University Daily Kansan Page 5 Kansas To Place String Of14 Victories On Line The Kansas Jayhawkers will be putting a string of 14 victories, three of which are from last season, on the line when they battle the Missouri Tigers in Brewster fieldhouse at Columbia, Mo., Saturday night. The game will be the second conference effort for the two clubs, Kansas having won its opener 71-48 while Iowa State nudged MU 57-53. In their only tussle with the young Tigers this season, KU downed them 75-65 in the finals of the Big Seven tourney. Stalcup's crew will try ball control and a pressing defense to defeat the experienced Jayhawkers. Coach Phog Allen has been drilling the squad on the pressing defense and the KU team should be able to handle anything that MU might try. In that game Coach Sparky Stalcup's team showed considerable talent as they pressed KU most of the way. The MU team, which has won six while losing five games, is young but what it lacks in experience it makes up in speed and hustle. Clyde Lovellette, the nation's No. 1 scorer with a 27.1 average for 11 games, will be facing one of the conference's best "big boys" in Bill Stauffer, 6-foot 4-inch center. Stauffer is a strong rebounder but has never been successful in holding down Lovellette's scoring. Lovellette has scored 298 points in Cage Scores Seton Hall 60, Creighton 44 Penn. State 61, Syracuse 57 Duke 74, New York U. 72 Loyola (ill.) 68, St. John's (N.Y.) Maryland 55, Georgetown (DC) 40 Virginia 88, VMI 60 Wake State 55, North Carolina 53 Indiana Forest 71, DePauw 52 Detroit Tech 119, Cleary 22 Illinois Normal 89, Michigan Friday, Jan. 11, 1952 Norm 60 San Francisco 51. Lovola (Cal.) 44. Coach Allen, his staff, a 12-man varsity squad and "11 B" team players will leave after practice this afternoon by bus for Columbia, Mo. The Tiger has a game with the Tiger reserves the varsity encounter. 11 games on 66 of 116 field shots for a shooting average of 51 per cent. The Kansas players will return to Kansas City Sunday before going to Lincoln, where they play the NU Cornhuskers Monday night. The "B" team will return to Lawrence Sunday. Kansas State was the offensive and defensive leader in the Big Seven conference last year. Offensively, the Wildcats led with a 69.5 points per game average. Defensively, they held their opponents to a 49 points per game average. YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. Lawrence Optical Co. Lawrence Ophelia Co. Phone 425 1025 Mass. SEE "UNSPOILED" EUROPE Motor, bicycle, rail, flatbat and study tours for students and teachers from $500 (60 days). Year 'round Economy Tours by steam boiler. SPEEND, LSMS OR SAISA TOURJ 18th year SITA Students International Travel Association WRITE OR PHONE FOR FREE FOLDER PHONE 3661 "your midwest SITA representative" DOWNS Travel Service 1017 N. 25TH ST. Lawrence Kane A LITTLE CARE Means A Lot of Mileage You can get more miles for your tire dollar by taking care that you don't wear your tires too thin. If your tires are showing wear bring them in to RAPID TRANSIT for trade-in on new U.S. ROYAL MASTERS or U.S. ROYAL AIR-RIDES. You'll be surprised how much your old tires are worth! We also have a large selection of good used tires—white and black sidewalls. GOOD SERVICE IS BUILDING OUR BUSINESS Rapid Transit Service NCAA Opens Business Talks Open All 24 Hours Cincinnati, O. — (U.P) — Business sessions of the National Collegiate Athletic association convention open today and a proposal to give the organization explicit authority to control televising of sports events is the first item up for a vote. Among matters to be decided by the NCAA delegates is a measure which would membership committee which would punish violators of NCAA regulations. 1000 Mass. Later, delegates will consider resolutions on post-season games, spring training, financial assistance and education adherence to scholastic requirements. Phone 1300 After the NCAA votes itself authority to act on these problems and arranges for policing them, it is probably tomorrow. Control over live telecasts seemed a certainty. At a round table discussion of video problems Thursday, most delegates favored continued restrictions. Their recommendation, sent to the convention floor, called for a "middle course of moderation." Mikols reports that his squad is in "fair shape" after practicing eight weeks. Kansas Swimmers To Return To Action Against Huskers University swimmers meet Nebraska in a conference match for their first competition in two years in the remodeled Robinson gym pool at 2 p.m. Saturday. The two teams will swim a 10-event meet in the new 20-yard pool. The squad includes Dean Glasco, John Welsh, in the backstroke; Charles Orthwein and Jerry Scott, in the breast stroke; Sam Perkins, Ken Reid and Bill Payne in the free style and sprinters John Ashley and Mahlon Ball, Dick Effin and Bob Wellborn. swimmers until Denver university brings a team here Jan. 31. Leading Coach Walt Mikols's Kansas will be letterman Harry Newby, a free-styler. The only other letterman, senior Tom Payne, will miss the meet because of recent illness. This will be the only meet for the The Jayhawkers are low in experience because pool repairs forced cancellation of last year's schedule. Coach Mikols, however, will send a group of promising youngsters, several of whom have no high school experience, into their first competition. "We don't know exactly what to expect from Nebraska," Mikols said, "I know what the Huskers did last year, but so far I haven't received their roster, so I can't make any comparisons." He explains that this is the first time that a swimming meet has been scheduled in the fall semester but he doesn't mention the team out of the practice stage. Eldridge Pharmacy Drugs, Sundries, Fountain, Pines Agency for Mixture No. 79 701 Mass. Phone 999 CONFERENCE IN THE CLOUDS Among the undergraduates on any college campus, you'll find the talk reaching up to the clouds. And once in a while—in a classroom, around a study table, or even in a bull session—a really big idea is born. Big ideas come, too, from the men and women in laboratories, business offices, shops. But often these professionals are exploring a path first glimpsed in college. How do we know? Because of the many college people who have come into the Bell System, where big ideas and a lot of dreams have taken their place in progress. The human voice, carried along a wire, first across a town, then a state, a nation, and now the world. Music and pictures and things happening delivered into cities and hamlets all across the land by radio and television networks. We're always looking for the men and women who get big ideas—whether they're about people, or machines, or ways of doing things. It's the only way the Bell System can keep on giving this country the best telephone service in the world. BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM