PAGE FOUR THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1926 Basketball Squad Will Take on Two Oklahoma Games Final Conference Standing in the Missouri Valley Will Be Affected by Result ten members of the Jayhawk basketball squad accompanied by Dr. Forrest C, Allen left this morning on a trip during which they will meet the two Oklahoma members of the conference in games which will have an important bearing on the final stings of the Missouri Valley conference. The first game will be with the Oklahoma Agries at stillwater, Friday night, and then twice-four hours later on Saturday afternoon, the sound will meet the valley-leading Oklahoma quintet at Norman. **Aggie Game to Ice Stir** The game with the Aggies will undoubtedly benefit from their defeat at the hands of the Jayhawks here last week, they lost to Missouri and Washington by only a two-point margin for each game. Tuesday night they led the University of Oklahoma team by four points with only ten minutes remaining, but only a two-point victory by Oklahoma presented an Aggie victory. Little needs to be said about the strength of the University of Oklahoma team and the impact that it has had on our earlier meeting of the teams this season at Lawrence. Oklahoa succeeded in defeating Kansas by overcoming a first half deficit. **Alumni to Give Banquet** On the trip, theku team will be on Thursday by the Kansas alumni of that city. The team will work out late this afternoon at the Elles gymnasium. A banquet will be given in honor of the ku team. They will leave for Stillwater sometime in the evening. After the Agrigente game, they will return to the night. The Oklahoma game will probably be broadcast from WNADA the Sonner broadcasting station. The wave length of that station is 2425 m. Julian Rabatson will act as trainee for the team on the trip, as "Friish" Kelly, regular trainer, is ill with the "flu." Fred Daniels, who is counted on by Karl SebLENdan to win some points in the high jump at the Kansas-Missouri meet tonight, will go to Oklahoma direct from Kansas City and will meet the team at Arkansas City. The equal members making the trip are: Captain Beigard, Petersen Gordon, Schmidt, Burton, Zuber, Laten, Daniels, Prodentf, and Kroenert. Hillyards to Play Friday Fast Game Expected in Clash With Schooleys When the Hillary basketball team takes the floor Friday night in the auditorium in Kansas City, it will be pitted against one of the leading independent teams of the city. Their opponents will be the Schoolyears, who defeated the Hillarys in the last year in Iowa. The School-team game is very enviable record thus far this season and have been playing their usual fast game. Playing with the Hillaryards are such players as Starbuck, one of the strongest defensive guards in the game today; Mueller, of Rocky Mountain and Colorado college fighter Goodenough, of Nebraska, and possibly Moseby, a former star at guard position when with the University of Kansas team. Playing with the Athletic Club will be Tuskerman, as center. His teammates will probably be based with "East" Browning holding down the other, while Wilkin, a former Kansas star, and Sandern, will play the guard positions. Two days after this contest comes the Hillary-K, C. A. C. game. This should be one of the greatest games this season, for the Hillarys have suffered but one败 this season and three others have finished clear. Both have played some of the leading collegiate and independent teams of the country. Budget Committee Calls for Enrollment Reports Dian J. G. Branit has called upon each department of the college for a report of the semester's enrollment in the department. This information will be used in connection with the preparation of the budget. Sessions of the budget committees are held usually in March and April. The committee for each department consists of the deans of the schools in which the department offers courses and the head of the department. The dean of the Graduate School is chairman of all budget committees. RIVAL CAPTAINS IN SATURDAY'S GAME Belgard Dunlap Captain Welfred Belgard of the Kansas Jayhawks, and Captain John Dunlap of the University of Oklahoma, whose teams will battle for first place in the valley race Saturday night at Norman. Both men play in the guard position, and both are playing their last last. Missouri Doped to Win From Kansas Tonight in Annual Indoor Mee Jayhawk Prospects in Relay Loom as Only Possibility for an Upset Dope has it all figured out that Missouri should win the twenty-third annual indoor dual meet in Convention hall tonight, but the Jayhawkers might spring a surprise and turn in victory over the confident jungle beast. Missouri can arrange the dopart chart so that its victory seems almost assured the Kansas authorities, with good deal of jugging, find only possibilities. Kansas dopesters concede several events to the Tigers but are hopeful of pulling an upset and winning the game. If Kansas is out to the mile relay with this race the deciding factor, it is very probable that Kansas will win as the Crimson and Blue runners made faster time in the game. A C, A invitation meet than the Tigers. Charting the meet has been unusually difficult this year since both schools are depending upon new men in several events. The Tigers are practically assured of the field events with a number of experienced men being entered. In fact, Kobe put high, jump and pole vault. Rochett, Potts, and Lancaster look like sure winners in these events. Kansas is well fixed in the short races with Captain Rooney, Wongwai, and Grady fighting for places. Rooney was defeated by Farkey by a few minutes but could not surprise Kansas followers to see the middet captain score a victory tonight. Kansas is exceptionally strong in the middle distances having experienced men in Watson and Lewis. The Jayhawkers are especially strong in the quarter-mile event with entrées to the Knicks and Co. Cooper, Renew, Woods and Watson. "Mae" is taking his 90-piece band to instil the fighting spirit in the Kansas runners. This is the largest musical organization Kansas ever has sent to the yearly indoor battle on the boards. Faculty Club to Hold Musicale The University Club will hold a musical at the club house Sunday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock, according o Prof. C. F. Nelson, social secretary f the club. Invitations have been nailed, and the program has been arranged. Prof. C. S. Skitton will be composing and several members of the faculty und students in the School of Fine Arts will illustrate selections from he opera. Tonight's meet will start at 8:30 o'clock and will be over two hours long. The officials have become adept in dealing with the crowd, and there is little delay between races. Tickets for the meet can be obtained from A. A. C. or tonight at Convention Hall. Although Crosby Gaige, the producer, states there are too many theaters in New York because there are not enough good plays to fill them, he believes that the American drama is improving and that present day movies actors rank with the stars of old. The football team from Drake University has received an offer from the University of Hawaii to play a post-season game. The players Ole Solem, Drake university athletic director, indicated that the game would be played if permission were granted by the university. Drake Is Offered Post Season Game in Hawaii The remarkable showing of the Drake team the last two years has made it a great drawing card and it is likely that if the trip to the islands is not taken some other important intersectional game will be scheduled. The Bulldogs have played two important games out of the valley in the last two years, one with the University of Texas and another with Southern Methodist University of Texas. Although they lost these games, they made a strong showing in spite of the auction changes of the season encountered in the southern states. World Athletes to Clash Students on the Hill who have any talent for entertaining may have an opportunity to perform, according to the management of the Bowersock theater. In past years a number of student productions have been presented at the Bowersock and have proved to be successful. There is a great deal of talent on the Hill that the management believes and is considering amateur night as a part of the regular program. It is also probable that other stars will enter. Chief among these may be Emerson Norton, formerly of the University of Kansas. Norton won the declation at the Illinois indoor reals last year. Chariy Hoff of Norway, world's champion pole-vaulter and all-round athlete, has challenged Harold Osborn in the international test of athletic ability. Both Hoff and Osborn were in the Olympic games, but due to an injury to the Norwegian star they did not compete. The decathlon event in the games. Hoff, since coming to this country, has taken the place of Nurmi as a record breaker and is one of the most popular foreign stars to come to this country. He now holds the world out and indoor vanity recording. Oxborn has expressed his hope that all players will go around in all around apremacy. The event will probably be tagged at the Columbia games in New York. Alaska to Be Mapped in Geological Survey; Airplanes Will Be Used Hoff Challenges Osborn in Test of All-Around Ability Bowersock Management to Hold Amateur Nights Albert Kerr, "c26, has been placed in charge as director of the work. "Many students," said Kerr, "have expressed a desire to try out on the professional stage. The new policy of the Bowersock will give them an opportunity to do so upon their own work and challenge to evaluate their own work." Expedition Is Under Direction of Lieut. Ben H. Brown of U.S. Navy of U. S. Navy Portland, Orca, Feb. 18—Forty-thousand square miles of country covered by snow-cans, great forests, glaciers and volcanoes in Southeastern Alaska will be mapped this summer from the air. This type of entertainment will include a variety of talent which may be used in musical numbers, prologues and act sketches, or staging and dancing. For years the geological survey has been struggling to complete its maps of this part of Alaska, but the ground is untrackable. It is in many places almost impossible. So the navy has been asked to assist. The expedition will be launched this spring under the immediate direction of Lieut. B. H. Wyatt, well known navy pilot, Lieut. M. A. Schuh, engineering and maintenance officer. The heat is gigantic. The territory to be mapped extends from the Aleutians and the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes to Kebelikan. The rough country, fogs and clouds present hazards. Most of the mapping will be done from an elevation of 10,000 feet. The expedition is styled the 'greatest new geographical expedition ever at tapped'. Dyche Museum Receives New Fossil Specimens The date set for the physical education program has been set for March 13. The women' part of the program will consist of country folk dances, clogging, pyramid building, and interpretative dancing. The people on the program will be chosen from the regular gymnastism classes. The department of vertebrate paleontology has just received a good specimen of humerus and one large vertebrae of a mastodon which was discovered on the Arkansas river in Reno county. The specimens were donated to the museum by W. A. Stacy, county engineer of Reno county. The mastodon belongs to the plioceae period and is found in the United States, according to H. T. Martin, assistant curator of paleontology. Clayton Finch, c'25, was elected to the office of night manager at a special meeting of the Kangan board Monday afternoon in the journalistic building. He will succeed Floyd Simonton, c'28. Marcefling - - - 75c Albert Bloch Announces Art Exhibition Schedule K. U. Beauty Shop 727 Mass. Phone 1028 The exhibition schedule for the department of drawing and painting was announced today by Prof. Albert Leinberg, Chairman of the exhibition sent through the American Federation of Art, showing the work of contemporary Cleveland artist will An exhibit of water colors by Raymond Jones, of Santa Fe, N. M., will be exhibited in the Art Gallery in May oil paintings by Prof. Raymond Eastwood of drawing and painting will be exhibited. The annual exhibition of watercolors will be a department for the year will be held during the early part of June. All of these exhibitions are shown in rooms 302 and 305 central Administration building. D. U. Fraternity to Hold Conference at Columbia A provise conference for nine chapters of the Delta Uma fraternity will be held at Columbia, Mo., March 10 and 29. The chapters who will speak are Minnesota, Kansas, Ames, Nebraska, Northwestern, Iowa, Chicago, and Illinois. Vice-President Dawes, Rupert Hughes, co-Governor Hyle, and Charles Hughes, all members of the university been invited as honorary guests. It is planned to hold three business meetings during the conference. The first one will be Friday afternoon. The second one will be Tuesday, big, and a third Saturday afternoon. The new The new Thompson Bros. Spring Oxford's will keep your feet out of the slush—$10 —and a Varsity Slicker will save your new Topoint. Slickers — $5 up Toppoints — $25 to $35 In action Williams shows its stuff! JUST a small squeeze of rich, white Williams Shaving Cream whips up into dense, wet lather. Lather that quickly saturates your beard, that softens the razor's touch, that leaves your face cool and soothed! Try this master shaving cream. Large-size tube 35c; double-size 50c, containing twice as much. At all dealers'. Friday night a banquet will be given in honor of the representatives and Saturday night a formal dance. Each chapter is to send three delegates. ALWAYS INSIST ON WILLIAMS Harry A. Smith, a former attuned of the University of Kansas, has recently been appointed a member of the American delegation to the preliminary conference on disarmament. During the World War he was connected with the drafting of laws, rules and regulations for the government occupation, the training of troops, and was also in command at Cobbell, Germany. Since then he was in charge of the army post at Port Leavenworth until recently. PHONE Five can ride for the price of one YELLOW CAB 711 Suiting You—That's My Business SCHULZ THE TAILOR 917 Mass. St. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. 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