PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS NOVEMBER 13,1945 The fighting eleven of Kansas is not relying on student rallies to bolster its pep for the coming K-State game. Prominently displayed in the team's dressing rooms are signs reading "Beat the Aggies" and "Remember 1944." That was the year a touchdown in the last few seconds, which would have made the Jayhawkers victorious, was called back. Kansas hasn't forgotten the game. BEAT K-STATE Kansas played its best defensive game of the season during the first half of the Marquette encounter Saturday. The Jayhawkers were held scoreless for the first time since the start of the season when they lost to T.C.U. 18-0. K-State will be on the rebound this week after playing its poorest game of the season last week with Nebraska. The Jayhawkers can take K-State and Missouri both, considering the present condition of the team, Coach Shenk believes for they have no injuries this week. Prognosticators last week, were swayed by "school loyalty" in predicting a Kansas win over Milwaukee. (Your editor's honest prediction was a loss for the Jayhawkers.) "Quigi" missed the boat by selecting K-State to win over Nebraska. "Tex" Langford and Coach Shenk picked two winners out of three by selecting Oklahoma and Nebraska as winners over Iowa State and Kansas State. First Matches Scheduled In Men's Handball Tourney The men's intramural handball tournament has started. The tournament schedule, with addresses of entrants, is posted on the intramural bulletin board in Robinson evm. Players will meet in first round matches this week. State Correspondent Names Listed (continued from page one) Roberts, Independence; Betty Brothers. Cherryvale; Frances Crisp, Coffeville. Stanley Woods, Caney; Barbara Pattison, Council Grove; Cora Hunter, White City; Ruth Brown, Sabetha; Mary Jackson, Seneca; Patricia Riegle, Chanute; Paul Ensch, St. Paul; Valdah Harkness, Ness City; Lyle Wheatcroft, Utica; Bethy Cummings, Almena; Shirley Otter, Norton; Edith Stodard, Burlingame; Shirley Wellborn, Lyndon. Emily Hollis, Overbrook; Alice Peterson, Osage City; Melba Whiting, Downs; Barbara Ford, Osborne; Max Musgrave, Minneapolis; Deane Postlethwaite, Delphos; Marlyn Frizzell, Learned; Laura Templeton, Logan; Marchita Townsend, Phillipsburg; Joe Arnold, Westmoreland; Joan Larson, Wamego; Neva Jean Unruh, Pratt; Marjorie Robbins Atwood. Joan Howard, McDonald; Jacquelin McDermed, Hutchinson; Mary Crandall, Sylvia; Coral Wade, Belleville; Beverly Hylle, Courtland; Billie J. Stillman, Bushton; Reva Brown, Sterling; Florence Stodel, Randelb. Virginia Pond, Plainville; Betty Loefler, Stockton; Donald Schwartz-kopf, LaCrosse, Epsie Brandt, Russell; Charles Marsh, Salina; Marion Greenlee, Scott City; Max Hand, Sedgwick; Marjorie Gardner, Valley Center; Jean Harris, Wichita; Jane Priest, Wichita; Loren King, Liberal; Sarah Heil, Topeka. Evangeline Pratt, Hoxie; Delores Sulzman, Selden; Dorothy Hoover, Smith Center; Patricia Colglazier, St. John; Anne Ardrey, Stafford; Joanne Cockram, Johnson; Mary Dudley, Hugoton; Lois Wooden, Argonia; Vivian Stunkel, Belle Plaine; Dorothy Harter, Caldwell; Barbara Ann Felt, Wellington; Sheila Guise, Brewsner; Glenn Warner, Colly. Marjorie Brown, Wakeeney; Geneva Laman, Alma; Marjorie Skeen, Eskridge; Kenneth Oldham, Leoti; Norma Lou Hall, Altoona; Gordon Offenhacker, Buffalo; Sheela Stryker, Fredonia; Juana Satterlee, Neodesha; Mary Burnside, Yates Center; Mary Margaret Gaynor, Kansas City; Norma Harrington; Bonner Springs. University Sends Programs Over State Kansas communities are being entertained and educated again this year by a variety of companies and individuals booked for appearances by the University lecture bureau, Guy V. Keeler, director of the bureau, announced today. Lecture bureau programs are given in high schools, colleges, service clubs, and community gatherings, he said. Sometimes they are scheduled in Oklahoma and Nebraska towns near the Kansas line. The list of performers on the lecture bureau's program varies throughout the year. Usually an individual or company gives the bureau a specific block of time in which to schedule Kansas performances. Currently appearing before audiences in western Kansas, northern Oklahoma, and southern Nebraska are: Maxine McCormick, dramatic reader; Iluster Musgrove, contralto; Yolanda Meek '45, pianist; Nathan H. Gist, speaker on education; Ben Hammond, cartoonist; Carmeron Beck, speaker on educational and vocational guidance; Willis A. Sutton, lecturer, and Pamahasikia's pets, a collection of trained birds. Band to M.U. Game The University band will play at the Kansas-Missouri football game in Kansas City, Mo., Nov. 24, Prof. Russell L. Wiley, director, announced today. The band will take about 75 members. the "COLLEGE JEWELER" 911 Mass. St. Students' Jewelry Store 41 Years