SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 24,1940 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 8 Gridmen Will Reach End of Trail Thursday The end of the trail will be reached Thursday by eight members of the University of Kansas football team. Seven of them will play the last college football game of their careers against Colorado State at Lawrence Thanksgiving Day, with the other senior viewing the game from the bench. John Burge, 180 pound end from St. Louis, will be the lone senior with no chance to get into the game. Burge suffered an injury to the cartilage in his right knee in the first game of the season and has not been able to play since. Leading the seniors into action will be Don Pierce, one of the finest centers in Kansas history. The former Topeka high school star is expected to be an almost unanimous choice for all-Big Six center. Four other seniors also will be in the starting lineup against Colorado State: Quido Massare at left guard, Ward Crowell at right end, Ed Hall at left halfback, and Ed Suagee at fullback. Massare has been bothered by a knee injury the last few weeks, but should be in good shape for Thursday's game. The husky guard from Monongahela, Pa., is the oldest man on the squau at 25. played end this fall after eight years of high school, prep school and college football in the depths of the line. He played his high school ball at Attica. Left halfback Hall has blossomed out in a passing role during the latter part of the present season after not throwing a single pass during his first two years on the varsity. Hall hails from Sublette. Suagee, a Bartlesville, Okla., boy, is second only to Hall in minutes A converted guard, Crowell, has played among members of the 1940 squad. The Cherokee Indian boy has backed the line on defense this year, turning his talents to blocking on defense. Senior reserves ready to go against Colorado State will be Chester Gibbens and Wayne Wilson. Gibbens has won reputation as the finest drop kicker in the country. His three year record for points-after-touchdowns shows 13 successful conversions in 15 attempts. Wilson is a reserve center, Fill The Bill--one» Ramsey, Schiller Shore Will Entertain Grange Two of the University's better vaudeville stars will entertain members of the Grange at their meeting, Dec. 6, at Twin Mound when Bob Ramsey, college senior, and Schiller Shore put on a show for the farmers, according to Marvin Goebel of the Men's Student Employment bureau. Ramsey is the University's professional master of magic. The job which he will fill originally called for a bird and animal imitator but Ramsey instead will pull shirts off the bewildered Grangers, confuse them with his ring tricks, and dazzle them with various odds and ends of legerdemaine. The magician, however, is also qualified for the bird and animal act as he once worked the sound effects for Archie San Romani's orchestra during a concert which featured the novelty number "The Blind Man's Movie." Ramsey, who has been practicing his magic tricks for nearly seven years, began his mystifying profession before he ever saw a magician. Phi Kappa Psi, Rev. Robt. A. Huntz Sigma Chi, Prof. Allen Crafton. Most of the "tricks of the trade' are not original with the magician, but the remarks accompanying them are. His equipment is bought from any of several magic houses located in various parts of the country. Ramsey has his own office and makes his own contracts for performances. Several full shows are available at any time for presentation. By this means he is making his way through college. Two years ago Ramsey slipped into the publicity floodlight when he captured the ephemeral title of National Intercollegiate Goldfish Gulping Champion. Before a newsreel camera, a WREN radio announcer, and a theater full of gagging spectators. Ramsey swallowed precisely 50 goldfish. He lost the title next day when some other college student in another school gulped 75 fish plus two phonograph records. The attendant publicity gained Ramsey the nomination of Men's Student Council president on the Goldfish ticket. His campaign was carriet on to point out the deficiencies of the present council set-up. He lost, but not because Marvin Goebel, who was Ramsey's campaign manager and propaganda minister, didn't give him enough publicity. Schiller Shore, erstwhile game warden of Potter lake, will give a display of trick shooting with his sub-machine rifle. Shore can trace out a silhouette of Donald Duck or Franklin D. Roosevelt with bullets. Besides shooting pictures, the game warden spends his boss' time inventing old but practical things like rear muffs for dogs. Union To Sponsor Ping Pong Tourney The Student Union Activities committee will hold its second annual table tennis tournament beginning Dec. 3 in the Union recreation room. All students are invited to enter. Entries are due Monday noon, Dec. 2. Competition will be held in three divisions: Men's singles, women's singles, and mixed doubles. First and second place winners in each division will receive medals. A "B" Girl of the tropics entertains Misha Auer in a torid tropical scene from "Seven Sinners" starring Marlene "Destroy" Dietrich, showing at the Granada today thru Wednesday. Auer has the role of itinerant magician and pickpocket, in this intriguing drama of the South Seas. In last spring's tournament, 52 men and 22 women entered. Norma Tibbets, who is in charge of the tournament, expects more entries for the winter meet. Brackets have been arranged for 64 men and 32 women competitors. Ceville Chapman won the men's and Ellen Irwin the women's titles last spring. Going through school in a hurry is Rex Edwards, 220 pound Colorado State tackle, who is a senior although only 19 years old. Edwards has lettered in both of the past two years. University Grads Employed By Oklahoma U. Hospital Mary Louise Asling and Marian Goehing, graduates of the department of bacteriology in the spring of 1938, are now employed by the University of Oklahoma hospital in Oklahoma City. Both girls completed their technician period and internship in St. Joseph hospital in Kansas City, Mo. MACKIE OPEN — (continued from page one) Bob Talmadge, Bob McKay and Rev. E.F. Price has worked out a schedule of dinner speakers for all of the organized houses of the University in connection with the Religious week activities. Sunday noon; Pi Kappa Alpha, Rev. Joseph F. King; 1231 Louisiana, Prof. Ray Q. Brewster. The schedule is as follows: Make Your Next Suit A Tailor-made Suit Monday evening; Delta Tau Delta, Prof. R. H. Wheeler; Delta Upsilon, Rev. Edwin F. Price; Kappa Eta Kappa, Rev. Joseph F. King; Alpha Chi Omega, Dean R. A. Schwegler; Alpha Omicron Pi, Prof. H. E. Chandler; Gamma Phi Beta, Miss Roberta Tucker. Pi Beta Phi, Dr. Forrest C. Allen; Corbin hall, Prof. Beulah Morrison; Miller hall, Prof. R. Q. Brewer; Watkins hall, Prof. Bert A. Nash; Suiting That Suits You because it's made to your measurements. Come in and choose from our latest materials and styles. SCHULZ THE TAILOR Battenfeld hall, Mr. Robert C. Mackie; Carruth hall, Dean Paul B. Lawson; Templin hall, Prof. Allen Crafton. "Suiting you—That's my business" Sigma Phi Epsilon, Prof. W. E. Sandelius; Alpha Chi Sigma, Prof. N. W. Storer; Phi Beta Pi, Mr. John J. O. Moore; Sigma Kappa, Prof. Robert M. Davis; Jayhawk Co-op, Prof. Henry Werner. Tuesday evening: Alpha Tau Omega, Rev. Harold G. Barr; Delta Chi, Dean R. A. Schwegler; Phi Delta Theta, Dr. Forrest C. Allen; Popular Records Love of My Life A Handful of Stars ... Artie Shaw Moon Over Burma Down Argentine Way ... 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