Tuesday, December 5.1967 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 3 Basketball father was coach at KU Great traditions are born unannounced. The birth date is discovered only after many years of excellence. So it was with basketball at KU. James Naismith invented the game in 1891 at the Springfield (Mass.) YMCA College. Seven years later he joined the KU faculty and introduced the game on Mount Oread. In December, 1898, he had eight student and faculty clubs playing. Soon Naismith put together a varsity which lost its first game, 16-5, to the Kansas City YMCA. The first home game, Feb. 10, 1899, was a 31-6 win over the Topeka YMCA and was seen by about 50 persons. Naismith, who invented the game just as a filler for the cold weather between football and baseball, little realized what he had started. Saturday night, the University of Kansas—which Naismith faithfully served the last 41 years of his life—began its 70th season of basketball with an 84-55 win over Utah State for victory No.963 before a near capacity crowd in Allen Field House. Naismith's fame probably drew to KU young men interested in the new game. One of them, Forrest C. "Phog" Allen later returned as coach and nailed down the tradition that basketball is a winning sport at KU. Allen holds the record for having coached the most collegiate victories—a mark that may fall this season, but only to one of Phog's former players, a member of his great 1923 squad, Adolph Rupp, coach at Kentucky. This year KU will try to move toward being the "winningest ever." Oregon State is No. 1 now, starting the season with 976 wins, 14 more than Kansas. Already winner of three consecutive Big Eight pre-season tournaments, Coach Ted Owens' team hopes to extend the mark to four. A third straight Big Eight championship is another goal—one not matched since Phog Allen's Jayhawkers put together four Big Six titles in 1939-44. The Sixth Annual Seminar on Juvenile Delinquency, Prevention and Control will be held all day Wednesday and Thursday in the Kansas Union Big Eight Room. Juvenile delinquency seminar will meet The seminar is sponsored by the Kansas Peace Officers' Training School, the Governmental Research Center, the Kansas Peace Officers' Association, the University Extension and KU. Registration for the seminar will be from 8 to 9:30 a.m. in the Union lobby. Events planned for Wednesday are as follows: 9:30—Welcome to KU by George B. Smith, vice-chancellor for institutional planning and university dean. 10:10—The President's Commission on Law Enforcement and the Administration of Justice. Task Force Report on Juvenile Delinquency and Youth Crime by Phillip G. Green, director of the Now you know BERKELEY, Calif. — (UPI)—Peter Selz, director of the University Art Museum at the University of California, gives the following definition for funk art: "Funk art is earthy, gutty, and sensual. It is more likely to be ugly than handsome. It is eccentric to the point of idiosyncracy . . . Like many contemporary novels, films, and plays, funk art looks at things which traditionally were not meant to be looked at." SALEM, Ore.—(UPI)—An attorney for former coed editor Annette Buchanan argued Monday in the Oregon Supreme Court that freedom of the press was "clearly involved" in her controversial 1966 interview with students detailing marijuana use at the University of Oregon. Emerald editor appeals her case to state court tion and Parole in Topeka and Phillip G. Green. Miss Buchanan was convicted in Lane County Circuit Court of refusing to tell the grand jury the names of seven students she interviewed for an article on marijuana. She is appealing her $300 fine. The interview was published in the May 24, 1963, issue of the Oregon Daily Emerald student newspaper under the headline "students condone marijuana use." 1:30—Workshops: with Dr. Harold J, Mandl, clinical psychologist in Topeka as charman, the workshops will discuss "And What Do We Do Today? Tomorrow?" Johnson contended the marijuana interview held at an off-campus coffee shop, "gained some information that had social value to the community." Dist. Atty. John O. Leahy said the real question "is whether you want to limit the power of the grand jury in compelling testimony. Miss Buchanan, now Mrs. Michael Conard of Eugene, did not attend the hearing. He said Miss Buchanan could not have conducted the interview without pledging the anonymity of the students. "That's what I think you have to weigh," he said "the emberrasment of a reporter against the power and duty of a grand jury to investigate crime in Lane County." "The use of anonymous sources is vital to the gathering and dissemination of news—as essential as a typewriter." Johnson argued. 4:30—Workshop summation by Dr. Mandl. division of juvenile delinquency service, children's bureau, U.S. Department of Health Education and Welfare, Washington, D.C. 6:30—Dinner in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union, James D. H. Reefer, director of the Community Services Department for Kansas City, Mo., will speak on "Juvenile Delinquency as Related to Total Community Affairs." 809 Mass. Special College Terms VI 3-5432 11:30—The Governor's Planning Committee on Criminal Administration; Sub-Committee on Corrections and Juvenile Delinquency with reports by Robert C. Londerholm, Kansas attorney general and committee chairman; Ronald H. Baxter, legal assistant to Gov. Robert Docking; Francis J. Donnelly, judge of the Juvenile Court in Kansas City; Dr. Joseph Satten of the Meninger Foundation; O. R. Stites, chairman of the State Board of Proba- For the Most Precious Madame, Bouquet That Will Linger For the madame you treasure most, give her the gift of perfume, a bouquet that will bring back memories each time she wears it. Raney's has the ideal fragrance for every lady on your gift list. At Raney's cosmetic counter you will find a new creme parfum by Faberge in four scents: Aphrodisia, Woodhue, Tigress, and Flambeau. Raney's also carries the sprays, bath oil, bath powder, soap and combined sets in these four Fabergé fragrances. At the cosmetic counter you will also find Revlon's Aquamarine and Intimate in cologne, spray mist and perfume. For an extra-special someone Raney's has scented candles in the Intimate fragrance. My Sin and Arpege by Lanvin are always prized gifts. And who could think of a more appropriate fragrance than Caron's Nuit de Noel (Christmas Night). Raney also carries Fleurs de Rocaile and Bellodgia by Caron. At Raney's you will find perfumes by Coty, Max Factor and Chantilly. Perfume, a bouquet that lingers, is a gift she will treasure. And for the most precious perfume for the most precious madame, come to Raney's.