University Daily Kansan Page 3 Competitive Spirit Of Team Lauded By Chancellor Murphy By RON KULL 图 写字 Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy lauded the fine competitive spirit the KU basketball team showed during the NCAA playoffs in Seattle The chancellor said that the team technically played well. "Winning was no fluke," he added. The whole team showed good sportsmanship, he said. Lovellette and Kelley in particular took beatings in the St. John's game but they took the rough treatment with a smile. The chancellor declined to single out anyone for special praise but he lauded Houghland for his good performance in spite of a bad leg. "The team seemed to be trying to win the game for 'Phog,'" he said. "The general picture reflected great credit on the University, the state, and basketball." The chancellor said that he met several of the coaches who were attending the meeting of the American Association of Basketball Coaches at Seattle. He said that By ROZANNE ATKINS Eight curtain calls and loud applause expressed the audience's appreciation of the superb artistic mastery of the Albeneri Trio in Strong auditorium Monday night. The three movements of Mozart's Trio in C major seemed melodically and harmonically unpretentious but offered an excellent example of the composer's almost frugal economy of compositional raw material. Audience Enjoys Albeneri Trio Amazing clarity and formal balance was characteristic of Ravel's Trio in A minor. Balance is maintained throughout the four movements by framing the single movements with similar text material and by-restating the opening melodic line at the conclusion. The B Flat Trio by Schubert concluded the concert. A good friend of Beethoven, Schubert was quick to accept the four-movement form for chamber work established by Beethoven. The last movement, a traditional rondo, has been described by Robert Schuman as "pure joy." The trio will leave today for a concert tour in Kansas. The trio will appear here again April 7. Official Bulletin Todav Alpha Phi Omega: 4:30 p.m., Pine room, all members and pledges attend the initiation. Tau Sigma: initiation tonight. QST: Important KU Amateur Radio club, 7:30 p.m. EE lab., discuss Engineering exhibition. All members be present. Women's Rifle team: no practice tonight. Student Religious council: no meeting today. Special meeting Tuesday, April 8. Wednesday YWCA cabinet: 5:30 p.m., Henley house. Last meeting of old cabinet. Everyone come and bring 75c. Phi Mu Alpha; 7 p.m., 131 Strong. Actives only. History club: 7 p.m. Pine room room, Union. Movie, refreshments. "Problems and Value Restoration Historical Sites." Nursing club: 4 p.m., Fraser dining room. Chess club: 7:15 p.m., 20 Strong, Rapid Transit tournament. FACTS: 8 p.m. 110 Fraser. Election discussion, everyone welcome. SUA Applications Accepted Until Friday most of them were pulling for Kansas to win the tournament. He was particularly impressed by the way the Big Seven coaches stood behind the KU team. He said that by the end of the games they seemed almost as anxious for KU to win as the rooters from the University were. Applications for officers of next year's Student Union Activities board will be accepted until Friday. James Bourgoyne, director of Student Union Activities, said the acceptance date for applications for president, vice-president, secretary and treasurer has been extended and the interviews for the positions by the SUA operating committee have been moved to April 8. He said that the coaches consider Dr. Allen the dean of American basketball coaches. Many of them refer to him as "Mr. Basketball." Chancellor Murphy said that this competitive spirit is essential. He believes that athletics are "neither most important or least important in college." He said that most of the coaches he met strongly believed in trying to preserve the competitive spirit in intercollegiate athletics. He said that he went to Seattle because he felt that the University should be officially represented, because the team had won the conference championship in spite of sickness and injury, because Coach Allen had been "a positive influence for the good in collegiate athletics" and because "I like basketball." Museum Of Art Receives Statue "The Virgin and the Child," a late medieval Lindenwood statue by the German sculptor Tilman Riemenschneider, was presented to the Museum of Art Friday. Dr. Bier traced the influences and development of Riemenschneider's style using slides to illustrate his talk. "The Virgin and the Child" was cited by Dr. Bier as one of the masterpieces of German art. Riemenschneider and the statue were discussed in a lecture by Dr. Justus Bier, University of Louisville expert on medieval German art. The slides illustrated how the German sculptor's style had evolved from an emphasis on the sharpness of form and a restraint of emotion to a greater simplicity expressing more emotion and atmosphere. This latter form is represented by the museum's new statue. Tuesday, April 1. 1952 Funds from the estate of the widow of Harry C. Thurnau, former professor of German at KU, made the purchase of the statue possible. The dedicatory program was sponsored by the department of Germanic and Slavic languages and literature and the Museum of Art. Acacia Quartet To Take Part In KFKU Top Hits Program The Acacia quartet, University singing group, will be featured on the K.U. Cavalcade of Hits radio program over University radio station KFKU at 7 p.m. today. The quartet is composed of Dick Roshong, college senior, first tenor; Murly Laman, college junior, second tenor; James Burgess, business junior, baritone; and Harvey Wilson, business senior, bass. The quartet is the first student entertainment to be used on the program. A recent telephone survey conducted by the Cavalcade of Hits program indicated greater student participation in the program was should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. Lawrence Optical Co. Phone 425 1025 Mass. desired by the more than 50 organized houses polled. Individual student talent will be a feature of the program in the future according to William E. Stanfill, writer-producer of the show. If student response is favorable to the new feature the majority of the program time will eventually be made up of students who have talent adaptable to radio, he said. Patronize Kansan Advertisers Your Plymouth Man . . . has a used car priced for you. Buddy GALLAGHER 634 Mass. Ph. 1000 Be Happy-GO LUCKY! play my trumpet here in school; My roommates raise a howl- But when I give them Lucky Strike, They smile instead of scowl! 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