PAGE FOUR THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1928 Week of Clashes for Valley Teams Arouses Interes Kansas Players Have Wor Title in Championship Race for Past Six Years With every team in the Missouri valley conference engaging in basketball encounters this week, interest is intense. Interviews are line up when all have played their first games. With the exception of Iowa State, all the teams played open-ended games during the holidays. The Ames quietly ever, will catch up with the other nine valley entrants as they meet both the North Dakota and Arkansas. The schedule for the week ends. The schedule for the week is as follows: Kansas, six times champion of the valley, tangles with the Washington Bears on the auditorium court here. Kansas and Washington have been simultaneously since 1902, having played fifty games, of which Kansas has won 39, and Washington 11. Kansas has piled up a total of 1658 points against Washington, and the St. Louis team scored 1809 points against Kansas. Tomorrow Oklahoma at Iowa State Oklahoma a. and M. at Grinnell Friday Okahoma at Grinnell Oklahoma A. and M. at Drake Washington at Kansas Okahama at Drake Okahama at A. and M. at Iowa State Washington at Kansas Aggies Missouri at Nebraska One of the two games that Kansas best in 1926 was to the Washington team. Washington has triumphed in the past six years of round-robin play. Scorer Jim O'Brien Saturday Year Kansas Washingt1922 44 17 41 26 41 16 1923 34 14 41 14 1924 17 16 17 16 31 22 1925 22 22 27 21 1926 18 25 18 25 29 22 1927 31 15 31 15 27 19 For six long years the Jayhawk has won the league title, and we have keball crown of the Missouri. For as many years, other members of the conference have tried in vain to capture the title. Most of the teams in the valley have as their highest ambition that of defeating the valley leader. Many times the Kaggies, Oklahoma, and Nebraska have come out on top each year the Jayhawk has come out on top. Last season it was thought that the Kansas team was out of the valley running when they lost two contests, one to Nebraska and the other to Iowa State early in the season. However, as in Nebraska, Kansas won the championship. As this is the last season for some of the teams to play Kansas in the old valley conference, they will in all likelihood be out for the dawzhak scalm. Many of the teams are strong this year, according to critics. Oldham's first game in a series had never been, Missouri, Kansas Aggers, and Nebraska are also ranked naively. As many of the teams have important games this week, fans will be able to judge their relative strength. Time alone will tell whether the Jays' hawk will again rule as king of basketball in the Missouri valley. Roundup of a coaching career of 36 years, John W. Heisman, athletic director and head football coach at Michigan State University, completed the retirement. With the exception of Alonze A. Stagg of the University of Chicago, he coached both football and basketball at Heisman. A co-ed at the University of Cali- fornia at Los Angeles has enrolled in the surveying course. (United Press) Hollywood, Jan. 4—An immigrant's story about being shot in the film colony, has been suggested by Mack Sennett, comedy producer, in a humorous moment, but might not be as horrific. Mack Sennett Suggests Girls Immigration Quot RENT-A-FORD CO. 916 Mass. Phone 653 The peak of every summer season finds the Celluloid Rialto wielded and annually the film producer rains the Hollywood warning that Hollywood is overcrowded with girls of all types and there are many more applicants than jobs. "Every time a new beauty drops on a train with the firm intention of beheading it, you are subjected to the film town has one more person unable to carnivore a living." Sweeney denies. Sennett suggests keeping all beautiful girls out of Hollywood for a year or at least only admitting a certain quota. Kansas May Be Host to Amateur Wrestlers for Olympic Tryouts First of Its Kind for State if K. U. Is Chosen to Handle Meet in Spring Will the University of Kansas be the scene of an Olympic tryout? Coach Guy Lookbaugh thinks it will be great if the athletes are led as yet the indications are that the Olympic tryouts in wrestling for the Kansas district will be held here. If the present plans go through this season, the University of Kansas of this kind ever held in the state. The size of the Kansas district and the time of the meet is as yet only unknown. The Olympic wrestling team was held in Kansas City and the district embraced several adjoining states. While no competitions were mediated after the close of the regular wrestling season, this will be held at March of the first of April. Coach Lookabaugh has received a letter from the chairman of the board requesting that he, if the University of Kansas would care to be hosts of the meet. Lookabaugh has replied in the affirmative but no answer has been received to him. Coach Lockbaugh says, "to the meet of this group we held in Kenya. It should be of a good bit of interest to the wrestling public and all sport federations." Any amateur in the district is eligible to enter the meet and a large entry list is assured. Exploring Party Hopes to Find Artic Mummies New York, Jan. 4.—Natural numbers of the post glacial period in the Far North of Siberia are among the objectives of another arctic expedition to add to the already extensive collection of natural American Museum of Natural History. (Science Service) The expedition will be financed and directed by Charles H. Stoll, a New York lawyer and sportman, and by Harold McCrachan, widely known as a photographer of wild animals, who was in charge of the ongoing issue of Science, Capt. Robert A. Bartlett, commander of the Roosevelt when Admiral Peary reached the north pole, will command the expedition's vessel, the Morrissey, which has been used during the past months in Greenland and Baffuland. The party will explore Czar Nicholas II Land, an island of unknown size north of Cape Chelyakovsk, off the coast of Asiai Siberia, about 600 miles south of the pole. It will also visit the city of Kanezh, a country rich in minerals, as well as possessed of timber, coal, gold, lead, zinc, and other minerals, as well as possessed of valuable grazing lands. Bird and mammal resources, the mountains, however, will constitute the primary object of the exploration. A Collegiate New Year's Resolution The perfect cleaning service—Phone 101 Be fair to yourself! Resolve that you will start out the new year with a thoroughly cleaned wardrobe! Send the Daily Kansan home. Advance Cleaners N.C. LINDSTROM PLLC M.E. LINDSTROM Delta Tau Delta, Phi Kappa Psi and Betas Win Games Approximately 150 Contests Scheduled for Basketball Tournament Tournament Intramurray basket ball started Monday with three hockey games in Robbinsville and two in Delft, Delta, Kiappa Pei, and Beta Thea Pie were victorious in the three conc We Appreciate Your Business Beta Theta Pi in a running right led Delta Upsilon off the court with 45-32. But after securing a majority contest against Phi Kappa and won 23 to 10. In a context filled with exciting momenta, all six teams were on the way while Phi Delta Theta was rounding up seven. All six teams will have played in 2017 before week when they will again be scheduled. For tonight three games have been arranged which if they adhere to the standards not on Monday evening, will play against the Stetson at 8 p.m., Delta Chi will clash with Sigma Chi, at 9 p.m., Pi Delta Chi will meet Pi Alpha Delta and at 10 representatives of the Alabama A. B. and Kendall Club will show their wares. In order to handle the tournament which promises to be a crowded one, Conch John Sabo has set a rather stringent forfeit rule for teams appearing on the court late. A delay in the game will be enough to forfeit a game. To date 146 games have been arranged, not including the semi-finals and finals which will probably raise their prize money. Fifty, thirty-wight organizations will be represented on the gymnasium before the tournament has run its course. Coach Salo announces that the court will not be available for practice until after 10:30 on nights of intramural basketball games. Tuesday nights, organizations wishing to use the court for practice games will find it free during varsity games in the Auditorium and may offer a free court at the athletic office for its use then. Gamma Phi Divan Goes From Fame to Discara During the intramural basketball tournament, Coach Sibo is planning to have players practice their practical experiences in refereeing games and acting either in the game or on TV. "To have, or not to have," was the main question of interest around the Gamma Phi Beta house a short time ago. The music was built upon themselves to move the famous old divan from the music room to the upstairs, considering it ready for dis- It seems that the men of the Hill did not approve of this change. Consequently Sunday afternoon a "prominent" senior, T28, happened to be visiting at the house and he drew attention to it, which brought back to its usual place. This petition met with great approval among the other men visitors and was finally given to the executive council for arbitration. Behind closed doors the meeting came up with a decision that it would announce the decision Tuesday at noon. The men who signed the petition were called and asked to move the divan back to the music room, but he was too cold. The room appeared. However, they immediately set to work moving the divan from the hanging room down the long and widening stairs, and to their surprise found the moving a hard job for two. "A new era has come in the production of motion pictures in the United States," says Glenn Alvine, A. B. '17, advertising director of the Fox Film corporation, who is visiting his former in Kansas City, Kan. "He has brought the medium of Moviemotion to the invention of a New York chemist. New Type of "Talking Movies Will Give Actuality to Silent Drama, Picture Officials Claim "Sound can be photographed anywhere and at any time is perfect for this purpose, as it also provides possible for the audience to hear everything that took place when the picture was made. It is far beyond what we usually expect from a talking movie, which operates on the principle of the phonograph by means of a wax record synchronized with the original recording." In this new form of talking pictures a small tube makes it possible to photochip an object on a film, Mr. Allave explained. From the film the sound waves in the ray of light interact with the screen and are returned to the audience through amplifiers similar to radio amplifiers. Yes, we remodel and alter clothes. wider film than the present films. The sound part of the film is carried on a fine edge and is managed by a needle. Thus when there is no sound by the characters in the film there is no sound recorded on the film. The picture of the women's championship class basketball team, which will play Thursday at 12:30 a.m. for Thursday noon at 12:30 a.m. in the Robinson gymnastium — Miss Ruth Intramural Board meeting, Thurs day at 4:30—Miss Ruth Hoover. The Botany club will meet at 7:30 night at the home of Prof. W. C. Sugest, the Botany faculty's address on "Genetics" will be given by Helen Sumpter. Refreshments Quack Club meeting, Wednesday light at 7:30. Announcements Send the Daily Kansan home. Kappa Phi club will give a Chinese kappa, Thursday evening at their reg- ular meeting time from 7:30 to 8:30 of Mrs. Edwin Price, '122 Ohio. THE STUDENTS' MEETING PLACE When you come to Brick's to dine you are always sure of meeting the crowd. BRICK'S Manuscripts for the W. S. G. A. musical comedy should be turned in to Miss Elizabeth Mégina's office by Wednesday, Jan. 4. —Rose McCollock. Fabrics of Character go into our clothes The invention is controlled by the Fox-Case corporation which has armored a company for the installation of the apparatus in 28 theaters in the United States. Mr. Alvine said that he had heard in Kansas City in a few weeks. WHERE JAYHAWKS MEET AND EAT Suiting You That's My Business SCHULZ THE TAILOR Mass. St. at 917 You'll enjoy the congenial atmosphere as well as the delicious food we serve. We Invite Comparison Quality - Finish - Comfort Prices no higher J. B. Lowell Shoe Shop 17 West 9th BL 3 doors west of Innes Hackman Short news reels of Ruth Elder taking on her off-matched transport-Allan Scully are shown at Foch and Premier Massolini have already been produced. The early efforts for dramatic possibilities are being made in which sound plays a prominent part. The blowing sound, the cueing sound, the voices of the actors and the mass sounds fitting into the general scene were measured in their exact wave lengths just as an effect was used to amplify the sound. The New Cafeteria (Memorial Building) A four year course in naval sciences and tactics has been established at Yale University which will qualify graduates for commission in the United States navy, GIRLS-I will have for rent 2 double and 2 single rooms for second seconder. I off campus. No hill to be on right, right. 1231 Louisiana, phone 1879. Now that the holiday season is over we're sure the faculty will be glad to meet their friends again on Too Late to Classify at Thursday Faculty Night For Your Pen Needs-by Festus J. Wade President, Mercantile Trust Company of St. Louis We stock a very complete array of all the popular makes of fountain pens including— Parker - Sheaffer - Waterman's - Conklin Moore's non-leakable Come in and let us help you make your selection. Handy for Students 11th & Mass. Rankin's Drug Store Why Not Make This New Year's Resolution? Resolve— Regardless of how many New Years resolutions you have already made and broken—there's still one you can make and keep until next year. To begin making the "Red Seal" Cafe your eating place now. Your ability to keep the resolution will then rest in our hands. How We'll Help— Our convenient location, plus quality of service united with our reputation for quality of food served, are our guarantees toward doing our share. 1340 Ohio St. A trial is all we ask Jayhawk Cafe A Far-Sighted Banker's Idea of Advertising Do I believe that a banker considers reputation, as developed by advertising, in extending credit? There probably are bankers who will give a negative answer to this question and believe they are giving the right answer. The banker himself will have become subconsciously sold on the firm, through its consistent advertising. He will say, "Oh, yes, that's a But let those bankers be approached by a credit-seeking national advertiser, who has established his name, therefore a market for his goods, and see what happens. In nine cases out of ten the fact that those goods have become a household "buy-word" will be the greatest factor in granting the credit. big house—well known, good reputation," etc., not realizing that it was advertising that did the work. The next minute he may be approached by a new company, trying to make its name, and turn down the loan because too much of it is to be spent for the purpose of advertising. In the first application he has helped the big advertiser to cash in on his reputation, and in the second was depriving the newcomer of the right to build a reputation. This is only a hypothetical case, and I am glad to say I don't believe it happens as often as it did in the past. Just as we learn something new every day, so every day another banker wakes up to the underlying power and pull of advertising.