Fair weather with rising temperature. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Stuaent Paper of the University of Kansas Students know paid to be good. VOL. XXVIII Four Jayhawkers Named on Kansan Big Six Selection Allen Harper, Kansas City Wins First Prize for Best Team EDITORS MAKE CHOICE The Kansan All-Star Team **16 war years** Hubert Campbell, Mo. 3 152 Earl Foy, Kan. 3 108 Robert Duggar, Mo. 3 218 Charles Snoot, Kan. 3 218 Leonard McGill, Kan. 3 210 Hugh Rhea, Neb. 2 205 Steve Huckle, Neb. 3 170 Stuart McKila, Neb. 3 170 James Bausch (c), Kan. 2 200 Red Young, Neb. 1 100 By B. V. Ryberg Four Kansas men, Earl Foy, Hutchinson; Charles Smoot, Bartlesville, Okla.; Ormand Beach, Pawhuska, Okla.; and James Bouch, Wichita, have been named on the all-big Six selection of the Daily Kansan. C. Allen Harper of Kansas City won the $5 cash prize for the best team selection in the draft. The selection was made by the sports editor and managing editor who tabulated the results of the teams submitted by each school. The closest to the team given below. With each team submitted by students trying for the prize a written explanation accompanied the list of players. Several of the selectors of teams were identical with the final ones with the exception of one or two men. The ends, Stevok Hofkub, Nebraska, and Campbell, of Missouri, are two great pass snaggers in the Middle West. Campbell has been handicapped by a fearless defensive player, the Tiger hunting and a coveleur amount of their pass catching. Hofkub virtually won the Kanso-Nebuska fray when he broke lose to make a scintillating grab of a long pass for a wrist snap, a good blocker, and keeps his head. Choice on Ability and Experience The final choice of the team was based on individual ability of the men and women in football in the Big Six conference. Missouri and Oklahoma Guards At tackle he Farl Foy, Fassas, and Hugh Rhea, Nebrauskis, both big and fast. Foy is one of the best that has played in the Kansas He is the fastest man in the Kansas line, smart and a deadly tackler. Rhea is hard to take out and plenty tough. Knute Rockie calls him the greatest Rockie in the Missouri Valley territory. MegGirl, Missouri, and Leo. Oklahoma, at guard would be hard to keep off of any team in the country. Both are big, experienced and are the batting leaders for the Giants, weighs 210, yet is fast enough to do a lot of interference running for the Giants. MegGirl, Missouri captain, prevented the later Tiger-Jawhawk battle from turn-around. The quarterbacking job is handed over to Buster Mills, the three year veteran on the Stone team. He can do much better than a fair job of signal calling. His brilliant broken field scampering has featured most of the contests that his team has Charles Smoot is an almost unanimous choice at center. He is big and athletic, but the defensive man, clever at diagnosing enemy play and posing for it. He has done a lot to up the Kanza offense by opening huge holes at center. He is without a peer Bausch Is Unanimous Choice Bausen is chummiest choice The greatest of them are James Bausch, the best choice on every selection. He is a halfback and captain of the all-star team and has finished his football career in the Big Ten, runs, and do all three equally well. He featured the Creighton game with his line snickering. He won the Aggie game with two brilliant runs of 85 yards and an interception. In the game with his plumbing, he showed Pennsylvania folks something in the way of grit and what he did not show up to. His running mate is a brilliant ground gainer and line brustler from Nebraska. "Red" Young by name who passed away suddenly incidentally several other lines this season. He loses very little in being compared with Bausch, for he can At fullback after much discussion was placed Ormand岛 Beach. When it comes to making a play, he has not missed a tackle all season and when he hits them they stay hit. A sophomore in many years before he plays his last. Many Given Honorable Mention In choosing a team it is almost impossible to choose between so many good men. The following men were Unanimous Choice (Continued on page 4) LAWRENCE, KANSAS. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1930 JIM BAUSCH James Aloysiu Bausch, Kansas half-back, captain and only unanimous choice on the Daily Kansas All-Star team, in one of the greatest backfield to play in the Valley and closed his career in a jane of glory Saturday. National Y.W.C.A. Worker Speaks Vocational Week Hazel Lewis of New York Has Been Secured by W. S.G.A. Harrel Lewis, of New York, who is to be the principal speaker for the vocational guidance week Dec 2.3 and Dec 2.4, will serve as the vapeers in Franer礼堂 at 4:30 p.m.; Wednesday at the hydrangea class at Marvin礼堂 at 4:30 p.m.; and Thursday before the hydrangea class in Green Ridge at 4:30 p.m., the schedule announced today. Mas Lewis is the director for the department of study for the association of Young Women in the Association of the Young Women's Christian Association. She comes to the University through the auspices of the W. S. Temple University promoting the vocation guidance week. Personal conferences will be held Tuesday from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.; Wednesday from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m; and from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. Miss Lewis is holding these personal interviews for any of the women of the University who wish to attend. Miss Lewis will be entertained by the different organizations while she is in Lawrence. Tuesday noon she will lunch with the Mortar Board members on an evenovic practice house, and she will be the dinner guest at Corbin hall that evening. Wednesday, she will have lunch with the Mortar Board members for a dinner with the W.Y.C.A. at the home of Kathryn McFarland. Thursday she will lunch at the Union building, where she will dinner with the owner and dinner that evening with the W. S. G. A. council at the Union building. GERMAN STEAMER WRECKED; HOPE LOST FOR CREW OF 3 No. 62 Hamburg, Germany, Nov. 24—(UP) The S. L. S. Leuconard of 3,500 trees was caught in in a violent gale at the base of the hill where he wrecked. His crew of 30 men were given up as host, all rescue efforts having been impossible because of the The ship, owned by the Leonhard- Blumberg firm of Hamburg, lost her ruder and anchor chain and was broke in two after being ashore. League of Nations Delegates Accept Air Publicity Text Provisional Move Requires Statement of Civil Forces Yearly Geneva, Nov. 24- (UP) -The League of Nations' refusal disermission of certain international text requiring nations to prepare an annual statement for publicity of civil rights issues. U. S. REFUSES TO VOTE Maxim M. Lativinoff, head of the Soviet delegation to the preparatory disarmament commission departed today from Paris where he was understood to be withdrawing from the conference, was represented as disguised with the "hypocrisy" of the methods used in suppressing methods of smaller nations' in the negotiations for disarmament. Trend of Thanksgiving Day Fashion Changes From Gobblers to Porkers The text, adopted by a majority of 17 votes, requires nations to show the total civil airplanes and dirigibles of each country. Hugh S. Gibson, U. S. delegate, abstained from voting, as did Germany's Japan's and the Soviet's, all of which declined to approve the measure. Wreck Fatal to M. U. Mar At the present rate it won't be many years until more bogs than turkeys are available. But this is not true, that is if the popularity of the pigskin sport for the last Thursday in November is high. K. U. Woman Is Severely Injured When Cauley Stiles Rides In father's day, every man and boy old enough to carry a gun, even though it were only an air rifle, would dress Mary Neal Smith, c34, of Johnson county, Kansas, was severely injured and her companion, Francis Martin, 22 The old Thanksgiving dinner where all relatives within a day's driving distance were allowed to eat in relays at a table grounded with the weight of turkey, dressing, cranberry sauce, pumpkin pie and that sweetened with honey. The unfried unlimited competition between brides and their mother-in-law, has a junior team and a junior play football in the afternoon and the rest of the family can stay awake and root for their son and team will probably not prepare any meal at all, but will spend the afternoon driving to some university or college down to see the game in the after- Car Strikes Ridge of St. Louis, was killed, when the motor car in which they were driving struck a ridge of heavy gravel and overturned into a ditch on state highway 106 near Blanche Mo. Mr. Martin, who was the son of Mrs Blanche C. Martin, 4159 Botanical Gardens, St. Louis, was a student in Missouri at the University of Missouri. The two had attended the football game in Columbin Saturday and yesterday went to Hagnell dun in Memphis, where he returned to Columbia when the accident occurred. Martin was apparently bed in an emergency room, but were brushes about the neck and chest and probably internal injuries. She was taken to the home of Ms. Larua Miss Smith lives with her parents Mr. and Ms. Smith, at Sixty-ninth street and Glenwood and Johnston Smith, at Kansas City Star, charging for the Kansas City Star Asks Interior Development St. Louis, Nov. 24- (UP)—The government was urged in keynote speech at the opening of the Mississippi Valley River Basin and inland waterways program in order to alleviate unemployment and aid agriculture and industry in the Middle West. Mississippi Valley Association Urges Government for $100,000,000 More than 1,000 delegates representing industrial, civil, and agricultural groups are invited to a biennial penditure of $1,000,000 a year for five years for completion of the inland-waterway program of the association and for the executive secretary of the association. Congress, he said, would be asked to help employers develop the first major move toward unemployment relief, as well as providing freight relief for the entire Mississippi river. NEW Kaufar NEXT Wabah NEXT Kaufar NEXT Wabah the last issue before Thanksgiving. Publication will be resumed with the issue for Monday, Dec. 1. --in his overall and spend the afternoon shooting jack rabbits. Men who never pulled a trigger during the rest of the year would invariably spend the afternoon of Thanksgiving day, projecting rabbits, no matter if they never hit one. ... In the evening the men would sit) about in the living room smoking and discussing events of the past summer. In the morning the dinner supers dishes would remain in the dining room and compare achievements in canning, and in knitting goods for the winter, discuss the troublesome of the season, and engage in a discussion of engagement, and admire the latest baby. Today only enough friends are invited in for the Thanksgiving dinner, eaten at the church. They bridge in the evening. The unmarried folks are conspicuous by their absences. If the home team won the game, they would wear a black collar; if ill post-war fashion, if their队 last they will drown their grief by the other group or express their relation. Committec Discusses Possibility Distributing Jayhawkers Pick County Club Chairmen The County Clubs committee meet this afternoon in the alumni office at 3 to choose permanent chairmen for the individual county clubs. The records for last year's county club work were referred to as a basis for determining who was active in the year. You will learn who are the logical leaders for this year's work. The permanent chairmen chosen this afternoon will organize the clubs in their county, and call meeting officers and carry on other business. In the committee meeting last Thursday, a sub-committee was appointed to investigate the advisability of sending copies of the Joyhawk to high schools and colleges in the region each year. This committee, composed of J. R. Meek, c.32, Wesley Fujimi, c.32, and Newman Jeffrey, c.32, was expected to report its findings regarding the price of Joyhawks for such a purpose and the location of the plan at the afternoon's meeting. Snow Storms and North Winds Bring Ducks, Geese Continued Cold Predicted for Today With Temperature Rise Tomorrow Kansas City, Nov. 24—(UP)—Snow storms north and east of Kansas City and vicinity accompanied by cold north winds in early spring. The season of ducks and geese of the season over this territory today and tonight record temperatures. Hammick, government weather observers. The forecast calls for partly cloudy and continued cold today, and fair weather, with rising temperature to tomorrow. The mercury dropped to 30 degrees in 8 clocked today, pushed downwards and back again. The snow will not rise much above 30 degrees nor morning the mercury may Freshmen to Argue Case Tomorrow morning the mercury may drop as low as 25 degrees. Requirement Is Innovation in School of Law Teaching Methods The trial will be judged on the points of law submitted in the case, the relevance of the arguments, the relative merits of the oral arguments. Dean Davis will be the presiding judge, and T E Atkinson, professors of law, will be the associate judges. Each freshman law student this year is required to prepare briefs on some case and argue it before a court commission. The case is based on the law. This is the first year that such a plan has been tried, according to a statement made by R. M. Davis, dean of the law school. After the case has been assigned to prepare a brief, and he is then given one week for study on the subject. The first case is to be argued Dec. 8, in the courtroom of the judge. E. H. Nirdlinger, E. H. Linnville, and E. Carl W尔丁. Nirdlinger, E. H. Linnville, and will be the council for the plaintiff and will argue the case for the defendant. Dr. Frank Herron Smith, A.B.92 spoke date in the Methodist church during the morning service Doctor Smith was formerly a resident of Lawrence, and pastor of the church he. He is now head of the Japanese work for the church on the Pacific coast in his work as the subject of his talk. DR. FRANK HERRON SMITH TELLS OF MISSIONARY WORI Doctor Smith's daughters, Elise and Mark, were sent to ABD. 27, were scheduled to attend in yesterday where they will do mission work. They did before taking his present position. Library hours will be from 9 to 12 in the morning and from 1 to 4 in the afternoon during vacation was the imminent departure. Charles M. Baker, director of libraries. The library will not be open on Thursday, Saturday afternoon, and Sunday. LIBRARY WILL HAVE SPECIAL SCHEDULE DURING VACATIO The announcement in the Sunday issue of the University Daily Kansan would meet most Monday morning to decide whether school should be dismissed one day early because the university victory authorized. --- Since the Chancellor was out of town, his office told the represen- tates of a holiday would have to be referred to the Chancellor's thaumast for a holiday, construed this to mean that a meeting of the cabinet had been called, and that he would regress to Kansan regrets the inaccuracy. Tonight's Concert to Feature Three Groups of Solos Myra Hess, English Pianist and Van Vliet, Cellist, to Give Program ARTISTS ARE FAMOUS Three groups of solo numbers by Myra Hess and Cornelius Van Vliet, English pianist and Dutch cellist reinterpreting the music of the University concert series to be given at 8:20 tonight in the University auditorium. Ruth Orcut, a member of the School of Fine Arts faculty, will play the accompaniments for Mr. Van Vliet. FOUR PAGES Miss Hess, who has been acclaimed by some critics as a possible successor to Sophie Montner and Terese Carrero, died in Bakersfield on February 12. Debussy, Granadon, and Albenziz. In public recitals since 1980 she won two Grammy Awards for York in 1923, and since that time she twice returned to this country for concert tours. This is her first ap- Selections from Valentini, Schwarze- zande, Nevada, Kaunf, and Popper will be his second appearance at the Uniti- lity's Music Department concer- cist in the Minnesota Symphony orchestra. In his musical career Mr. Van Vlist has toured both Europe and America. The recital, which is divided into six groups, consists of Part I, *Somuta*, II, *Boma*, III, *Largo-Allegro* (Valentin), by Mr Van Vliet Vier; Part II, *Italian Composition* (Valentin); Part III, *Predo* and *Presto* (Bach) by Miss Hesa *Elegie* (Schravea)和 *Mazia* *Elegie* (Schravea) and The second half of the program includes: "Variations and Fugue on a Treame by Haudel" (Brahms), by Miss Vivien; "An Instrumental 'Andalusian Secronade'" (Kaempf), and "Tarantella" (Popper), by Mr. Van Vliet; and "La Cathedrale Engloutte" and "Poinsons Oor" (Dehnuss) and "Le Roi de la Mer" (Albenz); by Miss Hess. REPRESENTATIVE PROPOSES ACTION UPON PENDING BILLS Washington, Nov. 24. (UP)-Bertel H. Snell, representative from Hewlett-Packard's committee which controls the course of legislation in the house, proposed to replace a law that requires committees including Muscle Shoals be taken up and voted on in the short session. Shelf's proposal meets, in general, the demands of western irregulators in the United States to block appropriation legislation and force an extra session if measures they believe are too restrictive. THIRTY-EIGHTH VESPER ORGAN RECTITAL GIVEN YESTERDAY The thirty-eighth vesper organ recital was given by the school of Fine Arts in the University auditorium. The group was led by an accomplished vocal was a solo concert by Meriha Moorie, soprano, a member of the School of Fine Arts faculty. Laurel Anderson Because of the Thanksgiving holidays there will be no vesper recital next Sunday. EIGHT BANDITS KILL THREE MERRYMAKERS; WOUND TWO Chicago, Nov. 24- (UP) - A third woman with a broken leg was injured during a roadside crash in eight nervous bandits fired after shot from their sawed off shaggards. Stars on Defense Ormand "Cloet欢" Beaeb, fullback, is the only sophomore on the All Big Six team and earned his position by his great defensive work. He was outstanding in the Nebraska and Oklahoma teams, and the field to bring down enemy backs. Two German Students to Debate Here Dec. 4 Burton Kingsbury and Free Anderson Will Represent the University Two German students representing the national union of students of Germany will debate two students from the University, Dec. 4. In Fraser theater, on the question: resolved "That culture of American Culture Is Justified." Hans Jürgen Graf Bhumenthal, one of the German debaters, is 23 years old and was born in Potsdam. He has taught at the University of Hamburg and studied law at the University of Munich and Konigberg and plans to complete his course in Berlin. He is active in student affairs and a member of Deutsche Studentenverein. Burton Kingsbury, former president of Delta Sigma Rho and present freshman to the University who is president of Delta Sigma Rho will represent the University of Kan- Herbert Schaumann, the other member of the team, was born in Prussia and is 30 years old. He went to school at the University of Berlin and attended the university of Berlin. When still a schoolboy he was chosen for the international debating team in Europe. The dealt will be conducted according to the German dealt system. They do not have a formal rebuttal because of their lack of experience they wish. The German dealt will talk in English but will have an interlocutor who is not familiar with the language cannot understand. When finishing they will summarize their speeches in English, and then the audience who understand the language TEXAS VILLAGES ARE FLOODED WHEN MATHIS DAM BREAK! Corpus Christi, Texas, Nov. 24- (UP) Flood waters receded rapidly today from two Texas villages inundated when the $2,500 million dams broke Sunday. Inhabitants of La Fruita river flooded and damaged and water soaked homes. Residents of Dintourzoor prepared to re-enter their village later today. Now they are preparing to leave after searching parties had made a careful survey of the district. Property damages were estimated at $800,000 or more and were given reason for the break. Javhawker Linemen on All-Star Team Charles Smoot, center, and Earl Foy, tackle, Kansas men on the all-star line. Smoot is the only member of the Jayhawk eleven who played every minute of every conference game. His superlative passing and fine defense work have made him the outstanding center in the Big Six and one of the greatest, defensively that Kansas ever had. He is a senior. He is the fastest man in the Kansas line and one of the biggest. He tips the scales at 208. His tackles and diagnosing of opponents' plays featured the K.U. ball games. He has one more year of competition. CABINET GIVES K. U. STUDENTS EXTRA HOLIDAY Thanksgiving Vacation to Start Tomorrow Night as Result of Student Cooperation DECISION LATE TODAY Deans and Division Heads Determine Whether Tradition Will Be Upheld at Meeting This Afternoon It was moved by the Chancellor's cabinet that in view of the spirit of cooperation on hobo day, and also because of the conduct and sportmanship of the team and student body in connection with the Pennsylvania and Missouri games, a half holiday be held at 12:30 p.m. Tuesday to vacation at 6:30 p.m. tuesday. The cabinet stressed that the extra half day was granted on account of the co-operation of students during the past few days in the observance of hobo week. The players got a trip to and from the Missouri game, and not because of the football victory. After Kansas had defeated the University of Missouri so decisively at Columbia Saturday students believed that the university would not written law or rule an extra holiday will be given students if the University is victorious over Missouri in the annual football classic but another victory will give an extra day, or half day, expected. In 1925 when Kausan won from Mismand in the last five seconds of the game, he fouled the foe (see 'Stony Wall', classes were dismissed one day) Again in 1927 when Jayhawkers won from the Tigers by the score of 14 to 7. Thanksgiving vacation began one-half Thanksgiving vacation officially ends Saturday, Nov. 29, and classes will be resumed Monday. Students continued to call the Chancellor's office and the Kansan all morning and afternoon to find out when school would be dismissed. The Chancellor's cabinet is composed of the deans of the various schools and the directors of the divisions of the University. Expect to Discuss Kansas' Ostracism at Kansas City Big Six Will Meet Friday The presidents of the Big Six conference have agreed at the request of Kansas City to host a week in Kansas City Friday of this week presumably to discuss the charges of realities which have been fired against Kansas, that led to the recent catastrophe of Kan- The presidents agreed to attend only on condition that the faculty representatives who recently instructed the team tend also, as a joint meeting was scheduled. Kansas has investigated its athletes and found nothing that could have led to the charges and Chancellor Lindley is expected to request that specific charges be made. This meeting will undoubtedly reinforce Kansas' future in the conference. Chancellor Lindley returned last night from a week's eastern trip. He attended the meeting of the national associates' convention on Wednesday and Thursday in Washington, D.C., and he was also present at the national White House conference on Tuesday to discuss part of the week he was in New York city on University business. O'Bryon Talks on German Trip Leonard O'Bryon of Lawrence spoke at the regular meeting of the German club this afternoon on his experience. The expense attached to such a trip. His lecture was given in English. Mrs. Ettenzhouer to Rosedale Mrs. Rose Ettenzhouer, who has been appointed to the Board for the last four years as accepted a position at the Rosedale hospital, Miss Edua Walters, who has been associated with Mrs. Ettenzhouer will take the place of Mr. Ettenzhouer. Ben Group Meets Pep Group Meets A meeting of the Jay James was held in the Union building today at 4-90 Tournament Play Continues In the volleyball ball tournament the juniors are scheduled to meet the 148, the seniors will play the freshmen. According to the hockey schedule the Green team will play the Orange squad in the Ice hockey tournament, the seniors will meet the juniors at 4:30. Read the Kansan Want Ads.