world wide coverqe of track and field

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Track & Field News World Wide Coverqe of Track and Field May, 1960, Vol 13, No. 4 P.O. Box 296, Los.Altos, Calif. $3 per year -~ ?~ . ..... ~.,_ .~.: A :,,.t,t..,..... -<. ....... .J 1:~ .. : - ,,_-e;[~ LASZLO T ABORI crosses the finish line to give the Santa Clara Valley Youth Village a new American record in the distance medley relay with a JACK YERMAN of California rups WILLIE WILLIAMS of San Jose State and BOBBY STATEN of Southern California in the mile relay at the West Coast Relays. Cal- ifornia v.as timed in 3: 10. 4 v.uh San Jose State second in 3: 10 6 and Southern BUD EDELEN wins 'the 5, 000 at the Drake Relays in 14: 35. 7 Edelen later set a national 10, 000 record of 29: 58 9 at the San Jose All-Comers meet Cal third in 3:10. 7. California also won the mile relay at the Los Angeles Col- (Des Moines Register & Tribune) 9:34 9, (Mike Tucker photo) iseum Relays by nipping Abilene Chnsuan. (Photo by Mike Tucker) BIG TEN CHAMPIONSHIPS Kerr Runs 46.1 & 1:51.6 By Jack Clowser, The Cleveland Press East Lansing, Mich., May 21 -- Illinois rode the magic in George Kerr's legs to a smashing triumph in the 60th annual Big Ten track and field champion- ships here today. The great Jamaican, already an NCAA and Pan-American Games title- holder, scored a fine double in 46.1 and 1:51, 6, then submerged Michigan's Tony Seth in the mile relay anchor leg to swell the Illini points to 61½. This was an upset victory, brought about to some extent by several Michigan performances that were below par, but abetted by Wolverine injuries and one disqualification in the trials. So Michigan, an easy victor in the indoor meet, wound up with 45 points. Then Minnesota, 25½, Michigan State 22, Ohio State 17½, Iowa 16; Indiana 14½, Purdue 12½ and Nonhwestern 1½. Just as in the indoor meet, Wisconsin failed to tally, Kerr, who anchored the relay in 46. 9 during a cold, pouring rain, was not the only double winner. Michigan's Tom Robinson, though plagued by a re- currence of leg trouble, took the 100 and 220 in 9. 4 and 21. 4 around a turn. Robinson's 100 was aided by a 5. 6 mile an hour wind, over the allowable limit, so his name doesn't go into the Big Ten record book. The Michigan star suffered a cramp in his left leg 15 yards from home in the 100, otherwise would easily have done 9. 3. It was his right leg that was so badly pulled last year. Coach Leo Johnson's Illini scored in every event but the pole vault, where he had no entry. Six first places went to defending champions, while Michigan garnered five, including a surprise triumph by Ray Locke in the shot put. Kerr's 46. l quarter, fastest in America this year, pulled three other men under the Olympic qualifying standard with him. Willie Atterberry of MSU did 46. 9, equal his best ever; Dave Mills of Purdue and 1959 champion John Brown of Iowa were third and fourth in 47. 2 each. With only 30 minutes rest, Kerr returned to whip teammate Ted Beastall by eight yards in the 880. The latter barely edged Tony Seth, who was running with a cold on top of a recent touch of influenza. Michigan lost certain points in the high hurdles, where soph Ben McRae had run a wind-aided 14 flat to lead the trials yesterday. But in the low hurdle prelims McRae suffered a nerve injury to his back, spent the night in the hos - pita! and was unable to compete .today at all. Minnesota's Dave Odegard then captured the highs in 14. 2 with an allowable wind. (continued on page two, column one) COLISEUM RELAYS 8:55.3 for Phil Coleman By Cordner Nelson Los Angeles, May 20 -- A soft grass track and some remarkable absences eliminated fast times and lowered the quality of the once-great Coliseum Relays, but the meet was saved from mediocrity by the significance of Olympic year com- petition Five meet records v.ere broken, but two of them were in field events and the other three were in seldom-contested metric distances. Hal Connolly's 219'9r' hammer throw and Dallas Long's 63'5¼" shot put were top marks. Phil Coleman's 8:55. 3 steeplechase is the best ever by an.American in his own country, But the broken 100 and 1500 meter records were second-rate. Some of the Olympic year significance came from athletes who were absent. The ''Big Four" meeting in the shot put collapsed like the Big Four meeting in Paris. Bill Nieder was forced out with injuries. Parry O'Brien was ill. And Dave Davis quit school and disappeared. Significantly, Dallas Long said, "My shoulder never hurt once. I guess it's all healed." A new 60-footer, Jay Silvester, entered the lists as a long-shot Olympian if more frailities develop. Herb Elliott dispelled doubts about his championship caliber by out-finish- ing a good 1500 field with a 55. 9 last 440. He said he v.as not fit enough to run the last half mile fast, and so he waited until the last backstretch before dashing into the lead Jerome Walters, v.ho took the lead with 440 to go in 2:49. 5, finished fast enough to worry a feY, milers and half-milers. With Ray Norton too ill to run the 100 meters and Bobby Morrow revealed as too badly injured to train, Doug Smith was the favorite, and he ran fast in spite of some thigh trouble. But Dave Sime ran faster and won by almost two feet in 10. 4, excellent on a track so soft the runners were off balance. Willie White led for half the distance but faded. He was given fourth place although pictures show Sid Garton deserved that position. Not much over one yard separated Smith and last-place Larry Dunn. The 5,000 meters, planned as a great race, turned out to be much less. Max Truex, suffering from a bad hip, withdrew and was joined by Alex Hender- son and John Macy. Jim Beatty towed the field through a 6:47. 5 pace, then quit with a toe injury. Al Lawrence looked as if he wanted to stop on the sixth lap, but when Beatty dropped out he re-entered the battle. Lew Stieglitz, hampered by a bad leg, gave up the chase after 2½ miles, and only Bud Edelen was left to battle Lawrence. The tiny Aussie pulled away from Edelen on the last lap. Hayes Jones, off to his usual fast start in the high hurdles, led Lee Cal- (continued on page three, column one)

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Track & Field News World Wide Coverqe of Track and Field

May, 1960, Vol 13, No. 4 P.O. Box 296, Los.Altos, Calif. $3 per year

-~ ?~

. ..... ~.,_ .~.: A :,,.t,t..,..... • ~ ~ -<. ~ ....... .J

~~ 1:~ .. : - ,,_-e;[~ LASZLO T ABORI crosses the finish line to give the Santa Clara Valley Youth Village a new American record in the distance medley relay with a

JACK YERMAN of California rups WILLIE WILLIAMS of San Jose State and BOBBY STATEN of Southern California in the mile relay at the West Coast Relays. Cal­ifornia v.as timed in 3: 10. 4 v.uh San Jose State second in 3: 10 6 and Southern

BUD EDELEN wins 'the 5, 000 at the Drake Relays in 14: 35. 7 Edelen later set a national 10, 000 record of 29: 58 9 at the San Jose All-Comers meet Cal third in 3:10. 7. California also won the mile relay at the Los Angeles Col-(Des Moines Register & Tribune) 9:34 9, (Mike Tucker photo) iseum Relays by nipping Abilene Chnsuan. (Photo by Mike Tucker)

BIG TEN CHAMPIONSHIPS

Kerr Runs 46.1 & 1:51.6 By Jack Clowser, The Cleveland Press

East Lansing, Mich., May 21 -- Illinois rode the magic in George Kerr's legs to a smashing triumph in the 60th annual Big Ten track and field champion­ships here today.

The great Jamaican, already an NCAA and Pan-American Games title­holder, scored a fine double in 46.1 and 1:51, 6, then submerged Michigan's Tony Seth in the mile relay anchor leg to swell the Illini points to 61½.

This was an upset victory, brought about to some extent by several Michigan performances that were below par, but abetted by Wolverine injuries and one disqualification in the trials.

So Michigan, an easy victor in the indoor meet, wound up with 45 points. Then Minnesota, 25½, Michigan State 22, Ohio State 17½, Iowa 16; Indiana 14½, Purdue 12½ and Nonhwestern 1½. Just as in the indoor meet, Wisconsin failed to tally,

Kerr, who anchored the relay in 46. 9 during a cold, pouring rain, was not the only double winner. Michigan's Tom Robinson, though plagued by a re­currence of leg trouble, took the 100 and 220 in 9. 4 and 21. 4 around a turn.

Robinson's 100 was aided by a 5. 6 mile an hour wind, over the allowable limit, so his name doesn't go into the Big Ten record book. The Michigan star suffered a cramp in his left leg 15 yards from home in the 100, otherwise would easily have done 9. 3. It was his right leg that was so badly pulled last year.

Coach Leo Johnson's Illini scored in every event but the pole vault, where he had no entry. Six first places went to defending champions, while Michigan garnered five, including a surprise triumph by Ray Locke in the shot put.

Kerr's 46. l quarter, fastest in America this year, pulled three other men under the Olympic qualifying standard with him. Willie Atterberry of MSU did 46. 9, equal his best ever; Dave Mills of Purdue and 1959 champion John Brown of Iowa were third and fourth in 47. 2 each.

With only 30 minutes rest, Kerr returned to whip teammate Ted Beastall by eight yards in the 880. The latter barely edged Tony Seth, who was running with a cold on top of a recent touch of influenza.

Michigan lost certain points in the high hurdles, where soph Ben McRae had run a wind-aided 14 flat to lead the trials yesterday. But in the low hurdle prelims McRae suffered a nerve injury to his back, spent the night in the hos -pita! and was unable to compete .today at all. Minnesota's Dave Odegard then captured the highs in 14. 2 with an allowable wind.

(continued on page two, column one)

COLISEUM RELAYS

8:55.3 for Phil Coleman By Cordner Nelson

Los Angeles, May 20 -- A soft grass track and some remarkable absences eliminated fast times and lowered the quality of the once-great Coliseum Relays, but the meet was saved from mediocrity by the significance of Olympic year com­petition

Five meet records v.ere broken, but two of them were in field events and the other three were in seldom-contested metric distances. Hal Connolly's 219'9r' hammer throw and Dallas Long's 63'5¼" shot put were top marks. Phil Coleman's 8:55. 3 steeplechase is the best ever by an.American in his own country, But the broken 100 and 1500 meter records were second-rate.

Some of the Olympic year significance came from athletes who were absent. The ''Big Four" meeting in the shot put collapsed like the Big Four meeting in Paris. Bill Nieder was forced out with injuries. Parry O'Brien was ill. And Dave Davis quit school and disappeared. Significantly, Dallas Long said, "My shoulder never hurt once. I guess it's all healed." A new 60-footer, Jay Silvester, entered the lists as a long-shot Olympian if more frailities develop.

Herb Elliott dispelled doubts about his championship caliber by out-finish­ing a good 1500 field with a 55. 9 last 440. He said he v.as not fit enough to run the last half mile fast, and so he waited until the last backstretch before dashing into the lead Jerome Walters, v.ho took the lead with 440 to go in 2:49. 5, finished fast enough to worry a feY, milers and half-milers.

With Ray Norton too ill to run the 100 meters and Bobby Morrow revealed as too badly injured to train, Doug Smith was the favorite, and he ran fast in spite of some thigh trouble. But Dave Sime ran faster and won by almost two feet in 10. 4, excellent on a track so soft the runners were off balance. Willie White led for half the distance but faded. He was given fourth place although pictures show Sid Garton deserved that position. Not much over one yard separated Smith and last-place Larry Dunn.

The 5,000 meters, planned as a great race, turned out to be much less. Max Truex, suffering from a bad hip, withdrew and was joined by Alex Hender­son and John Macy. Jim Beatty towed the field through a 6:47. 5 pace, then quit with a toe injury. Al Lawrence looked as if he wanted to stop on the sixth lap, but when Beatty dropped out he re-entered the battle. Lew Stieglitz, hampered by a bad leg, gave up the chase after 2½ miles, and only Bud Edelen was left to battle Lawrence. The tiny Aussie pulled away from Edelen on the last lap.

Hayes Jones, off to his usual fast start in the high hurdles, led Lee Cal-

(continued on page three, column one)

2- -May, 1960 BIG TEN CHAMPIONSHIPS (continued from page one)

Del Coleman of Illinois took the lows in 23. 8 around a turn as both that ancJ the furlong clash were contested against the wind over most of the course. Coleman also hacl a second in the broad ;ump, which went to teammate Paul Foreman yesterday \Hth a mediocre 24'3~". Favorite Les Bird of Michigan did only 23'41 .

Ergas Leps, strong M1ch1gan sophomore, stayed with a rather slow pace by Illinois' Jim Bowers in the mile, then easily outkicked Bowers to register 4: 12. 4. It was only 2: 08. 7 at the half.

Ken Bro\\n of Illinois, who cracked the conference indoor two-mile mark in Marc.:h, took his specialty today by kicking the last 250 yards in high wind and cold rain His time was 9: 15. 8.

Summaries from George Grenier: 100- 1, Robrnson(Mich) 9. 4w(5. 6mph),2, Miles(lnd) 9. 5,3, Coleman(Ill)9. 7, 4, Phillips (Ind) , 5, Cephas (Mich) 9. 9 Heats: Robinson 9. 7, Lattimore 9. 8.

220t- 1, Robinson (Mich) 21. 4; 2, Mills (P) 21. 8; 3, Atterberry (MS) 22. 2, 4, Brown (la) 22. 3, 5, Houston (Ill) 22. 4. Heats. Robinson & Atterberry 21. 7.

440- 1, Kerr (Ill) 46. 1, 2,Atterberry (MS) 46. 9, 3, Mills (P) 47. 2, 4, Brown (Ia) 47. 2, 5, Golem (N) 47. 7. Heats: Atterberry 47. 6, Kerr 48. O.

880- 1, Kerr (lll) 1:51. 6, 2, Beastall (Ill) 1:52. 9, 3, Seth (Mich) 1.52. 9, 4, Leps (Mich) 1:53. 3, 5, Castle (MS) 1:53. 4; Heat: Rogers (OS) 1:52. 8.

Mile- 1, Leps (Mich) 4: 12. 4, 2, Bowers (Ill) 4: 14. 4, 3, Erickson (Minn) 4: 16. 2, 4, Harvey (P) 4:16.2, 5, Manin (Mich) 4:17.2.

2 Mile - l, Brown (Ill) 9: 15. 8; 2, Reynolds (MS) 9:22. 0, 3, Young (MSU) 9:25. 4, , 4, Harns (Ill) 9:27. 8. 5, Bowers (Ill) 9:34. 0. HH - 1, Odegard (Minn) 14. 2, 2, Pederson (Minn) 14. 3, 3, Orris (Ia) 14. 7; 4, Davis (111) 14. 8, 5, LeCrone (Ill). Heat: McRae (Mich) 14. OW, Odegard 14. lw. LHt-- 1, Coleman (Ill) 23. 8, 2, Williams (la) 24. 7; 3, Cephas (Mich) 24. 7; 4, Pederson (Minn) 25. O; 5, Orris (Ia) 25. 4. Heats. Coleman 24. 2; Cephas 24. 5

fil.i Foreman (Ill) 24'3!", 2. Coleman (Ill) 23'9", 3. Bird (Mich) 23'41", 4. Ak­pata (MS) 23'3i", 5. Steffes (Mich) 23'f'.

!:!.1_ Williams (Mich) 6'7!", 2. tie, Sheppard (Ind) and Johnson (Ind) 6'6!", 4. Nourse (OS) 6'5¼", 5. tie, Gerhard (MS) and Lecrone (Ill) 6'4¼".

PY, tie, Kleinhans (MS) and Bowers (OS) 14'3~", 3. tie, Johnson (Pur) and Mor­row (Minn) 13'8i", 5. tie, Nelson (N\',) and Carroll (Ind) 13'4i".

SP- 1, Locke (Mich) 55'1", 2, Brown (Ill) ·,3'6t 3, Swanson (Minn) 51'9, 4, Mirka (OS) 51'8, 5, Albrecht (Minn) 50'.

DT- 1, Schmalenberger (OS) 162'8~", 2, Mirka (OS) 160'4, 3, Brown (Minn) l54'4t 4, Schmidt (Ill) 149'10~. 5, Edelman (P) 149'4~. MR- 1, Illinois, 3:17. 3 (Beastall 50. 7, Houston 49.1, Coleman 50. 6, Kerr 46. 9)

2, Michigan 3:18.4, 3, Iowa 3:19.8, 4, Minnesota, 3:20.0, 5, Indiana 3:20.8.

LONE STAR CONFERENCE CHA.MPS Nacogdoches, Texas, May 14 - -

440R, East Te'tas 41 3 Mile, Stewart (Lamar Tech) 4: 13. 8 440, Watson (Tex. A&I) 47.5 100, Baird (E. Tex)

INTERMOUNT AIN AA U Provo, Utah, May 7 - - PY, tie,

Nielson (Brigham Young), DeWitt (Ida. St) and Hollist (Utah St) 14 '2" ..!iL_ Costa (BY) 6 '6;l''. DT, Passey (Utah St) 172' l". 400H, Parker (una) 52 4 440, DeHart (BY) 47 6. 120HH, Lrncl­grcn (Utah) 14 4 3000SC, Griffeth (BY) 9: 36 0 880, Belcher (Utah St) 1.51.!l .IL_DevereatL'< (BY) 211T' SOUTHWESTE&'l CONF. CHAMPS

Baton Rouge, La. , May 7 - - 120HH, Allen (Texas Southern) 14 5w SP-,--­l3oyettc (Grambling) 53'10f' . .!:!h Lewis (Gramblrng) 6'6½'' 440, Miller (Southern U) 47. 3. 100, Johnson (Gram­bling) 9. 4w. 220, Johnson 21. 2w (20. 9 in trials) . .!!l!_ Jackson (Prairie View) 24'd". MileR, SouthernU. 3:16.5.

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STAFF Hal Barc:mJn, \lo111J}{111~ LJ D H Putts, Ju,u1u1t EJ R. L. QucrCc.tJni, f.11,,,p~,111 I J Don :\ash anJ fr.in Errata, lllgh l,J,ool l:.J1 Ge.urge Gnntl·r t,1,Juvr l:.d PHOTOGRAPIIER~ MJmn D"orkin. LJ lJu.\, ~like Oh\'c:au, ~(1kc l uckc.r Don \\ intun CosTRIUL'iUR~ D1Ck Bank. J,ck LloMer Jo< G,lh, P :-I H,..,J,.·nstrom, Ro)' S1ln·r TIMFR~ Lan R.isc.\ c hc.~aJ, ~,J Oc.Ronl'r

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BACK ISSUES Back 1ssuc.-s arc.· pncc...J from c.11 .?'; tu S'l r,tr cop), Jc:­pcndmg upon sc.1H1n \X'rit1. tur frc.'t. ltSr uf .1\a1l.ibl1. back muc:-s

9. 5. Garton (E Tex). 120HH, McKee (E. Tex) 14 5. 220, Garton 22.4 .!!l!_ Baird 24' 7 ~" . ..IL. Nettles (Sam Houston St) 208'91". DT, Holcomb (Howard Payne) 168'5r,:-MileR, Tex. A&I 3:17. 2.

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SCHEDULE OF IMPORTANT EVENTS June 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 10 10 11 11 11 17-18 19 24-25 MY_ 1-2 4 8-9 8-9 16 16 24

Compton, Calif., Invitational NAIA, Sioux Falls, S.D. USAF Champs., Dyess AFB, Tex. USMC Champs. ,Quantico, Va. Pacific NW AAU, Olympia,Wash. Central Collegiates, Milwaukee Ohio AA U, Dayton New YorkA.C. Games, NYC Mt. of Champs., Houston, Tex. S. Pacific AAU, Los Angeles Sr. Met. AAU, Ne\\/ York City Pacific AAU, Stanford, Calif. All-Service, Quantico, Va. NCAA, Berkeley, Calif AAU 15km Run, Detroit AA'.J, Bakersfield, Calif.

Olympic Trials, Stanford, Cal. AAU 20km Run, Ne1..-dham,Mass. AAU Decathlon, Eugene, Ore. Women's Champs. ,S. Antonio, T AAU Pentathlon, Kansas City,Mo. Women's FOT, Abilene, Texas All-Eastern, Baltimore, Md.

BIG EIGHT CHAMPIONSHIPS

Kansas Wins in Walkaway Ames, Ia., tv,ay 21--Chilly, wet weather held the record breaking down

to_ tw_o events but. Kansas maintarned its iron-fisted grip on the Big Eight title, WllUllllg for the nlllth year in a row and piling up the second largest victory mar­gin in history.

. Rex Stucker of Kansas State, one of the two new recordmen, edged Char­ley Tidwell of Kansas by a vote as the most outstandrng performer. Stucker cut the 220 low hurdle time, on a straightaway, to 23 O in the prelims and further reduced it to 22. 5 in the final. Tidwell, who owns the conference mark on a curve with 22. 7, is concentrating on the sprints this Olympic year and won them both with 9. 6 and 21. 1 on a bend.

J. D. Martin, Oklahoma's prime Olympic hopeful, did not miss until he had raised the meet standard to 15'4. He then tried 15'10¼ once and 15'9¾'' twice.

Scoring in every event, Kansas tallied a whopping 150 points to 73i for O1-fahoma State. pk!ahoma had 68!, Missouri 61½, Colorado 46½, Kansas State ~74, Nebras~ 30li and Iowa State 27i. The Jayhawks missed only in the high Jumped and piled up 22 digits in the javelin and an unexpected 31 in the hurdles.

. Tidwell to~ped the individual scorers with 24t coming from behind to wm the 440 relay m 41. 8 and running on the second place mile relay team. Teammate Darwin Ashbaugh scored in four events to score 202 points. . Teddy_ Woods, th~ big C~lorado soph, led all the way in the 440 to win rn 47. 7 as Cliff Cushman s closing burst Just missed. In the furlong Woods closed fast to nip Dee Givens for second, 1 yard behind Tidwell.

The throwers did well, Bill Alley taking the javelin at 237'5½, Dick Cochran reaching 174'9½ with the discus, and Mike Lindsay putting 57'1¼".

Summary from Don Pierce: l~0- 1, Tidwell (K) 9. 6, 2, Givens (0) ly; 3, Patterson (M); 4, Williams (K);

:>, Youngworth (0), 6, tie, Leslie (M) and Butts (M). 2:0t - 1, Tidwell (K) 21. 1~. ~• Woods (C) ly, 3, Givens (0);4, Patterson (M),

:>, Youngworth (0), 6, Williams (K). Heats: Givens, Woods 21. 5, Tidwell 21. 9. 440- 1, Woods (C) 4 7. 7, 2, Cushman (K) 47. 8, 3, Baker (M) 48. l; 4, Harlan (OS), 5, Davis (K~ 6, Baker (KS). Heats. Woods 47. 6; Harlan 47. 8, Baker 47. 9

880- 1, Mullins (N) 1:52. 7, 2, Tague (K) 1:52. 8, 3, Stone (05) 1: 52. 9; 4, Gros­zek (KS), 5, Ash (N), 6, Ringo (0). Heats: Mullins 1:53.6, Stone 1:52.8. Mile- 1, Dotson (K) 4:13.2, 2, Milliken (IS) 4:17.9, 3, Hodgson (0) 4:1.8.8, 4,

Metcalf (0), 5, Schmitz (M); 6, Haltmeyer (IS). Hodgson: 63.2, 65.7, 63,7. 2 Mile- 1, Eisenman (05) 9:16.7, 2, Hannaken (M) 9:17.2, 3, Mills (K) 9:19.8, 4, American Horse (N), 5, Darby (IS), 6, Frakes (C).

HH- 1, Stucker (KS) 14.2, 2, McCiinton (K) 14.5, 3, Coven (05) 14.9, 4, Ash­baugh (K), 5, Fasano (N), 6, Lee (K). (Rich, KS, scratched, pulled muscle)

LHt- 1, Stucker (KS) 22.5, 2, Ashbaugh (K) 22. 8, 3, Lee (K) 23. 0, 4, Smith (K); 5, Haddox (OS), 6, Coven (OS). Heats. Stucker 23. 0; Ashbaugh 23. 7n.

filt... tie, Meyers (Colo) and Toomey (Colo) 23'5½", 3. Ashbaugh (K) 23'il"; 4. Runge (IS) 22'101", 5, Williams (K) 22'9¼", 6. Warrick (0) 22'9". '

!:!.1_ ~egu~s (OS) 6'2¾". 2. tie, Dresser (IS), Eding (0), Bradley (0), Nee~ (0), Price (KS), French (KS), Blakely (OS) and Fasano (Neb) 6'.

PY, Manin (0) 15'4", 2. Dooley (OS) 15'!", 3. Olson (K) 14'6", 4. Kraft (Neb) 14 ', 5. tie, Davis (Mo) and Olander (Colo) 13'6".

SP, Lindsay (0) 57'1!°', 2. Smith (Mo) 55'11!", 3. Pilgrim (IS) 54'4¼"· 4 Dryer (K) 53'5¾", 5. Crumpacker (Colo) 52'9", 6. Cochran (Mo) 51'5". ' '

DT, Cochran 174'9J", 2. Lindsay 167'4", 3. Northrup (05) 156'4", 4. Divis (Neb) 152', 5. Foos (K) 150'3~", 6. Wellman (Neb) 149'}".

lL.. Alley (K) 237'5! ", 2. Beucher (K) 216'6", 3. Clark (Colo) 215'9½", 4. Book (K) 215'1", 5. Hamilton (KS) 205'6", 6. Renz (KS) 191'6}".

440R- 1, Kansas, 41.8 (Rearick, Ashbaugh, Williams, Tidwell); 2, Missouri, 3, Oklahoma, 4, Oklahoma State; 5, Kansas State; 6, Nebraska.

Mile R- Oklahoma State, 3:15.4 (Harlan, Farquharson, Stone, Burch), 2, Kanr sas 3: 15. 4, 3, Missouri 3: 16. 2, 4, Iowa State; 5, Kansas State, 6, Okla.

-the market place-All it.ems may be purchased from Track & Field News, Box 296, Los Altos,Cal. Cash w1th order. No CODs. We pay postage. *=listed for first time.

"1960 A. T. F.S. ANNUAL" *This great reference book by the Association of Track & Field Statisticians will be ready soon. It covers the 1959 season most thoroughly with best performers and performance hsts for men and women, records, national competitions, national records, indoor stats, photos, anicles and much, much more. It's a must and almost always a sell-out. Order now for delivery as quickly as published. Over 200 pages $1. 50 "l!l60 A.A. U. HANDBOOK' 1s ready at last. A supply 1s on hand for immed­iate delivery. Another annual that should be on the shelf of every track fan's library. Rules, records, results, photos, etc. $1. 75 "ZATOPEK THE MARATHON VICTOR" This well known biography of tlle great Czech distance ace has been out of print and unavailable for about a year. But we have been able to purchase another dozen copies and they are available wl~le they last, for $4. 00 l!l.>9 BOUND VOLUME TRACK & FIELD NEWS All 12 issues of Vol. 12 of T&FN (Feb. 1959 through Jan. l!l60) bound together with a hard cover, gold stamped, -~d with a _spiral brnding that allows the book to open perfectly flat Individual copies would cost $11. 75 without binding but this volume is only $5. 00 ACTION PHOT05 Any photo this issue, 8xl0" print, $1 if ordered by June 30

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COLISEUM RELAYS (continued from page one) houn by more than a foot over the first flight then appeared to lose his balance or hit a soft spot and Calhoun shot a yard and a half ahead of him. Jones closed enough to gain the same 14.1 clocking as Calhoun, significant because he could never before gain on Calhoun over the last three hurdles. Rafer Johnson was only inches behind Calhoun at the sixth hurdle, looking like the number three man on the Olympic team, but he clobbered the 7th and 9th hurdles to finish last.

Mike Larrabee won his usual midseason shocker, coming from last in the short stretch to nip Jack Yerman in 46. 7. He ran the first 220 in 23. o compared with 22. 2 for Southern and most others except Keith Thomassen, who must have run 21. 7. Ollah Cassell, who has not recovered from achilles troubles suffered in his 46. 2 race, faded badly in the stretch. Eddie Southern showed he has far to go in a short time.

Yerman, in addition to his fine open 400, came from two yards back in the home stretch of the mile relay to pass Nick Ellis and Earl Young. Starting three yards back, Yerman ran 46.1. Young, running a short time after he had almost snatched an 880 relay victory for Abilene Christian by gaining four yards in the stretch, was foul~ by Bobby Staten at ~e start of their mile relay legs and made ~e ~!stake of sprinting around Staten m the third lane. Nick Ellis, too, showed s1~1cant spped and power, but Staten pulled up in the stretch, suffering from a medical problem. ~ W. Williams (SJS) 9, 6, 2. Winder (Morgan St) 9. 7, 3, Haas (Oxy frosh) 9. 7;

4. Brooks (SJS) 9. 8, 5, James (USA) 9. 9; 6. Tripp (UCLA frosh) 10. 0, 100m I Sime (una) 10. 4; 2. Smith (Oxy) 10. 5; 3, Poynter (SJS) 10. 5; 4. White (Cal)

10.6; 5. tie, Dunn (Ariz) andGarton (E. Tex) 10.6; 7. Weaver (una). 400 1 Larrabee (SCS) 46. 7; 2. Yerman (Cal) 46. 7; 3. Thomassen (SCVYV) 47. 0;

4. Mal Spence (Ariz. St) 47.1, 5. Southern (una) 47.1; 6. Cassell (Houston) 47. 7, 800, Siebert (Cal) 1:51, 2; 2. Warren Farlow (SC) 1:51. 6; 3, Weisiger (Duke)

1:51. 6, 4. Wilcox (CCAC) 1:51, 7; 5. Katterman (USN) 1:52. 9; 6. Clark (SCS) 1:52. 9, 7. Mel Spence (Ariz. St) 1:53. 3.

1500, Elliott (Australia) 3:45. 4; 2, Tabori (SCVYV) 3:46. 5; 3, Walters (SCS) 3:47.1, 4. Moran (NYAC) 3:47. 8; 5. Seaman (SCS) 3:49. 5, 6, Almond (Houston) 3:51. 4; 7. Wray (SCS) 3:51. 8.

5,000, Lawrence (Houston) 14:25, 5, 2. Edelen (SFCX:::) 14: 29, l; 3, Stieglitz (USN) 14:42. 8; 4, Soth (SCS) 14:44. 7; 5. Robertson (SCS) 14:51. 0; 6. Clohessy (Hous­ton) 15: 11, 8; 7. Smithers (SC) 15: 31. 3. Beatty (SCVYV) did not finish.

3, 000SC, Coleman (UCTC) 8:55. 3, 2. Clark (SJS) 8:58. 3; 3, Lawler (ACC frosh) 9:09.0, 4. Peck (Oxy) 9:09.3; 5. Riding (UCLA) 9:19.6; 6, M1mdle (SCS) 9:20.3, 7. Jones (USA) 9:23.8, 8. Sargent (SCVYV) 9:27.2; 9. tie, Beeman (SCS) and Rodriguez (UCLA) 9:31, 5; 11. Harkness (Oxy) 9:40. 4.

ll0HH, Calhoun (una) 14.1, 2. Jones (E. Mich) 14. 1, 3. Cobb (USN) 14. 2, 4. Pol­lcinghorne (SC frosh) 14. 6, 5. Treat (Oxy) 14. 6; 6. Yang (UCLA frosh) 14. 7, 7. Johnson (SCS) 14. 9,

400H, Davis (una) 51. 0; 2. Howard (NM) 51. 1, 3. Cawley (SC frosh) 51, 2, 4. Smart (Morgan St) 52. 0; 5. Thompson (USA) 52. 5; 6. McCullough (SJS) 52. 9, 7. CUlbreath (Phila. Pioneers) 53, 9.

filL Baird (E. Tex) 24'9"; 2. Hayes (SC) 24'9", 3. Wiley (SCS) 24'8", 4. Kelly (Stanford) 24'5½", 5, Burton (SJS) 23'7", 6. Van Kirk (SCS) 23'6¾"; 7. Shelby.

HSJ, Floerke (USA) 50'5", 2. Andrews (SCS) 50'2", 3. Hayes 49'6¼", 4. Stokes (SCS) 48'2f', 5, Kelly 44'11½"; 6. Doby (UCLA).

!:!1._Dumas (SC) 6'9", 2. E. Williams (SJS) 6 18", 3. Faust (Oxy frosh) 6'8", 4. Avant (SC) 6'6", 5. Ethirveerasingham (UCLA) and Wyatt (SCVYV) 6'6".

fYi_Morris (SCS) 15'1", 2. Gutowski (USM::) 15'1"; 3. Graham (una) 15'1", 4, Mattos (SCVYV) 14'6", 5. Bragg (USA) 14'6"; 6. tie, Copp (Oxy) and Brewer 14'. ~ Long (SC) 63'5¼" (betters recognized world record), 2. Silvester (USA) 60'!";

3, Humphreys (SCS) 58'8", 4. Lewis (Oxy) 57'2½'', 5. Winters (Stan) 56'4", 6, Branson (UCLA) 56'1", 7. Johnson (Oxy) 56'½".

DT, Babka (una) 185'7}", 2, Humphreys 180'7½"; 3. Wade (SC) 178'6", 4. Carr (UCLA) 172'5}", 5, Johnson (SCS) 169'8}", 6, Gordien (SCS) 169'7", 7. Ficca (SC) 167'1½'', 8. Egan (USA) 166'5½'', 9. Silvester 163'6½''; 10. Putnam (UCLA) 160'8".

HT, Connolly (SCS) 219'9}", 2. Pagani (NYAC) 202'5", 3, Jongewaard (YV) 172'7". 440R, Baylor (Smalley, Knaub, Minter, Hollis) 41. 0, 2. East Texas 41. 2, 3.

Abilene Christian 41. 3; 4. San Jose St. 41. 4; 5. SC 41. 5. 880R, SC (Munn, Staten, Weeks, Coia) 1:25. l; 2. Baylor 1:25. 2, 3. ACC 1:25. 2,

4. SJS 1:25,6, 5. East Texas 1:26.2. MileR,Calii. (Karlsrud48.4, Epstein49.2, Siebert47.2, Yerman46.l) 3:10,9,

2. ACC (Young46.4) 3:11.1, 3. Morgan St. (Ellis 46.5) 3:11,2, 4. Arizona St. (Mel Spence 46. 7, Mal Spence 46.1) 3: J.2. 0; 5. Stanford 3: 14. 8, 6. Southern U. 3:15.1; 7. TexasChristian3:19.3. SC did not finish.

2MileR, Stanford (Lassen 1:53, 8, Parker 1:55. 2, Klier 1:51, 6, Cunliife 1.49. 0) 7:29,6; 2. Oxy 7:30.3, 3. UCLA 7:33.9; 4. Howard Payne 7:35.7; 5, Oxy frosh 7:42. 6, 6. SC 7:46. 8.

Late Nev,s Cambridge, Mass., May 21 -- John Thomas of Boston University again

raised the world high jump record today with a leap of 7'lt" at the New England lntercollegiates Thomas, who cleared the record height on his first try, then tried 7'2¼" but failed on his three tries. Thomas set his previous best of 7'1½" at the Penn Relays in April.

Eugene, Oregon, May 21 -- Decathlon prospect Dave Edstrom won both hurdle events and scored 13 points to lead Oregon to the Northern Division championship with 56 i points. Oregon State was second with 401 points. Edstrom took the high hurdles in 14. 3 and the lows in 24. 0.

Yonkers, N. Y., May 22 -- Young John Kelley won his fifth straight National AAU marathon today to just about clinch a place on the U.S. Olympic team. Kelley, who dropped out of the Boston marathon, was an easy winner today with a course record of 2:20: 13. 6. Gordon McKenzie finished a distant second in 2:23:46 while 'Alex Breckenridge was third in 2:32.41. The Olympic marathon committee recommended the first three runners to represent the U.S. at Rome.

May, 1960--3

BILL DOTSON (right) of Kansas nips Wichita freshman ARCHIE SAN ROMANI in the 1500 at the Kansas Relays. Trailing the pair are PAUL WHITELEY (left), DAVE DRYBROUGH and LEW MERRIMAN, also of Wichita.

SAN JOSE ALL-COMERS

U.S. Records at 5 & 10 Km. by Bert Nelson

Sunnyvale, Calif., May 6--An unheralded meet on a high school track never_befor~ used for big time racing produced the greatest distance running in American history and two new national records. . ~ Truex ran 5000 meters in 14: 03. 6 and Bud Edelen covered 10, 000m in 29:58. 9 m the San Jose All-Corners meet which was moved to the Fremont H S. facilities in order to handle a larger crowd. ·

Owner of the former U.S. mark of 14:04. 2, Truex had the first crack. T~e p~an called for Max and Lew Stieglitz to alternate pace setting duties. But St~eghtz had leg trouble and couldn't hold the pace, which was geared for a nine minute two-~ile. The two, tailed by San Jose's Cha:Jiley Clark, hit the mile in 4:30. 6 but Sueglitz had to let go on the seventh lap and Truex was 20 yards in front of Cla~k and 30 ~head of Lew as he clocked 9:05~5 for two-miles.

-~ his own, Air Force Lt. Truex picked up the pace in the third mile, tu~ed it in 4: 30. 9 and reached the three-mile point in 13: 36. 4, just off his own national record of 13:35. 7, set in the 1957 Compton lnvitati9nal (as was the 5000 figure). Unfortunately, the gun had been shot a lap too soon and all the official ~imers stopped their watches a lap short, leaving Max without an official clock­mg that can be submitted for a new national standard. Two unofficial watches on the finish line had 14: 03. 6 or better and two others across the track verified the performance, which at least betters the Olympic qualifying standard of 14: 10.

. I~ was the third time in less than a year that Truex has been jobbed by the ~ff1c1als. At_ the 19_59 Fresno Relays they wanted him to run an extra lap and against the R;uss1ans his laps were counted incorrectly and he lost second place.

Despite the boo-boo, Max was happy. "I really felt good. It was as ~sy a race as I have run. I was aiming for 14 minutes and feel I could have hit lt had the pace not slowed at two-miles. The limp warming up? That's just a little hip trouble that doesn't bother me once I start running. I think I'm on my way now."

. Less than _100 of the original 5000 fans remained when Edelen completed ~1s record_brealcing myria-meter at almost midnight on a perfectly balmy even­ing. Leading all the way, and running by himseU after sbalcing off England's Ray Allen before the half-way point, the ex-Minnesotan appeared well within him­seli ~s he made the U.S. record considerably more respectable by dipping under 30 mmutes.

The mile time was 4:48. 8, two miles 9:41. 4, three miles 14:33. 1, four miles 19:21. 4, fi_ve miles 24: 13. 1, and six miles 29: 01. 8. The last two clockings w?uld be ?ew national records except that the host of timers, standing around with nothing else to do, would not get official clockings at the intermediate dis­t~nces. Dick Hart, who ran five miles in 24:23. 9 in 1956, was calling the lap t1mes for Ede~en. The six mile time was caught by three watches, two of them held by AAU timers not assigned to the meet, and was far ahead of Gordon Mc­Kenzie's 29:28.1 of l!l56.

Touring the last lap in 66. 2, Edelen finished full of run. He missed the Olymp~c ~ualiiying ~.tandard of 29:40 by a goodly margin but now feels the time is well within reach. It was the easiest race I have ever run" Bud said. "I had set my schedule for 30: 18 (a second under Lew Stieglitz's new U.S. record) so really didn't push as hard as I might have. Had I had a chance to follow someone such as Al Lawrence I feel I could have run about 29:30."

:_!--May, l!J60 37 WORLD l\1ARKS APPROVED

London, April 1-1 - - The Inter­national Amateur Athletic Federation today rcleast.'li a hst of 37 world re -cords It has recently approved.

Included on the list is the 63'4" shot put mark set by Parry O'Brien m Albuquerque, New Mexico, last August 1. l00y, 9. 3, 8111 Woodhouse (US}, May

5, 1959, Abilene, Texas. .!QQYL !J, 3, Roscoe Cook (US} May 30,

1959, Modesto, Calif. 1,000m, 2.17.8, Dan Waern (Sweden}

Aug:--li}, 1959, Karlstad, Sweden. 1, 30llm, 3: 36. 0, Herb Elhott (Aust.}

Aug. 26, 1958, Goteborg, Sweden. 880 and S00R, 1:22. 6, Abilere Chris­

tian College, May 31, 1958, Modesto, Cahf.

2 MileR, 7· 20. 9, University of Cahf., May 16, 1958, Los Angeles.

4 MileR, 16:25. 6, Australian National team, March 22, 1959, Melbourne, Australia.

4 MileR, 16:25. 2, Hwigarian National team, Sept. 29, 1959, Budapest, Hwi­gary • ..,

110 and 120HH, 13. 2, Martin Lauer (Germany} July 7, 1959, Zurich.

10,000mWalk, 42:18.3, G. Panichkm (USSR} May 7, 1958, Staninabad, USSR

20, 000mWalk, 1:27:05. 0, V. Golub­nichiy (USSR} Sept. 23, 1958, Sim -feropol, USSR.

2 Hour Walk, 16 miles, 743 yards (26429 meters} A. Egorov (USSR} July 15, 1959, Leningrad, USSR

30, 000mWalk, 2:19:43, A. VedJakov (USSR) Aug. 23, 1958, Moscow.

30,000mWalk, 2:17:16.8, A. Egorov (USSR} July 15, 1959, Leningrad, USSR

20 Miles Walk,2.31.33, A. Vedjakov (USSR} Aug. 23, 1958, Moscow.

30 Miles Walk.-.07: 11, S. Lobastov

(USSR) Aug. 23, 1958, Moscow. 50, 000m\\ alk, 4: 16: 08. 6, S. Lobastov

(USSR} Aug. 23, 1958, Moscow. HSJ, 54'9¾" (16. 70m) Oleg Fedoysev

(USSR) May 3, 1959, Nalchik, USSR SP, 63'2" (19. 25m) Dallas Long (US}

March 2~, 1959, Santa Barbara, Cal. SP, 63'4"·(19. 30m} Parry O'Brien (US} Aug. 1, 1959, Albuquerque, N. M. DT, 196'6~" (59, 91m} Edmwid Piatkow­ski (Poland} Jwie 14, 1959, Warsaw. & 282'3!" (86, 04m} Al Cantello (US}

Jwie 5, 1959, Compton, Calif. Decathlon, 8,357 pts., Vasiliy Kuz­

nyetsov (USSR) May 16-17 l!J59, Mos­cow, USSR

Women's Events 100m, 11.3, V. Krepmka (USSR}

Sept. 13, 1958, Kiev, USSR 400, 53. 4, M. Itkina (USSR} Sept. 12,

1959, Krasnodar, USSR 440, 55. 6, B. Cuthbert (Australia}

Jan. 17, 1959, Sydney, Australia. 440, 55. 6, M. Chamberlain (New Zeal­

and) March M, 1959, Sydney, Aust. •140, 54. 3, B. Cuthbert (Australia}

March 21, 1959, Sydney, Australia. 440, 53. 7, M. Itkina (USSR} Sept. 12,

1959, Krasnodar, USSR 800 and 880R, 1.~6. 0, East German

team, July 26, 1958, Leipzig, Germany 2400mR, 6:27. 4, Ukrairuan National

team, Sept. 9, 1958, Kiev, USSR 80mH, 10. 6, G. Bystrova (USSR} Sept. ~58, Krasnodar, USSR !:!1.. 6'¼" (1.84m) I. Balas (Rumania}

Sept. 21, 1959, Bucharest, Rumania SP, 56'7" (17.25m) T. Press (USSR} April 26, 1959, Nalchik, USSR & 188'7" (57. 49m) B. Zalagaitite

(USSR} Oct. 30, 1958, Tbilisi, USSR Pentathlon, 4872 pts., G. Bystrova

(USSR} Nov. 1-2, 1958, Tbilisi,USSR Pentathlon, 4880 pts., I. Press (USSR}

Sept. 13-14, 1959, Krasnodar, USSR

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SOUTHWEST CONFERENCE

Baylor Wins 1st Title Ft Worth, Texas, May 14 -- Texas set most of the records today but

Baylor used its strength m the field events and the relays to pick up its first Southwest Conference track title.

The Bears scored 79 points while Texas, the defending champion, was second with 56 points. Southern Methodist was next with 33 points followed by Texas Tech with 27 1/3, Rice with 25!, Texas A&M with 21, Arkansas with 14 5/6 and Texas Christian with 13 1/3

Baylor won both relays, the shot, Javelin and broad jump and tied for \ first in the 220. Sprmters Billy Hollis, Tommy Minter and Roy Smalley accowited for 33 of Baylor's points. Holhs, who was the meet's high point man with 12 pomts, tied for first in the 220 with Rice's Taylor Jones and anchored the winning 440 and mile relay teams.

Texas saw its title chances wrecked when Ralph Alspaugh pulled up lame in the 220 at the 150-yard point Alspaugh was leadmg by three yards at the time Earlier, Alspaugh set a conference mark with a 9.4 100 The Longhorns' sophomore hurdler, Ray CWlningham, set a conference mark in the high hurdles with a 13. 8 and then tied the league mark in the lows with a 22. 6 Mickey Hollmgshead of Rice tied the conference 440 mark with a 46. 9, barely beating fast-closing Roy Smalley of Baylor. 100, Alspaugh (T} 9.4, 2. Knaub (Bay), 3. Hollis (Bay}. 4. Jones (R}. 5. Hart (TT). 220, tie, Hollis and Jones 20. 6; 3. Minter, 4. Knaub. 5. Ketcham (TCU). 440, Hollingshead (R} 46. 9, 2. Smalley (B} 47. 0, 3. McCaslin (SM), 4. Swafford

(TT}. 5. Hart. 880, Dlllllap (T) 1.51. 9, 2. Crooks (TAM), 3. Dyck (Ark), 4. Draper (TT}. 5

Walker (SMU). Mile, tie, Ahlberg (SMU} and Parr (SMU} 4: 15. 5, 3. Mellgren (Bay}, 4. Maxfield

(T), 5. Taylor (Ark). 2 Mile, Ahlberg 9:32. 6, 2. Nelson (Ark}. 120HH, CWlllingham (T} 13. 8, 2. Charlton (R), 3. Pettit (TT), 1 4. Bennett (Bay),

5. Beard (T}. 220LH, CWlllingham 22. 6, 2. Pettit; 3 Bennett, 4. Charlton; 5 Uribe (TAM} filL Minter (Bay} 22'10¼", 2. Sides (T) 22'9½", 3. Pettit, 4. King (TT), 5. Shirey. .!::!k. Thomton (Tr) 6'4¼'', 2. tie, Vest (Ark), Curtis (Bay), Linne (TCU}, Weiler

(T} and Shirey (Tr) 6'2". PV, Elkins (SMU} 14'5½", 2. Bennett (T} 14'½", 3. tie, Hughes (Ark) and Bank­

head (T} 13'6", 5. tie, Sugg (Ark}, Sanders (TAM} and Shirey 13' SP, Fry (Bay} 55'3f', 2. Bonorden (TAM} 55'3¼'', 3. tie, Allison (T) and Tyner

(Bay} 54'1", 5. Brown (T) 49'8¼". DT, Hill (TAM} 160'10f', 2. Fry 158'5", 3. Tyner 154'3!", 4. Allison, 5. Brown. & Wisener (Bay} 210'2", 2. Lamb (TAM} 206'1½", 3. Smith (T} 204'11", 4. Brewer

(TAM) 204'½", 5. Houston (T) 201'1". 440R, Bay (Smalley, Knaub, Minter, Hollis) 40. G; 2. R. 3. T, 4. SMU, 5. TCU. MilcR, Bay (Smalley, Thompson, Knaub, Hollis} 3:13.4, 2. TCU; 3. SMU, 4. T;

5. Texas Tech.

TEXAS COL LEG IA TE CHAMPS San Marcos, May 5 -- 440R,Abi­

lene Christian 41. 7. Mile, Cooper (N Tex} 4:13. 0. 440, Yowig (ACC} 47.9 120HH,Cooley (ACC} 14.6. 880, Edwards (ACC} 1:52. 0. 220, Yowi_g_ 21 1. 2 Mile, Cooper 9: 39. 9. PV, Clark (N. Tex) 14'6". Scores: ACC 72, Howard Payne 34 5/6, N. Tex. 28.

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EARL Y(){JllU anchors Abilene Christian to a 3: 09. 5 clocking in the mile relay on April 16. Kansas, anchored by CLIFF CUSHMAN, was second in 3:09. 7 while New Mexico, with DICK HOWARD running the last leg, did 3:09. 9.

WEST COAST RELAYS

Doug Smith Upsets Norton by Cordner Nelson

Fresno, May 14- It was Comeback Night at the West Coast Relays, with many an Olympic year disappointment, but two "washed up" runners came back with brilliant runs which startled the crowd of 14, 500 and much of the track world. Doug Smith, an Occidental junior plagued by injuries since his promis­ing high school days, outleaned Ray Norton in a 9. 4 hundred to hand the Olympic favorite his first 100 defeat in almost a year. Laszlo Tabori came back from near obscurity to his glorious form of pre-revolution Hungary and crushed Ernie Cunliffe with a 3:59. 5 anchor mile in the distance medley.

Tabori 's Santa Clara Youth Village team shattered the (unrecognized) world record for the medley with an amazing 9:34. 9, while Stanford, even though Cunliffe jogged in, also bettered the Striders' record by cloclcing 9:40. 5. Al Gor_don, formerly of Harvard, led off with a 47. 9 for SCYV's cosmopolitan team, trailing third-place Stanford by 3 yards. Mike Peake, formerly of Colo­rado, ran 1:51. 5 to beat Stanford's 'Young sophomore, Rich Klier, by I½ yards. The Striders, after Larrabee's 47 flat opener and a good 880, dropped out. The three-quarter leg was a great run, as Norm Lloyd made a comeback by holding even with comebacker Jim Beatty's 2:56. o. Cunliffe grabbed the lead on the pass and ran 56. 3, 61. 3, and 63. 2. Tabori 's legs twinkled along behind Cunliffe's heels, and when everyone expected him to fade he flashed past on the backstretch and sped to a 58. 2 last lap.

Smith and Norton both won 9. 4 heats with 5-mile winds. Smith won the final by leaning ahead of the upright Norton, who said, "I thought I may have nipped him." Norton came back later in speedy style, malting up 7 yards on Willie Williams in the 880 relay, only to lose again, by inches.

Outstanding college athlete award went to Gary Stenlund, who came back to his freshman promise by throwing the javelin 260'4½", raising him to 5th on the U.S. all-time list. He had two other throws over 250 feet.

Most thrilling race was the concluding mile relay which saw Jack Yerman hold off San Jose's Willie Williams for a full lap, lose the lead in the last ten yards, then come back to win, possibly because Williams slowed up whet\ he dropped the baton. San Jose was not disqualified, nor were they in the 880 relay where their first baton exchange apparently took place out of their zone. They were, however, disqualified in the 440 relay for the latter offense.

Rafer Johnson came back in the high hurdles and led for six flights until his decathlon rival, Dave Edstrom, surged past. Charley ~mas attempted a world record comeback and had one good jutnp at 7'21". Dave Davis lost his lead in the shot early but came back at the end to nip Dallas Long by i". Bob Seaman continued his comeback with a 1:51. 9 relay leg which carried the

May 1960--5 Striders' baton from 7th to 1st. Willie White's comeback almost nipped fiob Poynter for third, four or five feet back of Smith and Norton in the 100.

Darrell Horn, Oregon State junior who won the broad jump at 25'5½", also had two jumps of 25'4i"', and one of 25'1½". He hop-step-jumped 49'1½" for another personal record. 100, Smith (Oxy) 9 4, 2 Norton (YV) 9. 4, 3. Poynter (San Jose St) 9 5, 4. Willie

White (Cal) 9.5, 5. Marsh (Ore. St) 9.5, 6. Len White (USAF), 7. Weaver (una). Mile, Grelle (EEAC) 4:09. 9, 2 Wilcox (CCAC) 4: 11. 4; 3. Hoffman (Ore. St)

4:15. 8, 4 Abington (YV) 4:21.1. 5,000, Robertson (SCS) 14 43. 3, 2. Soth (SCS) 14:50. 7; 3. Sargent (YV) 15:02. 0,

4. McGee (YV) 15:06.0, 5. Peck (Oxy) 15:13.7, 6. Rodriguez (UCLA) 15:27.3. 120HH, tdstrom (Oregon) 13. 9, 2. Cobb (USN) 14. O; 3. Ball (USAF) 14.1, 4.

Johnson (SCS) 14.1, 5. Arlt (Wash. St) 14. 2. (Arlt 14. 1 in heat). 440H, Howard (New Mexico) 51. 7, 2, Cawley (SC frosh) 52. 5, 3. Arlt 52. 5, 4.

Klicker (YV) 52. 6; 5. O'Connor (Oxnard AFB) 54. 4. !11_ Horn (Ore. St) 25'5~". 2. Wiley (SCS) 25'5", 3. Van Kirk (SCSJ 24'11½°'; 4.

Hayes (SC) 24'9", 5. Shelby (SCS) 24'8", 6. Kelly (Stanford) 24'5;:i". HSJ, Andrews (SCS) 49'11½", 2. Hayes 49'6", 3. Horn 49'1½", 4. Johnson (una)

48'7½", 5. Kelly 47'2½", 6. Doby (UCLA), 7. Walker (YV), 8. Powell (Oxnard). !:!1.. Dumas (SC) 6'10", 2. tie, Williams (SJS) and Faust (Oxy frosh) 6'8", 4. tie,

Wyborney (Wash. St), Fendler (SCS), Avant (SC) and Moss (SFOC) 6'6". PY, tie, Martin (Okla) and Morris (SCS) 15'3", 3. tie, Gutowski (USMC),

Mattos (YV) and Brewer (SC) 14'6". ~Davis (SCS) 61'7f', 2. Long (SC) 61'7", 3. Humphreys (SCS) 57'5¼'', 4. Syl­

vester (USA) 57'; 5. Winters (Stanford) 56'9", 6. tie, Lewis (0>..-y) and Branson (UCLA) 55'9", 8. Johnson (Oxy) 54'10i".

OT, Babka (una) 178'9½"; 2. Silvester 178'8", 3. Humphreys 175'11", 4. Johnson 162'2", 5. Lewis 161'6", 6. Daniels (SJS) 160'6", 7. Wade (SC) 159'11½".

IT.t_ Stenlund (Ore. St) 260'4½", 2. Ulrich (UCLA) 242'1", 3. Sikorsky (USMC) 241 '7", 4. Stuart (Santa Ana JC) 240'7", 5. Covelli (USAF) 238'8½", 6. Frye (SCS) 237' 10", 7. English (Mt. Sac JC) 226'3", 8. Johnson 225'2!"; 9 Roldan (CCAC) 224'2½", 10. Studney (SJS frosh) 222'10!°', 11. Spielman (FS) 219'9ij.

440R, SCVYV (fhomassen, Carpenter, Noles, Norton) 40.3, 2. SC 41.0; 3. Oxy 41. 9. (San Jose St. placed 2nd m 40. 6 but disqualified, passing out of zone).

880R, SJS (Poynter, Brooks, Flemons, Williams) 1:24. 3; 2. SCVYV 1.24. 4, 3. SC 1.25.0; 4. SCS 1:25.8, 5. SJS frosh 1:26.4, 6. Oxnard AFB 1·27.2; 7. Oxy.

MileR, Calif. (Karlsrud 47. 2, Epstein 49. 4, Siebert 47. 1, Yerman 46. 7) 3: 10. 4; 2. SJS (Curtis 48. 8, Flemons 47. 7, McCullough 47. 5, W Williams 46. 6) 3: 10. 6, 3. SC (Smith 48.7, Balzarett 47.8, Coia 47.0, Statlill 47.2) 3:10.7, 4. New Mexico 3: 15. 5; 5. Stanford 3: 15. 8.

2 MileR, SCS (Shankland 1.55. 9, Seaman 1.51 9, Clark 1.54. 3, Walters 1.53. O) 7:35.1, 2. Oxnard AFB 7:36. 5, 3 Stanford 7:39. 7, 4. YV 7:44, 7; 5. UCLA.

Distance MedleyR, YV (Gordon 47. 9, Peake 1.51. 5, Beatty 2.56. 0, Tabori 3:59. 5) 9:34. 9 )American record), 2. Stanford (Besse 47. 5, Klier 1.52. 2, Lloyd 2.56. 0, Cunliffe 4: 04. 8) 9:40. 6 (national collegiate record), 3. UCLA 10: 02. 5, 4. SC.

Recommended by Bill Bowerman,

University of Oregon Track Coach

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6--May, 1960 ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE

Terps Easy Winners College Park, Md., May 14 -- Maryland proved to be a poor host to the

.Atlantic Coast Conference Championships this weekend by running away with the meet with 98 points.

That was more than double the 40 points scored by runnerup Duke while Nonh Carolina took third with 28} points. Other team scoring was: South Carol­ina 20, Clemson 19½; Virginia 16,' Wake Forest 2, and North Carolina State 1. The meet's outstanding performer award went to Maryland's Nick Kovalaltides, who won the javelin with a 220' toss, the shot put with a 50'4½'' effon and placed fourth in the discus . ..!!1_ Stanley (NC) 23'1¼" Mile, Weisiger (Duke) 4: 08. 4, 2. Nourse (Duke). 440, DW1delberg (Clemson) 47.9 100, Spiegel (Md) 10.1, 2. Whi­taker (Md). 120HH, Johnson (Md) 14. 6. 880, Bazemore (Duke) 1:54. O. 220, Whi­taker 22. 3. DT, Smith (NC) 145'4½". 220LH, Johnson 24. 7. PY, Andersen (Md) l4', 2. tie, Tiedemcman (NC) and Glass (Md) . ..!:!h Estes (Md)6'5¼". 2 Mile, Nourse (Duke) 9:26.7. MileR, Duke 3:18.8.

LAWSON WINS FOUR EVENTS Vancouver, B.C., May 7 -- Bob

Lawson, former Southern California all-around man now competing for the Oregon Staters T&F Club, won

four events today to feature the Van -couver Relays.

Lawson took the high hurdles in 14. 7, the high jump in 6'4", the broad jump at 23'7ii'' and the hop-step-jump

~-----------------. with a 49'5" effort. Washington freshman John Cramer won the pole vault with a

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tnark of 14'8¾'' and then narrowly miss­ed in three attempts at 15'1½". Dqug Kyle won the three mile in 13:53. 2 with Geof Eales second in 14: 01. 5. Eales also won the mile in 4: 06. 5 3,000SC, Hampton (VOC) 9:19.4; Treth­way (W. Wash) 9: 19. 7. Mile, Eales (UBC) 4:06. 5; Reeve (Oregon frosh) 4: 12 1. 100, Jerome (Oregon frosh) 9 6; Eves (VOC) 9. 6.__IL Fromm (SOC) 226'. Sprint Medley, VOC 3:26.0 (Canadian record). DT, Pul-ford (SOC) 156'3½". --CULVER CITY 12-MILE ROAD RACE

Culver City, Calif., May 8 --1. Bob Cons, CCAC 1:06:15 2. Mike Allen, Cal Poly 1:09:10 3. John Garcia, CCAC 1: 12.17

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Colorado sprinter TED WOODS Duke miler CARY WEISIGER

Eastern Notes

By Jim Dunaway Al Oener has had some sensational discus throws recently at the New

YorkA,C. 's series of two-event weight carnivals, held on Sundays in the remote privacy of Travers Island. On May 8, the burly blond Olympic champion spun one 190'7½", beating Jack Ellis' 186'7", while in the hammer Bill Mc­Williams improved his personal best and passed the Olympic qualifying standard with 204'2½" to beat Ed Bagdonas' 197'7". A week later, on May 15, Oerter just missed Fortune Gordien's U.S. record with 194'1½", which puts Oerter third on the all-time list .•. if Johnny Kelley (or anyone else, whether or not he ran or finished at Boston) should win at the AAU marathon in Yonkers, N. Y. , according to Pincus Sober, "he will be considered as a possible selection for the U.S. Olympic team." The same holds true for a non-winner if he is the first U.S. citizen to finish. Here is the baclcgrolllld. When the U.S. Olympic Committee got in touch with Kelley to see if he was going to run at Yonkers, he had already decided to. Johnny told the USOC that he didn't want any rule changes made especially for !us sake, but the USOC decided that the above change was within the framework of the present rules, anyway •. the Quantico Marines beat two of the East's best college teams on successive days, taking Villanova on May 13 and Manhattan on the 14th. At Villanova, Ed Collymore ran 47. 7, Pete Close 4: 11. 4, Mel Schwarz vaulted 14'6" and Al Cantello threw the javelin 250'9". For Villanova Paul Drayton flashed to 9. 7 and 20.8 sprint wins. Against Manhattan, Bob Gardner cleared 6'10¼" in the high jump and Schwarz did 14'9". A tough wind kept the running times down •. Manhattan surveying students recently surveyed the Van Conlandt Park• corss country course and found it about 3/l0ths of a mile short of the supposed five-mile distance.

of the month Because we appreciate your help in introducing Track & Field News to new sub­scribers we are happy to make available to you this special FREE gift of the month.

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So They Tell Me by Bert Nelson

WILBUR ROSS, Coach, Maryland State: 'The decathlon is one of the very interesting events in track: and it should be included in all track: meets on the con­ference level, such as the NCAA, NAAU and NAIA. Decatlion men need coaching just like other special events. 8000 points 'WOuld be a joke if the above came to pass."

RON DELANY, Olympic 1,500 champion. "I've been trying for two work­outs a day, but Im usually too tired. When I do, I take a 20-30 minute run in the morning, just getting the kinks out. The second workout carries the load. It may be over distance, on grass, track, roads or beach Sometimes a good cross country run up to 75 minutes, sometimes Fartlek up to 30 minutes, or some -times intervals of 150 to 440 yards with little jogging in between On the track my best workouts have been 8x440 in 58. 5-59. 5, or 22x220 in 28. 5-29. O. I've always done pretty well at 220s. This isn't a terribly hard schedule, as runners go. Most runners, and athletes, do a considerable amount of work for their results.

DON BOWDEN, first American sub-four-minute miler: "Ron Delany has come along tremendously. He rounds into condition rapidly. When he starts a workout he puffs, huffs, grunts and groans. You think he'll never make it. But after about 20 minutes you can't hear him. He just purrs "

RON DELANY again: "I finally figured how I got my bad tendon. l worked barefoot on the grass for 2½ months, never seeing a track. When I did get on the track with spikes it put more of a stretch on the tendon and since it wasn't used to it I was in trouble. But I've found that one can run with most injuries Most of us have something wrong most of the time. But we can't afford to baby Qurselves along.''

JACK CLOWSER, Cleveland sportswriter: "Lee Calhoun got the greatest start of his life in the Penn Relays and Hayes Jones didn't catch him until the last hurdle, then beat him by 1½ yards. Ray Norton looked tremendous, but I was most tickled about Dave Sime, a really nice guy who doesn't deserve any more leg trouble. The curve race didn't bother him, and considering the small amount of work: he'§ AAc!, I'd say he definitely will make it to Rome "

LEW HARTZOO, Nortl:ieast LowsJ.ana coach: "It was only eight days before we were to compete in the Sugar Bowl meet last winter, Dave (Styron) was messing around with a • 22 caliber pistol - - probably on a fast draw al­though he wouldn't admit it - - and accidentally shot himself. The bullet entered his right leg just above the hip and traveled downward for eight inches and in for two. Our doctor had to cut that bullet out in a hurry. The next day the doctor had Dave out running. You know that boy worked out four times a day for a week. He screamed at times from the pain as he ran but he was trying to overcome the natural stiffness that would follow such an incident. Two days before the Sugar Bowl meet I was convinced it was hopeless. He was making progress but was worried about pulling muscles and perhaps injuring his leg to the point where he would be permanently lame, The doctor gave Dave another examination and encouraged him to run in the Sugar Bowl race. We told him to go ahead and try. He did. And do you know that plocky boy gave us a 48.2 lead-off leg on the mile relay race."

JOHN LEGGETT, Elmsford, N. Y .: "The whole indoor crowd, from the spectators through the officials, are record hungry. This was especially not­able at the indoor AAU, and most of all in the broad jump. They used the pole vault runway, jumping over the vaulting pit and into dirt. When they measured the jumps, including Bo Roberson's claimed world mark, they measured right through the rubber chips used in the vaulting pit. Not once, as far as we could ascertain, was the tape level. Everytime it went over at least one bump in the chips. It is ,easy to add at least a half-inch in this manner, and that is what the record 'tljas broken by. In the weight throw, everytim e somebody threw the entire board, circle moved in one direction or the other. The pole vaw.lt bar is higher at on~ end than the other, and since measurements are made in the mid­dle this could provide an advantage, or disadvantage, for a vaulter clearing to one side of the center. In the high jump at Boston Kof C, the bar wasn't re­measured a.fl:er each miss at a record attempt ·of 7'2". Such sloppy officiating isn't necessary, nor fair."

BRUTUS HAMILTON, Coach, 1952 Olympic team: "Our present system of selecting the Olympic team is the best. Otherwise politics would enter into the selection."

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1s--May, 1960

GET SET! Freshmen and two year colleges

The battle for the team title in the third annual National Freshman Championships promises to be just as close as it was last year.

In 1959, Houston edged San Jose State, 60 1/5-59 2/3, for the team championship. In this year's competition, Southern California was leading the field with 56 3/5 points as of May 18. Abilene Christian was a very close second only one point behind while Northeast Louisiana State held down tlurd with 45 points. However, the whole compl¢on of the meet ls expected to change after the results are posted from the many big meets in the next month

It was a busy month for the nation's frosh and jaycee athletes as they accounted for five new national marks, three of them coming at the West Coast Relays in Freno, Calif. On May 7 a Baylor team of Don Adams, Jerry Nason, Glynn Fields and Bill Kemp set a national frosh record of 40. 7 in the 440 relay. The old mark of 41. 1 was set by Texas in 1956. The frosh mile relay mark was lowered for the second time this season when Southern California ran 3: 12. 0 at the West Coast Relays. The Trobabes set the old mark of 3: 13. 7 earlier this season. Rwming on the quartet were Stan Rhodes (49. 4), Ted Eggleston (48. 3), Kevin Hogan (47. 4) and Rex Cawley (46. 9). The New Mexico frosh placed second at Fresno with a 3: 12. 2 while Occidental also dipped under the old mark al­though placing third with a 3: 13. 2.

Arizona's Karl Johnstone, national high school discus record holder, picked up the national frosh discus record with a throw of 179'½" at the Border Conference championships on May 14. That easily broke the old mark of 171'6" set by Kansas' Al Oerter in 1955.

On the junior college scene, Bakersfield, Calif. , lowered the 440 relay mark to 41. O at Fresno with a team of Cunis Young, Wilbert Holley, Ron Suggs and Dennis Johnson. Los Angeles City College had set the old record of 41. 2 earlier this year Harry Edwards of Fresno gave the home folks something to cheer about at the West Coast Relays by throwing the discus 171'8½'" for a national jaycee standard. Compton's Jerome Jennings set the former record of 168'6¼" three years ago.

Jerry Dyes, the versatile Northeast LoUisiana freshman, got off a good early season mark of 225' 1" in the javelin but has since turned his anention to the hop-step-jump. At the recent Southern AAU meet Dyes had a wind-aided mark of 50'2f' and fouled a Jump of 51' 10" by about onlr an inch. In the same meet Dyes threw the javelin 202'4", broad jumped 23'1 4 ", high jumped 6', threw the shot 44'11" and tossed the discus 120'7" .

Frosh & J. C. Marks All ]C's in California unless noted V= freshman competing for varsity. Marks received by May 19. 100-YARD DASH 9. 5 Johnson, Bakersfield JC

9.6

9 7

n

n

Kemp, Baylor frosh Omagbemi, San Jose frosh Moore, Fullenon JC Jerome, Oregon frosh Green, Pierce JC Richardson, ACC frosh Rogers, Santa Ana JC Gaetcher, Clark JC, Wash. Palmer, San Jose frosh Plummer, Ne\\- Mexico V Roberts, TexasA&M frosh Segal, Furman frosh Haas, Oxy frosh Brinkwonh, Coalinga JC Tripp, UCLA frosh Phipps, Md St. V Gawley, SC frosh White, ACC frosh Fanning, SE La. frosh Buchanan, San Diego JC Clark, Fullerton JC Hall, Fresno JC

Wind-Aided 9. 4 Johnson, Bakersfield JC 9. 5 Green, Pierce JC 9. 6 Howard, San Bern. JC

Segal, Furman frosh Williams, TexasA&M frosh

9. 7n Wicks, Harbor JC 220-YARD DASH 20. 8 Segal, Furman frosh

21. 0

n 21. 1 21. 2

Richardson, ACC frosh Johnson, Bakersfield JC Buchanan, San Diego JC Hall, Fresno JC White, ACC frosh Phipps, Md. State V Moore, Fullenon JC Rhodes, SC frosh Gaetcher, Clark JC, Wash. Clark, Fullenon JC

Wind-Aided 20. Sm Fanning, SE La. frosh

20.6

21. 0

Johnson, Bakersfield JC Kemp, Baylor frosh Mac.A uley, Santa Monica JC Tripp, UCLA frosh

21.1 Williams, Texas A&M frosh mn Lowery, NE La. frosh,

21. 2t Plummer, New Mexico V 440-YARD DASH 4 7. 5 Homann, Sequoias JC 47. 6 Comer, Pierce JC

n Freeman, Pierce JC 47. 7n Petrinovich, Sequoias JC 47 8 Cawley, S. Cal. frosh

47. 9n 48 0 48 2n

Fields, Baylor frosh Brown, Sequoias JC Buchanan, San Diego JC Preston, E. LA JC Johnson, Glendale JC

n Fleming, Los Angeles CC 880-YARD RUN 1:50. 4 Dupree, New Mexico V 1.51. 7 Hudson, Arizona V 1.52. 3 Story, Santa Ana JC 1:51 7mn Dunbar, San Jose frosh 1.52. Sn Tomeo, Fordham frosh 1. 53. 5 Brady, Chaffey JC

Gentry, Los Angeles CC 1.53. 6 Neal, Fullerton JC 1:53. 7 Dwight, Montana V 1.54. 3 Webb, Valley JC ONE-MILE RUN 4:09. 7i San Romani, Wichita frosh 4: 12 ln Reeve, Oregon frosh 4: 12. 2 Hudson, Arizona V 4: 13. 7 Story, Santa Ana JC 4: 14. 4 Lawler, ACC frosh 4.14 9n Neal, Fullerton JC 4: 17. Si Geraghty, Manhattan frosh 4: 19 2 Mack, Yale frosh 4: 19. 3 Jackson, Glendale JC 4: 19. 6n Forman, Oregon frosh

Strickland, Texas frosh TWO-MILE RUN 9: 14. 6 Story, Santa Ana JC 9.17 9 Lawler, ACC frosh 9.22. 5 Moore, ACC frosh 9:29 6ip Hayward, Kansas frosh

ip Riesinger, Kansas frosh 9:31. Sip Haraughty, Okla. St. frosh 9:32 9 Moreno, S. Cal. frosh 9:34. 8 Fleming, Ohio U. frosh 9:35.5 VanDellen, OrangeCst JC 9:37. 0 Ketron, Nevada V 3, 000 METER STEEPLECHASE 9:42. ln Lawler, ACC frosh 9:52 Sn Fleming, Ohio U. frosh 120-YARD HIGH HURDLES 13. 9 Yang, UCLA frosh 14. 2 Polkinghorne, SC frosh

n 14 3n 14.4 l4.5

n

Cawley, SC frosh Andrews, Long Beach CC Pierce, SC frosh Johnson, SMU frosh Hankins, Fullerton JC Hammock, Villanova frosh Green, Los Angeles CC

14. 6n Ellis, Los Angeles CC Wind-Aided

14. 2 Green, Los Angeles CC 220-YARD LOW HURDLES 23.1 Andrews, Long Beach CC 23. 3 Cawley, S. Cal. frosh 23 4n Walker, NE La. V

23.5n

23.6 n

Kelly, SMU frosh Holley, Bakersfield JC Hankins, Fullerton JC Green, Los Angeles CC Keagle, Mt. Sac JC Hecker, NE La. V Adams, Reedley JC

Wind-Aided 23.1 Kelly, SMU frosh 400-METER HURDLES 52. 2 Cawley, SC frosh 54. Sn West, Northwestern frosh BROAD JUMP 24'6'" Williams, Long Beach CC 24'5¾'' Palmer, Monterey Pen. JC 24'4½" Howard, San Bern JC 24'4" Tucker, Los Angeles CC 24'2j" Wilson, Sequoias JC 23'11½'' Andrews, Long Beach CC 23'10¼'' Secor, Hardin-Simmons V 23'10" Yang, UCLA frosh 23'9" Miller, McMurry V

Poynter, Citrus JC Wind-Aided

25'2" Miller, McMurry V 24'4" Haas, Texas frosh HOP-STEP-JUMP 46'7½°' Dyes, NE La. V

Wind-Aided 50'2f' Dyes, NE La. V 47'll½" Edmundson, LSU frosh 44'11½'' Womack, LSU frosh HIGH JUMP 6'9" Stuber, Oxy frosh' 6'8¼'"i Rogers, Iowa frosh

6'7f'" 6'7 .. 6'6:z'" 6'6¼"

6'6"

Zubrinsky, Glendale JC Nicicelberry, Marin JC Mathis, San Francisco CC Haynie, Stanford frosh Stuber, Cerritos JC Jones, Bakersfield JC Howard, Trade Tech JC Upton, Texas Christian fr.

POLE VAULT 15'¼"i Pennel NE La V 14'10¾" Cramer, Washington frosh 14'8" Rose, Arizona St. V 14'3" Hein, S. Cal. frosh 14'1¼" Colbert, Los Angeles CC 14'½" Buchanan, Mt. Sac JC 14' Pratt, Los Angeles CC

Williams, Bakersfield JC Martin, Valley JC

- Belitza, Maryland frosh Tomlinson, SMU frosh

SHOT PUT 54'8¾" Korn, Kansas frosh 53'10}" Buchanan, Yakima, Wash., JC 52'8¼" Blood, Maine frosh 52'4i''i Carlson, Iowa St frosh 52'4" Steen, Oregon frosh 51 '3"ip Neuman, Missouri frosh 50'9½" Martindale, Texas frosh 50'9¼" Wright, Trade Tech JC 50'8~" Rooters, Fresno JC 50'7'" Lewis, Montana V DISCUS THROW 179'½" Johnstone, Arizona V

171 '8!" Edwards, Fresno JC 165'10" Santio, Md. State V 165.'8½" Stoner, Santa Ana JC 159'8" Bradford, San Diego JC 156'8!" Anderson, Phoenix, Ariz. ,JC 156'6½" Weill, Stanford frosh 156'1½'' Pederson, Coalinga JC 153'9" Ficker, Clark JC, Wash 153'3½" Studney, San Jose frosh ,JA YELIN THROW 247'5" Stuart, Santa Ana JC 231' English, Mt. Sac JC 225'1" Dyes, NE La. V 223'9" Pauly, Oregon St. frosh 222'10½" Studney, San Jose frosh 216'6!" Burns, Oregon frosh 209 '3" Marshall, Hardin-Simmons V 208'4'" Yang, UCLA frosh 199' Evans, Fullerton JC 198'4" Harbert, NE La. V HAMMER THROW 159'7" Jenckes, Dartmouth frosh 144'7" Standish, Yale frosh 134'8" Clayman, Harvard frosh 130'11" Wycoff, Dartmouth frosh 121'11" Maione, Yale frosh 440-YARD REL.A Y 40. 7 Baylor frosh 41. o Bakersfield JC 41. 2 Los Angeles CC 41. 0mn San Jose State frosh 42. l Abilene Christian frosh

n Pierce JC Texas A &M frosh

42. 3 Fullerton JC Sequoias JC

42 4 Santa Ana JC n Citrus JC

880-YARD RELAY 1:25. 8 Los Angeles CC 1:26. 4n San Jose State frosh 1: 27. On Pierce JC 1.27 2 Southern Cal frosh

n Long Beach CC 1:27. 7 San Francisco CC 1. 27. 8 Bakersfield JC 1:27 9 San Diego JC 1:28. 3 Glendale JC

n East Los Angeles JC ONE MILE RELAY 3:12. 0 Southern Cal frosh 3: 12. 2n New Mexico frosh 3: 13. 2n Occidental frosh 3:15. 3 Abilene Christian frosh 3:15.4 Los Angeles CC 3: 15. 5 Baylor frosh 3: 16. 5 Pierce JC 3:16. 7 Texas frosh 3:16.8 GlendaleJC 3: 17 0 Bakersfield JC TWO MILE REL.A Y 7:48. 6n Occidental frosh 7:51 3 Los Angeles CC

n Glendale JC 7: 51. 4 Bakersfield JC 7:54. ln Bl Camino JC 7: 55. 0 Cerritos JC 7:55. 5n "°'Valley JC 7:56. Bn Long Beach CC 7:57. 1 Abilene Christian frosh 7: 5 7. 4 Orange Coast JC SPRINT MEDLEY REL.A Y 3:24. 8 Fullerton JC 3:25. 4n Glendale JC 3:26. 7 Bakersfield JC 3:27. 3 Southern Methodist frosh

Abilene Christian frosh 3:28, 8 Antelope Valley JC 3:29. 2n Wichita frosh 3:29. 3 Stockton JC 3:29. 6 Los Angeles CC 3:30. On Chaffey JC DISTANCE MEDLEY RELAY 10:09. 7 Santa Ana JC 10: 12 5 Glendale JC 10: 14. 4n El Camino JC 10:21. 7n Valley JC 10:23. On Los Angeles CC 10:25. 3n Mt. San Antonlo JC 10:26. 8 Orange Coast JC 10:27.4 San Francisco CC 10: 27. 6 East Los Angeles JC ;t0:29.4 Citrus JC n Cerritos JC

..

On Your Marks By Hal Bateman

Indiana University recently was placed on a four-year probation by the NCAA for football recruiting violations. The ban applies to all sports and means the Hoosiers cannot enter any NCAA championship meets during the probation .. Johnny Kelley, who lost his chance to make the U.S. Olympic marathon team when he dropped out of the Boston Marathon because of blistered feet, may make the U.S. Olympic team after all. Kelley's trainer, Jock Semple, says Kelley may give the 10, 000 a try ... Gar Wllliams, the University of Chicago Track Club distance runner, is going to Russia in the fall on a student exchange program He is studying for a Ph. D. in geology and will probably be living in Leningrad

Kansas javelin thrower Bill Alley had injections which dissolved chips in his elbow and he has had absolutely no trouble with the arm this year ... inter­mediate hurdler Josh Culbreath took his own root-ing section to the Penn Relays Culbreath needed a private bus to transport his fan club from Norristown, Pa., to Philadelphia The rooters included his parents, his wife, 25 of his students and sprinter Ira Murchison Culbreath, who has been bothered by a number of assorted ailments during the past year, thinks he is finally healthy. But he says. "If everything else holds up until the Olympics, I'll probably wind up with a bad heart -- from worrying about what's going to happen next."

Willie Williams, the former Illinois sprinter who holds a share of the world 100-meters record, is racing again. Willie ran a 100 meters in Chicago on May 7 and placed third in 10. 8 ... another sprinter who has a share of the world 100 meters mark -- Leamon King -- also is running again. On May 7 King ran the 100 meters in 10. 5 in a special race at Kem, Calif King now is farming in Delano, Calif ... Michigan State's Willie Atterberry, who was having trouble deciding whether to run the 400, 800 or the intermediate hurdles in this Olympic year, says he will concentrate on the intermediate hurdles ... the Farlow twins of Southern California are giving the flllish judges double trouble. In the recent SC-Stanford dual meet, Wayne Farlow was announced as having finished third in the 880 in 1·50 5 However, two days later Warren Farlow told coach Jess Mor­tensen that he actually finished third while brother Wayne was eighth. Warren said he didn't bother with the correction on the day of the meet because it was all in the family

Pincus Sober, chairman of the U.S. Olympic track and field committee, l;ays his group v.ill make no statement concerning possible complications in qualifying for the Olympic Games until after the National AAU meet. "After the AAU championships we'll know every one of the 13 to 15 men who will be in the Final Olympic Trials," Sober said "Then we may issue some kind of clarifying statement concerning the Olympic qualifying setup."

Rafer Johnson thinks C.K. Yang, UCLA's freshman decathlon star, can beat Vasiliy Kuznyetsov and Dave Edstrom in Rome. Johnson, who says he will be ready in July, thinks somebody's going to be close to the world record in Rome ... former Illinois pole vaulter Don Laz settled his $840, 000 damage suit against the Columbia Broadcasting System and the Ford Motor Co. out of court for $35,000. Laz' suit charged invasion of privacy when a film strip of Laz vaulting was used in a commercial ... former Illinois quarter-miler Cirilo Mcsween recently was honored by the insurance profession for selling more than a million dollars of new insurance in the last three years ... Kansas distance runner Billy Mills called the Sao Paulo, Brazil, Midnight run "fabulous." "They treated us wonder­fully well," Mill said "The payoff came when I was at the airport and a committee showed up with a 20-pound trophy for my 10th place "

Tony Sepp, the University of Virginia sprinter who had bests of 9. 5 and 20. 6 this spring, recently shot himself through the left side v.hile twirling a . 22:caliber pistol on a firing range. Sepp was reported to be doing well after emergency surgery. It was the third time in the last six months that either a sprinter or quarter-miler has been involved in such a mishap. Quarter-miler Bud Clanton of Abilene Christian and sprinter Dave Styron of Northeast Louisiana State were involved in similar accidents earlier this season ... sprinter Norm Jehle has been dropped from the Houston track team for disciplinary reasons by Coach Johnny Morriss ... a 15-year-old Mayville, Wisconsin, high school boy, Danny Gleisner, collapsed and died on May 2 after he stopped running in a track practice session. A doctor said there were indications the boy had suffered a heart attack. However, an autopsy failed to establish the cause of death. all entries in the National Decathlon championships must meet a minimum entry qualification of 6,000 points. However, a name athlete may enter the meet if he can demonstrate from individual event performances that he can score at least the minimum entry.

Bud Held has a bad back injury and doesn't expect to throw well again A malformed vertebrae finally gave out. Last October, before the inJury, Held was throwing better than ever, hitting 260' in four straight workouts with a best of 268'. However, m May he could do only 214' in a painful effort .. in recent Boston A.A. workouts young Johnny Kelley did 29:00 for six miles on a five-lJp track and Carl Shine threw the shot 60' 10" ... Cathohc University did a com -plete reversal in the Mason-Dixon Conference championships Last year, Cath­olic U. won the team championship with 41 points. But this year the Cardinals placed last in the title meet and couldn't even score a point.

Vern Wolfe, one of the top high school coaches in the nation, has been named varsity assistant and freshman track coach at San Jose State. While at North Phoerux H. S. m Arizona Wolfe developed such standouts as Dallas Long, Jim Brewer and Karl Johnstone ... Max Truex and Navy's Bob Kunkle were m­volvcd in two recent cases of lap-countmg errors At the San Jose State All­Comers on May 6 someone gave Truex the gun one lap too early in the 5,000 Hov.ever, Max, who has been involved in lap-counung errors before, kept right on going and set a nauonal record of 14 03 G The three mile at the Penn Relays also Y..as marred by a lap-countmg error. Kunkle was told he had tivo laps to go when he was actually the leader at the start of the gun lap. He -.~ound up third after making no effort to kick when Terry Engleman, the winner, and Vic Zwolak passed him.

Penn Relay Summary May, l!J60- -9

Compiled by Jim Dunaway College l0Oy, Poynter (San Jose St) 9. 9, 2. Brown (Penn St), 3. W. Williams (San

Jose St), 4. Phillips (Indiana), 5. Fernandez (Manhattan). Open 100m, Norton (SCVYV) 10. 5, 2. Sime (una), 3. Morrow (una), 4. Woodhouse

(una), 5, Murchison (UCTC). Open 200 (turn), Norton 20 6 (ties world record), 2. Sime 20 8, 3. Collymore

(Quantico) 21.1, 4. Morrow 21. 4. Open 800, Murphy (NYAC) 1:51.4; 2 Moran (NYAC) 1.51.7, 3. Caraftis (NYAC)

1. 52. 0, 4, Carney (Oxnard AFB) 1:53. 0 Open 3 Mile, Engleman (Bloomsburg St) 14:26. 5, 2. Zwolak (Quantico) 14:26 6,

3. Kunkle (Navy) 14:28. 6, 4. Homen (Dela) 14 35. 2, 5. Shirey (Slip Rock). College 3, 000SC, Zwolak 9:31. 3, 2. Lowe (Brown), 3. Silvieri (Villa). 4. Cooper Open 3, 000SC, Jones (Ft. Lee) 9:06 6, 2. Young (USA); 3. Crawford, 4. Matza. College 120HH, Brown (Winston-Salem) 14. 3; 2. Johnson (Md), 3. Pras (Villanova),

4. McHenry (Navy). Open ll0HH, Jones (East Mich ) 13 6, 2. Calhoun (una); 3. Ball (Oxnard AFB). College 400H, Atterberry (Mich. St) 51. 5, 2. Smart (Morgan St) 52. 6; 3. More­

land (Brown) 54.1, 4. Damashek (NYU), 5. White (Manhattan). Open 400H, Culbreath (Phila. Pioneers) 51. 5, 2. Thompson (USA) 53. 4, 3. Rmen -

burg (Boston Spiked Shoe Club), 4. Baird (una). College BJ, Bird (Mich) 24'2~", 2. Reed (Penn) 24'f', 3. Burton (San Jose St) 23•11~·,

4. Moore (Winston-Salem), 5. Glass (St. John's). 6 Chappell (Army). Open BJ, Roberson (USA) 25'3~", 2. Bell (una) 25'2", 3 Moore (NYPC) 24'3", 4

Gamble (USA) 24'3", 5. Herman (NYPC) 22'11", 6. Pratt (Phila. Pioneers). College HSJ, Bush (Md. St) 49'4½", 2. Middleton (Winston-Salem) 48'9½", 3. Akpata

(Mich St) 48'¼", 4. Cooper (St. John's), 5. Ramey (Penn St). Open HSJ, Sharpe (Phtla. Pioneers) 50'6~"; 2. Davis (Phila Pioneers) 49'7~", 3.

Flo~rke (USA) 49', 4. Best (Bruce TC), 5. Shaw (NYPC). College HJ, Thomas (Boston U) 7'1~" (world record), 2. Sheppard (Ind) 6'8", 3. tic,

Nourse (Ohio St), Williams (San Jose St), Hilder (Navy) and Wllliams (Mich) 6'4". Open HJ, Gardner (Quantico) 6'8", 2. Barksdale (Ft Lee) 6'4", 3, Dennis 6'4", College PV, tie, Franta (Kentucl..')'), Glass (Md) and Andersen (Md) 14'. Open PV, Bragg (USA) 15', 2. tie, Schwarz (Quantico), Tork (Quantico) and John­

ston (USA) 14'6''. College SP, Marchiony (Manhattan) 56'4¼", 2, Garrett (Furman) 56'3~", 3. Batdorf

(Penn) 54'9¼'', 4. Och (Pitt) 52'8~", 5, Nance (Army). Open SP, Bantum (NYPC) 58'4~". 2. Sylvester (USA) 58'¼", 3. Monkofsl..-y (NYPC)

53'6¼", 4. Bender (USA) 52'9", 5. Allen (Quantico) 52'3f'. College DT, Batdorf 169', 2. Santio (Md. St) 165'10", 3. Kohler (Fordham) 162'2~".

4. Ramming (Dartmouth) 161'11", 5. Kannell (Pitt) 161'4" Oi,en DT, Ellis (NYAC) 180'9", 2. Sylvester 179'9", 3. Thomson (NYAC) 172'~".

4. Egan (USA) 168'11", 5. Keerd (USA) 167'2". College ,rr, Covelli (Oxnard AFB) 225'10", 2. Crawshaw (Conn) 220'8", 3, Living­

ston (Yale) 217'2½'', 4. Kovalakides {Md) 212'7!'', 5. Schwab {Penn St) 210'10". Open,rr, Morris (Oxnard AFB) 220'9~", 2. Kiwitt (NYPC) 214'~". 3. Bocks (USA). College HT, Lawlor (Boston U) 195'4", 2. Doten (Harv) 183'7", 3. Bailey (Harv)

181'11", 4. Sage (Navy) 180'2", 5. Cross (Yale) 175'2!''. Open HT,McWilliams (USA) 202'4", 2. Backus (NYAC) 189' 3. Hall (NYAC) 188'5~'

4. Thomson 188'4", 5. Keerd 182'111", 6. Dillon (NYAC) 176'1!''. 440R, San Jose St. (Poynter, Brooks, Burton, W. Williams) 41. 0, 2. Mich. 41. 0,

3. North Carolina College 41. 3, 4. Morgan St 42. 0, 5. Penn State 42. 4. 880R, San Jose St. (Poynter, Brooks, Flemons, W Wllliams) 1.24. 5, 2. Michigan

1.24. 9, 3. Villanova. 4. N.C. College; 5. Penn State. MileR, Villa. (Manion49 3, DeAngelis47.7, Raemore47.8, Drayton47.4)

3:12.2, 2. Morgan St 3:13 6; 3. Yale3:15.0, 4. Mich. 3:15.5, 5. Man. 3:15.6 . 2 MileR, Yale (Legat 1:54.4, Slowik 1.51.2, Stack 1 51.0, Carroll 1.50.8) 7·27.4,

2. Mich 7· 34. 9, 3. Mich. St. 7:35. 6, 4. Manhattan 7:40. 6, 5, Ohio St. 7:42. 4. 4 MileR, Mich. (Wyman 4:25. 5, Montour 4:23.1, Martin 4:23. o, Leps 4: 15. 7)

17:27. 3, 2. Georgetown 17.27 9, 3. NYU 17·28.4, 4. Cornell, 5. Maryland. Sprint MedleyR, Yale (Stack 49 2, Bain, Snyder, Carroll 1.53 0) 3:24.4, 2. 'Man­

hattan 3.25 8, 3. Cornell, 4. Duke. DistanceMedleyR, Mich. (Sethl53.0, Gibson48.6, Martin2.58.7, Leps4:16.5)

9:56.8, 2. Duke 9:59.2, 3. Gcorgeto1,n 10:01.6; 4. NYU 10:05.2, 5. Yale 10:08.2 480SHR, Winston-Salem (Middleton, Washington, Jackson, Brown) 59. 3, 2. Md.,

3. Navy; 4. NYU

Arm Weights $6.90 pr.

used by Champions

Leg Weights $14.95

ORDER DIRECT

Will reduce running laps by half - increase stanf na by 12% (480 men +l!sted) - Develop long, hard muscles exactly like you run.

ELMER'S HANDICAPS - Box 712 • Bil Sprin1. Texas

10--.May, 1960

U.S. Indoor Ranking

DASHES 1. Eddie Miles, Indiana

6. 2 1st, vs E. Mich. 2/6 6. 2 1st, vs Mo. 2/12 6.1 1st, vs OSU, Pur. 6. 1 1st, vs UCTC, 2/27 6.1 2d, Big Ten 5. 3 heat, Chicago 50 5. 4 1st, Chicago 5. 3 1st, Milwaukee 5. 3 2d, Cleveland

2. Roscoe Cook, Oregon 6. 0 1st, Los Angeles

3. Hayes Jones, E. Mich. 6. 2 1st, vs C, Mich. 2/10 5. 4 1st, Philadelphia 6, 2 1st, NYAC 6, 2 1st, vs Bowling G,

4. Dave Sime, Dike AC 7. 0 1st, Washington 70

5, Frank 9.ldd, Villanova 3d, Washington 70

6. 2 • 1st, M.tllrose 5. 4 heat, Philadelphia

2d, Philadelphia 50 6, 2 1st, IC4A

6, Bob Brown, Penn State 7.1 heat, Washington

2d, Washington 70 8. 0 1st, Washington 80 9, 8 1st, Wash. 100 6, 2 3d, Millrose 5, 3 1st, Boston AA 50 6, 2 1st, vs Navy, Pitt 6, 2 1st, NYKC

2d, IC4A 2d, Chicago 2d, Milwaukee

5, 2 1st, Cleveland 7. Tom Robinson, Michigan

6. 2 1st, Mich. AAU 1/30 6. 3 1st, vs UCTC, 2/5 6, 2 1st, vs MSU, 2/27 6, 1 1st, Big Ten 5. 4 heat, Chicago

3d, Chicago 3d, Milwaukee

8. Joel Johnson, W. Mich. 3d, Washington 70 3d, Washington 80 3d, Washington 100 2d, Mich. AAU

6, 2 1st, 2/5 7. 5 1st, MSU Relays 75 6, 2 1st, Central Col, 5, 3 heat, Cleveland 5. 4 4th, Cleveland

9, Chas. Tidwell, Kansas 6.1 1st, vs Okla., 2/8 7. 6n heat, MSU Relays 7. 7 3d, MSU Relays 75 6, 1 1st, vs Mo,, 2/19 6, 2 1st, Big 8 7. 6 1st, Kan. St. R.

10, Dave Styron, NE La. St. 6. 3 1st, Coliseum R, 2/20 6. 1 heat, Chattanooga 6, 1 1st, Chat., 3/19

440 to 600 YARDS 1. George Kerr, Illinois

1:11.8 1st, Boston AA 1:10. 6 1st, LA Times

47. 9 1st, vs Pur, NW, Ky 1:10. 7 1st, Chicago 1:11. 5 1st, Milwaukee 1:11. 8 1st, Cleveland

2. Jim Stack, Yale 1:10.9 1st, Boston KC 1:11. 6 1st, vs Dart. 2/13 1:10. 5 1st, vs Har., Pril\,, 1: 11. 0 heat, IC4A 1:12, 5 1st, IC4A 1:12.1 1st, Heptagonals

3, Jack Yerman, California

by George Grenier

1:10. 6 2d, LA Times 4. Mal Spence, Arizona St,

1:11. 4 1st, LA Invit. 1:11. 5 1st, Millrose 1:11. 2 3d, LA Times

5. Ton~ Seth, Michigan 1:16. 5th, Boston KC 1:10. 7 1st, vs MSU, 2/27 1: 1 0. 3 1st, Big Ten

47. 6 relay leg 6, Tom Murphy, NY AC

1:15, 7 1st, ~et. Devel. 1:12, 7 1st, Met. AAU 1:11. 7 1st, AAU

7. Joe Mullins, Nebraska 1:11, 4 1st, vs Drake, SJ)S 1:13. 0 1st, vs Okla. St. 1: 12. 3 1st, vs Kan. St. 1:13. 7 1st, vs Colo., 2/13 1:13.1 1st, vs Okla., 2/20 1: 12. 3 1st, Big 8 1:11, 5 2d, Chicago

8, K~e Courtn':}', Manhattan 1:1 ,4 1st, vs Army

2d, Met. AAU 1:12. 0 2d, Boston AA

57, 7 2d, NYAC 1:11. 7 2d, AAU 1:11. 7 1st, NYKC 1:12, 7 heat, IC4A 1:13. 0 5th, IC4A

9, Art Crichlow, St. John's 3d, Jr. Met AAU

1:12.8 1st, vsArmyl/16 1:13. 8 1st, Met IC

57.6 1st, NY.AC 1:12. 2 2d, NYKC 1:12. 2 heat, IC4A 1:12, 5 3d, IC4A

10. Rudy Smith, Bates 1:14. 2 1st, vs Tufts 1:12, 6 1st, Boston KC 1:12, 3 2d, Millrose 1:12. 2 3d, Boston AA 1:15. I 4th, NYKC 1:12, 3 heat, IC4A 1:12. 5 2d, IC4A

880 to 1000 YARDS 1. Tom Murph~ NY AC

2: 09. 3 2d, ston KC 1: 53. O 1st, Millrose 2: 09, 8 1st, Boston AA

clnf, NYAC 2: 10. 8 1st, NYKC 2: 16, 5 1st, Chicago 2: 13. 6 1st, Cleveland

2, Jim Grelle, Multnomah AC 2: 09, 5 1st, LA Invit. 2: 13. 4 1st, LA Times

3. Ron Gr~ory, Notre Dame. I: 55, 7 st, VS Mo. 2/1 1: 50, 5 1st, vs Pitt 2/19 i: 56, O 1st, Cent. Col. 1: 51. 2 relay leg

4. George Kerr, Illinois I: 54, 1 1st, vs Miami, WI 1: 56. 5 heat, Big Ten 1: 53. 0 1st, Big Ten

5. Ed Moran, NYAC 2: 10, O 1st, Philadelphia 2: 13, 2 2d, AAU 2: 12, 0 1st, Milwaukee

6, Tom Carroll, Yale 2: 09, 2 1st, Boston KC 2: 12. 9 1st, vs Bos., Prin.

2: 12. 2. 1st, IC4A 2d, Heptag.

1:51. 2 relay leg 7. Willie Atterberrt) MSU

2: 04, 8 4th, vs SU 2/6 1:54. 9 1st, vs NW, Ia. 2: 12. 2 1st, vs Mich. 2:11. 7 1st, Big Ten 2: 14. 2 2d, Cleveland

8. Car~ Weisiger, Dike 2: 12. 1st, AAU

1: 54. 9 1st, NC Invit. 1: 57. 5 1st, ACC

9, Bob Tague, Kansas 1: 55. 4 1st, vs Okla. 1:55, 4 1st, vs Mo. 1:53,4 1st, Big 8

IO. Ernie Billups, Loyola 1:55, 9 1st, Chi. Holliday 1:56,4 1st, vs Chicago 2:14. 3 1st, MSU R 2:12, l 1st, Cent. Col. 2: 17. l 2d, Chicago 2:15,8 4th, Milwaukee 2: 14, 9 3d, Cleveland 2:12, 5 1st, Cent. AAU

ONE-MILE 1. Phil Coleman, UCTC

4:12. 5 1st, Chi. Hol. 4: 11.1 1st, Chi 'land 4:07. 0 1st, Boston KC 4: 07. 6 2d, LA lnvit. 4:06. 6 2d, Millrose 4:03.8 1st, Boston AA 4:05, 9 1st, LA Times 4:09, 0 1st, AAU 4:05, 8 1st, Chicago 4:09, 0 1st, Milwaukee

2. Jim Beatqi, SCYV 4: 05, 4 st, NY AC 4:07.1 1st, Cleveland

3. 1&r.°ol 9.lrleson, Oregon 4:0 • O 1st, CA Invit. 4:05, 4 2d, NYAC

4. Jim Grelle, Multonomah 4:06. 4 1st, Millrose

5. Ed Moran, NY AC 4: 07. 3 2d, Boston KC 4:08. 3 1st, Washington 4:07.8 3d, Millrose 4:04. 0 2d, Boston AA 4:11. 2 3d, NYAC 4:11.8 1st, NYKC 4: 07. 1 2d, Chicago 4:10. 0 2d, Cleveland

6, Ron Gregory, ND 4: 14. 8 1st, vs Mo. 2/1 4:18. 2 1st, vs Pur. 2/5 4:11, 9 1st, Cent. Col, 4:13, 1 1st, IC4A 4:10. 7 1st, Milw. (Col) 4:09, 7 2d, Winnipeg 3/19

7. Bill Dellin~er 4:09.4 2 , LA Times

8. George Larson, Oregon 4: 07. s 3d, LA lnvit. 4: 12, 8 3d, Philadelphia

9. Jim Bowers, Illinois 4:08, 7 lsr,i vs Miami,WI 4:09,6 1st,, vs NW,Pur,K 4:09, 9 • 1st, Big Ten 4:11. 6 2d, Milw. (Col) 4: 14. 6 4th, Cleveland

10. Archie San Romani, W Fr 4:25, 6 5th, NVAc 4:12. 2 3d, Milwaukee 4:09. 7 1st, Winnipeg

2-MILE & 3-MILE 1. Al Lawrence, Houston

13:38.0 1st, Millrose 8:46, 0 1st, LA Times

13:26, 4 1st, AAU 2. Laszlo Tabori, SCYV

8:51, 6 1st, Cleveland 3, Doug Kyle, Canada

13:53, 2 1st, Winnipeg, 1/30 8:57. 2 1st, Chicago

13:45, 4 1st, Winnipeg, 3/19 4, 9.ld Edelen

9: 19. 0 1st, Chi. Holliday 13:58, 0 1st, Boston KC 8:57,4 1st, NYAC 8:58, 0 3d, Milwaukee

5. Alex Breckenridge, Marines ~07. 0 1st, Philadelphia 9;:01.1 2d, NY AC

14:02, 4 3d, AAU 14:07. O 2d, NYJCC

9: 02, 6 3d, Chicago 8:56, 8 1st, Milwaukee

6, Lew Stieglitz, U. S, Navy 13:58.s 2d, AAU 8: 57. 6 2d, Chicago

7. lohn Macr, Houston 1 :01. 3 st, Washington 13:46.1 2d, Millrose 9:04, 5 5th, NYAC

clnf, AAU 8; 57. 0 2d, Milwaukee

8. Jim Bea~ SCYV 8:57. Ost, LA lnvit.

9. Max Truex, USAF 8: 57. 4 2d, LA lnvit.

14:02, 2 3d, Millrose 13:56. 0 1st, Boston AA 8:59, 6 2d, LA Times 9: 33~2 7th, Millrose 9:01, 8 2d, Cleveland

10, Peter McArdle, NYAC 14: 28. 3 2d, Met Hdcp 14:15, 6 1st, Met AAU 9:07, 1 1st, NYAC hdcp

14:00, 2 1st, NYKC

HIGH HURDLES 1, Hayes Jones, E, Mich.

7. 8 1st, vs CM 65 2/10 7. 0 1st, Millrose 8, 6 1st, vs Ind,, 2/6 6, 0 1st, Phil. 50 7. 2 1st, NY AC 7, l 1st, A.AU 7. 1 1st, NYKC 7. O 1st, Chicago 6. 1 , 1st, Milwaukee 5. 9 1 1st, Cleveland 50

2. Lee Calhoun 7.4 1st, Chi. Holliday 7. 2 1st, Chicagoland 5. 8 1st, Boston KC 45 7, 2 1st, LA Invit,

2d, Millrose 5. 8 1st, Boston AA 45

2d, Philadelphia 7. 1 1st, LA Times 7, l 2d, AAU 7. 3 2d, NYKC

2d, Chicago 6. O 2d, Cleveland 50

3, Willie Ma~CTC 7. 3 2d, · cagoland 8. 5 1st, Chi, lnvit. 1/16 8. 4 1st, Washington 70 8, Q 1st, Mich AAU 65 8, 1 1st, VS Mich. 2/5 6, 1 heat, Philadelphia

3d, Philadelphia 7.2 3d, AAU

4th, Chicago 3d, Milwaukee

6. 2 3d, Cleveland 7. 2 1st, Cent. AAU 3/26

4. Rex Cawlex, USC Frosh 7. 4 3d, L Invitational 7. 2 2d, LA Times

5. BillJohnson, Maryland 7. 4 heat, All- Eastern 7. 6 3d, All- East. 1/9 5, 8 heat, Boston KC 45

2d, Boston KC 8, 6 heat, Washington 70

2d, Washington 3d, Millrose

8, 3 1st, VMI Relays 70 4th, heat, Phil. "'1 2d, NY.AC l

7. 3 1st, vs Navy 2/20 3d, heat, NYKC

7.4 1st, IC4A 8. 6 1st, ACC 3/12

6. Ancel Robinson, CCAA 7. 4 2d, LA Invitational 7. 2 3d, LA Times

7. Ben McRae, Michigan 2d, Chi. Holliday

8, 8 1st, vs MSU 2/27 8, 6 heats, Big Ten

4th, Big Ten 3d, Chicago

6, 2 heat, Milwaukee 50

4th, Milwaukee 3d, heat, Cleveland

8, Charles Pratt, Phil. Pion. 3d, heat, Philadelphia 4th, NYAC 3d, semi, AAU

7. 3 3d, NYKC 9. Bernie Ca~ Bowling Gr.

9. 2 1st, Relays . 8, 2 1st, Mich, Open 65 8. 6 1st, All Ohio 2/27 7.5 1st, W.Mich, R3/26

10. Curt Mcclinton, Kansas 7. 5 1st, vs Okla. 2/8 9. 2 heat, MSU Relays 9. 4 3d, MSU Relays 7, 4 1st, vs Mo. 2/19 7,4 1st, Big 8 9, 1 1st, Kan, St. lnvit.

HIGH JUMP 1, /ohn Thomas, Boston U.

7 ½" lst,7loston KC 7 '1 ½ 1st, Millrose 7'1½ 1st, Boston AA 7' 1st, Philadelphia 7' 1st, NY.AC 7'2" 1st, AAU 7'½" 1st, IC4A 7'2¼ 1st, Chicago 6'3;f' 1st, Boston 3/12

2, Charles Dimas, USC 6110½ 1st, LA lnvit. 6'11" 2d, Millrose 6'10½ 2d, Boston AA 7'¼" 1st, LA Times

3, Bob Gardner, NYAC 6 '8" 3d,. Boston KC 6'7" 1st, Met AAU 6'4i 3d, Washington 6'7" 4th, Millrose 6 '8" 3d, Boston AA 6'9" 2d, NY.AC 6'9" 5th, AAU 6'9" 1st, NYJ<C 6'7¼" 5th, Chicago 6'9" 1st, Milwaukee 6'6" 2d, Cleveland

4. Stig Petterson, Sweden 618" 4th, Boston AA 6 '7" 2d, Philadelphia 6'7" 3d, NYAC 6'9" 2d(t), AAU

5, Herm Wt,att, SCYV 6'6½ 4t , LA Invit. 6 '7" 3d, Philadelphia 6'7" 4th, NYAC 6'9" 4th, AAU 6'8¼ 2d, Chicago 6'8" 2d, Cleveland

6. Felton Ro~s, Iowa Frosh 6'Si 3d, cago 6'8" 4th, Milwaukee

7, Lew Hilder, Navy st, vs Prin. 1/15

1st, VMI Relays 1st, vs Pitt, PennSt.

6'6" 1st, vs Md 2/20 6'6" 1st, vs Army 2/27 6'8" 2d, IC4A 6'6" 1st, Heptagonals

8, George Dennis, ShanahanCC 6'61 1st, All-East 1/9 6'10" 2d, Boston KC 6'7" 5th, Millrose 6'6" 6th, AAU 6'7" 2d, NYKC 6'7¼ 4th, Chicago 6'3" 9th, Milwaukee

9. Paul Stuber 618½ 2d, LA Invitational

10. Errol Williams, San Jose 6'Bi 2d, LA Times

BROAD JUMP 1. Irv Roberson, US Army

25'9! 1st, A.AU 2. Ralph Boston, Tenn A&.I

25'i 2d, AAU 23'6" 1st, UCTC R

3, Paul Foreman, Illinois 23'9" 1st, Ill. Open 23'7f 1st, vs Miami, WI 24'12 1st, vs Pur, NW, K

1 l

May, 1960--11

M.C.S. Relay Summary Compiled by Jim Dunaway

100m, Fillman (Quantico) 10. 6; 2. Brown (Penn St) 10. 6; 3. tie, Siegel (Md) and Robinson (NC College). (Sime ran 10. 4 in heat by scratched from.final)

880, Caraftis (NYAC) 1:51.2, 2. Finnerty (Alfred) 1:51.4; 3. Tomeo (Fordham frosh) 1:52. 8; 4. Katterman (Shanahan CC); 5. Brennan (Manhattan frosh).

Mile, Moran (NYAC) 4:04. 6; 2. Close (Quantico) 4:12.1, 3. Bryant Wood (BOC) 4:13. 5, 4. Glynn Wood (BOC) 4: 15. 2, 5, Sweet (Alfred). 3,000SC, Jones (Ft. Lee) 9:32.4; 2. Zwolak (Quantico) 9:37.4, 3. Matza (Ft. Dix)

9:44. 2; 4. Glynn Wood 9:55. 5, 5. Gutnecht (BOC). 10, 0001 Breckenridge (Quantico) 30:54. 5, 2. Young (Ft. Lee), 3. Zwolak; 4.

Donovan (NYAC); 5. Reynolds (Michigan State). ll0HH, Jones (E. Mich) 13. 6, 2. Johnson (Md) 14. 0, 3. Rogers (una), 4. Pras

(Villanova), 5. Hammock (Villanova frosh). 400H, Culbreath (Phila. Pioneers) 51. 3; 2. Smart (Morgan St) 51. 3, 3. Atterberry

(Mich. St) 52. 3; 4. Coffill (Villanova) 53. 3; 5. Rogers 53. 5. filL O'Brien (Manhattan) 23'6", 2. Cooper (St. John's), 3, Buckley (Villanova). HSJ, Sharpe (Shanahan CC) 49', 2. Bush (Md. St) 48'5¾", 3. Middleton (Winston­

Salem) 47'5¾''; 4. Powell (USAF), 5. Best (Bruce TC). !!1_ Barksdale (Ft. Lee) 616", 2. Campbell (Penn St) 6'5"; 3. tie, Fields (Ft. Dix)

and Estes (Md) 6'4", 5, Tait 6'3". ~ Anderson (Md) 14'6", 2. Tork (Quantico) 14'6", 3. tie, Uelses (Quantico) and

Glass (Md) 14', 5. Johnston (Ft. Lee) 14'. §f.._ Monkofsky (NYPC) 54'6½", 2. Marchiony (Manhattan) 54'1¼", 3, Tiedemann

(BOC) 52'11¼"; 4. Allen (Quantico) 52'10"; 5. Batdorf (Penn) 51 '3¾'". OT, Thomson (NYAC) 164'6½", 2, Batdorf 160'8½", 3. Keerd (NYAC) 157'7½", 4.

Brown (Md. St) 150'11"; 5. Santio (Md. St) 150'6~".

Yale's JIM STACK, second-ranked in the indoor 440-600.

Indiana s EDDIE MILES, top-ranked indoor sprinter.

HT, Hall (NYAC) 192'5", 2. Bagdonas (USA) 191'6½", 3, McWilliams (USA) 190'1½", 4. Thomson 181'3", 5. Sage (Navy) 179'½".

ITL Kiwitt (NYPC) 228'11", 2. Schwab (Penn St) 216'6", 3, Kovalalcides (Md) 209', 4. Rohnke (Wash. & Lee) 208'!", 5. Cantello (Quantico) ::!00'8" (injured).

Quotable Quotes FORTUNE GORDIEN, veteran discus thrower: "This country should

put track stars -- greats such as Jesse Owens, Parry O'Brien, ~ob Richards and Harrison Dillard -- on a coast-to-coast tour to help boys with fundamen­tals and get them started on the right track. If this, or a similar plan, was put into effect the results would chanr the country's athl~tic outlook within five years. I don't propose w~ subsi z~ athletes as ~ussia does, but v:_e cer­tailtly should do our best to give thes kids the benefit of a good start.

BRIAN HEWSON, Great Britain's European 1,500 meters champion. "I'm aiming at the 800 in the Olympics. Whether I win a gold medal at Rome or not, I shall retire immediately aferwards."

PINCUS SOBER, chairman, U.S. Olympic track and field committee: "I am confident we will qualify at least three men for every event in the Olympics, except the 10, 000 meters. If that happens and form holds up in the tryouts, there will be no problems. If non-qualifiers win, or_ place ahe~d of qualifiers, we hope to have an acceptable answer. The Olympic squad will be assembled for training well in advance of departure. Competition will be arranged to give those who have not done so every chance to meet_the stan­dards. Marks made up to two weeks before the start of the Olympic track pro­gram on Aug. 31 will be recognized."

24'10" 1st, Big Ten ·23'61 1st, vs Kansas 14'6" 4. Milce Herman, NYPC 23'4 4th, Big 8 14'6"

24 1 1st, Boston JCC POLE VAULT

14'9'" 24'3! 1st, Boston AA 14'6" 24'8¼ 3d, AAU 1. !· D. Martin, Oklahoma 15'

5. Don Meyers, Colorado vs Kansas 14'9" 1 '!" 1st, 23 1811 2d, vs Neb. 2/13 15' J st, MSU Relays 14'6" 23'10½ 1st, Big 8 15'i" 1st, vs Nebraska 14' 24'8½ 1st, Colo. Invit. 15'7¼ 1st, Big 8 14'6"

6. Bill Toomey, Colorado 2, Don Bra&J, Shanahan CC 14'9! 24'5½ 1st, vs Neb. 15 131

' st, All-East 1/9 15'¼"

440R, N.C. College (Dobbs, Seaton, Johnson, Robinson) 42. 0, 2. Morgan St. 42.1, 3. Navy. (Penn State and Maryland disqualified for overrunning zones).

880R, Villa. (Budd, Drayton, Maruon, Raemore) 1:26.2; 2. N.C. College 1:26.2, a.Montclair St, 4. Md. St. (N.C. College ran 1:25.4 in heat). Club, Service MileR, NY Pioneer Club (Bertrand 49. 3, Richardson 48. 4; McRae

48,6, Barnes49.l) 3:15,4, 2. Phila. Pioneers; 3. NYAC, 4. BOC, 5, Bruce TC. College MileR, Md. St. (Crutchfield 49. 9, Mays 49. 0, Burchette 49. 5, Phipps

47.0) 3:15,4, 2. Montclair St., 3. Wm. & Mary, 4. W. Chester Teachers. Univ. l\-llieR, Morgan St. (Smart 48.5, Ridley 49. 4, Anderson 48. 5, Ellis 46. 8)

3:13.2, 2, Villanova 3:14.6, 3. Fordham 3:15.1, 4. Mich. St. 3:15.2, 5. NYU. 2 MileR, Mich. St. (Castle 1:56. 0, Carr 1.53. 5, Lake 1.52. 4, Atterberry 1:51. 2)

7:33. 2, 2. Penn St. 7:35. 4, 3. NYU 7:35. 6, 4. Manhattan 7:41, 7, 5. St. John's. 4MileR, BOC (G. Wood4:17.3, Pflaging4:23.4, B. Wood4:20.8, Rodda4:16.2)

17:17.7, 2. NYU 17:37.2, 3, Manhattan 17:40.8, 4. NYAC, 5. Fordham. Sprint MedleyR, Manhattan (Colino 48.6, Courtney, Fernandez, Evans 1:51, 6)

3:24.1, 2. Fordham, 3, Morgan St., 4. Maryland, 5. Navy. Club, Service Sprint MedleyR, NYAC (Morris, Ewing, Scruggs, Caraftis 1:52. 3)

3:26. 3, 2. BOC; 3, Quantico, 4. Phila. Pioneers, 5, Shanahan CC. Club, Service Distance MedleyR, NY AC (Caraftis 1.54. 0, Lockerbie 49. 4, Mc­

Ardle 3:03.4, Moran 4:08.2) 9:55.0; 2, Quantico 10:03.4, 3. BOC; 4. Penn AC. College Distance MedleyR, Duke (Bazemore 1.53.0, Jones 49.0, Weisiger 3:02.2,

Nourse 4: 18. 0) 10: 02. 2, 2. Mich. St. 10: 09. 2, 3 Penn St., 4. NYU, 5. Villa.

3d, Washington 14' 5th, Chicago 4th, Mill;-ose 14'9¼ 4th, Milwaukee 5. Joe Marchiony, Manhattan 2d, Boston AA 9 Henry Wadsworth, Florida 5412£ 1st, vs Army 1/9 6th, Philadelphia i-J 19.. i':th, AAU 53'7" 2d, Met AAU 1st, NYAC 10, Tom Reichert, ND 55'9" 1st, Millrose 3d, AAU 14' 1st, vs Mo. 2/1 54•3~ 1st, Met IC

56'8} 1st, NYJCC 13'6" 6th(t), MSU R 1st, Boston AA 1st, So. Atl. AAU 14'1" 1st, vs Pitt 2/19 55'7! 1st, Philadelphia 4th, Chicago 14'4" 1st, Cent. Col. 55'2 2d, NYAC 3d, Milwaukee 14'4" 1st (t), IC4A 56'5 2d, AAU 2d, Cleveland 13'6" dnp, Chicago 55'111 2d, NYKC

23'4" 1st, vs KS, Ia. S 15'4" 1st, Boston KC 5, ~im Graham 14'4! 5th, Milwaukee 57' 1st, IC4A 23'5" 3d, Big 8 15'5½ 1st, LA Invit. 15 1st, Winnipeg 1/30 14'6 3d, Cleveland 6. Chas. Roberts, Striders 24'8i 2d, Colo. Invit. 15'4" 1st, Millrose 14'3" 8th, AAU 14'4" 1st, WMU R 55'10" 3d, LA Invit. 23'8 1st, Kan. St. Inv 15'1" 1st, Boston AA 13'6" 1st, Okla, AAU

SHOT PUT 56'9" 4th, LA Times

7. Les Bird, Michigan 15' 1st, Philadelphia 15'i" 3d, Chicago 7. Ken Bantum, NYPC 23'llif 1st, Mich. AAU 15' 1st, LA Times 14' 7th, Milwaukee (inj) 1. Parry O'Brien, Striders 55'1 1st, Met AAU 23'2" 1st, UCTC 15'5" 1st, AAU 6, Aubrey Dooley, Okla. St. 63 111

' 1st, LA Invit. 54'6 1 1st, Boston KC 23'10¼ 1st, MSU R 15'4i 1st, Chicago 14'71 1st, vs Neb. 2/6 61 'll½ 1st, LA Times 54'8' 3d, Millrose 23'21 2d, vs MSU 15'6" 1st, Milwaulcee 14'6" 3d, LA Times 61 '8" 1st, AAU 55'2 1 2d, Philadelphia 23'5¼ 4th, Big Ten 15'5" 1st, Cleveland 14'9" 5th, AAU 62'5'" 1st, Milwaukee 55'3i 1st, NYAC

8. Phillip ChapEel, Army 3, Bob Gutowski, Marines 14'8i 2d, Big 8 2. Dave Davis, Striders 55'6" 3d, AAU 22'¼" 2d, vs Man.1/9 14 16½ 3d, LA Invit. 15' 1st, Kan. St. Inv. 61'6½ 2d, LA Invit. 56'3½ 1st, NYKC 22'8"., 1st, vs Cornell 15'1" 1st, Washington 7. John Pennel, NE La. St. 59'8" 3d, LA Times 55'7½ 4th, Milwaukee 21 '3" 3d, vs Prin. 15' 2d, Millrose 15'1" 1st, khattanooga R 60'½" 2d, Milwaukee 8. Ed Nuttin , Georgia Tech 22'2" 3d, vs Harvard 14'6" 2d, Philadelphia 8. ¾erry Welbourn, Ohio TC 3. Dallas Lona:, USC 56 3 1st, Col. Relays 23'8i 2d, IC4A 14'6" 2d, LA Times 1 '7½ 3d, Boston KC 60' 2d, LA Times 54'6 1st, Chattanooga 23'8 1st, Hepatgonals 15'1" 2d, AAU 14'6" 3d, Millrose 4. Milce Lmdsa , Oklahoma 9. Mike Lewis, Oxy

9. John B.!ckley, Villanova 15 '.i" 2d, Chicago 14'3" 2d, Boston AA 57 7 st, vs Kansas 55'4'" 5th, LA Times fouled AAU 15'6" 2d, Milwaukee 14'6" 3d, Philadelphia 58'6 1st, MSU R 10. Carl Shine, BAA 23'9! 1st, IC4A 4. Mel Schwarz, Marines 14'6" 3d, NYAC 57'10! 1st, vs Neb, 541411 3d, Boston AA

10. Bob Wenski, Missouri 151 2d, All-East 14'9" 4th, AAU 57'10½ 1st, Big 8 52'9" 1st, NE AAU 23'1½ 1st, vs ND 2/1 14'7! 2d, Boston KC 14'6" 2d, NYAC 58'1! 3d, Milwaukee 55'2½ 4th, AAU

12- -May, 1960 HEPTAGONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS

Runners Give Elis Title Cambridge, Mass., May 14 -- The Yale Elis, a disa~pom~ing thud in the

mdoor Heptagonal Championships, bowiced ~ck today to easily wm the outdoor championships with 63 points at Harvard Stadium. _

Defending champion Yale won six events and_ scored lll 11 of the ~6 ev~nts to turn back host Harvard, which scored 40 points. Navy was a _close third w~th 39½ pomts, Pennsylvania fourth with 26 points while Army, the md~or champion, was next with 23 points. Other teams scoring were: Cornell 18, Prmceton 17, Brown 16, Dartmouth 11, and Columbia 2½. I

Yale, which scored 51 of its pomts in the running events, had two ~e1=ord breakers in quarter-miler Jim Stack and Dave Bain in the 220. Stack was ti.njed in 47. o in the 440 to lower the conference mar.le by eight-ten~s of a second while Bain set a conference mark in the 220 with a 21. 2 during a trial heat. However, Barn finished second in the final, which was won by teammate Steve Snyder .• 100, Sprague (A) 9. 8, 2. Snyder (Y). 3. Golwas (N), 4. Bain (Y); 5. Van Houten_ (N). 220, Snyder 21. 6; 2. Bain, 3. Moreland (B), 4. Harwood (Prm). 5. Golwas. (Barn

ran 21. 2 in heat) 440, Stack (Y) 47. O, 2. Edmunds (Prin) 47.1, 3. Harper (Penn), 4. Moulding (Cor); S:-Pcrcy (H). 4

880, Carroll (Y) 1.52. 4, 2 Brandeis (Cor), 3. Slowik (Y), 4. Ha11,I1e (A), 5. Schumacher (H). .

Mile, Mullin (H) 4: 14. 8, 2. Howard (H) 4: 14. 8, 3. Groon (Cor), 4. Morrison (Y), 5. Reismger (Penn).

2 Mile, Lowe (B) 9: 16 5, 2. Laris (D); 3. Fitzgerald (H); 4. Kunkle (N), 5. Roberts (A),

120HH, Luck (Y) 14 lw, 2. McHenry (N), 3. Sinisi (B), 4. Cutcomb (N), 5. Neal (N). 220LH, Luck 24. l. 2. Moreland, 3. McHenry. 4. Ebers (D), 5, Blodgett (H). !tl!_ Reed (Penn) 23'5½'', 2. Wagstaff (Prin) 23'2", 3. MacDonald (Y) 22'10½'', 4.

Prichard {N); 5, Thorell (N) • .!::!L_ Hlider (N) 6'6", 2, Fay (A) 6'3". 3. tie, Joyce (Col) and Marshall (N) 6'2". PY, Murray (Cor) 13'8", 2. Berlmger (Penn) 13'4", 3. tie, Finch (Cor), Holland (D) and Blodgett 13'. SP, Batdorf (Penn) 54'2", 2. Nance (A) 54'1½", 3. Nichols (H) 52'5¼", 4. Cohen (H) 52'1", 5. Hart (N) 51'7½". DT,Batdorf i70'6", 2. Pyle (Y) 163'10½'', 3. Ramming (D) 163'6½", 4. Bartek (N) 156'8J", 5. Bronstelll (H) 156' 1½". .!:!I, Doten (H) 183'd", 2. Cross (Y) 181'9½'', 3. Sage (N) 180'8½'', 4. Bailey (H)

180'51" 5. Wilson (H) 178'11½''. lL_ Thurber (Prin) 223'8", 2. Livmgston (Y) 211'10", 3. Maxson (N) 196', 4.

Corbm (H). 5. Duell {P:tin). MileR, Yale (Brown, Knabel, Carroll, Stack) 3:18.2; 2. H, 3. A, 4. N, 5. Cor.

J..

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Track & fleld News, lox 296, Los Altos, Calif,

Drake Relay Summary Compiled by George Grenier

100, Tidwell (Kansas) 9. 5; 2. Knaub (Baylor) 9. 6; 3. Johnson (Grambling) 9. 7, ""T.""Givens (Okla) 9. 8, 5. Williams (Kansas). AAU 440, Davis (Ohio TC) 47.4, 2. Southern 47.8, 3. Don Styron (NE La. TC)

48. 1, 4. Dave Styron (NE La. TC) 48. 3, 5. Mills (Purdue) 48 6. Mile, Almond (Houston) 4: 12. 6; 2. Gregory (Notre Dame) 4: 12. 8, 3, Dotson (Kan­

sas) 4:12.8, 4. Brings (S. Dakota) 4:14.3; 5. Erickson (Minn) 4:16.5. 2 Mile, Lav.rence (Houston) 8: 57. 4, 2. Mellgren (Baylor) 9: 13. 8, 3. Eisenman

(Okla. St) 9: 14. O; 4. Mulholland (Loras) 9: 18. 8, 5. McFadden (Kirksville St). 5,000, Edelen 14:35. 7, 2. Coleman (UCTC) 14: 39. 9, 3. Henderson (Arizona St)

14:49, 9; 4. Mills (Kansas) 14:52. 6; 5. Eisenman 15:00.2. 120HH, Odegard (Mmn) 13. 9, 2. Cunningham (Texas) 14. 2, 3. Wilson (Texas)

14. 3; 4. Pederson (Minn) 14. 4; 5. Stucker (Kansas St) 14. 5. 440H, Stucker 52. 7. 2. Bork CH. Mich) 52. 9, 3. Wilson 53. 1, 4. Ablowich (Ga.

Tech) 53. 3, 5. tie, Moore ~radley) and Campbell (Cornell College) 54. 7. ~ Boston (Tenn. A&l) 24'9 4 ", 2. Baird (E. Texas) 24'7"; 3. Runge (Iowa St)

23'7¼", 4. Foreman (Ill) 23'5-;l'', 5. Ashbaugh (Kansas) 23'3½" . .!:!.h_Lewis (Grambling) 6'5!", 2. tie, Curtis (Baylor), Offett (Bradley), Thornton

(Texas Tech) and Weiler (Texas) 6'3f'. HSJ, Baird 47'5lf", 2. Foreman 47', 3. Nickel (Kansas City U.) 46'8½". PY, Martm (Okla) 15T', Dooley (Okla. St) 14'8f', 3. tie, Oden (Emporia St) and ""ciark (N. Texas) 14'2f'. SP, Lindsay (Okla) 56'10½°', 2. Smith (Mo) 55'1", 3. Nutting (Ga. Tech) 54'9¼"; 4. B. Brown (Ill) 54'8/i''; 5.' Fry (Baylor) 53'10¾''. AAU SP, Nieder 63'11~" (betters recognized world record), 2. O'Brien 63'1¼",

3. Davis 61'9¼". _QI, Cochran (Mo) 168'2"; 2. Weise (Houston) 158'4½'', 3. Williams (Hastings)

154'2~", 4. Foos (Kansas) 152'11!"; 5. McIntire (Emporia St) 149'8½". JL.. Alley (Kansas) 238'5", 2. Beucher (Kansas) 221 '5", 3. Cockreham CNichita)

214'9", 4. Hamilton (Kansas St) 205'4½", 5. Terauds (Dubuque) 204'2". 440R 1 Baylor (Smalley, Knaub, Minter, Hollis) 41. l, 2. Abilene Christian 41. 5,

3, Kansas 41. 7; 4. Missouri 42. 3, 5. Houston 42. 7. 880R, Abilene Christian (Cooley, Peterson, Taylor, Young) 1:25. 5, 2. Baylor

1:25.9, 3. Houston 1:26.2, 4. Missouri 1:26.4; 5, Kansas 1.27.9. MileR, Illinois (Lattimore 49. 0, Houston 49.1, Coleman 46. 7, Kerr 47. 2) 3: 12. 0,

2. ACC 3: 12. 6, 3. Kansas 3: 13. 6, 4. Texas 3: 14. 5, 5. Houston 3: 15. 7. 2 MileR, Kansas (Davis 1:55.3, Dotson 1:52.7, Cushman 1:55.7, Tague 1:54.1)

7:37.8, 2. Kentucky7:42.7, 3. Drake7:42.9, 4. Marquette 7:43.1, 5. Wisc. 4 MileR, Nebraska (Marples 4:32. 5, Kier 4:25. 8, American Horse 4:17. 9,

Mullins 4:26.4) 17:42,6, 2, W. Mich. 17:44.9, 3. Mo. 17:48.6, 4. Houston. Sprint MedleyR, Kansas (Cushman 49. 2, Williams, Tidwell, Tague 1.51.1)

3:22.1, 2. Ill. (Kerr 1:51. 9) 3:22. 3, 3. Ark. 3:22. 9, 4. Okla. St. 3:23. 6; 5. ND. Distance MedleyR, Illinois (LeCrone 50. S, Beastall 1.54. O, Bowers 3:01. 0, K.

Brown 4:13,7) 9:59.5; 2. ACC 10:00.0, 3. Nebraska 10:02.8, 4. Iowa, 5. ND. 480SH, Kansas St. (Falk, Hooker, Rich, Stucker) 58. 8, 2. Iowa 59. 6, 3. Kansas

59. 8. Texas did not finish. COLLEGE DIVISION

440R 1 E. Texas (West, Baird, Schaefer, Garton) 41.1, 2. Texas S,outhern 41. 4; 3. Tenn. A&l 41. 7, 4. Texas A&l 42. 0, 5. Emporia St. 42. 5.

880R, E. Texas CNest, Baird, Schaefer, Garton) 1:25. 9, 2. Central Michigan 1:26. 8, 3. Pittsburg St. 1:28. 5, 4. Loyola of Chicago.

MileR, Central Mich. CNaters 48. 3, Goetz 49. 3, Blalock 47. 9, Myers 46. 7) 3: 12. 2, 2. Texas A&l 3: 13. 9, 3. Loyola of Chicago, 4. Pittsburg St.

2 MilcR, Howard Payne (Myers 1.55.1, Ivey 1:56. 5, Petty 1:55.1, Noble 1:53. 3) 7:42. O; 2. W. Mich. 7:49.4; 3. Emporia St., 4. W. Ill., 5. Miami.

Sprint MedleyR, East Texas (Bagiackas 1.50. 9) 3:23. 7, 2. Emporia St. 3:24. 7, 3. Loyola of Chicago 3:25.2, 4. Texas Southern 3:26.3, 5. Southern U. 3:27.9.

Distance MedleyR, W. Mich. (Smith 50. 1, Wuggazer 1.54. 2, Ashmore 3: 06. 3, 1--------------------------------~ Eversole4:21.4) 10:12.0; 2. Emporia St. 10:17.4; 3. W. lll., 4. Mankato St.

U.S. REPORT by D.H.Pott■

19 Ma.Je Long Beach With thi• aoatb 1 • report I will begin the uaual rankln& or th• top ten Hn in each event. Three factor• att•ct r•nking1 (l),l~cing in ■1jor •••t■,(2)win-lo•• recerd,(,) ■1quenc• or ■1rlc1. Th• beet •rk doH not nec1 ■1■rily get th, top ranking. Nor 1• th, ranld111 '"'POIN to be ay gu,u H to who would bHt-vhoa. It ii bH1d OD an lftluat1on or each ■1n 1 1 ••• ■on record•• it i• known to ... Since sy 1ourc11 ot intoraation •r• not o■nipot■nt I can •••ily ■alt• ■OH ■i•­talt••• &lao in thi• tir1t r■nking Midwe1t1rn ind Ea1t■rn athl1t11 ar• at • 41aadvant•i• •• they haven't bad•• ■1ny chance• to ■how their worth •• have th• h1tern and Southern athl•t••• I did not atteapt • ranking in the r•c•• longer lhan th• mile nor in th• IISJ' end HT, ~••• event, being cont■•t•d l■■• frequently than th• other•. f ■rhap ■ by next tiH a ranking tor them will be po■■ ibl■•

In th• li■ t below it• ■an 1• ranked, hi• po■ ltion in raning 1• indicated by th• number pr■ c■eding hi• name. '!tie Hric given on th••••• line•• ••ch •n•• n•■- 1• hi• ••••on beet, it none ■ucb appear■, then hie •••■on b1■ t i■ reported below hi• nam,. Pl•••• 11nd addition, and correction■ to1 D.H.Pott,, Box }412, Long Beach,, Calif.

The following abbreviation■ are u1ed1

h hHt w wind H■i1ted triangular • H■i-final N non- ■ coring co~petitor quadrangular • ■etric diltance _p ■peillal event DM dev■lopHnt meet r rll•y ti■- T ti• lC all COlller ■ ■-It t around turn I tor■ign national

la ... •••nt, in addition to th• ten ranked men, I bava li ■ ted ■ddiUoaal p■rt-r• llbo ere in th• top twenty by mark. Further mark• li■ t■d are ••• ■on b1■ t1 which will ■eke the 5C beat li■ t tor th• year. 100 W41 There ■re really quit■• fe~ faat men vying for ■pot■ on our Olympic ■quad. I kind or think th• ■ucc■■■rul one ■ will not be th• f••t­••t but the h1althia ■t. Even• ■light injury i■ enough to interrupt th• training progru and talc• the edge ot the beet of the ■printer■• Errata, &l■paugh'• 9.5 or 4/22 wa■ windy .... _r did 9.8(2) on ,;26.

l.Ray Norton(SCIV)9., Gene Whit■ (1la.1&:M)9.4 10.,■ (l)ienn Rly■ 4/,0 Ralph &l ■paugh(T1xa■) lO.,a (l)&C(lunnyval ■) 5/6 9.4 (l)SWC 9.4 w h (l}W■■ t Co■■ t Rly■ 5/14 Willie William■ (San Jo■■ )9.5

5/14

9.4 (2)W1 ■t Coa■ t Rly■ 5/14 Hubie Wat■on(Jordan BS,U)9.5 2.Cbarli• Tidwell(lanaae)9.4 1 D■nn1• John■on(la1t1r1ti■ld)9.5

9.5 (l)l)rak:1 Rly1 4/,0 Ray Eth1rly(&lbuqu1rque,NM,HS)9.5 ,.Doug 8mith(Occidental)9.4 Pr1d NcCoy(Colo.St)9.5

9.7 (l)v1.&riz.lt. ,;12 Georg• P1ter1on(&cc)9.5 9.7 (l)v1.U!IC 4/16 Willie White(C.lifornia) 9.6 (l)v■ .ltantord 4/,0 9.5 (l)v,.Ora.St. 9.7 (l)SCU.C 5/6 bo■ Mar■h(Ore.St) 10.,.. (l)(Tart,Cal.) 5/7 9.5 (2)v■ .C..litornia 9.4 wh (l)We ■ t Coa■t Rly■ 5/14 Bob Ssund■r1(Wa1hington) 9.4 (l)W■■t Co■■ t Rly1 5/14 9.5 (l)va.UCl.l.

4.Bob Poynt■r(lan Jo ■e)7.4 Bill X1■p(Baylor Proeh) 9.9 (l)Penn Rly1 4/,C 9.5 (l)SWC(tro■~) 9.5 C,)W■ 1t Coa■ t Rly1 5/14 Paul Wind ■r(Morgan St)

4/,0

4/,0

4/,0

5/14

5.Dave ltyron(NE La)l0.2■ 9.5 (l)CW 5/14 9.6 (l)LSU Inv. 4/2, Bill Woodhou■■ (unattached)lC.21■ 10.l• (l)lo.UU 5/7 David J•n(US &rmy)

6.Sid Garton(E■ ,t T1xae)lo.,■ 10.2■ (l}(lnlcara} (2)Lone St•r er. 5/14 John Lewi ■ (Mc:tl.array)

4/22

7.Dev• Sim■ (unattached)l0.2m 9., w (2)v■ .Hardin-s1■• 4/ 111 (2)P■nn Rly• 4/,0 Stone Jobn■on(Grambling)

8.Jimy W1aver(unattacb1d)lo.2m 9.6 h (l)Dralc■ Rly■ (7 )lh■t Cout Rly• 5/14 9.4 w (l)SWAC

9.Bobby Norrow(unattach■d)lC.2m BillJ Holli■ (Baylor)

4/29 5/7

■ (})P■nn Rly• 4/,0 9.4 w (l) □ (W1co) 5/5 10.Larry Dunn(lrizona)9.4 'Denbi• John1on(Bak1r1tiald)

9,9 (l}A (Tuc■on) }/19 9.4 wh (l)WCR(jc} 9.9 (l)v■ .BYU ,;22 Tony Sepp(Virginia) 9.6 (l)v1.0r■ .St. ,;24 9.5 w (l)v•.Wm.a.Mary 9.7 w (l)v■ • .New Mexico 4/2 Bob Brook•(S■o Joie) 9.9 (l)v■ .Oklahoma 4/5 9.5 wh (3)W■1t Coa■ t R. 5/14 lC .O (l) A (Tuc1on) 4/14 Leonard White (USAF) 9.4 (l)va.lriz.lt. 5/7 9.5 wh (,)W■ 1t Coa■ t R. 5/14 9-,6 (l}Border Conf. 5/14 Ji■ Baird(la•t Teza1)

~BH~""'x....;--a-i,...N;-,,-:,tw~i=-n■~t""on""...a.~-=-1"'"••"").-=------~ 9.5 w (l }Lone Star Conf. 5/14 10,2■11 (l)(D■ kar) ,;29 John Lac■y(Fontana,C.l,HS)

Hubie Wat■on(Jord•n HS,U) 9.6 (l)v■ .Redland1 HS 4/20 10.,-W (l)(Lo1 &ng■l ■■) 4/29 Jerry Y.illar(8owie,Tex.,HS)

Roger Beu-r(ME La) 9.6 (l)Reiional 4/,o le.,.. (2)So.UU 5/7 Bob Naimbourg(Gard■n Grov1,Cal,HS) 9.6 (2)v■ .LSU 4/2 9.6 (l)Sun11t League 5/6

Stone John•on(O~ambling) Ray Xnaub(Baylor) lo.la (l)Gra■blinc Rlya 4/~, 9.6 h (l)Drak■ Rly1 4/29

Bob Broolc■ (S.n Joe■) Paul Willia•(lan1a■ ) 1C.4m (l)&C(Sunnyval1) ';/6 9.6 h (l)Drak■ Rly1

Pat Garr■ tt(La.Tech) Ji■ Tate(&rizona) 10.ltarw (3)So.UU 5/7 9.6 (2)v1.lriz.8t.

5/14

4/29

5/7

Mike Ga■ tchter(Clark JC} 9.6 (l)A(lua■ne)

Dick ltrunlc(l1Tada) 9.6 (l )v■,i Cal lggiu

Qiri1 lnott(U~) 9,6 (2)v1.Wa1hington

May. 1960--13 Bill Cowling■ (Fowl1r,C.l.,HS)

9.6 (l)'liCR(h1) 5/14 Bobby lb1r(Y.ia■i)

9.6 (l)Fla.UU 5/7 Dan Mill1r(Marfland St)

9.6 (l}la1t,Shor ■ R. 5/7

220 ;rard1 For the record I a2 countill( the ti-• •d• in Tidwell'• 20.2 lrJ adding O.l and callin& i\ 20C.. Th• actu•l di■ tance run wa1 only 1 14• abort or 200 ■et■r■• Errata1 ~ C.rney.

l.Ray Norton(ScrY)20.l Ron Harri1on(1lorid1 St) 20.6■t (1 )f■nn Rly• 4/,0 20., (l)Fla.UU 5/7 20.7.t (l )I.C(lunnyvall) 5/6 Vic Hall(Cel Poly)20.6

2.Bob foynt■r(San JoM)20.4 leith Tho■a1■1n(SCYV)20.6 20.8.t (2)&C(Sunnyvall) 5/6 Tony S■pp(Virginia)

,.Charlie Tidw■ll(lan111)2C.,■t 20.6 (l)n.W111.&>'.ary 4/1~ 4.Dave ltyron(MI La)2C.6 Billy Holli■ (Baylor)

20.9 (l)LSU Inv. 4/2, 20.6 (lT)IWC 5/14 20.211w (l)So,UU 5/7 Taylor Jone■ (Ric1)

5.Doug lmitb(Occidental)20.5 20.6 (lT)SWC 5/14 21.7 t (l)T■ .lriz.lt. 3/12 John Lacey(Pontana,C:.l.,HS)20.7 21.9 t (l)v■ .U It. ,126 l■lton R■e ■■ (LB ~oly HS)2C.8 21.2 w (l)ve.UCU 4/2 Pr■d NcCoy(Colo.lt)2C.8 21.4 t (l )ve. use 4/16 Dave Bain(Yal ■ )20.8 21.2 t (l )v■ .lt■ntord 4/,0 Qiri• lnott(UCl.l) 20.5 (l)Sc:11.C 5/6 20.8 (l )n .Wuhington 4/,C

6.Dav■ Si■■ (Unattacb■d)2C,8mt 1 Dav■ S1gal(Pul'llan Pr.) 20.e.t (2}P■nn Rly■ 4;,o 20.8 (l)n.Miami Fr. ,129

7.Willi• Willia■■ (San Jo ■e)2C.5 Paul Drayton(Villanova) B.ldolph fl-r(Jrew M■xico)20.6■t 20.8 (l )n.Lalall ■ 5/7 9.Ralph &l ■paugh(T1xa1)21.C t Denni• Richard1on(ACC Pro■h)

21.l w (l}v•.Ric■ ,Tex.&&)( 5/5 20.e (l}O(Big Spring) 5/7 l , 1 To■ Rob oaon M ch an 2 • t Bob Brown(P■on It) George f1ter ■on &CC)20.9mt 2018 fl}v■ .P!tt ~14

20.S,.t (3)0 (Abilene) 4/16 Billy Hollie Baylor) Earl You11g(&Cc}20.9 ~ 20.4 w (l ) □ (Waco) 5/5

21.l (l }Tn. Coll. 5/5 Bob Fanning(unattached) laith Tho■a1■■n(SCYV}2l.C t 20.,-W (l)So.&&U Jr. 5/7 Stone John■on(Grambling) Ro&•r B1umer(B La)

21.0 t (l)Grubling Rl71 4/2, 2c.,,- (2}1o.UU ,11 Jim Weav■r(unattach■d)21.0mt Georg• ik■ tro■ (Cornell) John l■ tzman(US&P) 20.6 w (l)n.Penn 5/7

21.0 t c, )&C(Sunnynle) 5/6 Bill l■■p(Baylor Pro ■h) Ji■ B1t■ 1(lllC}2l.l t 20.6 w (l )S'liC(tro•h} 5/14 Ed Collymore(Quantico) Hubi■ Wat1on(Jordan HS,U)

21.l■t c, )Penn Rly1 4/,0 20,7 w (l )n .Narboone 4/29 Larry Dunn(&rizona} Miki Larrab■e(Strider■}

21.2 t (l )n,Ariz.lt. 5/7 20.7 w (l )ve .LU,LBCC 4/,0 Dave Ja■H(lll &r■y) R.L.La11it■r(Big Spring,T1x,HS)

2l.2■t (l)(lnkara) 4/22 2 .8 w l Garland Tn 14 Bill Woodhou ■e(unattached) Bob Saund■r1 Wa1hington

21.,mt (4)sw La.Rlya 4/9 20,9 (2)n.UCU. 4/30 Bob Brook■ (San Jo ■e) Steve Robbin■ (Hamilton HS,Ll)

21.,.t (4 )&C(Suonyvall} 5/6 21.C (l)ve.Univ.HS 4/29 Ru1ty Wuk1(USC) 20.9 w (l)We ■t■ rn League ,11,

21.4 t (' )n .Cltla,ASU 4/8 D.yton lol•tad(Wa1hington) Otil Davil(iE.t.C) 21.0 (,)v•.UCl.1. 4/,0

21,4 t (l )A (Eugen•) 4/9 Bob Maimbourg(Gard■ n Grov■ ,Cal.,HS) Dean l■ith(Stantord) 21.0 (l)Sun■et League 5/6

21.4 t (2)n.Oxy, use v,o Bu( Whit■ (&CC Pro■h) 21.C (2)0 (Big Spring) 5/7

4lto 11rd• World record holder Glenn D1Ti1 ■ho~,d he 1• ,till• ■an to b• rackon■d with by beating a tine field 1~ • ■p•cial race in th• Drake ••la7■ , Re •••ily b■■t Southern, Mill ■, and the ltyron twin■•

l. 1Mal 8p1nc1(Ariz.8t)46.7 leith Th011a111n(SCYV)46,6 47.5 (l)v1.lrizona 5/7 47.l 111 (4)&C(Sunnyvale) 5/6 4e.5 (l)Border Coor. 5/14 Don Ra■o ■ (SCYV~46.7■

2,0llan C.111ll(Hou1ton)46.2 46.1 • (2 &C(8unnyval■) 5/6 47 .2 (l )Lone Star Cont. 5/14 Roy S■all■y(Baylor)

,.aarl Ioung(&Cc)46.2 47.0 (2)1W0 5/14 47.9 (l)T■x.Coll. 5/5 Dick idmund•(Prinoeton)

4.lddi• Southern(unattacb1d)46.7 47.l (2)H1pt ... aal G. 5/14 47 .9 (2}Drak■ Rly• 4/,C Vic Hall(Cal Poly)47.a

5.Gl■nn Davi ■ (Ohio TC)47.4 47.5 (l )CCU. 5/7 47.4 (l)~r■k• Rly1 4/,0 Bill Knock■ (CCAC)46.S,.

6.Jack I1r■-n(C.l1tornia)47.3 46.9 • c, )&C(Sunnyvall) 5/6 47,5 (l)v1.0r■ ,St. 4/,0 Golem(North~• ■ tarn) 47.4 (l)v■ .Stanford 517 47.2 (l)ve.Wi ■ ,Ia. 5/1' 46.7 r Weit Coa1t Rly1 ,/14 Uli1 Will1•••<eo~pton,C.l.,HS)47.,

7.0ti1 Davi■ (iE.t.C)46.7m Mile• Larrab■e(Strid•r■ )47.3 47.4 (1 )&C(Corvalli ■) 5/14 Williu Mill ■r(Southern Cniv) 46.7 • (l )Mt.SAC Rly■ 4/"-' 4z.~ (l }SWAC ~I

8.Mick■y Holling1h■ad(Rice) Willi• &tterberry(Uch.St) 46.9 (1 )swc 5/14 47.4 (l)n.Not.Da■- 5/14

9.Jim 8tack(Yale)47.C William John■on(No.Cer.Coll) 47.9 (l)v1.lrmy 4/2~ 47.4 (l )CIU ;/14 48.3 (l)v■ .Princeton 5/7 Jame ■ Wedd■rburn(NYU) 47,0 (l)Heptagonal G. 5/14 47.5 (l)M■ t.IC 5/7

10.Willi• Williu1(San Jo1e)46.5m Dan Bonmann(Sequoia1) 46.5 m (l)&C(Sunnyval1) 5/6 47.~ (l)C.Cal,JC 5/7

,14--May, 1960 46.6 r w,,t eo,,t RlY• '1'.l~

Dav, Nill1(Purdu1) 47.7 (l)v1,Mich,Ohio St,5/14

Glynn Pi1ld1(lllylor Pr)

Dick Wat,on(Texa, ,_.,I) 47,5 (l)Lo01 St,r Coat, 5/14

Guy Dllfart(BYU) 47 .6 (l )I~ UU 5/7

47.e (l)SWO(tro1h) 5/14 Lin Brown(81quioa1)

47.9 (')O,C.l JC 5/7 John Dunkelbero(Ol•■•on)

47 ,9 (1 )Ace 5/14 lrrata1 Dodd, did 47,6a on 4/16

Jim B1k1r(Mi1 ■ouri) 47,6 (l)v1,l1n1,St. 5/14

id Collywore(~u,atico) 47,7 (l)n.Penn St, 5/7

Pet, P1trinovich(S1quoia1) 47,7 (2)C,C.l,JC 5/7

OCQ 11rd1 lxc1pt tor Oualitt, 11 two ,ub 1150 clocking, thi1 ,vent ha, b11n rath,r ua,v,attul in th• pa1t r,w w11k1, irrat11 W1t1ig1r 1a 1150,9 wa, ■ad, v1,W1k1 Por,,t on 4/11,

l,lrnie Ounlitt1(St1ntord)l147,, Varr,n P1rlow(l18C) 1147,6 (l)n.UIC,Oxy 4/,0 11,0,5 (,)v1.lt1n,0xy 4/,0 1146.5 (l)v,,C.litorni• 5/7 'Xor•n Llcyd(8tanford)l151,0

2.J,rry li1b1rt(C.litornia)l149.5 Nik• O.ratti1(NYlC)l151,2 11,0.5 (l)v,,Ore,lt. 4/,0 Jarr,11 idward1(ACC)l151,2 1,52.0 (2)n.ltantord 5/7 Rich lli1r(St1ntord)

,.1>7rol Burl11on(Or•ion)l150.0 1,51., (4)n,lJSC,Oxy 4/,C 11,0,6 (l)n,Or1.lt. 5/7 lrai, Billup,(Loyola)

5/14 4,TOII Nurpby(MYAC)l150,5 1 ,51.2 (l)ilmhur,t Inv. l 151.4 ■ (1 )l>enn Rly• 4/,0 Pranlt Pian1rty(lltr1d)l151,4 11,0,5 (1 )Nat.IC (P) 5/7 Bob Ta1u1(lln1a1)l151,6

5,Ji■ Dupre,(llew Mlxico)l15C,4 J1ck Hud1on(Arizona)l151,7 6,J1ck ~ilcox(CC&C)l150,0II 1Nal lp1nc1(Ariz,lt)

1151.0 (1 )AC(Jruno) 4/,o l 151, 7 (1 )n ,Arizona 5/6 7,Ji■ O.rv1ny(Occid1ntal)l150.4 Larry lt,Clair(Manhattan)

1,54.0 (1 )n .lrh,St, ,112 11~1.1 'l)Mlt.IC ~1 1,.52.8 (l)n.tllC 4/16 Lui, Rodriguaz(Cal Poly) 11,0.4 (2)n.Stantord v,o 1151.9 {l)CW 5/7

8,Mik• P1ak1{8CYV)l150.4. Qi1rli1 Belcher{Utah) 1,55.1 r Mt.SAC Rly, 4/2, 1,51.9 {l)IM UU 5/7

9,0.17 w,1,1gar(Duk1)1150.9 Drew Dunlap(Texa,) lQ,R12hard Naa2b■ea,llk> 1 T1x11)l1~1.o 1151.9 (1 )swc 5/14 Bob Carn■y(USAP) llk>r■aa Hotf'llan(Ore,St)

1151,4 ■ (1 )lC(Sunnynle) 5/6 11.52.2 (2)v,.Qalifornia 4/-,C Maynard Or■e(SCYV) To■ 0.rroll(Yale)

1151,7 ■ (2)AC(Sunnyvale) 5/6 11.52.2 (1 )Yl,.rrinceton 5/7 Dave Dunbar(Saa Jo•• Fro,h) L,roy N1al(Pull1rton)

1151.7 • (., )AC(lunnyyah) 5/6 1152,., b (l)So,C.l,JC 5/17 id Moran(XYlC) To■ Lil1(Ant1lop1 Valley)

1151.7 • (2)P,nn Rly1 4/,0 1152.:, • (2 )So, Cal. JC 5/17 Ji■ Parr(SNU) Jan Und,"ood(Buena P,rk,C.1,,HS)

1152.5 (2)SW Rae, :,;12 11,52.4 (l)0rang, L,ague 5/6

uili The w,,t Coa,t lelay• produced another 4 minute mil• on t11 1011. Thi, one c,m, in tbl diatanc• -dley relay which pitted T1bori 1gain1t Cunlitt, in th• ..-hor leg, Aad L11zlo -d• it in l11e thin 4 mi•tae ind1cai.n1 he •Y be raady to raproduce th• tor■ that ranlcld hi■ no. one in th, world in 1955. lrr1ta1 Dellinger did 41C7,I and T,bori 41C7,l on 4/2,. San Romani'• 4109.6 wa• apparently an indoor ■ark,

l,Dyrol BurleN■{Or1gon),15t:,6 4111.:, (l)wa,Waah,St, 4/,0 4109.2 (l)wa,Or,.St, 5/7

2,L,azlo T1bert(larf)4106.1 ,146.2 ■ (l)&O(lunnival,) 5/6 ,159,6 r W11t Coa,t Rly• 5/14

,,lrni• Cunlitte(ltantord)4,oo.4 4112., (l)wa.1.90,0xy 4/,0 41o4.5 r w,at Coaat Rly• 5/14

4.Ecl Nor1n(JIYlC)410-.6 4105,e (l)(Univ,Park)(N) 5/7

5,Ji■ Gr1ll1(iEAC)410S,9 4109.9 (l)W11t Coa,t Rlya 5/14

6,Ji■ B1atty(SCYV)41o6,l

Bob Holland(UCL1)4107,8 C,ry Wei ■ iger(Dulce)

410€.4 (1 }lCCI 5/14 Phil Cole■an(CCTC)41c9.c JeroH Walt1ra(Strid•r•)4109,2 J,clc Wilcox(CCI.C)41c9.4

41ll,i (2)WHt Coaat R. 5/14 Charlie (;lark(San Jo,1.1-)Jt1c9.5 1Al L1wr1nc1(Hou•ton)4109.7 'Gail Hodg•on(Oklaho-)41c9.9 Don iiland(NE La)4110.o Max Truex Strider, 411C,4 John Coop1r(No,T1xa1

4110.5 (l)Mo.Valley Conf. 5/14 r--;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;.;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..7 JIM BURICH THROWS 183' 3½"

, .• ·· 'Qi;, FOR LasCruces, N.M., Mayl4--, '·', f Jim Burke threw the discus 183'3½"

fi- fl \-3 ; · ~ ~re.:1::e~ !!1::e~i~:~~o I G,1,~v\· ence championships. r IN Burke's throw bettered the old

' --..'.. 1 conference mark by more than 20 feet.

- • ,

1 ARIZONA Burke's teammate, Karl Johnstone, set

Air-conditioned Phones & TV Heated Swim Pool Private Sun Deck Credit Cards Honored

DESERT MOTO ■ NOTIL

FRIii Write f• u ...... "" o,w1 ,ww TAAvtl GUIDE n,,;,. fine..._,, ,,_ CNtt fO c .. ,, 1,..,.c­

,..,.,.. ..,,...,.. ~ c...,.. of""-- Hot.l1.

a national freshman record with a heave of 179'½" while a heave of 177'3" could only grab third for Arizona State's Carol Lindroos,

Arizona piled up 69 1/3 points to take the team title while Arizona State was second with 50 2/3 points. Most of the performances throughout the day were marred by wind and dust. Mile, Henderson (AS) 4:17. 2, 440, Mal Spence (AS) 48. 5. 100,i Dunn (A) 9. 6w. SP, Hiscolc (A) 56'3 ", Burke (A) 54'W, 120HH Lucky (A) 14. lw. 220LH, 'rhomis (New Mexico St) 22. 8w. 2 Mile,

L-==~=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::=~!J Henperson 10: 06, 9.

7,Bill l>elling,r(iEAC)4,o7,7 e. 111,x Hend•r•on(lriz.St)4106.6

4,1,.1 (l)va.lri:r.on, 5/7 4117,2 (l)Border Cont, 5/14

9,'Barri1 llmond(Hou1ton)4107,4 4112.6 (l)Drak, Rly• 4/,0

10,Bill Dot,on(X,n,,a~4,o9,5 ,154,5 m (2)Texa, Rly•

C,) ◊ (llilene) 4101.4 m (l)Xan•a• Rly1 4112,9 (,)~rake Rly•

Tucker (Iova J 4112,8 (l)va,NW, ■ia,

Joe Aaerican Hor11(N1br1-■) .,1,.0 (l)v1,Ckla.St.

To■ Rodda(l18 lray) 4111.:, (l)~ (Pt.Lea)

Tom Lari•(D,rtmouth) 4111., (l)v.,H,rvard

Jr1d Yint0n(G1org1town) 4111.9 (l)v1,Md,Jla"7

'Vic R11v1(0r1.Pr) 4112.l (2)Vaacouver Rly,

'Joa Nullin1(N1br11ka) 4112., (l)v■ ,APA

Maury Jornkka(W.Mich) 4112.5 (l)va,f.ie■i U.

Ron Gregory(lfotr, ~ ... ) 4112.7 (2)Dr1k1 Rlya

Geor[• Lar,on(Or,gon) 4112.7 (2)v,.0re.8t,

~ 61 ~••r•nc, got the a1cond under 9 minute clocking ot the ........ Dick Miller made a valiant try to dip under that barri1r.

9111 Dalll .. ar(ii:AC)8152,3 Charlie 01,rk(Sao Jo,,)9112.0 111 LawNae1(Hou1ton)8157,4 Don •ila.nd(lli La)9:12,2

S,57,4 (l)Dr1k1 Rly• 4/29 Billy Nilla(lan1a•)9112.2 9,05.0 (l)Mo,V,lley Conf. 5/14 Mal Robert,on(ltrid•r•l

Dick Mill ■r(Oregon) Tom L1ri1(D■ rt■o¥th) 91c1.8 (l)v1,0r1,St, 5/7 911,.1 (l)v■ ,Bo•ton U.

Paul Whitel1y(Empori1 St)910:,.e Bob Mellgren(Baylor) 'Alex H1nd1r1on(lriz,St)9105., 911,.e (2)trak• Rlya

lC1o6,9 (l)Border Conf, 5/14 Nil•• ii11rm■ n(Okla,St) Bob Hou11(un1tt1ched)91C7,8 9114,0 (')Drake Rly, lied Sarfent(SCYV)9110.7 Bob Low,{Brown) To■ Oalcl1y(Arka-1aa)911c.e 9:16.5 (l)H1pt,G. Alan Gaylord(C1liforoia)91ll,8 J1ro■1 Walt1r■ (Strid1r■) 1Pet Cloh111y(Hou ■ ton)9111,9 9117.2 (l)va.LBS,LBCC ~Jo~h~n"'-"M=a~c~H~o~u~•~t~on,.,...~1~1~1~ • ._ _____ 1Billy Rlynold■ (Nich,lt) Jobn Mulholland Lora,) 9116,0 (l)v,.llk>t.Da•

9116.6 (4~r•k• Rly■ 4/29 Joe A■erican Hor•■ (X1br1 ■k1) 9116,2 (l)v,,lPA

4/2,

5/7

5/7

5/7

5/7

5/7

4/,0

5/7

4/2:,

4/29

4/29

5/14

4/,0

5/14

'5/7

ull!!. Bill Dellinger dipped under the Clympic qualifying 1t1ndard in thi■ ,vent with a tine 1,14:,.4 at Eugene on April ,0.

'5C<lO w•t•r• Max Truex bettered bi• own L'S 1t1nd1rd in thi• ,v,ot. But he didn't quit• nk, it unnr 14 ■inut,1. Jim Beatty i ■ ailing with a brui••• toot. Cn• of th••• two ■hould be th■ tir■ t l■1rioea .nd1r 14 in th• neat two or three weeka.

Nu fruea(t.BAP) 1410,.6 (l)AC(Sunnyvale) 5/6

Jim B■atty(SCYV)l411,.9 John Macy(Hou1ton)l4125.4 Paul Whit■ley(iaporia 8t)l4126.2 lew Sti■glitz(US ~,vy)

14129,4 (2}1C(Sunnyvel1) 5/6

Cllarli• Clark(S,n Jo11) 141,2.4 C,)lC(Sunnyvale)

Bud idelen(ll'OC) 141,5,7 (l)Drak• Rly1

'Jan lhlberg(SNU)l4t,5,9 Ned Sargent(SCYV)

141,ti.:, (4)AC(Suonyvale) fhil Col1■1n(UCTC)

141:,9,9 (2)Dr■k• Rlya

5/6

4/,0

5/6

4/,0

lC,COQ meten 1u, Edelen became th• tir ■ t A■-ric•n to bre,k ~ minut,, for thi• '""'• ~/'1Y two week, after Xew Stieglitz had a,t, ne~ US record, the,-,,_, Minn,,ota runn,r, i111prov1d the mark by more than 20 ••cond. 1ba nest goal 1• to get an A■1rican under th• Olyitpic qualifying •ta•ar, ot 29,4c,C. idelen ran 29158,9 in th, 111-~ meet ,t Sunny•al■ on May 6. Hi• aix mil• time w,, 29101.e.

3000 Htlr •t•1pl19haE1 Only one race to report here. At Chicago .. lllq 7 Deacon Jone, ran 91oe., with G10rg1 Young 2nd in 9109,2 and Phil 0e1 .. a third in 9114.9,

120 iard1 hurdle, Decathlon •tar Dave ld,tro■ dipped under 14 at Pr■ano It may be of intreet to note that ot tbe top eight 1111n on th, All Ti■-Li ■ t in the decathlon •ix v1r1 or are under 14 high burdlera.

l,H1y1a Jone,(i.Michigan)l,.6 'C ,l,Y•ng(UCLA Pro,h)l:,,9 1:,.6 (l)hnn Rlya 4/,0. 14.5 w (1 )n,LBS 4/29 14,2 w (1 )v..Miami U. ;,/7 Dickie Durham(LSU)l4.0

2,Le, C.lhoun(unattach■d)l,.7 (2)So.lAU 5/7 1,.1 (2)Penn Rly1 4/,0 Bill Welh(Ua.1)

:,.Dave idatroa(Cregon)1,.e 14,c {l)va.V11hington 4/2:, 14.2 (1 )~■ cathlon 4/9 aill Johneon(Y.aryland)l4,o 14.4 (l)v,.W■ shinrton 4/16 14,6 (l )ACC 5/14 14.2 (1 )v, ,St■ n!'ord 4/2, Norman Charlton(Rice) 1,.e (1 )v..Wuh,St, 4/,0 14,0 (2)SWC 5/14 14.6 (l)Yl,0re.St, 5/7 Ancel Robineon(CCAC)l4,l 1,.9 (l)~e,t Coa1t R, 5/14 Calvin Cooley(lCC)l4,l

4.Don Styron(Ni L,)13.9 14.6 (l)T■x.Coll. ~5 1,.8 w (l)So,AAU 5/7 Ru•• Roger,(~Aryland lt)l4,l

;,.Ray Cunnin,ham(Texa,)l!,8 al,ine Lundgren(Utah) 14,2 2)Drake Rlye 4/~ 14,l (l)ve,Idaho It. 4/28 14.4 w (2)v1.Ric1,T1x,l&m 5/5 Charle ■ Pratt(Phil,PC) 1,.e (1 )St'C 5/14 14,l (4)Fenn Rly• 4/,C

6.Jim Ball(USAP)l,,9 14.4 (2)iuter Rlye 4/16

Harry Lucky(Ari7on1} 14,l (l)Border Conf, 5/14

1,.9 (-')Peon Rly• 4/,o 1111 t lrl t(Wuh,St) 14.2 (1 )AC(Sunnyvale) 5/6 14,l h (2)Wut Cont R. 5/14

-

1,,9 h (l)•eat Coa1t Rly1 ';,/14 Jerry T1rr(0r1.Froah) 14.l C,)We1t Coa1t Rly1 5/14 14,l h (,)wut Cout R, 5/14

7,Dave Odegard(Minne1ota) Refer John1on(Strider1) 1,, 9 (1 )Drake Rly1 4/~C 14,l 4 Weat Cos1t Rl • 14 15,l (l)Ye.NW 5/7 Ralph Boe ton Tenn.-"l)

e,Willie YAy(UCTC)l4,, 14.2 (1 )(Ankara) 4/22 14., (1 )AC(Chicago) 5/7 Rex Wil ■on(Texa■ )

9.Carl Bro~n(Winaton-S~lem)l,.9 14.} (~ )Lrak:e Rlye 4/,0 14., (1 )Penn Rly• 4/,0 Ruaeell Paderaon(Y.inneeota) 1,.9 (1 )CIAA 5/14 14.4 (4)Drake Rlya 4/,0

le.Chuck Cobb(US Navy)l4,C Bobby Bernard(TCU) (2 )&C(Freano) 4;,o 14.c w (l)O(Waco) 5/5

14., (2)AC(Sunnyvale) 5/6 Jay l\J'ck(Yale) 1410 (2}Weat Coa ■ t Rlx• 5Ll4 14,l v (l)Keptaional G. 5/14

Ourti■ kcClinton(laneaa) Gary Patt■r ■on(Long Beach St) 14.2 w (4 )Tua ■ Rly• 4/2 14.2 w (1 )n ,SCS ,LBCC 4/~

Randy McHenry(Navy) Ga■ ton Gre■n(lACC) 14,2 w (1 )n.Penn.St. 4/2, 14.2 wh (l )WCR(jc) 5/14

220 xard• hurdle ■ Ray Cunnin«ham and Jim f■ ttit ■ tag■d a hot duel in the SW0 meet. Cunningham w■nt into the lead about half way but tripped on th• ninth barrier and juat barely held off P■ ttit 1 ■ ru■h,

Don Styron(NE La)21.9 Walt Mince(lrizona) Calvin Cooley(ACC)22,2 2,., h (l )Border Conf. 5/14 Dick Koward(New YAx1co)22,} 2,.2 w (2 )Border Conf. 5/14 Ray Cunningham(Texaa) John Mallery(Arizona)

22,6 w (1 )va .Ric■, Tex .A&)! 5/5 2,,} h (1 )Border Conf. 5/14 22,6 (l)SWC 5/14 Harry Luck:y(lrizona)

Jim Pettit(Taxa ■ 'lech) 2,., h (2 )Border Conf. 5/14 22,6 (2)SaC 5/14 Bob Challender(Nevada)

Billy a'all ■ (L"CU) 2,., (l)Far Waatern er. 5/14 22,8 (l)va.Waahington 4/,o Clarence Treat(0ccidental)

Charle ■ Cobb(US Navy) 2,.4 (l)SCilC 5/6 22.e m (1 )AC(Sunnyvale) 5/6 De• lndrewa(LBCC)

Rex Stucker(lana•• St) 2,.4 (l)Met.JC Ch, 5/7 2:.2 (l )v■ ,)!iuouri 5/14 Gaaton Green(lACC)

Jay Luck(Ysle)2,,l 2,.4 h (l)So.Cal.JC Ch 5/17 24.l (l)Hept.G. 5/14 Jim Thoma ■ (N.Mex.St)

~ .. Andr•" ■ (lBCC) 22.8 w (l )Border Conf. 5/14 2,.1 w (1 )va.lBS,SCS 4/,0 Randy McHenry(N■vy)

Y.ik■ Xelley{S)!U Fr) 22,9 w (l)va.Md,Gtn. ')/7 2},l w (1 )S•C(fr) 5/14 1 H■nk Via■ ar(LCSB)

2},2 (l )CCU 5/7 4cc met■r hurdl ■• No on■ under 51.c y■ t. &nd ■ven t■l ■ nte lik■ Southern and Dovie will have to come •long pretty ta ■ t if they ■xp■ ct to giv■ iotgieter much competition at Ro ...

Eddi• Southern(Unattached)51.c Cliff Cuahman(Kanea ■ )51.2 Jo■ h Culbr■ath(Fhil.FC)5l., Lawaon Sm■rt(V.organ St)5l,} Dick Howard(Ne~ Y.exico)

51.7 y (l)•••t Coaet Rly1 5/14 •1111• ltt■rberry(Mich.St)

51.5 (l)Penn Rly■ 4/29 Rex •il1on(Tex■■ )51.e Glenn D9vi ■ (Chio TC)51,8 Dsve Psrker(unattach■d)

52,4 y (l)IY. AAU 5/7

Rex Clawl■y(USC Fro ■h)52.~ Walt lrlt(Wa■ h.St)

52,5 y (3)Weat Co ■■ t Rly1 Dava Xlicker(SC!V)

52,6 y (4)Weat Coaat Rly■ R■x Stucker(Kan••• St)

52,7 y (l)Drak■ Rlye John Bork(W.Michig■n)

52,9 y (2)Drake Rly■ Ron Ablowich(Georgi■ Tech)

5,,~ y (4)Drak■ Rly1

5/14

5/14

4/29

4/29

4/29

High Jump John Thomae brought the world mark in thi• event back to the US, And h• will probably up it eome more betore he 1 ■ through. He tried for 7 1211/2 at Penn but didn't quit• make it. Cherlie Duma■ mad■ • clo■• try et a world record 7 11•,;4 at Pre ■ no, too. Thea■ tvo might just be in a cl••• by th■m■alve ■ at RoH.

l,John Thoma ■ (Bo ■ ton 0)7 111 1/2 7 11•1;2 (l)fenn Rly• 4/,o 7 1 1 1/4 (1 )DN(Boaton) 5/5 7 1 (1 )va .SyracUH 5/14

2,Charlea DU111aa(USC)71 1 1/4 6 111" (l)va,Stantord 4;,o 6 161 1/2 (lT)va.UCI.A 5/7 6 1101 (l)W~at Coaat Rlya 5/14

},Id Coata(BYU)61111

6,161 1/2 (l)n.New Mex, ,;19 6 16 1 (l)va,Utah St, 4/~ 6 15• (l)v,. Montena 5/, 6 16 1 }/4 (1 )IM AAU 5/7 6 161~/4 (l)v■ ,AFA 5/14

4.Joe rsu■ t(Oxy Fro ■h)6 1 9• 6 161 1/2 (1 )L>. (Loa .lng■lee) 2/26 6 16 1 1/4 (l)ve.ELAJC ,;11 6 1e1 1/4 (l)v■ ,Sequoiaa }/19 6 161 }/4 (l)UCl.l Fro ■h 4/2 6 1611/2 (l)va.t.:sc Fro ■h 4/16 6 •e• (2T)WHt Coa■ t Rlf•~,/14

5,lrrol William1(San Jo ■e)6 1 e 1/2 6 161}/4 (5)Mt,5AC Rlye 4/2} 6 141 (~T)Penn Rly■ 4/,0 6 1611/2 (lT).lC(Sunnyvale) 5/6 6 181 (2T)Wut Coast R. 5/14

6,Henry Wyborney(Waeh,St)6 1111

Norman Grundy(Strid■r1)6 1 10 11/4 6 14 1 (7T)Jft,SAC Rly■ 4/2,

lance Bornea(San Joae)6 1101

6 121 (9T)Xt,SAC Rly■ 4/2, 1 Kan■ Albert1on(Gonzaga)6 1e1 1/4 Gene Zubrin■k:y(Glendale)

6 1811/4 (l)iCR(jc) Reggie Sh■ppard(lndiana)

6 16• (lT)0kio Rlye 6 181 (2)Pann Rly•

Dave ferry(Stridare)

5/14

4/2, 4/,C

6 1e1 (l}AC(Glendale) 5/7 Ray Nickalberry(J'.arin JC)6 17•~/4 Hick■ (Cole ■ HS,Corpu■ Chrieti,Tex)

6 171 1/2 (l) 4/ Henry Viccellio(Air Fore• lead)

6•7•1;2 (lT)vE.Wyoming 4/2, Jerry Lan■ (Wyoming)

6 171 1/2 ~lT)v■ .AFA Ralph Methi ■ ccsr)

4/23

61711/4 (l)Big ~ JC Conf, 5/7 Vern liil ■on(SCYV) ,

6 1611/2 (lT)AC(Sunnyvale) 5/6 Wayne 1'..oa ■ (sroc)

6 161 1/2 (lT)AC(Sunnyvale) 5/6 Brown(sr State)

6161 1/2 (l)v■ ,Sac.St.

6 191,/4 (l)v1.0regon 4/}0 6 141 (l)v■ ,Waehington 5/7 6 161 (4T)Weat Coa ■ t R. 5/14

7,Charlee Lewi1(Grambling)6 19• 6 161 (l)Felican St,Rly■ 3/19 6 161 (l)Prairie View R. 4/9 6 151 1/2 (l)Drak• Rly■ 4/,C 6 161 1/2 (l)SW.lO 5/7

8,Bob B•rkedale(Ft,L ■e)6 1 9•1;2 6 161 (l)va,Md.St. 4/9 6 161 (l~antico Rly■ 4/16 6 141 (l)A(Pt.Lee) 4/2} 6 141 (2)Penn Rly1 4/,C 6 191 1/2 (l)Xaat,Shore R. 5/7

9,Herman Wyatt(SCYV)6191 1/2 6 1613/4 (6)Mt,SAC Rly■ 4/2}

May, 1960--15

Eural Bell(California) 6 16"1/4 (l)v■ ,Cr■ ,St.

Guy Bauman(Notre Dame HS,Ll) 6 16•1;4 (l)Catholic League

Lew Hilder (Navy) 6 161 (lT)va,fa.St,

Dick Cen;pbe~l{Fenn St) 6161 (lt)va.Navy

Wilcox(~itt■nburg) 6 161 (l)Y■ ,Woc■ ter

Phil Fehlen(Cemp Pendleton) 6 161 l A a.Pend.

lC,Bob Gardner Quantico 1e ,;

4/,0

5/7

4/2}

4;2,

4/27

6 10• (l)Penn Rlya 4/,0

Pola Vault The Yaulter■ are apparently catohing their ■econd wind before launching another a■ eult on the 16 foot barrier. At Mt.SAC last month Ron V..orri• tried 15 11C1 and Don Bragg tried 15 1911/4 at Norfolk, but neither could quite do it.

l,J,D,Mart1n(0kla)l5 191~/4 151 1 1/2 (l)Drok• Rly■ 4/,0 14 1101 (2)v■ ,Ckla.St, 5/4 15 1}

1 (lT)Weat Coaet R. 5/14 2,Don Bragg(Ft,Dix)15•4•

15 1 (l)Penn Rly■ 4/,0 3.Ron )lorri■ (Str1der■ )15 1 4"

151 (l)n.LBS,LBCC 4/,0 151}" (lT)We ■t Coa ■ t R, 5/14

4,Jim Graham(un)1514 1

5,lubray Dooley(Olcla,St)l5 121l/4 14181 }/4 (2)Drake Rlya 4/,0 15 1211/4 (l)v■ ,0kl ■homa 5/4

6,Jim Brewer(USC)l5 1 1 1/4 15 1 1 1/4 (l)va.Stanford 4/}0 141 (l )va. UCLA 5/7 1416" (}T)We ■ t Coa■ t R. 5/14

7.Bob Gutow■ki(Camp Pendleton)l5 1

14 16" (4)Mt,S.lC Rlys 4/2, 151 (l)t,.(C,Pendleton) 4/~C 14 161 ('T)We■t Coa■ t R, 5/14

8,Mal Scbwarz(~uantico}l5 1

14168 (2T)Penn Rly• 4/,o 1416",/4 (lT)va,Pa,St. 5/7

9,Henry Wadaworth(Floride)l5 1 1 1/4 1} 1 (1 )na.AAU 5/7

10,Jobn Cram■r(~aab,Fr)l4 1 911/2 1414",/4 (1) }/26 14191 1/2 (l)v■ ,Vancouver 0C 4/16 14 141 1/2 (l)S.attle Rly■ 4/2} 141e•,;4 (l)Vancouver Rly■ 5/7

Don Jei■y(lrizona lt)l4 11C1l/4 David Clark(No.Texa,)14 191

1412•,;4 (2T)Drake Rly■ 14161 (l)Tex.Coll. 1411"1/4 (l)Y.o.Vall ■y er.

Tim Helma(0ccid■ nt ■l)l4 1 e 1

Bill Logan(Strid■r■ )l4 1 8 1

John Roaa(.lriz. 1St)l4 1€1

Don Y.■yar1(Colfado)l4 1 7•,;4 Dick Glover(lr1zona)l4 17~,;4

4/,C 5/5 5/14

14 111 ,/4 (l)ve.lriz,St, 5/7 Larry Nealay(Olclahoma)l4 171 1/2 Jim Johnaton(Ft.Lee)14 17 1l/2

14 17 1 1/2 (1 )A (rt.Lee) Dick Gear(SCYV)l417 1

14171 (l)AC(Sunnyyal ■) Dave Tork(~uantico)

14 16"~/4 (lT)va,Pa,St. Floyd Guerre(Tempe,lriz.,HS)

1415• (l)State HS Ch. Dexter Elkin■ (SMU)

14 15•1/2 (l )SWC Don Failla(Wa■hington)

1414• (lT)va,Wa■h.St, Al Harri ■ (U It)

141,•1;2 (l)CCU. Bob Oden(Emporia St}

14121 }/4 (}T)Drake Rly■ Jlamon Gib■on(UCTC)

14 121 (l)&C(Chicago)

4/2,

5/6

5/7

5/7

5/14

5/7

5/7

41,0 5/7

Broad Jump Only in are~ meet■ do you find an anemometer near the broad jump pit. That make ■ it pretty difficult to ■ort the good jump■ from the windy onaa. And an aiding wind 1• • biu■r factor in the Bj than in any other event. Errata& Vi■•er wa■ 2nd on April 2,

l, 1 H■ nic Vi11er(UCSB)26121

24 171 1/4 (l)A (S.Barb,) 4/,C 2} 161 1/2 {2)Cct.A 5/7

2,Irving Roberaon(US Army)251}":/4 25 13•,;4 (l)Penn Rly■ 4/30

},Greg S.ll(unattsched)25 15"}/4 25 121 (2)fenn Rly■ 4/,c

4.Ralph Boaton(T■nn.&&1)25 1 7 1

25 17• (l )(Iatanbul) 4/24 24 19"1/4 (l)Drake Rlya 4/29

5,Darrell Horn(0re,St)25 151 1/2 23 198 }/4 (l)va.California 4/,c 24111 1/2 (l)v■ ,0regon 5/7 25 151 1/2 (l)Weat Coaet R. 5/14 24 1}

1 1/4 (l)va.Fra ■ no 4/11

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24 191 1/4 (l)dual(Reno) irnie Shelby(Strid■r■)

24 168 (5)West Coa■ t R. Ira Davia(Phil,PC)

24 171 1/2. (l)Ea■ t,Shore R. John Xelly(Stanford)

5/7

5/14

5/7

24171 1/2 (l)v■ ,California 5/7 Walter Roberta(Compton,C.l.,HS)

24 16"}/4 (l)CIF qf 5/14 Bill Todd(ACC)24161 1/2 Blank■ (.llbuquerque,Nv.,HS)

24 16 1 1/2 (1) Don Palmer()..onteny hn.JC)

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16--May, 1960 6,Jim Baird(£set Texaa,24 17" 24'';"3/4 (l)•CR(jc) 5;14

:?4171 (2 )r.rak• Rlya 412$ Mac Burton(San Joea)24 1~ 11L4 24 17"1;2w (l)lone Ster .. onf. ';,;14 John Howard(San Bernardino)

7,Joel ~iley(Stridere)2';, 1';," 24 14"1/2 (2}WCR(jc) 5/14 C! 17 N w (!,)f..t.5AC Rlye 4;,} Ken Tucker(UCC)

5/14 24 111 1/2• (2)ve.lBS,LBCC 4/30 24 14" (,)aCR(jc) 2';,15" (2)Weet Coaet R, 5; 14 Lan Moora(Phil,PC)

e,Dick Van Kirk(Stridere)24 1ll"l/2 24 1,•,14 (,)Penn Rly• 4/,C 22 I 91 1/4 (6 )Mt .SAC Rlya 4;2, Jim Gqble(l~ Army) 24 171 w (l )ve.LBS,LBCC 4/~ 24 1!,1 (4 ).fa nn Rlye 4/~ 24 1111 1/2 (~)West Coast Rlye 5/14 Steva Abbott(Butl ■ r)

9,Luthar Hayaa(~SC)2411c•,;4 24 1,• {l)Iodi ■na IC 5/11 2, 111•1;2 (l)ve.5tanford 4/,C Bob RHd(fenn) 24 18" (1 )ve.UCU ';,/7 24 1 "'/4 (l)Pann Rly• 4/29 24 19• (4)Waet Coaat Rlye 5/14 Jackeon(Prairi• View)

lC.Jim Tate(Ar1zona)24 11C"3/4 24 141 1/cw (l)SWAC 5/7 2,•e•,;4 (1 )ve .Ariz.St. ';,/7 Jim Wileon(Sequoia•) 2, 16 1 1/4 (1 )Border Conf. 5/14 24 121 ~/4w (l)C.C•l.JC 5/7

Hop,•t•p, and ju~p Ir• Davie bac9ma the ••cond American to bast the Olympic qualifying atandard of 51 12•.

Bill Sharpe)Shanahan C~)5114"1/2 5C16 1 1/2 (l)Pann Rlya 4/~0

Ira Davia(fhil.PC}51'4"1/4 51 1 1 1/2 (2)NYKC 49 171 1/2 (2)Pann Rlya 51 141 1/4 (l)iaat.Shora R.

Kant Floerka(US Army)5C1

49 1 (,)Fann Rlye 4/30 Alvi• Andr•••(Stridera)49 1ll"l/2

5C14"1/4w (l)va.LBS,LBCC 4/,c 48 1

}1 (!)iaat•r Rlya 4/16

49 1111 1/2 {l)W•at Coaet Rlya 5/14 Herman Stok••(Strid•ra)

48 17 1 1/2 (2)Eaeter Rlya 4/16

Jarry Dyea{NE la) 50121 3/4w (l)So.AAU 5/7

Luther nay•a(USC) 49 161 (2)Wut Coaet R. 5/14

Bob Lawaon(Ora.St.TFC) 49 151 (1 )Vancouver R. 5/7

id Buah(Maryland St) 4914"1/2 (l}Penn Rlye 4;,c

Darrell Horn(Ore.St) 49 111 1/2 (3)l11Ht Coeat R. 5/14

Jo• Middlaton(Win•ton-Sal•■) 48 191 1/2 (2)fenn Rlye 4/,C

John•on(unattached) 46 17"1/.2 (4)W•at Coa•t Rlya 5/14

$hot Put Parry C1Brien wichdrew from the Coliaeum Rel■y• on doctor'• ordara. And he prc~ably won1 t be back in competition until June. That me•n• the meatging of th•"Big 4" won1t happ•n until th ... AAU meet at Bak•r•field. Hi•torical note a what athlete ■et• world mark in thi• •vent in April 1946 and then fini ■hed 4th in the Oly-pic Tryoute T

l,Bill Niader(~S Army)6517• Mika Lewie(Occidental) 63 1111 1/2 {l)Drake Rlya{P) 4/!C c:7 •5•1;4 (~)v■ .Stanford,USC 4/,C 63 111 3/4 (l)(Logan,Utah) 5;1} Ji~ Burke~Arizona)56 111•

2,Dave Davia(Striderc}62 181 1/2 Lud Bandariaa(LSU)56 191 3/4 61 19•1;4 (})Drake Rlya{P) 4/!,0 Rav Hi ■ cok(Arizona) 61 17"!;4 (1 )west Cont R. 5/14 ~•9• (l)v•.Ariz.St. 5/7

3,P.rry 0 1Brien(Stridera)63 151 Don S.ith(Miaeouri)';,6'7"1/4 6''1 1 1/4 (2)Drake Rly•(F) 4/3C Joa Y.archiony(Manhattan}

4/!,0 4,Dallaa Long(~sc)64 161 1;2 56 141 1/4 (l}Penn Rlya 60 15•3;4 (1 )vi.Stanford 4/30 Kan Garrett(Furman) 60 110"3/4 (l)ve,UCLA 5/7 56 13•3;4 (2)Penn Rlya 4/3C 61 17• (2)Weet Coaat Rlya 5/14 Dick Crane(Auburn)56' 1 1/2

5, 1Y.ik• Lind•ay(Cklahoma)58 14• Glen John•on{Occidental) 5611C"l/2 (l)Draka Rlye 4/30 56 1 8 3/4 {4)va.Stan,USC 4/3C

6,Jay Silve•ter(SCYV)58'2" John Fry(Baylor) ,e• 1 1/4 {2).Penn Rlya 4/3C 5~ 11C"lL2 ,1 }tl ,Waco) 2L~ 5e•2• (2)(Logan, Utah) 5/13 Jim Alli•on(Tex••) 57 1 (4)Weat Coa•t Rlye 5/14 55 16"1;4 (l}Ye,Rica,Tax.A&J,I 5/5

7,Bob Humphray•(Strid•r•)5e•1• Dick Verdon(Redland•) 58111 (l)va.LBS,LBCC 4/,C ,;,;I~ ■ (1 )SCIAC 5/6 .,., ., 5715"1/4 (')Weet Coa■ t Rly• 5/14 Clark Branaon(UC1A}

8,Jerry •intera(Stanford}5€ 181 1/4 55•4•,;4 (2)va.USC 5/7 54111• (l)ve.Freeno 4/2 Henry Bonordan(Texa• A&M)

5/14 5616" (1 )ve .SJ, Xan•aa 4/9 55•3•1;4 {2)SWC 56 12"1/2 (l)v•.U<1A 4/16 Dave Maggard(Celifornia)

4/,C 5511c• (l)v1.Cregon 4/2} 55 12• (l)v■ .Ora,St. 57 12• (3)va.1JSC,Oxy 4/~C Marlin McKeaYer(tJSC) 56 18"1/4 (l)va.California 5/7 ":411c• (5)v•.Oxy,Stanford 4/30 5619• (5)Wut Coaet Rlye 5;14 Bob Batdorf(Penn}

9,Kan Bantum(NYFC)';,E141 ,;4 54 191 1/4 (})Fenn Rly■ 4/,c 5E141 3/4 (l)Penn Rlye 4/,o Bill Brown(Illinoi■)

1C.£d Nuttinf(Georgia Tech)5S 17 54 1c"l;4 (4)I.,rake Rly• 4/,0 5e 17• l )va .Miami 4/23 Ernie Gordon(Long Beach St) ~4121 1L4 (3}Dreke Rli• qL:c ;4'7",;4 (l)CW 5/7

Garl~nd aoyetta(Grambling) Neil Flumley(Ora.St) 5~ 11C"l/2 (1 )SaAC 5/7 54 17"1/2 (1 )ve ,Oregon 5/7

Bert 3ender(US Army) Bob Crurnpaclcer(Colorado) 4/~C 5~•10• {l)~(Ft.Lee) 4/23 ';,4151 1/4 (l)Colorado Rlya

Bill Popejoy(Sacramento St) Keith Nance(Army) 5/14 54' "l/4 (l)Far Weetern er. 5/14 54 11"1/2 (2)Heptagonal G.

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by R.L.Quercetani The strong ■en led the parade in the opening stages ot the 196o

season in Europe. Vasiliy Rudenkov ot USSR equa.led his European ha-er record (67.92 or 222 11011) and a cohort of shotputtera (ob­viously, but not confe•aedly, chasing .uierica•s Big 4) were oft to a very promising start.

By ■id.May the season was underway 1• cost, it not all, European countries. The Russians, with their by now traditional Spring Meets in temperate places like Nalchik, Yalta, Leselidze, have had the lion's share as regards classy ■arks. But eTen in other countries the number o! 01.)'lllpic "possibles" who have bettered (or co■• close to) their best 1959 marks is incredibly great for an early season.

The toll.owing is a aUllll!lary of news received through Hay 15•

Sprints: 10.3 1 s BY THE ACREj BERRUTI 20.8m 1 RADFORD 20.9y

No less than 6 Europeans have 10.3 clockings already tor the metric century. Al!long them is Heinz MUller of Switzerland, whose 10.3 on the Sihlholzli track in Zurich (not to be contused with the LetziBTund track on which Martin Lauer ran his fa■oua 13.2 for llOm hurdles last year) on May 14 remoyed from the Swiss record list a lo.4 which was first set by Paul Hanni in a memorable duel with Eulace Peacock at Basel twenty-five years •So• Prior to that, Hilller had done 10.5 three times. Abdou Seye of France alao posted a 10.3, namely at TananariTe, Madagascar. Mihail Bachvarov of

,Bulgaria equaled his own national record (10.3) at Sofia, May 8. ilao credited with 10.3 were two little known Russians, .Aleksandr

Matsko and Nik~lay Politiko, who aeeaingly ran that fast in their heats at Nalchik, May 2. The final brought together the cream of Russia's dashmen, and the result belied preliminary clockings, tor the race was won by Slava Prokhorovskiy in 10.4 from Arkhipchuk (10.5), Ozolin (10.5), Anat.Mikhailov (10.5), Matsko (10.6), Barte­nyev (10.6) and Politiko (10.7). The following day Arkhipchuk won the 200 meters in 21.1. At Sevastopol, Aprill, this samu a_printer had run·lo.2, winning from Ryedko (10.3): definite wind assistance, variously reported as 3 or 10 m/s, nullified Arkhipchuk'a mark.

Armin Hary, back home after his ••aningly useless stay in the u.s., beat Jocelyn Delecour of France in the 100 at Hanover, April 30 - 10•4 to 10.5 - then posted a 10•3 with an allowable wind at 'Eranldort/Main, May 7.

Livio Berruti of Italy ran 10.5 several times, 21.3 and 21.2, before exploding •t Faenza, ?,;ay 8. In this meet he ran 200 meters in 20.8. Start and finish were practically on the middle of the track (4oo meters), so Berruti negotiated a full turn. Among Europeans, only Germar has ever done better under similar conditions (zo.6 at ~uppertal in 1958).

But the sprinter who has shown most consistent form is undoubted­ly Peter Radford of England. He had the following aeries: 21.0 for 200 meters on April 23, 21.0 (April 28), 20.9 (April 30) and 21.0 (May 3) tor 2.20 yards. The 20.9 clocking was at Nottingham, on a 550-yard tr•ck, with the start of the furlong a third of the way round the turn. Radford also ran the century in 9.6 and the lOQii in l0.5• In these races he usually won by a wide margin.

Young Manfred Kinder of Germany beat European champion John ~righton of England in the first notable 400m race of the season 47.2 to 47.6 (Tourcoing, 8 May). On the same day, Jerzy Kowalski of Poland did 46.9, a personal best, at Bydgoszcz.

Kiddle Distances: ZlMNY (8:oo.6) BEATS 11KRfS" IN }OOOm

Practically no action yet at either Boo or 1,.500 meters. Brian Hewson ran a l:50.4 halt at Harlow, April 30, and Ro~er Moina, 30, beat Paul Schmidt of Germany at Hanover, April 30, in the Boom - 1:52.0 to 1:52.3. Fastest mile of the season in Britain so tar is 4:05•9 by Stan Ta;rlor (Manchester, April 18).

Little Y...azimierz Zimny of Poland won a good 3,000. at Bydgosaca, Ma7 8, in 8:oo.6. Tb• entire Polish elite was u this racea Zdsi■law 1Crsyaa1tow1a.1t, on the coaeback trail after hi• Ulll.uclq 19.59 season, was second in 8:oi..6, followed by Marian Joc.baa.D and Jer•7 CbroidJt (8:13.2 both).

Derek Ibbotson triumphed in a •1.ailar rehearsal u l:llgl.and, April 28 at Oxford, over 2 aile■ • After touring the laat lap in leN than 58 seconds, Ibbotaon woa 1a 8150.6 fro■ Laurie Reed (8151.0), Gordon Pirie (8:52.6), Stan !!ldon (8:52.8) and Alastair Wood (8:53.4). But on Hay 8 at Tourcoing, Ibbotson went down to deteat against France's Michel Bernard, who used a long a_print to win the race, over 3,000 meters - 8108.4 to 8112.9. P7otr Bolot­nikoT covered the same distance in 8:lo.4 (Nalchik, Hay 3).

long Distances: BOI.OTNlXOV NEARS TOP FORM

Pyotr Bolotn1kov, the 30-year-old heir apparent to the Kuta throne (Vladimir dixit), won a great lO,OOOm race at Uzhgorod, March 15• ,Vith a good 29:21.4 he topped a atro!lg field: Artin;ruk 29:25.2, Zakharov 29:25.4, Desyatchi~ov 29:26.8, Boris Yefimov 29:27.0 1 Burvis 29:27.6, Zhukov 29:35.2, Parnakivi }0:05.o, Voro­byev 30:05.0. On March 26, still at Uzhgorod, Bolotnikov again defeated some of his best Russian opponents, thi8 time over 5 kilometers. His tirne was 14:0l,O, Zhukov, who ran second to Krzysz-

May, 1960--17

kowiak in the 10,000 of the 1958 European Championships, was a distant second in 14111.0.

Stan .Eldon met some stiff opposition from Alan Perkins in a 6 mile race at Harlow, April 30 1 but finally knocked out his rival - 28:44.4 to 28:47.8.

Basil Heatley ot England, who was 26 on Christmas Day, ran the second fastest 10 miles in history at Hur1ingham on April 16. 'l'he 5 1 811 , 144-pound Briton covered the distance in 48:18.4, time bettered only by •il Z.topek (48:12.0, on the way to a great 1-hour record at Stara Boleslav-Hou~tka. in 1951). Heatley•s mile fractions were: 4:46, 4:48, 4:48, 4148, 4:55, 4153, 4:50, 4:52 4:52, 4:46.4. A truly amazing deaonatration of even-pace runni~g, in spite of a strong, chilly wind. Heatley thus covered the first half in 2•:05 and the second half in 24:13.4. He broke a British record set by Fred Norris last year (48:32.4). Second in th~ Burlingham track race was Alastair Wood in 49:24.6.

Jerzy Chrooik just beat Kazimiera Zimny in the 10,000m at Zabrze, April 22, as both were timed in 29132.0.

The only notable 3,000!il steeplechase mark to date is Nikolq Sokolov•s 8:48.4 (Nalchik 1 May 8).

Hurdles1 MIKHAILOV 13.7 (TWICE)

MoTing outdoors after his great indoor ca■paign, Anatoliy Mikhai­lov of USSR ran llOm hurdles in 13.7 at Nalchik, May 2 1 and dupli­cated that time six days later, on the same track. On May 8, Mikhai­lov also ran 200m hurdles around a full turn in 22.9, equal to the Russian record set last year (apparently on a halt-turn course) by Boria Kryunov• On April 23/24, still at Nalchik, Mikhailov won the sprints in 10.6 and 21.3 (latter being a personal best) and the high hurdles in 13.8. Counting indoor dirt track marks, bia 1960 record so far includes two 13.6•a, three 13.7'•• and four 13.8•s. Second at Nalchik, May 21 was Valentin Chiatyakov, 14.1.

Italian high hurdlers had a promising start as Svara and Mazza did 14.3, Zamboni and Cornacchia 14.4. Two Britons were also credited with 14.4-at 120 yards: Hildreth an~ Bob Birrell. Salvatore Morale of Italy won the first 1960 round fro■ his countryman Moreno Martini over 400m hurdles, 52.0 to 52.9. I Jumps: BRU>IEL (18) 6 1 9111/2 1 KRASOVSKIS 15 1 1111/4 1 STEINBACH 25'10 111/4w

·Valeriy Brumel, Russia's latest.high jump find, quickly rose to national prominence in early season meets.After clearing 2.05 (6• 8113/4) at Yalta, April 2, tor a new USSR Junior record, Brumel (born 1942) improved to 2.07 (6 19111/2) at Nalchik 1 May 2. In the latter ■eet he soundly beat Shavlakadze and Bolshov, 2.00 (6 16113/4) both. Brumel did 1.95 (6 1 4113/4) in 1958, 2.01 (6 17111/8) in 1959. He is also a 24'-plus broad jumper. Muscovite Arka.diy Slobodskoy did 2°05 (6•8 113/4) at Moscow, Nay 9• Former world record holder Yuriy Styepanov, who in 1959 was out of action for months and could only jump 2.00 (6•6 113/4), duplicated that ■ark in a recent indoor meet. Two Frenchmen, Maurice Fournier and newcomer Raymond Dugarreau, jumped 2.02 (6•7 111/2) at Melun 1 Ma7 8. Gordon Miller of Britain did 6 17111/2 (2.019) at Harlow, April 30• Turkish record holder Cetin Sahiner cleared 2.00 (6 16113/4) at ilessandria, Italy, May 1.

.fuia KraaoYSkis vaulted 4.60 (15 11 111/4) at ?lalchik, Y.ay 2, winning from national champ Igor Petrenko, 4.52 (14 1 10' 1), Garin, Petrov, Rosenfeld (all 4.40, 14 15111/4). Bulatov is reported at 14'9" in training. Manfred Preuaager of Germany, who was inactive

an INVITATION to

EUROPEAN SUBSCRIBERS W'e would like to meet some ot our ntropean subscribers at the Olympic Games in Rome and so exteM an invitation to you to join us. You can sit with the Track & Field News group in excellent seats and oartici­pate in our !1111ed Celebrity Banquets. It will be run ror au· or us.

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18--May, 1960 last year due to an injured Achilles' tendon, did 4.40 (14'5"1/4) early in May but lost on the failures' count to Gerhard Jeitner, BAIiie height.

Manfred Steinbach, Germany's 19.56 Olympic sprinter, had a aerie• of •ind-ssiated yet notable broad juap marks. On April Z3 at Bocholt he did 7.62 (25 1 ) IUld 7.60 (24 1 11111/4). On May lat Wolfsburg h• jumped 7.88 (25 110111/4) -less than one inch shy of Luz Long's German record - 7.70 (25'3"1/4). In all of these jumps he was aided by a wind over the allowable limit. In the ca•• of his +;op effort the anemometer showed 2.6 m/s. At 'Noltsburg, Stein­bach won from Scharp (7.54 or 24 1 911) and Molzberger (7.53 or 24'8" 1/2). Other notewortihy performances: 7.59 (24 1 10113/4) by Yevgeniy Chen of USSR, and 24 1 811 (7.52) by John Whall of Britain.

Nobody has bettered 16 meters (52 1611) in the hop, step, jump so far. Beat mark is 15.85 (52'4") by the Philadelphia •inner (with eJC'.llctly the a«111e mark) Konstantin Taii;anlcov at Leaelidze I May 3. Vitold Kreyer beat Vladimir Goryayev at Nalchik on the same day -15.77 (51'9") to 15.70 (51'6 111/4).

Throws: FIVE EUROPEAN SHOTPUTTERS IN 61 1/59' RANGE

Szigmond Nagy of Hungary improved on his personal best (59'7" or 18.16 in 1959) in the very first meet of the new season. On April 29 at Budapest, the 23-year-old Magyar took the national shotput record away from Varju with a toss of 18.31 (60 1111). The following day, still in Budapest, Nagy and Varju were pitted a511inst each other. Nagy won, improving by l centimeter to 18.32 (60 11111/4), while Varju just missed his personal best with 18.16 (59•7 11).

Another national shotput record fell as Viktors Li.penis of USSR got one off to 18.19 (59 1 8'11/4) at Leaelidze, May 3. Adolfas Varanauskaa was second at 17.68 (58•j. European champion Arthur Rowe also started in high gear, missing his European record by 1 inch with a 60 1 11" (18.56) toss. He had two other puts over 60• (60•4 11 or 18',39 and 60 1 2'' or 18.34). This was at Harlow, April j(). In a subaequent meet, May 3 at Cambridge, Rowe did 59 1 511 (18.11).

Silvano Meconi of Italy reached 18.16 (59 1711)-in his third meet of the year• Jaroalav Plihal of Czechoalovakia upped his beat to 17.58 (57 1 8111/4) at Prague, April 25.

CONSOLINI (4}) 182 13111/2

Jozaef Szecsenyi of Hungary threw the diacua 57•19 (187'7 111/2) in his 1960 opener (Budapeat, May 14). His countryman Ferenc Klice, 36, came close to his all-time beat on April 24 at Budapest with 55.67 (182•7 111/2). Even more astounding perhaps was the distance achieved by 43-year-old Consolini of Italy at San Donato Hilanese, May 8: 55 • .56 (182 13111/2)1 Vladimir Trusenyev of USSR hurled the platter ,56.03 (183•10 11) at Nalchik, May 8. Czech discus throwers were also impressive in their season's debut at Pardubice, Hay 9: Cihak 55.20 (181 1 1111/4), Nemec 54.94 (18o•3 11). The first major tussle among Russian 11possiblea 11 for Rome occurred at Leaelidze, May 3: ~akhov won at 54.83 (179'10 111/2) from Kompaneyets 54.81 (179'10 11) and Grigalka 54.43 (178•7 11) • Todor Todorov of Bulgaria, also known as Todor Artarski, thre.- the discus 54°22 (177'10 111/2) and put the shot 17.22 (,56•6 11). Todorov was also reported at 200'­plus in a practise aeasion with the hammer, which would stamp hiJII as one of the greatest all around throwers in history.

RUDENKOV 222'10 111 NIKULIN 216'3"

Vasiliy Rudenlcov, holder of the European hammer record, started with a bang: on >lay 3 at Leselidze he••• tied his conti­nental record with 67.92 (222 110 11). He had other throws of 67.58 (221 1 8111/2) and 67.27 (220 1 8111/2), ao it is obvious that he can vie with Hal Connolly in pursuing that most coveted goal -the 70 meters (229'8") hit. Yuriy Nikulin, who has long been regarded by the Russians as a prospective 70..meter man, raised his all time best to 65.92 (216 1 311) 1 at Nalchik, April 24. He won from a strong field: Kolodiy 63.26 (207 1 6111/2), Igor Zakharov (the 240'-plus javelin man) 62.93 (206• 5111/2), Krivonosov 62.18 (204'), Migunko 62.04 (203'6 111/2). Kolodiy improved to 64.39 (2ll'J") at Nalchik 1 Hay 8, beating Zakharov, 63.43 (208•1 11

) • On the ~• day in Moscow Nigunko threw 63.99 (209 111"). To round the promising picture, ~amotsvetov did 64.02 (210 10111/2) at Leselidze, May 3e

Josef Matousek is the new Czech record holder: 63.68 (208 111 11) at Jaromer, Hay 8. And Jozset Csermak, a world champion at 20 and now a veteran of 28, upped his personal best to 63.41 (208 10111/2). Claus Peter of Germany, just 20 1 missed the German record by about a foot aa he threw 62.40 (204•8 111/2) at Halle, April 24.

Beat javelin mark to date is 78.71 (258 1 2'11/2) by Carlo Li.evore of Italy at Milan, ,April 25. Other good early season marks were turned in by Klaus Frost of GermanyL77.98 (255 110 11) at Leipzig, May l. 1 Vladimir Kuznyetsov of USSR, 77.t'Jo (255'4"1/2) at Leselid:te, May 3 1 and Michel Macquet of France, 76.84 (252'1") at Melun, May 8.

No outstanding decathlon so far. (With acknowledgments for most Russian data to Jan Popper, J..T.F.s.).

Late News: STEINBACH CONTINUES CONSISTENT UMPl!'l] Manfred Ste· c continue to s ow consistency int e road jump by

leaping 25'9f' (7. 86m) in Berlin on May 15. The wind on this JWTIP was 2. 0 m/s. Peter Scharp jumped 24'10" in the same meet but was helped along by a wind of 3. 8 m/s. The mile at Berlin also produced some good performances. Hans Grodotslci won in 4: 03. 6 followed by Hermann Buhl in 4: 04. 3, Jorg Balke in 4: 05. 7 and Klaus Lehmann in 4: 05, 8. In other highlights in Berlin, Gerhard Kopp

South Africa (from H.N.Beinart): Omitted from report in the April issue was the reaark that Edward ("Judge") Jefferys achieved his 20o2y (and 20.lm) on a straight course. The new Army track in Pretoria, where the race waa run on March 30, has the only 220 straightaway in South Africa, perhapa the only one in the Southern Hemisphere. The wind during the race was only 0.96 m/a, aiding. Mal. Spence was second in 20.8. Fanie Du Plessia threw the discus 182• 11 111/4 (55.76) at Pretoria, March 26. The~inal Olympic trials were held at Capetown on J.pril -'<>• In the 100 ■eters, Potgj.eter was ahead of John Luxon with 30 meters to go but "-ilingl,Y allowed Luxon to come abreast~ The latter won by inch•• as both did 10.6. Jeffery•, atill suffering from a alightly pulled muscle, 110n the 200m in 21.4 from Luxon, 21.5. Spence took the ltOQa in 46.5 fro■ Day, 47.1 1 and Davia, 47.4. Harold Clark set a new So.lo 1.500m record, 3:51.2. The So.lo Ol)'Mpic team, in alphabetical order, is as follows: Brian F.dgar Davis, 4x4oomR; Gordon DaJ::1 4oom & 4oomR; Stephanus Du Plessis, diacusJ Geors;e Hazle, 20 & 50 klll walk; ~ Keith, marathon; F.dward Jefferys, 100, 2001 4oomJt as reserve; Jacob­iii'"'iii'lan, llOmh; Gerhardua Potdeter, 4oo, 4oomh and 4x400mR c;­look ahead to 10 races in 8 daya if everything goes just right); Malcolm Sfence, 4oo & 400mRo In a meet at Windhoek, s.W • .lfrica, on April Z3 presumably under doubtful conditions) Luxon ran the furlong in 20.7 and just beat Potgieter in the 100 1 9.7 both. New Zealand (fro~ P.N.Heidenstrom) - Hal.berg's 10 1 000 meter ti.lie at Auckland, Harch 28 1 -• 28:48._2 (not 28148.4 as reported in European papers and 'llcnf). On >larch 19, still at Auckland, Halberg ran 2 miles 1n 8:40.5. Other recent markas 211111 Scott 8142.2 fro■ Baillie, 8:47 (Auckland, Mar.l); l.OOm, Graha■ Davy 10.5 (Auckland, Mar.28); 6m, Magee 28:33 (2nd to Halberg on Mar.28); SP, Milla 57'11 111/2 (17.66) at Auckland, Mar.19; Decathlon, Roy Williama 6,760 pat Dunedin, Mar.7/8 (uding w.ind in 100 1 llOh and BJ). ~tina (from SoEn~el) - Juan Dyrzka, 19 1 set a new national

record of 53.1 at B • .l., April 24. Other recent marks include• 14128.4 by Suarez (5km) and 30:37.8 by Lemos (10km), 10o5 by 19-year-old Juan Stocker in the 100■; 51.11 (167•8 11) by otlnther Kruse in the discus. K•&a (from c.Roffey) - .l small team of u.s. athletes visited Nai­robi on April 10. Best marks in thi.a Sunday meet WffeJ 14.o in the 120y hurdles by Lee Calhoun, 14'6" (4.42) in the p~l• vaul.t by Mel Schwarz, all-comers records both, 6•6 11 (1.981) in th" high jump by Lareaae of Kenya. Local .sprinter Seraphino Antao beat Calhoun in a 10.0 century. In the Kenya Olympic Trials, held oa !-lay 6/7, Antao ran 9.5 and 21.4, and Bartonjo &tich did 47.7 and 52o5 (44oyh). Nyandika Maiyoro made a comeback in the 3 miles and won in 14:3708•

Trk yl JAMES 1002 1 BOSTON 25'?" & l4o2 CoKoryllrek}

A 5-man team from th• States made a tour of the Middle East in Aprilo Dave James, the u.s. Army sprinter who clocked 6.1 in a sui-final of the 6oy at the A.AU meet recently, ran the metric distances in 10.2 and 21.2 at Ankara, April 22. Aydin Onur was second in the 100 in 10.6 1 once ,,ore tying the Turkish record. Ralph Boston aurpriaed with a 14.2 in the llOmh, and two days lahr in Istanbul brought his broad jump record to 7.8o (25'7")• There was only a negligible cross wind during the races. Boston had earlier done 7.71 (25'3 111/2) at Mashed, Iran, April. 18 1 and James had run the 100 in 10.4 at Cairo, April 9.

took the 800 in 1:51. 0 and Claus Peter threw the hammer 202'5½' (61. 71m) •. At Krefeld, Germany, on the same day Gordon Pirie of Great Britain ran 8:04. 4 for the 3, 000m with countryman Mike Wiggs second in 8: 07. 4. Helmut Janz won the 400 hurdles in 52. 2 in the same meet and Manfred Germar edged Karl Kaufmann in a 21. 3 200. Erich Ahrendt won the javelin at Krefeld with a heave of 247'9i" (75. 53m). At Nalchik, Russia, on May 14 Viktor Bolshov took the-high jump at 6'9t" (2. 08m), beating Brwnel, Khoroshilov and Shavlakadze, all of whom did 6'8i'' (2. 05m). In Budapest on the 14th Istvan Rozsavolgyi ran 8:06. 2 for the 3, 000m while at the annual Oxford-Cambridge meet in England Bruce Tulloh ran 13: 32. 6 for three miles with Alastair Wood second in 13:48. 2.

Attention OLYMPIC ATHLETES

When you earn that wonderful trip to Rome this summer you would hke to have your loved ones see you in the big meet. If your wrfe or parents are mterested ,n attending the Games now is the time to make plans. It is not hkelY that housing and tickets can be obtained in July. when the U. S. Olympic team has been chosen. But if you plan now you can be ready to send the relatives with one of the Track & Field News Olympic Tours.

Wives and parents have always been included in our tours. and over a dozen have signed for the 1960 tours. Tour deposits are due now but they are refundable in full immediately after the Frnal Trials 11 you don't make the team.

The tours. ranging from 15 to 36 days. and from $880 up, are rapidly filling. So write now for free details.

TUCI I Fl[ll llWS la 211 LIS Al.TIS, CAI.WmlA

• I I

I

l

-Long Beach Poly m Callforma set a national high school mark in the sprint medley rela} with a 3: 2D O clocking m Apnl Rwmmg on the team ....,ere (1-to-r) WILLIE MARTIN (440), BILLY SIMRIL (220), KELTON REESE (220) and DAVE SCHIN­:-SERER (880)

2 National Records JOHN TUREK SETS HIGH HURDLES MARK

Gamesv11le, Fla., May 14 - - john Turek of North High, Miami, erased the national high school high hurdles record ....,ith a sizzling 13. 7 clockmg during the Florida state finals here today

Turek, who has chalked up a 13 9 and three 14 l clockings over the high barriers this season, took advantage of a slight, but apparently legal, wind assistance to cstabhsh the new mark Steve Pauly of Beavenon, Oregon, set the old mark of 13. 8 last year ANDREWS AGAil\ CRACKS 440 RELAY MARK

Austin. Texas, May 6 - - Andre\\S High School's crack sprint relay team shattcrnd Its O\\n national mark for the 440 distance \\ith a 41. 5 here today in the Texas lnters.:holasuc League finals.

The team composed of Larry Shoemaker, R. E. Merritt, Darv1s Cromier and Ted Nelson had run the distance m 41 9 three weeks ago. The record before tlus year \~as ·12 0, set by Brooklyn Boys m the 1948 Penn Relays

Albuquerque, N. M., with rno sophs (Bob Mendez and Paul Bryant) and two Jun10rs (Ray Etherly and Hiram Carroll) bettered Andre¼s' old 41. 9 mark with a -U 7 on M.i} 13 m Albuquerque.

PREP PANORAMA B; Don Nash & Fran Errota, Box 781, San Jose, Calif

Eight of the nation's top preps m each event will be invited to paruc1pate m the first Golden West Invitational, June 18, at East Los Angeles Stadium m \\hat ma, be the beginning of a nauonal high school meet.

The New York State Public High School Athletic Assn has added two events for sectional and mtersectional competition -- the hop-step-Jump and the sprmt medley (440-220-220-880). As a result many schools will add these to their dual meet program But mteresungly enough, New York still has no high hurdles on the program

Jon Cole, soph discus thrower at Glendale, Arizona, threw 118' as a freshman and weighed onlt 140 pounds. After a year of weightlifting Jon now \\e1ghs 183 and has had several throws over 160' in practice with a best meet throw of 1.36'6f'. His personal amb1t10n is to break Karl Johnstone's class marks He's three feet ahead of Johnstone as a soph Junior teammate Bob Morris 1s approaching Johnstone's Jumor record with a 176'10" best this year.

Dick Hart, Morrisville, Pa., cracked the national Jumor class shot put mark with a heave of 63'2¾'' on May 14. The old mark of 61 '5" was set by Dallas Long, North Phoenix, Arizona, m 1957

Hiqh School Marks Additions, corrections and improve­ments to list in April issue Please send any ne\~ marks or corrections to P.O. Box 781, San Jose, Calif.

Doubtful spnnt and hurdles marks are listed as ¼ind-aided unless informa­tion is received to the contrary *= indicates junior. **= indicates soph 100-YARD DASH 9. 6 Cowings (Fowler, Calif)

Ma1mbourg (Garden Grove,C) Mannings (Bakersfield, Cal) Patton (McClymonds, Oak-

land, Calif) n Simpson (Castlemont, Oak-

land, Calli) Wmd-Aided

9 5 Newbury (Highland Park, Dallas, Texas)

!J G Maroney (Snyder, Texas) Miller (Bowie, Texas) Smith (Cherokee, Texas)

220-YARD DASH 20 6 Wesley (Aldlne-Carver,

21. 0 Houston, Texas)

Maimbourg (G .i rden Grove, C) Robbins (Hamilton, L.A.)

Wind-Aided 20.;; Hill (Garland, Texas)

20 7 20.8

20.9

Nelson (Andrews, Texas) Watson Uordan, L.A., Cal) Miller (Bowie, Texas) Wolf (Manteca, Calif) Cram (Greenville, Texas) Kelly (El Segundo, Calif) Newbury (Highland Park,

Dallas, Texas) Robbins (Hamilton, L.A.) Watson (Sweetwater, Texas)

n Saia (Oakdale, Calif.) 440-YARD DASH 48. 1 Gardenschv..anz (Highland,

48.3

48 4

Albuquerque, N. M.) *Carr (N. W., Detroit, Mich)

Merritt (Andrews, Texas) Buford (Chino, Calif) Saddler (Castlemont, Oak-

land, Calif.) 48 6 Sims (Muir, Pasadena, Cal) 880-YARD RUN 1. 52. 4 Underv..ood (Buena Park, Cal) 1.52. 9 Van Asten (Bomta, La Verne,

1.53 1 1:54. On 1:55. On

Calif) Ruble (Los Altos, Calif) Gunter Uacksboro, Texas) Schinnerer (Poly, Long

Beach, Calif) 1.55.2 Hargrave (Graham, Tex) 1 55. 4 McCalla (Berkeley, Texas) ONE-MILE RUN 4:14, 9 Thomas (Uniontown, Pa.) 4:18.0 McCalla (Berkeley, Cal) 4:18.4 Carius (Morton, Cicero,Ill) 4:19 3 Steinke (S. Salem, Ore) 4:20 4 Dellinger (Springfield, Ore) 120-YARD HIGH HURDLES 13. 7 Turek (North, Miami, Fla) 14. 0 Conright (Poly, Long

14.1 Beach, Calif)

*Hicks (Coles, Corpus Chris­ti, Texas)

Johnson (Plainfield, N.J.) n Conte (St. Petersburg, Fla)

14. 2 Nickolas (VaUeJo, Calif) Wind-Aided

14. 1 Biffle (Anton, Texas) 14. 2 Cooper (Port Neches, Tex)

Pickett (W. , Houston, Tex) Roderick (Highland Park,

Dallas, Texas) 180-YARD LOW HURDLES 18. 8 Cortright (Poly, Long Beach,

18.9 Calif)

Lyons (Berkeley, Calif) Prude (Compton, Calif)

*Mackey (E., Bakersfield, Cal) Neathery (California,

Whittier, Calif ) Wind-Aided

18 8 Woolever (Snyder, Texas) 19. 0 Hohn (Beatrice, Neb.) HIGH JUMP 6'7½'' *Hicks (Coles, Corpus Chris-

ti, Texas) 6'7" Little (Ft. Lauderdale, Fla) 6'6½" Elliott ~lendale, Ariz) 6'6¼" Baumann (Notre Dame,

Sherman Oaks, Calif) Mohr (Maine East, Des

Plaines, Ill) 6'6" Cunningham (Davis, Kays-

vtlle, Utah) 6'5~" Williams (Mexico, Mo) BROAD JUMP

24'6:!,_" 24'6¼" 23'11£" 23'9¼"

:,1ay, 1960--19 Blanks (Albuquerque, NM) Roberts (Compton, Calif) Gaston (Wasco, Calif) Warfield (Harding, Warren,

Ohio) 23'9" Foster (Sunset, Dallas, Tex) 23'7!° Williams (Abilene, Texas) POLE VAULT 14'5" 13'9" 13'8½°' 13'8¾''

13'7¾°' 13'7£"

Guerra (Tempe, Anzona) Evans (Boone, Orlando, Fla) Graves (El Ca.Jon, Calif) Flanagan (Ganesha, Pomona,

Calli) Guynes (Grand Prairie, Tex) Fortner {Hoover, Glendale,

Ariz) 13'6½'' Ely (Poly, San Francisco, Cal) 13'5f' Wood (El Segundo, Calif) SHOT PITT 64'7 1" Gubner (Clinton, NYC) 63'2¾'' *Hart (MorrisviIIe, Pa) 62'3" Young (Brov..nwood, Texas) 60'6¼'' Roberts (Cleveland, Tex) 60'4" Kelso (Bellflower, Calif) 59'7¼" *Richards (Poly, Riverside,

Calif) DISCUS THROW 17!!'7" Darnes (Poly, San Francisco) 176'10" *Morris (Glendale, Ariz) 175'5" Schoenwetter (Fremont,

Sunnyvale, Calif) 173' l" Young (Brov..nwood, Texas) 172' 10½" Smith (Edison, Miami, Fla) 170'4" Nash (Lake Charles, La) JAVELIN THROW 207'6!" Hamic (Crowley, La) 207'3f' Barkas (Hanover Pk., NJ) 206'7½" Cage (Neville, Monroe, La) 199'1½" Dickerson (Lansdowne, Pa) HOP-STEP-JUMP 44'9" Pierce (Washington, Fremont,

44'8"

44'7" 44'4/l''

Calif) Arballo (Lincoln, San Jose,

Calif) Danna (Del Mark, San Jose,

Calif) Higginbotham {Opelousas, La) Nelson (Kearny, San Diego,

Calif) 44'4" Wood (Madera, Calif) 44'3½" Rheams (Lompoc, Calif) 44'2½" Young Gennings, La) 440-YARD RELAY 41. 5 Andrews, Texas 41 7 Albuquerque, N. M. 42 On Bay City, Texas 42 3n Snyder, Texas 42 5 Bowie, Texas

42.6n Highland Pk., Dallas, Tex Big Spring, Texas Glenville, Cleveland, Ohio

n Lee, Baytown, Texas 880-YARD RELAY 1:27.1 Albuquerque, N. M. 1.27. 4 Compton, Calif.

1:27 6n 1.28. ln 1.28. 2 1:28. 3

Menlo-Atherton, Athenon, Calif

Vallejo, Calif. Hobbs, N.M Muir, Pasadena, Cah.f. Glenville, Cleveland, Ohio

n Highland, Albuquerque, NM MILE RELAY 3: 19. 0 Lee, Baytown, Texas 3: 19. 1 Castlemont, Oakland, Cal. 3: 20 In Jefferson, Dallas, Texas 3:20. 3n Abilene, Texas 3:21 5 N Valley, Demarest, NJ EIGHT-MAN MILE RELAY 2.58. 8 Jordan, Los Angeles 2-MILE RELAY 7:56. 7 Molloy, Brooklyn, NY

8:01. 0 Mt. St Michaels, NYC Clayton Valley, Concord,

Calif. 8:02. 9n Berkeley, Calif. 8: 03 2n St. Francis, NYC 8:03 3 Alhambra, Calif DISTANCE MEDLEY RELAY 10: 30. 4 McClatchy, Sacramento,Cal 10:31. 3 Power Memorial, NYC 10:32. 6n East, Bakersfield, Calif 10:36.5 La Habra, Calif. 10: 37. 5n Bakersfield, Calif.

20--May, 1960

of People and Things by Bert Nelson

Among my pet peeves are coaches who refuse to have times taken for non-winning rwmers. If they don't care about the spectators they should consid­er the athletes, both their own and the others. Yet how many meets, including some of the biggest, have you seen where there is no time given for second or third place? And have you ever b~n on the field at the finish of a race and noted how quickly a runner MU start asking for his time?

Tlwre 1s no quicker \\ay to discourage participation in running races than to refuse to get a ume for the runner. He works all week, or months, to pre­pare for a race Then \\hen It 1s over he doesn't know how well he did. It's a crime on any level. On the championship level this lack of measurement of per­formance 1s a shameful fraud

Iromcally, every U.S. track meet I have ever seen has been cluttered up by too many officials. How simple 1t would be to designate some of these people to do a necessary, useful Job.

. Another timing peeve, strangely enough, is the result of trying to give too many place umes in sprint races. I'm all for getting the times of the non­winners, but it has to be done accurately, or not at all. It sometimes happens that times are published that obviously are way off Investigation shows that they were taken with one watch and sometimes even by the same timer who snapped his other hand just a tenth or two before on the winner. It takes three timers to get an accurate time on the winner and they are aided by a tape. How can we expect accurate sprint place timing when only one watch 1s assigned, there is no tape for a guide, and as often as not the timer is one Judged not good enough to time first place? Where a tenth-second is all impartant a more accurate method is to combine urning with an estimate of the distances between runners. In no case should a place time be used when it is obvious to any com­petent observer that the time is too fast.

SOCIALIZING, ANYONE? T&FN readers are invited to get together with other fans at two of the

three big meets next month. At the AAU in Bakersfield there will be an informal, no-host get together at the Hacienda Motel at 2 p. m. Friday, June 24. Ask at the lobby desk for location. At the Olympic Trials at Stanford there will be a no-host cocktail hour and informal dinner meeting at which, among other things, the new Track & Field Society (to Promote track) will be discussed. There will be other fans and guests tc meet, and the day's great happenings to talk over. Dinner, including tax and up, is $4 . .:;o, uckets must be obtained in advance, no later than June 15, and they are available from Track & Field News.

OLYMPIC TEAM PICKS (cont ) Eleven new men are named to the Olympic team, as compar~ with only

four newcomers last month, in our track nuts' selection contest. Results of the May 15 pall give 13 unanimous picks- -Norton (twice), Burleson, Coleman, Thom as, Bragg, Martin, Bell, Roberson, ;\.1cder, Oerter, Alley and Connolly. The selections of 36 voters, with my cho11..c:, marked with an asterisk (*).

100-Norton* 35, Tidwell* 20, Poynter 20, Morrow 17, Sime 8, Smnh* l, Styron 1, Jones 1, Miles 1 200 - Norton• 36, Tidwell* 26, Morrow 18, Sime 13, Poynter 10, Collymore 2, Garton 1, Alspaugh 1, Thomassen l, Smith* 0, 400-G. Davis* 29, Southern* 14, 0 Davis* 11, Yerman 8, Mills 8, Cassell 7,­Thomassen 6, Young 5, Carlson 3, Larrabee 2, Collymore 1, Hall 1, Ellis 2, Williams 1. 800- Murphy* 34, Cunliffe* 34, Bowden 11, Walters 7, Carroll 7, Peake 6, Siebert* 5, Atterberry 2, Burleson l, Farlow l. 1500 - Burleson* 36, Grelle* 33, Moran* 28, Cunliffe 8, Walters 2. Steeple -Coleman* 35, Jones* 33, Clark* 27, Grelle 4, Walters 2, Young 1 5000- Dellinger* 35, Truex* 27, Beatty* 27, Sueghtz 12, Eisenman 3, Edelen l, Wh1teley 1, Mills 1 10km -Edelen* 27, Truex* 26, Stieglitz 19, Soth 17, Breckenridge 11, McKenzie z;--­Smartt l, McArd!e' l, Kelley* l HH- Jones* 35, Calhoun* 34, May 12, Gilbert 10, Sytron* 10, Cawley 2, Robinson 1, Cobb 1. IH- Southern 28, Davis* 23,

'Howard* 22, Culbreath 14, Cawley* 13, Cushman4, Atterberry 3, Styron 3 lli,-Thomas* 36, Dumas* 35, Gardner 14, Wyatt 7, \\,ybomey 6,

Williams 4, Faust* 3, Costa 1, Barnes 1, Richardson l. ~- Bragg* 36, Mar­tin* 36, Graham 15, Gutowski 14, Morris* 6, Brewer 1. ~-Bell* 35, Roberson* 35, Boston* 13, \\-lley 12, Shelby 8, Jackson 2. !:@I- Davis* 32, Sharpe 29, Andrews* 17, Stokes 13, Floerke 12, Dyes* 3, Hayes 1, Nickel 1. SP-Nieder* 36, O'Brien 34, Long* 25, Davis* 11, Bantum 2. DT- Oerter* 36, Babka* 34, \\ade 16, Gordien 13, Silvester* 11, Ellis 1 JI- Alley"' 36, CanteUo* 31, Sbordone 16, Held 12, Sikorsky 7, Fromm 6, Conley 2, Stuart 1, Stenlund* 0 HT- Connolly* 35, Hall* 32, Backus 20, Mc\\ ilhams 8, Bagdonas* 6, Lawlor (still Eire) 2, Engel 1, Pagani 1.

LAWLOR SETS NCAA HAMMER MARK Boston, May 5 -- John Lawlor of

Boston Uruversity raised his NCAA hammer throw record to 20!J'6i" after teammate John Thomas failed m h!s efforts to raise his world high Jump mark.

Lawlor's toss broke his old NCAA mark of 208'8~" set last year. Ed Bagdonas of the U.S. Army placed second in the AAU development meet with a 203'11" effort.

Thomas cleared seven feet for the 18th time with a 7'¼" leap and then had the bar raised to 7'2¾'', three-quarters of an inch above the pending world mark he set in the Penn Relays. However, he knocked off the bar on all three trials

with h!s foot. COLORADO RELAYS

Boulder, April 30 - - 440R, New Mexico 41. !J. 8S0R, New Mexico 1. 26. 9 Distance Med~Southem Methodist 10:27.2 MlleR, New Mexico 3:14.8 60, McCoy (Colo. St) 6. 2 (6. l in heat). OT, Vernon (Colo) 166'81" SP, Crum­packer (Colo) .:;4'5¼" . ..fil_,_ Meyers (Colo) 23'8J°'. PV, Meyers 14'. KELLEY WINS 25-KILOMETER RACE

Petaluma, Calif., April 10 -- Don Kelley of the Santa Clara Valley Youth Village won the National AAU Junior national 25-kilometer. title today in 1:31:32. Wes Hildreth of the Marin A. C. was second in 1: 36: 50 with Jerry Laird, also of SCVYV, th!rd in 1.37:46.

TRACK & FIELD NEWS Lo, Allot. Calofor ...

Return Poatage Guaranteed Forwarding Poatage Guaranteed

Newspaper SOUTHERN CALIF. I.A.C. CHAMPS

Los Angeles, May 6 -- Mile, Wel­born (Oxy) 4: 14. 0. 100, Smith (Oxy) 9. 7. 120HH, Treat (Oxy) 14. 4. 220, Smith 20. 5, Wallace (Redlands) 21. 2 220LH, Treat (Oxy) 23. 4. SP, Verdon (Redlands) 55'5", Johnson (Oxy) 55'3½", Lewis (Oxy) 55'2~". JL. Wilkinson (Red-

lands) 235 •. OT, Lewis 165 • 1 0". Scores. Occidental 109/l, Redlands 54~, Whittier 27/11 Pomona 18, Claremont-Mudd 10. SOUTHERN CONFERENCE CHAMPS

Williamsburg, Va., May 14 -­SP, Garrett (Furman) 55'½". 880, Williams (VMI) 1:52. 6. Scores. Cita­del 64, VMI 53, Wm. & Mary 43.

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