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Daily Iowan, May 27, 1919
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The Daily Iowan The Student Newspaper of the State University of Iowa vol. XVIII New Series Vol. III NUMBER 107 IOWA TEAM LOSES TO AGGIES' NINE IN SCORE OF 4 TO 1 Hamilton and Olson Formed University's Battery- Plagge Pitched for Ames GAME HERE WEDNESDAY Hawkeyes Beaten by Michigan in Saturday's Contest at Ann Arbor- Score 11 to 1 Ames defeated Iowa by a score of 4 to 1 in yesterday's game. A long distance talk with Coach maser afforded little information as to details of the play, but it was learned that Hamilton pitched for Iowa. Olson was catcher. McIlree was at first base and Irish at third. Plagge was the Ames pitcher and Van der Loo the catcher. A return game will be played here Wednesday at 5:30. Coach Jones and the Iowa team are expected back today. The score by innings was: Iowa.... 000000010-- 1 Ames.... 000000310-- 4 MICHIGAN, 11; IOWA, 1 Ann Arbor, Mich., May 25, -- For the second time this season Iowa was beaten by Michigan in a poorly fought, long drawn out game. The score was 11 to 1. Iowa went to pieces in the fourth and Michigan scored seven run, Score: Michigan.......... R H P A Knode, SS.........3 2 1 4 Cooper lf ......... 1 3 2 0 Bowman, rf .......1 1 0 0 Garrett 2b ..........1 1 1 2 Karpus 3b .........0 2 2 2 Froemke 1b ......0 0 14 1 Lanham, cf .......3 1 1 0 Huber c ...........1 1 5 1 Parks p ..........1 0 1 3 Totals ............. 11 11 27 13 Iowa R H P A Irish ss ............1 0 1 6 Goodwin 2b...0 1 0 1 Ehred 3b ......0 0 2 3 Crawford cf ...0 0 3 0 Brown lf .........0 0 1 0 Hamilton rf ...0 0 2 0 McIlree p .....0 1 0 5 [??son] c .... 0 1 6 1 Belding 1b ...0 1 9 0 Totals ...........1 4 24 16 Iowa .... 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 1 Michigan. 0 0 0 1 7 2 1 0 0 - 11 Errors-- Knode, Karpus, Fromke, Irish, Ehred, McIlree, Belding, 3. Two base hits-- Karpus, Garrett, Knode. Bases on balls-- Off Parks,1; off McIlree, 3. Struck out-- Parks, 6; McIlree, 1. MUST MAKE ENTRIES FOR CANOE RACE Contestants for the annual canoe race must be entered at least two days before the meet and unless the entries are in, the contestants shall not be allowed to enter. Coach David Armbruster has received three entries already and is expecting several more in the next two days. The following are entered: Randolph and Katter, Leese and Rotten, Anderson and Hanapel. The race will start at 9 o'clock Decoration day and will finish at the Iowa avenue bridge. A silver loving cup will be awarded to the winners by the Eels club. Journalists took the honors in the feature story contest held by Theta Sigma Phi at the University of Illinois. The three prize winners are all active in journalistic work. TO GIVE HONOR TEA The Y.W.C.A. will give a tea for Miss Mary Andersen, who arrived this week from France, and Bernice Cole, who leaves the last of the week, in the liberal arts drawing room tomorrow afternoon preceding Miss Andersen's lecture at 4:30. All students, faculty members and townswomen are invited. HAWKEYE EXECUTIVES TO BE CHOSEN SOON Any Next Year Junior Is Eligible for Position as Editor or Business Manager. Applications for the positions of editor-in-chief and business manager of the 1921 Hawkeye must be presented to Prof. C. H. Weller, chairman of the Hawkeye board, before June 2. At present two applications have been filed. Any student who will be a junior in good standing at the opening of the fall term is eligible for either position. The selections are made by the members of the Hawkeye board, which consists of four students and three members of the faculty. The present board is composed of Arthur Rosenbaugh, Carl Speicker, Nancy Lamb, and Marion Smith, student members; and Professors C. H. Weller, Frank B. Thayer, and H. F. Goodrich, faculty members. In addition to choosing the editor and business manager, the board approves all appointments on the staff. The financial remuneration for each position, editor and business manager, is no less that $200 and no more than $290. In even of a surplus, the first 100 for to the corporation. Sixty percent of any surplus over $100 and not in excess of $400 reverts to the editor and business manager. Any further profits are placed in a surplus fund. The Haweye board meets the first Monday in June, at which time the editor and business manager will be chosen. PHI BETA KAPPA TO INITIATE AND BANQUET Dr. John D. Stoops, Professor of Philosophy at Grinnell, Will Give Address Seventeen seniors will be honored by initiation into Phi Beta Kappa, the scholarship fraternity, at their annual initiation to be held here at 5:30 tomorrow night in room 104 liberal arts building. A banquet, served in the parlors of the Unitarian church, will follow. The order of exercises, presided over by Prof. Forest C. Ensign, will consist of the presentation of candidates by Mrs. Grace Partridge Smith; "History of Phi Beta Kappa," Professor Jacob Van der Zee and "Explanation of Signs and Symbols," by Miss Jane Roberts. Professor Ensign will act as toast-master at the banquet. Prof. G. W. Patrick will extend a welcome to the initiates to which Albert C. Wilcox will respond. The address of the evening will be given by Dr. John D. Stoops, professor of Philosophy at Grinnell. Lucy Scales, Gamma Phi Beta, who has been teaching at Oelwein, is now in Iowa City. MISS ANDERSON VISITS UNIVERSITY AFTER Y. SERVICE IN FRANCE Former Iowa Secretary Now Wears Two Silver Triangles and Fleur-de-lis CHAPERONED WAR BRIDES Was in Charge of Nurses' Hut at Angers and Established Tea Rooms for the Nurses Mary Andersen, formerly University Y.W.C.A. secretary, arrived in Iowa City yesterday morning after fourteen months of service in France. On her uniform sleeve, Miss Andersen wears two silver triangles which indicate a year's service overseas. A flour-de-lis on the left shoulder signifies that she was in the Paris district. As the first official chaperons for English war brides, Miss Andersen and a fellow Y. W. worker landed in New York May 16 on the transport Plattsburg. At the last minute it was decided that the fifty war brides sailing for America should be chaperoned and the ship's prison cell, which was then occupied by an officer embezzler, was emptied and prepared for the Y. W. women. Showed Executive Ability At Brest the officers of the ship could find no way to make room for twenty-six officers who were awaiting passage home on the Plattsburg. After the captain had failed to make arrangements, Miss Andersen and her companion quietly settled the difficulty by sending twenty-six of the brides who wished to wait over at Brest to a hostess house. Their ability to handle the situation won the admiration of all the officers, especially those who secured passage in this way. Miss Andersen will talk on her experiences in the liberal arts drawing room Wednesday at 4:30. She was in charge of the nurses' hut at Base Hospital 27 at Angers, near Tours. One of the first units was stationed there in the best equipped hospitals. In The S.O.S. District The hospital was in the S.O.S. district, 200 miles from the firing line. During the big drives, men were brought directly from the field stations by a hospital train which came right up to the grounds. Usually, though, the patients were evacuation cases. Since no hut or regular recreation spot was provided for several months, Miss Andersen served tea to the nurses every afternoon in a beautiful grove between the movable barracks and the hospital, which was an old monastery. On rainy days, they met in the mess hall or in Miss Andersen's own tiny room. When the nurses' work was especially heavy, tea was served them on the steps outside the operating room. Royal Company When countesses began to stop in at tea time, Miss Andersen decided that a hut should be built. About the first of October, a hut similar to the hostess houses here was provied. Miss Andersen lived there alone with her little Belgian refugee maid, who plans to follow her mistress to America as soon as she can. Picnic parties in an ambulance and occasional birthday dinners were given to entertain the nurses. Several bicycles were also kept at the (Continued on page 6) DR. HOLMES LECTURES Dr. Abby Holmes gave the first of a series of informational talks on social education to the freshmen women in the L. A. assembly room yesterday. Dr. Holmes has given two years of her time to this work, which is under the direction of the national board of the Christian association and which has been correlated with the training camp activities in health and education. ALUMNUS CAMPAIGN INCITES SUBSCRIBERS Colleges of Law, Engineering and Pharmacy and Nurses School Subscribe 100 Per Cent The seniors from the Engineering college, College of Pharmacy, Law College and training school for nurses, have subscribed 100 per cent in the recent Iowa Alumnus campaign. Although the reports from the liberal arts college are not complete it looks as though from the five colleges mentioned there will be 125 new subscriptions to the Alumnus. The Dentistry college has not completed its campaign but reports indicate that it is the lowest in its percentage. Much of the success of the campaign is credited to the leaders in the various colleges. These are as follows: Nurse's training school, Maude Peterson; Engineering college, Alvin Hanapel and Wendell Anderson; Law college, Clyde Jones and H. N. Mosier; College of Pharmacy, Ben Rogers; Liberal arts, Lilian Prentiss, Ralph Overholzer and Gretchen Kane; Dental college, Harry M. Erhred. The College of Law bought 880 copies of their special issue and sent them over the state. This campaign is to be carried on every year. Subscribers will receive their first issue in about ten days. It will be the commencement number. GENEVA PROSPECTS BAN UET TONIGHT Invitations Sent to Eighty Men-- Those Who Cannot Attend Urged to Phone Y.M. Iowa's Geneva Fellowship banquet, sponsored by the Y. M. C. A. will take place tonight at the Commercial club rooms from six to eight o'clock. The University has always been well represented at the annual conference at Lake Geneva and preparations are being made for a large delegation this year. The bansuet tonight is in the interest of the representation this spring. The program follows: Geneva-- A Definition, Allen A. Herrick Expressions-- Harold Sandy, W. S. Kelly, Virgil M. Hancher Nonsense-- The Good Times, Rev. Robert R. Reed Expenses-- Dollars and Cents, Neil C. Adamson Values-- President Walter A. Jessup All Aboard-- Mr. J. H. Kolb, Executive secretary, Student bureau, Central department. Invocation by the Rev. Irving E. Wade and the singing of Old Gold will complete the program. Invitations were sent to eighty men. The committee urges that those who cannot attend phone 160, Y. M. C. A., before today noon. GRINNELL GRABS PREMIER HONORS IN STATE MEET Hendrickson, Simpson's Famous Athlete, Is Individual Star BRIGHAM KEEPS JUMP TITLE Ames Gets Second from Iowa by Half Point Margin -- Simpson Finishes Fourth Grinnell wrested the state track title from Iowa and Ames Saturday in the annual state meet at Des Moines with a total of 48 points. Ames nosed Iowa out for second place, after a bitter fight, by a half point, their score being 33 to 32 1-2. Although seven other terms won points, the three leading schools, Iowa, Ames, and Grinnell, won most of the events. Simpson finished in fourth place with 14 1-2 points, all but four of which were won by Hendrickson, individual field champion. Grinnell took five firsts and place in twelve out of fifteen events. Iowa captured two firsts and placed in nine events. The Cyclones also won two firsts and placed in ten events. Draws Poor Position Eight Hawkeyes, not including members of the relay teams, made points for Iowa. Colby ran third in the 100 yard dash, Has and Cowden of Grinnell defeating him by a narrow margin. In the 220 yard dash, the Old Gold sprinter placed second, beating Lodwick of Ames who won this race at the Ames-Iowa dual. Justin added a point to the Iowa score with a fourth place in the century. The Old Gold registered but one point in the 440 yard dash, due to the fact that Captain Greenwood drew a poor position on the track, and in an effort to take the pole, was badly boxed. He lost the race but came in fourth, in spite of handicaps. Rosenbaugh ran a fast half mile for Iowa, but was beaten for fourth place a few yards from the finish by Richards of Grinnell. Score in Field Events Most of the Hawkeye points were scored in the field events. "Duke" Slater won the discus throw with a heave of 120 feet 8 inches with Greenwood, his teammate a close second with a throw of 118 feet. The Old Gold scored another victory in the high jump when Brigham defeated the redoubtable Paige of Ames, by clearing the bar at 5 feet 9 1-4 inches. In the preliminaries Friday, the Iowa jumper was badly off color and barely managed to get into the finals. His comeback Saturday delighted Hawkeye fans who were anxious to see him retain the high jump title he won last spring. Watson's three shot putters, Mockmore, Slater, and Wallen, landed second, third, and fourth respectively in their event. Wagner of Ames won first place with a heave of 39 feet 8 inches. Bailey and Sheedy annexed a point for Iowa when they tied for fourth place in the pole vault. The only record to fall Saturday was in the mile run. Browning of Cornell bettered the time of 4:32 3-5. State records in both relays were tied. In the short relay a bobble by Wahl in giving the baton to Justin lost the race for Iowa, but Colby finished in second place. The mile relay was also a victory for Grinnell with Iowa and Ames tiring for second. Greenwood made a beautiful (Continued on page 6)
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The Daily Iowan The Student Newspaper of the State University of Iowa vol. XVIII New Series Vol. III NUMBER 107 IOWA TEAM LOSES TO AGGIES' NINE IN SCORE OF 4 TO 1 Hamilton and Olson Formed University's Battery- Plagge Pitched for Ames GAME HERE WEDNESDAY Hawkeyes Beaten by Michigan in Saturday's Contest at Ann Arbor- Score 11 to 1 Ames defeated Iowa by a score of 4 to 1 in yesterday's game. A long distance talk with Coach maser afforded little information as to details of the play, but it was learned that Hamilton pitched for Iowa. Olson was catcher. McIlree was at first base and Irish at third. Plagge was the Ames pitcher and Van der Loo the catcher. A return game will be played here Wednesday at 5:30. Coach Jones and the Iowa team are expected back today. The score by innings was: Iowa.... 000000010-- 1 Ames.... 000000310-- 4 MICHIGAN, 11; IOWA, 1 Ann Arbor, Mich., May 25, -- For the second time this season Iowa was beaten by Michigan in a poorly fought, long drawn out game. The score was 11 to 1. Iowa went to pieces in the fourth and Michigan scored seven run, Score: Michigan.......... R H P A Knode, SS.........3 2 1 4 Cooper lf ......... 1 3 2 0 Bowman, rf .......1 1 0 0 Garrett 2b ..........1 1 1 2 Karpus 3b .........0 2 2 2 Froemke 1b ......0 0 14 1 Lanham, cf .......3 1 1 0 Huber c ...........1 1 5 1 Parks p ..........1 0 1 3 Totals ............. 11 11 27 13 Iowa R H P A Irish ss ............1 0 1 6 Goodwin 2b...0 1 0 1 Ehred 3b ......0 0 2 3 Crawford cf ...0 0 3 0 Brown lf .........0 0 1 0 Hamilton rf ...0 0 2 0 McIlree p .....0 1 0 5 [??son] c .... 0 1 6 1 Belding 1b ...0 1 9 0 Totals ...........1 4 24 16 Iowa .... 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 1 Michigan. 0 0 0 1 7 2 1 0 0 - 11 Errors-- Knode, Karpus, Fromke, Irish, Ehred, McIlree, Belding, 3. Two base hits-- Karpus, Garrett, Knode. Bases on balls-- Off Parks,1; off McIlree, 3. Struck out-- Parks, 6; McIlree, 1. MUST MAKE ENTRIES FOR CANOE RACE Contestants for the annual canoe race must be entered at least two days before the meet and unless the entries are in, the contestants shall not be allowed to enter. Coach David Armbruster has received three entries already and is expecting several more in the next two days. The following are entered: Randolph and Katter, Leese and Rotten, Anderson and Hanapel. The race will start at 9 o'clock Decoration day and will finish at the Iowa avenue bridge. A silver loving cup will be awarded to the winners by the Eels club. Journalists took the honors in the feature story contest held by Theta Sigma Phi at the University of Illinois. The three prize winners are all active in journalistic work. TO GIVE HONOR TEA The Y.W.C.A. will give a tea for Miss Mary Andersen, who arrived this week from France, and Bernice Cole, who leaves the last of the week, in the liberal arts drawing room tomorrow afternoon preceding Miss Andersen's lecture at 4:30. All students, faculty members and townswomen are invited. HAWKEYE EXECUTIVES TO BE CHOSEN SOON Any Next Year Junior Is Eligible for Position as Editor or Business Manager. Applications for the positions of editor-in-chief and business manager of the 1921 Hawkeye must be presented to Prof. C. H. Weller, chairman of the Hawkeye board, before June 2. At present two applications have been filed. Any student who will be a junior in good standing at the opening of the fall term is eligible for either position. The selections are made by the members of the Hawkeye board, which consists of four students and three members of the faculty. The present board is composed of Arthur Rosenbaugh, Carl Speicker, Nancy Lamb, and Marion Smith, student members; and Professors C. H. Weller, Frank B. Thayer, and H. F. Goodrich, faculty members. In addition to choosing the editor and business manager, the board approves all appointments on the staff. The financial remuneration for each position, editor and business manager, is no less that $200 and no more than $290. In even of a surplus, the first 100 for to the corporation. Sixty percent of any surplus over $100 and not in excess of $400 reverts to the editor and business manager. Any further profits are placed in a surplus fund. The Haweye board meets the first Monday in June, at which time the editor and business manager will be chosen. PHI BETA KAPPA TO INITIATE AND BANQUET Dr. John D. Stoops, Professor of Philosophy at Grinnell, Will Give Address Seventeen seniors will be honored by initiation into Phi Beta Kappa, the scholarship fraternity, at their annual initiation to be held here at 5:30 tomorrow night in room 104 liberal arts building. A banquet, served in the parlors of the Unitarian church, will follow. The order of exercises, presided over by Prof. Forest C. Ensign, will consist of the presentation of candidates by Mrs. Grace Partridge Smith; "History of Phi Beta Kappa," Professor Jacob Van der Zee and "Explanation of Signs and Symbols," by Miss Jane Roberts. Professor Ensign will act as toast-master at the banquet. Prof. G. W. Patrick will extend a welcome to the initiates to which Albert C. Wilcox will respond. The address of the evening will be given by Dr. John D. Stoops, professor of Philosophy at Grinnell. Lucy Scales, Gamma Phi Beta, who has been teaching at Oelwein, is now in Iowa City. MISS ANDERSON VISITS UNIVERSITY AFTER Y. SERVICE IN FRANCE Former Iowa Secretary Now Wears Two Silver Triangles and Fleur-de-lis CHAPERONED WAR BRIDES Was in Charge of Nurses' Hut at Angers and Established Tea Rooms for the Nurses Mary Andersen, formerly University Y.W.C.A. secretary, arrived in Iowa City yesterday morning after fourteen months of service in France. On her uniform sleeve, Miss Andersen wears two silver triangles which indicate a year's service overseas. A flour-de-lis on the left shoulder signifies that she was in the Paris district. As the first official chaperons for English war brides, Miss Andersen and a fellow Y. W. worker landed in New York May 16 on the transport Plattsburg. At the last minute it was decided that the fifty war brides sailing for America should be chaperoned and the ship's prison cell, which was then occupied by an officer embezzler, was emptied and prepared for the Y. W. women. Showed Executive Ability At Brest the officers of the ship could find no way to make room for twenty-six officers who were awaiting passage home on the Plattsburg. After the captain had failed to make arrangements, Miss Andersen and her companion quietly settled the difficulty by sending twenty-six of the brides who wished to wait over at Brest to a hostess house. Their ability to handle the situation won the admiration of all the officers, especially those who secured passage in this way. Miss Andersen will talk on her experiences in the liberal arts drawing room Wednesday at 4:30. She was in charge of the nurses' hut at Base Hospital 27 at Angers, near Tours. One of the first units was stationed there in the best equipped hospitals. In The S.O.S. District The hospital was in the S.O.S. district, 200 miles from the firing line. During the big drives, men were brought directly from the field stations by a hospital train which came right up to the grounds. Usually, though, the patients were evacuation cases. Since no hut or regular recreation spot was provided for several months, Miss Andersen served tea to the nurses every afternoon in a beautiful grove between the movable barracks and the hospital, which was an old monastery. On rainy days, they met in the mess hall or in Miss Andersen's own tiny room. When the nurses' work was especially heavy, tea was served them on the steps outside the operating room. Royal Company When countesses began to stop in at tea time, Miss Andersen decided that a hut should be built. About the first of October, a hut similar to the hostess houses here was provied. Miss Andersen lived there alone with her little Belgian refugee maid, who plans to follow her mistress to America as soon as she can. Picnic parties in an ambulance and occasional birthday dinners were given to entertain the nurses. Several bicycles were also kept at the (Continued on page 6) DR. HOLMES LECTURES Dr. Abby Holmes gave the first of a series of informational talks on social education to the freshmen women in the L. A. assembly room yesterday. Dr. Holmes has given two years of her time to this work, which is under the direction of the national board of the Christian association and which has been correlated with the training camp activities in health and education. ALUMNUS CAMPAIGN INCITES SUBSCRIBERS Colleges of Law, Engineering and Pharmacy and Nurses School Subscribe 100 Per Cent The seniors from the Engineering college, College of Pharmacy, Law College and training school for nurses, have subscribed 100 per cent in the recent Iowa Alumnus campaign. Although the reports from the liberal arts college are not complete it looks as though from the five colleges mentioned there will be 125 new subscriptions to the Alumnus. The Dentistry college has not completed its campaign but reports indicate that it is the lowest in its percentage. Much of the success of the campaign is credited to the leaders in the various colleges. These are as follows: Nurse's training school, Maude Peterson; Engineering college, Alvin Hanapel and Wendell Anderson; Law college, Clyde Jones and H. N. Mosier; College of Pharmacy, Ben Rogers; Liberal arts, Lilian Prentiss, Ralph Overholzer and Gretchen Kane; Dental college, Harry M. Erhred. The College of Law bought 880 copies of their special issue and sent them over the state. This campaign is to be carried on every year. Subscribers will receive their first issue in about ten days. It will be the commencement number. GENEVA PROSPECTS BAN UET TONIGHT Invitations Sent to Eighty Men-- Those Who Cannot Attend Urged to Phone Y.M. Iowa's Geneva Fellowship banquet, sponsored by the Y. M. C. A. will take place tonight at the Commercial club rooms from six to eight o'clock. The University has always been well represented at the annual conference at Lake Geneva and preparations are being made for a large delegation this year. The bansuet tonight is in the interest of the representation this spring. The program follows: Geneva-- A Definition, Allen A. Herrick Expressions-- Harold Sandy, W. S. Kelly, Virgil M. Hancher Nonsense-- The Good Times, Rev. Robert R. Reed Expenses-- Dollars and Cents, Neil C. Adamson Values-- President Walter A. Jessup All Aboard-- Mr. J. H. Kolb, Executive secretary, Student bureau, Central department. Invocation by the Rev. Irving E. Wade and the singing of Old Gold will complete the program. Invitations were sent to eighty men. The committee urges that those who cannot attend phone 160, Y. M. C. A., before today noon. GRINNELL GRABS PREMIER HONORS IN STATE MEET Hendrickson, Simpson's Famous Athlete, Is Individual Star BRIGHAM KEEPS JUMP TITLE Ames Gets Second from Iowa by Half Point Margin -- Simpson Finishes Fourth Grinnell wrested the state track title from Iowa and Ames Saturday in the annual state meet at Des Moines with a total of 48 points. Ames nosed Iowa out for second place, after a bitter fight, by a half point, their score being 33 to 32 1-2. Although seven other terms won points, the three leading schools, Iowa, Ames, and Grinnell, won most of the events. Simpson finished in fourth place with 14 1-2 points, all but four of which were won by Hendrickson, individual field champion. Grinnell took five firsts and place in twelve out of fifteen events. Iowa captured two firsts and placed in nine events. The Cyclones also won two firsts and placed in ten events. Draws Poor Position Eight Hawkeyes, not including members of the relay teams, made points for Iowa. Colby ran third in the 100 yard dash, Has and Cowden of Grinnell defeating him by a narrow margin. In the 220 yard dash, the Old Gold sprinter placed second, beating Lodwick of Ames who won this race at the Ames-Iowa dual. Justin added a point to the Iowa score with a fourth place in the century. The Old Gold registered but one point in the 440 yard dash, due to the fact that Captain Greenwood drew a poor position on the track, and in an effort to take the pole, was badly boxed. He lost the race but came in fourth, in spite of handicaps. Rosenbaugh ran a fast half mile for Iowa, but was beaten for fourth place a few yards from the finish by Richards of Grinnell. Score in Field Events Most of the Hawkeye points were scored in the field events. "Duke" Slater won the discus throw with a heave of 120 feet 8 inches with Greenwood, his teammate a close second with a throw of 118 feet. The Old Gold scored another victory in the high jump when Brigham defeated the redoubtable Paige of Ames, by clearing the bar at 5 feet 9 1-4 inches. In the preliminaries Friday, the Iowa jumper was badly off color and barely managed to get into the finals. His comeback Saturday delighted Hawkeye fans who were anxious to see him retain the high jump title he won last spring. Watson's three shot putters, Mockmore, Slater, and Wallen, landed second, third, and fourth respectively in their event. Wagner of Ames won first place with a heave of 39 feet 8 inches. Bailey and Sheedy annexed a point for Iowa when they tied for fourth place in the pole vault. The only record to fall Saturday was in the mile run. Browning of Cornell bettered the time of 4:32 3-5. State records in both relays were tied. In the short relay a bobble by Wahl in giving the baton to Justin lost the race for Iowa, but Colby finished in second place. The mile relay was also a victory for Grinnell with Iowa and Ames tiring for second. Greenwood made a beautiful (Continued on page 6)
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