UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas } VOLUME XXXIV Chicago U. May Withdraw From Big 10 Chicago, Nov. 24-(UIP)-First open charges of proselytizing in the Big Ten this season were made by the Daily Maroon, student newspaper at the University of Chicago which urged Chicago's withdrawal from the western conference unless it "tracks down on existing policies of members and adopt a firm policy against subsidization of athletes." Second Survey Planned Citing its extremely high scholastic standards, John A. Kiser, editor-in-chief of the daily, said the Maroon could not hope to campaign successfully against the Big Ten and whose standards are not the same. The editorial appeared as at least one unofficial investigation was reported underway in the conference and a second survey by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching was being planned. Kiser singled out no specific schools for his attack, but said, "It is more or less common knowledge that all big Ten tens except two or three use various undercover methods of subservitation." Advocates Enforcement Means Unless the conference "devices an effective means of enforcement of their rules, we strongly advocate that Chicago discontinue relations in football and possibly certain other sports with all but those Big Ten schools having comparable policies and standards; or if that is not the case, that Chicago withdraw from membership in the Big Ten conference," the Maroon said. University officials refused to comment on the editorial. Withdrawal of the paper came up again by the paper for several seasons, said one spokesman. on the SHIN alan asher I didn't bear what the go was but Ed Safford, Phil Dell, sent a couple of the pledges of that club to Betty Graham (down the way a piece) to retrieve a pair of his pants. He mentioned to the pledges in question that Betty Graham might be an author, a writer or a bureaucrat of said articles of haberdashery. "The moon rose cheerless over hills of gray" and the D. U. boys went out into the dead of night Monday and threw a formal senrade (one at which they wear tuxedos). Someone at the Sig Alg house took a couple of shots at the lads while the latter were singing at the Gamma Phi house one hurried to the container from one door of Brick's while the serenaders were chortling for the Pi Phi's. Correction: Bettie Wasson did most of the gossip column in the health department, she devised the criticism she is receiving from reader of that sheet. A thought for the day: You may be the apple of your Mother's eye but you're the hole in your Father's pocket-book. It may not be a bad idea for some of the lads and lashes to attempt to figure out how they happened to coin the word, "Thanks-giving." Along this line, perhaps I should, warn some of the thinner coeds to be cautious while eating olives with their turkey. Season's greetings at you! Yearly CSEP Reports To Be Made Out The yearly reports of students on the CSEP will be made out during the holiday vacation in order that they be office of the NYA. Next week, Miss Mary C. Olem, executive secretary announced yesterday. The CSEP office will be open during Thanksgiving day, the exception of Thanksgiving day. The blank forms when filled out will contain an abstract of the student's record, his standing, and a record of the work he has completed. A blank must be filled out for each student on the CSEP. Kansan Denied Press Privileges At Jayhawk-Tiger Game Tomorrow The University Daily Kananian isn't covering the football game at Columbo thanks Thanksgiving Day because the University of Missouri has refused to endorse it. The publisher of the Kansas wrote a letter to Columbia some time ago, asking for tickets to the game for Kanan reporters who were prepared to LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 25, 1936 vide space for anyone except those filing wire reports. Kerstetter a reply was received from Vaughan Bryant, Missouri official in the department of intercollegiate athletics, which stated that owing to crowded conditions in their stadium press box they would be unable to provide space for anyone except those. Kansan representatives will not 1 present at the game. "It seems strange." Publisher John Malone said last night, "that a paper representing the student body of a rival school should be denied the privilege of covering a game in which its own team is concerned, especially when teams have been traditional rivals for years as MU, and KU have been. "The Karsan joins the team in being the underdog at the M.U. game Thanksgiving day." Tampa, Fla., Nov. 24—(UP)—American Federation of Labor convention delegates tonight shouted their condemnation of Fascism, Naziism and Communism and voted to tighten the trade union boycott on German-made goods until "Hitler's death" and the Jews is abandoned." A.F.of L. Condemns Fascism, Nazism And Communism "The existence of Communism, Fascism and Nazism, the existence of dictatorship in any form, is a definite threat to union liberty and to peace for its aim is a subjugation by force and bloodshed of all those within the nation who may differ," a resolution said. Contrasting View In contrast the Resolution Committee pointed to the recent election of President Roosevelt and said, "there will be no retaliation by the losers" because "this is a country of free men ..." As weary, restless delegates jammed through scores of resolutions in a comparatively listless session, leaders contemplated methods of healing the sharp breach in the ranks of labor as a result of the convention indefinite suggestion that John L. Lewis and his CIO unionists. Executives Speak There were three outstanding developments: 1- John M. Harrison, shrewd head of the railway clerks, said that "given a little time an adjustment will be made and I think will be worked out." 2- President William Green said members of suspended unions would be permitted, temporarily at least, to vote in local elections in Iowa and state labor bodies. 3-Mac Zaritsky, president of the United Hat, Cap and Millinery workers, said failure of the convention to recommend expulsion of the CIO unionists or the boycott on goods produced by their workers was a victory for the "middle-of-the-roaders." Meantime George L. Berry, Federal Co-ordinator of Industrial Cooperation, head of the International Pressunies Union, and close friend to Mr. Obama, was occasioned by his vote against the CIO unionists early today. Prof. Olm Templin will be the principal speaker at the monthly meeting of the K.U. club of Hutchinson University. Dan II, Fred Ewellsorth, secretary of the university association announced yesterday. A. W. Heffling, '24, president of the Hutchinson alumni club, will be in charge of the meet Templin To Speak At Hutchinson Meeting Professor Templin is developing plans for a memorial to the poachers of Kansas which is to be built on the University campus. He wishes to work with the different pioneer organizations in the region, which are interested in preserving the history and traditions of the state. Men's Council Sets Traffic Fines Violators To Be Tried By Informal Sessions Of Group The Parking committee of the Men's Student Council met yesterday afternoon in the Pine room of the Memorial Union building for the purpose of considering fines that have been made this fall for traffic violations on the campus. Plans were discussed for the reorganization of the committee concerning conduct of future meetings. Notice of the meetings will be published in the Kannan and meeting and all offenders will be notified by letter that their cases will be discussed at that meeting. This action is being taken so that everybody who has received a ticket for some traffic violation will have an equal chance to participate in the organization will allow everybody a chance for defending his case before the committee. Contrary to the general opinion, the members of the committee meet in an informal session and hear the reasons that are presented for the case. When the case will be levied is left to the discretion of the parking committee. Robert Stoland, c39, having repeated violations last year and this week, was fined the limit of the monetary fine and it was recommended to the faculty by the parking committee that he be assessed two credit hours. The rulings in the constitution of the Men's Student Council regarding use of motor vehicles on the campus are as follows, in part: 1. No male student shall operate a motor vehicle on the campus at more than 15 miles per hour for two hours, minutes and thirty minutes after the 4. The offender, in case of reckless or fast driving, shall be tried by the titan's Student Council whether or not it is the second offense. 2. The above shall be enforced from 8.29 am, until 5.30 pm, on class days and at any other time when the classes are chaning. 5. No student of the University o Kansas who does not possess a parking license granted by the parkina permit or by the parkins permitted to park his car on any drive, avenue, or street of the campus or in the restricted parking sections between the hours of 8 a.m. and except Saturdays and Sundays. Pittman was somewhat pessimistic over the European war threat that pretest temporary United States naval forces be strengthened and expanded. Washington, Nov. 24. — (UP) — Moves by European nations toward settlement of the $12,000,000,000 World War debt owed to the United States were forecast tonight by Senator Keynitt G, of the important Senate Foreign Relations committee. He tied debt settlement prospects up with the present extended move toward international currency stabilization. The dupper Nevada senator, one of the key men in the Roosevelt administration foreign policy setup, said in an interview that "there is no question but that the war debts are going to be settled." Library hours during the Thanksgiving holidays have been announced as follows: The parking committee urges everybody to observe these rules and follow them more carefully. NOTICE Sen. Pittman Sees War Debt Payment Wednesday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday, closed all day. Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, closed all day. Sunday, closed all day. Meeting of Math Society Features Famous Men Sessions To Be Held In the Administration Building Friday and Saturday The American Mathematical Society will hold a national meeting here Friday and Saturday, with lectures by Prof. H. L. Rieuz, Iowa State University, Prof. Constantin Caranedoche, University of Munich, and Prof. L. R. Ford, Rice Institute. Professor Riezt is considered to be the foremost authority on statistics and life insurance in the United States, while Professor Carrathology is reputedly the world's greatest mathematician, ranking with Prof Albert Einstein in profit of thought by Dr Carolyn W. Hearn of the United States to visit the Harvard Tencentery celebration, and is the visiting professor at the University of Wisconsin this semester. Sessions have been arranged for Friday afternoon and Saturday morning, and will be held in room 203 of the Administration building. An informal dinner for the members of the society and their guests will be held on Friday evening at 6:30 at the University Club. The papers to be presented Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock are disjointly scheduled for P. O. Bell, University of Kansas; transformations of a survival game; D. G. Porek, Central Y.M.C.A. College; group order analysis; G. D. Porek, Kansas City; dependence of a local point in curvature; Householder College; and a non-rigorous problem in the calculus of variations, Dr. G. M. Porek. At 3 o'clock Friday, Prof. H. L. Rietz, Iowa State University, will on "Some Topics in Sampling Theory," and at 4 o'clock, Prof. Constantin Cantanis, University will discuss "Bounded Analytic Functions." Saturday Morning As a supplementary program, University of Memphis, University of Missouri with Horn Angles and Abstract Metrics1. Counterpoints and Associated Cubics2: Prof. Arnold Emch, University of Memphis. On Symmetry Surface. Dr. Schweizer, Chicago. "Projective Analogies of Systems of Axioms in the Foundations" Prof. N. H. McCoy, Smith College. Some Theorems, concerning Non-Equilateral Triangles3 Prof. N. H. McCoy, Smith College. Starting at 9:30 Saturday morning, Prof. L. R. Foe, Rice Institute, Houston, will teach 10:30 papers will be presented which will include transformations of differential equations in College; expansions involving parametric sign changes; Prof C. C. Camp, University of Kansas; integrals, Prof. W. S. Kimball, Michigan State College; note on the properties of hyperbolic geometry, Dr. H. Doon E. B. Stouffer, University of Kansas, and E. W. Emery, Metropolitan Life Insurance company; hyperbolic geometry, Prof. L. Mhumental, University of Missouri; hyperbolic geometry, Prof. L. Jensen, University of Illinois, and Prof D. L. Holt, Iowa State College; devuing force on a planet in the earth's rotation, Prof W. H. Roever, Washington University, triple systems as rules for gravitational waves, Hays Kansas State College; and orthogonal polynomials with orthogonal derivatives of Nebraska. Business School To Place Seniors Dear F. T. Stockton announced yesterday that arrangements for placements of School of Business seniors are being made earlier this year by the big companies, than last year. The Eastman Kodak company has written and set the date for their interview for Dec. 18. General Electric, Goodyear and Firestone have written to the dean asking for an opportunity and Gamble have here also sent representatives here for interviews. Dean Stockton believes the interviews will come from one month to six weeks earlier than last year and that more companies will ask for placement interviews. Fifty—one companies visited here last year and by commencement 55 per cent of the seniors had positions. The hope of the school is to raise the percentage of positions for senior students this year, so that most of them will be placed by June. NOTICE Scabbard and Blade, honorary military fraternity, will hold an important pledge meeting next Monday evening at 8:15 in room B3, where they will be structured as to their pre-initiation duties. More Mariners To Strike Ranks Walker Josselyn, first Sergceant New York, November 24—(UP)—Oswald hundred fifty men of the crew of 258 aboard the U. S. Jiner, President Roosevelt, woke off the ship today and joined the insurgent scummar strike. The men were met by 360 piket who escorted them to headquarters of the Strike Strategy committee heading the east coast walkout. Cancel Ship's Schedule The President Rosenett arrived today from Europe. Her scheduled departure tomorrow was cancelled and the President Harding took over her cargo and mail. The latter will carry no passengers. Ship officers and licensed engineers joined picket lines as four unions concentrated on the Roosevelt. The Masters, Mates and Pilots associations, the Marine Engineers' Beneficial association and the American Radio Telegraphers association have men on strike. Seamen Claim Victory Striking women of the International Saverne's union claimed an immediate victory, but the officers union insisted their walkout today was an independent action for higher wages. Ship owners said shipping was normal and unaffected by the strike while the seamen more than doubled up in Atlantic and Gulf ports. The scheduled mass walkout of 209 officers and engineers arrived 19 ships in Boston harbor failed to materialize as the storm had not yet been notified. Students To Attend Meeting at Salina Paul Moritz, c'29, co-chairman of the regional World Student Christian Federation commission; John L. Hunt, general secretary of the Y.M.C.A.; and Ellen Payne, general secretary of the Y.W.C.A., will represent the University at the regional counterpart. Dr. Eileen Stevens, Student Christian Movement at Salma Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. The purpose of the meeting is to plan for the activities of the comm months and the Eates summer conference. Patients At Hospital Exceed Usual Number Patients at Watkins Memorial hospital now number 26 or 27, greatly exceeding the usual number for this program. The Director of student health Cameron, director of student health Frank Ewang, fa 28, operated upon Sunday morning after an attack of appendicitis, spent a "very restful" day. Mrs. Hazel Cobell, fa 28, and Maxine Laughlin, fa 28, also recuperated pseudotomias performed the past week. The recovery of Miss Carolla Wit of Paragola, Ark, from injuries received in a collision Sept. 25, in which two University students lost their lives, has proved to be a marvelous example of modern medical science. Dr. Gail McClure brings word from the University of Kansas hospital at Kansas City, to which Miss Wit was admitted after her five-day rheumatic hospital, that she is now sitting up in a chair and will soon be able to return to her home. According to Dr. Cautoufe, Miss Witt received, in addition to a broken pelvic bone, a ruptured diaphrem, her stomach being forced up into the left lung cavity. At one time her lungs were cut off and she could not even be removed to the X-ray room without first severing a nerve in order to relax her diaphram. League Groups To Hold Joint Meeting Sunday evening at 1 o'clock the University league groups of the Lawrence church will co-operate in a meeting at the Congregational parish Y.M.C.A., will speak on the subject, "The Voice of the City." The Friends league will be in charge of the dev'sions, and Dean Brooks, $23, will play a tambourine solo. The evening will involve with a social host and refreshments. Traditional Battle Will Wind Up Season for Both Teams; Missouri is Topheavy Favorite as Kansans Will Try for First Conference Victory Jayhawkers To Meet Tigers In Annual Turkey Day Game By Fred Harris, c'38, and Merle Bratton, c'38 Tomorrow. Five Members of This Year's Squad To Play Last Game For Kansas Events Five Members Fighting with their backs against the wall—or, in this case, the goalposts—the Kansas Jayhawk football team will battle the highly touted Missouri Tigers in the traditional Turkey Day game Thursday at Columbia. WADE GREEN SEO. HAPGOOL This game will wind up the season for both teams. Missouri has had one of its most successful seasons in several years. Kansas has been on the short end of the score in all but one game, SEIGLE JOE GIANANZELO University Band Will Play for Rally Kansas rep will start generating tonight when Jaswinkha fans invade the Union Station at Kansas City at #15. The University Band will supply the prelude to the rally with a parade from Eleventh and Baltimore to the station. There, with the contingent of students and alumni, they will gather in the southwest corner of the lobby to give vent to their enthusiasm under the direction of Harley Steiger, assistant sheer manager. One speaker's speeches will be given by representative Kansas City alumni, sounding the keynote of a successful "twisting of the Tines' tail." Kansas Players Lauded by Caldwell The football team will arrive by train at 8:40 to join in the celebration for a short time before going on to Columbia. The rally is expected to last about 45 minutes and will mark the opening of the Mississippi state park that will reach a climax at the kick-off tomorrow. The Kansas Players, presented over KFKU weekly by the department of speech and dramatic art, were commended by David C. Caldwell, governor of the Kansas chapter of the Mayflower Desperds, in a talk at the annual meeting and presentation that organization Saturday night. During the banquet, held in the Jachayker at Topica, Mr. Caldwell introduced Allen Crafton, professor of speech and dramatic art, as the guest speaker of the occasion. directed by Rolla Nuckles. Caldwell concluded his introduction by urging the members, who represented various sections of Kanakarana, to attend a historical series, of which the eighth instalment was presented last night, is written by Professor Crafton and Dr. Vikram Shah. "Perhaps some of you are not aware," said Mr. Caldwell in his introduction, "that on Monday ever after at 6 o'clock dramatic episodes on the history of Kansas are being given over KEU." and that was the first game of the season against Washburn College. The dope points strongly to a long-delayed Tiger victory over the Jayhawk, but in these traditional games the dope bucket has been spilled many times, and this year's Kawaien crew will do its part. Several Jayahawers will be playing their last game for Kansas and will be doing everything possible to end their playing days in glory by defeating Missouri. Green, Seigle, Hagood, Glanmangue, and Lattion will be playing the game and will be inside their molecules after the game Thanksgiving day. Must Stom Mahley and Frye Must Stop趴戏 Coaches This week in practice Coach Liberty and I were drilling their hands hard. In the workout they have brought to the players that the end runs of Mabie and the tiger plunges of Frye, two outstanding Tiger backfield aces, must be stopped along with setting up a barrier against the vaulted passing attack that the Missourians use. Frye, who was the superhead of the Missouri attack last year, has again proven to the critics that he in probably the best quarterback in the Big Six this year. Mahley, his running mate, is probably the fastest back on the Missouri roster. The Tiger line is heavy and rugged the year and will recall to the old faces on Missouri teams of old. Loading the linemen is Betty, a center, who last year came in for considerable praise for his outstanding work and the team captain who will lead his team against the Jayhawks is Al Laude who bails from St Louis. He is a threat as a passer, and as a receiver has no cap on the Missouri team. Dope Favors Tigers In the past six years the Tiger has gone without his victory bacon and with dope favoring him he may be able to break the fast this year. In the lean years that have followed the Tiger, Kansas has run up an even 100 points to the Missourians 0. This the people at Columbia contend that they are going to ace the 90 points in their game. The Jayhawkers have different ideas on the subject, and will be trying their best for a victory. Kansas will be outweighed both in the line and in the backfield. The running attack of the Jayhawkers has proven nothing this year and with the absence of many starter surprises the Kansas eleven will probably take to the air lanes in an effort to accrue. Missouri on the other hand has a hard running attack with a deceptive passing attack to rely on when the line plunges big down. K. G. Reserve Strength Week The game with the freshman last Saturday proved to the fans that the resistance strength of the Jayhawkers will have to bear the repulsion and the replies will have to bear the brunt of the entire battle. Missouri has displayed several good combinations this fall, and as many replacements that will not alter the strength of the lineup during the game. K. U. Reserve Strength Weak The season up to date finds that the Missouri team has won 4, lost 2, and tied 1. Kansas has won 1, lost 5, and tied 1, which further points out that the Tigers have been upper hand on game time arrays. The probable starting lineup: Kansas Missouri Shirk LE Nelson Shrink LT Houston Stapleton LG Simon Lutton C Betty Loton G Kerry Ward RT Roy Green RT Rae Mason QB Bowyer Hagpack LR Londe Englepine LH Mahley Englepine FB Mahley WEATHER Kansas—Fair Wednesday and Thursday: colder Wednesday, rising temperature Thursday.