THURSDAY, JANUARY 9.1940. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE get- night ium. your our ot of in- over ruc- ches Her- nite- and F. ards, ored itball The uppas reedən Boble binds;dns; binds;dns; binds;dns 1555 ohn,boh, Clay flan- Psi's Continue Unbeaten; Nip Sigma Nu's,28-21 "B" games found Sigma Chi "B" downing Kappa Sig "B" 47 to 16, Beta "B" winning from Carruth "B" 37 to 12, and Phi Psi "B" defeating Teke "B" 45 to 24. Psi Guards Star The Phi Psi-Sigma Nu game was much closer than the score indicates. Sealy and Arbuckle, the Psi's stellar pair of guards, kept their team ahead throughout the game, although halftime found the Psis in front by only a point, 14-13. Israel, Sigma Nu guard, stood out for the losers. Co-op In Easy Win The Jayhawk Co-op was paced to its easy victory by two forwards, Young and Anderson. C. Svoboda starred for the defeated Ohio Mt. Boys. Griffith stood out in the P.A. D. win over Carruth. High scorers in the Sigma Chi win were Hartman and Hyer with 14 and 10 points respectively. Best performers on the victorious "B" teams were Hershman, Sigma Chi; Robinson and Walton, Beta; J. Brown, Phi Psi. Box Score: BOX STORE. PHI PSI (28) G FT F Hodge, f 2 0 0 Nolan, f 0 0 0 Unsell, f 2 0 0 Knight, c 2 0 1 Arbuckle, g 3 0 2 Sealy, g 5 0 1 Totals ... 14 0 4 SIGMA NU (21) G FT F Fogel, f 3 0 0 Collins, f 1 0 0 Porter, c 2 0 0 Stone, g 2 0 2 Israel, g 4 1 0 Totals 19 1 0 Hargiss to K.C. For A.A.U. Confab Coach Bill Hargiss will go to Kansas City Saturday to discuss plans for staging the Missouri Valley A.A.U. indoor track meet with Big Six alumni, Kansas City high school coaches, and other officials. A program to include grade and high school, junior college, college, and university events in conjunction with special attractions has been arranged tentatively. When the meet opens in Kansas City Municipal auditorium Feb. 8, a more rounded program will be offered than that of last winter's carnival. Hargiss has sent invitations to outstanding track stars to compete in special open events. The headliner of the meet last year was the 2-mile run when Walter Mehl of Wisconsin defeated Glenn Cunningham, Archie San Romani, and Taisto Maki. College Playwrights Urged To Enter Plays in Contest Pomona College, Claremont, Calif. announces a second annual nationwide contest in one-act playwriting. Twenty-five dollars will be awarded for each of the best comedies, social dramas, and tragedies. The author of the play adjudged the best, regardless of classification, will receive an additional $75, and the play will be produced at Pomona College. The three prize-winning plays will be considered by Robert Taylor for possible screen adaptation. Officials Get Approval For Evacuation Hospital Chancellor Deane W. Malott and H.R.Wahl, dean of the School of Medicine, have received official notification of approval from the federal government for Evacuation Hospital No.77 which is composed of members of the faculty of the University of Kansas School of Medicine. The surgeon general of the United States Army requested that the unit be organized, and organization plans have been developing since August when the? idea was approved by the Board of Regents. Evacuation Hospital No. 77 is a mobile unit of 750 beds which may be employed for the urgent care of casualties and their preparation for evacuation to the base hospitals in the rear. "This unit can be called into service without seriously handicapping the work of the hospital or of the school," said Doctor Wahl. Forty officers, 60 nurses, and 306 enlisted men comprise the personnel of such a unit. Regular army medical officers are assigned the positions of the commanding officer and executive of the unit; all other officers will be members of the faculty of the School of Medicine and the University of Kansas hospitals. Drew to Lecture To English Majors Elizabeth Drew will speak to English majors and others on contemporary literature, in Fraser Theater, the third week in February. dressmaking and designing business for several years and then returned to Cambridge, where she lectured and taught in the university. She has visited America many times and has lectured in schools and colleges throughout the country. She will lecture at the luncheon meeting of the Kansas Association of Teachers of English at Hutchinson, Feb. 1, before coming to Lawrence. Her first book, which she now says is best forgotten, was "The Modern Novel," published in 1926, and her second a biography, "Jane Welsh and Jane Carlyle." She afterwards wrote a play on the same subject, which was performed in London in 1934. Her later books, "Discovering Poetry," "The Enjoyment of Literature," "Discovering Drama," and "Directions in Modern Poetry," were all written for teachers and students in those subjects, and are widely used in colleges and schools. Mrs. Drew was graduated from Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, England, with honors in English language and literature. She afterwards became a lecturer in English at Girton College, Cambridge, England. At the end of the last war she was attached to the British Army of Occupation at Cologne as head of the women's education staff. After that she was in the Her husband is Brian Downs, assistant professor in English at the University of Cambridge. Last January Elizabeth Drew brought her son, Jonathan, to this country for the duration of the war, and they are now living in Farmington, Conn. Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the University health service, received word this week that Watkins Memorial hospital has been fully accredited by the American College of Surgeons. Full-fledged recognition was granted when October additions to the hospital staff fulfilled the last requirement of the organization. (KANSAS (31) g ft Engleman, f 6 3 0 Sanneman, f 1 0 2 Buescher, f 1 2 2 Hall, f 1 0 0 Kline, c 2 0 4 Sollenberger, g 0 0 2 Allen, g 1 2 0 Hunter, g 0 0 2 Johnson, g 0 0 0 Hogben, g 0 0 2 But still depending on those whom we know to be the best foundation for everyday living. A New Year— A New Outlook On Life— SOONERS STAGGER— That's the reason our customers will still be customers year in — year out — because Fritz Co. gives the best in service every time. CITIES SERVICE PRODUCTS Totals ... 12 7 15 Fritz Co. Phone 4 **OKLAHOMA (42)** g ft f Carlile, f ... 2 1 2 Corbin, f ... 3 0 1 Roberts, f ... 1 0 2 Richards, f ... 0 1 2 Lehmon, f ... 0 0 0 Ford, c ... 4 6 4 Bentley, c ... 0 2 0 Heap, g-c ... 0 1 2 Paine, g ... 4 2 2 Rousey, g ... 0 1 1 AS WE SEE IT— Totals ... 14 14 16 Score at half—Oklahoma 14, Kansas 11. Missed free throws—Buescher 2. Allen 2, Engleman, Sanneman, Kline. Sollenberger, Johnson, Hogben, Ford 2, Paine. (continued from page four) times met in groups for bull feasts or organized victory steakfries. In short companionship was found for many who would not have gotten it otherwise. Ferry himself was every ready to fill in for a missing teammate in virtually every intramural sport and through his great experience probably knows more about Hill civil strife than any other individual in school today. Dominoe accomplishments over the past two and a half years include: the Hill swimming championship for the past two years, five consecutive individual horseshoe championships, one individual tennis title, runnerup for the '38 softball title, and a mirad of minor honors. The Dominnoe-Newman machinery has produced intramural athletes who rank with the Hill's best. A list of these must include Raliegh Bowley, thrice chosen on the Kansas' softball All-Stars, Francis Domingo, a top-notch basketball and tennis player; Ed Baumhardt, perennial handball and tennis threat; Marion Cooper, "Red" Nelson and Lloyd Koehling, outstanding swimmers; Joe Fournier, forward passer and basketball forward de luxe; Warner Coffin, well-known Indian star; Charles Bliss, outstanding swimmer and softballer; Webster Kimball, '39 tennis champion, and Wayne Jones, Hill backstroke champ and powerful hitting softballer. Of these Domingo, Bowlby and Baumhardt are members of that original Dominoe team. Others include Neil Ferry, Gene Young, Karnowski, John Tweed, Lee Barry, Karl Wolf, Leon Hepner, and Everitt Schrader. All but Bowley are in school today. Reading the above one can see that the organization has come a long way. A long way because two cagey young men had enough imagination and ability to show the college world that independents can be turned into intramural powers. And so, intramural fan, when you see another Newman victory won, don't forget that a pair of guiding hands are probably behind it, and that often the longest way round is the shortest and sweetest way home. 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