。 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XXXVI OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1938 NUMBER 35 PLOW AGGIES UNDER 27-7 Drive For Funds Begins Tomorrow University Band N eds $800 From St d en t Contributions for Trip To Washington, D.C. A University-wide drive for funds to send the Jawahk band to Washington, D. C., Nov. 9-13, begins to morrow. Outstanding feature of the campaign is that the student who collects the largest amount of money toward the quota will be given a free bus trip to the nation's capital, along with the University musicians. A meeting of all organizations and students interested in joining the drive will be held at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in room 102 of the Journalism building. Final plans of the house-to-house canvass will be discussed; an administrative subcommittee will be appointed by Blaine Grimes, C99, head of the charge of affairs, Prof. Russell Wiley, director of the band, will explain details of the campaign. The goal sought is $800. This amount, added to $1,500 already amassed by the band, will allow the group to accompany the Kansas football team to the game scheduled with the University Newsletter. Saturday, Nov. 12 the Ku Ku's and Jay James will be the backbone of the drive for funds but all others are urged to enter the competition or the award. Any student may try to win the trip. His only opportunity is that the all band members are giving, and purchase of two meals on the return trip. Backbone of Drive Posters are being prepared and will appear on the campus tomorrow. At the same time, donation boxes will be provided for contributions made on the Hill. Chancellor E. H. Lindley has given his consent to the band to stay in Washington an extra day and redux of "The Lick" in untimed umni in the capital city sent a tele- by Jimmy robertson Continued on page 2 Thoughts while thinking: If John Randolph Tit bit a dog I wonder if it would be news . . . Or why the Beta's claim their colors are carmine and navy blue but not gray, likely to be elected candidate for Homecoming Queen . How many out-of-season comic valentines will I get this week? on the... SHIN dark doings and stuff at the Alpha Chi house—and this is positively gruesome! Eleanor Klappenbach notice a sinister smell in her room that eleanor was ill, an examination revealed it was a dead fish—in her pillow case. The other morning Rebe woke up with black spots all over her face. The spots were caused by silver nitrate that January and Klappenbach had put in Carbet's witch-hase! the night before. Jeanette January experienced the same experience. The victims then combined their brain power and deduced the criminal was Reba Corbett. So Klappenbach, to rebutli, crashed two eggs in what she thought was the Sleeping Reba. But it was her roomy. Henry Halderman-Julius and Robert Hagen have a way of giving girl friends the third degree. It's a favorite trick of thurss to drive ont Continued on page 2 On to Washington Said C. C. Carl, downtown business man, yesterday, as he signed a check for $5: "I want to do my part to send the best dog-gone band in the west back East." Contributions are not solicited from town-nephew, but their donations are accepted. The actual drive for funds to send the University Band "On to Washington" begins Monday evening. The thermometer bubbled a little over the week-end even though half the student body had gone to Manhattan. Watch it climb from now on out. Celebration Goes on Air Anniversary Celebration Will Be Broadcast Over National Hook-Up University students and alumni throughout the country will be listening in at 10:30 Wednesday p.m. Nov. 2, when the University of Kansas goes on the air in celebration of the 75th anniversary of its founding. Eighty-eight stations comprise the blue network of the National Boardcasting company which will carry the program. William Allen White, famous Emporia editor and former student, will be the chief speaker. He will be introduced by Chancellor E. H. Lindley, who will make a few preliminary remarks. The-coast-to-coast program will last for half an hour, and will be broadcast by station WREN directly from the ballroom of the Memorial Union building. Dramatic students under the direction of Prof Allen Crafton will depict events in the early history of the University Club, the University Clubs, and the University Band will provide musical entertainment. Mr. White will also speak at the dinner and program which will precede the national broadcast. Robert will show early-day Kansas picture Tickets for the dinner are 75 cents and are available at the business office. The dinner begins at 6:30 p.m. In addition, alumni, friends and friends of the University. Thursday is exactly 75 years from the day Governor Thomas Carney issued a proclamation date to the state university. Classes did not begin until (Continued on page 3) Jones Closes Christian Mission Week Final Speaker of Week Says the Three Great Needs of Mankind Can Be Met by Religion A genuine spiritual awakening on the Campus was the objective of religious week, Dr. E. Stanley Jones, religious leader, author, and a professor in India, told a hard audience in Hoch audiofilm Friday night. Dr. Jones' lecture was the close of the University Christian mission here. The religious leaders left immediately after the lecture for Iowa City, where they will conduct a religious week at the University of Dr. Jones expressed the deep gratitude of the minister to his kindness shown to it by the faculty and students of the University. "The Three Needs of Mankind", according to Dr. Jones, are a new social order to bring the best there is in life equally to all; a power to meet the problems of human living; and something to reinforce our moral worth from the kind of person we are into the kind of person we want to be. Society must be organized around the cooperative spirit of the home. "The family is working better than any other unit of human society, and the Christian proposes to take the leadership role and push it uselessness and push it straight out into the economic, social and international world." Needs of Mankind Stated "God Lifts Us Up . . . " We must gain an inner unity, Dr Jones explained, to have the power within to turn "troubles into triumphs, Calvaries into Easter morning. "We have to love something outside of ourselves, to fix intently our attentions upon it, and the scattered energies of the inner life will be gathered together into unity. God is the supreme personal object of love; He lifts us up out of ourselfs," ended the speaker. The Plymouth Congregational church chair, under the direction of Mrs. Alice Moncrieff, sang an anthem, "Lord of Power and Might," at the opening of the program. Ellijah cale, C'4, introduced Forty-Nine Engineers Leave on Inspection Trip Eighteen senior electrical engineering students will leave early today and 31 senior mechanical engineering students leave early tomorrow in inspection trip of industrial plants in Kansas City and St. Louis, Mo. The Campus rally followed nearly five hours of parading and shouting The electrical students will spend two days in St. Louis, while the mechanical students will devote all to industrial plants in Kansas City. Frosh 'Harvest' Aggie Goal Post; Transplant in Frank Strong South Eighty Returned to Lawrence by 35 stouthearted Jayhawk freshmen gridsters, who braved the outnumbering them three to one uproot the crossbar on Ahearn Field. The white metal upright head of the ground floor Oval limestone by the same hands that removed it from Agie soil. A rallying throng of jubilant Jayhawker rooters planted a Kansas State college goal post in the shadow of Frank Strong hall last night with anything but solemn ceremony to spiritful celebration of the Kansas victory over Wes Fry's Wildcats. Luticele McVey, fa' 39; Roberti Mitchell, fa' 39; Virginia O'Connor, ca' 39; Lela Rios, c' 39; Lela Siebert, graduate student; Mary Emily Sturthman, c' 39; Evelyn Thompson, c' 39; and Marjorie Ward, fa' 39. In addition to the names of doctors who inspected the University hospital and health service, which appeared in Friday's Kansas, others who took part in the inspection were: Dr. John L. Rice, head of the New York City public health department; Dr. Smiley, head of the public health department; Dr. Cornell University medical school; and Dr. Kein Schmidt, head of the New York tuberculosis association. Palchritude in Pants To Puffi and Pant At Puffi And Pant Prom By Harry 'Scoop' Hill, c'40 Men in the Memorial Union ballroom will be strictly taboo Wednesday night, Nov. 16 from 7 o'10 clock. The reason will be the Puff Pant Prom which will be open only to women students of the University. A Union Pacific special train, crowded to overflowing on the trip to Manhattan, arrived in Lawrence shortly after 8 p.m. with more than one-half of its passenger list missing. Those who returned reported scores of Joyhanna Jenkins, virtually the entire band were still in Agigilley. Fourteen new students qualified for Quill club at the meeting Thursday. The pledges, announced by George Michalopoulos, president of the club were Evelyn Thompson, c'39; Virginia Gear, c'42; Nancy Kester, fa'41; Leo Freed, c'40; James Burrow, fa'41; James McClure, McBride; Emma Lou Montgomery, c'39; Mary Lou Randal, c'41. Eighteen students were elected to membership in the Gamma chapter of Pi Lambda Theta, national honorary fraternity for women in education, at a meeting last Thursday evening. The pledge services will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Pine room of the Memorial Union building. D. J. Willetts is the prom manager and Mary K. Lattner, president of W.A.A., has appointed various committees to handle the program. Tickets will be sold by girls of each organization and can also be purchased at the physical education office. Those elected were Dorothy Bub litz, c'39; Mary L. Chaney, graduate student; Betty Cole, c'39; Esther E DeBord, c'39; Margaret Draper, fa39; Janavie Fink, ed 39; Midre Hauer, c'39; Susan Louise Kanage c'39; Lucille Knuth, c'39; Jean Makepeace, fa.ao for the University band and the hundreds of Kansas fans who saw the Wildcats plowed under. Three More Doctors Inspect University Health Service This annual event where women dress as men will provide an opportunity for coeds to brush up on their leading. Any type of attire will be appropriate—formal, sports or character. North Lawrence rocked with the cheers of the throng that greeted the train. When the freshman team had unloaded their goal-post prize, the straggler bandsmen struck up the Alma Mater and then the Rock Chalk roared out over the Kaw Valley. Fourteen New Members Taken Into Ouill Club Pi Lambda Theta Pledges Eighteen Ruth Mary Nelson, ed; 40; Maria Dillon, c'40; Dorothy Werner, c'29; Bill Reed, c'39; Dorothy Dyer, c'29 Led by the band, the victory crazed students and townpeople paraded across the bridge, halting for yells at the Ninth and Eleventh street corners. Cars, four abreast, followed the paraders, blasting thunder with their horns. Not only did the inspired Jay-hawker team steal the show at the Wildcat's homecoming and 75th anniversary celebrations, but the returning legends brought with them a thing but the Aggies pitch-forks. A freshman player wore a Kansas State yearling's cap and others clasped yard line markers. One guard took the battle to capture the goal post: "We left the stands about three minutes before the game ended. (Continued on Page 2) Globe Trotter Kansas Packs Too Much Power For Wes Fry's LITTLE Mighties Harrison Forman, who will open the Forum Series with a lecture on "The Far East Afame." The Independent Student Association will hold a tea this afternoon from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Memorial Union building. Although the tees is free, freshmen and freshman women. All Independent students on the campus are invited. Independent Women Plan Tea This Afternoon The Independent Student Association has also planned a hay-rack ride, which is open to all Independents, next Sunday evening at 5:30 in the building before noon Saturday. All Independent women interested in working on the homecoming committee are invited to meet with members of the community after afternoon in the Union lounge. Chancellor Leaves, for N.Y.A. Committee Session Chancellor E. H. Lindley last night for St. Paul, Minn., where he will attend a meeting of the national advisory committee of the National Youth Administration Monday and Tuesday. Charles W. Taussig, chairman of the committee, called the meeting. Chancellor Lindley will not attend the sessions on Wednesday, as he is returning for the 75th Anniversary dinner and broadcast that evening. Tryouts Thursday For Campus Contest Trouys for the Campus Problems contest will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 3, in the Little Theater of Green hall. Topics for the contest are confined to local or national collegiate problems. "The topic is limited in this way," said Miss Margaret Anderson, assistant professor in the department of speech and dramatic art, "because it is felt that the best work is done on a problem understood by the student. Any student of regular enrollment in the University is eligible to compete." All contestants must have an interview with Miss Anderson before next Wednesday. Contestants will be al- lorized in which to deliver their speech. New R.O.T.C. Uniforms Here Swedish Exhibit Closes Today The final showing of the Swedish exhibit, presented by Miss Marjorie Whitney, assistant professor of design, will be from 2 to 5 o'clock this afternoon on the third floor studio of West Frank强礼 hall. Colonel Karl F. Baldwin announced yesterday the R.O.T.C. uniforms will be obtained Monday afternoon, beginning at 1 o'clock on the door cloosers. That uniforms will be required for parade Wednesday. Ameire and Divers Reel Off Long Touchdown Jaunts in Big Six Upset; Hackney Is Checked as 16,500 Homecomers Look on; Jayhawker Fans Get Goal Posts Far East Cameraman To Lecture By Lester Kappelman Kansan Sports Editor Harrison Forman, cameraman for the "March of Time" and Paramount News, and an author will speak this evening at 8:20 in Hoch auditorium. This lecture is sponsored by the Student Forum, activity books will admit. 600 fans take over the field. Ad Lindsey's battered Kansans came to town this morning facing the Aggies, Elmer Hackney, and oblivion, but the team played inspired football all afternoon, struck fiercely at the Manhattan, Oct. 29—(Special) "Breathing" their way through to a crashing 27 to 7 victory over the Kansas State Wildcats and Associated Press correspondents, a powerful Jaw-hawker flock displayed the most spectacular football performance of the Big Six season before a homecoming throng of 16-500 fans and critics here this afternoon. Mr. Forman is an authority on the Far East having headed many expeditions into this region to film the customs of the people. He first filmed Tibes in 1929 and brought back many unusual scenes. In 1935 he filmed the return of the Panchen Lame to Tibet after his exile in China, the only motion pictures available of the event released by Paramount. In 1936 he brought back pictures of the third ranking living God of Tibet-Jamy Jap on his one life's siluage from Lilase. Harrison Forman Talks This Evening in Hoch Auditorium; Activity Books Admit Mr. Forman who has recently returned from Japan, also brings pictures of the Eastern conflict. When he arrived at the airport of Taihouki, capital of Fomosa, the Japanese territory bombed by the Chinese, some months ago, Mr. Forman lended in the midst of dozens of bombing planes. From there he traveled to the on-site pictures of the head hunters. From there he travelled through Manshuke to the Siberian border where the Russo-Japanese incidents occurred. Faculty Member Writes Feature for Sour Owl From Manchuko, Forman went to Darien and south to Peping. He was the first foreigner to enter Suchow after its occupation and the first to take pictures of the Yellow river flood. Professor Joseph H. Taggart, of the department of economics, is among the literary contributors to the next edition of the Sour Owl Professor Taggart's article, which is entitled, "Old Grad—Welcome," has been written especially for the Homecoming number of the Sour Owl which will appear on the campus this week. This contribution from a member of the faculty is in accordance with the editorial policy of Sigma Delta Chi, publishers of the Sour Owl, which this year will attempt to give the University students the best possible humor from faculty and students alike. "In submitting his article Professor Tagart is but the first of the faculty members who will contribute humorous short stories and articles to the Sour Owl during the year," said De La Kan editor. Kansas: Fair and warm today WEATHER Wildest line, and rushed over four touchdowns, two in the final quarter, to completely rout their traditional rivals and turn in one of the outstanding unsets of the year. The brilliant running of Dick Amerine, Lyman Divers, and Paul Masoner and the all around steady playing of Max Replobe it in a large way responsible for the Jayhawkers surprising showing, but the line outrushed the Wildest forwards most of the time, completely bottled up the one man game for the second period, and limited Wee Fry's charges to one first down for the last thirty minutes. The Goal Posts Go. Kansas fans climaxed the triumph when they swarmed onto the field and ripped up the north goal posts, but when they attempted to storm the cross-sburss, a horse of Aggie supporters rushed into the breach and repulsed the invaders after an exciting fist-swinging melee. The Jayhawks first scoring threat banged down on State's 18- The Jayhawkers first scoring threat bogged down on State's 18-yard line after two incomplete forward passes, but the Crimson and Blue struck right back after Briggs punched over Masonner's head to the Kansas 21 and scored shortly before the opening quarter ended on a sustained drive of 79 yards. These Were Among The Kansas Stars MAX REPLOGLE LYMAN DIVENS DAVE SHIRK CHARLES WARREN Replepie picked up five yards around left and Divers made it a first down on his own 32. A pass from Divers to Bumgarner was one of the best Replepie faded back and tossed a long one to Captain Divers who raced to the Wild- Continued on page 4