2. $ \therefore $当 $ x=1 $时,函数 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS VOLUME XXXVIII LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1940 Z-229 Another FBI Investigation On K. U. Campus NUMBER 37 ★★ A college senior who asked that his name be withheld declared today that the F.B.I. investigation of Patty Bigelow, which ended happily Saturday, is not the first probe of a University student to be conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation this fall. Student Is Questioned The student has been associated in rumor recently with an alleged secret organization, the "11-11-41," which was believed to be the date set by radicals for a national uprising. For two weeks, the student said, he had been accused by several campus eign Wars which will be held in Kansas. Several of the buttons, which appeared in Lawrence, were the source of the rumor. leaders of being a leader in the 11-11-41 organization. Any basis for the 11-11-41 rumor was destroyed today when the Kansas learned that buttons, bearing the 11-11-41 insignia, were not revolutionary symbols, but merely a tag advertising the date for the national convention of the Veterans of For- The student said F.B.I. men had gone to his home town, about 60 miles from here, and talked with his parents about the student's reasonable activities on the campus. The G-men even had bits of the student's recent conversation on the Hill to prove that he was a radical. A similar story is the adventure of Patty Bigelow with the F.B.I. Patty, a college sophomore, got into hot water with the local police and the G-men over a lost invitation to a Delta Upsilon "Blitzkrieg" party. The party was last November, and Patty lost her invitation a short time later. The invitation was a rifle cartridge, intact save for the powder. Inside the shell was the German note, "Ihre nummer ist aufgestanden" (your number is up.) Since last May police and G-boys have been investigating the strange epistle, trying to uncover a fifth column in Lawrence. Saturday Patty talked to the local police chief, finally succeeded in proving that she was not an agent of the Gestapo. Homecoming Queen To Be Selected From Fast Field of 16 Candidates Barbara Edmonds will relinquish her crown and year-old reign as 1939 Homecoming queen when her successor is chosen Saturday to rule over the 1940 Homecoming festivities. Sixteen candidates for the crown have been submitted to the secret committee which will select the twenty-third ruler to preside over a University Homecoming. The following houses are sponsoring these women for queen: Alpha Chi Omega—Ruth Beeler, Topeka. Alpha Delta Pi—Marilyn Duncan, Lawrence. Alpha Omicron Pi—Beatrice Witt, Russell. Chi Omega—Billie Doris Jarboe, Cameron, Mo. Gamma Phi Beta—Greta Gibson, Altamont. Kappa Alpha Theta—Edna Givens, Fort Scott. Kappa Kappa Gamma—Shirely Tholen, Leavenworth. Pi Beta Phi—Jean Hinshaw, Bennington. Sigma Kappa—Jeanne Moyer, Lawrence. Corbin Hall—Jean Steele, Kansas City, Mo. Miller Hall—Evelyn Nielson, Monument. 1005 Indiana—Mary Madge Kirby, Stillwell. Delta Gamma Colony—Helen Louise St. Clair, Lawrence. 1244 Louisiana-Isabel Rein, Russell. 1247 Kentucky—Alice Louise Brown Kansas City, Kan. The candidates have been asked to assemble at Hixon's studio at 8 o'clock tonight to have a group picture taken, which will be used for press releases. It was announced that formal dress would be preferred. The queen and her three attendants who will reign over the Homecoming festivities Saturday will be chosen by a secret group of seven. It has not yet been decided when the winner will be announced, but the decision is expected the last part of the week, Walter Keeler, chairman of the Homecoming queen committee, announced. Nation To Polls Today BULLETIN Students and faculty members who have not voted are reminded that the polls close in Douglas county at 6 o'clock tonight. This also includes the absentee ballot board at the county clerk's office. Those who wish to vote and do not reside in Douglas county should cast their absentee ballots with the county clerk. The names of the county officers in the voter's own county must have been sent in to make the ballot valid. New York, Nov. 5.-(UP) The unprecedented issue of a third term went to the people today. They are choosing between Franklin D. Roosevelt and Wendell L. Willkie for President of the United States. The National election day weather was generally fair. Stirred by political dispute as it has not been since 1916, the Nation has registered 50,- 000,000 voters and the largest poll in history is under way. Republicans are battling not only (continued to page eight) Canuteson Hits Polio Rumor Dr. R. I. Canuteson, director of Watkins Memorial hospital, today branded as false the rumor that the hospital was treating a case of infantile paralysis. A student was sent to his home in Atchison Friday, Canuteson said, and an unverified report from there has indicated the man may have paralysis. The hospital sent the student home when it was believed he might be afflicted. "There isn't and hasn't been such a case in the hospital," Doctor Canuteson said. More procurement inspectors are needed at the air corps, Wright field, Dayton, Ohio, for inspection of aircraft, engines, instruments, parachutes, aircraft propellers, tools, and gauges, it was announced by the United States Civil Service commission. Want Men for Jobs K-Club Looks To Frosh Rule Freshmen may be in for another beating. Thursday before the Nebraska-Kansas football game, freshmen were required to wear their skull caps, walk on only one side of the street, and cross at designated places. K-club members enforced these rules with paddles. At least that is what K-club members will discuss at the meeting at 7:30 o'clock tonight in the K-club room of Robinson gymnasium. Art Collection On Exhibit The department of painting has brought a collection of cartoons, sketches and mural designs to the University. They will be on exhibition in the south gallery of Thayer museum this month. Here To Replace Eda Paddock Miss Roberta J. Tucker, who replaces Eda Paddock as Y.W.C.A. secretary at the University, arrived "continuing to press重生" (continued to page ei=ht) Frosh Voters Cast Ballots On Thursday By JIM SURFACE Two more days and nights of ballyhoo, and the life of independent freshman students will resume normalcy when the class election Thursday culminates the fall campaign of the Hill's two major parties, the Progressive Student Government League and the Society of Pachacamac. For the last two weeks the home life of freshman voters has been disrupted by politicians from each of the parties, while the victims listened to the sterling qualities of each party's candidate. It is about this time in a campaign when the politicians put on a final drive and the voters, filled with propaganda, put up signs warning off any would-be vote seekers. Dorms A Candidate Factor The biggest imponderable in the election is still the influence of the dormitories. Both parties have been campaigning actively in all three men's houses, and both platforms refer to themselves as the staunch defenders of more dormitories. Most politicians, even Pachacamacs, will grant a slight P.S.G.L. majority in the dorms, but the question of whether they vote as a solid block or whether they split their vote remains to be answered. In Hill politics, the campaigns are contests of personality and not of principle. For this reason, the candidate who makes the most friends during the campaign will win. By friends, it is understood that the treasure hunt goes on in the Independent houses. The organized houses are pledged to one party or the other, but the self-sufficient Independent man is bound by no pledge, and it is his vote which swings the election. On Thursday he will give his answer. Freshman Candidates seeking the favor of the electorate are: President-Dale Ewing (P.S.G.L) and Jack Milam (Pachacamac). Treasurer—Bill Brunwel (PS.- G.L.) and Roy Shofa (Facachaeuse). Men's Student Council Representative, (two to be selected)—Arthur Nelson (P.S.G.L.), Marion Haynes (Pachacamac), Jack Brown (P.S.G.L.), and Bill Porter (Pachacamac). (5)