Wednesdav. April 24. 1963 University Daily Kansan Page 9 University Daily Kansan SPORTS KU Bowling Team Wins NIBA Title The University of Kansas won the championship title of the National Intercollegiate Bowling Association finals Saturday. After winning the NIBA Kansas Conference championship, the Jayhawkers went to Northern University of Illinois, DeKalb, Ill., to compete with the nation's seven leading teams in the NIBA finals. The Jayhawkers defeated the other teams with the maximum points, 97.26. AMONG THE TEAMS competing for the championship were KU; Air Force Academy, Colorado Springs. Colo.; Bellarmine College, Louisville, Ky.; Mankato State College, Mankato, N.D.; La Crosse State College, La Crosse, Wis.; Central Missouri State College, Warrensburg, Mo.; the University of Akron, Akron, Ohio, and Siena College, Waterville, N.Y. Terrel Hays, Shawnee senior, was awarded a trophy for the top 10- game score, 2039, of the tournament. The other KU bowlers were Dave Rybolt, Ottawa junior, 1823; Donald Kahl, Tulsa, Okla., sophomore, 1825; Oklahoma won the just-completed conference postal bowling league, posting a 40 won-12 loss record. The Sooner team is the defending tournament champion, winning last year at the University of Colorado at Boulder. League Bowling Actions Begins Here Friday KU ENTERS THE tournament after closing out the league action in second place, winning 33 and losing 19. Iowa State finished a close third with a 31 won-21 lost record. Bassom C. Fearing, KU bowling coach and Union recreation manager, said that he will have to see the results of the next varsity practice before he decides who will represent KU in the tournament. Tournament regulations limit each school to five players with no substitutions. Saturday matches will start at 9:00 a.m. and continue until 5:30 p.m. Awards will be made at a banquet at the Kansas Union, 6:20 p.m. The six leading KU varsity bowlers, and their overall averages are: Donald Kahl, Tulsa sophomore, 193; Dave Rybolt, Ottawa junior, 187; Terrel Hays, Shawnee senior, 186; Leslie Mueller, Belleville, Ill. sophomore, 185; Bob Bowersock, Shawnee Mission junior, 185; and Harold Bunch, Kansas City, Kans. junior, 184. Hays is the captain of the KU squad. Rybelt is the secretary of the Big Eight League. PAIRING FOR THE tournament matches will be made at the coaches and captains meeting, 7 p.m., Friday. The first match will begin at 7:30 p.m. and the second and final match of the night will begin at 9:00. The tournament will be conducted on the Petersen Point system-one point per game won and one point for each fity pins. Leslie Mueller, Belleville, Ill., freshman, 1673; and Robert Bowersock, Shawnee Mission junior, 1866. The University of Akron and Siena College took the second and third place respectively in the tournament. In the NIBA Kansas Conference, KU won 63 of 84 games and lost 21 games. The other participants in the conference were the University of Wichita, won $ 49\frac{1}{2} $ -lost $ 34\frac{1}{2} $ Kansas State University, won 39 los 45; and Emporia State College, won $ 17\frac{1}{2} $ -lost $ 66\frac{1}{2} $ . Oklahoma University bowlers will be trying to continue their winning ways at the Big Eight Bowling Tournament to be held here at the Kansas Union Jaybowl, Friday and Saturday. Dodgers Eye Future With Howard's Specs By United Press International Frank Howard finally has put on glasses and suddenly the Los Angeles Dodgers can see a much rosier future ahead. Wearing the specs at bat for the first time last night, the six-foot-seven Howard hammered a home run in the bottom of the ninth inning to break up a tie and give the Dodgers a 2-1 victory over the Milwaukee Braves. HOWARD HAD considered putting on glasses for some time but didn't decide to wear them until shortly before last night's contest. Even though they won, the Dodgers still had their troubles. From the point of view of the Dodgers, who have been having their troubles lately, the big outfielder couldn't have picked a better time. They collected only two hits, one off starter Bob Shaw and the other off loser Claude Raymond. THEY ALSO MAY have lost their ace southpaw, Sandy Koufax, for a while. Koufax, who was sidelined for half the season last year with a finger ailment, suffered a muscle spasm in his left shoulder last night and was forced to leave after blanking the Braves on two hits for 6 2/3 innings. And merely to make sure the game had everything, Milwaukee Manager Bobby Bragan announced the Braves were playing under protest in the third inning. Bragan got his dander up over two successive balks called on Shaw by plate umpire Augie Donatelli. SAN FRANCISCO beat Cincinnati, 4-2, Chicago defeated Pittsburgh, 7-2, and St. Louis crushed Houston, 15-0, in the other scheduled National League games. Koufax entrusted a 1-0 lead to Ron Perranoski, who nursed it until the top of the ninth when Hank Aaron cracked out his fifth homer of the season to tie the score. Attendance Up For A's Games Athletics' owner Charles O. Finley decked his team out in bright green and gold suits this year to increase "color" in the game. However, most observers today said it was the colorful play, not uniforms, that was drawing the crowds. JOE'S BAKERY KANSAS CITY, Mo.—(UPI) The green and gold-clad Kansas City Athletics, besides making other teams green with envy with top division play, have struck gold at the home turnstiles. Statistics today showed that attendance for the first 10 home games was up 25,000 over last year to 99,943. Other statistics showed the A's in second place in the league, despite early forecasts for near the cellar ranking. Open 24 Hours Night Deliveries 412 W. 9th VI 3-4720 QUALITY CRAFTSMANSHIP at BUSH BODY WORKS formerly University Ford Body Shop "We Repair ALL Makes & Models" East 23rd St. VI 3-3006 The krone is local currency in Norway. So is this. Dining in Oslo? Hiring a guide to Skjeggedals Falls? Pay with BANK OF AMERICA TRAVELERS CHEQUES. Norwegians know them as well as Parisians do. And you, as a traveler, should know that they're loss-proof, theft-proof. Only your signature makes them valid, so they're money only you can spend. Sold at banks everywhere.