a SUMMER SESSION KANSAN PAGE FOUR TUESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1939 D Goal-Ni and Athletes Make Film Debut for Paramount News Goal-Hi made its film debut yesterday afternoon on the Stadium Field with Billy Andlauer, Paramount Newsreel photographer, shooting 200 feet of the new game invented by Dr. F. C. Allen. Principals in the film are a group of University athletes, who like Goal-Hi, have never seen on the silver screen before. Dr. Bert A. Nash professor of education, and Dean D. Nesmith with seven students returned form Beloit Saturday afternoon after spending several days giving mental and visual tests at the Girl' Industrial School there. Fans of the popular new game will get another chance to see it in action tonight when the Gunners, captained by "Odd" Williams meet the Artillerymen. These teams are made up of younger boys. A still younger group will play tomorrow night when the two teams which played such a close game last week will meet again. Those who made the trip were: Rudi Wiens, Topeka; Gertrude Ruttan, Ellis; Urusla Henley, Lawrence; Gertrude Stoelzing, MinMrs. Ethel Wilson, Columbus; and Lucille Wilson, Larned. Instructor From Line of Athletes Nash, Nesmith, Students Return from Beltow School Edward B. Degroot, who comes to the University in September from the Kamehame school in Honolulu as an instructor in physical education, comes from a long line of athletes. The South Park playground in Chicago was established by his father. His brother was a star athlete at Stanford. Student to Play Kate Bender Edward also was an athlete at Stanford while in school, playing basketball and football. He specialized in the pole vault and did track running. Shirley Jane Ruble, c'41, has been selected to play the role of Kate Bender in a motion picture to be made under local supervision in Labette county. H. H. Daniels of Oswego is in charge of filming the production. The Bender family lived on a hill at the western edge of Labette county. According to legend many travelers who stopped overnight at the Bender Inn were murdered by Kate and robbed. Some believe that she was burned to death. Graduate Appointed Judge Ben Salatiel, 138, has been appointed police judge at Independence by Mayor Ralph Mitchell. Salatiel, who is also a justice of the peace, succeeds Judge S. P. Miles, who resigned. Student Undergoes Operation Earle T. Anderson, superintendent of schools at Claflin and who is enrolled in the Summer Session, underwent an emergency appendectomy operation Thursday in the Lawrence Memorial hospital. His condition is reported as satisfactory. Thank goodness! Twelve months to take things easy before another vacation arrives. The beauty about the vacation season is that if you don't pay your bills your creditors think it is because you are away. Another thing against war is that it seldom kills off the right people. The Chemistry building stinks but the building across the street is Fowler. RIDE R I D E Early and Late Horses 50c per Hour MOTT STABLES Phone 346 4 Blocks West of Campus Playground Facilities Available This Week Playground facilities on the cool campus quadrangle will be open every evening this week from 7 to 8:30. This spot has proven to be one of the most popular on the campus throughout the summer for both adults and children. Friday evening will be devoted to the children at the archery range. Weinzettel Observes New Game R. E. Weinestel, sales promotion manager of the Medart Manufacturing company, is in Lawrence watching the progress of the new Goal-Hi game, and attending to other business. The Medart company is manufacturing the goals for the game. Slip-Ups (Continued from page one) the beginning of the next semester, Sept. 23, 1919, we find this encouraging note: There will be no raiding of Wednesday night dances by the Women's Student Government Association this year. But this must have been a blind because in a clipping from the Feb. 20.1919, Kansan we see this; No University women were found at the Wednesday night dance which was raided by four members of the council of the Women's Student Government Association and Miss Alberta Corbin, adviser of women. Several University men were present. But the real gem from the whole back file is an account of a successful raid by the Disciplinary Committee on an unauthorized dance. The entire story, with killer-diller headlines: Attendance at these dances, for both men and women, is forbidden by the Senate rule which prohibits student attendance at all dances "Thrown open to the public indiscriminately at a fixed price." Imagine being told in September that nobody would raid a party you were attending and then bingo!, not six months later somebody crashes into a mid-week and catches you with your socks down. Gad. TANGO HOUNDS DESERT WOMEN WHEN W.S.G.A. RAIDS MID-WEEK DANCES Disciplinary Committee Punishes Three Women, but the Men All Get Away Spectators at Unauthorized Dances Will Be Punished, Miss Corbin Becomes Strategist BLIGHT HITS WALL FLOWERS "Tango hounds and lounge lizards first," has reversed the proud Anglo-Saxon, "women and children first," when students at forbidden dances seek to escape a raid by University authorities. Three deserted University maidens told the Disciplinary Committee Friday why they failed to escape the raid on the dance at Eagles' Hall last Wednesday night, when four members of the Women's Student Government Association and Miss Alberta Corbin, adviser of women, slipped past the dance look-outs and entered the hall. In the general rush for the fire escapes the men students pushed a side or deserted the women, crowded onto the fire escapes and got away. About nine students escaped. Not a man was caught. The tango hounds didn't stick, but deserted the women. The Disciplinary Committee decided that the three women should attend no more dances, except in their homes, until Nov. 15. One of the three is a College senior. The other two are College and Fine Arts juniors. The Disciplinary Committee also issued a warning that attendance as a spectator at any mid-week dance came under the ban just as strongly as dancing at a forbidden hop, and would be punished in a like degree. "I started to run," said one of the women students, "before I saw the raiding party." "Why did you do that?" asked a member of the disciplinary commit tee. "Because the man I was with started to run," she replied. Apparently her escort outran her. Four members of the W.S.G.A council are letter women and were represented among the raiders who with Miss Corbin slipped up to the Eagles Hall last Wednesday night in a taxi. The small boys who were standing before the hall as lookouts had not been told to suspect raiders in a taxi, and the raiders were at the entrance of the hall before their identity was discovered. Two small boys tried to dart past and up the stairs to give the alarm. A letter woman tripped them neatly and the raiding party came into the hall without the dancers having been advised of their presence. But as quick as they were, they were not quick enough for the tango hounds who crowded the women aside and got away down the fire escape. And that's the way they went to town in 1919. You sneaked into the dance; you posted lookouts; you scrambled down the fire escapes if somebody gave an alarm. And if you couldn't rate a date to the dance and you were a muscle gal you could join the raiding party. Which probably was more fun than the dance anyhow. And if your date left you during a raid, girls, you could always burn him down the next time he called by saying, Not with you, you TANGO HOUND! That'd fix him, the cad. Semi-Annual Clearance SALE SUBSTANTIAL REDUCTIONS ON THE FOLLOWING--- - Summer Suits - Wool Suits - Straw Hats - Arrow Shirts - No Belt Pajamas - Summer Shoes - Wash Slacks Wool Slacks BOYS SPRING AND SUMMER NEEDS