WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1940. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Kansas Eighth In National Cue Tourney The Kansas three-billiard team finished eighth in the national telegraphic tournament, conducted last week, it was announced today. The results just tabulated show that Michigan U. won first place with a total of 98 points. Kansas scored 68. The members of the Jayhawker The members of the Jayhawker and their individual scores were: Jack Thompkins 19, Chapman Tracy 16, Al Bracke 12, Earl Kinney 11, and LeRoy Fugitt 10. John Haslam, manager of the billiard teams, said today that a new tournament would get underway this week-end, this time in straight rail competition. The elimination tournament starts at 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon with the tourney at 7 o'clock Monday night. Manhattan, Kan., March 13—Five individual performers and two relay teams will represent Kansas State College in the twelfth annual Armour Tech Relay games at Chicago Saturday. K-State Entered In Armour Relays Coach Ward Haylett named Elmer Hackney, shotput; Thaine High, two-mile run; Louis Akers, 60-yard dash; and Darold Dodge and Ed Darden, hurdles; for the trip. Members of the medley and two-mile relay teams will be selected in tryouts this week. Hackney defended his Big Six conference shotput crown at Kansas City last week by throwing the iron ball 50 feet, 2 3-4 inches, and High won the two-mile run in 9:41.2. Darden was fourth in the high hurdles, Dodge third in the low hurdles, and Akers third in the 60-yard dash. Life Guard Class Open to Seniors A class in Senior Red Cross Life Saving for men of the University will begin at 4:30 Thursday afternoon. The first meeting of the group will be held in room 202 of Robinson gymnasium at this hour. This announcement came from Herbert G. Alliphn, instructor in the department of physical education, and chairman of life saving of Douglas county. The class will meet daily from 4:30 to 5:00 until 15 hours of instruction has been completed. This will probably be the last life saving school for this semester. Prospective candidates may sign up in room 107 Robinson gymnasium. Cement Official to Lecture "Reinforced Concrete Construction", a subject applicable to both the field of civil engineering as well as the field of architecture, will be the lecture topic of H. K. Shideler, representative of the Portland Cement association, which will be presented before a joint meeting of the American Society of Civil Engineers and students in the Department of Architecture in the School of Engineering and Architecture, in room 206, of Marvin hall, at 7:30 p.m., tomorrow. Kansas Earns--- (Continued from page 4) The Jayhwaker defense did a good job of bottling up Ford, limiting his scoring to 2 free tosses and no baskets. The 6 foot, 6 inch boy wasn't up to the heights that he reached against the local team last week, when he repeatedly leaped high in the air to bat away sure-fire baskets. Mesch found the hoop for 17 points to carry off top scoring honors for the evening. Ebling and Engleman both accounted for 11 points. Sooners Appeared Tired The Oklahoma basketeers appeared tired after their tussle with Missouri on the preceding night and it wasn't the same powerful aggregation that swept Kansas from the court four nights before. The Jayhawkers led most of the game, with a half time score of 27-16. With only five minutes remaining in the game, the Sooners threw a scare into the local camp when they cut down their disadvantage to a mere two points, 37-35. At this point the lanky Ford went out on fouls and Kansas poured in several rapid-fire baskets to ice the contest. In the closing seconds a stalling game proved successful, as excessive fouling on Oklahoma's part failed to gain possession of the ball. Kansas refused several free tosses at this point. KANSAS (45) | | g | ft | mft | pf | tp | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Ebling, f | 5 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 11 | | Engleman, f | 5 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 11 | | Millean, c-f | 3 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 6 | | Allen, g-c | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 6 | | Voran, g | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | | Harp, g | 2 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 6 | | Hunter, g | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Kline, g | 2 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 4 | Totals 20 5 5 12 45 OKLAHOMA (39) g ft mft ptf tp McNatt, f ... 4 2 1 3 10 Zollner, f ... 0 0 0 0 0 Mesch, f ... 8 1 2 0 17 Roop, f ... 0 0 0 0 0 Ford, c ... 0 2 4 4 2 Richards, c ... 0 0 0 2 0 Splege, g ... 0 0 0 0 0 Scheffler, g ... 3 1 0 3 7 Snodgrass, g ... 1 1 0 2 3 Totals 16 7 6 14 39 Score at half—Kansas 27, Oklahoma 16. Officials—G. W. Duvall, Jr. (Kansas City), and Clarence Breithaupt (Washburn). (Continued from page four) blue in the international games are: Tom Poor, Merlin Graham, Glenn Cunningham, Jim Bausch, and Clyde Coffman . . Monday Dr. F. C. Allen spoke at Wichita North where Ernie Vanek, former Jay- hawker, is doing a swell job coa- ching. Simonizing--- (Continued from page four) In the invitational tournament back in Madison Square Garden four teams get together tonight in the semi-finals. . . Oklahoma Aggies tangle with Duquesne and Colorado meets DePaul of Chicago. . . The teams rest tomorrow night and play the finals and consolation Friday night. . . Correction dept.: The other day this column mentioned that Kansas won one game from the Missouri Valley and lost two this year. I had overlooked the victory over Washburn in the finals of the Sunflower tournament in Topeka. Kansas has won two and lost two in four contests with the Valley. Photos Displayed In Art Museum Forty-one photographs of Elizabethan England have been placed on exhibition in the north gallery of Spooner-Thayer Museum, Miss Minnie S. Moodie, curator of the museum, announced today. Representing a survey of English history and culture from 1485 to 1680, the photographs illustrate the impact of the Renaissance on England. Special attention is devoted to conditions during the lifetime of William Shakespeare. The exhibition was prepared by the Boston Museum of Fine Arts and is being circulated by the American Federation of Arts. It will remain on display until March 26. Aviation Man Interviews Engineering Students Here Twenty students in the department of mechanical engineering in the School of Engineering and Architecture were interviewed today by Walter Bishop, representative of the Wright Aeronautical company, Patterson, N. J., according to an announcement by Prof. E. D. Hay, head of the department. Mr. Bishop is the second company representative to interview engineers this week. Representatives of General Electric were here two days last week, interviewing prospective engineers. Lecture Bureau Signs German Refugee Edmund P. Heilpern, a refugee who was forced to flee Germany and later Austria, has been signed for appearances during the next two and a half weeks in various schools and communities by Guy V. Keeler, director of the lecture bureau at the University. Heilpern, now a resident of Topeka, was an advertising expert and journalist in Berlin, but was forced to leave and locate his office in Vienna. Then, when Hitler took over Austria in March, 1938, he began his second emigration and came to the United States in August of that year. Heilpern's main lectures are "How Hitler Started the War of Nerves" and "How Hitler Rules Germany." Geologists Hear Survey On 'Underground Water' Several reports were read yesterday afternoon by members of the federal and state geological surveys at a joint monthly meeting in Haworth hall, according to Raymond Whitla of the geological survey. The reports centered around the Kansas underground water program. At the present time the fluctuations in water level of 257 wells are being made monthly. The wells under observation are in Morton, Stanton, Hamilton, Kearney, Scott, Finney, Gray, Mead, Ford, Sedgwick, Harvey McPherson, and Jewell counties. Thomas Burtch Speaks To Business School Students Thomas Burcht, chief underwriter of the federal housing administration at Topeka, spoke to students of the School of Business in Frank Strong auditorium this afternoon. His speech, which was the last in a series of five on the subject, "Real Estate Valuation" was entitled "The Mathematics of Translating Income Predictions Into Valuation Estimates." x Add New Books To Club Library Several new books, gifts from the Carnegie Endowment association, have been added recently to the library of the International Relations Club. Among the new books are: E. M. Patterson's "Economic Basis of Peace," Guy Stanton Ford's "Dietatorship in the Modern World," and Eduard Benes" "Democracy Today and Tomorrow." Bucs Put Ghosts--- (Continued from page 4) GALLOPING GHOSTS (24) | | g | ft | f | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Westerhaus, f | 3 | 0 | 1 | | Shupe, f | 2 | 0 | 2 | | Kelly, f | 1 | 0 | 3 | | Johnson, f | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Hare, c | 2 | 1 | 3 | | Fournier, g | 1 | 0 | 2 | | Coffin, g | 2 | 1 | 2 | Totals 11 2 13 g ft f Moser, f 2 0 2 Wagner, f 0 0 1 Domingo, f 2 3 0 Sanneman, c 1 0 3 Widner, g 2 1 0 Peterson, g 0 0 0 Totals — — — 7 4 6 Bridge Designer Here for Banquet MARCH 28 Order new telephone service or listing changes now. The University's future "hob nailers" will hear Ernest E. Howard, widely known bridge designer, at their annual Engineering banquet, March 29, in the Memorial Union, according to an announcement today, by Professor G. M. Beal, in charge of obtaining the banquet speaker. Mr. Howard is consulting engineer of the Ash, Howard, Needles, and Tammen Company with offices in Kansas City, Mo, and New York City. Bridge designing is his specialty. He was chief architect ion bridges built in Mexico, Japan, Russia, Canada, and China, as well as the designer of spans over the most important rivers in this country. Grads to Head Schools The appointment bureau today announced the placement of two graduates in administrative positions. Harold Hoeglund, M.A.'38, has been elected superintendent of schools at Burlington for next year. For the past year and a half he has been with the government school at Metlakatfa, Alaska. Floyd Smethers, M.A.38, formerly superintendent of schools at Virgil, has been elected principal of the Eureka Senior High School. The Palace 843 Mass.