Page 5 —Kansan photo by Bob Longstad ONE ALONE—Gil Reich, Kansas forward, goes in all alone for a lay-up against Iowa State Friday. The goal followed a Jayhawker steal in the first half during the Kansas flurry that netted 27 second-quarter points. Girls' Bowling Begins Today A women's bowling league, the first on the campus, will begin play this afternoon in the Union with 26 teams from organized and independent women's houses competing. Each five-woman team will bowl once a week, in its division. The league will continue until May 1, when the division champions compete in a round-robin tournament to decide the league champion. Bowling will be from 4-6 p.m. on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday, and from 6:30-9 p.m. on Thursday. The five divisions are: Today—Sigma Kappa No. 1, Corbin No. 2, Alpha Phi No. 1, North College No. 2, Hodder, and Kappa Alpha Theta No. 1. Tuesday-Sigma Kappa No. 3. Corbin No. 3. Templin No. 2. North College No. 1. Locksley, and Kappa Kappa Gamma No. 2. Wednesday - Sigma Kappa No. 2, Templin No. 1, Kappa Alpha Theta No. 2, Corbin No. 4, Sellards, and North College No. 3. Thursday—Delta Gamma, KRUW, Delta Delta Delta, and Alpha Phi No. 2. Friday—Templin No. 3, Corbin No. 1, Kappa Kappa Gamma No. 1, and Foster. IM Schedules MONDAY Robinson Annex **Fraternity** 'A' 4:00 E. Sig Ep (Ep) 4:05 TKE-Delt (W) 4:10 Triangle-Phi Kappa (A) 4:15 Chi-Sigma Phi Gam (W) 4:20 ATO-Sigma Nu (U) 4:25 Delta Chi-DU (W) 4:30 Kappa Sig-Beta (E) **Independent A** 4:35 Stephenson-W Fraternity C 7:00 Beta Chi Phi Delt II (E) 7:10 Beta Chi L-PHI Delt VI (W) 7:45 Psi FaI III-Sigma Chi I (E) 7:45 Psi Gam-SAE (W) 8:15 sigma Chi III-Lambda Chi (E) 8:15 Psi Delt III-Delt II (W) Robinson Annex **Independent "A"** 4.00 Don Hentz-Jolliffe (E) 3.91 Lilahona (W) 4.51 Sigma Gamma Ep-Physics (E) 4.51 Speech-Hodder (W) 4.64 Club 316-Last Chance (E) 4.64 AFRF-CVarity (W) **Featuring "B"** 7.30 ATO-SAE (E) 7.30 Beta-Sigma Chi (W) University Daily Kansan Meanwhile, play will continue in the National Invitation tournament with Brigham Young playing Niagara in the last first-round game and quarter-final games pitting LaSalle against St. John's and Manhattan against Louisville. Big 7, Ivy Crowns Settled Tonight faternity 8:15 Sigma Chi III-Lambda Chi (E) 8:15 Phi Delt III-Delt II (W) 9:00 Delt III-Phi Delt I (E) 9:00 Phi Psi II-Sigma Chi II (W) Kansas, last year's NCAA champion, can win its second straight Big Seven crown by concluding its season with a triumph over Missouri. However, if Missouri springs an upset, Kansas State still can gain a title tie by beating Nebraska to-morrow night. New York—(U.P.)—Kansas will try to wrap up the Big Seven championship and Pennsylvania will attempt to clinch the Ivy league title tonight to complete the field for the NCAA basketball tournament. Play also begins tonight in the NAIA tournament for smaller colleges in Kansas City with almost half of the huge 22-team field competing in seven first-round games. Pennsylvania can put the Ivy league crown under lock and key by completing its season with a victory at Harvard. La Salle, seeded second as it opens the defense of the NIT crown it won last year as "dark-horse" entry, was a heavy choice to win its quarter-final tonight over St. John's, although the Brooklyn Redmen provided the surprise of opening round games Saturday night by upsetting St. Louis, 81-66, as sub Jim Walsh fired 24 points. Manhattan was a slight choice over Louisville and Brigham Young the same over Niagara. Other Saturday games saw Duquesne stamp itself a title threat by trouncing Tulsa, 88-69, and Louisville crush Georgetown, 92-79. Unbeaten Arkansas Tech (23-0), St. Peter's of Jersey City, N.J., which lost to Seton Hall by only one point, and three-time winner Hamline, all of whom play tomorrow, were the early NAIA favorites. The big surprise of the weekend was Wake Forest's capture of the Southern conference title by upsetting regular-season champion North Carolina State, 71-70, in the playoff against Billy Johnson throw. Washington won the playoffs for the Pacific conference crown, two games to none, by beating California, 80-57, as Bob Houbregs tallied 31 points. NIT, NAIA Get Into Swing; La Salle Hurt by Injuries Kansas City—(U.P.)-The 16th annual NAIA basketball tournament opened its weeklong stand today with Illinois and West Virginia represented in the first game. Eastern Illinois opposed MorrisHarvey of Charleston, W.Va., to start the basketball marathon. Originally, Loyola university of Baltimore, Md., was paired with the University of Portland, Ore., in the tourney opener, but Loyola encountered some difficulties here and wired officials the team would be unable to arrive on time. Officials said last night that Portland and Loyola would now play at 10 a.m. tomorrow and there would game games tomorrow instead of eight. Nine more first-round games are on tomorrow's card. The championship will be decided Saturday when two teams wins its fifth game in six days. The defending champion is Southwest (Mo.) State college of Springfield, which is back to try to make it two in a row. New York—(U.P.)-La Salle, despite the illness of two of its stars, was a solid favorite to beat St. John's and Manhattan was a narrow choice to beat Louisville tonight in the quarter-final round of the National Invitation Basketball tournament. Ken Loeffert, coach of defending champion La Salle, said he would probably "gamble" with two subs in the starting lineup _because all-American center Tom Gola still is on the team he has last week and ace rebounder Jackie Moore is weak from a session of gripe. In the first game of the tripleheader at Madison Square Garden, Brigham Young was a slight favorites, but only remaining first-round game. Brigham Young, runner-up in the Skyline conference, comes back to New York with two members of the Cougar team that won the NIT in 1951-Joe Rickey and Hal Christensen. A fast-breaking game is in prospect, with Larry Costello leading the Niagara attack. THE BUS (Adv.) by BIBLER "Flat or no-when I ride the bus we're never tardy!" Monday, March 9, 1953 Hank Greenberg Signs Wynn, Doby To 1953 Cleveland Indians Contracts Tucson, Ariz. (U.P.)—General Manager Hank Greenberg of the Cleveland Indians signed pitcher Early Wynn and outfielder Larry Doby to 1953 contracts early today. Capitulation of the two Cleveland stars left only Bob Avila of the regulars unsigned. He is expected here tomorrow night. It was believed that Wynn received approximately $33,000 and entered into a gentleman's agreement that he will get more if he has another good season. Doby got about $28,000 and said he was happy with the manner in which the long fight ended. He also may received a promise of more if he has a good year. Jayhawks Have Hot Averages Four Jayhawker regulars, forward Harold Patterson, forward A1 Kelley, guard Gil Reich, and center B. H. Born carried shooting averages of 40 per cent or better into their last two games. Patterson leads this department with 44. Born and Kelley are travelling at 41; Reich at 40. (Never a wrinkle or a crease.) CALL 383 LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS J. Paul Sheedy* Switched to Wildroot Cream-Oil Because He Flunked The Finger-Nail Test Here's a sad cotton tale: poor Paul was in a stew about his haire until his paw wrote; "I ear you got a bun on because your girl left you. Now, lettuce look at the breer' facts. To get in on the bunny huggin', smart rabbits foot it down to any toilet goods counter for Wildroot Cream-Oil, America's biggest-selling haonic tonic. So fuzz thing tomorrow, invest 29% in a bottle or handy tube. Contains soothing Lanolin. Non-cholic. Grooms the hare. Relieves annoying dryness. Removes loose, ugly dandruff. Helps you pass the Finger-Nail Test." Sheedy tried Wildroot Cream-Oil and now he's a jump ahead of every Tom, Dick and Harvey. So what're you waiting but? Get Wildroot Cream-Oil today, and ask for Wildroot at your barber's. You're bound to like it! - of 131 So. Harris Hill Rd., Williamsville, N. Y. Wildroot Company, Inc., Buffalo 11, N. Y.