PAGE FOUR THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 25.1929 Freshman Basketball Quintet Number Two Leads in Tournament Coach John Bunn Announcees Standings of Yearling Care Sounds Cage Squads Out of the four teams which were selected from the freshman basketball entries some time ago, team member Alex Kirk was a game, according to John Bunn, freshman. The division was made by the coach to encourage competition and interest among the first year men, and to see how best the material out of the groups. Team team number 1 has lost 2 game and won one; team team number 3 has lost 1 and won 2; and team team number 4 has lost three and won one. TD O'Leary leads the group in individual scoring and helps his team to credit his Ard Dodd Tinski. Players on the undefeated team are Orville Clauch, forward; Wallace Wiley, forward; TD O'Leary, center Jim Bauch, guard; Blenn Miller Substitutes are: McNell, forward; Carin Conew, forward, and CarBenn, guard. Entries who have been showing up well in the series of games being played at Griffin, John Noble, Otis Rost, A. R. Mayer, Peter Bauch and Banny Black. The regular freshman back row group has been cut down from 12. Formal practice will be discontinued during finals, but will be resumed after the examinations, according to Coach Bann. Washington and Illinois Fencing Teams to Mee St. Louis, Mo., Jan. 22 — Washing- town meets its first intercollegiate foro on Feb. 2 when the duel artists go to Urbana to engage with the formidable Urban College. Fencing, a comparatively new sport in Washington, has stepped forward by making it easier to learn Solomon, a nale graduate and former eastern intercollegiate champion, took up fencing. Additional meetings may be scheduled with Chicago, Northwestern or Notre Dame. Inasmuch as fencing is some distance from the Valley region, any meetings scheduled must be outside that district. Washington, however, is a member of the board of directors and has an opportunity of engaging in several meetings in the St. Louis area. Women's Court Tourney Under Way Next Month The women's basketball tournament between class teams will be played off during the latter part of February. Ruth Hoover, coach, said this noon that next semester the class teams would have regular practice. --- Announcements Dr. G. Leonard Harrington will lecture Thursday afternoon at 4 instead of Thursday mornings at 10:30 from now on. This schedule will be followed all the second semester. Applicants may be made through the psychology department. His hours are from 2 to 4 p.m. on the days of his lectures. The A, S, M, E, W will meet tonight and he will speak. He will speak. Hay will speak and have pictures to accompany his lecture. There will also be a talk by Mr. Clifton in his book, J, P. Clifton will preside. More than seventy colleges and universities in the United States are now offering courses in applied aeronautics and other subjects connected with aviation. The Air Force and Yale have organised flying clubs to promote interest. For Funk's ambulance call 119..419. Unclassified seniors who have been regularly classified at one time in the College, but have not had a formal class by about four hours of advanced standing, may enroll with the regular seniors. For early enrollees, please contact the College by appointment at the College Office. College Seniors Omaha Hat Shop 717-2 Mass. St. Intramural Basketball Play Resumed Tonight Intramural basketball play will be resumed tonight in Robinson gymnasium when six games are to be played. We clean your hat, repair your shoes, shine them and deliver them to their address. Phone 255 So far 10 fraternities have 1.000 percentages in the rankings. The games will be tonight and tomorrow for all. Each second semester is well under way. A schedule of the games for February is being prepared by the intra mural office. The games they tonight include: Spierer Club vs. Delta Tau Delta, at 8; Alpha Club vs. Delta Tau Delta, at 10; Delta Sigma Ia vs. Phi Gamma Delta at 9; Pi Kappa Alpha vs. Phi Beta Pi at 9; Rice Club vs. Delta Upsilon, at 10; Pi Kappa Sigma vs. Pi Kappa Palat, at 10. Around Mt. Oread --- A snow such as the last one is a great expense to the University according to C. G. Bayles, superintendent of buildings and grounds, Havensburg University. He walks, walks, and skinned on the sleet, cost the University $235.24. Frank T. Stockton, dean of the School of Business, has been invited to speak at the Kansas retail clothes and furnishers convention in Wichita, Feb. 10-12. He will speak on "Modern Methods of Merchandising" and the strangest combination of the independent merchant in competition with chain stores. Margaret Drennon, fa 29, attended the recital of Elizabeth Rethberg, who is known as the perfect singer, in Kansas City. H. E. Underhill, who has been serving as instructor of economics the first semester as a substitute for H. F. Holtckwil, has been appointed to the staff of the department of economics at the Southwest Missouri teachers College at Springfield Mo. He will assume his new position Feb. 1. Alpha Delta Pi sorority will give a formal dinner to-night for five senior members of the sorority who will be invited to the mester. The seniors who will be guests are Irene Montgomerie, Mary Lyder, and Lois Figge. Miss Margaret Marie Fankhunter, of Great Bend, and Lloyd Livingston, fs28 of Kanapolis, were married in 1946. She is a member of Mr. Livingston was captain of the K. U. baseball team in 1927. He is a member of Alpha Tau Omega, Mrs. Marilyn Clement, an agriculture College at Manhattan. She is a member of Chi Omega. Mrs. Gertrude Pearson, Alpha X Delta house mother, will return to Lawrence Feb. 5 to resume her duties. Since the middle of November Mrs. Pearson has been in Chicopee OKa, caring for her granddaughter Kyle. For K. Muckle she acted as house mother during Mrs Pearson's absence. Strides of Science in 1928 --- A method of investigating the graphs was perfected by Dr. Mas Ladin, director of the Roeenigen Institute of the Citizens' Hospital of Zurich. For his work on tularemia, or rabbit fever, Dr. Edward Francis of the U. S. Public Health Service was awarded gold medal of the American Medical Association for a conference on awards declaring that his contributions to the knowledge of the ciliata High-frequency electric currents were found to be beneficial in checking cancerous growths of mice and chickens. The final step in scientific conquest of Goya fever, which afflicted the Inca ruler, was to be announced by four scientists of the Rockefeller Institute, or the Rockefeller Institute, by gnats. sease were the most important medical work of the year, judged on the basis of originality. A new theory that cancer is associated with an immunity to the abundance of the blood was advanced by Dr. Elizabeth McDonald, a researcher of Pompeii's research of poisoning. Injections of glucose were found to be beneficial in acute cases of encephalitis, the European sleeping sickness. A lack of the important beta hormone, which controls the water deposits of the body and the ability of the tissues to use water and which is in the post pituitary gland at the base of the brain, is an artificial supply from animal glands, Dr. Oliver Kann of Detroit, Mich., announced. Operation of apparatus transmitting short radio waves was found to produce fever in hystandries, and Dr. Larry Levine developed a College began experiments with the electrically induced fever on animals, since fever is now an important factor in the etiology of illness. A new water purifier, succinichemide, that will not deteriorate with age was announced by its discoverer, and brought up the of the U. S. Army Medical School. A new industrial hazard, chromium poisoning is definitively increasing as a result of the widespread use of lead-based solvents, was reported to the American Medical Association by Dr. Jackson Blair of Cleveland and studied by the The paper mulberry is one of the plants responsible for "hay fever," Dr. Harry S. Berton of Washington announced. Nobel Prize in medicine for 1986 was awarded to Prof. Charles Nicolede of the University of California for recognition of his typhus fever researches which have shown how the virus spreads. The Grand Cross of the French Legion of Honor was awarded to Dr Albert Calmetti of the Pasteur Institute in producing a tuberculosis vaccine. A new minimum death rate for terebrulosis reached in 1928, announced by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company is 72.1 per 100,000. Vitamin D, which prevents rickets in young animals, may also play an important portent in the development of H. bovis and F. Hes, of New York, announced. The presence of copper in the diet is a preventive of anemia, Dr. E. B. Hart, of the University of Michigan believes. Teeth, shining by fluorescent light in the dark under the influence of ultra-violet rays, reveal by dark spots the regions where decay will develop, Dr. H. C. Benedict, of the Northwest university school of dentistry found. An instrument for measuring a person's sensitivity to sunburn was invented by Dr. Robert C. Burt, of Pasadena, Calif. Dr. Hideyo Noguchi, of the Rocke- feller Institute died of yellow fever as Concise Strikingly Clear Authoritative Physics Civics Economics Chemistry Latin Spanish Biology 1. Give a real "birds-eye-view" of a subject 2. "Pigeon-bone" each in its proper place. 3. Impress the really important things on the mind. 4. Clear up all "hazy" points. Modern History American History English Grammar Elementary Algebra Intermediate Algebra Plane Geometry English Literature Ancient & Medieval History 5. Make facts stick in the memory. 68c Two tores nausea which patients have had to endure in the past. a martyr to his researches on that disease, leaving research which may have been found for administering chalomhauroli oil, the remedy for malaria. Epilepsy was produced artificially in dogs by brain operation by Dr. Lawrence O. Morgan, of the University of Illinois. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusively 1025 Mass. Read the Kansas Want-Ads. SUITING YOU that's my business SCHULZ the TAILOR 917 Massachusetts St. "It's no the richt club, laddie!" If you ever play St. Andrews, the cradle of Gowf, don't be surprised if your aged caddie silently passes you the . . . . . when you asked for your . . . . Don't argue with fifty years of seeing the best of 'em come and go. And don't feel insulted if we tell you something about your taste in cigarettes, because we were making them before you were born. We know, for instance, that when you say, "like mild cigarettes" you don't mean it at all. You really mean (dinna be fash, now!) that you like the full and free taste of good tobacco, smooth enough to be classed as guilt, but not so mild that the flavor and richness get lost. Isn't that so? Then, you'd "rather have a Chesterfield," and the sooner the better. MILD enough for anybody...and yet...THEY SATISFY CHESTERFIELD TO SENIORS Who are planning to enter the Business World What Other College Men Have Done With Kresge UGGETT & NVERS TORACED CD. *Graduating from Western Reserve University in 1921, I began business life as a retail retailer in a general work. I left my comfortable desk work and started in the stock room. I then worked successively in a floor manager. I joined the staff of the company. I then received my biggest promotion, and today I am happily located in an executive position, with increased respon-sibility.* The financial return that has come to me exceeds all that I had expected." Colby B. S. 175—Wesleyan M. S. 1971 A Bit Beta Kresge can become an assistant chemist for an Eastern manufacture until 1922 when he entered the Kresge He is now a manager of a Kresge store with a greater income than the teachers and industrial acquaintances who sought to discourage him for making such a career. A Missouri University graduate enthusiast relates the following: "In June of 1923, just after I had been born, I received a gift from my father—a skin gray beard grooming with years of experience said to me: 'Just what the future holds for you will depend largely on your health.'' I have years. Take my advice and select: some good company, begin at the bottom and work upward. I followed his advice by starting in the stockroom of a Krestee store on December 8, 1923, managing my first store, happy in the thought that I Today I am managing my first store, happy in the thought that I am on the road to success." AFTER the years of college then there comes to many men the most trying period of their careers. What place does the world have for them? For what niche has their training best suited them? Where do they fit? a It is to these seniors who have not yet fully decided on their future that this advertisement is addressed. The S. S. Kresge Company has an opportunity for college men who are ambitious enough and capable enough to reach the top—who are willing to start at the bottom. These men we train to store managers and to occupy other executive positions—well paid positions involving a share in the Kresge prefts. The men selected are given intensive preparation for their future executive positions, they are instructed in every detail of store management and they are advanced as rapidly as they become familiar with the layout and the Kresgeads of merchandising. The work is not easy but the reward is not small—a executive position in the Kresge organization which operates 510 stores with an annual volume of business close to $150,000,000. If a career such as those described here appeals to you, write our Personnel Department and a Kresse representative will be sent to give you a personal interview. What Others Have Done You Can Do A Bucknell College graduate writes, "After graduating from college with a wife, I transferred to an MBA in a position at Chemical Institute as a professor. I was dissatisfied and decided to pursue a career." I became acquainted with an enthusiastic Kreme manager, who gladly expressed my desire to become store managers. Shortly after that I started in the stockroom, received various training courses, and today although a successful store manager I am in line for mill great success. PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT 2 An alumna of the University of Michigan class of 1922 says "The most important problem confronting us the last time we went to school" is *job* that would begin when campus days were over. To make the right start in the business world was my ambition to be a part of that kind that paid fairly well to start but held no future, for stockholm job with me. I had to find a job that offered a definiteuture. I combined my education with good common sense and after applying myself diligently, I was proudly promoted to greater responsibilities. I know of no other organization where a man's efforts will be better repaid than with the Krenge Company." Today I am manager of a good sized company, and I have been assigned a mission as a CEO to define, provide you possess the necessary skills and a whole hearted desire to success. S·S·KRESGE CO 5-10-25c STORES . . . 25c TO $1.00 STORES KRESGE BUILDING DETROIT 1.