PAGE SIX --- 7. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13. 1931 Jayhawker Team Abandons Regular Football Uniform Hargiss' Squad Wears Ligh Track Suits to Prac- tice Plays Under Warm Sun With a boiling sun pouring down on every corner and nook of the practice field, the football squad put aside their football pants and shoulder pads and took their pants and kick pads and truck skates yesterday afternoon. Some were only the truck pants. PAGE IS AT FULLBACK Beach told some members of the football team and Coach Hoggins that if he attended school this year he would have to leave with his afternoons devoted to football practice, would not allow him proper time for his studios. He has not failed a course in his year and is well versed in both games and wishes to maintain this record. Coach W. H. Hargas must find a backfill to take Ormand Beach's place and Lee Page seems to fit nicely into the picture. Page, a senior in the team, often carrying the ball, is a sure defense man and also a good passer. Raymond Dumm, who played fullback on the freshman team, has been grounded out for the backfill. It now seems certain that Beech will not attend any school this year due to the fact that he is a student, brother, who is in school this year, and is also sending money home. Beech has been working in the office of the company since June and owns a company at Tacoma all summer. Work on the plays was in order during both of the practices yesterday. In the morning more body contact was allowed as the athletes wore regular football outfits, while the other team went short after a short dummy serigraphy with little body contact. Today is the last day the squail will have for two practices. Tomorrow the practice will start at 3:30 and the real game starts at 4:30. A competition for the first game in ten days. The sound worked on the same plays that it has been using for the last few days following Hargis' principle that a few plays well learned are better than a number which the men are not sure of (not even, but hurtful, carried the ball on a number of the plays in the afterternoon session. Swimming Prospects Good Veteran Stars and Promising Freshmen Expected on Squad Prospects for a winning swimming team are bright with several of last week's winners, from the freshman class scheduled to report. Ted Evans, who was ineligible last year to compete, will also be back with his second Big Six record for the 50 yard dash. Last year Kansas won four dual meets and took third in the Big Six meet in Kansas City. Herbert G. Aliphin, swimming coach, said that practice would not start until he had to do it. His team has not been arranged as yet, but it is planned to have all meet during the season. Men expected out for the team when practice starts are Ted Evans, Bikyot Kumar and Jon Jennings. Stephen Suppleman, Mike Rojger Kruse, F. Mill and Tom Page. Washington. - For their contributions to science in finding methods of many unanticipated centuries, two acta de la Sevilla, have been awarded the research corporation prize of $2,500 and a Swedish university institution. They are Dr. A.E. Douglas of the University of Stockholm. Each acta receives the research corporation plaque. Dr. Douglas is an astronomer, though his study was conducted on trees and on timbers of ancient Pueblo ruins Dr. Anteva has traced similar weather patterns in the mountains using the thin layers of clay in ancient lake beds, known as "varnes." TWO SCIENTIST DISCOVER METHODS TO COUNT YEARS Sport Shorts Dispelling the belief that athletics are all brawn and little brubs, two stars of the first magnitude at the U.S. college championship for Phi Beta Kappa nominations. O'Leary has who lettered twice in basketball and once in tennis, and Junior Coen, star tennis player of international fame, has also written of O'Leary has on the honor roll for three years and Coen for two years. If the present weather prevails for the next two weeks the entire reserve squad of the football team will see a great deal of service in the first game. All players will come through the country may hinge on who has the strongest reserves. John Madison, letterman in the back-field, will have to wear a brace for the ankle he broke during spring practice. Whether this will show him up remains unclear. He is expected to cause Johnny was one of the fastest members of the backfield last year. Coach W. H. Hargis, football mentor, must find some one to take Beach's place in the backfield and this is a tough assignment. Beach was wrong and as a defensive man he was rated by the writers through this territory as having no peer in the Big Six and few who were in the middle of defense in all sections of the country. E. R. Elibel, director of intramural athletics, has finally put into action his plan whereby a student need not attend college unless he is not out for a major sport, band, or R.O.T.C. Elibel has been working on the system of points for more than a year and will be compiling facts after he has seen it in operation. Sport bits from here and there about the campus. *J* John Teach, star freshman guard at Kansas in 1929, star freshman guard at Ohio State in 1950, back at Kansas in 1951, competition. Too bad Paul Fisher, varsity quarterback for three years and journalist, stopping at football practice, shaking hands all over the globe while being bilded with Kansas City Times. We might add that Paul is now an enterprise reporter for that publication. . . Even athletes must enroll. While we were there we saw Schank, Page, Dumun, Koehler and other players not get a new hold and chalk talks between selection of courses. . . Faith frank "Strings" Dixon, colored hardy man on the field and in the lineup, the same as he always did. -SK Place Wisconsin Students 5,009 Jobs Secured by School Employment Bureau With the number of placements made so far this year on a par with those made in 1929, and only slightly below that in 1935, we have the abilities of jobs by which students may earn part or all of their expenses while attending the University of Wisconsin. We are good as during the last two record years, Miss Alice V. King, superintendent of the student employment office at Wisconsin College, told us that A. Record in job placements was made last year when nearly 5,000 temporary, part-time jobs were found for students, in 1929; 4,600 temporary, 4,640 jobs were found for students in 1929; 4,001 in 1928; and 3,000 in 1927. So if in 1928 the number of jobs for students was greater than the number found at this time in 1929. Los Angeles, Cal.-The legislative commission of the National Education Association will continue to work to establish a Federal Department of Education, it was stated at the sixty-ninth session. The Association held in this city recently. N.E.A. WISHES TO ESTABLISH CABINET POST FOR EDUCATION It will also widen its scope to help state departments of education hold school buildings together to better their legislation on such topics as school building programs teacher salaries, and retirement tenure. It will also facilitate circulation a series of pamphlets presenting the arguments dealing with tenure, retirement, rural schools, and community organizations. Cyclones Are Out to Break Lengthy Streak of Losses Veenker, New Coach, Finds Lack of Heavyweights During Opening Workouts THREE LINE VETERANS Following is the first of a series of six daily articles which will be carried on United Press writes, each team in the Big Six conference, in the Big Six conference. Ames, Sept. 15.—(UP) Two long years have dragged themselves away since Iowa State College has won a bipartisan bid to establish agricultural school are working long and faithfully these days in an effort to do some writing in black ink or the type of pen that works best. It was back in 1928 when the Cyclones hung up their last victory. Seventeen gallegs defeated followed. Many players were injured, but bagging for the Ames team when the tide changed and brought victory for opponents by narrow margins. All the strangles ended in fairly close scores on the short end of the count. This year it may be different. A new team is working from the fronts of nearly half a hundred and the first game of the season is with Simpson College in a rela- Walter the teacher George Vesner, who came to Iowa State this fall from the University of Michigan, where he had basketball and assistant football coach Veenker Is New Coach When Veenker lined up his candidates from their first workouts he found is shortage of material for the first camp, so Kenneth Wells, Wendell Johnson, Roger Bower, Richard Grefe, Ivan Pinson and Donsen carrying more materials. In the line three veterans gave the new coach a foundation for putting them to the best in the conference. At center there was Gordon Nagel and both tackles were taken care of with Franklin McKinney and Smith weigh 195 and 185 respectively and Nagel promised to fill up a large area in the middle of the line with his The holes at guards and ends mus be filled with material not yet tested. New Material at Ends Garden City, Kan. — The family of Frank Reed has set a new record here that no one has any intention of trying to break. Sept. 26—Simpson at Ames. Oct. 3—Morningside at Sioux City (right). Oct. 9 —Detroit at Detroit (night). Oct. 24 —Missouri at Ames (Honey coming). In the last five weeks, all three sons of Reed have sustained broken legs. One is row in the hospital, and the two are holding around on crutches. Unique Record Set Oct. 31—Oklahoma at Natman. Nov. 7—Kansas at Ames. Nov. 14—Drake at Ames. Nov. 21—Nebraska at Lincoln. Read the Kansan want-ads. Prof. F. W. Jacobs, of the School of Law, published a revised edition of his book *Property*. Professor Jacobs has been preparing this new edition for the past two years. The new volume appeared in October 1993 and is part of St. Paul, Munlin, and has been adopted for use in the School of Law here, and is to be used in many other publications. Dr. W. J. Baumgartner and M. Anthony Payne were co-authors of an article entitled "Intravitam" Technique Used in Studies on the Living Cells of Algae. The study was published May issue of the Journal of Experimental Zoology. The account deals with a new method used in the observation of living germ cells, and includes photomicrographic pictures of protozoal organisms by the research fund of the University. Dean Frank T. Stockton, of the School of Business, is the author of an article in *American Economic Review on "Production Co-operation in Manufacturing"* and a number of the American Economic Review on "Production Co-operation in Manufacturing". He experiments of the Union with corporations from 1847 to 1966. The movement to obtain a United States charter was supported by co-operative foundations and the reasons for the failure of the cooperative movement are discussed in a forthcoming article. Stockton Writes Article Various articles and books have been published during the summer months by University instructors and graduates. An article by William A. Murphy, M.A., Director of department of business administration at western college, entitled "Out of the Ruts to Profits: Some Practical Suggestions." Students Apply for Loans University of Missouri Receives Larger Number of Requests Columbia, Mo. Sept 12 - (UP) -- Applicants must demonstrate academic readiness for student loans have taken received this summer by the student loan committee of the University Bank. Despite this fact, no additional loan funds will be available, and the committee has faced with the necessity of a face loan from the bank. Approximately $60,000 will be available during the 1831-32 school year to help "needy and deserving" young students in need. Ported. Freshman loans will be restricted to actual fees and cost of textbooks, usually not more than $30 per semester. Loans may be borrowed to shore up debt. The committee estimates that loans will be made this year to approximately 500 students, making an average per student of about $125. Scientists Are Striving to Develop By-Product Industries Fir Waste Is Kept Down Missoula, Mont. - While a period of business depression focuses public attention on waste, the office of products division charts which indicate that a large part of Doulas fr and Western larch trees are utilized when they are cut for limn- When Douglas fir is cut in Montana and northern Idaho, 63.9 per cent. of Greetings: Students and Faculty of K. U. While in Lawrence make your headquarters Kansas Graduates and Instructors Publish Various Books and Articles Successors to ROBYS on the HILL LUNCHES SODAS CANDIES CIGARS TOBACCO A Cardboard Felt The Plaza Free Delivery Service Austin H. Turvey, assistant professor of education, is the author of an article "The Effect of Frequent Short Intercourse in College Students in Educational Psychology" which appeared in the issue of *Educational Psychology* and wrote further forTurvey based his article on experiments he had conducted with his classes in educational psychology at the University of Texas. 1241 Oread Phone 50 A Good Place to Eat All-Sports Athletic Ticket Get Best Seats for Varsity Athletic Events by Buying An Volume I and part of Volume II of Kansas Studies in Education was prepared during the summer months by O'Brien editor of this series. The volume consists of monographs. The purpose of this series of Kansas Studies in Education is to present the result of research studies on Kansas students. This diversity in the field of education. The monographs are distributed chiefly to persons and institutions within the state that are directly concerned with Kansas students. These include universities and individuals in other states upon request or in exchange for similar publications. The first volume is composed of thirteen monographs. Only one volume has been printed if the second volume. Selling Now at Athletic Office $15.00 to all others (Note: Students must present registration cards when buying the All-Sports Athletic Ticket) $10.00 to Students, Faculty and K. U. Employees $15.00 to all others National recognition was given to the Bureau of Governmental Research of the University of Kansas for the publication "The Guild and Clyde E. Snider of the political science department. The manual is now available in English." Association assoca" The American Legislators' association in the July issue of their full page to the work of the Bureau. Admits to all home football, basketball, baseball, wrestling, track and the Kansas Relays. Season Football Tickets. $9.00 (6 Home Varsity Games) Saving $3.50. Priority in seat reservations to holders of all-spots or season tickets. Guild and Snider Co-Authors the Jun' 20 issue of The Merchants Journal, a weekly grocery magazine published by the Morningstar firm. Mr. Murphy was employed in the preparation of the state law Index for Merchants Journal. Scientists are riveting to develop new pulp and by-product industries which will use a portion of the wood wasted in lumbering and logging. the tree is converted into humber and 132 per cent is otherwise utilized, the tree has been converted into a cellled, only about 57 per cent, becomes humber, while 12 per cent is converted Read the Kansan want-ads. Our Special JAYHAWK STATIONERY JAYHAWK STATIONERY 60 sheets (1 lb.) 40 envelopes 1021 Mass. St. $1.00 The Book Nook 1021 Mass. St. (Magazines) COE'S Drug Store 14th and Massachusetts Across the street from the high school Phone 521 Note Book Special Large 3-Ring Notebook $1.00 with paper and dividers free Fountain Pens Sheaffer Parker Conklin Waterman We enquire your name free on any pen you buy from us. Neighborhood Service at Downtown Prices Phone 521 COE'S SUPPLIES New Books Sold at Publishers List Prices New and Used Textbooks Main Store 1401 Ohio Rowlands. Annex 1237 Oread TWO BOOK STORES Near the Campus