ate "Dutch Lonborg (quarterback), I want you to play just two plays this next half. Do you hear me? Formation Y and Formation X." And so forth, and so forth, and so forth, "Call nothing else but these two plays at the right time. Use other plays for decoys. And if you are licked 50 to O on this pregran, we will still be proud of you for giving the best you have. But you are not going to get licked. We are going to win. It is going te be a last half of brain against brawn." coe . "Captain Nettels, lead your men to victory! I know that you ean do it! Out and at those red-shirted devils!"- Two touchdown passes, Dutch Lenborg to Frank Mandeville, and the third - John Bunn, who was inserted into the line-up, flipped the third one to Frank Mandeville who dashed over the goal line fwr the tying touch- down, Pandemenium broke leose! A delirium of Kansas fans! They were weeping, shouting, and crying for sheer joy. Cursing, pwameling, and hugging! There was no reason manifest now. It was a courageous little team that this mad crowd was worshipping. A gamer one never wore the cleats. A David had slain a Goliath! During this autumn of 1920 a Werld War Memerial Stadium drive had been smoldering in prospect, awaiting only a prepelling stimulus to set it into motion. This stadium was to immortalize the 129 Kansas men and wemen who had died in the war service of these United States. These Kansas football men were the spark igniting the fuse that exploded one of the greatest student demonstrations in the history of the school. On the following Monday morning at a great mass meeting held in Robinson Gymnasium the students and faculty pledged $160,000 to this splendid Warld War Memerial Stadium. ile ewe the beautiful $660,000 Memerial Stadiun, which nestles in the bosem of Mount Oread at the University of Kansas, largely to this valcreus team, Chancellor Malett has asked me to head up this drive. I weuld rather not call it a drive. Many ef you on the faculty have already given in the first stadium drive just mentioned above. If you have not, and wish to join Ernie Quigley's K.U. Hale Club, I am enclosing an explanatory letter by Mr. Quigley, the Directer of Athletics. There is not one penny of the taxpayers money in this stadium building. And we do have baccalaureate, commencement, and other University functions besides athletics there. President Middlebush of the University of Missouri, pays a rental fer the Brewer Fieldhcuse for beth baccalaureate and commencement exercises. He is aiding the Missouri Athletic Association in cutting down the indebtedness on Brewer Fieldhouse. The Athletic Association at Kansas pays all the upkeep in every respect on the stadium and the grounds, I am sure that some of you faculty members oan appreciate the many useful purpeses this stadium serves besides