PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1940 High School Journalists Here Friday From 300 to 400 high school journalism students and their instructors will invade the University campus this week-end for the twenty-second annual high school newspaper conference which will start Friday morning and end Saturday noon. "Vitalizing the High School News- paper" is the theme of this year's conference. Out-of-town speakers will include Orville S. McPherson, publisher of the Kansas City Journal; Mrs. Zula Green of Topeka, better known as "Peggy of the Flint Hills;" and Prof. H. S. Hepner of South Dakota State college. The conference will start at 9 o'clock Friday morning. with the registration of delegates in the news room of the Journalism building. General sessions will be held Friday morning and afternoon and Saturday morning in the Little Theater in Fraser hall. Teal will be served by the young women of Theta Sigma Phi, honorary journalistic sorority, at 4:30 Friday afternoon. The annual dinner will start at 5:45 o'clock Friday in the Memorial Union with Roscoe Born, president of the K.U. Press club, presiding. The conference will end Saturday afternoon with the Nebraska-Kansas football game. Students will be admitted to the high school section for 50 cents. Tickets for the dinner, now on sale. are 50 cents. Four new members of the journalism faculty will be presented to the group and will speak at the general sessions. They included K. W. Davidson, who will speak of "Glamor on the Other Side;" Mr. Elmer Beth, who will speak on "The Press Covers the Election"; Mr. Siegfried Mickelson, who will speak on "Covering a Three-Hundred-Mile Beat;" and Mr. Thomas Ryther, who will speak on "A Profitable Hobby for the Beginner." Other speakers will include Chancellor Deane W. Malott, who will extend greetings to the delegates; Mr. L. N. Flint, chairman of the department of journalism; Miss Marjorie Fisk of Kansas City, Mo.; Mr. G. W. Corporon, Kansas City; Kan.; Mr. Paul Johnson, Arkansas City; Mr. Clifford D. Miller, Wichita; Arthur E. Goodwin, Merriam; Mr. Philip R. Keeler, Kansas City; Kan.; Miss Nan Spery, Kansas State College at Manhattan; and several journalism students. Mr. Goodwin, who is president of the Kansas Council of Teachers of Journalism, is journalism instructor at the Shawnee-Mission High School. He planned the program for the teachers, while Mr. Flint drew up the meeting plan for the student delegates. The Roman libra, which corresponded to our pound, weighed 10 ounces, 18 pennyweight, 15 and five-sevenths grams. The year 1940 marked the 500th anniversary of the "movable type" printing industry, 300th year of American printing and 250th year of American paper making. Chiapusso Fills Hall For Faculty Recital Apparently music lovers on the campus are impervious to to the early onslaughts of Old Man Winter, for the auditorium in Frank Strong hall seated another capacity audience of 550 on Monday night for the piano recital of Jan Chiapusso of the School of Fine Arts faculty Mr. Chiapusso began his program with the ponderous "Toccata Adagio, and Fugue in C Major" (Bach-Busoni). The composition, which is complicated in structure, was played with skill. Warming to his task, the pianist then played an all-Chopin group First came the "Sonata in Bb Minor, Op. 35," with its well known Funeral March. This was followed by the beautiful "Nocture in F Major, Op. 15, No. 1," and "Fantasy in F Minor, Op. 49." In this group the pianist was at his best. Mr. Chiapusso's third and last group consisted of "Etude in A flat Major" (de Schloeser), "The Juglerman" (Moskowsky), and "Etude-Caprice" (Dohnanyi). Mr. Chiapusso exhibited effective showmanship in the execution of these numbers. For an encore, he played "Aeolian Harp Etude" (Chopin). EXPECT LATE---never threatened. The defen starsof the game were J. Ewers and Kelchner, Sig Alph's and Dalyrmple, Teke. (continued from page one) person, and place of employment of business. Each registree sat opposite one of these interrogators and supplied the information. Registration cards filled out at the University will be sorted out and sent to the home addresses indicated thereon, where they will be turned over to the local registration boards. Registration blanks sent to the University number 1,250, and Foster said that he expected the registration figure to reach near that number by the close of the books tonight. The October issue of the Graduate Magazine will be ready for distribution today, with an article on E. H. Lindley, late Chancellor-Emeritus of the University, as the feature. "These Alumni Stand Out" is the name of a new department of the magazine. Fred Ellsworth, Alumni secretary, is editor. Grad Mag Out Today Style Plus Economy These Smart Shoes for Young Men Only $3.50 TRY A PAIR — YOU WILL LIKE THEM. Sig Alph, Beta Triumph Fischer's Store 813 Mass. Exclusive Dealer in Lawrence for Wings Shirts $1.65 Fingertip Length COATS Ons of the smartest models in the fashionable finger tip-length. Slash pockets, talon key pocket, reglan sleeves and leather button front. Colors are Nu-brown and College. Genuine Hockmeyer CORDUROY $6.95 Gibbs Clothing SUEDE JACKETS $5.95 First quality dark brown suede. Slash pockets, zipper front and zipper breast pocket. Plaid Lining. A hard blocking line gave Bill Geiger plenty of time to hit his receivers for 6-pointers as the Beta's downed the A.T.O.'s 18 to 0. Stand-outs in this line were Eberhardt, Robinson, and Burtis. The first Beta tally came in the second period on an aerial from Geiger to Dunn. The final two touchdowns resulted on Giger's long passes to Stoland and Litttooy. Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Beta Theta Pi strengthened their title aspirations in the intramural football league Monday afternoon by winning impressively from Tau Kappa Epsilon and Alpha Tau Omega. Phi Kappa Psi "C" sprung an upset defeating Sig Alph "B" 13 to 6. "WHERE CASH BUYS MORE" 811 Mass. St. Dick Harp, Sig Alph back, paced his team to a 27 to 0 triumph over the Teke's with fine running and passing. Harp tossed to Winters and Hamilton in the opening quarter to put his team in front by two touchdowns. He increased this margin by sprinting around his own left end 15 yards for a score and then heaved a 20-yard aerial to Hydon for the fourth marker. The Teke's offense 811 Mass. St. Two railroads use the same ties, but maintain separate rails, between Tavares and Orlando, Fla. Watch the Kansan for latest sports news!