WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1934 PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY, KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS VOLUME XXXII Washington To Furnish Kansas O] White and Harr Injuries; Me Peterson E Line-u Stepping out of Big play for the first time the Kansas football stepping out of big-time. St. Louis for a game w Washington University Bears are stronger to year by comparative score 7 to 12 to Illinois who was defeat to 7. While Kansas was State to a scoreless if muddy field lost S it resting rounding But of it 7 in the mid of it The Butter and Ill are the only points that stared against the S it in three other early in three other early McKendrick, Wabash a White and Ha Kansas faces the gs backfield dependables, Fred Harris. Both of injured in the Iowa ?turning in nice perfo started the game at the beginning and nurtured the early part of locked especially good clones returning pun, these players is exp action for more than. To offset this loss, Joey Tommy McCail ran away after seens. Peterson is choice at fullback a while McCall is a wets assured is安验 of a starting game in which he is *a* side his aggressive team having *e* having *c* the *e* count of Kansas' six season. Jayhawk Break Vast improvement Ames in the chargin blocking of the line at the end, breaking through the stopping their sonnac Alleander, and Milner after time. On offense the ball is passed much better shape it game has shown. Ken the entire game at fad in a nice job of calling George Hapegood, looked for better that team could produce, an ing was hindered by and wet ball. Nestle to use an airatal attac thou the Jowans h in that department, conditions. Kauanism founcid, Kauanism founcid and recoverd the bebm PROF. W. A. DILE TO COMPILE ELECT Kansas is now on chance of any of the ponents of having a bruiser weakened some by the bruising Pittsburgh P this Saturday. Prof. W. A. Dill w City tonight to aid in pollination return for the Associated Pa Mr Drill has been Press election staff years. The election, every two years, wi all night tonight and issued of taking the returns from races. Practice for the V begain last night with in which passing was Lindenby is already pitted for that with Netschau here n urday. Jackson To Rep Prof. D. C. Jackson trig engineering, his president of the Kan- tan of the Society for Education in manhattan. University Daily Kansan Official Student Pamper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Associate Editors EDITOR-IN-CHIEP ... WILLIAM BLIZZARI Associate Editors Wesley McCalla Loreen Millier MANAGING EDITOR ___ LENA WYATT Campus Editor Max Mayne Makeup Editor Harry Vanclous Sunday Editor Carolen Harper Sunday Editor Carolen Harper Night Editor George Lourdine Exchange Manager George Lourdine Business Manager F. Quentin Snow Manager Ellen Clower Leona Wynatt Ibz Olson Blake Miller Robert Schoen Louise Layne Rutherford Brown Wesley M.Callis George Lepcik Herbert Warner George Leppik Wesley Herbert Q. Percinia Neusinker F. Wesley Herbert Departments Business Office K.I. 66 News Room K.I. 25 Night Connection, Business Office 70181 Night connection, news room 70192 Published in the afternoon of Tuesday, Wed nesday, Thursday and Friday and on Sunday morning, Wednesday and Saturday depts in the Department of Journalism of the State University of New York at St. John's, the Press Office of Journalism. Subscription price, per year, $3.00 cash in advance, $2.25 on payments, Single coupon, be each. Entered as second class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kau- gan. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1934 IN BEHALF OF PEACE Peace is the island of safety for which all races are struggling in the midst of the turmoil of national and international instability. Perhaps no organization has as great a percentage of members who see intelligently the evils of war and despise them as does a university, and yet the students of Kansas do nothing about it. The campus needs an active organization for the promotion of peace; not a radical group which will shout to the public that they won't go to war for any reason or for any body, nor a lukewarm convention, but one which, through intelligently studying the obstacles which lie in the path of world peace, will come nearer to the solution of the universal problem. History shows that it is youth which takes the active part in bringing about long-needed changes. As persons grow older they become conservative and lose the impulsive enthusiasm of youth which often runs amuck, but which accomplishes things nevertheless. We are the last generation to have any personal reminiscences of the World War. The older generation which fought and suffered through it will never forget it, but their places will soon be taken by men and women whose horror of the catalytic will be a hand-me-down, worn-out by time. Ours is the task of working for peace while the opportunity is ripe. An organization actively interested in the promotion of peace should receive enthusiastic support from a large per cent of students and faculty. PATENT PENDING Albert G. Burns, president of the National Inventors' Congress of Kansas and Missouri, recently asserted, "History shows that every depression has ended because some new thing has been invented." Perhaps it wouldn't be a bad idea for one of the 3,500 inventors in this district to invent "some new thing" which will just kind of do away with depressions altogether. From Washington comes the story that some officials believe the NRA might be empowered to purchase excess goods from manufacturers so that industry may put more workers on the payrolls. Perhaps the story has no foundation, but it is an example of the bogies are keeping business men in a state of jitters. PANACEA The proposed plan is modeled after the disastrous Farm Board of the Hoover regime. If NRA takes it up the government will become owner of great piles of goods and be deeper in debt and farther from a balanced budget than ever. And it will induce the manufacturers to produce more than their regular market can consume, so that when the government stops buying they are right back where they started. At present Roosevelt is asking business to take up the burden o, recovery, and business is asking the government to define definite policies and then let business alone so that it can undertake some long-range planning of its own. It would be better if the government were to settle down for a while and to improve the "plans" which have already been started rather than announce new cure-alls, especially when the new proposals have been tried unsuccessfully before. THE RUBBERNECKS GOT CHEATED No doubt, there were a number of vicarious thrill seekers who, when they read their papers Friday morning and learned that the body of "Pretty Boy" Floyd had rested on a baggage truck at the Union Station in Kansas City for about fifty minutes Thursday afternoon, felt keen disappointment at not having had the opportunity of gaging at the shipping box which contained the dead bandit's casket. Hardly a soul was there to see the body being taken home for burial. Officials had taken care to have it thus. There is something promising in this fact. It seems to prophecy a time when officers of the law and newspapers will look upon the violent death of a criminal as a regrettable but inevitable phenomenon, and upon his dead body as the private property of his family, not as a spectacle to satisfy the cravings of a group of curious busybodies. SENSATION SEEKERS Upon the ears of downtown shopper Monday afternoon fell the strains of canned music and occasional announcements to the effect that the bullet-riddled ear in which Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker met their death last summer would be on display at the show room of a local auto agency. It seems that the car had been stolen by Borrow from a Topeka man, who had recovered it after the killing and has now sold it to this local auto agency to be used for advertising purposes. Just how a bullet-ridled car body can emphasize any good points of any particular make of car, is more than we can see. The fact that the body is full of bullet holes might even indicate that there is something yet to be attained by manufacturers of car bodies—bullet-proof perfection. Then the only advertising value that this car could possibly have, as we see it, is the power to attract people to the advertiser's place of business through an appeal to morbid curiosity. W. A. White, Emporia Gazelle. Less than a year ago, Chancellor Johnson convened conferences with Governor Landon to inform a student aid plan to official Washington. Laurels for The Chancellor W. A. White, Emboria Gazette. Because the plan was so humane and workable the FERA established a division of education. As a result 100,000 students in American colleges are enrolled because they are recipients of a regular allotment which averages $15 per month for part time work while attending school. This means that girls and girls have been added to the college enrollments. For the most part they are working on the campuses of their respective institutions. The National Student Mirror admirably sums up the advantages of assigning off-campus social work. It says, "We are the conscious of the extra mural world." In lieu of campus service Federal Administrator Hopkins has pointed out to state relief administration that "students may be assigned to extension classes, but the activities that increase the usefulness of the college to the community." Because of the importance of these off-the-campus contacts the American Military Institute is looking to explore the possibilities of new fields. It is looking for socially desirable work to make the student a more integral part of the community and lives for nine months in the year. Such practical service working out jobs for themselves while receiving $15 per month is valuable. It makes the transition from school to a $15 a week job in the cold, cold world after you graduate seem more reasonable. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN A.L.E.E. meeting, Thursday, Nov. 1, at 7:30 p.m., Marvin hall auditorium. There will be a talk by Captain Gordon, and business. Notice due at Chancellor's Office at 11 a.m. on regular presentation d and 11:30 a.m. on Saturday for Sunday issues. A. I. E. E.: G. G. FENOGLIO, Secretary. Wednesday, Oct. 31, 1934 American Society of Mechanical Engineers meeting at 7:39, Thursday evening. George Wright will tell his experiences in Russia while there last summer. A. S.M.E.: EL ATENEO: El Atenco se remita a juices Nov. 1, a las 4:30 p.m. en el salon no 113 del edificio de Administración. Se servirvem fríquentes. INTER-RACIAL COMMISSION OF Y. W. C. A: There will be a meeting Thursday night at 7 o'clock at Henley house. All University women are invited. KAPPA PSI: MARTHA PETERSON, ANNA MARIE TOMPKINS. Pharmacy fraternity meeting Thursday night at 7:30 in the Student Council room at the Memorial Union building. Activities and pledges be present. All men interested in competitive swimming come to room 206, Robinson commission. Thursday at 5:15. K. U. SWIMMING TEAM; HERBERT G. ALLPHIN, Swimming Coach. There will be no rehearsal this evening on account of the Wiggam lecture HOWDWARD C. TAYLOR, Director. MID-WEEK DANCE: The regular mid-wick-dance will be held this evening at 7 o'clock in the Memorial Union hallway. All students must attend the enrollment cards required by PLLC COCHAKEH. NON-FRATERNITY MEN: There will be an open mass meeting Thursday evening at 7:30 in the men's lounge of the Memorial Union building for all non-freemenity of the freshman class. This meeting will be sponsored by the Oread-Kayhawk party and is for the purpose of nominating candidates for the freshman election. "Hell Weck" will be replaced by a *probationary week*, and this does not mean that the name alone will be changed. At the beginning of each semester, every fraternity shall submit for approval to the counselor of men n PI LAMBDA THETA: UNIVERSITY WOMEN'S CLUB: Lip Lambia Thea pledge services will be held Thursday, Nov. 1, at 4:30 in room 116 Fraser hall. All women to be pleased please in room 108 Fraser hall. The November tea will be held at Myres hall on Thursday afternoon at 1 p.clock. MRS, J. J. WHEELER, Corresponding Secretary. V M C A CARINET: --statement of the objectives of its probab- iary week, together with a detailed outline of the program or plan of pro- cedure to be followed. The Y. M. C. A. cabinet will meet Thursday afternoon at 4:30 in room 10 of the Memorial Union building. WILFRED McCLAIN, Vice President. Campus Opinion THE EDITOR REQUESTS that the president of the K.J. Young Democratic Club get in touch with him at once concerning a campus opinion handed in yes- Editor Daily Kansan: Some of the common practices specifically prohibited by the new ruling are physical paddle handling, exiting the water and swimming daily minimum of seven hours—any kind of rough handling, and diving to the bottom, or properly designated fraternity officials. It isn't that I have been afraid to do something like this. I have been busy, that is all. It is because I came to K.U. to learn. I said, "K.U. is prominent in the filing of learning. I shall go there." And here I am, after the first issue of the Jaya Press, I went to the library and lectually. Writing in that issue was not even rotten journalism! And on each page, painted in the blood of this Barbarian, is the word Monopoly! The Cream of the Crop! Who are they, and what have they done? We know the only requisite of the "copper" in wealth, and we ask: "What have they done?" **Poets! Moths Mr. Guest would laugh—quite as much as he is laughed at. And with all the Barbarian poets and authors who expressed, via application, a willingness to contribute *Illustrations!* Oh, I have it, the good artists are Barbarians. And you, Joyhawk Editors, had two months or —who knew?—more "Illustrations." I have hunch that you were not capable of doing a worthwhile job. If I am wrong about this, my brother and sister Barbarians shall know upon receipt of the next issue. And, if there is a repetition of this recent "I'm better than you" or "Monopoly" attitude, there is but one alternative: A publication by and for the Barbarians, bearing the title, perhaps, of The Barbarian. Those of the Barbarians whose names will be the launching of such an enterprise will please phone 1504—and ask for. In issuing this statement the prel- ceident said that the action was prompted by the fact that "the university is obligated to protect the health and well being of all students under its supervise and to justify the faith and confidence placed in it by parents and patrons." Paddling, tubbing, and "Hell Week" as practiced by the fraternities at the University of Southern California were abolished last week by Dr. Rufus B von Klein-Smid, president of that university. George James Michalopoulos. Hell Week Goes to — This plan indicates a way in which the University of Illinois can abolish "Hell Week." For several years authorities on the campus have been trying to convince fraternities that "Hell Week" as well as those on this campus is harmful to students. Doctor Board of the University Health Service has repeatedly testified as to the detrimental effects of this week to which all pledgees have to submit. Professors have complained of the general decline noted in the scholastic work of pledges. Several of the leading fraternities on this campus have practically abolished "Hell Week." The men in these fraternities realize that paddling and other physical activities are anything but respect and brotherhood. However, there are still a number of fraternites who still carry on the old practice. The leaders of these houses know how to handle situations and they cannot be persuaded to accept any intelligent course of action. An appeal has been made to them at other times with our results. These individuals will never give up their rights to a pledge who cannot defend himself. The solution to this situation lies in action on the part of university authorities. It would be a great aid if university professors would write letters to the editor of the Daily Illini and state their opinions of "Hell Week." "Hell Week" has no place in an intelligent student body. Chaffee Here For Game Carl "Chafft" Curtis Chaffte, '25, chemist for the Continental Oil company of Ponce City, Okla., attended the Kansas-Oklahoma game Saturday on his way home from Chicago where he had been on business. Freshman Teams to Play Friday Freshman Teams to Play Friday Warren Plakkas, assistant freshman football coach, announced today that there will be a game between two freshman football teams of at least half of the season. On the football game last Friday the Bites defeated the Yellowies by a score of 6 to 0. HAIRCUT ___ 20c Shave ___ 20c PALACE BARBER SHOP Across from Swedes RALACE BARBER SHOP Across from Swedes GROSS CAFE at 9th and New Hampshire Welcomes You at all times. Shrimp and Oysters every Thursday and Friday. ROCK --- CHALKLETS By R.J.B. BROKE AGAIN BROKE AGAIN (The Saddest Words of Mouth or Pen) The Sudden Words of Mouth or Pen (Broke, broke, broke) I am back in the house. O Dail I could remember spending the I dreaded I had. Oh, well for the business man's boy that he drives on the Hill every day. Oh, well for the hunter's ind, that comes up to college to play. Or some money sent from home. And the couses still so on as hopelessly as this pome, But, oh, for a touch from my father dear. Broke, broke, broke, my checks are all coming back "hot." How crumple, in making me wonder If I'll stay a free man or not. Although we solicited this poem, we are so overjoyed at finding a contributor that we are tempted to pronounce Lamer, Poet Laureat of Mt. Rushmore, any object she may object to the objectier submit a poem or forever hold his rhyme. According to reports, the Spooner Thayer museum is to receive some prints of old spoons, which prompts the alliterative-minded headline writer to say: "Send Silver Sipping Spoons to Spooner." "Intoxicated driving, uncentred thrumping and indiscriminate spoonning," a traffic report declares, "are among the major menaces of our highway safety." Or, to put it even more boldly, his hike and hup—Boston Herald. The dreadth is so hard on the local pumpkin crop that the kids will have to use turnips for their Halloween treats —Cheetah Shoe in August Gazette. As long as the kinds don't have to use oranges for jack-o-lanterns all will be satisfactory. Want Ads Twenty-five words or less; 1 im- sertion; 23 i录; 1 imserion; persons. WANT ADS AND ACCOMPARED ACCOMPANDED BY CASH. LOST. Men's gold watch with watch black leather strap. Initials: AML. on back. Call Pengy Anze Landen 415. Brownd. — 26 PLEASANT, DESIRABLE, reasonably priced rooms for boys. At 1227 Ohio Phone 1212W. -55 KU. WILL WIN the football game, T14 say; and you can get a Hollywood Hair Cut for 25c at the KU. Barber Shop, 14th & Tennessee. -37 FOR SALE. Tuxedo in good condition. Cheap. Ruby Zuber, 505 East 9th, Hutchinson, Kansas. -37 WANTED: Young Lady to sell women's hoesie, afternoons and Saturdays in local store, Write Box No. 4, Daily Kannan. —35 JOUNIAL-POST delivered to you each evening and Sunday 15s week. Sports, news, comics, up to date pictures. Phone your order to 603. FEET HURT? Don't miss that party because of painful corneal. All foot injuries can cause pain. James S. Seen, Chircopodist, Foot Speecher 731. Masson Pediatric, Phone 9282. NOTICE CO-EDS: Soft end cils $1.00 complete; guaranteed oil permits $1.50 to $5.00, any style. Shampoo and conditioner $4.99. Balm .84. Massachusetts. Call 2333. FOR SALE! 1931 Chevrolet Coach, cox- lic condition. Priced right, each or terms. Call at 927 Massachusetts or phone 722. -45 WANTED: Wire fireplace screen. Phone 2285-M. —30. Osteopathic Physician DR. FLORENCE BARROWS Treatment of colon and rectal diseases 900 lb Mass. Phone 2337 A farce comedy with a popular appeal Only two more performances "Eva The Fifth" A face comedy with a popular appeal Kansas Players---Dramtaic Club PRESENTS AT FRASER THEATRE Curtain 8:15 November 1.2 Season Tickets (3 plays) $1.00; Single Admission 50c Student Activity Tickets Admit — Reservations Now — Green Hall 9 a.m. till 12 and 1 p.m. till 4 p.m. Modern Decoration Calls For Only The FINEST PAINT You will find it more economical to buy our paints, because they are made to assure the most artistic effects. The simplicity of decoration today demands smooth, even color surfaces that only scientific- illy made paints can give. Lacquers, varnishes, flat saints, and enamels, in small or large quantities. STUDENTS—Let us give you an estimate on the paint needed to redecorate your room or apartment GREEN BROS. "Lawrence's Largest Hardware Store" We Deliver Phone 632 "Laurence's Largest Hardware Store"