Unsettled tonight and tomorrow. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Council decrees more slaughter of the innocents. VOL. XXIX The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas Chinese Advancing Against Japanese Entrenched Army Attempt to Cut Off Man churian Occupation Forces Causes Concern Mudken, Nov. 12—(UP)—The Chinese have started moving against the extended Japanese forces on the Noni river front today it was announced that Japanese forces in the Japanese in Manchuria. The announcement said Chinese cavalry from Angangbei below Taitou had moved southward, passing to the right of Tashin, where the Japanese threatened to cut off the Japanese rear. 'COMING FROM RUSSIA "The situation is dangerous, and I Chinese attack is expected at any moment. My team is considering considerable force occupied a position south of the daziness, the latter's com­mander in, and confronted from the north by an unnely superior force of Chi- Horie's headquarters said 20,000 Chinese were now mobilized at Anganchi with equipment received in the last week from Russia. Chinese in Russian uniforms are arriving at Anganchi from Russia, the announcement said. The Americans are about 100 Chinese in the Red army, but ridiculed the Japanese report. Headquarters declined to reveal the number of Japanese on the Nomu, but it was disclosed on reliable authority to report. They were wrong, wrote out numbered about 10 to 1. Representatives of Kansas College Meet in Topeka Today Plan Post-Season Games TOPKA, NOV. 12, (CP)-THAT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS WILL MET WASHUEN COLLEGE IN A CHARITY FOOTBALL GAME IN TOPKA, DEC. 5. WAS DECIDED AT A MEETING OF THE ATHLETIC HEADS HERE TODAY. WE WANT TO HELP THEM to help unemployed in Topkau and 49 per cent will go to Lawrence for the same purpose. Other details of the games will be worked out later. Kansas State will meet Wichita University in Wichita on the same day. Sixty per cent of the returts are from the Wichita area. Farty per cent to Manhattan. Minimum price of admission to the gates will be $2. No reduction价 will be made for the students in any of the four institutions. No. 54 Meet in Topeka A meeting to arrange for post-season charity football game was held in Washington on Monday morning by representatives from Washburn College, Wichita University, Kansas State College of Agriculture and Applied Sciences, and the University Representations from the various institutions included the head of each city, the mayor, and as well as heads of the chambers of commerce of the four cities, Topkapi, Tsimane, Tbilisi, and Vladivostok. Those going frobe th兜 were Chancellor E. H. Lindley; Dr. F. C. Allen director athletics; Dean B. Sisak representative to the Big Six; Coach H. W. Harles; and A. B. Weyer, president, Wayne McCoy, first vice-president, and George Chamberlain, secretary, Lawrence chamber of commerce. BE HELD TOMORROW NIGHT ANNUAL MILITARY BALL WILL BE HELD TOMORROW, NICH The annual military hall, sponsored by the R. O. T. C., will be given in the hallroom of Memorial Union building at 12 Hull Hall to furnish the music. Out-of-town guests from Kansas City, Topka, and Leavender are ex-convicted. Ms. J. H. Lindley, Chancellor and Mrs. E. H. Lindley, Dean Agnes Husband, Major W. C. Koenig, Col. George Derning, Professor William Derning, envoies will be Mr. and Mrs. Fred Elsweiler,rof and Mrs. J. H. Neboh, and instructors in the college of mili- RADIO ENTHUSIASTS TO PLAN PERMANENT ORGANIZATION Because of the interest shown by many electrical engineering students in the fall semester, Ralph Ayrre, c33, has called a meeting of all those interested in radio to more than 400 faculty members. At the meeting tonight temporary officers will be elected and plans laid for LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1931 Quill Pleäges 10 Students Junior-Senior Literary Society Initiates Three Women ates Three Women Pledging services for the 10 students who were successful in becoming mentors of a new senior literature society at the University, were hold high eight at 8 in the morning and seven at 6 in building. Initiation services for three new members were also held at this time. The following students were inflated Maxine English, c23; Catherine Vallette, c23; and June Roth, c23. Those pieded last night were Laurent Montzingo, 'cunel,' Holly Bolton, *cunel* 32 Hilden Bolton, *cunel* 33 Rolla Nuckles, 'cunel,' Chilton Creason, *T33*, Leslie Rutledge, *cunel*, C22, Hard Jones, *cunel*, C24, Dud Miner, *cunel*, and Fred Wird. *cunel* A short business meeting was held at 7:30 at which only the active members of the group were present, mediately following the pledging and initiation services, refreshed were Quentin Davis, Injured in Crash. Dies in Topeka: Former Student Was Member Phi Delta Theta; Funeral Sunday Quentin Marshall Davis, 23, of McPherson, a student in the University last year, died Wednesday night at Stormont hospital in Topeka, from an accident incident near Topeko. Davis was injured when a car in which he was riding with Q. R. Lyth and Leslie Beard, of McPherson, collided with one driver Davis is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. Davies and Mrs. Phenom, Pheasant Funeral services will be held Sunday, Nov. 15 at 2 p.m. in the Presbyterian Davidis was a member of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. services for Student Killed Tuesday Night to Be in White Cloud Funeral services for Robert L. Pierce 24. University student who was killer Tuesday night when his car overturned three times as he tried to avoid a crash. Six Cornerers, will be held Friday, Nov. 13, at 2 a.m. in White Cloud. Pierce's body will be lie in state until Friday morning at the house of his brother, Larry Kelly, seven miles southeast of Independence, Mr. just off Leesum Summit Pierce was a member of the Phi Mu Alpha, musical fraternity, and Delta Chi, social fraternity. Delegations from fraternities will attend the funeral. GUY MAIER PLAYS RETURN ENGAGEMENT AT HIGH SCHOOL Stepping into the role of a dreamer, Guy Mauir, pianist, played before an audience of grade and upper elementary students at Memorial high school afternoon evening. The dreamer went through a deep forbearance before he also in music as he played "Prelude" (Chopin). Then the "Dance of the Tambourine" (Gosse) pictured a soldier marched through a courtyard with a course more appropriate for the day the dreamer became a soldier and married three times. He "Rookie's Squand" (Kluber). And so on through many lands of both people and animals, enduring the silence of 'Wolf,' interpreted by a waltz method. Rahul B. Ludwik, *£25* president of the Dolta Tula Dulza fraternity, has withdrawn from school and has returned to his home Glacier, Kan., be- Delta Tau President Withdraws The second part of the program was given to the telling of a story of toyland. The characters were dolls in a toy shop and the story was told by Master both in words and in music and illustrated on the screen by colored slides. Nervous Magazine Salesman Pleads Case of Amos'n' Andy in Hill Offices Graduate of K. U. Tells About Work in Russian Mines He made hurried visits to several offices in the Administration building, and he was not alone. A regulation, having a wild story about tooth paste, magazines, and Amos 'n Andy that seemed, from the reports available, to have varied in every day. "Have you received your sample tube of Pedepent with Harper's Bazaar yet?" was the query of a most unusual magazine salesman the Hill this morning. Engineer William E. Mullins Assisted in Direction of Siberian Coal Operations "Russia will be very lucky if they have 25 per cent of their five-year plan completed when the alotted time is up." This was the high point of the season for Mullins, c28, at the School of Engineering concretized this morning. Mullins has just returned from an eighteen months stay in Siberia where he has been working in the Siberian coal fields. Mullins is a K. U. football teams while in school. Mullins was one of a group of engineers sent to Russia to supervise the great coal mining interests of the U.S. Mullins was sent to work for the coal trust that has charge of all of the coal mining from the Ural mountains to the Arctic. The coalitions Mullins said that the haaste in find coal has caused the Russian engineers to drive shafts for mines that missed the vein as much as 90 meters. The coalitions Mullins said that the attempt at speed is pathetic. In one instance the only steel that the engineers had had been forced from railroad iron. In speaking of the Russian railroads, Mullins said that they were shown an electrified line that skirts the city of Moscow and built under the supervision of German engineers and most of the equipment had been made in Germany. This line was used to power a ship as representative of the great Russian system of railroads, in reality most of the railway cars are of the four wheeled locomotives. At the occasion the engineers group was sent the wrong way at a junction and 24 hours passed before the mistake was resolved. Perhaps he was nervous, or hard-hit. At any rate, after telling one starred secretary that Amoa "in Andy's hand," he asked the officer he nine, 19, he fired. In the other man he Mullins was stationed at Tornuk in central Liberia. The living condition there were very bad. The workers all ate bread and water, they pay from 25 to 30 per cent of their wages and in return they receive their allowment of bread and potatoes and a share of the government cannot buy at the government's stores but must go on the market where the prices are very high. A chicken cottage or butter salad and butter salsa about $4.50 a pound. FATE PROBLEMATICAL Living Conditions Bad Elizabeth Bryan, ed32, and Dorothy Lightburn, ed33, will represent the Women's Athletic association of the University at the state convention to be held at Southwestern College. Winfield, beginning Nov. 19. Miss Bryan is president of W. A. A. and Miss Lightburn, from the association at large. Russian Church Is Gone Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes, assistant professor in the department of English, was in Loewenworth Touche for 10 years as part of an organization of Jewish women. The church is Muslim, goes according to Mullahs. The people of each village are given their choice to vote whether the church be turned down or put up. The people of each village he has his choice. The fact is, it is he does vote in favor of the church remaining, he is exiled to the Siberian region, and he is sent to the Soviet government feeds and clothes the Red army and all town are forced to supply them. According to Mullahs the Soviet secret police. The life of the soldier is greatly evoked by the peasants, although the Russian army the most poorly equipped in the world. In speaking of the fate of Russia, Mullins said that so far, no one has offered a solution in case the five-year plan fails. Mullins spent most of his time and conditions there are considerably worse than those in European Russia. again to explain that the publishers of his list of magazines were going to save the paper industry by making a contract that would keep them on the air in case sufficient subscription was not made. To Attend Convention In one office where he had previously made a sale, he dropped in for a moment to find out if the magazines were regularly, but even there he lived. The general consensus of opinion among the women in the various offices was that he was a "tall, dark handsome man," and there was a good chance he would be spotted inopping in and out of the various offices like a starled rabbit as he did. A pop rally will be held tonight at 7:15 at the St. Thomas Fc station as the team leaves for St. Louis for the game Saturday with Washington PEP RALLY TONIGHT Mixer to Be Feature of Homecoming Rally The rally will be sponsored and directed by the Ku Ku's. The homecoming rally and mixer at 8:30 p.m., Nov. 29, in the Union building gives promise of being one of the greatest gatherings of notables and good times this year, according to the plan. The committee will meet the committee preparing this program. Pep Talks, Several Stunts and Boxing Match Scheduled Scheduled Herefore the rally and miker have been planned separately, but this year the object is to centralize them under the control of a team that will affair an atmosphere of good spirit. The program for one hour of pep talks will include H. I. W. "Bull Hirglans", head foot protection and a fire brigade director, and 'Sandy' Window, a former cheekwarcher who is reputed to have an all-time record for intensity and fire where pep gatherings are to occur. There will be other talks by alumni and some stunts including a boxing match between Bill Ridley and Kansas City Mo., and Ewert Kirkart, c35, freshman taclede, and an eccentric dance by Johnny Moe, who will also redefine the match. Music for the program will be furnished by a quartet from the University Men's plex club under the direction of Todd Seldoff and his orchestra have been obtained for the program of free dancing to follow the rally. The Jay Janes will serve candle and doughnuts following the rally the group will assist in holding the crowd. Dr. Latimer Publishes Paper 'Prenatal Growth of Cat' Printed in October Anatomical Record Doctor Latriner studied 220 fetus, and 35 newborns in preparing his series of articles. Some of the specimens were so small it was necessary to use binoculars. The article is illustrated with twelve charts, which show the curves of growth of the different parts of the fetus. This month's article is the second of a series of articles on the development of the at present be and Evert Larson, of the department of anatomy are working on quantitative analysis of adult cuts. This will be published Dr. Houter B. Liatner, professor of anatomy, has an article on "The Presence and Function of the Number of the Anatomical Record. The article gives the growth and dimension of the head and trunk of the cat utet through the changes in mind." The work on the cats is the first of its kind, and is the authority in that field. Dr. Dominene Gaghaird, of the department of economics, and Prof. Alix Winston, of the department of English were elected president and secretary of the recently organized Lawrence Chapel University of Chicago College Association. CHICAGO UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ELECT GAGLIARDO PRESIDEN Meetings will be held on the occasions of visits of distinguished persons from the University of Chicago. Richard Harrington, b32, has been appointed as treasurer of the School of Business to succeed Roland Rogers who did not return to school this fall. Harrington's appointment was made by the School of Business offi- Harrington to Office Sigma Nu, house. 1 a.m. O.T. Nu, house. 12 p.m. Gamma Piu, house. 12 p.m. Gamma Piu Ba, house. 1 a.m. Baptist Young People, church. 1 a.m. AUTHORIZED PARTIES Friday, Nov. 12 Wesley foundation, church, 10:30 t.m. Varsity, Union building, 12 p.m. Alpha Tau Omega, house, 12 p.m. Lutheran Students, church, 10:30 p. - Delta Sigma Lambda, house, 12 n.m. Saturday, Nov. 14 Sociology department, Broadview Inn. 8:30 p.m. AGNES HUSBAND, Dean of Women Noted Economist Talks on Effects of Machine Epoch ... Stuart Chase to Appea Tonight as Second Feature of Lecture Course WELL-KNOWN AUTHOR Stuart Chase, noted economist, writer, and author on Russian and Mexican as well as American industry, who applauds his work for its auditorium as the second feature of the Community lecture course, is to arrive in Lawrence at 5 a.m. this afternoon. He is to be a guest of the Chancellor at dinner, to which other guests are invited. This subject for the evening's lecture will be "The End of an Epoch!" a talk by a clinician in child psychology, including a discussion of the depression, and concluding with a call to action. Author of Books on Economies Clase is the author of "Men and Women in Business" and co-author of "Your Money's secret." The book combines with practical lessons on business to cover loss of jobs by adoption of new machinery, breaddales, and the relation between income and employment. On his lecture tour this year, Chase discusses the following subjects: "The Tiger," "The Elephant," "The chineless Men." "The Iron Bouncer," "A Billion Miles of Horses," "Machines" and "The Diver." Discusses Work in Machine Age In "Man and Machines," his best-known book is *The Making of a Machine* and where it is leading. He treats the matter of jobs in a machine age with a view of authority from an engineer who has created unemployment; ultimately it has created far more work than it took to operate the machine and the population of the earth to triple. Chase asks and discusses such questions "As shall men be slave or master for us?" and asks for "for us or we for them"? Gigantic buildings tower skyward; giant aeroplanes and dirigibles and great ocean liners lie on the surface of the graph, telephone, and radio are at our services. But are they at our service? Chase has the reputation for wasting time with these questions, so much so that such questions. He neither attacks nor defends in his lectures, but submits these to the audience with suggestions as to the future. He attempts, in brief, to draw up an itemized balance sheet, showing the gains and losses a machine age has brought to mankind. Taggart Teaches in Topcka Classes Sponsored by the American Institute of Banking Joseph H. Taggart, associate professor of economics in the School of Business at Tufts University, will visit bankers at Topena each Monday evening. The courses are given under the auspices of Banking, and will continue over a period of 28 weeks. Professor Taggart began the work had year in Lawrence, MA, and went on to study of money and banking and bank credit have approximately 75 members of the various junior executives of the various Topena banks. All of these members have pursued the course of study as prospered students. The American Institute of Banking has conducted an educational campaign in the country, the purpose of which is to improve conditions in the banking industry. It has prescribed 10 prescribed courses, and after the satisfactory completion of these courses, it has become a national bank. Higgins Is Smoker Speaker School of Business Hears Report or Packing Industry That all major packing houses have been operating "in the red" for the past two or three years was the opinion of a group of lawyers and sales manager of Wilson and Co, at the School of Business smoker hold last night at the Delta Stigma Pi house. The group says that profits indirectly as a cause of the lack of profits in the industry, saying the decline in meat prices was the chief factor in the company's suspension on the part of the public. Fred Louis, b. 32, president of the Bank of Business, acted as chairman of the Bank of Louisiana Bickett, manager of the Kansas City Bank, and founder Fam T Stockton of the School of Banking Richard Harrington, b. 32, recently appointed treasurer of the School of Buni- Engineers Will Choose Junior Council Member Committee Is Attempting to Select Insignia for Seniors The election of junior member of the Engineering council was postponed until Wednesday. Nov 18 when a special session of the council took place of filling the vacancy. Only two petitions of candidates for the position have been filed and one of them did not have the necessary number of signatures according to the council constitution. The deadline set for petitions is 12 noon next Friday. These petitions must be signed by at least 20 per cent of the junior class of which there are A committee under the chairmanship of George Fraser has been working on the new system, which will be senior engineers. The committee reported that they believed that they had learned the importance of sigma satisfaction to the class this year. Attempts have been made along the way. It was the opinion of the council that two candidates from the entire junior engineering class was not enough, and as a result an event,circum- Plans have been started for the hob nail shop, annual engineers dance, and an attempt is being made to set the fire to the house during the week of St. Patrick's Day. Five Attend 4-H Congress Five State Champions Win Educationa Trip to Chicago Columbia, Mo. (UP)—Five Missoula 4-H club members, as state champions for the State High School sports tripa to the tenth national 4-H club congress at Chicago from Nov. 21 to Dec. 5, according to Theodore T. Moore of the Missouri College of Agriculture. Those chosen were Mary Triplett, Joyceette Taylor and Jane Forney. Friends from Clay County, and Charles Gates, Henry county, health champions; Florence County, health champions; Annabel Lewis, health champions; and Annaleb Lewis, Petits county, champion in canning excelsior. Two other state champions, in baby and pig production, selected 30 trips to the congress will be awarded outstanding 4-H club members by railroads in Miss- Storling Wilson, c34, underwent an emergency operation this morning at the University of Florida's districts. The operation was performed by Mervin T. Studder, report from the University of Florida, where Wilson's condition as satisfactory. Wilson is a member of the Della Upsilon Have you ever heard that the world is gettingOLDER every year? Not Kansas, for the last month she held the state championship in October in the last 64 years, according to Prof. C. J. Posey of the State Metrorological station at the University, which monitors temperatures in the station. The mean temperature was 61.92 degrees which is 5.75 degrees above the normal for October. The warmest October was in 1922. Do you Kansas Has Had Only Two Warmer Octobers During Past Six Decades Only twice in the last 64 years has the temperature been higher in October than that of last month. Back in January, it was as a maximum, and in 1872 it reached 92 degrees. Warm Octobers are not infrequent as the temperature reached the same as this year in 1881 and 1928 at 36 degrees. It is almost a drought. Only 1.77 inches, which is below par by 1.05 inches. And yet the meteorological station tells us and euii and even more than annual number for October. Perhaps old man Weather made up for it. Standing by her old reputation, Kansas produced plenty of wind. A high pressure breeze blew for 24 hours on Oct 6 and 7. Skirts blink, tin can ears flitter, and a gust of cautious speeds, for a wind of 445 miles for one day's average is something to brace against. The whole wind for the month averaged less than 11 miles per hour. That is calm if you see those nerve-racking days in September. Indian summer has come to hypnotize us for a time, so we must enjoy it and keep it in mind. Jack Frost remained at his palacial bone last month, but he has painted beautiful windows, framed glasses and see one of the most beautiful states in the Union during winter. the rain by giving us four fogy days and putting the humidity at 77.1 per cent which is 9.1 per cent above normal for the Indian summer month. Ten days were partly cloudy. 13 really cloudy days, and then asking for variety, call on Kansas. 'Caps or Paddles,' K Club Members Say to Freshmen Censureship During Recent Weeks Despite Leniency Results in Reversal PAST SINS FORGIVEN On with the cap or on with the pardon² has apparently been the lat- tion judged by members of the K club, judging from material today by Bearisake³, cunel, president, that freshmen must wear caps and ribbons on the Hill tomorrow. "We, as the K club, have absolutely nothing to do with the mailing the French cops and other so-called trumpeters' cops and Boardhouse," but since we are a federal district Council to enforce all such rules, we expect to do so to the best of our ability. We have been laying off the freshmen for the past month in order that we could concentrate on the absence of enforcement by the K club, but so far it has only brought in five new freshmen and the number of freshman caps seen on the campus has been reduced to practi- In speaking of the attitude of the K club toward those who have not been wearing caps during the past week, Beardside said that they "are wiping the slate chain of all offenses that have occurred in the past," but added the need to be careful not to hit his cap during the coming week should be ready to suffer the consequences. Past Offenses Exused This attitude toward past offences also includes punishment of those men who have taken dates to football matches, or both freshmen and upperclassmen. "Punishment for this is out of our control at the present time," said President Boarderds, "as dates may be taken to the Homecoming game without in- As a means of giving weight to their order that caps be worn is the warning to the freshmen that if they do not wear caps during the next week, the proposition may be token to the Men's Student Council that caps be worn during According to the general custom in the University the cap are burned immediately after the blowing of the last breath. The caps will be carried at all times next week by members of the K club, according to present rules. Ribbons will be presented before the deadline. Haunching名来, rather than on Friday, which is Hobo day. PROFESSOR WHEELER DEFINES PERSONALITY AS A BALANCE "The kind of personality we develop depends entirely up our environment. Personality is not born - it is made," said Prof. Raymond Wheeler, head of the College's psychology, while speaking to the engineering lecture class this morning. Professor Wheeler's definition of personality was: "A field property of a person but to the whole being. Personality is one of the most important properties." "Our own peculiar qualities in every case are more efforts to maintain a balanced and energetic life," Wheeler. "Day-dreaming is one of the most common methods of maintaining balance and energy that we get closer to our goal by gaining more kinetic energy. Dreams are Nexi Tuesday, Nov. 17, Prof. L. D. Jennings, assistant professor of economics, will lecture to the class on spending money. PARKS WITH GIRL, TAKES RIDE. LOSES $3 AND CAR Parking in Neosho Falls city park resulted in jerry Arthur, 29, of Burkwood in Neosho Falls, being robbed of $1 less than the amount which finally ended up in Lawrence. The bandit, after robbing Arthur of $1, forced the couple to ride with him to Buck Creek, which is about two miles from town. Here the couple was ordered out of their car by the bandit with instructions not to follow. Arthur hailed a cattle truck coming into Lawrence, and he and Miss Joseph were brought Police are searching for the bandit, of whom they have a good description. Metcalfe Wins Contest Avis Metcalfe, f29, was awarded a Master's degree in electrical engineering by the Fr Grande Oil company recently. Announcement of the prize was given in the Oct. 11 issue of *The Wall Street Journal*. El Paso Mayor chose for her poster topic, "The Passing of the Old West." More than 400 men and women have received this honor.