PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY. APRIL 15, 1934 Wildcats Run Up One Sided Score To Defeat Bears Baldwin Makes Two Home Runs for Victor Nine; Additions Help to Losers The Wildcats, under the leadership of Baldwin, third baseman and pitcher, who blasted out two home runs, made 13 hits count as they swamped the Bears in an inter-University baseball game here yesterday afternoon, 17 to 9. The game which lasted only five innings should have ended with the score 10 to 9 in favor of the Wildcats who battled last. Eight of their runs came in the last half of the last innning, and seven of them after the game had been Although badly outlugged in the abbreviated contest, the Bears showed an improvement over their previous games. Additional players which were made possible by a shift in the lineups of the team, became valuable to the under-dog team. Warren Plasket, hard-hitting in- fielder and pitcher, led the Bear team with a hit and two runs in two trips to the plate. Baldwin's two homeruns gave him batting average of .500 per cent for the afternoon; he scored an additional run McGuire, former senior second-baseman, led both teams in the number of hits and in four trips for a perfect afternoon. Both teams made more scores than hits despite the fact that both of the starting pitchers hung up impressive strike out totals. The box score: Bass, AB R H PO A Borda, f 4 0 2 0 3 Donelon, 2b 3 0 1 2 Norris, 1b 3 1 1 4 Lewis, rf 2 0 0 1 0 Plaskett, ss, p 2 2 1 0 2 Everhardt, 3b 2 2 1 0 0 Crust, lf 2 1 0 1 0 Robinson, lf 1 1 0 1 0 Hable, c 3 0 1 0 0 Buchbinder, c 3 1 1 8 0 Totals 24 9 15 7 15 Wildcats—17 AB 9 H RO A(P) Sadayau, ss 3 1 1 0 1 Baldwin, 3b, p 3 1 2 0 1 Mammie 4 1 2 10 0 Klaas, cf, 3b 4 3 2 0 0 McGuire, 2b 4 3 4 2 2 Murray, m 3 1 0 1 3 Mudley, f 3 1 0 1 3 Klinske, if 3 1 1 0 0 Bender, 1b 1 0 0 0 0 Kappelman, 1b 2 2 2 1 0 Totals ... 31 17 13 15 8 Score by innings: 02 304 — Bowls 02 348 — Wildcats 02 348 — The summary: Doubles, Bucbinder, Kappelman, McGuire. Triple, Everhard. Home runs, Baldwin 2, McGuire 1, off Buffaline 1, out of Buffaline 4, off Bradford 1, Struck out, by Bradford 6, by Murry 6, by Bradlow 1, by Plaskett 2, Hits, off Bradford 8 in 4 innings, off Plaskette 5 in 1 inning, off Murry 6 in 4 innings, off Buffaline 2 in 1 inning. Winning pitcher, Murray. Losing pitcher, Bradford. Complete Relays List Includes 55 Colleges in succession, will again be a contender The Pittsburg runners won both years in the half-mile, mile, and medley, but lost the one-mile event last year t (Continued from page 1) Following is the complete list of entries: Frozen Fruit Salad Is a Nice Sunday Evening Lunch UNION FOUNTAIN Sub-Basement Memorial Union --with DICKINSON TODAY and TOMORROW University Class.-Arizona, Arkansas Butler, Chicago, Drake,innell Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Minnesota, Missouri Montana, Notre Dame, Nebraska, Oklahoma, kansas A. M., Washington State College of Pullman, Washington University of St. Louis. A Big Laugh Show The Dumbest of the Dumb Teamed Together Edna May Oliver and Edward Everett Horton "THE POOR RICH" College Class. -- Baker University, Baldwin, Kan.; College of Emporia; Central College, Fayette, Mo.; Friends University, Ksau; Teachers, Emory; Emory, Kansas State Teachers, Pittsburgh; Haskell Indian Institute; Illinois State Normal, Iowa Wesleyan, M. Pleasant, Iowa; Mother- Rolla; Northwest Missouri State Teachers, Maryville; Omaha Municipal University; Oklahoma Baptists, Shawnee, Missouri Teachers; Missouri Teachers, Cape Girardeau; Schreiner Institute, Kerrville, Texas; Simpson College, Indiana, Iowa; Sfofield, Southwestern College, Winfield, Kan.; Washburn College, Topeka; William Jewel, Liberty, Mo.; Wichita University; Westminster College; Yankton School; Southern College; Teachers, Kirksville, Mo., Teachers The high school meet of Friday will train 100 athletes from 116 Kennesaw high schools. Junior College Class—Arkansas City, Cameron College, Lawton, Oklahoma; Fort Scott, Independence, Kan, Kansas City, Missouri; Tuscaloosa, Alabama; College of Agriculture, Tisomingo, Okla. Thelma Todd - Andy Devine Grant Hamlyn - Leila Hyams John Millan - Ula O'Connor Class A, high schools. — Argentine (Kansas City, Kan.), Arkansas City, Atchison County (Effingham); Atchison, Burlington; Memoria, Concordia; El Paso; Garnett, Fort Worth; Fredonia, Garnett, Herington, Hiwata, Holton, Horton, Hugoton, independence, Junction City, Lawrence, Leavenworth, Manhattan, Neodesha, Poughkeepsie, Poole, Pooha, Peabody, Pittsburg, Riverton, Sabetha, Salina, Seaman High (Topeka): Topeka, Topeka Catholic, Valley Center, Valley Falls, Wichita East, Wichita North, Wyandotte (Kansas City, Kan.), Wamego Also Usual Good Shorts Class B, high schools ---Admiral, Alma, Baldwin, Burbank, Buckle, Burlingame, Cedar Rd, Centralla, Chase County ,Clyde, Cockerill (Mubury), Dighton, Downs, Edgerton, Edwardsville, Elgin, Emett, Eskridge, Eskride, Fairview, Eckert, Fowler, Fort Wayne, Hartford, Havana, Kansas Vocational ( Topeka) , LaHarpe, Linwood, Louis- merville, Mayette, Moyette, Mount, Mulvane, Meridian, Mount, Moulvane, Neal, Nortville, Oread Training School (Lawrence) (Glenn Cunningham, coach), Osakaoka, Over- Ports, Wichita, Ports, Ports, Quincy, Scranton, St. Marys, Truedale, Troy, Uniontown, Vinland, Walton, Washington Rural (Wellborn), Washington, White Cloud, Wilson, Winchester. 15c BOXING MATCHES SCHEDULED Eight Bouts Will Compose Friday Even Relings Program The first open-air meeting of boxers here will be presented in conjunction with the Relays at the University stadium at 7:30 p.m. Friday, weather permitting. Boxers from Haskell, St. Benedicts, Kansas City Athletic club of Kansas City, Mo., and the University will participate. The ring will be erected in the north end of the stadium so everyone may have a clear view of the eight matches. A newsreel film of Glenn Cunningham winning the Wannamaker mile will also be shown at this time. Coach Bill Hargis will explain the race. Students Will Sponsor Exhibition Polo Match Trible and Brazil Will Act as Captains; Local Team Planned University students will enter into a new field of athletic activity here this afternoon when they participate in a practice polo game at one of the Haskell units, 5 miles south of Lawrence on Highway 73, at 3 o'clock. Wiltz, Trible, c'unel, and Jimmy Brazel, c25, will act as captains of the two teams this afternoon. Trible was a member of the Oklahoma Military Academy team, in one of the most successful teams in this section, for three years. He has also played with the University team and during the past few years has played several times with Will Rogers, noted humorist and screen star. Brazil has previously played with an independent team in Kansas City. All other Big Six schools have polite teams, so the players feel that the organization of a team here should meet with support and approval. Games will be played each Sunday. Plans for the formation of a University team which would compete with other college teams are being made. The players hope to secure a field just west of the present intramurals field. The horses which will be used are the property of Haskell Institute. The public is invited to attend the practice game this afternoon, and anyone interested in working out for the team is asked to get in touch with either Trible or Brazil. Silver Anniversary Planned Class of '99 Will Meet Once More at Commencement The planning committee for the Silver Anniversary meeting of the class of '09 which is to be held at commencement on Thursday, Tuesday afternoon at the alumni office. The following personals composed the committee: Frank Tyler, Kansas City Ray Trip, Herington, Lauren Armysb, Kansas City, and Nina May Hester Ruth Kenney, Mrs. Eugene Sterling and H. W. Houghton, all of Hawley The alumni association has received a request for samples of bills, advertising circulars, magazine promotional material and other similar material to be sent for display at the national convention of alumni secretaries which will be held at Skytop Lodge, Monroe county, Penn., April 27. The national organization is known as the American Alumni council. Dr. Frank Strong, of the School of Law, who was chancellor of the University from 1902-1920 has been invited to attend the banquet given this spring. Dr. H. B. Hungerford, professor of entomology, will give a slide lecture on "Phone Peach" at the Entomology club meeting April 16, at 4:30 p.m. in room 417, Snow hall. The club meeting is open to any one who is interested. Trackmen May Visit Classes Invitation to spend the week between the Kansas Relays, April 21, and the Drake Relays, April 28, at the University of Kansas, and to make use of the University's library facilities and to attend Kansas classes was extended today by Paul B. Lawson, acting dean of the University of Washington State College track team being brought east by Coach Carl Schadman. Dean Lawson Invites Washington Team to Use Orear Facilities "The visitors from the west will be welcome to make use of the libraries, and to visit such classes as they may wish," said Dean Lawson. Schlademan was track coach at the University of Kansas for six years, from 1920 to 1926, and instructed classes in physical education. Mirror Will Be Coated By California Technician (Continued from page 1) pense, but the thin coating of reflecting material placed upon the glass surface after it is finished. In the past the surfacing material has been silver. The advantages of aluminum for this purpose have been known for some time, but there has been no practical method of coating the glass with this metal to produce a satisfactory, long lasting surface. The process to be used in coating the KU. mirror and the one which was used recently in coating the 36 inch mirror for the Lick Observatory on Mt. Hamilton, California, is the outcome of a long series of experiments carried on by Dr. Strong. The aluminizing process, as described recently in the Literary Digest, "requires that the glass surface be absolutely clean; so clean that the final contamination is blown off by a bombardment of electrons and ions. The next step is to deposit the aluminum, almost an atom at a time, evenly on the surface. This is done by placing the mirror in a high vacuum. Aluminum is coated on a tungsten wire and then heated electrically until the aluminum evaporates and collects like a vapor on the cooler surface of the mirror." Coming in contact with the air the aluminum soon develops an invisible coating of aluminum oxide which protects it and thus enables the aluminum to outlast many coatings of silver which tarnishes easily and have to be renewed. The aluminum will also reflect the light and silver mirror will not. These rays are of importance in revealing the states of matter in stars and nebulae. The K.U. mirror will probably be sent to California about the first of May and will be returned next fall for installation in the telescope. Iowa Relay Team Works Out IOWA RELAY TEAM works on the Iowa State hall mile relay team composed of Ike Nelson, Tom Scott, Ken Wessling, and Don Sheetz covered the distance in the time of 1.285 last Saturday. This time is only two seconds slower than the present half mile Kansas Relay record. TODAY! at 1:30 - 3:30 - 7:00 - 9:00 PATEE Attend the 1:30 matinee and be sure of a seat. Cardinals Stage Late Rally to Defeat Cubs Winners Score 6 Runs in Fifth After Cauble Leaves Game Cauble of the Cubs left the pitching mound after the end of the fifth inning with a lead of 4 to 10. Bill Hibbs who replaced him immediately got into trouble by issuing four bases on balls and only five hits. Al White was called in to end the rally of the Cardinals but before he had replaced Hibbs the Cardinals had pushed across 6 runs to place the game on ice. One year in production—"RIPTIDE" is unquestionably the finest screen entertainment Miss Shearer has ever appeared in. It has the brilliance of "The Divorcee" the sparkle of "Let Us Be Gay" the drama of "A Free Soul" the romance of "Sminil' Through." The hard hitting Praille of the Cardinal squad slammed out a home run in the seventh innight to further the discomfite of the weakening Cubs. The Cubs who became groggy after the sixth innings rally of the Cardinals could get no more than 7 hits off the offerings of Pugh and Kelly. Staging a rally which began in the sixth inning, the Cardinals, led by Pugh as pitcher, defeated the Cubs in a battle over 75 innings and beaten by the Cubs. The score was 7 to 4. The box score: Cardinals—7 AB R H E Pugh, ef, f 3 0 1 0 Kelley, p 2 0 0 0 Roberts, lf 3 0 0 0 Terry, ss 3 1 0 0 Pralc, e 3 2 2 0 Everly, 3b 4 3 2 Trombold, 1b 3 1 1 0 Hyland, 2b 2 1 0 0 Kloppenberg,rf 2 0 0 0 Packard, cf 2 1 2 0 Totals... 27 7 9 1 Cubs-4... AB R H E Cole, lf... 4 0 0 0 Macaulay, ss... M 6 1 0 Khaas, cf... 2 0 1 0 Kappleman, c... 3 0 1 0 Ebling, 1b... 3 1 1 0 Cauley, p... 2 0 0 0 Armstrong, 3b... 2 1 0 0 White, 3b... 3 0 1 0 Hibbs, rf... 3 1 2 0 Simpson, rp... 1 0 2 0 Wiley, 2b... 1 0 0 0 Totals ... 27 4 7 Score by Innings Cardinals 000 006 1-7 Cubs 012 010 104 balls, off Cauble 2, off Hibbs 4, off Pugh 2, Struck out, by Cauble 14, by Pugh 4, by Pugh 6, by Pugh 4, By hit by pitched ball, Trombold, Roberts. Stores bases, Klass, Ebling, Armstrong, Pugh, Packard, Prale, Strong, pitched pitcher Pugh, Losing pitcher Hibbs. The summary: Doubles, Fugn, Trombold. Home runs: McGuire, Pralele, off double, 2 in White; 5 in 1-3 in- ning, off Fugn; 2 in 3 innings. Base or Men's Intramurals PLAYGROUND BALL STANDINGS Division 1 W Phi Garn 2 0 1.000 A. T. O. 1 0 1.000 Campus Raiders 1 1 1.500 Sigma Chi 1 1 1.500 Sig Eu 1 1 1.500 Theta Pau 0 1 1.000 A. K. Psi 0 1 0.000 Division 3 W L Pct. Phi Delt 5 1.000 Collegians 2 1.000 Kappa Sig 1 1 .500 K E K. 1 1 .500 Rexall 0 1 .000 Sigma Nu 0 1 .000 S A M. 0 1 .000 W L Pct. 2 0 1.000 Delta, U. 2 0 1.000 Phi, Thepi Tn 1 0 1.000 Phi, Psi 1 0 1.000 Pi K, A. 1 2 .333 Phi Chuks 0 1 .000 Joelwawks 0 1 .000 C, D, S. 0 .000 W L Pct. Delta Tau 2 0 .100 Delta Chi 2 0 1.000 Acacia 1 1 .500 Sig Alph 1 1 .500 Bricks 1 1 .200 Triangle 1 2 .333 Kayhawk 0 2 .000 Inter-University Baseball The schedule for week ending Saturday, April.28 Monday, April 16—Cubs vs. Cardinals, Tuesday, April 17—Bears vs. Wildcats, Wednesday, April 18—Wildcats vs. Colts Thursday, April 19—Cardinals vs. Bears No games will be played Friday, April 20, and Saturday, April 21, because of the Kansas Relays. Standings of the Teams Standings of the Teen W L Pet. Cubs 2 1 667 California 2 1 667 Wildcats 2 1 667 Bears 0 3 000 Joe E. Daniels, '20, who has been a member of Duel, Dunn, and Anderson, patent attorneys, has established his firm Fort-49th street, New York City. VARSITY TODAY at 1:30 - 3:30 - 7-9 Thru WEDNESDAY practice Short Subjects include: Helen Morgan and Lanny Ross