人,空心 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS VOLUME XXXVIII Z-229 Hint Early Greek Deal With Italy Rome, Oct. 31-(UP)—Reliable informants hinted today at the possibility of an early agreement with Greece under which Crown Prince Paul would succeed his brother King George II on the Greek throne, pledged to cooperation with the German-Italian "new order" in Europe. Paul, 38, is married to Princess Frederica Louisa of Hanover, a German. It was represented that Paul was the leader of a secret proItalian bloc in Greece and that after Greece had felt the full force of Italian attack there might be a change of feeling which would result in speedy conclusion of peace. Newspapers gave prominence to reports that Gen John Metaxus, the Greek strong man, had confined Prince Paul to his palace under heavy guard and might hand him over to the British to be confined in the island of Crete. NUMBER 34 Paul Is Married Under any agreement, it was said, Greece would agree to Italian occupation of strategically important areas for the duration of the European war, and probably would be asked to agree to post-war territorial adjustments, including the cession of Cianuria province to Albania and Aegean sea ports to Jugoslavia and Bulgaria. Like Rumania It was said that any chance in the Greek rulership would be effected in similar manner to that in Rumania where Kling Carol was succeeded by his son Crown Prince Michael. Gen. Metaxas would be required to change the government, and LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1940 (continued to page ei=ht) Cheer as Jayhawks Leave Rally Costs Student's Lunch More than 150 University students filed away from lunch tables hungry this noon to give a battered Jayhawk grid team a sendoff to points east. Ku Ku's, Jay Janes and just loyal Jayhawkers crowded on the platform at the Union Pacific station before 1 o'clock to send the 35 University gridmen to Philadelphia where they will contact Villanova Friday night. "Maybe they can beat our team but they While cheerleaders Hal Ruppenthal, Bob Wright and Roy Edwards were leading the aggregation in the "Rock Chalk" and the "Alma Mater," the baggage was put on the eastbound train. The players walked down to their car. Coach Gwinn Henry, following, mummered to Vic Hurt: "can't beat these students." The train left the station with the students chanting "U rah, rah, rah, Kansas." The team will pull into Philadelphia at 3:45 tomorrow afternoon and at 8:45 that evening they will line up against the Villanova Main Liners in Shibe park. The Jayhawkers will leave Philadelphia at 2 a.m. Saturday for Washington, D.C., where they will arrive at daybreak and spend the day before returning to the University. The game will not be broadcast. Bob O'Neil and Paul Hardman, ends, and Ross Relph, tackle, who received injuries in Saturday's game with Kansas State, will be missing from the Jayhawker lineup Friday night and did not make the trip east. GWINN HENRY —"they can't beat these students." First Batch of 30,000 Draftees To Go Into Service in 18 Days Washington, Oct. 31-(UP)—In another 18 days 30,000 men—most of whom had numbers in the draft lottery this week—will be inducted into the army for a year of military training. But the draft, as such, probably will not go into effect until December because officials today expected that first batch of 30.000 men to volunteer rather than wait for the compulsory call. Officials based their predictions on what they described as the cheerful response of American youth to the first peace-time conscription. The second step in that program—the lottery to determine the order in which men shall be called—was completed at dawn yesterday. Local boards will start mailing out questionnaires as soon as they have received the lottery list. Even if a man's number was drawn last, and he wishes to volunteer for training, officials reiterated, he may do so. Most officials rested yesterday after the more than $17\frac{1}{2}$ hour session of number drawing. But their staffs today were If he can qualify physically,he will be accepted,moved to the head of the list,and busy preparing official lists of the numbers for mailing to local draft boards. Local boards prepared to mail out millions of questionnaires to take an accurate inventory of the manpower available for service, including a census of dependents, a survey of the physical standards, and other information needed for selection of those fit for service. the local area's draft quota will be reduced correspondingly. When received local boards will cross out the numbers which exceed their registration numbers. Those left will constitute, in the order drawn, the local boards' guidance for the first call. Besides the 30,000 to be put in training Nov.18, there will be later calls until the 800,000 army of trainees is reached; 60,000 on Dec.2; another 60,000 on Jan.3; 90,000 on Jan.15; then 160,000 on Feb.10; and two contingents of 200,000 each on March 5 and June 15 next year. Dykstra and other selective service officials said the draft machinery was operating smoothly. Draft Director Clarence A. Dykstra said that it probably would not be necessary to call any men this year whose numbers were drawn after 3,000 had been picked from the goldfish bowl. It may be, he said, that those whose numbers were read after the 1500th drawing will not be called. That will depend upon the number who qualify for service from among those numbers drawn first. Symposium Will Present Speakers From Three Parties University voters and other interested people will be told the how and why of voting tonight at 8 o'clock in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union, when the Democratic, Republican, and Socialist parties will present a political symposium. The Young Democrats will insert the element of novelty by presenting two speakers, Abe Shaffer and Dick Demster, both law students, in its allotted 10 minutes. The Republican cause will be argued by Bob McKay, l'43, and Socialist Harold Gregg will give his party's side of the story. (continued to page eight) Will Start New Year With Music Meet Here Twenty-five of the leading music supervisors of Kansas and Missouri met for dinner last night in the Old English room of the Union building to draw up plans for an Education Music clinic, to be held at the University, Jan. 9-11. the Universi Symphony orchestra Supervisors of music will meet to study methods of band, orchestra and choir direction. Interpretations of selected material will be given by the University band, under the direction of Russell Wiley; the Univers Symphony orchestra, directed by Karl Kuersteiner; and the A Cappella choir, directed by Dean D. M. Swarthout. Other noted bands, orchestras and choirs will come, and under their respective directors give demonstrations of (continued to page eight) L. R. LIND, PH.D. -assistant professor of Romance languages whose number, 57, was drawn in the eighteenth group yesterday. If Goblins Don't, Cops Intend To Jude Anderson, chief of Lawrence police, said today that since Hallow-een is merely the last day of October, the police will consider any destruction done under the name of pranks as a misdemeanor and shall act accordingly. Many of the organized houses have organized their own police forces to cope with the egg-throwing and window-soaping spirits. Freshman men have been mustered and placed in strategic points to give the alarm of oncoming raiders. Weather Continued cloudy and cold to night and tomorrow.