UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1951 PAGE EIGHT Spivakovsky Will Present Violin Recital Tossy Spivakvosky, Russian violi in, will give a recital at 8:20 p.m. Monday, Feb. 26, in Hoch auditorium, sponsored by the University Concert course. Born in Odessa, Russia, Mr. Spirakovsky went to Berlin at an early age and studied violin with Arriago Serato. Later he continued his studies under Willi Hess. He made his debut at the age of ten, gave concerts throughout Europe, and attained recognition as soloist with celebrated orchestras in that continent. When Artur Rodzinski became conductor of the New York Philharmonic Symphony orchestra in 1943, he invited Mr. Spivakovsky to play the New York premiere of the Baja Bartok violin concerto. The young virtuoso was an overnight success. The 1948-49 season saw Mr. Spiakovsky advertised from coast to coast for 88 concerts. It was the biggest United States tour a major violinist had achieved since the days of Elman, Kreisler and Heifetz. Mr. Spivakovsky is now on his fourth tour of America. B. Winthrop P. Haynes Seeks to Geoaloy Class Dr. Winthrop P. Haynes, former assistant professor of geology at the University, visited K.U. today andooke to the petroleum geologyclass on Middle East petroleumresources. Dr. Haynes is now a visiting lecturer in geology at Harvard university. After leaving K.U., he was chief geologist in Europe for the Steanolind Oil company until he retired. Kansas Legislators To See KU-KS Game Topeka, Kan., Feb. 23 (U.P.)—Gov. and Mrs. Edward F. Arn and about 250 Kansas legislators and their wives will attend the Kansas Uni- versity-Kansas State basketball game in Manhattan Saturday. The lawmakers will go to Manhattan in busses provided by the Manhattan chamber of commerce. They will be guests at a dinner in Thompson hall provided by members of the student council. Living in tents amid Dakota Indians for eight weeks will be part of summer school for one course at the University. Live As Indians For Credits Carlyle S. Smith, assistant professor of anthropology, will take his class in archeology field work to an Indian village site 18 miles north of Chamberlain, S.D., this summer. The students will excavate during the summer for six to eight hours credit. The village where they will camp, said Dr. Smith, was probably occupied by the Arikara Indians, a tribe related to the Pawnee. The Dakota Indians still live in the area. A prerequisite for the field course is Dr. Smith's course in New World biology, a study of various Indian cultures from 15,000 B.C. to 1800 A.D. Dr. Smith also plans to take his class to the Indian burial pit at Salina, where more than 100 Indian skeletons can be seen. Students who have not had this course or The American Indian, a course taught in the fall, but who would like to go on the expedition can do field work for pay, Dr. Smith said. He is at present looking for a full time cook. The building appropriations bill passed Thursday, by the Kansas house of representatives will make $1,863,000 available to the University of Kansas for construction of the new field house. This is in addition to $750,000 granted by the 1949 legislature. The measure needs only senate acceptance of a typographical error correction made by the house before being signed by Governor Edward F. Arn. Arthur C. "Dutch" Lonborg, K.U athletic director, expressed gratitude to the Kansas legislators for passing the bill by saying, "I think it is wonderful that we're getting a field house. "I'm very happy and pleased that we'll soon have an outstanding indoor athletic plant to house our basketball, indoor track, and other sports. We've needed such a building for a long time." Chancellor Deane W. Malott was not available for comment. Funds Are Sufficient For Fieldhouse The $2,500,000 structure will seat 16,000 persons—almost four times the capacity of Hoch auditorium. It will be located southwest of the Military Science building in the southwest portion of the campus. Seismograph Records Small Coastal Quake A deep focus earthquake was recorded by the University seismograph at 12 minutes and 43 seconds past 11 a.m. Wednesday. The tremors lasted for 15 minutes. Sanborn Partridge, instructor of geology in charge of the University seismograph station, said the quake was deep in the earth's crust. The record shows that the quake occurred 1200 miles west of K.U., somewhere along an arc extending from Oregon to lower California. "The quake was relatively small compared to some that we have recorded," said Mr. Partridge. The fieldhouse proper will be $347\frac{1}{2}$ feet long, 255 feet wide, and 86 feet high. The exterior will be of either "cottonwood" or "silverdale" limestone, and will resemble the new Fowler shops. The field house will be a multipurpose structure, and will be used not only for basketball games, but will house other activities. The basketball floor is designed to be moved aside for track, football, and baseball practice. It will also serve as a drill area for University military units. In the over-all athletic picture, a gymnasium, swimming pool, and other facilities for physcal education will be incorporated into the "dream" athletic plant. The field house will not be completely finished, but the unfinished portions will be designed for easy completion and additions. Speaker Tells Of Changes In France "If Rip Van Winkle were to wake up in France after a 50 year sleep, he would see unbelievable changes." Dr. Jacques Lacour-Gayet, lecturer for the French alliance to the United States, said Thursday. Dr. Laour-Gayet compared government, politics, society, economics, and other phases of the France of 1900 to the France of today, and found a great change. England, a traditional enemy in 1900, is now France's ally, and even Germany is being cultivated by the French because of their fear of Russia. The French franc, one of the most stable units of money in the world in 1900, now fluctuates badly, said Dr. Lacour-Gayet. In 1900, 100 francs was equivalent to II, and now 350 francs are necessary for the same amount. Since the fluctuation of the franc, the characteristic French trait of thriftiness is deteriorating, said Dr. Lacour-Gayet. The first floor of the building will house locker rooms, showers, storage rooms, ticket office, six classrooms, and two physical education apparatus rooms. On the second floor will be the athletic offices and extra space. No name has been decided on for the fieldhouse. Ise On 'Crisis' Lecture Tour John Ise, professor of economics, is giving his "World in Crisis" lecture on the Marshall plan in Wichita, Dodge City, and Colby this week. He is the sixth faculty member to speak at these towns. Chancellor Deane W. Malott; O. P. Backus and Ambrose Saricks, assistant professors of history, and George Anderson and C. B. Realey, professors of history, have given their "World in Crisis" lectures at these three towns during the last five weeks. Next week Orient Lee, visiting professor of history, will make the tour. Guy V. Keeler, director of the lecture course bureau, is managing the tours. Vice-Versa Tickets On Sale Tickets for the annual Jay JaneKuKu Vice-Versa dance are now available from members of these two pep organizations. Maurice Murphy, education junior, was named ticket chairman Thursday for the KuKu's. University students and faculty are invited. Tickets for the dance are $1.20 a couple. The dance will be from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. Friday, March 2. KU Title Hopes Hinge On Saturday's K-State Game PROBABLE STARTERS | KANSAS (13-7) | Pos. | (17-3)K-STATE | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 6-5 Bill Lienhard | F | Jack Stone 6- 3 | | 6-2 Bob Kenney | F | John Gibson 6- 3 | | 6-9 Clyde Lovellette | C | Lew Hitch 6- 7 | | 6-4 Bill Hougland | G | Ernie Barrett 6- 3 | | 6-2 Charlie Hoag | G | Jim Iverson 5-11 | Officials: Ron Gibbs (St. Thomas), and Cliff Ogden (Kansas City). Place: K-State fieldhouse, Manhattan, Kan. Time 8 p.m. Saturday. Radio broadcasts: WREN, Topeka (Max Falkenstien); WHB, Kansas City, Mo., (Larry Ray), and KSEK, Pittsburg (DeVere Nelson). Feeding 280 Liberty Network stations. By BOB NELSON Daily Kansan Sports Editor With their backs to the wall, Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen's Jayhawkers will attempt to keep alive their flickering Big Seven title hopes by upsetting the league-leading Kansas State Wildcats at Manhattan Saturday night before what is expected to be the largest crowd ever to see a Kansas-Kansas State basketball game. Kansas enters the game with a 6-3. Big Seven record as compared to State's state setting 7-1 mark. Oklahoma KU in third place with a 5-3 record in order to remain in the championship race, Kansas must win Saturday's game and its other remaining contests with Colorado at Boulder (Feb. 26) and Iowa State here (March 7). Following the Kansas game, KState has conference games remaining with Iowa State at Ames (March 3), and two home games with Nebraska (Feb. 26) and Oklahoma (March 5). | | G | TP | Avg. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Clyde Lovellette | 20 | 457 | 22.8 | | Bob Kenney | 20 | 167 | 8.4 | | Bill Lienhard | 20 | 134 | 6.7 | | Bill Holland | 20 | 134 | 6.5 | | Charlie Haug | 20 | 58 | 2.9 | | Dale Engel | 10 | 23 | 1.4 | | Bill Schaake | 11 | 13 | 1.2 | | Buddy Bull | 14 | 13 | 9. | | Sonny Enns | 19 | 14 | 7. | | John Keller | 14 | 7 | 5 | Top 10 KU Scorers | | W | L | Avg. | O.A. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Big Seven | 6 | 3 | 55.1 | 48.9 | | Season Record | 15 | 7 | 55.8 | 49.3 | Kansas' Season Record Only Bruce Drake's Sooners are considered strong enough to upend the Wildcats, but undefeated records for K.U. and Oklahoma over the remainder of the conference trail would probably end the Big Seven title race in a three-way tie for first place with K.U., Kansas State, and Oklahoma all deadlocked with 9-3 records. The K.U. attack is expected to operate around its 6-foot 9-inch All-American Center, Clyde Lovellette, who has scored 457 points in 20 games for a 22.9 average—good enough to rank him as the nation's sixth best scorer. Kansas, rated from 10th to third in national preseason forecasts, needs a victory over the country's fifth ranked Kansas State club to regain lost prestige. Lovelletta's 45-game career at Kansas lists a grand scoring total of 1,002 points which is only 81 points short of Charlie Black's four-year total at Kansas. The last two games have been contests that Lovellette would like most to scratch from the books. For the fifth and sixth times in his collegiate career, Lovellette has been outscored by an opponent as Iowa State's Sy Wilhelm bested him Kansas State's ability to run-and-shoot and effective use of the full court press is expected to tire and tax the Jayhawkers' play to the utmost. Kansas must play its best ball of the year—not for 33 to 35 minutes—but for the full 40 minutes if they are to pull an upset in Manhattan Saturday night. Kansas State will start five members of its Century Scoring Club which now totals seven. These players are forwards Jack Stone, 163 points; John Gibson, 127; center Lew Hitch, 183, and guards All-American Ernie Barrett, 201, and Jim Iverson, 183. 18 to 13 and Oklahoma's Marcus Freiberger topped his total, 30 to 22. The big fellow will be paired against the Wildcats' trio of Lew Hitch, 6-7; Dick Knostman, 6-5; and Dick Channel, 6-5. Lovellette will receive plenty of scoring help from forwards Bill Lienhard and Bob Kenney. Bill Hougland Charlie Hoag, who have flashed all - around improvement through recent games, will round out the Kansas lineup in the backline. To date, K-State has failed to stop Lovellette in three Big Seven meetings as he has scored 79 points for a 26.3 average. The Wildcats present more overall reserve bench strength and this may well determine the outcome of the expected hotly contested affair. Top 10 KS Scorers | | G | TP | Avg. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Ernie Barrett | 20 | 201 | 10.1 | | Jim Iverson | 20 | 183 | 92 | | Lew Hitch | 20 | 177 | 8.9 | | Dick Stone | 20 | 167 | 7.5 | | Dick Krautman | 20 | 157 | 6.9 | | Bob Bousey | 20 | 130 | 6.5 | | John Gibson | 20 | 127 | 6.4 | | Ed Head | 17 | 98 | 5.8 | | Dick Peck | 19 | 49 | 2.6 | | Don Upson | 19 | 31 | 1.6 | K-State's Season Record K-State's Season Record W L Avg. O.A. Big Seven 7 1 66.0 49.3 Season Record 17 3 67.7 52.6