hurdler Anthony Watson. rarrall, however, has cleared 15- $9 \frac{1}{2}$, and will be anything but a pushover in the pole vault. THE JAYHAWKER baseball team goes into this semifinal series with their 10-5 second-place standing at stake. Close up are Iowa State (7-4) which hosts last place Kansas State (3-9), and Oklahoma (8-7), which is at Oklahoma State (3-7). Manning cleared 16-1¾ in his record-breaking effort. The Jayhawkers came home Tuesday and Wednesday to close the season against Missouri's 13-0 league-leaders. The Jayhawks beat the defending champs 5-2 earlier this season, and have posted a 14-2 record overall. The KU tennis team hopes to break through Oklahoma State's domination for its first Big Eight tennis crown since 1948. Scheduled for a first-division finish, the KU golf team is expected to battle with Colorado for third place in the conference. Ethan Smith can show you how to get an accurate estimate on your move Developed by experts, the North American Van Lines method of estimating is "Quality Controlled" for accuracy. Our men have been trained to use this system, so if you are moving across town or cross-country, call for a FREE estimate. There is no obligation. Ethan Smith Moving & Storage 808 Penn. V1 3-0380 YOUR NORTH AMERICAN VAN LINES AGENT We'd like to say some nice things about America's young adult drivers And we think we've got good reason! Last January, we selected twenty 18- and 19-year-old young men and women through the Junior Achievement program to drive our team of Chevolets in the Mobil Economy Run, April 3-9. It was the first time any company had relied entirely on drivers with limited experience in this exacting competition. We brought these young adults—most of them college students, some from the business world—to Arcadia, California, in late February. For six weeks, our expert teachers trained them in the skills of economy driving. We were going against the grain. It takes high proficiency to win the Mobil Economy Run. Competition is tough. Why did we rely Then, on April 3, they set off on the Run, 3,243 miles from Los Angeles to New York. on drivers with such limited experience? Chevrolet wanted to give the Chevy Teen Team a chance to prove in front of the nation that they and the 6.5 million licensed drivers in their age bracket are safe, same people behind the wheel. We felt the Run offered a splendid chance. The Corvair, Chevy IIs, Chevelles and Chevrolets driven by the Chevy Teen Team in the Mobil Economy Run did remarkably well compared with the class winners in overall miles-per-gallon figures. The final results are a tribute to the high degree of driving skill displayed by the Chevy Teen Team representing the youth of America. No wonder we're proud of America's young adult drivers. We couldn't have a better reason. The Cars Everyone Can Drive Economically