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; Vol. l, No. 19 May 3, 1961 Semi-Monthly 1 $6 per .year by firs.t class mah Edited by Hal Bateman Page 147

NATIONAL NEWS O I "C, 1 BOSTON'MARATHON, April 19: Oksanen (Finland) 2:23:29; Kelley (Boston AA) 2:23:54; Norris (McNeese •pt) 2,:25:'46.; MacKenzie (NYPC) 2:28:40; Manninen (Finland) 2:29:46; Terry {Electric Boat AC) 2:30:20; Williams (UCTC) 2:32:22; Gruber (Austria) ~:3i:49; Green (Boston \

AA) .2:32_:58; Duncan (Beston faA) 2:33:46. , . I ' · KANSAS ItELA YS, Lawrence, April 20: 10,000, Lindrud (~nsas) : 34:43, 1. April 21: ·4 MileR, Houston (Lawrence 4:23. 0, Macy 4:17. 5, Almond '4:08. 6, Clohessy 4:13. 2) 17:02, 3; Missouri 17; 05, 8; Colorado St. 17:28. 0; Southern Illinois ,. Univ. Sorint MedleyR, O~a. St. 1 (Strong, Covert, Davis, Stone) 3:22,A; Texas Tech 3:2-3, 5; Drake 3:24. 6; Kansas 3:26 .. 7. ' , College MedleyR, Loyola (Chicago) (V/hite, Flanagan, Alexejun, Q,'i-Iara) 3:?3, 1; Texas Southern 3:23, 8; East Texas St. 3:24, 8; Emporia St. 4001H, Cushman (una) 51, O; , Stucker (Kansas St) 51. 7; Watson (Texas A&l) 52. 2; Toomey (Colo) 52. 9 • ...!2L_Fry (Baylor) . 170'7½"; Lindsay (Okla) 165 '4½11;Seitzinger (Hardin-Simmons) 165'2"; Holcomb (Ho~~rd Payne) 160'8". 3 MileR, Nelson (Ark) 14:12. 2; Macy (HoustonJ 14:18. 5; Mellgren ...(Baylor) 1 11 I I 14:26. 8; Glyde (Colo. St) 14:34;7 • ..fil.tMiller (McMurry) 24'~"; Gertain (Emporia St) ,24 8 ; Meyers (Colo) 24'4¾''; Buckley (Wichita). April 22: 120HH, Stuc½er ,ltl, 2; ,Gunnm,ghum(Fe~a,s); Brodie (Arkansas); Petross (Howard Payne). College Distance MedleyR, East Texas St. \ , 1 (Foster, Bennett, Bagiacka's, Vandcr Wal) 10:09. 3; Southern Illinois; Wabash. University , ~- ·: r· Distance M~leyR, - North Texas pt. (Bothrncr /4:8.0, Spencer 1:,_55. l, Menchaca 2: 59. 2, _. ,, , Coope,,: 4:07. O) 9:49, 3; Missouri 9;53~ D; Kansai$ 9:57. 3;' Houston 10: 07. 8..-100, Kemp (l3ay•.,· · :i f lor) l'O; 1; St'ell (McMurty); ,fllspat,igh (Texas); Butts (Mo}., Sp,ecial Mile, Grelle (EEA~) 1.4:07. ,1; Cunliffe (una) 4:11. 0; Dupree (una) 4:13, 6; Mullins (wia) 4:18. 7. SF, Fry 57'3"; . Lindsay · 1 11 '56'9;1-";, Tyner (Baylor) 56'; Smith (Mo) 55 7 • HJ, tie, Richards (Empori~ St), Fordham · 1 1 (Emporia St) and Curtis (Baylor) 6 6". College 440R, . Texas 8outhern (jones, Allen, Frazier, ) q·;, Milburn) 41, o; McMurry . 41. 2; ,East Texas St, 41. 7. University 449R, Baylor (Small~Y,, · , Bennett, Fieldsi ' Kemp) 40; 8; Houston 41. 0; Drake. HS.1_Kelly (una) 50'3"; Floerke /(una) _ 1 r:_,, !' 50'1"; Shirey · (Texas A&!) 46'10,!". College 2 M~_eR~ Howard Payne (Noble, S~tiago, Bishop, _ Petty) 7:32. O; Texas Southern 7:35. 9; Ft. Hays St. University 2 MileR, Drake (M9or~ 1:57.5, ' Hutchinson 1: 52, 6, Luri..fo:td 1: 50.4, Durant · 1:11:9.5) 7:30. O; Kansas · 7:30. 8; Kansas State / . 7:36.1; Texas Tech 7:3-7A. Special _100, Alspaugh 9, 8; Wlebe (una); Dave Scyron (una). _ ~ 1 College 880R, Texas Southern (Jones, Allen, Fr,azier., MHburn), 1:24; ~;' McMurry 1~26.·0'; , , , Texas A&I 1:213~O. JT, VHlkinson (Redlands) 242'8½"; Clark (Colo) 235'; Cockrehq,m _(Wichita) 223'8"~ Smith (Texas) 219'8½". 'Univers!!Y_ 880R1, Baylor (SmaHey, Alc;xander, Fields, /Ke{rlp) 1:Z5.1; Mfssouri 1:25. 9; Houston 1:26. 0; Arkansas, 3000SC, Mellgren 9:20.4; Holman (una) , , ; ;) 9:27. :l; Thomas (S. IU) 9~.2~.6; Eila~on ('Colo.- ~t) 9:35.h , College W1ilcR,Emporia$t, . . . ' (Mayo, Franklin, . Certain, Washington) 3:12.2; Texas ,Western 3:13.9; McMurry 3:14.6. • \i l University MileR, HDecathlon: ·(April 21-2Z) Mulkey (una) 7,268 pts.; Cattcr (Alabama) 6,318 pts.; ,, , 1 , ' . Perry (Hutchinson JC) 5, 7,69 pts. , , , . : · · \ · OHIO RELAYS, Columbus, April 22: -440R, 1 Miqhigan 42. 6. 880R, Ivrlchigan i:29. 4. MileR, Inqiana 3:19. 7. 2 MilcR, Michigan 7:51. 3, 1 Sprint Medle¥R, Centrai St. 3:34, 3. Distance ,McdlcyR.1 ~ichfgan 10:·09, 2 • .fili._Akpata (Mich. St) ~2 111,". SP, Locke (Mien) · 1 1 54 8¼".PV,Johnson (Pui;-due) 13 6" • .J:!1_1Speppard (Ind) 6'5". loT, ~c_hmalcnberger (OSU) , '] z) J. 11~3'1". 100, Murchison (UCTC) ~- 7; ~dams (Pµrct~ · frosh) 9. ~-!..120HH, Wasl,lingto~ (Ce~r~l i-. _,.~ , -r.t -1,. • J I ; J ,- .., :-- ' , I \\ .0 ), r ! ; i \ l \ : r , Page 148 , , , . May ,3, 1961 St) 14.7. 40.0IH, Washington 56,7. 600, Parker (una) 1:11.7; Hunter (una) 1:11,8. 1,000, Sullivan (St; George H.S.) 2:12. 7. Mile, Umbarger (una) 4:2~.1. 3000SG, Young (Mich. St) 9:30. 6, . . gUEENS-IONA RELAYS, New York City, April 22: 440R, Maryland St. 42.1; Morgan St. 42. 3, 880R, Maryland St; 1:26. 2; Manhattap. MileR, Maryland St. 3:15, 7; Morgan St. 3:15. 7; St, John's. 2 MileR, Manhattan 7:44. 5; NYU 7:50, 3. 4 MileR 1 Fordham 17: 37. 0. · Sprint MedleyR, Morgan St. 3:27. 5, Distance MedleyR, Villanova 10:23. 7. 120HH, Rogers 1 11 , {Md. St) 14.·2, .fil.t.Mays (Md. St) 23 8¼''. DT, Kohler (Fordham) 163'1 . ' . LONG BEACH, CALIF., April 22: Smith (Oxy) 9.7, 21.0; Southern (USAF) 46.8; Holland (Striders) 9;14.2; Smartt(Striders) 9:15.9n; Humplureys (Striders) 53'2½", 175'5½"; · ' Stuart (Striders) 229'i"; Ulrich (Striders) 222'6½"; Van Kirk (Striders) 24'5½"; vViley (Striders) 24' 4½"; Babka (Striders) 178 '5½''; O'Brien (Striders) 171'; Connolly (Striders) 215' (HT); , Andrews (Striders) 48'4.l" (HSJ): , I ,. ODESSA, TEXAS, April 22: Nelson (Andrews, Texas, H, S,) 20, 6, 46. 5 (national high ,school record), WASHINGTON 36 11/3 AT UCLA 94 2/3, April 22: Branson (C) 57'4f'; Buchanan (i;V) 55'9¼"; Tripp (C) 9,6w, 20.5w; Saunders fv'✓ ) 9,6nw; Johnson (C) 14.2w, 23.4w, 24'10"w; Yang (C) 224'4"; Dahl (C) 9:04; 8; Cramer fvV)15'1¾''; Failla C,.V)14 14". , , 1 11 BOSTON U. 46 AT DARTMOUTH 89, Apr:il 22: Thomas (BU) 14.9, 6 6 , 47'4½". . , CAL POLY (POMONA) 24, ARIZONA FROSH 53 .AT ARIZONA 85,April 22: Alexander (A) 6'6½"; Burke (A) 53 1 10½", 176'8"; Johnstone (A) 179'; Glover (A) 14'6'•; Dunn (A) 9. 6w, · 21. 2. _ CALIFORNIA 32 2/5 AT OREGON STATE 98 3/5,April 22: Johnson (0) 47. 8; Cuddihy (0) 9:11.4; Likens (0) 229 13"; Horn {0) 25'6½". , SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA 8321 OREGON 61 AT STANFORD 17½,April 22: SP, Long , t ~(SC) 63 19"; Steen (0) 54'1¼''; Wade (SC) 53'7¾". JT, Sbordone (SC) 217 14½"; Burns (0) 219'9½"; , Tomlinson(SC) 214'11". !:.!h_Avant (SC) 6'8¼''; Grundy (SC) 6'4¼". Mile, Burleson (0) 4:11. 5; ·· Forman (0) 4:13. 6; Larson (0) 4-:15. 8. 440, Cawley (SC) LJ:6.3; Hogan (SC) 47. 8; Staten (SC) 48. 5~ 100, Jerome (0) 9, 6; Bates (SC) 9, 7; Munn (SC) 9. 7; Cook (0) 9:9. 120HH, Tarr (0) 14. 0; Pierce (SC) 14. 2; Polkinghorne (SC}, 880,Bt1rleson 1:50. 3; Ohlemann (0) 1:51.1; Warren ' Farlow (SC) 1:51. 7; Klier (SC) 1:52. 6, 220t, Munn 21. 5; Bates 21. 5; Jerome 21. 6. 220LH, Cawley 23. 4; Pierce 23. 6; Tarr 23. 6. 2 Miles, Reeve (0) 9:50. 7; Larson 9:50. 7. Mile R, SC 3:17,4. I3J, Close (0) 24 14"; Hayes (SC) 24'1½"; Moore (S) 23'1<>¾", DT,Weill (S) 175'; Y.ade (SC) 173 1½";Bell (S) 171'11"; Stubblefield (0) 165'6". PV, Brewer (SC) 14 18"; tie, Hein 1 (SC), White (S) and McAllister (0) 14 • Dual meet score: · SC 78, Oregon 53. NORTHWESTERN RELAYS, Natchitoches, La., April 22: Garrett (La. Tech) 9.5; Smith (Lamar Tech) ·14. 4; Pennel (NE La) 14 '7". . CHAMPAIGN, ILLINOIS, April 22: West (Northwestern) 47, 9; Van Scotter (Marquette) 21. 0. Special 440, Kerr 46. 7. , TULANE 25 AT ·.LOUISIANA STATE 104,April 22: Constant (LS) 9. 6; Bandaries ' (LS) - 1 1 1 11 55 10½ ', 151 10 ; tie, Harris (LS) and Fatheree (LS) 14!6£", : - . _ ARMY 51,AT YALE 89, April 22: Stack (Y) 48. 5; Carroll (Y) 1:53. 5; L,uck (Y) 14. s; 23, 3; ,Bachrach (Y) 9:15. 5; Livingston (Y) 227'8" . . GRAMBL,ING REL.A YS, Grambling, . La., April 22: Duhon (Sotitµern U) 14. 2w; Jackson (Prairie View) 24 '9"; Boyette (Grambling) 53 19". · ' GEORGIA TECH AT AUBURN, April 22: ·Nutting (GT) 58'3"; Crane (A) 58'1", 175 13" . . TEXAS A&M 64½, SMU 48½ AT RICE 56,April 22: Rice 41. 8, 3:15. 4; Roberts (TAM) ~ 9. 6}v; Hollingshead (R) 20. 5w; Jones (R) 20, 5nw; Charlton (R) 23, lw. ~ VIRGINIAN-PILOT RELAYS, Norfolk, v_a., April 22: PV, tie, /Bragg (una), Wadsworth l (una), Dooley (Quantico) and Schwarz (USMC) 14'6" (Bragg cleared 15'1¼" on extra trial). I Mile, Clos ,e (Quantico) 4: 07. 4; Weisiger (Quantico) 4:08. 8; Young (Ft. Lee) 4:09. 0. HOUGTON AT NEBRASKA, 1-\pril 25: Roots (N) 218'4"; Almond (H) 4:07.8; Macy (H) ,... f 9:08. 5; Cassell (H) 9, 9, 21. 9. - - . UTAH 40 AT BRIGHAM YOUNG 91, April 25: Cowart (BYU) 6 18"; Thatcller-(BYU) 229'4"; Lindgren (U) 14. 3, ~rn.7~ .. , . · . MT. SAN ANTONIO REI..A YS, Walnut, Calif., April 28: 10,000, Peck (Oxy) 30:54. 4; --- Smartt- (Striders) 31:35. O; Robertson (Striders) 3;1.:42,0, 3000SC, Schul (USAF) 9;14. 7; \ ,;/ Hughes (SCVYV) 9:26, 2; Davis (San Jose St) 9:26. 2. April 29: 100, Munn (SC) 9~ 5w; vVhite. (~CVYV) 9. 6w; R~bbins (Arizona~ 9.6w. Invitation 100, Johnson (Snn Jose St) 9. 2W (rolling _ .- . .Y .,._ ' f

1 ' Page ,149 ·.. •· ·· . . . .! ..· • ., . > • . May 3, 1961 ' start); Watson (Arizona St) 9, 5w; James (Striders) 9, 6w. 440, Thom~ssen (SCVYV) 46.1; Crothers (E. York TC) 46, 2; Hoga~ (USC)46,5; Monroe (Oregon St) 46. 8~ Comer (Pierce JC) 46. g; Johnson (Oregon St) 46. 9. 880, Siebert (wta) 1:50. 7; Cunliffe (una) 1:51. 2; Van Asten (Mt. Sac JC) 1:51. ?; Brady (una) 1:53, 8. Wu.le, Beatty (SCVYV) 4:04, 9; Tabori (SCVYV), , " 4:06.2; Holland (Striders) 4:08. l; 'Abington (SCVYV} 4:08;9; ~Jones (Oxy frosh) 4:10, 9; Mc~ . Calla (FullertonrJC) 4:12.0, 5,000,JGdd (E. York TC) 14:46.8; McGee (SCVYV) 14:52.4; Schultz (CCAC) 15:27. 3; O'Riordan (una) 15:37 ;o, 120HH, Johnson (UCLA) 13. 9w; Pierce (SC) 14. Ow; Ball' .(USAF) 14. Ow;1 Lucky (Arizona), 400IH, Cawley (USC) so.6; Southern (USAF) 50. 7; Cushman (wia) 51. 7; McCullough (San Jose St) 53. 3; O'Connor (USAF) 53. 3. College BJ, Visser (UC Santa Barbara) 24 17¼"; Knockstedt (Idaho St) 24'3", OJ?en BJ, Van Kirk (Striders) 25'3;i"w; Wilson (Pepperdine) 25'3¾"w; Wiley (Striders) 25'3½"w; Hayes (USC') 24'11¾"w; Kelly (una) 24'9½"w; Knockstedt 24'6"w. HpcJ;Stokes (Striders) 52'2¼"w; Andrews (Striders) 50'4"w; Hayes 50'2¼' 1w; Johnson (wta) 50'1 ; Jackson (LA St) 48'¼''• HJ, Avant (USC) 7'; Faust (Striders) 6 11<>£";Jones (Gal Poly, SLO) 6 16¼"; Zubrinsky (San Jose St) 6 1 6¼". PV, Morris (una) 15'½"; Brewer (USC) 15'½"; Tork (USMC) 14'6½"; Chase (San Jose St) 14'6½"; Pratt (Lo,s Angeles CC) 14'6½" (national jwtior college record); tie, Gear (San Jose St)f Helms (Oxy) and Glover (Arizona) 14'6½"; Servis (Oxy) 14'6½"; Rose (Arizona St) 14'62"i 1 1 Balfer (Striders) 14 6½ '. SP, Long (USC) 61 '9£"; Silvester (SCVYV) 61 'lf'; , Wiriters (SCVYV) 58'8¼"; Branson (µCLA) 57'4¾"; Conkle (La Verne) 55'1½". College SP, Conkle 56'½". DT, Babka (llna) 194'7½"; Silvester 192'5½"; Humphreys (Striders) 184 15''; O'Brien (lina) ~81'4½"; Burke JArizona) 180'5½"; Johnstone (Arizona) 112 1 1½"; Wade (USC) 171 'l½"; Lindroos -(Ariz, St) ~69'8"; Studney (San Jose St) 169'4". College DT, Sande_rs (Whittier) 166'4-½". JL. Wilkin­ son (Redlands) 243'; St1,1art (Stridcrs) 242 111''; Yang (UCLA) 234'11"; Covelli (una) 233'10"; Ulrich (Striders) 226'10½". HT, Connolly (Stridcrs) 220'8"; Pagani (Cal Poly, . SLO) 188'5";. Jongewaard (SCVYV) 178'. 440R, San Josc ,St. Qohnson, Poynter, Flemons, Ramos) 40. 5; , Arizona 41.1; USC 41. 1, 880R, USC (Staten, Bates, Cawley, Munn) 1:23. 6; Arizona St. 1:25.l;SanJoseSt. 1:25.2; UCLA. MilcR, USC (Staten~8.0, Balzarett47.5, Hogan46.7, Cawley 45. 4) 3:07. 6 (national collegiate r~cord)i Arizona St, (Freeman 47. 5, Schreiner 47.6, MclSpcnce 46.4, Mal Spence •16.2) 3:07 .• 9; Oregon St. 3:09,6; Occidental 3:12.0. · 2 MilcR, UCLA (Jackson, Webb, Dahl, Dunkell) 7:40, 1; USC 7:40. 6; Strid .ers 7:42. 9; Oxy.. Sprint MedleyR, Oxy (Farmer, Haas, Smith, Cerveny) 3:22. O; Oregon St. 3:25. 4; Camp ✓" Pendleton. Distnnce MedleyR, SCVYV (fhomassen, Brown, Wulftange, Marden) 10:11. 5; · Str .iders. (UCLA finished first in 10:00. 6 but disqualifkd). _ DRAKE RELAYS, Des Moines, Iowa, April 28: 2 Mile,Clohessy (Houston) 8,58. 6; Ahlberg (SMU) 9:00. 8; Macy (Houston) 9·,01. O; Mills (Kansas) 9:03.1; Young (Mich~ St) 9:04.6. DT,Fry (Baylor) 164'2½"; WellJT. an (Neb) 163'7"; Holcomb (Howard Payne) 159 1 11½". HSJ, Akpata (Mich. St) 47'; Horn (Oregon St) .46'5½";Brown (Lincoln) 45'1¼". 440IH~ Ab­ lowich (Ga. Tech) .52.1; Stucker (Kansas St) 52. 8; Nason (Baylor) 53, 5; -Keane (Ne,b) 53. 9. 4 MileR, ·western Michigan (Bashaw 4: 19. 8, Ashmore 4: 10. O, Bork 4:07. o, Ponci'4:13. 6) 16:50.4 (American record); Oregon St. 17:04.7; Missouri 17:08.0; Iowa 17:25.9, Sprint - MedleyR, SMU (Holley, Mccaslin, Hill, Parr_) 3:20, 9; Okla~ St. 3~21. 7; Drake 3:23. 4; Houston 3:24, 1. College Distance MedleyR, Howard Payne (Noble, Santiago, Petty, Reid) 10:03:1); Southern Ill. 10:07. O; Western Ill. 10:09, 5. April 29: 480 Shuttle HurdleR, Nebras­ ka (Haedt, Keane, Wilkie, Fasano) 59, 7; Hastings 1:00, 1; Iowa 1:00, 2. 120HH,Bernard (TCU) 14. 4; Odegard (Minn) 14. •1; St.ucker 1,1. 5; Charlton (Rice) 14. 6. 100, Kemp (Baylor) 9. 7; Skinner (Doane) 9.8; Alspaugh (Texas) 9. 9, PV,Davies (Okla. St) 15'6"; tie, Martin (Okla), Jobn5on (P:g.J ·-.:e), Elkins (SMU) and Stevens(Kansas) 14 18". IL_ Pauly (Oregon St) 22,2'9½"; ~-.n'i .::h (i'cxas) 220'10"; Cockreham (Wichita) 213'11½" • .filt_ Hon1 24'7"; Akpata 23'7¾'',_~]0_ L::.nctsay (Okla) 57'5"; Fry 57'¼"; Nutting (Ga. Tech) 55'6-J"; S.mith (Mo) 55'2½". !:!1_Thomas (Boston U) 6'7¾''; Fordham (Emporia St) 6'5¾''. Mile, Almond (Houston) 4:09, 2; Parr (SMU) 4:12.4~Clohessy (Houston) 4:12,5; Mills•'.'.::13,5. 8GOR, Baylor (Smalley, Alex­ ander, Fields, Kemp) 1:2L1.3; Rice 1:25. 4; Missouri 1:25. 5; SMU. 440R, Baylor (Smalley, Bennett, Fields, Kemp) 41, 1; Rice 41. 4; Houston 41. 5; Texas Christian 42. 3. 2 MileR, . Kansas (Hagan, Davis, Thornton, Dotson) 7:28. 6; Drake 7:34. 5; Notre Dame 7:40. 8. MileR, Drake (Hutchinson, Saunders, Lunford, Durant) 3:11. 9; Houston 3: 12. 2; Oklahoma State 3:12. 5; Kq,nsas 3:12. 6. Di'stance MedleyR, Western Michigan (Cook, Bork, As~more, Ppnd) 9:58~ 7; Missouri 10:00, ~; Purcue 10:01. O; Iowa 10:13. o. College Sprint MeclleyR, Texas I \ Southern (Milburn, Jones, Frazier, Adams) 3:22.4; Loyola (Chicago) 3:23. 7; East Texas St. 3:24. 9, College 440R, Texas Southe .rn Oones, Allen, Frazier, Milburn) ,n, 2; East Texas

a ' ,, j l '.. t ...... __;r I ) ·, I "I t I J _•\: \ ,/., f ·, ·~ )l 'r •·\, , ' / ,•/1.'\·--'- 1 1 ;_ · - Page 150 -1 , 1 · ) _ , · \ , ·' t May 3, 1961 \.\, ( .. St l 4-l •.9; Lincoln 4,2.1. 2 .MileR', 'ifexas Southern (Hobson, Hunt, Warner·, Adams) 7: 35. 2; ( ·, Howard Payne\ 7: 37. li Western ,Ill. 7: 37. 9. MileR I Plttsburg ,St. (Brc;,wn;_.Huddleston, iv:iller, 'f ... Ireland) 3:14.5; Loyola (Chicago) 3~14.6; South Dakota 3:16,0. Special(M0 1 Kerr ,(una) 46.6; Ddn Styron (Salukis) 46. 7; MUls :(Purdue) 46. 8~'Special BJ, ,Boston. (Tenn A&I) 26 1 1¼"; Watson 1 1 I 1(4na) 24 8.¾'', · -· · , 1 ' • } . t( ·; : PENN RELAYS, PhHadelph,ia 1 April 28: 440H, Rogers (Md. St) 52. 2; Smart (Morgan' .I' •..St); Nelson (West Chester St), HT, Doten (Harvard) 195'10½"; Bailey, (Harvard) 190'1"; Sage · 1 1 1 }.i (Navy) 180'4"; M~C.arthy (Army) 173 6½\ DT ,.Batdorf (Penn) 173 511;Kohler (Fordham) 170'9"; 1 "' ., Bronstein (Harvard) 169'4"i Kennel (Pitt) 166 • Distance MedleyR, 'Yale (S~ack,, Luck, CarroU, 1 , Mack) 9:53, 9; AbHene Christian 9:54. 8; Villanova; Dartmouth . ..fil.z_Moore (Wi1:1~ton-Salem) . -; 24'7¾".;, Bird (Mich) 24 1½'.'; Mays (Md, St) 23 19½". 2 Mile, Moore (Abilene 1Christian) 9:06,4; . Bachrach (Yale); Morgan (Ursinus); Everett (North Carolina). 4 MileR, . Michigan (Wyman, ·h Schafer, Martin, Lepsl 17: 15. 3; _Harvar 'd; Penn St. ; Maryland. ;April 29: H~J, Com ache ,. ,•\ 1 1 /-1 (Puerto-Rico) 50 '5¼"; Bush (~1d, St) 49,I'½"; Rumildo Cruz (Puerto Rico) 48 104 "; . Cooper (St. ' John's) 48'5", Sprint MectieyR, Yale (Stack, Carney, Bain, Co.rroll) 3:25. 5; NYU; Central St. i _,, i , Villanova, 440R, Abilene Christian (Taylor, Richardson: McKennon, Young) 40. 9; Michigan; ·/;:- ~or~an St.; Maryland St. 2 Mile.R.; Michigan (Schafer : A.quino, Martin, ~eps) 7:34,2; Ford- Ii, - ) ham; Penn ~t.; Manhattan. HJ, 1Davis (Morgan St) 6 16"; Smith (Fla. St) 6'4". 120HH, Roger 's 14. 0;' Joh.i,son (Md); Duhon (Southern U); Ebers (Dartmouth). 100, Brown (Penn St) 9, 9; Miller

, ,. (Md St); Spiegel (Md). 880R1 Villanova (Manion, Drayton, Budd, R~empr~) 1:24. 8; Abilene 1 \ ' 1 Christian; Maryland St.; Southern U •...[L_ Kovalakides (Md) 232 ; McDyre (LaSalle) 230'7½"; s·chwflb (Penn St) 223'4". 3000SC, L~wler (ACC) 9: 14. 2; Lc,>we(Brown); Traynor ,(Villanova); , 'IL Tracy (Penn). {80 Shuttle HurdleR, Villanova (Kerr, Coffil1, Hammock, Pras) 1:00. 8; Dart­ ·, mputh; 1.Maryland. MileR, Villanova (Manion, DeApgelis _ Raemore, Drayton') 3:l4. 3; NYU; ' I I 1 Morgan St.; St, John's. PV, tic, Murray (Cornell), Culver (ACC), Belitza (Mµ) and Andrews 1 1 (Yale} 14 • SP, Brown (Navy) 55 8¾"; Locke (Mich) 54'9"; Joe (Villanova) 54'7¾',': .,_ RED RAIDER 1RELAYS, Lubbock, Texas, April ?9: Ne'w'Mexico ,41. 5, 3:ZO.2; Draper . , ,, (Texas Tech) 1:51, 0; Plummer CT\JewMexico) 47, 9, 21. 6; Blanks (NM) 24 13¼r1. . · \ '~- S.C. Y. Y. V. 51 AT CALIFORNIA, April 29: Maggard (C) 57 19"; Wyatt f'{V) 619"; ·' GaylQrd (C) 9: 16. 0; Washington (YV) 14. 7, , OREGON 86' AT WASHINGTON ST. 44, April 29: Bu.rleson (0) 1:52. 3; tie, Wilson (WS) 1 and McA,11.ister (0) 14'4½"; Bernick (0) 227 2"; Cook (0) 10. 4, 21. 9, · · · 1. 1 1 ,, ., , __ 1 STANFORD ~8 AT WASHINGTON 63 1 April 29: Buchanan rN) 55 2½", 151 8"; Batchelder J ' ''.(S) 226'+0"; Doulgas _(W) 226'3"; Saunders f',V) 9. 7, 21, 2; Weill (S) 174'8¼"; Bell, (S) 169'5½"; '' L,Cramer rN) 15'¾".' CHICO STATE 22 AT NEVADA l~ril 28: Rautio (N) 237'2 .", · . . NAVY 64 1/3 AT ,PENN S'i'ATE 66 2/3, April 22: Brown (N) 54 12½"; Moorhead (PS) · '} - 4: 1~. 2; Deardorff (PS) ,4; 14. Sn; Norman (PS) 4: 15. 4n, 9: 14. 8; Brown ( PS) 9. . 6, 20. 8; Gol\vas 1 ,, , (N) 9,6n, 21.4n; Miller (PS) 1:52,6; Penn State 3:14.6; Navy 3:15,2n. · : - · , (', , \ . NORTH Cl~ROLINA 31 AT lvIARYLAND 100,April 22: D. Smith (M) 1:51, 8;, Wells . , , (M) 4:11.1; Bel}tza (M). 14'; Spiegel (M) ,9. 9, 21. 6; Johnson (l\1} 14. 6: ·- · · · 1 ,,,_ i . '.. _ BA'LTIMORE OLYMPIC CLUB 22 AT QUANTICO MARINES 41 1 April 22: Fr 'ye (Q) 216'6½''.'; Collymore (Q) 9. 5, 2f,2; Moore Q3) 14, 4, 23.1. · · / . · .,. Ii

. 1 - FOREIGN NEWS - PADUA', ITALY, Apri12?:Ber.rutil0.3. , GldiHRIDGB, ENGLAND, April 21: Elliott (Australia) 1:53. 4. April 24; Elliott 4: 09; 9,

BULLETIN BOARD •/"I

Next,New,sletters May 171 31. Track & Field News mailed May 25.

, WIND SPRINTS ~

J San Jose State spr'inter Dennis Johnson sa¥s his left block slipped several inches,

thµs giving 1him., a lurching start in the 100-yard dash lat the Mt. , San Ant'onio Re1ays. However, starter Red G_u~er saitl it ,.wa~ a "fair getaway" and Jo~nson went o_nto -cloc ,k\9, 2 wi_th_the help of an 11. 2 nules . per hour wrnd, 1 Johnson's first race of the day ·was as leadoff mun ,lll the ~ 440-yard relay, Guyer warned Johnson that he had come up to the "set" position a lit~le _slow , and that he wouldµ't allow t!Jat in the 100, It was reported that the fieic;I in the 100 w_as at the :· ~( · set positi\On for 2~2 seconds .•• · Jay Silvester had the gr<;-:atestweight ct'ouble 'in ,history at the l I I , i ! . , \ 1, ti F ' \ ' \: ~,\ ,/.I'{ I I ( ' l. ,J ·.V ) .1 ,'' . \'

• l_.. l \ t ~- ' . ~ , I Page 151 ~ , , - . May 3, 196l \ Mt. San Antonio Relays with throws of 61'1¾" and 192'5½" but yet didn't w:in_either event, "I keep improving and still can't win," Silvester said, ' ''But I'll keep trying,",,. one of the biggest improvements was shown at the Mt. Sac meet by Bill Crothers -of the East York Track Club in Canada, Crothersfinished second in the 440 in 46, 2, a big improvement over , his previous best of 4:7, 4 for 400 meters. He is only 20-years-old ••• Ful\erton, Calif., , , Junior College set the ' pace in the juriior college events aJ Mt. Sac. Fullerton set two national junior college records and broke another national jaycee mark but finished second. Fullerton \ -0 ran 9: 57. 3 in the distance medley relay> far faster than the winning time in the open division, and 7:41_.8 in the two-mile relay. Fl.lllerton also broke the national junior college sprint medley relay mark of 3:24. 8 with a 3:24. O clocking but the first place honors went to Mt. San Antonio College with~ 3:22, 8 performance,,. at the Drake Relays, halfmiler Jim Parr of Southern Methodist was warming _up for the sprint medley relay when he was hit 1 on t!ie back of the hip just before his race. A trainer took care of his slight injury and he went out and \ ran a 1:49. 2 anchor leg to give SMU the victory. "Fortunately it had-hit the gro~d first and ' was -0n the bounce,''. Parr said, .• the hero in Western Michigan's American record -in the four-inile relay is a quarter-miler. He is John Bork, who ran 46. 9 for the 440Jast year, , "As a sophomore and junior I ran the quarter and this year I run the 880," Bork said. "Fastest I'd ever run the mile before today was 4: 15. " He ran 4: 07. O on the third leg to give the Broncos a big asi:iist t9wa,rd ;4e record, •. an Australian has won the two mile at the Drake Relays for four straight years. Alex Henderson has done it twice, Al Lawrep.ce once and Pat Clohcssy, who won the race this year ••• George Davies of Oklahoma State, who took the 1 1 pole vault a't Drake with a career high of 15 6 ; almost was climinat<..>dat a much lower height. · He missed t\,vice at 13'6" before going over on his third try. Later, he had t\VOclose misses at 15'10", •. the flu bug was a passenger on the train that carried 'Baylor, North Texas State, Southern Methodist and Texas Christian to the Drake Relays. The results started showing Friday night. "I called the hotel doctor at 2 a. m, and, as I was stcnding by the desk, Eddie Weems (Texas Christian's coach) rushed up to do the same thing," Baylor coach Jack Patter­ son suid, "It was a horrible night. I'm a poor nurse." Baylor's Eddie Curtis couldn't high­ jump because ; of the illness and North Texas State's John Cooper wasn 1t up to par. Another who was sick was Bill Kemp but it didn't seem to show because he won the 100 and ancho;red Baylor teams to victory inthe 440 and 880-yard relays, "I'm a sick dog," Kemp said, "and so is Roy Smnlley." . . - . Abilene Christian had hoped to win four relay events at the Penn Rclilys; a feat accomplished only twice in history at the Philadelphia meet, once by 'Pitt in 1939 and another time by Michigan in 1945, However, the Wildcats scored only one relay victory -- the 440- yard relay, Abilene Christian was a big favorite in the mile after running 3:07. 9 earlier in the season but leadoff man Dennis Richardson droppeg _the baton and ACC finished out of the moriey. That s.~t up a seventh-straight victory in the .:1ile relay for Villanova •• , at the Kansas Relays, Drake coach Bob Karnes wanted his team o drop out of the two mile relay after seemingly being out of contention with a mile to go. "I did everything in the world l . could to get us to drop out and keep Ed Lunford and Charlie Durant fresh for the mile relay," Karnes said. "I even sent a }siddown to the track telling 'em to quit. " The word didn't get to the men and Lunford ran 1:50. 4 and Durant 1:49. 5 to give Drake the victory in 7:30. O. Lunford exceeded his previous best _by about four seconds. Durant, who later ran a 46. 8 in the mile relay, stands 6'4" tall and has a stride that sometimes lengthens to ,10 feet •.• John Fry, the 6'4", 213-pound shot putter-discus thrower from Baylor, was a shot putter in high school but his main intere$t was basketball, He went to Baylor 011 a basketball' scholarship · but f<>undthat he was too short to play his high school position, center, and was not a good enough shooter to play o~tside. "I played on the freshman,_ basketball squad and was-.red­ shirted a year before I decided to concentrate on track, " he said. He reached only 49 feet in the shot during his freshman year but this season has done 58'10½" ••• Atletica Leggera, . the Italian track monthly, sco:res the U.S. versus Europe in a dual meet, using the stand- ' a~d European scoring system. On Olympic performances .it would be Europe 121, U. s. 102. _, On 1960 best marks it would be U.S~ 113) Europe 110. Another comparison is between the leading decathlon men on the IAAF scoring tables and the highly regarded Portuguese tables. Officicilly, it's Rafor Johnson 8,683; C. l(. ~a11g8,426; Vasiliy

Edstrom 8,593; Yang, 8,547; Kutyenko 8 1 504; Mathias 8,486; Campbell 8,460; and Lauer \ l 8,432. - '' ,- I ' .': i• ' r , •'/i" ({1-...,, ~~ ·1 t - \ \ /' .., -'/i 'i' ,' \ \~ _-, {' \...,.,.;.l- r - ,{ ,I .l ""· ..... \l . I i / J l \. ~ I',:,( / l ~ ! \ / ) /. ' { i y ~ ~ I .... I {; _ ) '/ 1 . , ;: _,i,._,':;age 152 ,, ~ ( NOT ED w ITH INTER E s'i ·,G \'.-- ~1ay ~, -1~61 ' , . '"' The late A. C. Gilbert, a form er Olympic po~e vault champion, \Vas outstanding in 7c 1 • .... i 1 1 1 1 many ways, according to New Y9rk Times sportswriter Arhtui· Daley. Her~ is what Daley' 1 i 11:-t writes: . · · \ • 1 • • . . ,(,;i, I "Tpe mild-mannered little guy who had been quietly puffing his pipe in the corner · suddenly became the sensation of the party. This was at Lincoln, ,Neb,, on the eve of the national trac~ and fi,eld championships iQ.July of 1935. A group of ·selected officials · and some other visiting firemen had ,been invited to a do6kout at the ho.me of Samuel Clark Waugh, , tnen a Lincoln banker bu_tnow the recently , retired president of the Export--Import Bank,

' It was a 1cl!ghtf _ul occ_asion ~nd it was made '1ven more mem1orable by Alfreq. C?arlton 1 Gilbert •of New Haven, the chief judge for the pole vault. A shy and modest man, he yielded to the coaxing of friends and took over. He performed card trick~, fea.ts Of magic · and amaz- '' • I ing stunts of legerdemain. And he. tlid them with the n.plomb . · skill of a professional, des'" pitc his good,-natured 1protests of being rusty. · , . , /., I , In his way, he was a professional. Gilly's cleverness a,s an artist at hocus-pocus _;•_;, ' - , , gained him a college edu9ation at ·vale, an: Oly,mpic pole vault charppionship and countless millions of dollars. T,his · pop-eyed witne~s first became fascinated with A .C. Gilbert that , , evening in LincoJn and the fascination \VUStp endure until his death at t~e age of 76. He was • 1 J a gentle, sweet and charming man, J A)s a pole vaulter, Gilbert wo1:-intercollegiate and amateur championships before

s_etting out for the biggest 011eof all, the Olympic title. Before the went to London in 19081 ,, his agile mind realiz .ed there was an inherent flaw in using a spil

othe 1r batch was .ilcd by\E, T, Cooke of Cornell at 12'2''. ' In the final round onlyGilbert cleared 12 '. ·Happy in his presumed victory, he returned toJhe dress'ing room. In burst an irate j . j English offici,ul, 1 , , ''What's the matter with you?" he shouted; "Don't you want to win?" , Then Gilbert learned that the officials were spitefully counting Cooke's preliminary i \ 'vault ,as , a legitimate clearance in the final ranking. Nothing like this ever happened before or since. So a -wearied 21-year-old boy matched the Cooke height on his last -try. They were , ruled co-champions but the Cornellian ,refused to acc@t the medal. \ 1 "The Queen of England presented it to me, "4ai d Gilly wryly in later years, ~"but that event was J1nxed for me all the way. The medal was stolen. " , · ( Gilly, an amateur experr with a million feet of vaulting films in-his horn'e, coacheq Yale vaulters for close to a decade and a half as .the Elis dominated th'e,event to the virtual >- exclusion of all others. , · . · ; ·, ·' 1 Tiie. Wlpretentious millionaire was one of the most zealous of all sports officials, • ' y: a warm and likable chap who was a,o popular as he was -respected. He was a rare one." \. . . ' I ~ . ', .I, I QUOTABLE QUOTES 1 . 1 ED Fl/4NAGAN, B9ston University coach: "We will see how ,good Jo])n Thomas is thi.s ,.__,.1 {'i' spring. for the first time we ~re going to turn ' him loose. He's a big, strong _boy, We're ' goin~ to let him rt.lI1: everx event he wants -- hurdles, javelin, possibly discus or shot, , · · :"sp,rirttS and 'brpad jump~ in addition to his specialty. This sumIT\er if he mak~s the U.S. ) ted.m to Russia I.think he'llreally showthernwhat he can do as an all-around trackman. By the time vthe National Coll~giatcs rolJ ,aroW1d Thomas will be bac _f in the groove again and will _.J 1 be assault':ing'his outdoor record of 7'3¾" with renewed vigor ;, My only hope is -that we have · five or six other American boys pushing him to greater heights.' ·' , ' . J ( l:S,.. ) ~ { I \ ·, \ 1, I \i

I' t i J'

• \ ' THE GREATEST 5, 000-METER RUNNERS -,. 1 Page 153, May 3, 1961;

VLADIMIR KUTS (USSR) 394 points

Vlaclimir Kuts, the short and stocky blond ru,nner 'from the Ukraine, has forever stamped his name on the all~time Ust of immortals in distance 1·unning.- It is generally agreed 1 that he W?,S better at the 10, 000 but in the space of thre -e .years he helq. the world record ,. for the shorter metric distance on four different occas'ions. His method of qefeating his opponents ,vas with bursts of speed at various intervals during th~e race which :wore them down physically and more important - ~ mentally. Only on two occasions, when he was in his prime, . \ did this tactic work against him. J;hese two occasions were both world record races, 13:51. 6/ · by Chris Chataway in 1954 a.nd 13:36. 8 by Gordon Pirie in 1956. Kuts' time on each occasiort -. was also under the world record at the ttme. Kuts, who took up'where Emil Zatope~ left off, did n.ot fea.r the stop watch, and went into his races with an air of grim determination and forthrightness.

Achievement Points: . 379 4 14: 04. 0 on 5 Aug. 53 at Bucharest 5 First 1955 USSR 5,000 Championsm.p 4 14:02. 2 on 27 Aug • .53 at Moscow 9 Second 1955 World 3 Mile/5000 List 4 14:o04. 4 on 20 Sept. 53 at, Moscow 9 Second 1955 T&FN World Ranking 2 14:05. 2 on 2 Oct. 53 at Oslo 14 13:...39.6 on 19 June 56 at .Bergen 3 First 1953 USSR 5,000 Championship 2 14: 06. 4 on 4 July 56 at Moscow 8 Third _1953 World 3 Mile/5000 .List 12 13:42.2 on 13 Aug, ,56 at'Moscow 8 Tllird 1953 T&FN World Ranking 14 13: 39. 6 on 28 Nov. 56 at Melbourn_e 6 13: 56. 6 on 29 Aug. 54 at Bern 15 First 1956 Olyrnpic 5, ooometers 15 World Record,-- 13:56.6 10 First 1956 USSR 5,000 Championship

12 First 1954 European 51 000 Championship 9 Second 1956 W odd· 3 Mile/50Q0 List 8 13: 51. 8 on 13 Oct. 54 at London 10 First 1956 T&FN World "Ranking 8 13:51. 2 on 23 Oct. 54 at Prague 10 13: 48. 6 on 2 Sept. 57 at Moscow 15 World Record -- 13:51, 2 14 13: 38. O on 6 Oct. 57 at Prague 3 First 1954.USSR 5,000 Championship 14 13:35. O on 13 Oct. 57 at Rome 10 First 1964 World 3 Mile/5000 List · 15 World Record -- 13:35. O 10 First 1954_T&FN World Ranking 10 First 1957 USSR 5,000 Champi'onship 4 14:03. 6 on 22-Aug·. 55 atLvov 10 First 1957 World 3 Mile/5000 List 6 13: 57. 8 on 3 Sept. 55 at Moscow 10 first 1957 T&FN World Ranking 10 13:46. 8 on 18 Sept. 55 at Belgrade 15 First All-Time 3 Mile/5000 List 15 World Record -- 13:46. 8 15 First Best Five Times Av-epiges 2 14: 08. 6 on 17 Nov. 55 at Tbilisi I Victory Points: 26 \, 2 Aleksandr Afiufriyev 1 , Albert Thomas 2 Chris Chataway , I 1 Laszlo Tabori 2 Emil Zatopek 1 Thyge TBgersen l Hubert Berta . 1 Herbert Schade 3 Ivan Ghernyavskiy 1 ·Velisa Mugosa 4 Pyotr Bolotnikov 1 Yevgeniy Zhukov l Gordon Pirie 1 ~ Aleksey Desyatchikov 1 Derek Ibbotson l Jerzy Chromik · ,✓ 1 Miklos Szabo II 1 Keva.n Gilligan 379 AP 26 VP

Defea.t Penalties: 11 405 ? -11 DP 1 Emil Zatopek 1 Nikolay Pudov 394 1 1 Jozsef Kovacs II 1 Aleksandr A1~tinyuk ~ 1 Chris Chataway , 1 Yevgeniy Zhukov 1 Gordon Pirie · .., - 1 Yuriy Zakharov 1 Pyotr Bolotnikov 1 Ivan Chernyavski.y 1 1 Hubert Prirnakivi

'/ ii ~.)fl ',¼~~~- ~-., I '-:. "'1 \ \; '/: ' /' "{!;-', ·, I .·\1 ·\ ·,/. 11. ~ \ 1 ' Pagel5 .4 ALL TIM ·E BEST RELAY ' PERF ,ORMANCES · May3, 1961 ,"- ·J. ,_ ,Ti·m· e· ~ '_ _,, 400 METER RELAY · r ~ 1 ·rearri ' , Meet \ , .... -1 Place · 39. 5 United States Melbourne (, , ~ ) , 39. 5 1 ,. _ . A. s:V. Koln, Germany . . International Meet ' · Cologne . 8.29.58 J. ( Manfred Steinbach, Martin Lat,?.er, Heinz Flitterer, ) Ger.many . · Olympic Games, heat Rom,e · ,9. ·7.60 (Bernd Cullman., "Ar:min Hary, ~alter Mahlendorf, Martin Lauer) ·· 39~5 '- Germany ' , Olympic Games · Rome ,. i' 9. 8, 60: /1 (Bernd Cullman, Armin ,Hary, Walter Mahlendorf, Martin Lauer) "1" I . 39.6 1 · I l United-Stat~s · v. USSR I Moscow 7.27.58 , 1(Ira Murchison, , Jim Segrest, Ed Cbllymore) . · I;,· 39.6 Germany · · · ' . · . Cologne 9.16.60 ;,: i .. ' ', r (Bern __Cullman, Armin Mary, Waltec Mahlendorf, Martin Lauer)

,J a~:7 United .~t~tes , · , Olympic Ga-m'es, heat Rome · 9. 7.60 \ (, , Stone Johnson, ) /• I . I 39. 7, Germany · · Olympic Games, semi Rome 9. 8.60 I ) ~ ', '· (Berq.d Cullman, ' , Walter Mahlendorf, Martin Lauer) I 39·-.·7 United States 1 Olympic Games, semi Rm11e 9. 8'. so. (Frank Budd, · Ray Norton, Stone-Johnson, Ray Norton) \ 39~8 USA, Olympics, · 19~6 39. 9 Germany, Frankfort, 1960 39~8n USSR, Olympics, 1956 ~ 40. 0 USA, Olympics, 193~ 39.8 USA~' v, Hungary; 1958 40, O USA, Olympics heat, 1936 1 '- 39. 8 USA, v. USSR, .1959 40. 0 USA, v,. Germany, · 1938 Vi ·,.39~8 I GermanY, 'i Col9g~e, 1959 40. O Germany, Co~ogne; 1956 . f \;.;' \ 39.8 W. Germany, v. Switz., -19'60 40. O USA; pre-Olympic, 1956 \ J ( l I 39. '8 USA, pre-Olympic, 1960 40. O USA, v-. Poland, 1958 \_ \ \ i ( -39. 9 Germany, International, 1958 , 40. On USSR, v~ USA, 1959 1 ,39. 9 Germany, Dor~mund; 1960 40, On 1Polartd, · v. Germany, 1959 40. 0 Italy, Olympic heat, 1960

1 1600 METER RELAY 3:02. 2 United States Olympic Games Rome 9. 8. 60 , , Gack Yerman 4~. 3, 45. 5, 45. 3, 45.1) -

3:02. 7n ·· Germany I Olympic Games Rome . 9. 8, .60 ' (Hans Reske 47.1, Manfred Kinder 45.1, Johannes Kaiser 45.8, Ca.rl Kaufmann .44.7

3:03. 9 Jamaica , ·, · · · Olympic G_ames · Helsinki · · 7. 27~._52' \ ,,; (Art Wint 46. 8, Les Laing 47. o, Herb McKenley 44~ 6, · George Rhoden 45. 5)'., 3:-:4, On United States ( : · ' , · Olympic Games · Helsinki , · 7. 27. 52 (Ollie Matson 46. 7, Gen~ Cole 45. 5, Charley Moore 46, 3, Mal Whitfield ·45_ 5) 3:04, On West Indies i' Olympic Games Rome · 9. s. . 60 't ' I r- .,, j Oim Wedderburu. 46. 6; Keith Gardner 46.4; Mal Spence r±5.7, George Ke.rr 45. 3)' , 3:05. On South Africa ' Olympic Games Rome · 9. 8. ~o (Edw.Jeffreys 47.1, Edgar Davis 45. 8, Goraon Day 46,4, M~l Spence 45. 7) 3:04. 7 United States 1 , - Olympic Games Melbourne · 12.1. 56 (Lou,Jone-s 17 .1, J. W. Mashburn 46, /4,, Charley Jeri.kins 45. 5, 1'pq:1Cpurtney -45.8) 3:05. 3 West Indies Pan American Games Chicago ,, • 9. 2. 59 'f (Mal Spence 46.9, Mel Spence 46. 7, Basil Ince 45. 7, George Kerr 46.0) 1 . I s:·os.6 . ·. West Gerrqany ( , v. Switzerland . Freibu_t"g · J • , 8. 21: 60 · . , (Hans R &ske 46.6, Manfred Kinder 46.9, Johannes Kaiser 47.9, Carl Kaufmann 45. 9) -. a:os;s_ USA, v. Poland, 1958 3:07. O Great Britain; pre-Olympic, 1960 3:05. Sn USA, Pan 1Am Ga'flleS, 1959 3:07~ ln Great Britain, O}ytnpics, 195i6 3:06. ,2n Australia, Olympics, 1956 3:07. 2 USA, Pan Am Games, 19~5 3:06. 2 , USA, Internatiqnal, 1960 3:07. 3 qermany, v. Great Britain, 1957 _ ,_h ~ , 3:06.1 Sout~ Africa, 'Qlympics, 1960 3:07 •.4n G~rmany, Olympic semi, 1960 •. ·, 1i, 'v 3:06,. 5 West Indies, Br.Games, 1960 3:-07.5 Germany, v, Cze~hoslovakia, 1956 3:06. 6n Germany, Olympics, 1952 3:07. 5n Great'Britain, Olympic semi, 1 1960

I , , 3:07. 0 USA;. v. USSR, 1958 , -3:07. 7n Italy, Olym ·:·tc semi, 1960 . 1 I ,) 'n I 3: 07• 0 l:]SA~ ~. USSR, 1959 , 3:07. 8 Germany, , v. Gt:eat--~itain, 19516

,,, J' j J ,, .J