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On the one and, they are The Kansas Jayhawks received strong pitching performances from Dave Rusch and Clay Christiarsen Saturday as the Jayhawks swapped a doubleheader from the Washburn Ichabads at Quigley Field, 7-1 and 4-1. Smith y Selb. osewicz Cobb. Purecell Vrye verman. compassion numpbell maurin 'O'Shea Jarsulille 'Higbee 'Hornton 'Connor 'unrender enstrand Rusch allowed three hits and struck out seven in the opener, raising his season record to 3-1. Christiansen hurried a four-shot victory, but Kauffman one-alleh his record at 2-2. In the first game, the Jayhawks jumped on Washburn starter Larry Meikel for two runs in the first inning. The key hit came by Dryl Anne Gilmor. With two outs and the Sports bases loaded, Gilmore singed into right field, driving in two runs. THE 'HAWKS scored one run in the second inning when Ron MacDonald doubled, scoring Stan Messner from second. KU added an unearned run in the third when Carl Heinrich singled and scored on a two-base error. Washburn scored its lone run in the fourth inning when lead-off hitter Mike Custenbrow walked and advanced to second on an infield single by Gary Conwell, the first hit allowed by Rusch. Custenbrow scored a double hit for Murray Lord doubled the right field line. MacDonald made it 4-1 in the bottom of the fourth with his second home run of the season, sending a Meilek fast ball over the left field fence. ALL-BIG EIGHT candidate Carl Heinrich's two-run honer in the sixth, his second of the year, rounded out the scoring. Rusch was pleased with his outing, his tourth straight complete game, and was ready to step on. He was "Our bats were alive today, and we were really stinging the ball." Rusch said. "The team was very good, and they commit an error. It's easier to win when we play as we did today." Henrich paced the eight-hit attack with a home run and two singles. THE 'HAWKS found the going a little tougher in the second game as the Ichabods grabbed an early lead by scoring an unearned run in the first inning. KU didn't touch Washburn starter Greg Cartwright until the fourth inning when Lee ice-singed to the left for KU's first hit of the game. ice advanced to second on a sacrifice bunt by Heinrich and scored the tying run when he crossed over. KU took the lead in the fifth when Vince Monalong sung, stole second and came over to help. Meanwhile, Christiansen kept control, retiring 11 straight during one four-hour shift. **THE 'HAWKS** added two insurance runs in the sixth when Jeff Watson walked and scored on a double by Scott Wright. Monslow followed with a single to left, scoring Wright and giving the Hawks the 4-1 victory. Gilmore, playing in his first game following a four-game suspension for breaking curfew, had a good day at the Mets, where he played in five bats and drove in three runs. "I was just trying to relax and make contact," Gilmore said. "I felt I let the team down last week when I was suspended, and I owed them something. I felt bad about what I did, but I'm thankful Coach Temple gave me a second chance." THE JAYHAWKS received another surprise from the bottom of their lineup, when the eighth and ninth spot hitters drove in runs in the second game. "I think the most pleasant thing of the afternoon was the performance of the bottom part of the lineup," Temple said. "We've been getting good results from our first five hitters, but to be productive we must receive maximum effort from the bottom third of the lineup. We received that effort Saturday." Temple said he thought the strong performance turned in by Christians would be a result of his efforts. "Clay had two good outings in Texas then got shelled in his third appearance." TEMPLE ALSO noted that the starting pitchers threw a minimal number of pitches: Christiansen, 84 and Rusch, 86. Temple said. "He was doubting himself a bit this week, but his performance should help." Pre-season reports that doubted the team's strength were ignored Friday as the Jayhawks won both games of a doubleheader against Northwest Missouri State, B-2 and 4-2, at Holcom Sports Complex. There's some credence to the caution, "Don't believe everything you read." And the KU softball team has proved the strength of that warning. Coach Bob Stanclift was pleased. Softball team wins doubleheader By COURTNEY THOMPSON Trackmen beat rain, foes in Dallas meet Associate Sports Editor Competing in the pole vault for UTEP was the French national champion, Patrick Abada, who finished fourth in the 1976 summer Olympics at Montreal. Abada elected to pass until the bar was raised to 15. But one of the bumps had been eliminated. Sports Writer By ROB RAINS The Jayhawks, in their first outdoor meet of the season, led the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP) by two points, 93-91, with players to go, the pole vault and the mile relay. The Kansas track team was in contention for the Dallas Invitational title Saturday, but it took a break to finally clinch the win for them. ABADA, JUMPING in a rain that had plagued the day-long meet, failed to clear the height on any of his three jumps and didn't place in the event. Tad Scales of KU was third in the heat and gave Hawks a finish in the mile relay, gave the Hawks a 105-95 triumph. "We thought for a while that we were way off, the head coach Bob Timmons said yesterday. We were in a position to win the thing. We had been scoring points all along but so had If Abadha had won the event, he would have lifted his team to a two-point victory. FINISHING BEHIND UTEF were defending Alabama, 76 Texas, 71% Texas, Oklahoma, 76 Texas, 71% Texas. Jim Prodrebarc finished first in the shot put with a toss of 56-74%. Richard Foster placed fifth and Doug Roffheart sixth for KU, which saw 35 points nearly half the final score, come from the seven field events. THE OTHER first place for the Jayhawks came from the 440-yard relay team of Kevin Newell, Dust Blatcher, Cliff Wiley and Anthony Coleman who led Tennessee by two-hundredths of a second to win in 41.25 seconds. AARM 52, Baylor 49% and host Southern Methodist with 13. The Jayhawks recorded only three first-place finals, meet, rely on their rosters, and have a record of 5-2. Newell also came in third in the 100 meters—the only race which was run in meters—and third in the 220. Wiley finished second in the 100, running 10.61. U.S. Olympian Johnny Jones of Texas won in 10.47. The Jayhawks went three-four-six in the javelin, four-five in the 440, and got a second from Tommy McCall in the 880 and a fifth in the 720. In the six-kilometer round out their scoring. "I don't think you could look at the marks and make comparisons with a meet run in the city," he said. All for $1.99 Chef's Special Steak Includes salad, beverage choice of potato and sizzler toast. Limit one dinner por person (Good thru Thursday, March 31) Good only at 1516 W. 23rd St. Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Special April Fools Day rates-15 word ad, $1.50, additional words .01 each Don't let April 1st pass you by without sending a Kansan Classified Advertisement In order to appear April 1, ads must be placed at the Kansan Business Office, 111 Flint Hall, by 5 p.m. Wed., March 30. The ATID Jewish Bookmobile is coming! Tuesday, March 29 10:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. In front of the Union on Jayhawk Boulevard Philosophy, Fiction, Poetry, Festivals . . . 20% Discount on Most Titles! Sponsored by Hillel, K.U. Jewish Students --eliminates a lot of worries and takes the pressure off the pitchers." DISCOVER EUROPE THIS SUMMER Over 150 Low-Cost Charter Flights to Paris, London and Amsterdam. Designed for students, teachers and University staff. Leave almost any day from May 30 through August 6. Stay in Europe from 4 to 12 weeks. For folders and reservations, contact your SUA/Maupintour travel agent in the Kansas Union Lobby. SUA Maupintour travel service Telephone 843-1211/900 Mass/Hillcrest/The Malls "For an opening game I couldn't expect much more," Stancil said. "We made a few errors, but they were mechanical, not mental and those are easily correctable." BOTH STARTING pitchers, Gloria Graves and Shelley Sinclair, gave strong performances for KU. Northwest Missouri got only seven hits in two games. "We've got two top-nopitches," Stancliff said. "Shelley looked strong and did a super job, going the last 5 innings without allowing a hit there, but strong against him, it has been hard in because they had a couple of runs already." Catcher Paula Woolworth also was im- Catcher Paula Woolworth also was impressed with KU's pitching. "Both were hitting the corners well and bad Northwest chasing after the ball. One of Shelley's pitches picked a blood vessel in my hand." "I don't think I could expect anything better," he said. His smile kept everyone going. "Kevin, everything is fine." WOLWORTH WAS one of the pre-season doubts because she was a replacement for Marci Penner, who was injured. But Woolworth seemed to have no trouble taking over the job and looked anything but inexperienced. in the first game, KU scored two runs in the first inning against Northwest's starter, Sheryl Wurster, who was 11-1 with a 0.97 E.R.A. last season. That was enough insurance for KU's Gloria Graves. She gave up two runs in the sixth, but by then the Jayhawks were ahead. The 17th run ended on two walks and allowed only three hits. Stancliff said KU's hitting, would be strong and he was right. The Jayhawks got 10 hits in the first game and nine in the second. The Jayhawks took a while to get things going in that game. Northwest's Cindy Williams kept KU scoreless through three imminus. AFTER PLAYING left field in the inplayer and going 2-for-3 Shelley Sinland followed with another strong pitching performance and hit four home runs four hits, walked two and struck out four. But singles by Donna Sullivan and Debbie Kuhn, a wild pitch by Williams and a double by Karen Scheller gave KU two runs. In the fifth Kelly Phipps tripped, Nancy Stout doubled and Sullivan singled to give KU two more runs. $1000 REWARD FOR MURPHY PATTY PLEASE COME HOME The men of SAE wish to offer a $1000 reward for information concerning the whereabouts of Brother Patty Murphy. Murphy is described as 6 feet tall, 180 lbs., brown hair, green eyes and smelling of Scotch. Murphy's excessive drinking habits have caused concern among the brothers as he has been known to have spent days-on-end wandering the streets in search of his lost love "Juicy" Lucy Pattie while under the influence. Any information concerning Murphy should be sent with stamped self-addressed envelope to: Find Murphy, 1301 West Campus. No phone inquiries please. Recreation Services Rm. 208 Robinson Recreation Tennis (singles, doubles, & Co-Rec) Meeting March 29th at 5:00 p.m. Rm. 205 Robinson Gym Must attend to enter. INTRAMURAL TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT Saturday and Sunday, April 2nd & 3rd Entry Deadline—Thursday, March 31st, 12 noon Applications In Rm. 208 Robinson • Free Admission Applications in Rm. 208 Robinson o Free Admission 841 Massachusetts