UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE FOUR JANUARY 10, 1946 Kansas Defeats K-State 39-26 On Wildcat Court The Jayhawkers quintet pulled in its second conference victory by defeating the K-State Wildcats, 39 to 26 at Manhattan last night. Gib Stramel, substitute forward for Otto Schnellbacher lead the scoring attack with 14 points. After 12 minutes of play, the Wildcats, lead 7 to 6. A field goal by Black brought Kansas into the lead which they maintained the remainder of the game. Kansas was ahead 20 to 14 at the half. The K-State defense had seen considerable improvement since its 71 to 46 defeat by Kansas in the first round of the Big Six tournament in Kansas City Dec. 14. The Wildcats, who set two new tree throw records in beating Iowa State 52-46 last Saturday, missed 15ree points last night. Kansas G FT F Black, f 3 2 4 Schnellbacher, f 0 0 0 Stramel, f 6 2 4 Martin, c 1 1 2 Peck, c 2 1 2 Gear, c 0 0 0 Daum, g 0 0 1 Clark, g 2 2 2 Hill, g 1 1 2 The lineup; 15 9 17 Missed Free Throws—Schnellbacher, 2; Martin, 2; Peck, 2; Hill, Stramel. Kansas State G FT F Kramer, f 2 1 5 Weatherby, f 6 2 3 Allen, f 0 0 0 Hood, e 0 0 1 Payton, g 2 3 3 Toburn, g 0 0 3 Jones, g 0 0 1 Patee, g 0 0 0 10 - - 13 10 6 16 Missed Free Throws—Kramer, 3; Weatherby, 3; Hood, 2; Payton, 3; Jones, 3; Allen. Twenty - seven students have applied for practice teaching next semester, Dean George B. Smith, of the School of Education, announced today. 27 Students Apply For Practice Teaching They are Mary Ella Barber, and Eleanor Wood Smith, English; Shirley Crawford and Lorraine Teeter, art; Rose Coughlin, Winifred Ice, Beverly Jane Waters, and John DeMott, social studies; June Montgomery, Charlotte Price, and Florence Richert, mathematics; Jane Priest and Edith Darby, speech. Lylas Ruhlen, Nadine Tibbs, and Margaret Bower, music; Violet Conn and Donald Kyle, physical education; Helen Hoyt and Mary Lyth, history; Josephine Giles, political science; Ernestine Wyatt and Phyllis Jackson, psychology; Anna Marie Stevens, home economics; Denzel Gibbens, business; Helen Hird, Spanish; and Dorothy Kintzel, chemistry. Get Your Date for It Now! BIG K.U. POW-WOW MARCH OF DIMES DANCE Watch for Date 'Good Deal,' GI's Said of Shrivenham (continued from page one) few were permitted to do so. One of the important features of the educational pattern at these schools has been the organization of field trips designed to utilize the resources of the region as supplements to the class work. A number of buses was provided so that students studying agriculture might see at first hand the ways in which problems were met in England and in France. Students studying Chaucer were thus able to visit Canterbury, following the route of the Pilgrims from London. History students have thus been able to see the development of Britain from the great circles of Avebury and Stonehenge down to the ruins of Coventry. Finally each institution has developed a definitely "collegiate" atmosphere. At appropriate seasons of the year there were baseball, football, and basketball teams. Extensive programs in guidance, both in counselling and in vocational guidance, and in visual education were also worked out. And there were endless buill sessions as thoughtful students discussed among themselves and with their teachers many of the vexing problems of the world they were to enter as civilians. All that was lacking was a stadium with a big debt on it. There were midweek dances, with the ranks of civilian clerks and stenographers augmented by importations of girls from Swindon and Farrington. There was even an election of a football queen. There was a college song, written by one of the English department and set to music by the head of the Fine Arts school, Shrivenham closed on Dec. 5 after two highly successful terms, since most of our troops have left the United Kingdom and since apparently the educational program seemed to be one of the places where economics were to be exercised. There was even a coke bar in the PX, where one didn't have to wait much longer for his coke than he does in most places on the Hill. Biarrtiz is continuing for at least one more term, and it seems likely that a new university will be set up in Germany, closer to the source of supply of students, for the Army of Occupation. Ralph Wygle, 250-pound tackle with the 1944 Jayhawk grid squad, participated in Manila's New Year's day football classic, playing with an army all-star squad in the Bamboo Bowl. Wygle Wiggles Again Laramie, Wyo. (UP)—The great days of more women students than men at the University of Wyoming are nearing an end. Registration now shows 421 men students and 578 women. During the war, there were four women to every man enrolled in school. Good Old Law of Averages Atomic Age Group Meets Final organization plans of the Atomic Age group will be made at a meeting at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Union, Mrs. Jean Gardiner, chairman, said today. Dates for future discussions will be set at that time. Membership to the group is open to all students. Gustafson the "COLLEGE JEWELER" 911 Mass. St. Students' Jewelry Store 41 Years During This FRIENDLY NEW YEAR Come In for Our FRIENDLY SERVICE PHONE 4 WHEN YOU NEED TIRE OR BATTERY SERVICE Firestone-Exide-Cities Service Products FRITZ CO. WHERE STUDENTS GO 8th and New Hampshire GET HEP TO PEP...IN You'll feel like steppin' out in Jogs! They're up-and-coming shoes! Light, springy, bottomed with thick balloon type rocker soles. And what snappy uppers! So new, so hot...they'll even give your spirits a lift! Lloyd L. Ware, Jr. It's a pretty dog - cared book, with pictures and drawings of airplanes all over. Lloyd L. Ware, Jr., who is 27, still has the blue-backed grade-school speller he used two decades ago. In fact, Lloyd says, if there had been fewer planes, there might have been better spelling! Ware—Captain Ware, lately of the Army Air Corps, suh, is one of the two ex-GIs who have taken over the Lawrence airport, and who will instruct the members of the Jayhawk Flying Club next semester. In the past seven years he has been flying, he's been at the stick of everything from Piper Cubs to the 4,000-horsepower B-26s, which he flew in the army. His service stint, incidentally, included 15 months overseas, ferrying cargo in C-47s over Africa, Italy, Sardinia, and Corsica. Despite some 4,100 hours time in the air, Ware never has had an accident. "And I still get as big a bang out of flying as ever," he says. "Aviation has become big industry today, and it's the real coming thing of tomorrow." Ware instructed for a K.U. civilian pilot training program before the war, and at two army airfields during the battle. He married Lexey Burchfield, a Theta who was on The Hill in '41 and they're expecting a "baby flier" just any day now. Jayhawk Flying Club