d UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, MARCH 17, 1938 Ghosts Take Opening A'Final Kappa Sig "B" Captures Semi-Final From Beta To Enter Final Round Against Sig Alph 'B' After trailing the Galloping Ghosts, 4 to 14, at the end of the first half in the initial game of the "A" division intramural basketball playoff, the Sig Alph's pulled up to a tie after soon the start of the second half, but bowed 26 to 33, under a late spurt. B. Cover1, of the Ghosts, opened the scoring soon after the opening whistle, and added another field goal before Hall of the Sig Alph's pulled it to a 4-2 with one-a-hander. Covey then proceeded to play a one-man game and dropped in two more counters to raise the count for the Ghosts ta 10 points. Vogel then entered into the scoring for the Ghosts with a field goal and a free toss, and Covey swished another just before half-time to bring it to 14-4 for the Ghosts. Coveys Tie Score Beginning the second half, the Sig Alph's put on a scoring burst, getting 12 points while the Ghosts tallied 2 to pull up to a 16-all tie in the first few minutes of the third quarter. However, M. Covey dropped in two successive charity tosses on Nourse's and Zieglemeyer's fours, but Nourse titled it up again with a long counter from center court. The tally was again knotted with free throws by James and B. Covey, and from there on, the Ghosts never relinquished their lead although the Alph's pulled to within one point at one time. With the score at 27-26 for the Ghosts and a few minutes to go, Hoffle took charge of the scoring and counted two free throws and two field goals to pull the Ghosts to a comfortable lead, 33-26 as the gun sounded. B. Covey led the scoring for the evening with 5 field goals and 2 free throws for 12 points, and Nourse, of the Alph's, was second by virtue of 4 field goals and a lone free toss. The Ghosts were making use of their foul chances, sinking 9 free throws to the Sig Alph a 8. Next Game Monday This was the first game of a two- out-of-three series, and the next game will be at 8:30 Monday night immediately following the "B" final which will consist of only one game at 7:30 Monday night. The box score Sig Alph (26) G.Ghosts (33) Sig App...g ft f g ft f g ft Nourise, f 4 1 Holfine, f f 3 2 Naurie, f 4 2 Hoffmeier, f f 3 2 James, c 0 2 2 B.Covay, c 5 2 Zglem'y rg 1 0 Day, g 1 0 Namerine, g 3 0 Reed, g 0 0 Barben, g 3 0 Reed, g 0 0 Barben, g 3 0 Vogel, f 2 2 Engleman Plumley. Led by Hensley and Kibm, the Kledg *Bis*’s “Bis” rough-shan do over their division; they will meet the Sig Alph’s “Bis” for the title. The kledg will ask them big brothers did last night and looked as though they will give the Sig Alph’s a tough run for their money Monday. The Beta's were paced by Hibbard who hit the bucket for 7 points, and Eberhard for 6 points respectively. From all indications the final in the "B" division will be a very interesting affair with the team to choose between the two teams. The box score: g ft 1 Lyons, f. 2 DeFever, f. 1. 1 Allderdice, c. 2 Hensley, g. 5 Kihm, g. .. 4. 1 Beta "C" (16) Hibbard, f. 3 ; 1 Banks, f. 0 ; 1 Coward, f. 0 ; 1 Coward, f. 0 ; 1 Mellinger, j 2 ; 0 Lewin, j 2 ; 0 Mellinger, j 2 ; 0 14 7 5 6 4 1 4 Officials; Greene, Niswonger. Topeka Table Tennis Team To Play University Tonight the undefended Palace table tennis team of Topeka will be faced by probably the strongest league competition this year when they meet the University players tonight of the Memorial Union building. With only one defeat against them, the University men are expected to finish very high in league standing. They were successful in upsetting the paddle wielders of the Kansas State College representatives in Topeka Monday night by a score of 4 matches to 3. The feature match of the evening will be played between Malcomb Black of Kansas and C. Woodward, Topeka champion of 1937. Russell Speaks Over KFKU Football Team Gets First Scrimmage Dr. F. O. Russell, associate professor in the School of Education and director of Oredo Training School, Mount Saint Mary's Philadelphia College on station KFKU. Serimage was the order of the day yesterday for Coach Ad Lindsay's Jayhawkers. As in previous practice sessions this week, each game was given a chance to show his wares, both on offense and defense. The practice yesterday was notable for its lack of lettermen, as most of those reporting were freshmen. Serimimage was not held under game conditions. The offensive team brought the ball back to the same spot after each play and no attention was given to players, although passes were mixed in with running plays. Miller, Hall, Bukaty, Amerine ame Bunsen were doing their usual heavy share of ball lugging that has featured practice so far. Hall has been driving hard from his fallback position and has done some elusive running from the tailback position. Miller's passing has been outstanding all spring. Several injuries have beset the squad. Mull Sillant received a bruised hip in the first scrimage of the season and has been watching from the sidelines since then. Ed Staugen, promising left halfback, injured his foot Tuesday afternoon and will be out for about a week. Blocking practice and running of plays occupied the early part of practice yesterday. What's Doing in Sports At Other Schools By Dole Hekendorn The Iowa State College campus is all aftter. Fred Perry and Elsworth Vines, two of the world's most outstanding tennis players, will appear in the State gymnasium, March 26. Vines is the top-ranking American professional and Perry is a top notch English pro netman. In 1936 Perry captured all major tennis titles. The winner of this year's series between these men will be selected to meet the red-headed Don Budge when he turns professional. Coach Tom Stidman, football mentor of the University of Oklahoma, has plenty of weight in his line prospects. The heavies are Gilford Duggan, 215-pound junior; J R Manley, 210-pound junior; Howard Tester, 228-pound junior; Harold Edcerman, 215-pound junior; Maurice Moore, 216-pound more; Holdt Lahar, 225-pound sophomore; Just Blowers, 218-pound sophomore and Albert Ryan, 219-pound junior. University of Indiana athletes appear to be air-minded. Several Hoosier lettermen have joined the U.S. Army Air Corps, Lieutenant Wes Bicking, a former Indiana track race, has appeared in the Kansas relays. Bicking, a quarter mile, ran on the mile relay team which included Harpold, Hornbostel, and Fouqua. This combination holds the Indiana record for the mile relay at 3:15.9. Harold Houland has been appointed to the position of superintendent of schools at LeRoy for next year. Mr. Houland received his M. A. degree from the University. Tracksters Check Out Ninety Men Report Regularly to Coach Bill Hargiss Enthusiasm is running higher on the Hill in track than it has for several years. Ninety tracksters have checked out equipment and are reporting regularly to H. W. Hargiss coach. The 220-yard indoor track is crowded every afternoon with varsity and freshman eindermen. They are probably more athletes working on the stadium indoor track than ever before in the history of sports, more than when the squad moves outdoors. Four large heaters have been installed on the track. These heating units have met with considerable approval by cindermen, Hargass, and Gwinn Henry, an athlete director of the university. There is less danger of pulled muscles, and the men have not complained so much of sore legs. The stadium force began preparing the outdoor track for the coming open-air campaigns. Monday, the outdoor track and next steps will be rolling and dragging. Outdoor workouts will begin soon if the weather permits. Along the Sideline Newt Hoverstock Kansan Sports Editor It shouldn't be hard for the persons involved to remember last year's track season, when Son Romani, Venize, and others were making the going tough for the great Cunningham, and certain persons came through with the opinions, "He's burned out." "It's too bad, but Glenn's through," "a man can't expect to run till he'll be 60, anyway." We wonder just what these sages have to say now that the Galloping Demon is again laying them all in the track! However, how much time for the soul, and we can't say too much since it looked that way to us, too. Our only virtue may have been in remaining quiet and feeling sorry instead of telling why and how old the Glenn was gone. The Kansas City Healey's, with Fred Pralle, Ray Noble, and Frank Groves, are still plugging along in the National A.A.U. event at Denver. Another recent alumnus of the university of Kansas, Phillips, is bringing with the Bartlesville, Okla., Phillips bunch which took the Wichita Gas, 62-24. Preliminaries in the intramural winning events were begun Tuesday afternoon, and the last three of the eight events will be completed, beginning this afternoon at 4:30 p.m. semifinals in the various events will ben be held this evening at 8:15, and the final will be run off next tuesday although the exact time is to get set. Worry over the Olympics is definitely over for the time being, as the international Olympics congress at Cairo announced yesterday that the games would be held in Tokyo, Sept. 21 to Oct. 6, 1940. However, Phone K.U. 66 CLASSIFIED ADS Shampoo and Wave Set, dryed Oil Shampoo and Wave Set, dryed 50c Permanents and End Curls $1.00 complete Phone K.U. 66 MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP 732 1/2 Mass. Phone 2353 Britain has announced that the 1945 games, if held in Japan, would get no support whatsoever from Britain and that Britain would limit itself to competition with the United States and "other countries which still remain civilized." It is expected that other countries may enter the list of "boycotters," but they have not as yet declared that intention. BANNS RACKEN RESTRUING New Jackets, Balls Soft Bats, Bats RUTTER'S SHOP Mass St. Phon THE ARGUS $12.50 "Candid Cameraing . . . It's the rage." with an f4.5 uses motion picture film See us for motion picture cameras and complete line of photographic supplies all makes of paper, films, developers, tanks, tripods, filters and accessories. IVA'S RUTIER'S SHOP 1014 Mass. St. Phone 319 Women's Intramurals Candid Camera-Ily Speaking HIXON STUDIO Phone 41 In Hotel Eldridge Bldg Chi Omega won the deck tennis match with Corin hall. The winners of the four divisions will play at the following game on March 18. The following two matches will be played: 4:30, Chi Omega vs. I.W.K., 5: Pia Beta vi vs. Kappa W.A., 6: Pia Beta vi vs. Kappa W.A. games will play each other in the finals on Monday at 4:30 o'clock. Shampoo and Wave 35c Complete Permanents $1.50 up Phone 333 941½ Mass. St. are tall horseshoe matches which were postponed because of bad weather, but they are still deflated Alpha Delta Pi in the finals. The members of the Corresponding Iisabel Spiegel, c;39; Lorrine Barchem, c;39; and Kathleen Durbin, p;39; Phi Delts Turn Tables To Win Second Tilt DUNAKIN CLUB In the second game of the intranural volleyball final last night, the Phi Delt's turned the tables on a strong Phi Gam team to take the second of the two-out-of-three playoff, 21-19 and 21-12. The first match went to the Phi Gam's, Monday night, 22-20, and 21-14. With the identical teams as in the opener of Monday night, the Phi Delt's took the starch out of the Phi Gam six in the first game and went on to win the second easily. Bunsen and Roberts did the major part of the spiking for the winners, with Chambers, Sifers, and Van Cleave playing steady ball in the set-up positions. 1319 Tennessee Street Lawrence, Kansas The final test will come up Friday night when the last of the series is played to decide the intramural volleyball champs of this season. 12 Dinners and Suppers, $2.50 6 Breakfasts, 50c TAXI HUNSINGER'S 920 - 22 Mass. Phone 12 Suits Tuxes Dresses Hats Coats RELIABLE CLEANING Guaranteed Track Team Is Competing In Chicago The Chicago field house track is unusually fast. The track, made up of sdwust, clay and cork, is wide and has well banked curves. The Kansas Jayhawkers will add the final chapter to the indoor track season Saturday in the Armour Institute of Technology Relays at the University of Chicago field house. The cindermen will leave early this afternoon. Lyle Foy and Paul Masoner are entered in the 60-yard dash and 70-90 low hurdles respectively. They compete in Kansas men competing in open events. A mile relay team made up of Gordon Clucas, Hugh Warrie, Milice Williams and Marvin Cox will be entered in a fast field. Guaranteed Foy and Masoner Are The Only Kansas Men To Be Entered in the Open Events Max Replogie, Joe Ryan, Charles Toberen and Dale Hekendorn have qualified for places on the two-mile relay team entered by Coach H. W 3 garments for $1.25 GRAND CLEANERS 50c the third fourson, a spirt medley, includes Cox, 449; Masoner, 209; Foy, 229; and Ernest Klann, 880. The men, accompanied by Hargill, will ride by car, on wheels, to stay in one of the University of Chicago dormitories. Call 616 Free Pickup and Deliv. Seadlund Court To Federal Court Chicago, March 17—(UF) —A federal court jury qualified to order the death penalty tonight began deliberations in the case of John Henry Seadlum, gum-chewing ex-lumberman, and Kidnapman of Charles S. Ross, Patented greeting card manufacturer. Date Set For Golf Squad To Qualify March 26 has been set as the date for the 36-hole qualifying matches for some 27 varsity golf aspirants. Men seeking positions on Coach Glen Osman's squad met in the K Club room Tuesday night to discuss problems confronting the Kansas golfers. The 36-hole elimination matches will be played on the Lawrence Country Club course, and Oatman County Golf Club, where you can return in the best scores to make up the variability ranks. Before each encounter with other schools these men will play qualifying rounds to place men on the team to compete. Big Six rules will not permit outside competition during the season. Glen Oatman, star of last year's team, ran into considerable difficulty by playing in an outside tournament. However, he did not lose his eligibility and closed the season as one of the outstanding golfers of the conference. Glenn Stevenson, gr., will also speak on "The Recovery of Radium from the Bear Lake Deposits of Pitchbbleen in Northern Canada." Japs Seek To Destroy Chinese Air Force Perkins discovered analine mauve, the first analine dye known, when he was only 18 years old. The meeting of the club today is in observance of the centenary of his birth. Shanghai, March 17 (Thursday)—(UP) Japanese war flyers today continued their unprecedented raids on Chinese airdromes in an effort to wipe out China's reorganized air force, which is composed largely of American, Soviet Russian and other foreign pilots and technicians. Alarmed at the activity of the Chinese force, and the superior skill of Occidental combat pilots flying fast British, American and Soviet planes, the Japanese resorted to night soled an effort to cripple their adversary. The Japanese refused to reveal their own losses, but said they had destroyed several more Chinese planes. Dr. F. B. Dainis, professor of chemistry, will speak to the Chemistry Club this afternoon at 4:30 in room 201 in E. H. S. Bailey Chem- and Biol. Lab on W. H. Parkin and the Early History of Analine Dyes." Talk on Analine Dyes Will Be Given by Dains Labor Party May Have Place in British Cabinet The invitation would be extended, it was said, in order that the whole of the national government would be broadened and the national solidarity would be assured during the present international emergency. The scene in Commons tonight was reminiscent of the dark days at the end of July in 1914. There was a tense table with frequent reports of strong division of opinion over the government's foreign policy. London, March 16. (UP)-Reports circulated in librines of the House of Commons tonight that the Labor party would be invited to have representation in the cabinet of Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain. DYE YOUR SHOES ...to fit the season ...for the parties Gilding, Silvering and Tinting of Fabric Shoes ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP W. E. Whetstone, Prop. 1017 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Phone 686 ADVERTISEMENTS Make Neighbors of a Nation The Yankee clipper-ships are sailing phantom seas. The western two-gun man has retired to the movies, and the southern plantation has been subdivided. The old sectional distinctions have passed into tradition. Where there was North, South and West, there is now one people. Those old barriers of distance and prejudice have been worn down by many uniting forces: Railroads, radio, automobiles, telephones, newspapers, magazines, Advertising. These are the things that have united America into a nation of neighbors. You have the same automobile as the chap a half-dozen states away. You both eat the same advertised foods, smoke the same tobaccos, enjoy concerts from the air with the same radio sets. You have a lot of things in common. Advertisements give you and your neighbors in all the forty-eight states the same chance to know and obtain new things as soon as they are ready. Through advertisements, you learn of a thousand devices that save you labor, increase your comfort, and help you enjoy life generally. They give you a broad panoramic view of this modern age we live in. Read the advertisements----your neighbors are reading them too. DAILY M.F.A.T.