Page 5 the York iliar Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen will be the featured speaker at the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce Basketball banquet Friday honoring the University's championship team. Dr. Allen Feature Speaker Friday Coach Allen will discuss his 42-year tenure coaching basketball champions, and the past national championship season. John Andrews, committee chairman for the banquet and program, said that his group decided to let the man who knows the most about the club talk about it. This is a departure from the usual procedure of importing an outside dignitary in the particular field concerned. Guests of honor Friday will be the University varsity cagers, seven of whom will play on the U. S. Olympic team this summer. Other special guests will be assistant coach Dick Harp, trainer Dean Nesmith and student manager Wayne Louderback. The dinner at 6 p.m. Friday in the basement of the Community building is open to the public. Tickets are $2.50 and can be purchased at the C. of office in the Wren building at 8th and Vermont streets. Reservations may be made until noon Thursday. The public also is invited to a program at 8 p.m. in the building's auditorium following the dinner. The program is free of charge. A premiere showing of the film version of the 1952 KU season will highlight the program. Titled "Championship Basketball at Kansas," it was prepared by the Mosser-Wolf Centron firm of Lawrence and edited and narrated by Don Pierce, Dick Hart, Charles Lacey and Max Falkenstein. It shows the outstanding action from all 31 Jayhawk cage contests. Kansas 4-Mile Team Readies for Drake Two special guests who are expected for the banquet are Coach Wilbur (Sparky) Staleup of the University of Missouri and Bill Stauffer, his All-Big Seven and All-West center. Stauffer player recently on Allen's all-star team in the first annual West-East Shrine cage game. The Helms Athletic foundation award naming Lovellette the outstanding collegiate player of 1952 will be presented to the big player by Jayhawk athletic director Arthur (Dutch) Lonborg. The five seniors on the team, Clyde Lovellette, Bob Kenney, Bill Hougland, John Keller and Bill Lienhard, will speak briefly, and Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will present the team members with gold basketball awarded by the Big Seven to the league champions. Kansas' record-breaking four-mile relay team composed of Lloyd Koby, Art Dalzell, Herb Semper and Wes Santee is one of the five teams expecte dto repeat its winning time in the Drake relays Friday and Saturday at Des Moines. The Jayhawkers have shown in the Texas and Kansas relays that they are aiming to break the national collegiate mark of 17:16.1 set by Indiana in 1937. $ \textcircled{*} $ University Daily Kansan The foursome shaved 16 seconds in the Kansas relays record with a time of 17:18.3. At Austin the Jayhawkers won with a time of 17:21.2. They were just two minutes and two-tenths seconds from the national record in the Kansas relays as Santee ran an unofficial 4:11.6 mile anchor. No team is expected to give the Jayhawkers too much trouble in their four-mile venture. There was little doubt of the outcome here Saturday after Koby ran the first leg of the race. Missouri's Kansas relays second place finishers should be in the race and will probably come the closest to catching the fleetfooted Jayhawks. University of Texas will go after two wins—the 440-yard and 880-yard relays. Texas won the Kansas 440-yard relay in a run of 41 seconds. The Longhorns had won the Texas title and set a new meet record for the Texas relays two weeks earlier in 41.2 seconds. In the two recent relays Texas has tied both meet records in the 880-yard relay. At Kansas the Longons raced in with a 1:25.2 time and Austin hit a 1:25.6 time. Oklahoma will be up in the two-mile relay. After running it in 7:41.8 at Austin, the Sooners set a new record at the Kansas relays Milwaukee's Brewers will be shooting for the longest win streak of the American Association's young season when they meet St. Paul to-day. Milwaukee Shoots For AA Big One Milwaukee, which has won three consecutively from St. Paul, is pressing Indianapolis for the loop's top spot. The Brewers have won four straight and will be fighting to outdistance the Indianapolis Indians who were captured after they won four in a row. Elsewhere in the Association all clubs resume action after a one-day layoff with Toledo at Indianapolis, Columbus at Louisville and Kansas City at Minneapolis. In the individual field Darrow Hooper, great field man from Texas A&M, will participate. Hooper won the shot-put-at at the Texas relays shoving the iron ball for a new record of 54 feet $73 \frac{1}{4}$ inches. He won at Kansas with a throw of 53 feet 9 inches. with a time of 7:41.5. For Hooper, it'll be the second attempt in as many years to score the Midwestern Relays grand-slam. He won both events in the Texas, Kansas and Drake games last year. The reason to believe he won't repeat his foray against the Celtics is He has two legs of the double grand slam now. In the college section North Texas State will attempt a repeat in the 880-yard relays. The Texans tied the Texas relays record with a 1:25.6 and won the Kansas relays with a 1:27.1 time. It will be the third major win for the Texans if they win at Drake. Thus five teams and one individual will be aiming for their third straight major track and field triumph. Kansas will be aiming for the new collegiate record as the four-mile relay team competes. Hooper-took the discus at Texas with a heave of 157 feet 8 inches and repeated the win at Kansas with 152 feet 8 1/4 inches. Sorority Women In Tournament Expected to hinder Hooper's efforts will be Wally Tanner of Colorado, the No. 2 man at the Kansas City Marathon, who showed the shot 50 feet 9 inches. Women from 13 sororities are participating in the annual Women's Invitational Tennis tournament, sponsored by Sigma Alpha Epsilon, being held from 4 until 6 p.m. each afternoon this week, on the Sig Alph tennis courts. Also in the field, in all probability, will be Don Pratt, Texas A&M, No. 3 man here Saturday at 50 feet $4 \frac{1}{4}$ inches. Peggy More, Alpha Omicron Pi, versus Mary Dixon, Theta Phi Alpha; Jean Michaels, Alpha Chi Omega, versus Pat Garrett, Delta Delta Delta; Donna Carter, Gamma Phi Beta, versus Marilyn Hanson, Alpha Delta Pi. First round pairings in the round robin meet are as follows: Marian Miller, Sigma Kappa, versus Janet Bond, Delta Gamma; Kip Scarritt, Pi Beta Phi, versus Cappie Petit, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Cathie Holt, Alpha Phi, versus Susan Forney, Kappa Alpha Theta, and Pat Aylward, Chi Omega, drew a bye. Trophies will be awarded to first and second place winners. All contestants will attend a dinner in their honor on Sunday, April 27, at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house. Watch Repair Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed Rain Cancels Play Of KU-Missouri Game The scheduled Jayhawker home baseball game with Missouri this afternoon was rained out. Both games of the two-day double-header—scheduled yesterday and today—have been washed out. Wolfson's Third Jayhawker Available Today 743 Mass. The third issue of the Jayhawker will be available today until 4 p.m. in the Jayhawker office, 211 Journalism, and the Information booth. The issue includes a survey of campus opinion on subjects ranging from favorite beer and cigarets to most popular entertainment. It also has a special sports section covering the Kansas basketball team through the season to the NCAA playoffs. Someone Having A Birthday? Call 675 Send a Book. We have books for every age and gladly wrap for mailing. Tuesday, April 22, 1952 THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Phone 666 League Standings American League W. L. Pct. Cleveland 7 0 1.000 Boston 6 2 750 St. Louis 3 2 774 Van Wert 3 2 574 New York 3 3 500 Chicago 3 2 286 Philadelphia 1 6 143 Detroit 0 7 0.000 Yesterday's Results Philadelphia 1, New York 5 Washington 3, Boston 2 Only games scheduled. American League W. L. Pct. Brooklyn 5 1 .833 Cincinnati 4 2 .667 Chicago 4 2 .677 St. Louis 3 3 .500 New York 3 3 .500 Boston 3 4 .429 Philadelphia 2 5 .286 Pittsburgh 2 6 .250 Aerial Frustrates Pigeon Yesterday's Results New York 10, Philadelphia 4 Chicago 7, Pittsburg 1 Only games scheduled. Memphis, Tenn.—(U.P.) A persistent pigeon here tried all day to fly away with a radio aerial hanging from an office building window. Probable Pitchers (won and lost records in paren- thouse) NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston (Surkont 0-1 and Wilson 0-0) at Brooklyn (Roe 1-0 and Van Cuyk 1-0) twi-night double header. New York (Jansen 0-0) at Philadelhia (Meyer 0-1) Night Chicago (Rush 0-0) at Pittsburgh (Friend 1-0). Night. AMERICAN LEAGUE St. Louis (Mizell 0-0) at Cincinnati (Raffensberger 1-0). Night. Your Cleveland (Garcia 1-0) at St. Louis (Byrne 1-0). night. Plymouth Man Detroit (Gray 0-1) at Chicago (Stobbs 0-1). Buddy . . has a used car priced for you. GALLAGHER 634 Mass. Ph. 1000 Hope You Had a Good Vacation. We Can't Offer You a Vacation! But We do Offer Delicacies from Vacationlands FLORIDA POMPANO COLORADO STREAM TROUT MAINE LOBSTER and Many Other Fine Foods Skillfully Prepared Duck's Sea Food Tavern 824 Vermont Dionysius Cato prescribed: "Mingle your cares with pleasure now and then" Disticha De Moribus Make that pleasure an ice-cold Coca-Cola and you'll tip the scales from care to cheer. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY LAWRENCE COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY © 1952, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY