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COSLIN SETS PACE WITH 4 OF 16 HITS Gets Home Run, Two Dou-| bles and Single—Al Thomas Rescuer of Weaver. BY JOHN B. KELLER. 'HILADELPHIA, April 22— | Suddenly recovering the punch that had been miss- ing for more than a week, the Nationals fell upon a flock of pitchers this afternoon in the wind-up of the series here to drub the Athletics, 10 to 7, and put to an end a losing streak that had run to four games. Sixteen hits rattied off the bats of the Griffith guards, one of them Goose Goslin's second home run of the cam- paign. There also were five two-bag- | gers, two of them banged by the W ! Goose of the Potomac. It was Goslin's biggest day at bat since his return to the Nationals from the Browns, ior in | all he collected four saleties from his | six trips to the plate. In scoring their first victory in five | starts, the Nationals showed plenty of | fight. Monte Weaver, their starting| pitcher, put them in a sad situation Tight off the reel when his wildness backed by some substantial Mack maul- ing as well as some fluky hitting staked the nome side to a four-run get away But the Cronin crew came right back to knot the count in the second session and from then on the game was all theirs. Wind tos.ed pops figured greatly in the early scoring, but each side was favored by the near gale that cross Shibe Park from lett field to right.| After that come back, however, the| Nationals got their runs mainly from fine, earnest hitting. HE venerable Connie Mack paraded five pitchers to the hill and three | feld. making five putouts, all with gocd | Ful. were found for tallies. Tony | Freitas, the chunky little left hander | started and remained in action long enough to take the beating. Lee Roy Mahaffey, Gowell Claset, another south- | paw, and Bill Dietrich then carried on through the eighth inning. Big George Earnshaw took a turn in the ninth and yielded the final Washington score. The Mack moundsmen chucked in eight | s to help the Nationals, but the its gleaned off them were far more helpful as six of the walked batters, never found the plate. After Joe Cronin, the boy field boss, decided that one inning was enough for ‘Weaver, he sent Al Thomas to the fir- ing line, and Al justified his selection | in the best of style. The A’s got 7| of their 10 hits and three of their five passes in the eight rounds he withstood | the chilling breeze. But Tommy never | ‘was seriously pressed outside of the sixth session, when the A's managed to whittle the Nationals’ lead to one run Then it was no fault of the pitcher | that they scored. twice the rally being due to erratic infield play As Tommy scored his initial \'scmry‘ of the campaign, he showed no signs of any weakness in the arm that had to be doctored by a Chicago surgeon last Fall. He pitched at top speed from the start of his turn, and was in fine fettle at the finish. Few of the hits made off him other than a homer | whacked by Mickey Cochrane in the fifth were really solid blows. 'O walks, ‘with & bunted slnxle sandwiched between, filled the bases with A's in the first frame. | After Foxx fanned, Bishop tallied as Miller drove into a force-out. The breeze twisted Finney's hoist to short center so much that Myer couldn't grab the ball cleanly, It land- ed for a double, chasing over two runs Higgins then slammed a real two-bag- ger to put across & fourth marker. Singles by Cronin and Schulte and Kuhel's stroll crowded the sacks with none out in the Nationals’ second turn. Bluege and Sewell merely lofted feebl but Harris picked up Weaver's bat an: popped to short center. Bishop-danced around under the sphere, only to miss | Pion Yankees for the first time in this ‘red ink factorles. the catch, so three runs crossed. while | Harris pulled up at the middle sta- tiom Myer rifled a double to left to get home the tieing tally. Goose Goslin’s home run shot over the right-field wall broke the deadlock at the outset of the third frame and in the next the Griffith guards amassed 8 really respectable lead. Al Thomas | singled with one down and scampered | to third when Myer hit for a base.| A run went over as Manush forced: out Myer. A hoist by Goslin was buf- feted by the breeze and finally landed in center for a double. Manush took third on the hit, then raced home when Williaims fafled to_check Cramer's re. turn of the ball. Cronin stepped up t& single Goslin to_the counting block and Freitas to the shower. HE A's got back one score in the fifth when Cochrane poled his first homer of the season, a liner over the right-field barrier, and after the the Washington defense cracked in the sixth they were only one run behind. ‘There was one out in this round when ‘Willlams put up a pop in front of the plate. Sewell and Bluege couldn’t de- cide who should try for the catch and a single resulted. Coleman batted for Mahaffey and singled. Bishop pushed | My a double-play chance at Myer, but Buddy chucked wildly to Cronin at sec- ond and Willlams counted. Cramer’s single sent home Cihocki. running for Coleman. Cochrane’s walk loaded the bases and put it up to Foxx. All Jimmy | did was tap into a two-way erasure. ‘That the end for the A’s, but the Nationals picked up scores in their last two turns. Goslin's double and Cronin’s single off Claset were good for a tally in the eighth and Sewell's walk, Al Thomas' sacrifice and Myer's single off Earnshaw ylelded a marker in the Fc nin Griffs’ Records @ > =b 3 00 PR e o P P B SeoccssosomrueR SR~ | Alexander | the old fight. SPORTS SECTION he Sunday Stard WASHINGTON, erst Is Injured, ‘ But Manush Toils | Special Dispatch to The Star. HILADELPHIA Aprfl 22 —Heinie nush, Nationals’ left fielder, hnd his rlght wrist badly sprained as he fell while trying to catch Lou Finney's liner in the third inning of today’s ball game at Shibe Park. Manush played through the game, however, and should the wrist not be greatly swollen he will face the Yan- kees as they open a series in Wash- ington tomcrrow. After the game here Manush com- plained that the sore wrist prevented him getting a firm grip on the bat, but said it did not interfere with his fielding. He injured the same wrist several seasons ago while he was with the St Louis Browns. \ CONBS' SLAM PUTS YANKS OVER, 2101 Triples and Scores 'on Fly to Give Pipgras Edge Over Rhodes. ° By the Associated Press. OSTON, April 22—Earl Combs slashed a triple against right-, center field wall in the eighth | inning and broke up a neat pitching duel to give the Yankees a 2-1 victory cver the Red Sox, their seventh in succession. | As Joe Sewell flied out Combs scored with the run that enabled George Pipgras to outpoint Gordon “Dusty Rhodes on the mound. Pipgras gave 3 \ hits and Rhodes 5. Babe Ruth had a busy day in right- | | catches after long runs. New York AB. Boston AB.H.O. Gombs.cl v 55 4 3 4230 McMns.3b 3 Alexan b 4 of 3 3 3 o i 3 Crosettiss 2 s Piperasp Rhodes.p. Totals.. i New York0 0 0 0 0 1 0 Boston 6 0, 0 0 b 10 Runs_—Combs, Crosetti, McManus. Errors | Crosetti, 2. Rups ted in—Gehrig. well. Alexander. hits-Crosetti, e bae MitCombs. _ Sac- | rifice—Lazzeri. Double plays—Hodapp to Warstler to Alexander. Warstler to_Hodal to Alexander. Left on bases_New York. Base_on balls—Off Pipgras, Struck out—By Pipsras, esirs. Hildebrand, Kolls Time of game—L hour and 5 Totals of | Umbpires Dinneen. minutes, SOCCER MATCH TODAY. uled this afternoon between German-American first team and the Marlboro eleven on Benning Field at|} 3 o'clock. It will e the first meeting | in a year or more between these formid- | 2 able teams and good competition is| expected. I3 | Cincinnati PIET'S BINGLE WINS FORBUCS IN TENTH Makes Liner Kgamst Reds With Bases Full—“Lucky" Seventh Fatal to Fan. | By the Associated Press. ITTSBURGH, April 22.—Cracking | cut a whistling liner in the tenth with the bases full, Tony Piet gave the Pirates a 6 to 5 victory over the Cincinnati Reds today. Louis Raphael, 55, of Pittsburgh, a fan, fell dead in the stands during the seventh inning, in which the Bucs scored two runs. Jim Bottomley’s homer in the first, | with Morrissey on bese, gave the neds a two-run lead at the outset. ABH.Q A Pitisbeh ™ 5 it Ginein, G'thay Mor n b 4 Botley.ib 4 b ABH. O |t | Lo'bardi.c Rice.rf.. | Reetiger.rf Totals. . 31 Totals. .¥1 14 30 13 *None out when winning run was scored Pittsburgh D0F0002001-6 DODGERS EVEN SERIES l Carroll Checks Phils in Pinches to Take 6-to-2 Game. BROOKLYN, April 22 (#).—The Phillies couldn’t hit Owen Carroll when | hits meant runs today and Brooklyn's | Dodgers came through with a 6-to-2 | victory to even their two-game series. Carroll yielded nine hits and four | walks, but was so steady with men on the sacks that the Phils earned only one | The Dodgers hit safely only seven | times, but bunched them neatly and | took advantage of Philadelphia plavs hile. Boilfver.. Bartell ss. AB.H.O. A Biivn. H. i Liski *McCurdy Pickrelp. 1Todd Hansenp. a1 inning. mning. 010 200 Taylor, Stripp, E *Baited for Liska in seventh tBatted for Pickrel in eighth Philadelphia Brookiyn . Runs—Fullis, Plowers %), Bissonette tell, Dugas (2, Wiison. | Klein, Stripp. Wi Philadeiphia. 115 Brookivi. balis—Off Carroll, 4: off Raem. off Pickrel. 1. Struck out- fl Rhem. 4 in A%y innings: innings: off Pickrel, 1 in 1 inning! | Sen. none in | inning. Losing pitcher e mpires - Messts. Stark and Kiem Hiton D. C, o | Tume ot ‘same- hours. SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL Griffmen, ‘Bloody but Unbowed,’ Open Desperate 3-Game Stand With Yankee ‘Decrepits’ Today By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. HILADELPHIA, April 22.—Mauled and mangled, but still confident they're really good, the Nationals are returning home grimly de- | termined to put up a great argument as | they run up against the world cham- American League campaign. That the Yanks are striding along ln‘ seven league boots doesn't appear to | have the Griffith guards unduly -n-1 noyed. Maybe the boys are a trifle punch-drunk from the battering they have had in the early going, but they | seem to be hopeful of going ahead in | the trio of tussles due to start tomorrow in the Washington ball yard. ‘The Griffs still have a lot of faith in themselves. Didn't a Washington club | not so powerful (on paper, anyway) as the present outfit hold these same Yankees to an even break in 22 games | last year? Nothing less, these “new | deal” Nationals point out and reflection | leads them to believe they’ll do no| worse. So it won't be a dispirited Capital | ¥ | | club that tackles the Yankees in Grif- | fith stadium. In fact, it'll be full of | But to make the battling | brisk, it had better be full of pitching | and batting too. SNAPPING OUT OF IT ‘WASHINGTON. s er, 2b. . 5 Man Goslin, rf. Cronin. ss Schulte. cf.” % Kubel. 1b Blue Sew Weaver, *Harris A Themas, . ». Totals *Batted for PHILADELPHIA. Bishop, sscmmuwmamad Earnshaw, Totals +Ran for Colel iBatted rmr Bretrich in- elehth. Washingtor Phiiadelphia —Harrls (@), Myer (2), . Miller, Finney ler. Sewell. ul Thomas. Double plays—Higgins to Bisho A. Thomas to Seweil to Kuhel. Lefi on bases—Washington, 8 Pirst Keaver, base on off T Preit : off Mahafley, 1: e oA Bleirich, 1+ 'off Clasel: Slruck Qit—By Weaver. 1. by Thomas Preitas, —Off Weaver, % in 7,10 8 lnning Mahafl fT Cl i 114 tnine T Caies: of Earnsha wild | nc ud ity 9! with Earl Whitehill and. according to | right side. IOMETHING must be done about this New York club, and quickly, too, if the American League is to have | & championship chase to the merry tune of clicking turnstiles. A few more weeks of this Yankee parade and the base ball bosses will be buying out the While the experts were picking the Yanks to repeat in the pennant pur- suit, they admitted the club was not really great. Yet the Yanks carry on, despite the many defects in their or-| ganization noted by the wise ones of | the game. Babe Ruth’s underpinning is so fragile | the big buster hardly can hobble, Earl | Comb’s arm is made of glass. Ben Chnpman is the best booter of ground balls in the majors. It's a wreck of an outfield. Joe Sewell is far past the age for a big league third baseman. At chort stop the club has in Frank Cro- setti a plaver who can neither field nor hit. Only half of the inner cordon is functioning. That'’s the New York club today, and your answer as to how it wins is as good as the next man’s. | Everyone seems to know the Yankees | are in a desperate situation, except the; Yankees themselves. And no one has been able to make them realize it. The Red Sox couldn't. The A's were un- able to impress it upon them: | Passing the word to the Yanks is squarely up to the Nationals now. ANAGER CRONIN has about de- cided to give the Yankges a good | dose of southpaw slabbing while | they are sojourning in Griffith Stadium. He will open fire against them tomorrow his present program. come back Mon- dav_with Walter Stewsrt. While neither of these pitchers was |’ particularly successful against the New York nabobs last year, the boy field boss feels these left-handers, with the better backing they now are supposed to have, are his best bets for service against a batting order so top-heavy | with left-hand swingers as is Joe Mc- Carthy’s jumble. Only Chapman. Laz- zeri and Crosetti of the first eight in the Yankee hitting order bat from the ‘What's more, Whitehill and Stewart are the only regular starters of the Capital crew with rest emough back of them to step to the hill in the first two clashes of the series If assigned as plarned. Whitehill will have had four days cf rest, Stewart three. Al Crowder may get the call for the ‘Tuesday geme. His choice. however, will depend greatly upon how the Na- tionals fare in the earlier engagements. Figuring on pitchers with the Yankees around is uncertain business at best. Homer Standing By the Associated Press. runs nufdny—nonomlzy. Vergez, Giants, 1; Goslin, Nationals, 1; Cochrane, Athletics, l: Lea umu—-Anmun. 5; thnfl.“r Total, 33. . 'WEST, SCHULTE TOP JUNIOR LOOP HITTERS Sam, Swapped by Griffs for Fred, Leads Rival by 11 Points. Simmons Is Third. By the Associated Press. NOTHER sudden change in batting form jumped Sam West from third place to first in the Ameri- can League standing yesterday. dropped Al Simmons from second to third and plunked Manager Marty McManus of Boston from the top clear out of the big six. The order of the National | League half was left unchanged, al- though Pie Traynor's average dropped 11 points as he made two hits in five times up. West hit two out of four and Simmons one out of three. Fred Schulte of Washington moved into second in the American League, | boosting his average to .406 with thr!!‘ hits in five attempts. The standing: Erederick. Dodgers. H 5 3 1 13 14 Simmons, White Sox TIES 9.6 CENTURY MARK Cleveland Schoolboy, Also Wins 220, Broad Jump. MANSFIELD. Ohio, April 22 (#.— Jesse Owens. cinder-path comet of East Technical High School, Cleveland, today tied the national interscholastic record Owens, | of 9.6 seconds for the 100-yard dash, set last Summer by Draper of Hunting- | mln dl’nk. Calif. Owens ran against the wind.. Competing in the seventh annual Mansfield relays, he also won the 220- yard dash and the brosd Jump. MRS. MYER OPERATED ON, ‘While Buddy Myer was helping the .Nationals defeat the A’s yesterday, Mrs. Myer was operated yon for appendicitis by Dr. Stanley ite at Emergency Hulslpml The patient is reported doing wel Southern Association. New Orleans, 7; Atlanta, 1. Chattanooga, 5; Little Rock, 4. Menphis, 8; Nashville, 2. Knoxville-Birmingham, wet grounds. American Association. | St. Paul. 6; Louisville, 2. Columbus, 3; Milwaukee, 2 (10 in- nings) Indianapolis, 2; Minneapolis, 1. International. Baltimore, 5; Montreal, Toronto, 11; Jersey Cit Newark, 5; Rochester, 2. Buffalo, 8; Albany, 5. Pacific Coast. San Francisco, 5; Oakland, 4. Sacramento, 9; Los Angeles, 7. Portland, 5; Holywood, 3. Missions, 5; Seattle, 2. Texas. Tulsa, 3; Oklahoma Clty. 0. FDrt W th 8; Dllh.s E 3. 3. 23, 1933. o MARBERRY WINNER, BROWN HIS VICTIN | Detroit Tr|ms St. Lou1s, 5-1, With Former Griffmen Op- posing. on Slab. By the Associated Press ETROIT, April 22.—Fred D Marberry, now cf the De- troit Tigers, whose forte | notch relief hurler, went the full route today to defeat St. Louis, 5 to 1, defeating Lloyd Brown, also a former Griffman. §t, Louis ABH.O.A, Sch'r'in.3b g Weste. . | Reyn'las.1i Burn~.1b. Gullic.rf Ferre Melil Leveyss.. Brownp. . | Stiles.p. . Garms® . Detroit. Fox.cf ow Stone.rt GingTib 2 Grberg.ib i Walker.if . R Tota *Batted for Browa in 10000000 1102001035 vest. Fox (2). Walker batted in Roge! | st. Louw Detroit Sren Runs % Runs, . 'Stolen base— Stone. Gehringer. Double plays—West to Melillo; Ferrell to Melillo. Left on bases—— . & 8t. Louis. 6. Bases on balls—Off | off Brown, truck_out— 3 by Brown. 3. Hits—Off Brown. nings: off Stiles, 1 in 1 inning. Wild" pitch—-Brown, . Losing pitcher—Brown Umpires—Messrs. McGowan and Summers. Time of game—1 hour 46 minutes. ‘Nats “Stop Foxx to Beat A’ s By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. A’s” was the Nationals’ conten- tion as they entered the final | of the series here today, and it proved | 38 |sound. As the club shattered its four- game losing streak, Cronin's pitchers | certainly had the big Eastern sho’ boy |in tow. Only one hit and that a measly scratch made the last time he stepped to the plate was tapped by Jimmy. ‘The first time up Foxx was fanned by Weaver. He flied out in the second round, fouled out in the fifth and tapped to Al Thomas to start a double play when the A's had the bases loaded in the sixth. Trying to pull away from a pitch in the ninm Jlmmy topped the ball down the SUNDAY, APRIL 23, 1933. AMERICAN YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Washington, . New York, Chicago, NATIONAL YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. . Bittsburgh. 4 Cincinnatl. 5 (10, innings). Boston. 7; New York, 8t Louis. 2: kiyn, 6; rhu.-Jelpmm 2. 8nuo1g 011.000 PREb T 11.833 667 21.667 New York.I-. 5 4 | St_Louis. | 5 Chicago.. 41470 (EE 3 41470 31.400 41.200 51 51 61 0161 GAMES TODAY. GAMES TOMORROW. N. Y. at Wash. (3:00). New York at Wash. Phils. at Boston. t. B Loulk af Detrolt. GAMES TODAY. GAMES TOMOREOW. Bittaban at St Touis. Pltab'eh at 8t Louis. e e Suam Phlia. ¢ New York. HILADELPHIA, April 22.—“Stop | Jimmy Foxx and you beat the | Thcmas barely missed a pick-up, and | the dribble went for a one-baser. A high wind swceplng Shibe Park made the afternoon miserable for the | ‘ficlders but Sewell and Bishop man- aged to do some fine work. Sewell got | under a brace of nerve-racking fouls at critical moments, while Bishop into short right and center, staggered under whirling flies, but always got them after missing that damaging one put up by Harris in the second. Myer pulled & smart one in the first inning, only to run into a double play. When Higgins, after a long sprint, | juggled Manush’s foul before complet- ing a catch, Buddy set sail for second, third sacker’s throw. Cramer was credited with a hit for his bunt in the Macks' first turn, but Kuhel might well have been charged with an error for dropping the throw from Bluege, who had made a flashy pickup. THe ball got to the first sacker while Cramer was two strides dway from base. Kuhel, though, made two spectacular catches of fouls. His grab of Bishop's in the fourth was a masterpiece. had to run far back along the right field line to get to the ball soaring hither and yon in the near gale. Manush and Miller thrilled with grabs that killed long hits. In the sixth, the veteran Mackman tore across right field to keep a good clout from Goslin. At the start of the seventh, Heinie backed against the grand stanc wall near thé foul line and leaped to spear with one hand Miller's smash. ‘There was some stealing for a change. Maybe the boys were running to warm. Miller made Weaver Iook foolish in the first inning & ilfering second while the pitcher held l.ha ball. Sewell stole the same sack in the seventh, and so did Kuhel in the eighth. Cochrane didn't throw either time, as third was occupied. Although it was the coldest day of the series, the biggest crowd was out. Something like 10,000 shivered m the long game. tore | has been thgt of a top-| | Gale Induces Thrilling Plavs‘ | le | | | but was barely beaten there by the | X | Joe | V- linoi: d | Bipots —By. TOM DOERER BRAVES GARNER 16 HITS all on Four Giant Twirlers Winning “Comedy,” 7 to 3. NEW YORK, April 22 (#)—The Bos- ton Braves pounded a quartet of Giant | pitchers for 16 hits today and took a “comedy” ball game, 7 to 3. Boston scored five runs in the third | inning, clouting Ray Starr and Adolf Luque for five safeties and having three New York errors tossed in. AB. in 0 o 0 1 Beilp 1 fLesiie. .. “Totals 3 for Luque in fourth. Shores in_sixth. for Ryan in ninth, iBatted for Ben"in nimih: Boston L105010000-7 New York' D10110000 0= Runs—M; Urbansk hits—Mancuso. Gyselnian "l hree-base it OK. run—Vergez. Stolen Mangum. Double plays Boston. WILE KING MAKES ONE OF 7 RECORDS Childress Beats Charles in Decathlon, but Scoring Is Unusually Low. BY CHARLES GRUMMICH, Associated Press Sports Writer. EMORIJL STADIUM, LAW- RENCE, Kans., April 22, —Glenn Cunningham up- held his prestige as king !of American milers today at the eleventh annual Kansas relays | carnival and broke one of the | seven records erased in the first | major test of the Midwestern out- | door track and field season. The Kansas middle distance ace, de- fending -the 1,500-meter run champion- ship, decisively shattered his own mark and. on a heavy track was only 2.1 seconds slower than the American record in defeating Glen Dawson of the Tulsa Athletic Association. \ Dawson, the national indoor 1,000~ meter champion, who had beaten Cunningham in one of two indoor mile races, finished 19 strides behind the Jayhawk ace, who led most of the way after letting the Oklahoman set the pace on the first lap. Cunningham was timed at 3:53.3. The mark he eslabllshed at the first running of the Ol\m ic mile” last year was 4:02.5 B Pers H(Ei: o;fiy other open event, the lecathlon, was won by Charles Childress, 22-year-old senior in the Central Missouri State Teachers’ College at Warrensburg, who conquered Wilson (Buster) Charles, Oneida Indian, who was national all-around champion in 1930 and fourth-place yinner in the last Olympic decathlon. Childress, runner-up to James A. Bausch in the decathlon last year, won only two first places in the 10 events, ;zxtn;::regu with 6 victories for Charles, e Missourian pressed ahead while Charles Taltered. iz | e Indian’s marks were considered | below the best he has made in com- petition and Childress’ winning 7454.04 points did not approach Bausch's record total Charles amassed 7431.11. mfi) event records remained intact. e entrants were handicapped b; sodden infield resulting rrolrjnperami which also left the cinders spongy. A crowd of 5000 turned out for the | carnival. The University of Indiana made off with championships in the 4-mile and 1-mile relays, third in the medley, second in the discus throw and fourth |in the broad jump. lose behind was the University of Illinois, with first in the 15-mile relay, second in both the 1,-mile and 4-mile baton gevents, first in the shot-put and | two tled for first in the pole vault, 'dommated by Capt. Estil Lenington and 4| Seely of the Illini. Kansas State College was first in the | medley, second in the 2-mile relay and second in the shuttle hurdles. With Bill Newblock, defending high | jump champion, taking first again in | the high jump, the University of | Oklahoma won one championship, three ,second places; and three thirds. | Nebraska took first in the broad jump, lsecmnd in the medley. third in the -mile relay, third in the 100-yard dnsh and fourth in the high hurdles. VIRGINIA BEATS NAVY Largest Crowd in 15 Years Sees Luck Pitch 3-1 Victory. UNIVERSITY, ‘Va. April 22 () .— . The largest crowd that has seen a base ancuso. Winning pitcher. Mangum._ Losing pitcher—Starr, Umpi; Messrs. Pfirman, Barr and Quigley. Time | of game—2 hours 10 minutes. 100-YARD DASH—Won by Hall (Kansas): second. Glass (Okiahoma A. and M.): third, Lambeitus (Nebraska): fourth, = Meyer (Toxas). Time. 0:10 flat. 120-YARD HURDLES—Won by Scheifley | (Emporia, | (Kansas) | (Minnesota) second, Haring Kans.. Teacners): third. Fiic xo.«:nh, Dohrmahn (Nebraska). Time, 0:15 1.300 METERS—Won by _Cunningham (Kansas): second. Dewson (Tulsa Athletic third, Peden (Central Teachers' Col- 5 : fourth, Hutton (Ii- ‘Time. New | meet,record: former record. . made by | Cunningham, 193: SHOTPUT— Won by Kamm (l]linull\ feet il inches: second. Dees feet 8 Tnches: injrd. Gilliz. (Okiahoma feet inches: fourth. Barter lKUkl\uu!. Mo., Teachers), 45 feet 612 inches. DISCUS—Won by White (Pittsburg, Kans.. Teachers), 143 feet 11, inches: 'second, Busbee Undiane). 550 test 5 nches: hird: Kimble (College of Emporia). 136 feet 11'a inches: _fourth, ~Baxter (Kirksville, Mo., /pFOLE VAULT_Won by Lenington and Seely ‘both of Tilinoi), tied. 17 feet 1o Inch fest 9 inches fourth. Ta’ nd M.). 1% feet 6 inches. Te-:mm, 135 feet 6% inches. Mo it inches: second. Ward . 24 feet 1a inch; 'third, 5 University), on_by Newblock (Okla- Inches: second, Stambach Birim. (Kahsas) and Branas : Dumm (Okl-nomlh "ticd. B Teet 11%s Inches. o IN—Won by R1l’l\!! (Oklahoma A. 3 ' inches! third, King (Drake), 176 fect 8'4 inches: fourth, Brown (Southern' Illinois State Normal Uni- versity), 173 teet 10 inches 110-YARD le:ulfl 'RELAY—Won MUk, Galiaeher, Little Tminois: Time. Olanoma. A. and. M. F. Harrington, Glass); second. lahoma; fourth,” Texas. 0:414. 480-YARD SHUTTLE HURDLE RELAY— Won by umv:um of Minnesota (Kiibor: Larocue. Knoblauch, Scheifley). second. Kan® e fhard: Dniversity of Kansas. Time. New meet record: fcmer record, made b‘g Nebraska_ 107 D RELAY_Won by (Carroll, s tiansen, Kenaicot, secon lahe third, Ne. fourth, OKlahoma A. 6. lvllslfl 1-MILE a1 RELAY—Won ld. Bicking. Ho Lfl':{ cong, Texas: u?:'m ‘Oklanomi made by San Marcos, Tex. Baptist Acad- | Childres ""’l’fii‘r'cm.un RELAY—Won by Pitt K fll flwgf’ lw“h&‘:l Kh'; ourin. ) second. “third, Emporia. 'flfl#- 3 17.3 (new ‘meet ria. Kans. Wichita — Usiversity. record; former 2 red: | $iiien a1ie O ball game on Lambath Field in 15 years today watched the University of | Virginia_team defeat Navy, 3 to 1. Peck Luck, Virginia siow-bal artist, was the hero. In addition to limiting the visitors to four hits and striking |out nine batsmen, he scored two of ! the victors’ runs. jord of : Won by Em- ege (Knight, second, Baker, I Rhoades) : disqu; med im Teachers, Motgan, Bridges. Towa State Labertew); . second. Tniversity of Kansas. m i | | LAY 47 d fourth, Butler. T0:2 | record: former record of | Marguette University. 102 OLLEGE DISTANCE MEDLEY RELAY , 1,3 mile)—Won by Piits- i . "Teachers (German. O'Reill Brown. Smith); second, Teachers: _third. Emporia, {pUrn. Missourt ‘School | s | 1n ridze, Neese, bosteD): _second. Tilinois: | fourth. okiahoma A. and M. Decathlon Events. 110METER HIGH HURDLES_Charles. 18 Shi Ea leman, earson, Kans., of Mines. Time, by orlnnen. me, 17:5: i Frizey, 1 1 DisCUss. ‘rnlow—clnnen 126 feet 7 Inches; Gharles; feet. 5 Inche: 2 nnn_u, 119 % " inche: vnm.-r—mtmms 12 feet son, and Prazey. | ; 4 Gharles. m eet 728 nd 10 Teet e Taenei son. 136 rnuy. 135 feet 412 iriches; ‘ t 10% inches; Classen, nch. 2 'n:n RUN —Charies. 4:514; j Frazer, ildress, ‘drammer 5201 DASH_Wilso Onar - R, Rleondn, Gomrus W Gram Grai lll !eet "i 100-MET] attached, Hstitute, i3 lliam__ Frazey, sleyan Collega Ten ure. uo, 2.5: :;1 : “Newton Jul! feet 414 relnaln. 22 lzelh i% nmlm, Chllt Gram 2 inches Guassen, 17 dee SHOT PUT—Charles, 41 feet 81 inches; Childress. 40 feet Pearsom 94 feet 11% tnches: Eag Sleman. | Frazey, Teet 44/‘ HIG —_Char feet 11%4 inches, 5 feet 107 fnches: Fearsan, B fee Prazey, 5 feet 5% I m- et 4% Inches: Eagleman. & feet 5 Clageen, 4 fect 6 inches, RUN_Grammer, 535 sec- ouds; Chatles, 41 5 550 Chil- e Fatwn, o4 T¥% inghe mer, o7, el