SupplementingTRACK & FIELDNEWS twice··monthly.
: a,< •~,'> ~- 3. Horn 48'.6"; 4. Thomas (Los Angeles St) 48'5½"; 5. Jackson ($C;\·\ ~-::':'Ot:eaon Runners Prevail VYV) 48'2-l'!; 6. Dana (SJS frosh) 48'¼". . · . <,t ,:;__ ·!!L..Faust- (Mt. -Sac.JC) 7'1 ~'; 2. Llewellyn (Or~gon) 6-'7";.3_. Jones~-_,_-\--~~~/~~~~➔ ...... Modesto, Calif., May 26 -- Oregon's talentedDucks, al- (Cal Poly, SLO) 6'7"; 4. •Nickleberry_(una) 6'7"; 5. Ricgway (Lan,.at''.,f! 1 11 tb..oug-li&Ufferlnga couple of disappointments, showed why they are Tech) 6 6 • · ,, 1 11 ," , : the·,favorite for the NCAA team title with a number of outstanding ~ Uelses (una) 15 6 ; 2. Morris (Striders) 15'6"; 3, Tork (Ca.mp~ • performances at the California Relays . .l:'endleton) 15'611;4. Pratt (una) 15'; 5. Turnbull. (SJS) 15'. ·-.·• . · ., . The Ducks suffered their first disappointment in the high ~Davis (Camp 'Pendleton) 59'11"; 2. Silvester (una) 59'6t"; :a._,_·_,_·. '~ hurdles when Jerry Tarr hit a hurdle midway through the race and .·__ :sttee1e. n (O,regon) 58'4½''; 4. McGrath (Oxy) 57'9"; 5. Hiscok (Stri· failed to place as veteran Hayes Jones won handily in ~3. 5. Tarr, ders) 55-f.5i". ·. · .who has run 13. 3 this season, clocked 13. 6 in his heat and appeared DT, Oerter (NYAC) 195'; 2. Silvester 192'8-l"; 3, Humphreys (Pasa-,: readyfor Jones in the final. Jones got his usually fast start but Tarr dena TC) 179'10"; 4. McGrath 173'7"; 5. Stubblefield (Oregon) .•··.' caught him halfway to the tape. Then Tarr hit the hurdle. Oregon 165'3". <·>was shooting for the world record in the two-mile relay but had to HT, Connolly (Pasadena TC) 210'7"; 2. Pagani (una) 193'5"; 3. Burka t~Mel Renfro, Mike Gaechter, Tarr 7S'CVYV) 237'1"; 4. Winningham (USA) 236'4t"; 5. Quist (New Mex;F" and Jerome surprised some crack teams in the 440 relay with a 40. O co TC) 235'1". ic:.· performance, which ties the best ever run around two turns . The 440R, Oregon (Renfro, Gaechter, Tarr, Jerome) 40. O; 2. Strid.era ,, , Stricters were second in 4P . 1 with Texas Southern third . Earlier, (Gilbert, Fitzpatrick, Turner, Smith) 40. l; 3. Texas Soutnern '(' Jerome f:lgured in a disputed finish in the 100 when he handed Bob Oones, Milburn, Allen, Willfams) 40.2; 4. Florida A&M (Austin, liayes of Florida A&M his first defeat in two years. Botll crossed the Harris, Paramore, Hayes) 40.3; 5. San Jose State 41. 6. . ... " , 14ilshtogether and the judges picked Jerome as the winner. However, 880R Texas Southern Oones 20.9, Allen 21.4, Saddler 21.6, Mil.;. tc:}i·~~sme11 and others on the finish thought Hayes won. Hayes had burfi.20.2) 1:24.1; 2. Striders (Gilbert 21.5, Larrabee 21,3, • , \,c;,J::~ocked9. 3 in his heat and he repeated the time in the final although Smith20.4, Turner 21.1) 1:24.3; 3. Florida A&M 1:24.6; 4. San · ·,-:_runningwith a 101 degree fever. Jose State 1:26.2; 5. SCVYV 1:26.1. ~-T:.·...... , . Another standout for Oregon was junior Keith Forman, who MileR, Arizona St. (Barrick 47 ,7, Carr 45 .7, Freeman 46. 7, Will;.· ~r.,,~a·last 440 of 56. 7 to win the mile in 3:58. 3, his best and iams 46.3) 3:06.4; 2. Oregon St. (Comer 47. 8, Monroe 46.5, tf:Jlie second Oregon runner to break four minutes this seas on . Cary Eves 47~.l, Johnson 46.2) 3:07.6; 3. Texas Southern (mack:mon· ;:½~~::)Ve.fsigm-, improving every week, was second in 3:59.3, also his 48.0, Houston 48.0, Saddler46.0, Milburn 46.9) 3:08;9; 4. Colo:~.:; (:. fti'st sub:-four minute effort. Although finishing second, Vic Reeve (Burns 49A3, Gairdner 47 .7, Heath 46.8~ Woods 46 .2) 3:10.0; 5. ;± ;]:>Hhe Ducks looked good in the two miles with his 8:47 .1 clocking. Calif. frosh (Courchesne 48. 4, Brown 4 7 . 9, Fishback 4'7• S, Ar:"·< ··· ·· Bruce Kidd was an easy winner in 8:41. 9 after running his last 880 chibald 46. O) 3: 10 .1 (national frosh record); 6. Striders .(Tumex: s:2 ,· Z: 0.2. The Webfoots also scored another second when Les 48.3, Reames 48.4, Karlsrud 46.6, Larrabee 47.5)3:I0.8~ ~ , ;fiptonthrew the javelin 237 '4t". 2 MileR, Oregon {San Romani 1:49 .4, Abram 1:52 .2, Ohlemann· _,,~H: ri-2.t The Santa Clara Valley Youth Village accounted for an Ameri- 0 \t).ca.n.and a world best with a 3: 15. 5 in the sprint medley relay as ~~~~h!~tii:~f:~=:!J~r:1~ s:..rtt~~~ i!~:~~e c~~~,Jl!eis,.J!~~ ~-~?Q,cegonState finished second in a national collegiate record 3: 17. 7. Dupree 1:47.8) 7:22,3; 3. Kansas (Riesinger 1:51.9, Coanel:52~8i t l)etails: of this .race are reported in the June issue of Track & Field Thornton 1:50.2, Dotson 1:47.8) 7:22.5; 4. Occidental.(Neighbor ·· ··. i,''· .• 2, 4, Haas (Oxy)2l.2, 5. Cheatham (SCVYV) 2L4. ~:~::4to,.Williams (Arizona St) 46 .4; 2. Archibald (Calif. frosh) 46. 9; :{_(i\ • Carroll (USN) 47 ~5; 4. Strong (Okla. St) 47. 5; 5 . Crothers (EY - ~F'-TC) 48 2 ;~'~: Ye:rman(SCVYV) 1:49.1; 2. Hoffman (Staters T&F) 1:49.5; 3. D~E1~1~~I~~lA~~E~E¥~~\;.··~;i~i 47.7, Azevedo· 1:Ql.5, Davis 3:02.1, Tuclcer· -4:08.2) 9:49.6; -3.- ~ · ~-~~ •. ) rr(una) 1:50.4; 4. Wayne Farlow (USC) 1:50,5; 5. Colpitts (Ore Nevada 10:07 .8; 4'. Fresno State 10:16.0. · · <,;}; ~~')<&~St.-frosh) 1:51.3; 6. Stone (Okla. St) 1:52.1. CALIF. STATE JUNIOR COLLEGE CHAMPS . . . . . ·: -~;'~~~ ~it~~-~..:'Forman (Oregon) 3:58.3; 2. Weisiger (Quantico) 3:59.3; 3. 100, Morris (Pasadena CC) 9 .5 ·l20, Morris 20 .3 (nationa,l JC :record); ,·;~·q~ 4:00.4; 4. Kozar (una) 4:10.3; 5. Schlicke (Stanford ~l?l~n (una) 2. Cowings (Col •. of Sequoias) O. 5~ 3. Russell (Long Beach CCl ;~t·-~~ Jt.. ~f-rosh) 4!10.'l; 6. Tabori (LATC) 4:10.8. · 20.6; 4; Rubm (OaklandCC) 20.6. 440 Bruce (HancockJC)-46:.8. ·.) · l';t~i:&Miles. Kidd (EYTC) 8:41. 9; 2. Reeve (Oregon) 8:47. l; 3. Martin 880, Van Asten (Mt. Sac JC) 1:50.4. Mfle, Thornton (El Cam~o :~ ~/;:- .TC) 8:58.1; 4. Truex (LATC) 8:50. 3; 5. Fer (Air Force) 8: JC) 4:10.1. 120HHH.Butler (Pasadena CC) 14.1. 220LH, Nickolas ..-.. _,_.··;···•~.:'' ;4f6~ Larrieu (una) 8:58.6; 7, Sargent (LATC) 8:59.5; 8. Mc (Vallejo. JC) 23.3~.!U.L.: Faust (Mt. Sac JC) 6'9t'; 1 2_. Stuber (Ceri;J.·: -._·t . (LATC) 9:03.0; 9. Brady (Oregon St) 9:04.8; 10. Fishback tosJC) 6 18¼".~Pace (Long Beach CC) 56'&.i"; 2-. Kel~o (Cerri- . >:- _ .•·J~e St) 9:06~5; 11. Hughes (SCVYV) 9:06.8; 12. Robertson tos JC) 56'1". DT, Darnes (San Francisco CC) 169'3". <':,t .. }9U3.6. Jones (una) 13 ,5r' 2. Qolbow (Oxy) .14 .2; 3. Green (Arizona Villanova Wins IC4A Title 4.3; 4. Bond& (una) 1~·}.::S15. Johnson (SCVYV) 14.3. ·(Tarrt Villanova,.Pa., May 26· --Although they didn't really need" ~~n,.ran 13. 6 in heat.) them, the Villanova Wildcats received fine doubles from sprinter. -.-=-t :Marsh(Oregon St) 23. 3; 2. McCullough (San Jose St) 23. 4; Frall'k Budd and miri,.. ~ J.54~ tly~Cr.A} 95~ ( continued from·paga· 15~) -~v~~,~~L~~~~,r~~-3- ·200t, Tripp 2:1.0; 2:. Cortese 2L2; 3. Lamor.eaux 21.4; 4. Doll ~ .. 'js,fpoirits. 5. Tal$ky. . · . . 8 440. Cawley (SCJ 46. 8; 2. Doll 47. 7; 3. Emanuels (Stan) 47. 9; 4. ~tl c~rayton ~~d~~1:1~i~~!i~~~s:~~i~;~:i~io t:\:e~~;~aul 20. 6, respectively. At the Friday trials, Budd had clocked 9. 5 and 8~;s~~!1g1c;>i:!9 -~~:~Warren Farlow (SC) l: 50. 0; ~. Klier ,c ~ 20.6. Traynor, a junior, attempted a difficult mile-steeplechase -double and came very close to wmning both races. In the mile, . Tray ~cr, not setthe pace for the first three laps in 59.1, 2:02.5 and 3:06.1. ~~~~~i±~b:t~.)~]~~!~> fi~~)3~,~~- (Caltt.~ ~i . _ At the beginning of the gun lap Boston College's Larry Rawson 3 Miles, Mccalla (Stan) 14: 13. 3; 2. Marin (SC) 14:30 ~ l; 3. White : -:challenged for the lead and then went past Traynor on the back- head (Calif); 4. McBain (UCLA); 5 .Frostad (Wash). ~;i.:"stretch. Also going by on the backstretch was Harvard's Mark Mullin. 120HH, Polkinghorne (SC) 14.1; 2. Yang (UCLA) 14.1; 3. Cortright _.)~] l.1~, Traynor rallied to catch Rawson at the tape but missed Mullin. The ~tan); 4. Tisdale (UCLA); 5. Thrall (Wash). j~1 r"-< - -·winning time of 4: 06. 4 broke the meet record by more than a second 220LHt, Cawley 23.3; 2. Yang 23.5; 3. Polkinghorne 23.8; 4. Cort~ .,.,:cj did Traynor 's runnerup time of 4: 06. 9 and Rawson's 4: 07 .1 in a's r:ight; 5. Tisdale. . . ~)~ ,,.:'- - third. Traynor found things much easier m the steeplechase 80 min BJ. Moore (Stan) 24'8¼"; 2. Doby 24'7"; 3. Shinnick (Wash); 4. Tripp; ;:f.,:_~ e;;,,- - :ute~iate:r, running away from the field in 9:19.1, a meet record. 5. Alexander (UCLA). _ - · Also rising to the occasion for Villanova were shot putter Triple J, Alexander 47'11½"; 2. Cortright 47'3"; 3. Doby 47'2¾"; ,1t "'i · Billy Joe, who went over 60 feet for the first time with a 6 O'6" 4. Gaskill (Calif) 47'1"; 5. Grundy (SC). •:f~'..'•Adolph Plummer •Smith (Md) 1:51.4; 6. Azoy (Princeton) 1:51.5. (In heats, Azoy ran Denver, Colo., May 26 -- Brigham Yowig overwhelmed the · l:51.2 and Kenney, Fordham, 1:51.4.) rest of the teams in the Skyline Conference championships but New Mi!:e, Mullin (Harvard) 4:06.4; 2. Traynor (Villa) 4:06.9; 3. Raw Mexico's Adolph Plummer was the individual standout of the meeL son (Boston College) 4:07.1; 4. Wells (Md) 4:08.8; 5. Harper (Md) BYU won the final conference title (the league was disbanded follow-"~:?; 4!09.6. ing the meet) with 70½ points as New Mexico took second with 45. 3 Miles, Norman (Penn St) 14:20 .2; 2. Zwirner (Princeton) 14:25. ~; Plummer won the 440 in 46.2 and the 220 in 21. 7 but saved his best . _ 3. Walsh (LaSalle) 14:31. 9; 4. Zwolak (Villa); 5. Lang (St. Johns). race for last, the mile relay. New Mexico was about 30 yards behind: ' ., '3.00'9SC1 Traynor 9: 19. 1; 2. Brown (NYU) 9:46. 9; 3. Moorhead (Penn when Plummer took the baton for the final leg . He kept gaining on his-':~, "· .-·St) 9:60.4; 4. Mack (Yale); 5. O'Connor (Fordham). opponents but narrowly missed at the finish. New Mexico coach Hugh .-';;: ;.•...':.~OHH,Pras (Villa) 14.2;_2. Bet~ea (Morgan St) 14.3; 3. Luck (Y. ale); Hackett caught his ace in 44.4 while another Lobo aide also had a 44~~~~?, · ··~· ·~·Stauffer (Md); 5. Friend (Pittsburgh). Two less prejudiced timers caught Plummer in 44. 9 and 45. O, still .440H, Luck 61.7; 2. Smart (Morgan St) 51.9; 3. Stauffer 52.2; 4. plenty fast. BYU won the mile relay with Utah and New Mexico tying Crossman (Alfred) 53 .3; 5. Manning (Manhattan) 53.4. for second. All three teams were timed in 3: 12. 0. £ Thatcher (B- < ]le Tatnall (Delaware) 23'7¾''; 2. Thomas (Yal_e); 3. Lewis (Mich. YU) 229'5"; 2. Christenson (Utah) 226'6½"; 3. McMahon (NM) 225'7½", '· -.·.· St}~4. Keller·(Boston College); 5. Marchaloms (Lafayette). fil.z.._Smith (BYU) 24'¾". 440, Plummer (NM) 46.2; 2. Tobler (BYU) ,;'Tri~l 1J.Vincent (Boston College) 48'8¾"; 2. Cooper (St. John's) 47 .1; 3. Barnes (NM) 47. 3; 4. Hunter (Utah) 47. 7 (47. 5 in heat). ~./' 48-2-'; 3. Ellington (Dart); 4. Hawkins (Rutgers); 5. Thomas. 120tIHiLindgren (Utah) 14.1 (13.6w in heat). DT, Passey (Utah St) f:~::\'f:~t!!L..Thomas(Boston U) 6'9£''; 2. tie, Hartnett (Princeton) and Krow 180 10:2'"; 2. Mickle (BYU) 18-0'1"; 3. Sinclair (NM) 167'8". 220, ~~\t:,-(Albriglx)6'5½"; 4. tie, Little (NYU), Streibert (Yale) and Wett Plummer 21.7. 220LH, Lindgren 23.5 (22.5w in heat) • .!!.L,Andrus }t:L-: st011e(Penn St) . (BYU) 6'7½". MileR, BYU 3:12.0; 2. tie, New :Mexico and Utah :::-~"-!Ya.tie, Cruz (Villa) andBelitza (Md) 15'6"; 3. Glass (Md) 14'6"; 4. 3:12 .o. Team Scores: Brigham Yowig 70½, New Mexico 45, Utah ' . tie, Andrews (Yale), Beard (Penn St), Mitchell (Princeton), Negin 35½, Utah State 24, Denver 21½, Colorado State 16, Montana State .._< (Navy), Rector (Navy) and Woodall (NYU) 14' . 12½, Wyoming O. ~Guhner (NYU) 62'1¾''; 2. Joe (Villa) 60'6"; 3. DeLone (Harvard) ,ot 53'11½"; 4. Donini (Villa); 5. Kohler {Fordham). Abilene Christian Edges Houston :- t>T, Gulmer 168'10½"; 2. Kohler 163'7 2"; 3; Busch (Colgate); 4. - , Toughill {St. Joseph's); 5. Thomassey (Pittsburgh). by Al Lawrence /.J:'.L.Kerr (Villa) 224'10½"; 2. Thurber (Princeton) 217'7"; 3. Livings- Houston, May 26-- Abilene Christian won the first Texas } ton (Yale); 4. Hallas (Yale); 5. Montgomery (Md). , Senior College championship meet by three points from Houston , ttHT. Bailey (Harvard) 192'3"; 2. Desnoyers (Boston College) 18162 111 ; with Jerry pyes winning three events, the javelin (238'6½"), triple . '~c~;~ :c.:,x;)c-~~Kilgallen (Holy Cross) 178'11"; 4. Tozour (Navy) 175'10½"; 5. jump (49'5½") and the broad jump (23'7¼"). In addition, Dyes placed t{~s::icp·J)yer (Brown) 169'4"; 6. Blood (Maine) 167'11". second in the shot put (48'4½") and ran on the winning 440 relay ·c;/J •"·.J.tileR, Morgan St. (Bethea 48.8, Bagley 47 .6, Brown 46.4, Smart team . Fields were small in all events as most colleges were in the · ~,, ;<~7.8) 3.:10.6; 2. Yale 3:11.8; 3. St. John's 3:12.2; 4. Holy Cross middle of final examinations, and performances were generally poor.: _, :~<,-3! !2. 6; · 5. Dartmouth 3: 14. 8. One of the features was the pole vault where Dexter Elkins finally :~t'~inScores: Villanova 49½. Yale 25½, Morgan State 23, New York turned the tables on Fred Hansen o~ Rice. Elkins cleared 15'2" S:D.(~l'.-'--~---·; , U. 22½, Maryland 17½,Fordham 16, Boston College 14, Harvard 13. later cleared 15'6" on a fourth attempt. 440H, Waterman (Houston) _ ·,.. 53.3; 2. Cooper (Texas) 63.4. 2 Mile SC, Lawler(Abii~¥ ChristiaJ1) ·_ ~,,olGns Win A;gain 9:46.7. 440R, ACC 42.0._!!1 Curtis (Baylor) 6'7½". _!40, Young .. ,J (ACC) 47 .8. PV, Elkins (SMU) 16'2"; 2. tie, Hansen (Rice), Bennett::\:.~~~ . , _ Los Angeles, May 26 -- Southern California won the Big Five (Texas) and Guynes (Texas) 14'8". 220t, Young 21.4. 3 Miles, .• ~':ff] ,,.tJtlefor the third stra~ht year but received a scare from cross - Clohessey (Houston) 14:44. MileR, "'X'cc 3:16 .8. Team Scores, .. ·S~ ~ rival, UCLA, 782 -73. Rex Cawley was the top man for the Abilene Christian 180, Houston 177, Texas 48, Sourthern Meth,odi(!ll>i- ·· · ' " · jans, winning the 440 and low hurdles and ~ing on the win 38, Texas A&M and Baylor 22, Rice 14. · inilerela.y team However, C.K. Yang of UCLA was theout .. .··athlete ,of the meet, taking second in both hurdles races · Jay SUvefter Throws 19·9; .· ...... i\~°1:~e-javelin and fourth in the pole· vault. Compton, Calµ •1 June 2 -- The outstanding athlete awEir~.~ t!t~•Compton)nyitati.oruU wentto BrucecKidd and his :u:4.3-,'if-0tt•,f ~_?;~""~-?~yc::1,,,c::"JA~:~': -:.-~"-:t<:- ~idlift~-June l~S\le ofTrack :i:iW~j.w;s.,Ailot&£','Ctt:! te"fortne-·award was Jay Silvester, whose--199' m the discus -_,~!ts and tied f-or firs; 1rianother but had B( 'e::thirdbe~t of all time. · _ - _ the-·stranglellQl~ of Kansas on the Central Co.lleJzia1te :ff-~::_-The 'other discus throwers were sharp, too, as Stanford's Broncos ofGeorge Dales scored 53 1/3 points as /\te)Veill·set a national collegiate record of 191 '7½'' and veterans won the team title for siX straight years, could only place '_Babkaand Bob.Humphreys were also over 190'with 191'2½" and with 34. :15':n" efforts . Another weightman who was sharp was Dallas Long, The outstanding performance of the meet was turned c~o-bad two ..hrows better than Gary G_ubner's 63'9!'' in second Fred Hansen of Rice, who easily won the pole vault at 15'6'' ,f{~:i Long hit his best of the night, 64'11½", on the second throw had one close miss at ·1s'll". Another Rice victory came from 9in<:f1te-had a 64'&,i" on the fifth round. Long's teammate, Rex Caw- Ed Red, who threw the javelin 234'2". ~l~yc,_,showed that he has returned to top forin with a fine triple• In Western Michigan's victories came from Joel Johnson in the ,tlJe:'.440he ran 46 .3 as Ulis Williams improved to 45. 9. Cawley then 220 and from the 440 relay team which Johnson anchored. Alonzo "~the 400 hurdles in 50. 8 and closed out his night with a 46 ,4 Littlejohn tied for first in the high jump. The best running event of ;/thirt:l)eg to help Southern California clock a runneru~ 3: 07 • 5 in t_he the day was the mile where Southern Illinois' Bill Cornell, Kansas' _;o:1ililerelay. Arizona State was again the winner, setting a collegiate Bill Dotson and Loyola's Tom O'Hara waged a tjght battle. Dick }i:ecord of 3:05.7 and missing the world record by only a tenth. Greene of Western Michigan set the pace for the first half mile but <~-/ Elsewhere on the track, Villanova' s Frank Budd looked im - Cornell took over on the third lap with Dotson and O'Hara following \ptessive with his 9 .4 and 21. 0 double while Utah's illaine Lindgren closely. O'Hara challenged on the backstretch of the last lap b1,1t ,·,c:-:"/~howed that his fast times in the Rocky Mountain area were for real fired. Dotson then started to press Cornell and did so all through ~ti:'tt?asbe :Wonthe high hurdles handily in 13. 7 • Fran Washington, Lind- the straightaway but the Englishman was too strong and won by a _ -~:/gren's top opponent, was thrown out for two false starts. The mile couple of feet. ~{~ :'turned out to be a tactical affair and Marine Cary Weisiger kicked 100, Adams (Purdue) 9. 5; 2. Ford (Mich. St) 9. 6; 3. Johnson ·(W. i.-inwith a 56 .4 final 440 to win in 4:02 .3 as the last man in the race Mich); 4. Cowling (Bradley); 5. Holmes (Wheaton). . ;:ran4:06.0. Favored Jim Grelle dropped out with intestinal flu. 220t,Johnson 21.4; 2. Ford 21.4; 3. Holmes; 4. Friedman (foledo);_ .·uo, Haas (Oxy) 9.5; 2. Cook (Striders) 9.5; 3. Tripp (UCLA) 9.6; ~Montgomery rv,!ayne St). _ \¾_-_:_~_·__'_:_-_-~_,_.~_,_~_-~:_.:_:_t_·:_~_s __--_ffl'Clc_ eial-100, Budd (Villa) ~.4; 2. _Carr (Arizona St) 9.5; _3. Johns~ (Kansas); 5. Stoddart (Kansas). 2 ft_::• ;: (San Jose St) 9.5; 4. Smith (Stnders) 9.6; 5. Dunn (Arizona) 9.6, 880, Dupree (S. Ill) 1:50.1; 2. Leps (Mich); 3. Pelster (Mo); 4. t-it~ .6. Drayton (Villa) 9.6; 7. Morris (Pasadena CC) 9.7. Rawson (Mo); 5. Hagan (Kansas). - _ •_-_,--_. ~~~-z-~20t,Budd 21.0; 2. Drayton 21.1; 3. Frazier (wia) 21.1; 4. Haas Mile,Cornell (S. Ill) 4:06.2; 2. Dotson '(Kansas) 4:06.3; 3. O'Hara - ti:,t_f.. 2L2; 5. Watson (Okla) 21.3. , (Loyola); 4. Greene rv,/. Mich); 5. Hayes (Mich). - -- ~"'- .440 Williams (Arizona St) 45. 9; 2. Cawley (USC) 46. 3; 3. Plummer 3 Miles, Turner (S. Ill) 14: 14. 8; 2. Bashaw rv,/. Mich); 3. Hancock ~tt ."7'New Mexico) 46.6; 4. W. Williams (San Jose St.) 47.6; 5. Carroll rv,1.Mich); 4. Greene; 5. Carver (Notre Dame). . . _ -. __ ., ·?;· (San Diego Navy) 47 .6; 6. Larrabee (Striders) 48.3. 120HH, Whitehouse (Notre Dame) 14.5; 2. Streeby ~Mo); 3. Friend ;.fj~·: 8801 Hogan (USC) 1:49.6; 2. VanAsten (Mt. Sac JC) 1:50.9; 3. Cro- (Pitt); 4. Mulrooney (Notre Dame); 5. Peckham (Mich. St). _ ;{:_;i?_·thers (EYTC) 1:51. O; 4 .. Moon (Oxy) 1:51.6; 5. Warren Farlow (USC) 220LH Streeby 24 .O; 2. Williams (Iowa); 3. Matson (Det-roit); 4. · · 1:59.9. Yerman, USA, Kerr and Klier, Stanford, did not finish. ~house; 5. Thompson rv,1. Mich). _ _ 'Mile, Weisiger (Quantico) 4:02.3; 2. Seaman (una) 4:02.6; 3_. Davies 440H Williams 54.5; 2. Saunders (S. Ill); 3. Cook (W. Mich); 4. : {New Zealand) 4:03.3; 4. Tucker (San Jose St) 4:03.7; 5. Dahl (UCLA) ~rs (S. Ill); 5. Mulligan (Notre Dame). _ 4:05.1; 6. Sullivan (Villanova f:i;-osh)4:05. 7; 7. tie, Schul (LATC) fil_i_White (Loyola) 23'9"; 2. Gilliam (Drake); 3. O'Connor (Notre - and Martin (LATC) 4: 06. 0. Dame); 4. Etnyre (Furman); 5 . Lewis (Mich. St) . · 5000, Kidd (EYTC) 13:43.8 (American all-comers record) (3 Miles, Triple}, Krebs (Butler) 47'9½"; 2. tie, Etnyre and O'Connor; 4. u 13:17 .4, also all-comers record); 2. Truex (LATC) 13:49. 6 (Ameri- Oliphant rv,1. Mich); 5. Lewis. - !~fi>can record) (13:22.2); 3. Halberg (New Zealand) 13:57 .6; 4. McGe)e ~ tie, Littlejohn (W. ·Mich), Offutt (Bradley) and Swanson_ {Kansas) (LATC) 14:22.3 (13:54.5); 5. McCalla (Stanford) 14:26.0 (13:58.8; 6 6"; 4. w. Johnson (Mich. St) 6'4"; 5. tie, Oliphant, Whitehouse ___ 0 6. Marin (USC) 14:27.9 (14:00.1); 7. Sargent (LA.TC) 14:36.1; 8. and Peckham. , . .. Ashmore-(LATC)' 14:42.3; 9. Robertson (una) 14:52.2. PV, Hansen (Rice) 15'6"; 2. Stevens (Kansas) 14 3;11 3.
, 0 _~. 120-HH,Lindgren (Utah) 13.7; 2. Polkinghorne (USC) 14.2; 3. Green ler (Butler), Fortner rv,/ayne St), Hertzberg (Iowa)and (Arizona St) 14.2; 4. Pierce (USC) 14.3; 5. Yang (UCLA) 14.3. SP Smith (Mo) 58'11"; 2, Uzelac (W. Mich) 52'9-f"; 3. i..ul~l;\,,Jt\,I; ·40-0H,Cawley 50.8; 2. Atter~erry (LATC) 51,-2; 3. Reide~ach (~r~s- ~otre Dame); 4. Magrane (Drake); 5. Giacinto (Notre Dame). '<-''" no St) 52.5; 4. Randall (Striders) 53.0. Whitney, Oxy, did not fm1sh. DT, Soudek (Mich) 162'5"; 2. Thomassey (Pitt); 3. Giacinto; 4. ft-t-N;Boston (una) 2r10½"; 2. Watson (Okla) 25'5,''i,,3, Kirkpatrick Stoner (Kansas); 5. Hanratty (Kansas). - ~\' (Striders) 25'½'; 4. Clayton (Compton JC) 24 8; 5. Horn (USAF) n::.,_Red (Rice) 234'2"; 2. Johnson rv,/ichita) 227'10"; 3. Talbott f,-~c24'6¾'' sas) 209'; 4. Kennedy (Notre Dame); 5. Mosser (W. Mich). ;~~·~;--=:,Td,ple{.'Samuels(Foothill JC) 49'11"; 2. Thomas ~Los Ang~le ~. St) 440R, W. Mich. (Th~mpson, Waters, Barham, Johnson) 42 .8; 2. ~~-½"-~,4fP2'; 3. Stokes (Stri~ ~s) 48'3"; 4. Jackson (Striders) 48 l41 ; 5. Notre Dame; 3. Kansas. it,,::"',Pendleton)60'2¾"; 4. McGrath (Oxy) 57'9¾"; 5. Silvester (una) NAIA Meet Summary ~,t,t<.56'-Sil'. Sioux Falls, S.D., June 2 -- Summary of the NAIA Champ"." -\OT. Silvester 199'; 2. Weill (Stanford) 191'7½" (national collegiate ionships: _ 'record); 3, Babka (una) 191'2½"; 4. Humphreys (tma) 190'6"; 5. 1001 Sayers (Omaha) 9.5; 2. Hayes (Fla. A&M) 9.6; 3. Jones (Tex.' --Johnstone (Arizona) 177'3". Sou) 9.6; 4. Lewis (McMurry) 9.7; 5. Johnson (Grambling) 9.7; ;_'_-._~_,__ .Sikorsky (USC) 261'3½"; 2. Conley_ (una) 244'11"; 3. Winningham 6. Thornton (Norfolk St) 9. 8 . J:;:iDSA) 236'2"; 4. Stuart (Santa Ana JC) 235'1"; 5. Tomlinson (USC) 220t,Jones 21.0; 2. Hayes 21.0; 3. Sayers 21,1; 4. Lewis 21.3; 5. :---231 'B½". Johnson 21.4; 6. Thornton 21.6. (Lewis ran 21.1 in semifinal.) 'T Connolly (lllla) 224 '2 "; 2. Pagani (una) 195 '5½"; 3. Pryde (SBAC) 440, Saddler (TSU) 46.9; 2. Milburn (TSU) 46.9; 3. Owens (Gramb l,82'6½"; 4. Frenn (Abilene Christian) 172'10"; 5. Lennon (Cal ling) 47. 8; 4. Simmons (Graceland) 48 .1; 5. Blackmon (TSU) 48 ~ 5; Pdy) 167'8". 6 . Mouton. (Southern U) 48. 6. OR Striders (Gilbert 21.5, Larrabee 21.2, Smith 20.6, Turner 880, Cound (Ark. St) 1: 51. 3; 2. Hill (Portland St) 1: 51.4; 3. Mason il:. 3) 1:24. 6; 2. UCLA 1: 26 ..0. (Kearney St) 1:51.4; 4. Hobson (TSU) 1:51. 9; 5. Wagner (High Pt.J- - ~ R Arizona St. (Barrick 47 .7, Carr 45.7, Freeman 46,.6, Will 1:52.4; 6. Hunt (TSU) 1:53.6. 'i;tms 45♦ 7) 3:05. 7 (national collegiate record); 2. Southern Calif. Mile, Camien (Emporia St) 4: 09. 7; 2 . van der Wal (Kearney St) 4!.: ,(LilEt 47 .5, Doll 47 .4, Cawley 46.4, Hogan 46.2) 3:07 .5; 3. Stri 09.8; 3. Keefe (C. Conn St) 4:11.8; 4. Reich (Pepperdine) 4:12.0; ~s·qurner 48.3, Bruce 47 .4, Larrabee 46.6, Karlsrud 45.8) ( continued on page 156, column one) --D.8.l. _ ~ TRACKNEWSLETTER ~ :-· ~(:,,_fifle~~toWeste.rnMichigan Se~ondclass postage paid at Los Altos, Calif, Pub1ishedsemi-monthly by Track{&-. c;'-_ ':' -- -- ~- • - ~ ' • .,: , Field News, Inc., e.Q. Box 296, IM_Altos-, Calif. $6.00 per year {24 issues)by'fmt class mall in _the U. S., second class_matter elsewhere.Haf • lateman, - Mana,ging- :.i{\Jfotre·Qa.~e,' Ind. j Jtine 2- ...- western fyliclugan won only two Ed.itor;-Cordner 'Nelson, -~itor; BertNelson,_ Publisher-. · :::. .(11~'1.;;~··sttengJ0kl.a •.St),:4t-.•~ t:Qo'hl;tf.(Wt)} 41:i, . ·,'i };( . . . ( continued from page l5~) . ~L Dntson.(KaMas} 1:ittf;~; 2 i Dunkelbei;g(una} lr5Ak0; a. HesajJJi~, S:~~if.~e(KE!arneySt) 4:14;0; 6. Sloan (Emporia St) 4:17~2. · .. • · (Colo. St) l:&&.!;4:.Gunter (l'exas). l::iO;Si s. Cozens {Hod$tolj.);c-:\ ..• Mil~.• _W~isJfer. (Quantico) 4:01.8; 2. Davies (NZ) 4:,0Z~3; 3. OloheS's~J:t~~ ..z~~'fi'ffiirlKeefe 14:U.4; 2. Lorenc (W, lll) 14:13.2; 3. Sloan 14:13.5; (HoUSten;),4:.04, l; 4, Dubourg (una} 4: O'l, 6; 5 J Ebert (Okl•) 4: 08.Jl.: ,.: " · · ;'<,. > i. , ck (Graceland) 14:43. 3; 5. White (Doane) 14:49 . 0; 6. Woelk ,.;}<(Emporia St) 14:51.3, 5000,H~rg (NZ) 13:,5.5.8 (13:30.6 3 miles); 2. Macy (una}.14:41~-2:~~" 'atotsC~an der Wal 9:33.8; 2. Lorenc 9:37 .4; 3. White 9:58,4; 4. 3. Eschl:e- (Texas); 4. Almond (Houston). . . · .•. ,·· ::•'i,"' ~¥:>-: 120HH, Lindgren (Utah) 13. 9; 2. Allen (TSU) 14.2.; 3, Cool)t)r.(:rbXa:sf,;~~~,;; ~~·.,.:;·· Detrick 10: 01, 3; 5. Killham {Oregon Col. of Ed) 10: 05 .1; 6, Wiedel ~-' {Kearney St) 10: 11. 1. 14. 8; 4. Waterman (Houston). . . . : . /·~~ 410H, Hardin (LSU) 51. 9; 2. A.blowich (Ga. Tech) 53 .1; 3. WatennaDJ:0',lr~ ~tf.• ,1'2:0r,IH.Rogers (Md. St) 14.2; 2. Allen (TSU) 14.2; 3. Eastman (Cal . Cooper. · · .. -.~.; ~:f~~::· Poly) 14. 7; 4. Bartlett (Seattle Pacific) 14 .8; 5. Ellis (Whittier) 14, 9; 3000SC, Walker(Houston) 9:03.6; 2. Lawler (ACC) 9:03.6; 3, Mell- >fff; 't~~•~;,· 6-~ Richards (Emporia St) 14. 9. 220LHt, Rogers 23.4; 2. Allen 23.8; 3. Ellis 24.4; 4. Osborne (Ha.s- gren (Baylor) 9:22 . 7 . . :> fili.. Miller (McMurry) 25'9"; 2. Shirey (Texas A&l) 25'1!"; 3, Wat- .·· ~1~•~·-·.~:l.2 ~.4; 5. Thorne (E. Oregon) 24.5; 6. Stonebraker (Ft. Hays son (Okla) 25'1"; 4. Jackson (Prairie View) 24'st"; 5. Harris (Tex.<· ~ 6 Sou) 24'2¾", ·• :,~ ,\ · 440H, Rogers 51.9; 2. Driskill (Whitworth) 52.4; 3. Owen (Ark. St) Triple]. Dyes (ACC)49'10j"; 2. Miller 48'6½"; 3. Harris 46'10¾",. ,,, 52. 8; 4, Vail (Southwestern) 53. 5; 5. McCracken (Redlands) 54. 5; !:!.L_Ridgway (Lamar Tech) 6 •10.''; 2. Brady (Okla) 6 '8 "; 3. CUrtis "·,:':" 6. Burleson (Pepperdine) 54. 6. 1 11 1 ·· (Baylor) 6 6 ; 4. Swanson (Kansas) 6 6"; 5. Collins (una) 6'6".. ._, ,,v ·· :.. !llz._,Miller (McMurry) 24'2£"; 2. Jackson (Prairie View) 24'2½"; 3, · .!X.z.Pratt (una) 15 '2¼"; 2. Elkins (SMU) 15 '2¼"; 3. Hansen (Rice). Broadnax (Washburn) 24'; 4. Walker (Morehouse) 23'8½"; 5. Harris 14'8¼"; 4. Stevens (Kansas) 14'8¼". ~-.. · (TSU) 23'6"; 6. Ed_gerson (W. Ill) 23'2¼", ~Inman {Okla) 57'4"; 2, Roberts (TexasA&M)54'10½''. .,::, "' TripleJ, Walker 48'½"; 2. Brown (Lincoln U) 47'6½"; 3. Wilson (Pepper- .QLSeitzinger (Hardin-Simmons) 162'½"; 2. Roberts 155'1"; 3. {f\=:: dine) 47'6"; 4. Hunter (Omaha) 47'3¾''; 5. Osborne 47'¼"; 6. Miller Inman 153 '11". ,,, ,., '" 46'3". 1 1L. Winningham (USA) 255•10½"; 2. Dyes 250'5½"; 3. Red (Rice} ~' !:!l,._Albertsson (Pacific Lutheran) 6 8"; 2. Richards 6'7"; 3. tie, 236'6"; 4. Johnson (Wichita) 228'10"; 5. Edwards (Rice) 221'5j". ;~~!_,-~,-- Thores-on (Westmont), Richardson (Grambling), Williams (Lincoln 1 11 U) and Birdow (TSU) 6 6 • ~~-~"-,E,Y.,_ Bauer (fy, H~ys St) 14'1':; 2. Merlin (Kearney St); 3. tie, Brixey · Tremendous Shot Putting by Long (Biola), Hanby (S. Oregon); 5. Mittag (Redlands); 6. Curtright (C. Los Angeles, June 8 - - Almost completely overlooked at the Wash). Southern Pacific AAU meet (where Jim Beatty set a world two-mile ;;_ ,. · ~ Jackson (Southern U) 54 '7¾"; 2. Hircock (Kearney St) 53 '11¼"; 3. record of 8:29. 8, reported in the June issue of T:rack & Field News) Favrow (Emporia St) 53 '10"; 4. Goldhammer (Emporia St) 52 '7½"; was some tremendous shot putting by world record holder Dallas 5. Harper (N . Mich) 52 '5£' '; 6. Tansil (Southern U) 52 '3½". Long. Q:LHarper 173'1½"; 2, Sanders (Whittier) 169'2"; 3. Berg (New Mexi Bjg 'D" came up with his second and third best ever puts co Western) 157'1"; 4. Nixon (SF Austin) 155 '7½"; 5. Ketcheside while winning easily at 65'2!'', the fourth best throw of all-time. "" · (Ark. St) 154'4"; 6, Goldhammer 151'10". Long's series was: 63'7½", 63'5!'', 64'2", 61'2,i'', 65'!", 65'2!". f'=~)t'IL,_Curtice(Portland St) 217'11"; 2. Hurn (Emporia St) 214'2½"; 3, Another field event man who was impressive was Ron Morris, who Katsis (Wayne St., Neb) 210'8"; 4. Muncy (Washburn); 5. Mason is favored to retain his National AAU title. Morris vaulted an all t>_. (Kearney St); 6. Karas (C, Wash.). time best of 15 '8¼" with his fiberglass pole, a quarter of an inch Texas Southern 41.2; 2. Ft. Hays 31.5; 3. McMurry 41.6. 440R. better than he was able to do with a metal pole . .MileR,TSU 3:17.9; 2. Ft. Hays 3:17.9; 3. Ark. St. 3:18,3; 4. Kearney 100, Harville (una) 9.6; 2, Morris (Striders) 9.7; 3. Carper (Santa C: ;-__-- , -st~,.;5. Redlands. Team Scores: Texas Southern 62¾, Emporia _St. 46, Kearney St. Barbara AC); 4. Hester (una). (Haas, Oxy, ran 9.4 in heat but 45, Md. St, 30, Omaha 20, McMurry 19, Portland St. 18, Ark. scratched from final . ) 220t,Haas 21,.1; 2. Collymore (Camp Pendleton) 212.; 3. Williams St. 18. (Arizona St) 21. 5; 4. Morris • (Williams ran 21. 3 in heat . ) 440, Hogan (USC) 46.6; 2. Larrabee (Striders) 47 .l; 3. Freeman MaJberg Runs 13:55.8 5000 (Arizona St) 47. 2; 4. Carroll (San Diego Navy) 47. 6. By Al Lawrence 880, Wayne Farlow (USC) 1:50.9; 2. Warren Farlow (USC) 1:51.0; f;:s~ 3. Seaman (una) 1:51.2; 4. Mellady (Camp Pendleton) 1:51.3. Mile, Kozar (LATC) 4:10,3; 2. Neal (Oxy) 4:11,6; 3. Kirkwood (Camp Pendleton) 4:12 .2; 4. Jones (Oxy) 4:13. 6, i1!.·.::1~I~~:~:i~~ft~~~fft?.~~;:~~2 Miles, Beatty (LATC) 8:29,8 (world recor4); 2. Grelle (LATC) i: · Halberg clocked 13: 30 . 6 for three miles enroute and finish 8:36,0; 3. Schul (LATC) 8:57.3; 4. Robertson (una) 8:59.3; 5. McGee (LATC) 9:00.5; 6. Ashmore (LATC) 9:00.5; 7, Sargent ~-~-t.,.:treel nearly half a lap in front of his nearest competitor, ex-Polish ih . · army officer John Macy. Running the first mile in 4:25, the Olympic {LATC) 9:05,0. lii(?:;;·champion dropped to 9:01 but again picked up the pace for the re 3 Miles.Larrieu (Culver City AC) 14:01.6; 2. Muller (Glendale JC) f'···.~ distance. Davies' countryman, John Davies, pushed Cary 14:55.4; 3. Drake (Culver City AC); 4. Duarte (una). ~j~:,< Weisiger to a meet record 4:01.8 in the mile. A slow third quarter 6 Miles, Smartt (Striders) 29:53.4; 2. Drake 30:04.2; 3. Garrett ;;{/' of 64 seconds ruined the chances of a sub;.four minute mile. Davies (una); 4. Kidnay (Mt. Sac JC). 3000SC, Martin (LATC) 9:09. 5; 2. Haserot (Culver City AC); 3, lit\;:f:X:~C:·~:a:~~~1o ~l~tt:;~:~f1;~~i~J~hessy dropped down Krenzer (una); 4. McCormack (March AFB). t~;'{' Glenn Winningham of the U.S. Army saved his best effort for 120HH,Polkinghorne (USC) 14 .O; 2. Emberger (Camp Pendleton) ~"'"''-< last in the javelin and edged early leader Jerry Dyes, 255'10}" to 14.3; 3. Pierce (USC) 14.3; 4. Patterson (LB St) 14.5. ~ ·.;· 2-50'5}". Dyes made up for this defeat by taking the triple jump with 22OLHt, Hester 23 . 6; 2 . Patterson 2 3 . 9; 3 . Hahn (una). i.\:'r~a49'lo¼'', 440H, Cawley (USC) 51.5; 2. Atterberry (LATC) 51.8; 3. Ka.rlsrud }<~ . Two members of the 1960 U.S. Olympic team found the (Stride rs) 53. O; 4 . Houser (una) . ~;·~~.. ~~ g<)ing t9ugh. AnthonyWatson broad juniped 25'1" but placed only §LKirkpatrick (Striders) 23'4£"; 2. Yancy (una); 3. Taylor (una), ~i1.~rthird as McMurry's Bill Miller won at 25'9" and Bob Shirey leaped Triple}. Stokes (Striders) 49',i"; 2. Andrews {Striders) 48'.1"; 3. ::~·~>>2S.'li". Earl YoWlg finished third in the 440 and was last in the 220 Thomas (Los Angeles St) 47'10¾"; 4. Taylor. ~f\j\ 1lXOund a tum. Ray Saddler, the Texas Southem freshman, won !!J.,,Avant (una) 6'10"; 2. Faust (Mt. Sac JC) 6'10"; 3. Grundy (USC) 1 11 ~;{:/:' ea..sily in 46 . 4 as former Houston star Ollan Cassell nipped Young, 6 10"; 4, Jones (Cal Poly, SLO) 6 8 • ~~:;· ·46,9to 47.0, for second. Nebraska's Ray Knaub won the 220 in 21.0 ~t~~!~~) i~~::~t~~~:t~•;~SC~o::,f~izona St) 14'llj"; 3, Olson: t2>.' but fmished second to Homer Jones' 9 .4 in the 100. \:i 3 ~ Long (USC) 65'2£"; 2. Davis (Camp Pendleton) 60'2¼"; 3, Wynn ~~t:·chase w1:e~~~ ~::P~~~~~jg~:1~~ t::dci~~~-~=~:r~t~:~e- (Long Beach CC) 55'8¼"; 4, Hiscok (Striders) 54'7". , ,~::~t .. ~ustralians, ran identical 9: 03. 6 's . Lawler, coming fast after an ~f{::::;~a:ly season knee injury, was two yards down at the last hurdle and t~J,.r·aJ.~ost caught Walker as they went across the finish together . ~~1-iEE~ifi;~T.~i ~ts!:~7!¼rll~aar!!ih,· .1,l.•.i._1.; •~y,'.100,Jones (Tex. Sou) 9.4; 2. Knaub (Neb) 9.5; 3. Alspaugh (una) .. 3. Polizzi (Striders) 223'5½"; 4. Stuart (Striders) 222'2½". ·0 !:!I,COIU1olly (un~) 217'8½"; 2. Pagani (una) 187'11½"; 3. Pryde (Sall~ i~~~;c:~Ot~; ~::~vl~;(~~;>r:~i~r (una) 21.2; 3. Lewis (McMurry) 21,3; ta ~arbara AC)!U8l'li"; 4. Frenn (Abilene Christian) 176'3'\ ·.··, . ·. 4 ~ Sullivan 21.4. 2 MileWal.k,Bowman (Striders) 16:48 .4; 2, Sjogren (Finnish·J\merl~ ~;•40; Saddler (TSU) 46.4; 2, Cassell (Ft. Hood) 46.9; 3. YoW1g (A.CC) can AC) 16:50.9; 3. Bullmgt:Qtl (una) 16:55.4; 4. Klanun (CCA.C.)~'
~'..J~\ ,: 5Fj~f¥iI.';,:~>~i~:~¥;__; ·•~., ,•,;;:C,~' •~ =~~~ ~ ,~:¥~:t::/i~ :Mi~·W't~~--..·< .••...... ·· .. · . < .> . . ·.. · . . ····.•· .. · ~ >ci;cJj·a1'6½'~;4. Stuan(sam:aAnaJC) 221·1". sP,.t>avis(c~InP··· s 1:47 .O in dletori) 60'lo.f tt; Z~ Sllves~r (Wia) 60'ltt, 100, Etherly (Al.buqlle~~~ . TC)9._7.;;~6HH,Jones (una) 13.8; 2. Washington (SCVYV) 14.~.,~=~~ .. . Stanford, cam., Jwie 9 -- Jerry Sieben came within two.;. Allen(rexaS·Southern) 14,2; 4. Lindgren (Utah) 14.5.~Bostbi'ic:.:i~ ,.t:e~ of a second of the American 880 record with a 1:47. 0 per (una) 25'9½"; 2. Clayton (Compton JC) 24'11!''. 88.0, Hoffman(unal.: ...\:\'. ~:.;,.'.{:f9rmance at the Pacific AAU meet. Sieben's time, the third fastest 1:51.0; 2. Kerr (una) 1!52.3. · · · · ;; · ~Qfall time, was achieved after Stanford's Rich Klier set the pace s.l's· with a 52. 6 for the first 440. Finishi~ a strong second was San ~:' Jose State sophomore Ben Tucker, who clipped more than two Oregon ·Wins NCAA Title (l 's~conds off his previous personal best witJ:l a 1:47. 8. Jack Yerman Eugene, Oregon, June 16 -- The University of Oregon, capi.;,··::::~~1-ij was ~ected to be Siebert's main competition but a spike wound Yer- talizing on outstanding performances by hurdlers Jerry Tarr and .Mel\\ '}!; 0~0· roan suffered at the Compton Invitational reopened and the former Renfro, miler Dyrol Burleson and sprinter Harry Jerome _ea~ily · }2\';. ~··•·. ~Califoi'llia ace finished third in 1:50 .1. won the NCAA team title before the home folks with 85 pomts, more s\':_,3.]l ~, ·· ...· Also impressive on the track was California freshman Dave than double the 40 3/7 scored by runnerup Villanova. .iJ"\\3 ~>¼t~r,cbibald who won the 440 in 46. 3 . Double winners included Bobby Tarr was the outstanding athlete of the meet, first taking the :·~'i'f~ ff'\l'oynter with bis 9.6 in the 100 and 20.5 in the 220 and Fran Washing- high hurdles in a wind-aided 13. 5 as Renfro took second in 13. 8 and . -~ 1:c::··t9Jl, who scored easy hurdle victories of 14. 0 and 22. 6. In the field, then coming back to trounc~ the field in the 440 hurdles wi~h a 50_.-a -- -i~ .,,. w<>rld record holder Dave Tork managed only 15 '¾"as Jeff Chase also clocking. Burleson set a meet record in the mile, clocking 3:59.8 -~, ·cleared the same height. for his third straight victory in the event. Jerome lost to Frank B~ ···:0~v- ,,: 100:,Poynter (SCVYV) 9.6; 2. Williams (San Jose St) 9.6; 3. Chea in the 100 but won the 220 around a turn in 20. 8 after posting two ' · ...·· ithi!m (SCVYV) 9.7; 4. Rubin (DeFremery AC) 9.7. 20. 7's in heats. Renfro, in addition to his high hurdling, also took ·\t 22:0, Poynter 20.5; 2. Williams 20.6; 3. Middleton (SJS frosh) 20.8; third in the broad jump at 25'11¾". Tarr, Renfro and Jerome scorec;l _•-~ ·. 4; Cheatham 20.9; 5. Thomassen (SCVYV) 21.0. 52 points for Oregon. . · /·>~·:~~ 440; Archibald (Calif. frosh) 46.3; 2. Thomassen 46.9; 3. Middle Of the 10 defending champions half of them repeated, Burleson;.>::;~,,; ton 47. 5; 4. Emanuels (Stanford) 47. 8; 5. Bums (una). Budd in the 100, Pa~ Clohessy of Houston in the three mile, Tarr in ·· 880, Siebert (SCVYV) 1:47.0; 2. Tucker (SJS) 1:47.8; 3. Yerman the high hurdles and Dallas Long of Southern California in the shOt (USA) 1:50.1; 4. Klier (Stanford) 1:50.3; 5. Lee (San .tvfateo) 1:51.3. put. Defending champions who fell by the wayside were Budd ind~ : J_:; Mile, Clark (SCVYV) 4:12.8; 2. Davis (SJS); 3. Linn (CaUf). 220, New Mexico's Adolph Plummer in the 440, Abilene Christian's 2 Miles,. Fishback (SJS) 9:06. 8; 2. Schlicke (Stanford frosh) 9:06 .8; John Lawler in the steeplechase, Boston University's John Thomas 3 . Beardall (.tvfarin AC); 4 . Darnell (Berkeley HS) . in the high jump and Colorado's Don Meyers in the broad jump . .. . io_;ooo,Shettler (SCVYV) 31:54.2; 2. Beardall 32:05.8; 3. Szurcsik However, Meyers claimed part of another title when he tied for first -~--:-:c':.~lSCVYV)_. in the pole vault. As usual there were many surprises but two of · '{c. ~,i:2E~..3QOOSC,Oakley (SCVYV) 9:12.8; 2. Hughes (SCVYV) 9:27.4; 3. the biggest were Kermit Alexander of UCLA in the triple jump and '·t:c.. Shettler (SCVYV); 4. Coleman (~JS frosh). Roger Olsen of California in the high jump. Olsen, a sophomore, ~OHH,Washington (SCVYV) 14. 0; 2. Bonds (una) 14. 5; 3. Ball (SC set a personal best of 6 '10" to score his first ever victory in .. VYV) 14.5; 4. Cobb (SCVYV) 14.7. collegiate competition. 220LH, Washington 22. 6; 2. Nickolas (Vallejo JC) 22. 8; 3. McCullough 100, Budd (Villa) 9.4; 2. Jerome (Oregon) 9.4; 3. Johnson (San Jose ,,c· . · (SJS)23.2; 4. Bonds 23.5; 5. Johnson (SCVYV). Stj9.4; 4. Sayers (Omaha) 9.5; 5. Drayton (Villa) 9.5; 6. H:iggins i;~: .: 400H, Toomey (SCVYV) 55. O; 2. tie, Smith (SJS frosh), Kennealy (una). (Puget Sound) 9. 6. (Budd ran 9. 3 in heat). . .. ·· \?;}i !}l,Moore (Stanford) 24'1¾''; 2. Lawson (SJS frosh) 23'7½"; 3. Roberts 220t,Jerome 20.8; 2. Drayton 20.8; 3. Adams (Purdue) 20.9; 4. Jones+:~"'-'· ". JSJS); 4. Jackson (SCVYV). (Texas Southern) 21.2; 5. Sayers 2J ..2; 6. Bertrand (NYU) 21.2. ·· ,·.-,:: ·THpleJ, Lawson 47'3¼"; 2. Cortrjght (Stanford) 46 '7½"; 3. Jackson; 4. · · Roberts. (Jerome ran 20. 7 in heat and semifinal.} }~\"~~ 1 440, Brown (Morgan St) 46. 9; 2. Baker (Mo) 47. 0; 3. Mills (Purdue} , <.'J •. !:U.,__Jolmson(Calif) 6'9½"; 2. Fehlen (SCVYV) 6 6½"; 3. Pontius (Stan- -;r,r.-0; 4. Plummer (NM) 47. 0; 5. Heath (Colo) 47. l; 6. Cawley (USC} ~:\:B;: ford) 6'6½"; 4. Olsen (Calif) 6'4½"; 5. Wyatt (SCVYV). 47. 3; ~- . l~i~?~ ~ Tork (Camp Pendleton) 15'¼"; 2. Chase (SCVYV) 15 '¼"; 3. White 880, Dupree (S. Ill) 1:48.2; 2. Frazier (Iowa) 1:48.7; 3. Bertofa .. .t,:,..,;; . >(Stanford) 14 '6"; 4. Turnbull (SJS) 14 '6 "; 5 . .tvfartin (una) 14 '6". 1 · ~Maggard (Calif) 59'1½"; 2. Arch (Stanford) 53'7"; 3. Chapple f4~-~~~-l~!~k~r\,~i}~!:l~r\°f~ 9~J.1:49.3; 5. Tomeo (Fordhamf :}1ii~ (Stan); 4. tie, Jensen (SJS) and Bray (lllla). Mile,Burleson (Oregon) 3:59.8; 2. Cornell. (S. Ill) 4:00.5i 3~ Dotson•·• • ;"o§. ·. ,QI;Weill (Stanford) 186'8½"; 2-. Darnes (CCSF) 166'11"; 3. Stoecker (Kansas) 4: 00. 5; 4. Forman (Oregon) 4: 04. 5; 5. Clohessy (Houston) .;~t~';;~ (una) 164'4½"; 4. Bell (Stanford) 160'5½"; 5. Koolery (una). 4:06.6; 6. Dahl (UCLA) 4:07 .3. ., ffi: Fromm (SCVYV) 233 '8½"; 2. Batchelder (Stanford) 232 'd"; 3. 3 Miles,Clohessy 13:51.6; 2. Turner (S. Ill) 13:53.9; 3. Story (Ore •.. ''~~{~ Bocks (SCVYV) 228'11"; 4. Gilstrap (Stanford frosh). St) 13:58.0; 4. Traynor (Villa) 14:01.8; 5. Tekesky (Miami) 14:ll.3; H1:.J'ongewaard (SCVYV) 181 '2"; 2. Burke (SJS) 172 '; 3. Lester (SJS). 6. Mccalla (Stanford) 14: 15. 5. . . · . ·~:;,· 3 8 8 ;.l99'7 1-2" Discus Mark for Oerter ~~~~~~~r:r~~~; ~~ s~~~keFt~~;~~)(~~l°t;es~tb=~~ -(~a!·J::e~:~ t~l1~ .,\.:;_-,; 9:10.6; 6. McCalla 9:16.5. . .. ;;,li.j :;,~ Yonkers, N. Y., June 9 -- Olympic champion Al Oerter 120HH,Tarr (Oregon) 13.5w; 2. Renfro (Oregon) 13.8w; 3. Polking-•~ ;•~~&~ ~t:·· unleashed his second best throw of all time and the third best · horne (USC}l3. 9w; 4. Rogers (Md. St) 13. 9w; 5. Bethea (Morgan · , Jf~ ~:·ever to· easily win the Metropolitan AAU discus at 199' 7½". St) 13 ..9w; 6. Cunningham (Texas) 14.0w. · .· · ':i'i::.rc- . Oerter had another throw of 199'4". In other wejght. 440H7 Tarr 50.3; 2. Stauffer (Md) 51.6; 3. Rogers 51.7; 4. Luck ~c~,?~~ events, Gary Gu.mer threw the shot 63'4" and Al Hall came up (Yale) 52 . 0; 5. Hardin (LSU) .52 . 0; 6. McCullough (San Jose St) ~·'t/)t~ ~:~·/_~:.-~~el (Grand St. ~ys) 187'9½"; 4. Keerd (NYAC) 184'8"; 5. Thom Angeles St) 48'11". ·.. · ·. i· .;.;,I~ ;:!t.'}'$0n (NYAC) 170'2½''. SP Gubner (Grand St. Boys) 63'4". DT !:!.L._Olsen (Calif) 6'10"; 2. tie, Littlejohn~. ~~h). ~homa.s (_Bos-•c::f~ !;:[-":·,>-~&.:•( Oerter (NYAC) 199'7F;°'2. Keerd 170'3"; 3. Gubner 167'11½": ton U), Llewellyn (Oregon), Johnson (Calif) 6 9 ; 6. tie, CurtJS ~\:~ (Baylor), Williams (Mich) and Wybomey (Wash. St) 6'8". . ·.. . ~~"'ji[f~ i~~~~~nother Seven-Footer PV tie, Belitza (Md), Hans.en (Rice), Meyers (Colo) and Elkins (SMtl){J{~ by Avant Ys'3"; 5. tie, Cramer (Wash), Rose (Arizona St), Hein (USC), . ~,.;~/•t~;i · Albuquerque, N .M., June 16 -- Bob Avant tied his career Cruz (Villa), White (Stanford), Wilson (Wash. St) and Bennett (TeX.Lf ):~st alld came up with his best high jump of the season by clear~ 14'9". . · .·.:, :cf\at the Albuquerque Invitational. In other highlights, John Uelses SP Long (USC) 64'7"; 2. Gubner (NYU) 63'4"; 3. Joe (Villa) 59'11"}.c.:J. ~terurrt«lto action by pole vaulting 15 '9" and Murray Halberg of ~ l'vJaggard (Calif) 59'8¾"; 5. Steen (Oregon) 58'5¼"; 6. Inman i ::}J 14~\.'i_Zealand easily won the two miles in 9!03 .2. Mile, Davies (NZ) (Okla) 57'8½". :A . . . . . ·•· •.. ·4:J~-~~-44ot>Williams (Arizona St) 46.8; 2. Carroll (San Diego !2!.,Weill (Stanford) 188'1"; 2. ¥i,ckle (BYU) 180'6"; 3. Johnstone · · ~,4!.~Q;:S.Sciddler(Texas1 ~outhem) 47;5. JT, Winningham (US (Arizona) 180'2"; 4. McGrath (Oxy) 178'2"; 5. Gubner 169 117-!ff;·.· c:2:4~~i·":;2 , Fxomm:(ScVYVJ 241 '7½1!; :f.°Quist . (A.lbuqu~rqu.e (continueEl · on page 158, column <>ne} •.• ic~?!iiss· :.-~~'l}i!{~fI¼Tu~~eat}'.-•DT:K&1uffe•-~<>rdhan1r-1,:S:•&r•;·2; ~CHAMPIONSHIPS (continued from-page 157) · 173'8½tf. SP Gubner·s2•11½''; 2. Kohler 54~7~'. T'.f3atnScoreJi:-~, ._ 1 hattan 82½, Fordham 64½, New York U. 58½,·St. John's 51t., Se'fott;;~.,'.;~~~ ji/Webb (Iowa) 168 11}". Hall 12 . . . · . . '-;,~t Sikorsky (USC) 249'4 '\2 .pyes (Abil~ne C~ristian) 246,\~.: :.IL:.. - KANSAS 59 AT OKLAHOMA 77, Max12: ~ Inman (Ot 5&y&t'rd~;~ Batchelder (Stanford) 241 10 ; 4. Covelli (Arizona St) 235 42 , 5. 1 · Tipton (Oregon) 233'5"; 6. Red (Rice) 231'10". Mile, Dotson (K) 4: 12. 7 . .!!L.Brady (0) 6 '8:Ii". PV, Stevens (K} 14'6' ',,'.;~~ HT Bailey (Harvard) 193'11"; 2. Desnoyers \13.Don Styron (NE La) 13.9. ~Dave Styron (NE La) 9.6. MICHIGAN ST. 86 AT CENTRAL MICHIGAN 35, May 15: Mile, Robinson (SW La) 4:08.3; 2. Eiland (NE La)4:08.3. 440, 100, Ford (M) 9.6. 220, Parker (M) 20.6w. 220LH, Jacobsen (C) Walker (NE La) 47. 4. 22 0LH, Don Styron 22. 6; 2. Dominique 23.2._§L.Parker 24~ (SW La) 23.1. 880, Brady (SE La) 1: 51.4. 220t, Dave Styron 21.4. NORWALK, CALIF., May 19: 100, Morris (Pasadena CC) 2 Miles, Norris (McNeese St) 9: 07 . 8. PV, Goree (La. Tech) 14 '6". 9.5. 220, Morris 21.0. 880, VanAsten (Mt. Sac JC) 1:51.9. Mile, IT.t_Bech (SE La) 220'8". Team Scores: Northeast La. 85 7/10, Thornton (El Camino JC) 4:08.4 (national junior college record); 2. ·_'';,:. Southwestern La. 57, La. Tech 49 11/15, Northwestwestern La. Underwood (Fullerton JC) 4:09.7 . .fil:z_Wynn (Long Beach CC) 55'8¾''; 40 7/10, Southeastern La. 39 8/15, McNeese St. 26 1/3. 2. Pace (Long Beach CC) 55'6¾''.J::!L_Faust (Mt. Sac JC) 6'9"; 2. SANTA BARBARA, CALIF., May 5: DT, Babka (Pasadena 1 Stuber (Cerritos JC) 6'8". PV, Manning (Ventura JC) 14'7" . ...![,_ · 11 TC) 190 1"; 2. O'Brien (Pasadena TC) 181'9".~ O'Brien 57'8½". Clayton (Compton JC) 24'4 • TUSKEGEE, ALABAMA, May 5: 100, Hayes (Fla. A&M) NORTHERN CALIF. INVITATIONAL, Stanford, Calif., May 9.4. 440R, Florida A&M 41.0. 2 MileR, Florida A&M 7:33.1. 19: ~ Maggard (Califl 58 'fr!". 440, Emanuels (Stanford) 47. 6~ 880R, Florida A&M 1:26. 0. Fromm (SCVYV) 239'2 2"; 2. Batchelder (Stanford) 236'; 3. Bocks NEWARK, N.J., May 7~ Norman (Orange HS) 222'. (SCVYV) 228'8½"._§L.Roberts (San Jose St) 24'5£'', 880, Siebert (SC MERCHANTVILLE, N .J., May 9: JL May (Haddon Hts. VYV) 1:48. 5; 2. Tucker (San Jose St) 1:49 .9; 3. Gibeau (SJS frosh) HS) 220 '3½". 1:50.1. ~Weill (Stanford) 183'; 2. Bell (Stanford) 171'7". ~Bame~. _·_ QUANTICO 62 AT VILLANOVA 78,May 12: Mile, Weisiger 11 (SJS) 6'8 2 "; 2. tie, Carter (Calif. frosh) and Johnson (Calif) 6 62 • _.· (Q) 4: 02. 7; 2. Traynor (V) 4:07. 3. 440, Edmunds (Q) 46. 8. 100, 11 11 ~ White (Stanford) 15 '½; 2. Chase (SCVYV) 14'6 • MileR Calif. Budd (V) 9.3; 2. Drayton (V) 9.5. 880, Weisiger 1:52.5. 220, Budd Frosh 3:11.8_;2. Stanford 3:12.9. 2 Miles, McCalla (Stanfo~d) 9:02.5;. 20.0 (ties world record); 2. Drayton 20.1. 120HH,Pras (V) 14.3. 2. Shettler (SCVYV) 9: 08. 6; 3. Davis (San Jose St) 9: 08. 9. 2 Miles,,Traynor 9:21.2. MileR, Quantico 3:11.4. PV, Cruz (V) EASTERN DIVISION MEET, Fort Collins, Colo., May 19: 11 1 11 14'11 • ~Joe (V) 58'5½". JL Kovalakides (Q) 234'3f'. DT, Waters (New Mexico) 165 5 • 440, Barnes (NM) 47. 7. 100, , C.l.C. CHAMPIONSHIPS, Omaha, Neb., May 12:IT.,_ Mun- 1 Plummer (NM) 9. 7. 220, Plummer 21. 5. sey (Washburn) 220 5" ...Nz_Hunter (Omaha) 24'5½".~Favrow D.C. AAU, College Park, Md., May 19: 880, Reilly (Emporia St) 54'9". 120HH, Richard (Emporia St) 14.4. (Georgetown) 1:49. 8. 12~H:I,Johnson (lllla) 14. 5. 440H, Stauffer (Md) OKLAHOMA ST. 57 AT SOUTHERN ILLINOIS 79, May 12: 53. 7. PV, Glass (Md) 14 6 '. 880, Dupree (SI) 1:48. 8; 2. Stone (0) 1:51.2. Mile, Cornell (SI) MANHATTAN 73 AT ARMY 67, May 19: HT, Ballard (A} 4:02.7; 2. Turner (SI) 4:05.0. 2 Miles, Turner 9:10.4. MileR, 166 '4½".PV, Plymale (A) 15 19.i".1;fi1eR, Manhattan 3: 13. 5. ~1't" OS 3:13.9; 2. SI 3:13.9.!!L_Blakley (0) 6'6f'. FORDHAM 77 AT ST. JOHNS 63, May 19: 220, Weiss (F) TEXAS INDEPENDENT COLLEGE CHAMPS, Stephenville, 21.0. 440, Weiss46.9. 880, Tomeo(F) 1:51.4. May 11: DT ·Seitzinger (Hardin-Simmons) 173'7!·" ._filz.Miller (Mc 1 NEW ENGLAND 1NTERCOLLEGIATES Providence, R.I., Murry) 25 i". 440R, McMurry (Lewis, Morgan, Miller, Stell) 40.8. May 19: ~ Desnoyers (Boston College) 177'7''; 2. Ward (Mass) ~i:::" c 100, Lewis (McMurry) 9.5; 2. Miller 9.5 (Lewis ran 9.4 in heat). 173'5"; 3. Kilgallen (Holy Cross) 171'11½"; 4. mood (Maine) 171'6"; 220, Lew'is 20.3. 11 5. Rice (Boston U) 170 '½ • Mile, Keefe (C. Conn) 4: 11. 8 · tf20HH, CENTRAL INTERCOLLEGIATE AA, Baltimore, Md., May Thomas (Boston U) 14. 5w . .fil.LThomas 23'2¼". 2 Miles, eefe 9:- 12: 440,Mays (Md. St) 47.7. 120HH, Rogers (Md. St) 14.1; 2. Bethea 13. 0. ill.,_ Thomas 6'8¼". Team Scores: tie, Boston College and. (Morgan St) 14.1. 220LH, Rogers 23.6. 440H, Rogers 52.3; 2. Boston U. 38, Holy Cross 29½, Rhode Island 19½. McCray (N. Carolina College) 52.6. DT, Santio (Md. St) 163'3". YALE 67 5/6AT HARVARD 811/6, May 19: Mile, Mullin MileR, Maryland State 3: 14 .4. - (H) 4:09.2.~ Luck (Y) 9.9. 120HH, Luck 14.6. 880, Mullin MINNESOTA 46 AT WISCONSIN 86, May 12: 440, Higgin- 1:53. 7. 220, Luck 21.5. 220LH, Luck 23.5. !!h_ Ohiri (H) 24'1¼''. bottom (W) 47. 8. ~ Ezerins (YI) 54 '!£". -- & deLone (H) 54'9". TripleJ, Armstrong (H) 47'1¾''. HT, Bailey GULF AAU, Houston, Texas, May 19:.IT.,_Red (Rice) 235'3"; (H) 191 '3½". Frosh JT ,Hinkle (Y) 229 'l 11. 2. Parker (una) 228'11". DT, Roberts (Texas A&M) 1~7'3". 440H, ENGLEWOOD, N .J., May 19: 220; Krumeich (Essex Catho Hardin _(La. St) 52.1; 2. Waterman (Houston TC} 53.6; 3. Cooper lic HS) 20.8. 440, Grier (Monroe HS, New York City) 47. 5. (Texas) 53.8._fil:t_..Roberts 54'9". Mile, Clohessy (Houston TC) MODEsfo"; CALIF., May 19: DT, Parks (Reedley JC) 165'3". 4~09.0; 2. Elliott (Houston TC) 4:09. 7; 3. Romo (San Anto~o Te~h 440, Bruce (Hancock JC) 47 .2. HS) 4: 10. 0. l00t Jones (Texas Sou) 9. 5; 2. Frazier (~a) 9. 6. fil,_ FORT HOOD, TEXAS, May 17: .1.!.,_Winningham (Ft. Sam - · RldgWay (una) 6 8". 880, Hobson (Texas Sou) 1:50.1; 2. Cozens Houston) 265 12 ". t~{'i ~(l-ioustonTC) 1:50.8; 3. Gunter (Texas) 1:50.8; 4. Hunt (Texas Sou) I. I.A. C. CHAMPIONSHIPS, Macomb, Ill . , May 19:. Mile, "\::;__ . l:i51.3. 440 1 Nelson (una) 47 .3. 120HH, Cunningha1:1 (Texas) 14.3. Cornell (S. Ill) 4: 11. 3. 880, Dupree (S. Ill) 1: 50. 3 ....fil.,_ Gualdoni 4" 2:20t1 Frazier 21.0; 2. Lewis (McMurry) 21.3. 3 Miles, Macy (Haus- (S. Ill) 24'1". ~~.... -.. tori TC) 14: 11. 9 . .fil.LJackson (Prairie View) 24 '6·l''. MileR, Texas MID-AMERICAN CON FERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS, Kent, J>· Southern 3: 10. 9. ~ Hansen (Rice) 15 '5 "; 2. Elkins (SM.I) 15 '5 "; 3. Ohio, May 19: 880R, W. Mich. 1:26.5. Mile, Ditchell (Ohio U) /2'.,::;:·. , Guynes (Texas) 14'8"; 4. Pratt (una) 14'8". 4: 12. 3. !Q.QzTyler (Miami) 9. 5 . 12 0HH,Tyler 14. 5. 22 0LH, Lowe ~~·:~ ( . w ~11!::)~EE, OKLA., May 12: 100, Colbert (C. Okla.) 9.5w (Miami) 2 3 . 3. !!1..Littlejohn (W • Mich) 6 '8" . Team Scores: W . 9 4 Mich. 85½, Miami 78½, Ohio U. 54½, Kent St. 18, Bowling Green 12, Toledo 8, Marshall 2. 0 WESTERN DIVISION MEET, Missoula, Mont., May 19: DT, , , A~I) •1~5~s1~~i¥:i,r~:lf:5 · Passey (Utah St} 181'4"; 2. Mickle (Br.igham Young) 178'2" ._JL_ =•~:::.~ 11 ~~~:;> . FRESNO, CALIF., May 15: 440, Bruce (Hancock JC) 4!.0. Christenson (Utha) 231 '5½"; 2. Thatcher (BYU) 223'7 • 440, Tobler lit~~-'·. 220LH,Nickolas (Vallejo JC) 23 .2; 2. Leathers. (Col. of Sequoias) (BYU) 47 .6. ~HH, Lindgren (Utha) 14. 5. 23 ALL- OMERS, Baltimore, Md., May 20: 1002 Jackson ~----~-----:.,,_·._ .4 • METROPOLITAN INTERCOLLEG IATES.New York City, (Morgan St) 9. 5. 440, Brown (Morgan St) 47 .1. ::'. -:~~y 12: 220, Fernandez (Manhattan) 21.0~ 440, Weiss (Fordham) ARIZONA AAU, Phoenix, May 22: 120HH,Jans-et1{Arizona r. ~"liic,v&Mi(l\ri~na St) 232 DT, JohnsQne (A,:Jzona) 169 '3½''; . . , ?Pil,'m:s (una) 15¾6"; 2. Glover (Arizona) 14'6"; 3. Kerr (Arizona) c(Mo)·57's"._!!hBroadliax (W~shburn) 24'4!''. DTtCoclttan"(Una.), -~s•;4~ Annon(Phoenix CC) 14'6". 172'8½". IT.z.Talbott-(Kansas) 220'10½". TripleJ~Floerke (una) 48 "'. :,~"-,c•'.·!.::. GEORGIA AAU, Atlanta,. May 19: 100, Fowlkes (Atlanta Stri 11". _880, Pelster (Mo) 1:50.8. 220LH,Hanson 24.1. ::~•::'}~~S) 9.5:. 120HH, Moseley (Alabama) 14.3. 880, Dunkelberg (Atlanta .. • MODESTO, CALIF., June 2: 100, Beaty (Hoover :Sti:i.ders) 1:51.1. 220,_ Mann (Tallahassee AC) 20.6. 220LH,Long 9.5. (Ran 9.4w in heat). 220, Stebbins (Fremont HS, Los A~ge;J.,esJ __,;- {!"AC) 23.2. ~ Moselev 24'10i". 20.9 ....fil.,_ Kennedy (Lincoln HS, San Diego) 24'5¾''; 2. -~'•:c;.. ·. · QUANTICO 59½AT PENN STATE 81½, May 19: Mile, Moor- moore HS) 24'2". Mile, Carr (Lowell HS, Fullerton) 4:08;7 \1.1.c1..1..1.v.11GLJ. lli-'pea.d(P) 4:10.5. 440i' EdmW1ds (Q) 47 .3. 220,Ednumds 21.3.lL_ 1 high school record). !!1._ tie, Jones (Bakersfield HS), §'-~~:~_:J(ovalaki~s(Q) 228 5" .J!L_ Wettstone (P) 6 6". son HS, Los Angeles) and Channell (McLane HS, Fresno) ~~t:: _. SAN-DIEGO, CALIF., May 19: 100, Ragsdale (Lincoln HS, 880R, Jefferson HS, Los Angeles ·1:26.1. f:~~-:LiSanDiego)9.5w. 220, Ragsdale 20.7w. -- SPRING GAMES Baltimore, Md., June 3: 220LH,Bethea tl•:> . WALNUT,°a°uly (S) 232 '11½". 120HH, Tarr (0) 13. 6; 2. Pauly Next Newsletters June 27, July 18. Track & Field News mailed \'14.2. 8~0hlemann (0) 1:52.3. 220t, Jerome 21.3. 220LHt, Tarr July 12. 23 .3. DT, Stubblefield (0) 171 'll½". RY, Betz (S) 14 '9"½". 2 Miles, Brady (S) 9:01.8; 2. Lelmer (0) 9:15.1. •. · MICHIGAN AAU, Kalamazoo, May 30: 880, Leps (una) 1:52 .2. AAU Dope Sheet 120HH, H. Jones (una) 13.7; 2. P. Jones (una) 14.3. 100, Murchison · (UCTC) 9.5. 3000SC, Jones (UCTC) 9:19.4; 2. Bashaw (W. Mich) (As a guide to the key performers in the AAU we present this dope 9:19.5. 220t, Johnson r,N. Mich) 21.3; 2. Amu (una) 21.4. !:!h_tie, sheet made in Eugene by T&FN staffers Cordner Nelson, Bert Nel Littlejohn fl{. Mich) and Williams (una) 6 '9¼". son, Hal Bateman and Syd DeRoner. Marks are best of the year. ., _. NEW YORK A.C. SPRING GAMES, Pelham Manor, N. Y ., Mark following event heading is AAU meet record.) .>Cc:June2: Mile, Vinton (Balt. OC) 4:09.0; 2. Rawson (Boston College) 100 YARDS (9.2) :2,t4:ll.7. Handica~2 Miles,Mc.Ardle (NYAC) 9:08.,6 (scratch). HT, Frank Budd, Villanova 9.3 Showed fine form in NCAA win :~i•;:,Hall(NYAC) 201 ; 2. Engel (Grand St. Boys) 191 5 11 ;3. Backus (NY Harry Jerome, Oregon 9 .3 Pressed Budd, has stuff to win ~f{i':~C}188'2½"; 4. Kilgallen (NYAC) 177'7"; 5. Thomson (NYAC) 168' Bob Hayes, Fla. A&M 9.2 Question mark after 3-week layoff •;~•:}A''.DT, Oerter (NYAC) 194'2"; 2. Kohler (NYAC) 165' . .filz_Gard Dennis Johnson, S .J. 9 .4 Slowly returning to form z].;:c~er(NYAC) 6 '10". PV, Schwarz (USMC) 14 '6" . Roger Sayers, Omaha 9 .5 Upset winner in NAIA has class ;;-~·t• ._· PHILADELPHIA P.C. MEET, Norristown, Pa., JW1e 2: Mile, Larry Dunn, Arizona 9 .5 Little fellow usually underrated ~':\::fraynor (Villanova) 4:16.5. ~Joe (Villanova) 58'3". 100, Webster Budd recovering from leg trouble, should be even stronger .. If k':;J..~(Villanova frosh) 9. 9. 2 Miles, Traynor 9: 15. 7 . 440, Webster 49. 1. Hayes regains early season form he could win a classic battle. ~:-:·":=:~-22-0,Webster 21. O. 220 YARDS (21 . Ot) ~~:'f:•?, ·· . NCAA REGIONAL, Galesburg, Ill., June 2:JL_ Kipe (DePauw) Harry Jerome, Oregon 20. 7t Proved ability as 220 man in NCAA ~~~."2:2717t".J80, McNeil r,Nabash) 1:51.1. Paul Drayton, Villanova 20 .8t Narrow loss in NCAA may change ~b . 0 10 AAU, Dayton, June 2: ~OHH, H. Jones (una) 13.6w. Bob Hayes, Fla. A&M 20 .9t Could win if back in top form ,4t.•·_'-_•':.r._-OH,Wa_shington (Central St) 53 .4; . Crawford (Kentucky CC) 53. 5. Chas. Frazier, W1at. 20 . 9t Almost won last year, tough on turn ~?:::·:~ripleJ, Ramey (wia) 48'2!" . .!!L_ Wright (Miami) 6'7". 220LH, Tyler Nate Adams, Purdue 20 . 9t Showed real class in NCAA ~~%t0~mi) 22 .6w; 2. Malzahn (una) 22.8w; 3. Lee (una) 22 .9w; 4. Tay Homer Jones, Tex. So . 20. 7t Big boy is better than NCAA 4th ~.~:•c:lJ,)~(Central St) 23. lw. 3 Miles, Hegedus (Central St) 14:24 .4. Defending champ Drayton fought back at Eugene, could beat )- _·_ ARMY 75 AT NAVY 74, June 2: 100, Almaguer (A) 9.6.~ Jerome who will be.fway from home. :~ {A) 55 12". HT, Tozour (N) 176'5". PV, Plymale (A) 15'. ~._ . 440 YARDS (45.8) . ·· < MIS$0URI VALLEYAAU 1 Mission, Kansas, May 26: 100, Ulis Williams, Ariz.St. 45.9 Apparently in a class by himsel( :··-:°:':l9.7.440, Han.sQI).~7~1; 2. Baker (Mo) 47 ~l. SP, Smith (continued on page 160, colunm one) !Z~l;,tfe"~-:1i~~1;;~;;~~@?:: -.:>,:~~":;~::- - Colinlli.y, Lamar·~½.'!- .., _ John Thomas -&-•10" Slipping aee may_re.oo.u . .' . Brown, Morga.nSt. 46. 7 NCAA titlist can run' .faster Gene Johnson . 7' ·. . Lost to teammate in NCAA,;-'.;:,_ ffilbi~ · Five seven-footers without Thomas provides rough field arid Archibald, Cal. Fr .46. 3 Keeps on improving a.f .mve wide open event. Misses rule becomes all important~ - - DaveMills, Purdue 46 . 2 Could be second if right _ Ray Saddler, Texas So . 46. 4 Lost only once this year; talented . . _ . . . . BROAD JUMP (26'Ut") ..... _. ·. < --:·· Ralph Boston, unat. 26' Slow getting in -shape, l>Ut ::cc'5!.c, Jim Baker; Missouri 46. 7 NCAA 2nd may provide incentive tf~~:iti\"J pc - :\ ---_·_-•. - Once great field has disintegrated. Woods signed pro contract; Anthony Watson·, Okla. 26'½" Hurt knee in NCAA,; J!laf ~cr_ateh:"~~i~ •:; : J'lumrner says won't run; Young off form; Cawley hurt. Darrell Horn, USAF 25'6½" Experienced; been JUIDP18$w~U.i··_:f'"-g 880 YARDS (1:47 .6) Paul Warfield, Ohio St. 26' Looked evert better than NCM_!iid t~y-:'V Jerry Siebert, SCVYV 1:47. 0 Veteran running best ever Bill Miller, McMurry 25'6" Discount NOAA place Ken Tucker, LA St. 25'5½" NCAA boards bothered some- ~ Boston returns to world record pit. NCAA jumpers wiU los~ • i':,_;.J 1~~--~:~ ~~:~:;. ~;M~inSoAisc il; !4~8: ~6 :Li~~~:fhc:ffov~~arhi:d i~/t~dAAkst~f :1~ distance on return to normal runway. :.'~:\; Ray Van Asten, t. : . ots o stu ; on ome rac POLE VAULT (15'8") . -. . ,-<'.~ ~~~-- Jack Yerman, SCVYV 1:48 .6 Spiked recently but tough fighter Ron Morris, Striders 15'8¼.. Defender is mastering glass pole:.J~,&~ JohnBork, unat. 1:48 .5 Workouts indicate he could surprise John Uelses, unat. 16'!" Consistent glass man, may win L\:fi1 Rumor has it Snell may enter. Bill Crothers of Canada is another George Davies, unat. 15'7" Has good season record . _··.< >/·(ii ~.:,:· _foreigner who would figure high. Siebert 's time may surprise. Dick Plymale, Army . 15'9!.. Did 16'2" in practic_e before NC~.;t;;;fl ,>-i- MILE (3:57.9) Dave Tork, USMC 16'2" Has been having troubles "I:~~ ~:::·_'- Jim Beatty, LATC 3:58 .9i Gunning for world record Fred Hansen, Rice 15'6½" Misses less than most collegians. - Jim Grelle, LATC 3:58 .9 Veteran will have to be at best <~ Large field of evenly matched top performers will see payoff on . :;~-~ C~ry Weisiger, USMC 3:59 .3 Has beaten Grelle twice misses rule, emphasis on inconsistency of fiberglass. _ ·"" Bill Cornell, So. Illinois 4:00. 5 Can better 4 on proper pace <;r: -- J3ill Dotson, Kansas 4: 00 . 5 Returning to form, competitor TRIPLE JUMP (53'4¼") ~~:t~ Ira Davis, Phil. PC 51;4" Olympic ace jumpinghagain . J~ ~f;\ Bob Seaman, LATC 4:00 .4 Old timer with lots of ability Mahoney Samuels, Foot. 51 10-,r''3 Jamaican has even c ance to wm ~~~;~.-• - Burleson says he won't run. Beatty has had only one race, but Bill Sharpe, Phil. PC 47'9" Veteran alway$ scores well that a world record. Weisiger, Cornell, Dotson all tough, ready. Kent Floerke, unat. 48'11" Another vet who will be tough 3 MILE (13:37 .1) Darrell Horn, USAF 49'1½" Not having best season Mu:rray Halberg, N.Z. 13:12~orld record holder now ready Kermit Alexartder,UCLA50'11¾" NCAA surprise champion Max Truex, LATC 13: 22. 2 In fine shape after forced layoff Veterans Davis, Sharpe, Floerke haven't jumped much, but • Bruce Kidd, Canada 13: 17 .4 Attempting difficult double; great just enough to indicate they will be tough here. P.at Clohessy, Houston 13:42. 6 Top three have to watch him SHOT PUT (62' 6¼") Charley Clark, SCVYV 13:39 .8 Second rated American Dallas Long, USC 65'10½'' World record holder and ready Gary Gubner, NYU 64' 11" Young strongboy a challenger {Tut~·•- Har~:;~~~~u!t~~~o.r~t~!;~~~. K~tl, f:i~~~~~i::~tm hard to Dave Davis, USMC 62'5¼" Comeback progressing well :;s · figure. World record could fall. Rubber between Halberg & Kidd. Billy Joe, Villanova 60'6" Not much chance for higher '_';C 6 MILE (28:52 .6) Dave Maggard, Calif. 59'8!" Improving, could get fourth ;:\~' Bruce Kidd, Canada no time Talented kid should win easily Dave Steen, Oregon 58'10" Beat other rivals in NCAA ::~.;,~_ John Gutknecht, BOC 30:44 .4m Condition of defender unknown Long seems to have Gubner's number, but can't relax. ;,, Buzz Sawyer, BOC .29:33.6 Veteran has good recent mark DISCUS THROW (195'8") "'~t_c.. Merle McGee, LATC 29:32.6 Mark made in early season Al Oerter, NYAC 200'5½ Very tough competitor in shape •; ~'" , - Alex Breckenridge, USMC30:47.0m Marathoner is reliable plugger Jay Silvester, SCVYV 199' May force winner to world mark ,,.-.,_- Mike Lehner, Oregon no time Youngster could surprise Rink Babka, Pasadena TC 194'10 Smooth thrower could win it all ~/sf:: Halberg entered, doubtful starter. Watch Pete McArdle, Doug Dave Weill, Stanford 191 '7½" Top collegian steps up in class '?s,, _ Kyle, Jerry Smartt. Anything can happen .. m = 10, 000m time Bob Humphreys, PTC 190' 6 Another steady veteran 8 Parry O'Brien, Pas. TC 190'7 Former shot ace inconsistent ~~~~(_-,- George Young, unat 9:1~':~Ei~~~A:!a~ i;~~~~race World mark can fall even if favorable breeze is not present. . JAVELIN THROW (271'9") Glenn Winningham, USA 265'2 Three times over 250 this year Jan Sikorsky, USC 261 '3½ Came through in NCAA cltitch John Fromm, SCVYV 246'½" Defender will be hard to beat Jerry Dyes, ACC 248'6 Most consistent of collegians Larry Stuart, Santa Ana 256'2 Slender thrower having trouble Phil Conley, unat. 244'11 Hasn't been throwing much I[s,:~.i,C O - ~~?.~l~~.0~~~~3f~i\~~~JI~;:;:~· 120 HURDLES (13 .4) A tough event to predict as inconsistency rules . Dick Bocks, 0 Art Batchelder must be watched. ~tt ~:::s}~~~~. o~::tn ii:; ~~~ ~:~:h: :::~ ::~ t!e:!~t him HAMMER THROW (225'4") Hal Connolly, Pasadena 227F3 Biggest favorite of the'meet t_~_!_-~\,~. ;;:; =~~~ ~s';,':Vi:.-J~~hi"!~.:: ~:'.i:;:{;1:::. Al Hall, NYAC 208'5½ Veteran Olympian improving ..·.·•""'-··· ~ 'acBrfan Polkinghorne, USC 14.0 Ran well in NCAA, coming Ed Bailey, Harvard 200' NCAA champ formful throwe,r · tr;..¥;',>: MelRenfro, Oregon 13 .8w Second place surpriser in NCAA Tom Pagani, unat. 195'5y 3rd last year, consistent .-- Tarr & Jones two best in world. Wide open behind them. Bob Backus, NYAC 192'9-2 Another vet just in form ~"'~CS,'.::: 220 HURDLES (22. 5) Eino Keerd, NYAC 192'6½ 3rd to 6th places ~(!;;•., Don Styron, NE La. 22. 5 World record holder likes straight Still. not much young blood with only Bailey a new ff:1t,r," Fran Washington, YV 22. 6 One of world's great all-arounders does well in Mt. SAC circle. Jerry Tarr, Oregon 22:8t Would be favored if race on turn , Russ Rogers, Md. St. 22. 6 NAIA triple champ TEAM SCORES Ba:r-neyAllen, Tex.So. 22.9 Third last year, coming around ' Jay Luck, Yale 22. 7 Could place higher (Doped team scores are on basis of this dope sheet. Many oithe · _ ,Interest lessening in non-Olympic event but comes on day after competitors shown representing a college wiU compete for a clUb other two hurdle races, should have strong field. but this has been considered in doping the team scores. Club 440 HURDLES (49.9) affiliation of some athletes unknown until last minute entries,) Don Styron, NE La. 51.3m Hit last hurdle in 2nd last year Santa Clara Valley Youth Village 67- 2nd last year Willie Atterberry, LATC51.2m 1956 Olympic alternate returns Southern California Striders 54 Defenders split Russ Rogers, Md.St. 51. 7 Will forego highs for this one Los Angeles Track Club 42 Distance strength Chris Stauffer, Md. 51.6 Edged Rogers in NCAA for 2nd Emerald Empire Athletic Assn. 37 All Oregon U. Jay Luck, Yale 51. 7 Not apt to repeat NCAA mistakes Villanova 30 Top Eastern team Lawson Smart, Morgan 51.9 Hasn't run much, but 3rd in 1961 Pasadena Track Club 29 Great weightmen Tarr says two events on same day too much. Cawley hurt. Two United States Marine Corps 24 Top service team Russian ,team spots now wide open. New York Athletic Club 21 Still HIGH JUMP (7'2") Philadelphia ~neer Club 16 2 triple iurnOE~rs 7' Defender at peak of form Baltimore Olympic Club 14 Two six 7'1¼" Local boy tailing off a bit Cl-Osee.nough to give Striders chance to 7' Improved, al~-ays hard to beat ers have depth, could score_ more . Others out ofit ~ .