PAGE FOUR . MONDAY, MARCH 27, 1933 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Did You Know That: Charles Bachman, newly chosen coach of Michigan State College, received a great ovation when he turned up in Lansing Mich., the other day. At the game, he and the crowd that included such coaches as Harry Kippe, and Hunk Anderson. . . Hordage, Oklahoma football mental, is holding spring football games every Saturday between two pickets teams and so far there has been two games. You may think it of 0 games must be teaching great defensive ability down there. . . The national A.A.U. officials did not do things half way in their recent suspension work—It took in the entire Henry's team and it seems as long as no other men would play, other men who played in the same game with him will also remain suspended. The University of Michigan took its second consecutive Big Ten swimming title last Saturday without losing to two other boxers. boxers took part in the Eastern Intercollegiate boxing tournament held at Pemm College college last week. . . Attention Dr. F. C. Allen—the student body and officials at Pemm State college reserves and backkers at the boxing tournaments held there last weekend. Weather makes no difference in Southern California as far as hockey is concerned—there being a Southern California collegiate hockey league . . . Coach Howard Jones, of the national champion U. S. C. eleven, has a small squared of 17 out for spring football practice, but the two teams are men and squadmen who will be fighting for the two tuckle and one end berths vacated by graduation . . . The Pittsburgh Teachers from Kansas will enter the Armour Rails at the Armour Institute of Technology fieldhouse to be held April 1. This event is one of the biggest indoor events of the year and will have such teams as Indiana, Big Ten indoor champ, and Wisconsin, Big Ten outdoor champ. The Big Ten had a fencing meet last week at the University of Chicago field house which was won by the University of Illinois. There will not be a scarcity of lettermen at Nebraska next fall after looking over the players out of spring football. . Henry Bauer will be back in the Nebraska football team for a year and the Suer-Bauer-Masterson backfield combination will be hard to stop in Stig S six iridron circles. . Decreased Football Receipts Force Curtailed Athletic Budgets College Sports Lose Money Philadelphia. — (NSFA) — Although the condition of college sports in the east is cause for concern, a nation wide survey conducted by the New York Times shows that the Eastern Rockies are in most sections of the country. In every section except the Rocky Mountains, where there has never been any football inflation and where the falling off in revenue from the grid game has not been so serious, collegiate athletics are in the economic depression more than here. The results of the Associated Press survey, which showed that schools remotely situated from the centers of population suffered the most in the way children learned to read in all sections of the country. For instance, the University of Southern California at Los Angeles had its biggest football records of its history in 1982 while Stamford, at Palo Alto, and Caldwell, at Berkeley, suffered a drop in revenue. Purdue was the only team of the Big Ten which made more money last year from football than in 101. Although Michigan's total attendance was within double digits, it was far below normal because of the reduced price of admissions. Northwestern was especially hard hit, its receipts being about $150,000 under the new deal. Michigan crew, and Wisconsin, Michigan and Minnesota have dropped hockey. PROFESSOR TAIT'S MOTHER MUST UNDERGO OPERATION Professor and Mrs. R. S. Tait were called to Kansas City to be present during an operation on Professor Tait's mother, today. Professor Tait will probably return to classes tomorrow, he said, but it is probable that frequent trips to Kansas City will be made until he is assured that his mother is out of danger. Mrs. Tait will probably will stay in Kansas City. Professor Tait is an associate professor of mechanical and industrial engineering on the Hill. Fencing at the University of Kansas by Dr. James Nalsmith The art of fencing, which has been defined as the art of becoming skilled in the use of the different kinds of swords, was practiced by the Romans. This was almost a necessity where combatants with the swords fought before great crowds and it was then a situation of life or death to the combatants. Italy was the first nation to take the matter up seriously in the middle ages and it spread to Spain and then to where it became the national sport. There are at the present time, three main types of fencing. The French, which places more importance on the technique and sportmanship than on the actual winning. The one touched is the one to acknowledge the point against himself. The attack is always in a direct line. In the Italian style, the main object is to reach the point aimed at and for this reason the attack may come from Shuttle Hurdle Event to Be Held This Year Demand by Coaches Causes Dr. Allen to Include It in Relays The 480-yard shuttle hurdles event will be retained on the Kansas Relays program in the eleventh annual holding race. The event was announced today by Dr. F. C. Allen, manager of the Kansas Relays. The shuttle hurdles event had previously been announced as dropped because it was too difficult to cause the event to be retained. Coaches Ward Haylett of Kansas State College and George Bresnahan of the University of Iowa, both express a desire that the event be Iowa won the shuttle hurdle event here last year in 1,92.5, to equal the meet record; Kansas State College was Nebraska, third; and Kansas fourth. HIGH SCHOOL ENTRY BLANKS OUT Official entry blanks have gone out from the University of Kansas athletic office to more than 600 Kansas high schools for the twenty-ninth annual interscholastic track and field meet to be held here April 21. The meet is open to members of the Kansas State High School Athletic association. All contestants at the high school meet will be invited to remain over here to attend games that will be played lays on the next day, as guests of the K.U. Athletic association. The High School meet draws more than a hundred Kansas high school says to Lawrence to compete and in the fall to follow their school routs to follow their teams. The interscollastice meet was won last year by Arkansas City in Class A, and by Kansas Vocational High School of Topeka, in Class B. The meet this year will again be constricted in two classes: the first 190 enrollment competing in Class A, and all schools under that enrollment in Class B. CLOWNS TO FEATURE CIRCUS OF OREAD TRAINING SCHOOL A circus displaying physical education will be given by Oread Training School Tuesday, April 11, in Robinson gymnasium. All the students enrolled in physical education will take part in the demonstration. Roosevelt Gets Swimming Pool Washington, March 27—(UP) The house today approved acceptance of a public donated swimming pool at the White House for President Roosevelt. A total of $2,656 had been subscribed by newspaper readers in several large cities. The program will include folk-dancing, tap-dancing, and solo dancing by the girls, and the boys will do some building, tumbling, wrestling, and spring dancing. Clowns will feature the circus. Practice teachers having charge of this work are planning the program under the supervision of Miss Elizabeth Dunkel from the Performing Arts department at the University. The Oread orchestra will play. The public is invited E. C. Qigley, St. Mary's well-known referee, will be the guest at the athletic interview to be presented over station KFKU. Thursday, March 30 at 6 p.m. several time on this program with Professor Edwin R. Ehlel. Quigley on KFKU Mutchef Speaks in 'Topeka Matteau' at a mathematics speech, on the subject. "A New Education for the Changing World," at the Topeka Unitarian church yester- day morning. His talk was one of the most important speeches of a World I Would Like to Live in." Mitchell Speaks in Toneka any point within the limits of the field. In the college sport, the aim is to touch the opponent. All the fine points are disregarded and the judges determine whether a touch has been made or not. In St. John's Military Academy just outside of Paris the students took up basketball and played according to as in fencing. Everything well went until a team met a team from the United States. The French called fouls on themselves and of course they were fouled. of the A. E. F. called any fouls on themselves. They learned that it was the custom in the United States to await the decision of the official and the young French players soon accommodated themselves to this new Rifle Team in Last Match national Intercollegiate Athletic association is taking up the matter of formulating rules for this sport and it will soon be a recognized sport in the world. Ed Smiley Makes First Perfect Score of Season In the concluding match of the regular telegraphic match season, the men's team beat the women's team in out of the possible 4000 points. Ed Smiley, c34, fired a perfect score for the prone position, which was the first perfect score made by a member of the national team from this club. Contesting teams for the week end March 25, were the University of Hawaii, Michigan University, and Syracuse University of New York. The 10 high scores for the match, according to Hall Taylor, c'33, captain, are as follows: Ed Smieley, 374; Craig c'36, 368; Hall Taylor, 367; Robert Neale, c'35, 369; Royer Heueran, b'35, 369; Mulligan, b'35, White, c'33, 365; Sam McKenna, c'36, 343; L. Cooper, c'36, 341; and E D. Leigh, c'33, 357. A special match will be fired this week in which five men will represent the entire team. The men chosen for this match are: Ed Smiley, Hill Taylor, Sam McKone, Royce Rearwin, and T. Craig. James A. Bauch, Olympic decathlon champion and world record holder, who arrived in Lawrence Saturday, said he had been a member of the valley Valley A. A. U. decathlon event at the Eleventh Kansas Relays to defend his title and meet record set in winning the event here last year. The team competes for the Kansas Athlete Award. JAMES BAUSCH MAY DEFEND RELAYS DECATHLON RECORD He plans to confer, with Dr. F, C. Allen, director of athletics today concerning his entry for the decathlon event. Women's Intramurals WOMEN TRAIN CARS If enough women are interested, a track team will hold this spring, Miss Rhoe Ruther announced today. Couch H. R. Wargiss will hold training classes at 10:30 on Tuesday and Thursday, and on Monday, Wednesday, and Fridays if there are a sufficient number enrolled. All those who wish to enter should sign up on the gym bulletin board immediately under the event in which they wish to compete. Women's Track Meet Planned GENERAL STUFF c+5 c+5 c+5 c+5 c+5 c+5 c+5 c+5 c+5 --c+5 c+5 c+5 c+5 c+5 c+5 c+5 c+5 c+5 Students are eligible to receive the many prizes to be given at the Lawn-Trade Trade Show this week. There will be over $200 worth of gifts given away besides incidental prizes given by individual merchants. The show opens Wednesday night at 8th and New Hampshire streets and is planned to be the biggest thing of its kind ever to be held in this community. Sylvia graduates from prison several years before her husband gets his diploma. A shower forces her to go out alone, and she is short a few marbles and needs a bit more drive. The Pick-up-supplies both shorts and they climb on top of the stairs. A member the husband! He gets out of jail and causes trouble. Sylvia Sidney and George Raft make a good team in "Pick-Up" at the Dickinson. It will be worth while. Make plans to attend sometime before Saturday. Don't Hoard It All. It Only Takes 25c, 35c or 50c to Get Your Heels Straightened. We clean any kind of shoe ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP 1017 Mass. 11 W. 9th Free tickets may be obtained from merchants with every dollar purchased or paid on account. "Pick-Up" is above average and carries with it good shorts and a fair comedy. Weavers RENTAL LIBRARY The management at the Dickinson Newest Fiction and Non-Fiction No Registration Fee 3 days — 10c The New Parker Pen Holds 102% More Ink Than Other Pens. $125 WEAVERS—First Floor GENUINE ALEMITE and FIRST-CLASS CAR WASH A REVOLUTIONARY PEN! The new invention abolishes the rubber sac— it is vacuum filled. Rankin's Drug Store "Handy for Students" Firestone CARTER SERVICE This Parker Vacuum Filled Pen with an Eversharp to match is now on sale at--has all plane laid for the big Hollywood Primere, scheduled for Wednesday. 11th Mass Phone 678 M. Orde intellectually with a tendency toward an Oxford accent should see "Our Betters" at the Patee, with Constance Bennett. We were never thoroughly sold on the Bennett technique, but she has only one part. The story deals with the adventures of rich American girls and young women. sophisticated, too much so, as a matter of fact, to have that elusive quality known to the profession as "box office". In our opinion, Minnie, the Duchess of something or other, was the greater part of the picture. She was exceptionally good and can do a great deal to help aspiring Oxonians of Kansas to synchronize their flat "a's" with gestures. Tonight is the last time to see "Our Betters." Tomorrow comes Jack Williams. "We're Good," BeGood "concern the rapid rise of Jonsey, a sailor with pugilistic aspirations and a gin-woman complex. Sandwich Time FOR LUNCH Sandwich Pie Milk 21c at the NEW PRICES Rotation $ 2\frac{1}{2} $ per cue Swede's for Billiard's 731 Mass. St. Phone 540 The Dickinson Leads — Others Follow DICKINSON TONITE - TOMORROW SHOWS 3 - 7 - 9 MAT. and TILL 7 - 26c AFTER 7 - 25c GEORGE RAFT IN “PICK UP” Added JIMMIE GLEASON in 'ROCK-A-BYE BABY' SYLVIA SIDNEY PLAN NOW TO ATTEND THE ONE and ONLY GRAND IN LAWRENCE — WEDNESDAY NIGHT DICKINSON THEATRE HOLLYWOOD PREMIERE This is the original . . . The Premiere you have been hearing about . . . And the one you will want to see. SEE STARS PARADE 30 Local People Impermate Your Favorite Movie Stars. Stars Will Arrive in Front of Theaters at 6:45. Stars Will Play Live Over the Public Address System. Stars Will Parade on Sight at 9 p.m. Wilder Winners are Selected COME EARLY For Choice Standing Room to See the Stars Arrive Among Band Music . . . Flood Lights . . . and Fireworks. ALSO world premiere of "GOONA GOONA" WEDNESDAY of PRE-EASTER FASHIONS By 20 Living Models 50 Million CandlePower SUN ARC Positively the Most Powerful Light Ever Shown in Lawrence See It in Operation and PREMIERE in the Middle West of "THE KEY HOLE" Starring Kay Francis Geo. Brent in Their Latest SMASH HIT — ALSO — Hollywood Premiere In Gorgious Technicolor Beautiful Girls - Fast Comedy and Latest Musical Hits NOTE: Stars will start arriving at the Patte Theatre in 7 p. m., dressed in the season's smallest fashion and they will be presented in front of the theatre under the direct daylight conditions. This powerful light brought direct from the Metropolitan cities for this mighty show and gala demonstration which inaugurated the opening of the Lawrence Spring Trade Show.