SUNDAY, MAY 18, 1941. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE FIVE K.U.Sports---- DIVISION IV | | w | l | pct. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Pflashes | 5 | 0 | 1.000 | | Tennessee club | 4 | 1 | .800 | | Newman I | 3 | 2 | .600 | | Theta Tau | 3 | 2 | .600 | | Dunakin club | 2 | 3 | .400 | | Nat'l Defenders | 1 | 3 | .250 | | Jayhawk Co-op | 1 | 4 | .200 | | Temple hall | 0 | 4 | .000 | Drawings for the intramural softball play-offs were made yesterday morning at the intramural office by the managers of the teams involved. Softball Teams Prepare For Playoffs The first round games will be played Tuesday at 4:20 on the intramural fields. On diamond one Phi Delta Theta plays Newman II. Phi Kappa Psi meets the Pflugerville Flashes on diamond three. Diamond four will be the site of the Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. Alpha Chi Sigma tilt. The other game, Beta Theta Pi vs. Tennessee club, will be o diamond six. Second round games in the playoff series will be played Wednesday afternoon on diamonds three and four. The final game will be played Friday on diamond three. A single defeat eliminates a team from the playoffs. Beta Theta Pi won the championship last year with a 2-1 win over Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Last year's runners-up did not get in the play-off series this year. MISSOURI CAPTURES (continued from page four) Sphaake (K), second; Steuber (M) ord—distance 47 feet 8 5-8 inches. Discus throw — Aussiker (M), first; Schaake (K), second; Jack (K), third—distance 136 feet 11 1-2 inches. Javelin throw — Lloyd (M), first Higgins (M), second; Schaake (K) third — distance 167 feet 7 1-2 inches 220 low hurdles — Johnson (M) first; Stoland (K), second; Schaake (K), third — time 24.5 seconds. 120 high hurdles — Johnson (M), first; Stoland (K), second; Schaake (K), third — time 15.6 seconds. Mile relay — won by Missouri (St. Dennis, Reeves, Tracy, Crosby) — time 3251. Want the Best in FOOD and SERVICE Eat at the BLUE MILL It fills the bill! Enjoys K. U.'s Newest Dance Spot — Upstairs Watkins hall moved into first place of their baseball division Friday afternoon when they defeated the A.D. Pi's 28-6. Other teams in the division include Kappa's, Chi Omega's and Theta's. Women's Intramurals Corbin hall and the I.W.W. teams were winners in the other two divisions. In Corbin division are Pi Phi's, Gamma Phi's, Alpha Chi's, and Miller hall. The I.W.W. group include Independents and ETC.'s. Baseball semi-finals will be played Monday and Tuesday with the final game being staged Wednesday, Ruth Hoover, assistant professor of education, announced Saturday. Games will start at 4:30 p.m. All baseball games which have been postponed during the season will be played off this next week, Miss Hoover said. Anyone interested in archery will have a chance to display his or her skill this afternoon when the archery club meets at 4 p.m. in Robinson gym. Business Student Loan Established A student in the School of Business next year will be aided in his school work by a $250 scholarship, awarded by the American Bankers association loan foundation. Rules of the foundation specify that loan scholarships be awarded only to "deserving students tf integrity, intelligence, character, competency, and aptitude, whose means of support are dependent wholly or in part on their own labor, and whose major course is banking economics, or related subjects in the classes of senior grade or above." Application blanks may be obtained at the School of Business office, and must be filed with the committee on awards before June 1, 1941. Frosh Track Meet On Deck Tuesday Numeral trials for freshman tracksters will begin at 4:30 Tuesday afternoon and will be continued at the same time Wednesday, Coach Bill Hargiss announced yesterday. The trials will be in the form of meet competition and the various events will be run off under meet conditions on two afternoons. The scheduled events are: Tuesday — Mile, 440, 100, high hurdles, pole vault, shot put, and high jump. Wednesday — 880,220,low hurdles, javelin, discus and broad jump. The competitors in each event have not been selected as yet, but probable entrants will be: Sprints — Joe Thomas, Joe Engers and C. A. Gilmore. Quarter and half mile — Bill Brownlee, Gaylord Conzelman, John Sterrett, and Flovd Santner. Weights — Les Breidenthal, Charles Black, Jack Tenenbaum and Ed Todd. Javelin: Milo Farneti. Hurdles: Layton Sharpe, Ray Niblo, Don Atchison, and Morton Cree. Henry J. Allen Sees Long War Distance runs: Walter Herriman and Clarence Ketterman. Henry J. Alien, former governor of Kansas and United States senator, told the 70 persons attending the annual Kansan Board dinner Friday night that he was going to England in June to improve coordination between the British and American "Save the Children" Federations. This is my third war, Allen said. In the other wars, we were full of ideals; today we are grim and determined. Allen did not hold out promise for an early peace. He said that in a conversation with Herbert Hoover in New York last week, Hoover said that he thought the war might last 15 years. Gray Dorsey, college senior, was toastmaster during the evening and introduced John Waggoner, college sophomore, who gave an after-dinner speech. Lorenzo Fuller and his K. U. Serenaders sang several numbers before Allen's speech. Graduation Suggestions RACHMANINOFF SYMPHONY NO. 2 Played by Eugene Ormandy and the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra DEBUSSY NOCTURNES Played by Leopold Stokowski and the Philadelphia Orchestra Anniversary Dinner Tickets On Sale--$1 Tickets for the Seventy-fifth Anniversary dinner, to be held in the Memorial Union ballroom at 5:45 p. m. Saturday, June 7, are now on sale, it was announced yesterday. FRANCK—LES EOLIDES—Symphony Poem Columbia Broadcasting Symphony SIBELIUS—Symphonic Poems British Broadcasting Sym. Orchestra Only 900 persons can be accommodated for the dinner, Hilden Gibson, a member of the dinner committee said. Reservations can be obtained immediately for $1.00 each, from one of the following persons: Miss Elizabeth Rupp, chancellor's office, Frank Strong hall; Fred Elsworth, alumni office, Frank Strong hall; Bert Nash, room 18, Fraser hall; Marshall Mayberry, room 403 Snow hall; Hilden Gibson, room 106 Frank Strong hall. Ben Hibbs, managing editor of the Country Gentleman, will be the principal speaker of the evening; William Allen White will serve as toastmaster; and Governor Payne H. Ratner will give a short address. Lynch to Present Organ Recital This Afternoon In Hoch A graduate organ recital will be presented by W. Arnold Lynch at 4 o'clock this afternoon in Hoch auditorium. Lynch, who received his degree of Bachelor of Music from the University last year is from the studio of L. E. Anderson, professor of organ and theory. W.S.S.F. Drive Stops His selections chosen for the recital include "Toccata-Prelude on 'Vom Himmel Hoch'" (Garth Edmundson); "Fantasie for Flutes," which is written by Lee Sowerby; "Two Chorale Preludes," Rodger Sessions; "Sonata Eroica," Joseph Jongen; "My Inmost Heart Doth Yearn" (Brahms); "Canon in B Minor" (Schumann); "Cantabile" (Frank); "Passacaglia and Tema Fugatum in C Minor" (Bach). The World Student Service Fund drive for contributions on the campus is officially over, Fred Eberhardt, chairman of the University branch of the WSSF, said yesterday. Simultaneous drives by other organizations and conflicting meetings were given as the reasons for failure of the organization to raise its $1.000 quota. The total amount collected from the "Prison supper, Tag day, and solicitations is approximately $620, Eberhardt said, but proceeds from a union church service during the Seventy-fifth Anniversary celebration are expected to boost the total by at least $100. The WSSF is a national organization collecting money to aid students in China and Europe. Summer Flyers Report Students interested in summer flying courses should report to Room 117 Marvin hall as soon as possible, Prof. Earl D. Hay, supervisor of the University branch of the CAA, said yesterday. Instruction will begin at the opening of the University's Summer session. Both primary and advanced courses will be offered. The University quota for the summer flight courses will be determined by early student registration. For that reason Professor Hay urges all students interested to come in immediately. Enjoy Superiority in Cleaning! A Cleansing Service for Those Who Appreciate Quality. Whites are Whiter, Colors Brighter, Textures Smoother CALL 432 INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 740 Vermont