WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1933 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS New Year's Varsity $ 50^{\circ} $ Dates and Stags Friday Night January 6 Bill Phipps and His Orchestra Dancing 9 to 12 Memorial Union New Year's Varsity 50c Dates and Stage Dates and Stags Friday Night January 6 Bill Phipps and His Orchestra Dancing 9 to 12 Memorial Union Dates and Stags New Year's Varsity 50c SOCIETY Phi Chi Delta Holds Candle Lighting Servic Candle Lighting Service A candle light service with 45 members participating marked the regular meeting of Chi Phi Delta, Presbyterian church sorority, at 8:30 last night at Westminster hall. The dinner was sponsored by the Sorority Plans for the initiation of new members on Jan. 17 were discussed. Group singing concluded the program. Kappa Phi Announces Nominating Committees Eugena Donahue, c 35, was in charge of program arrangements, assisted by Edith Borden, fa 34, Mary Rudiger, c 35, and Eldie Bovenbacher, c 35. Kappa Phi, Methodist church sermon, held its first meeting of the year in the form of a candle lighting service last night at Myers hall. Elizaveta is in charge of the program. Developmentes led by Jesse Lee, e 35. The following nominating committee was appointed by Betty Day, ed;33 president; Allena Hicks, c;33, Margaret Roberts, fa;35, Edna Jane Peuney, c; and Mrs. Edwin F. Price, sponsor of the organization. Recent Marriage Is Announced Mr. and Mrs. Henry John Tillia of Birmingham, Ala., announce the marriage of their daughter, Virginia Elliott. The couple will be married, 22, at the home of the bride's parents. The University Women's club will entertain with a tea tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock in Myers hall. Dr. Woolson will speak in City, Mo. will speak on "Philosophy." Dr. Ott was graduated from Southwestern College at Winfield, receiving his M.A. degree from the University of Kansas and a Ph.D. degree from Ohio State University. He is professor of mathematics at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville. Club to Hear Dr. Andreas Bard Mrs. Lee E. Treese is in charge of the general arrangements for the tea. Those will help her are Mrs. J. N. Carman, refreshments; Mrs. Henry Werner, decorations; Mrs. A. H. Shus, table; and Mrs. Allen Caffen, program. To Give Dinner Agee-Goodkind Alpha Chi Omega will entertain the following members of Morgat Board, honorary society for senior women, at dinner tomorrow evening at the chapter house; Alice Gallup, Alice Learned, Elizabeth Ansisworth, Heston Elizabeth Ansisworth, Martin Lawrence, Kathleen Asher, Jane Cornelius, and Charlotte Mangelsdorf. Announcement has been made of the marriage of Ruth Agee, daughter of Mrs. Ida M. Aage of St. Joseph, Mo. to L. Lewis McGuckin Jr., of Chicago. The couple will make their home in Chicago. The bride is a former student at the University, and is a member of Mu Phi Epsilon. Dr. Blayton Krayler of Bell Memorial hospital, Kansas City, Kan., will be a dinner guest for Phi Chi, professional in the marrow evening at the chapter house. Mrs. Jane Maclean, housemother at the Pt Beta Phi house, will be hostess to members of the Thursday team on Friday andorrow afternoon at the chapter house. Carl Hollday of Manhattan is a guest at the Kappa Sigma house. He is grand master of the chapter at the Kansas State College. Alpha Gamma Delta will entertain Beta Theta PI with an hour of dancing at the chapter house from 7 to 8 o'clock tomorrow evening. The vest pocket maps of the Kansas legislature for 1933, which are prepared by the University of Kansas Alumni association are now out. There are two maps in this little pamphlet, one with the representatives to the house and the other of the senate. The districts are marked with the representativeness each Member of the legislative find these maps very convenient for locating other members and their districts and for marking committees. "Botton's Up" to Prove Point Boston—UP) Lawyers at a hearing in federal court here contended that 95 per cent alcohol, which had been introduced in evidence, could not be contained in the bottle or given ginger ale or otherwise diluted. Suddenly U.S. Attorney S. M. Brewster of Kentucky grabs the bottle and took a drink. "That's not so tough," he commented. MAPS OF KANSAS LEGISLATURE NOW READY FOR DISTRIBUTION The Alumni association has been distributing these maps since 1821. On the back of the pamphlet there is a sketch of the center entrance to the administration building and a paragraph concerning the University. 'Bottoms Up' to Prove Point Technocrats Discard 'Price System'; Would Measure Work by Ergs, Joules By Sidney B. Whipple New York, Jan. 4 — (UP) In its theory that the machine age has increased mankind's productive power beyond humanity's capacity to absorb the flow of manufactured products, technocracy is said to be radically every economist agrees with that. But in its theory that this new age has smashed the "price system"—the system by which the flow of goods, wealth and the material requisites for life is regulated—technocracy has prevailed. The system has been actively attacked by students of economics. The technocrats say that the price system, which is the yardstick by which work and production are measured, may have been fitted for past ages, but that it is antiquated, broken down, and useless as a measure today. May Have to Eat Ergs In their attacks on the price system, the technoarchs point out that not even the followers of Karl Marx, the socialists, or the communists have advocated for their own standards. Technoarchy would wipe them out and measure labor and production by some unit of energy—the erg and the joule, or perhaps the calorie. Technoarchs also want to live on ergs, or transport erg, or吃 erg, the technocorps do not say. But the theory is this: All forms of energy can be measured in ergs. A dollar may be worth, in buying power, so much today and more or less tomorrow. A unit of work, or heat, or energy, never changes. On the other hand, they argue, the dollar is an arbitrary unit that has no measure of the physical operation" of our continent. Wealth Evidence of Debt Furthermore, the price system op erates so that all wealth is produced only by the creation of debt, and a man is wealthy when he is a vast creditor. In other words, the wealthy man owns stocks, bonds, public and private objebies, and has the power that is a dab of the government itself. Nine members of the senate and nineteen members of the house of the 1933 Kansas legislature are graduates of the University of Kansas. Many of their wives, daughters, sons, niece and grandchildren attend school; they have children in school at the present. They are: C. A. Dodge, Jr., c34, son of C. B. Dodge, sensor from the 31st district; Helen Russell, fa34, daughter of R. C. Russell, senator from the 35th district; Joe F. Balthach, c38, daughter of Nina Neochoe and William H. Vernon, Jw c34, son of W. H. Vernon, representative from Pawnee county. Wives, Sons and Daughters Are Also Former University Students Members of the House who are graduates are: O. M. P., May S, 15; *S*; Harry W. Fisher, 113; R. A. Cox, 108; S. C. Bloss, 94; Matt Guilleau, 114; George K. Melvin, 120; R. C. Walters, 15; Ed Pedroja, 120; George W. Flummer, 96; fess W. White, 19; Russell J. Walsh, 115; William B. Charles E. H., 22, 124; Elm Rother, 26; Morris Johnson, 19; John W. Blood, 106; Frank McFarland, 18; Jes L. Teetors, fs 17; and Harry M. Minker, fs 18. Members of the Senate who are Uni- iversity graduates are A. Q. Delleyan, Jr., 172, Simon Webb, 128, g29) Hali, 163, James Ward, 152) Cynthia Todd, 150, tafs i. and C. Cook, 144) K.U. Grads in Legislature BAR FOREIGN DEBT DEFUNCTS ETON MONEY MADE, INVESTIG The technocrat recites the puzzling case of Henry Ford, whose family, they say, made profits of $4,000,000 in one year. These millions represented the "debits" of the country to them. But this was only one thing they could do with these millions. They couldn't eat money from further stocks and bonds and cash, debts which must be paid by further production. Mavhan Gets Appointment Mayhan Gets Appointment The appointment of Cadet R. C. Mayan, c36, to cadet corporal was an honoured today by Major W. C. Kuehman, senior corps captain, who has been assigned to the first platoon of Battery "B." These debts, the technocrats observe, must be paid by the process of increasing the quantity of goods sold, by trade expansion, by increased production, and in a virtuous circle, by increasing machinery to step up further production. But the very machines grow men out of work, decreasing mankind's power of consumption—and there you are, mankind is losing its wealthy man still piling up what he thinks is property, but what is actually nothing but other people's debts to him. Humanity, therefore, under this theory is doing nothing but running around in circles; each time humanity runs around the circle gets bigger. The circle will soon get so big it will explode, and "20,000,000 Americans will work"—in the theories hold, and if somebody doesn't do "something about it." Humanity Runs in Circles When you ask technocrats, then, what they propose to do, they shrug their shoulders. (The third article in this series will be carried tomorrow.) (Copyright 1933, by United Press) BAR FOREIGN DEBT DEFUNCTS FROM MONEY MART; JOHNSO Washington, Jan. 4—(U-P)—Senator Johnson, Republican from California, in a bitter speech called on congress today to bar from the American money market all foreign debtors who repurchase U.S. dollars in United States or to American citizens. Johnson has such a bill before the senate finance committee. In the midst of his war debt speech today, he an- nounced that he would demand action in this session. HOUSE LEADERS TO CONFER WITH ROOSEVELT ON RELIEF New York, Jan. 4.-(UP)-President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt, after a visit to a dentist, today mapped out details of the program he will discuss tomorrow with Democratic congressional leaders. Sweeping reduction, affecting every function of the Federal government and farm relief legislation, which Rosevelt is desirous of seeing carried out at the short session are high on the list. New Orleans—(UP)—Even the ice men couldn't stand the recent cold spell here. Several ice wagons appeared on the streets with drivers squatting beside small charcoal furnaces as they made their rounds. Ice Men Use Furnaces Erma Bologté at Hospital Ermia Bologté, c3h became suddenly ill after a stabbing of Phi Chi Delta, Presbyterian sorority, and was taken to Watkins Memorial hospital. She was recovering nicely this morning. Erma Blodgett at Hospital COMPARISON OF INCREASED ENROLLEMENT, TEACHING STAFF, TOTAL EXPENDITURES, AND THESE EXPENDITURES COMPUTED ON EVIDENCE OF RESPONSES TO QUESTIONS. May Revise 'Point System' W.S.G.A. Committee to Meet Soon; Honor System Investigated This graph demonstrates that on the basis of 1915 values the University expenditures have increased 225 per cent since 1915 while enrollment has decreased. Meetings for the point system committee and the honor system committee were planned at the meeting of the W.S.G.A. council held last night. The committee is planning to revise the point system maintained for University women. The honor system committee with several members of the faculty will continue the investigation of the honor system here and at other universities. A report of marginal guidance week by Miss玛格丽特 Fiffel, who was given the training, is given by Alice Learned, c34, chairman of the voational guidance committee, at the regular meeting next week. There will be no W.S.G. tea this TAU SIGMA PLEDGES TO GIVE PROGRAM AT NEXT MEETING There will be no W.S.G.A. tea this week. The pledges of Tau Sigma will present the program at a meeting of that organization Tuesday, Jan. 10, at 4:30 in the afternoon. The purpose of the program is to watch the dancing in view of choosing persons to appear in the annual recital, which will be given II. unless the date is changed. Miss Jill Walters will be the speaker at the meeting. The pledges are divided into two sections, as follows: Laura Cooke, captain, Helen Skinner, Elizabeth Day, Jean Cowie, Virginia Sterling, Sarah Jane Givins, and Marian Fagen. The second division: Dorothy Breedthal, captain, Betty Jones, Friends Funk, Jane Warner, Catherine Marsh, Jeanne Helen Tyler, and Emma Joo Suanwong. 200 UNEMPLOYED BATTLE WORKERS ON BUILDING JOB Wheaton, II., Jan. 4. (UP)—An army of 200 unemployed come to the million-dollar Wheaton postoffice project today and battled some 75 inmates, who were assaulted, and shovels, leaving six injured. The battle, which followed unsuccessful attempts of the unemployed, who had come in 63 autos from other cities, ended up inside the workers to leave the job, who was briskly fought for several minutes. Answer to Today's Query Answer to Today's Query He rode in the front seat with a girl on his lap. GIRLRS: Attractive kitchenette, living room; grand piano radio. Also double woofer, with or without board. Every room has a built-in TV. 1703. Mrs. Junita Ringo. — $82. LOST. Pair of gold-rimmed glasses and silver Waterman fountain pen in black leather case. If found, please call carolyn Harper at 1123. —80 LOST; Black bill fold, containing snapshots and pin. If found, please see Delmar Curry at 181 Illinois. — 81. FOR RENT. Nicely furnished room in private home. Near Campus. Garage. 945 Ohio. Phone 2521R. -81. THE CENTRAL PRODUCE CO. 812-14 Vermont Phone 700 —that the tenderest, most flavorful of milk-fed frying chickens come from DON'T FORGET MONEY LOANED ON VALUABLES Shoes and Gent's Furnishing Goods New and Misfit Clothing Jewelry and Watches Guns and Revolvers 637 Mass. ABE WOLFSON BREAKFAST WITH US Toasted Sandwiches - Waffles Hot Cakes - Ham and Eggs If you are in a hurry — We will be. Phone 675 COE'S DRUG STORE No. 2 a. Woven checked Seersucker, white pique viole blouse $7.95 b. Woven striped Seersucker, transparent buttons $3.95 c. Plaid gingham with a white pique collar and patent belt $2.95 Thursday...A Special Presentation Nelly Don Spring Fashions 411 W. 14th — Carl Clifton, Mgr. NELLY DON prices them all quite low—then sweeps them into distinction by the sheer force of their smartness, their radiant colors, exquisite details, casual lines and new textures! See them while our collection is still complete!