4 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, MAY 1, 1945 Softball Game Schedule Out Tomorrow Ray Kanehl, assistant director of intramural sports said today that the schedules of the softball tournament will be announced tomorrow and mailed out to the managers of all competing teams. Only five weeks remain, Kaneleh observed, in which to play the seven rounds and the playoffs if they are to be completed before finals. Play Two Games a Week There will be two games a week probably on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Those games rained out will have to be played at the convenience of the teams. The playoff will be among the four highest scoring teams in the regular schedule. Seventy-five divided by the number of games on the schedule will be awarded for each game played plus 75 divided by the number of games for each game won. In the playoffs the champion will be awarded an additional 25 points; the runner-up will get 15 points; third and fourth palce winners wil get 5 points. A forfeited game will count as a game won, but not as a game played. In tie games, points will be divided evenly between the two teams. Games Run Seven Innings The games, to be played on the south field, will run seven innings, or less if the managers agree. Bats, balls, and masks, but not gloves, may be checked out from the equipment room. Each organization will furnish one official. Score cards may be checked out from the intramural office by the team managers and the manager of the winning team will be responsible for returning the scorecard to the office after the game. 14 Submit Name All but two of the 16 teams entered in the men's intramural softball tournament have submitted their lists of players, according to the records of the intramural office. Three organizations whose lists have not been published are Carruth, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, and Pi Kappa Alpha. These lists appear below. The Pi Kappa Alpha entries are Paul McDonald, manager; Paul Finck, Vincent McCabe, Charles Fisher, Harvey Morrow, Tom Davis, Bill Miller, Bobby Burch, Jim Irwin, Bob Yendes, Ralph Martin, Jack Kennedy, and Jim Barker. Sig Alph entries are Jim Baska, manager, Jim Johnston, Miller Nordeecon, Francis Pierpont, Hal Wilcox, Bob Rosenfield, Don Feli, Bill Charleton, Jim Metcalf, Kenneth Nohe, Everett Sutherland, Charles Smith, Leon Thomas, Bob Daleen, Jack Corber, and Frank Haas. The entries for Carruth are Bob Crawford, manager, Adair Shoebro. Ed Marks, Jim Graham, Earl Barney, Earnest Fritz, Andress Kernick, George Johnson, Kenneth Miller, Don Alderson, and Jim Keller. Graduate Student Back From Overseas Tech. Sgt. Reuben Klayer, graduate from the School of Pharmacy in 1941, was visiting friends on the campus Friday afternoon. Sergeant Klayder whose home is in Neodesha, Kans., is a pharmacist with the 73rd Hospital unit in Rome, Italy. He has been with the hospital since it was established at Ft. Lewis, Washington, in July, 1942. The unit was sent overseas to Constantine, Algeria, and was moved in January, 1944 to Naples, Italy, then later transferred to Rome. The sergeant has been in the armed forces 46 months and has served 26 months of that time overseas. He has a 45-day leave. Nebraska and K.U. Thinclads to Meet Jayhawk track and field men will play host to Nebraska's thinclads in the Memorial stadium Saturday in the second outdoor dual meet of the season. Coach Ray Kanehl said this morning that he has not decided all his entries yet, but that more of his men will see competition in the Saturday meet than in the smaller contests in which the Kansas cindermen have participated recently. Nebraska defeated the Jayhawkers 51-42 in an indoor dual meet Feb. 4. Kansas salvaged three firsts in the contest at Lincoln. Lynn Leigh won the broad jump with a 20-foot, 2-inch leap, and Jarmarg placed first in the high jump at 5 feet $8 \frac{1}{2}$ inches. The mile relay team made-up of John Jackson, John Stites, Kenneth Danneberg, and Lynn Leigh took the third title. Other Kansas men who placed in the indoor meet at Lincoln were Richard Hudson, Norval Jackson, Harvey Morrow, James Thomas, Ronald Hayenga, and Rolland Hamilton. The first outdoor dual meet, April 14, was lost to Oklahoma 45-51, despite the outstanding performance of Leroy Robson in scoring 18 points. McGaugh Awarded Second Fellowship To Chicago University Maurice E. McGaugh, '39, has, for the second time, been awarded a fellowship to the University of Chicago, Robert M. Hutchins, president, has announced. Mr. McGaugh was one of 94 graduate students from 31 states, Washington, D. C., Canada, and China, awarded fellowships. He received the fellowship in the division of physical sciences, but will continue his work toward a doctor of philosophy degree in geography. The total value of the fellowships exceeds $85,000, and is granted from the university's annual budget of $594,912 for student aid. Last year the university presented scholarships and fellowships in a cash amount large enough to carry the expenses of a moderate sized community. Before beginning his advanced work at the University of Chicago, Mr. McGaugh was an instructor in geography for the army air corps at Springfield, Mo. He received his masters degree here in geography in 1941 and was a member of Phi Delta Kappa and Sigma Xi. Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the Watkins Memorial hospital, will leave tonight for Minneapolis, Minn., to preside at a business session of hte Council of the American Student Health association, held instead of the Council of the American Student celled because of travel restriction. Dr. Canuteson is president of the association. Canuteson Leaves For Minneapolis Council members representing twelve major schools will attend. Special attention will center around health problems of the veteran returning to college. VARSITY 14. JAMES CAGNEY Academy Award Winner WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY in The Kansas-Nebraska Dual meet in Memorial stadium Saturday is not one of a long line of tradition-hallowed sports affairs. Similar meets in the past have been scattered sporadically over the calendar. "JOHNNY COME LATELY" Sportorials With Bob Lilbridge, high point man, counting 13, the Kansas cinderdemen scored a total of 85 points, leaving Nebraska with 37, and the Manhattammen 12. In that meet the Jayhawkers dominated the track, winning eight firsts, tying for another, and sewing up the meet with 13 seconds. In the 1944 track season, there was no outdoor dual meet with the Cornhuskers, but the Nebraska tribe participated in a triangular meet here including Kansas State. A report from Manhattan tells that Fritz Knorr, basketball coach, is conducting spring practice for his cagemen. Ten men are reporting twice weekly for drills. They are Jay Payton, an all-Big Six Guard last season; Jack Kincheloe, Dick Spencer, Burt Howard, David King, formerly of the University of Arizona; Howard Lietz, Jack Larson, Harvey Arand, James Newberry, and Jose Diaz, from Puetro Rico. K. State Has Cage Practice By LOREN KING Max Harvey and lettermen Bill Schultz and Ralph Stuesser are expected to report later. Quigley Strides Ahead E. C. "Ernie" Quigley's campaign to knock out the stadium debt strides ahead. He announced yesterday that $25,000 will be paid on it June 1. By using cash donations made in the present campaign to sell "F" bonds plus gate receipts from last season's football games, he will be able to apply this amount. Quigley said that he had collected $13,900 selling "T" bonds here in Lawrence for this purpose. That amount put the city of Lawrence $400 over the quota set for it by Quigley. The quota set for Greater Kansas City in the debt reducing program is $30,000. Quigley has worked since Saturday in the city and will spend the rest of this week there working for the campaign. A Prisoner of War Information bureau in the Mediterranean theater has one of the most complete sets of index files on German and Italian prisoners of any such bureau in Europe. Index Files on Prisoners TODAY — Ends Wednesday TRULY AN ADVENTURE In Gripping Suspense! Furlong Will Speak On Mexico Tonight Elmer T. Beck, Topeka, father of Jack Beck, a former University student, has been appointed state treasurer to succeed the late Walter E. Wilson, a university graduate. Hitler's wrecked Reichstag and home ministry were seized, along with 200 more city blocks in the heart of the city, and the Soviets broke into the famed Tiergarten after dashing across the Spree river. Elmer T. Beck New Treasurer Italians Repair Everything William Harrison Furlong, director of the Inter-American Highway association, will speak on "The Inter-American Highway in Mexico," tonight at 8 o'clock in Fraser theater. The lecture will be open to the public. Beside Berlin, the first White Russian and First Ukrainian armies fought with increasing fury in an attempt to finish the job in the German capital in time for Moscow to celebrate its fall on May day. In Italy the United States Fifth army surged north of Verona toward the southern approaches of the Brenner pass while the disorganized Nazis fought desperate rearguard action to cover their attempted retreat into the Alps. An ordnance company in the Mediterranean theater runs six shops where 150 Italians repair everything from clocks and electric motors to X-ray machines and interior plumbing for hospitals. A color-sound motion picture will be shown portraying scenes in Mexico City, Overbavaca, Taxco, Pueblo, and Veracruz. The narrators for the picture are Linda Darnell, Tyrone Power, and Orson Wells. CHURCHILL---to more than 50 miles. Simultaneously the British and the Second White Russian army smashed powerful blows at Nazi defenses along the northern pocket and moved toward a junction which will seal off the province of Schleswig-Holstein and the Danish peninsula. Mr. Furlong will describe the work on the highway, the life of the people there, and what the project will ultimately mean to the Americas. (continued from page one) GRANADA ON THE STAGE WEDNESDAY ONLY 3rd in a Series of Presentations MAXINE LINDLEY'S School of Dancing THURSDAY - SATURDAY Return Engagement For the Many Who Have Asked to See it Again — and Those Who Missed it the First Time! "SINCE YOU WENT AWAY" SUNDAY — 4 Days Maria Montez Jon Hall Turhan Bey "SUDAN" In Technicolor Kappa, Alpha Chi, Chi O Win Games Kappa defeated A. D. P. Pi 16-5 Alpha Chi defeated Harmon 11-6, and Chi Omega defeated Corbin 11-8 in softball games played yesterday. In the game between A. D, Pi and Kappa, A. D, Pi was leading until the fourth inning when Kappa scored 10 runs. The score up to that time was 9-6 in favor of A. D, Pi. The batteries for the games were Maxine Gunsolly and Barbara Heller for Kappa, Thelma Stutz and Lucile Land for A. D. Pi, Audrey Harris and Marilyn Roseman for Alpha Choi, Lios Harkleroad and Geneva Peiriano for Harmon, Elizabeth Niven and Sarah Erwin for Corbin, and Dona Burkhead and Rose Nell Curtis for Chi Omega. STAR REPORTER---- (continued from page one) used to tag along with the regular Times reporters on various assignments to get experience." He was transferred to the city desk as a cub reporter and has covered police courts for 32 years. Mr.Moorhead has worked with 16 police chiefs and many hundreds of policemen and detectives during his many years of news coverage. Mr. Moorhead's office is now in police headquarters. Recently he lectured to new policemen, giving them his slant on crime and the policeman's job, gained from his own experience. Mr. Moorhead will speak to members of the department of journalism and anyone else who is interested at 4:30 tomorrow afternoon in the Journalism building. Buy War Bonds JAYHAWKER TONITE ON OUR STAGE AT 9:00 P.M. THE SUNFLOWER ENTERTAINERS 6 Big Acts! NOW — Ends Saturday VERONICA LAKE SONNY TUFTS EDDIE BRACKEN WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY 10 BIG PRIZES 5 Each Night Given Away From Our Stage at 9 p.m. One—1 Year Pass One—$25.00 Bond Three—6-Month Passes