THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1930 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Freshmen to Play K.S.A.C. Yearlings Friday Afternoon Coach Hinshaw Will Take Thirty-three Men to Manhattan SQUAD PRACTICE STIFF Thirty-three freshman football players will make the trip to Manhattan to play the young Aggies Friday, and Coach Steve Hinshew this week. The team has been working hard the entire week in order to perfect the passing game. The Missouri yearnings last Saturday. The team is well-balanced, and fairly healthy with 190 pounds, while the backfield will probably run close to 180 pounds. The players who will make the trip are: Centers: Frank Watkins, Theodore Savran, Steven Gibbite, George Hobson and James Boulton, Robyn Rowan, Rollin Fountain, Eugene Chuppell, J. R. Sebastian, Robert Man Tackles: Roy Conkey, Sherry Martin, Pat Mehringer, Harley Volkman, Mark Tan Creel, Frank Greene. Eords: Arthur Baker, Ernest Casini Dick O'Neil, Charles McCormack, Albert Anderson. Quarterbacks: John Manning, Rutherford Hayes, Warren Pinkelk. Halfbacks: Ross Marshall, Merle Divens, Clyde Hill, Lee Lo Freese, Dick Weaver, Alan Phares. Fullbacks: Jeff King, George Kroni- lc, Ed Laub. Bell Addresses Mathematics Club Bell Addresses Mathematics Club Philip Bell, gr, spoke Monday at the meeting of the mathematics club in the women's rest room of central Admissions. His paper was entitled "Interesting Properties of Circulating Decimals." Twenty seven new members were taken into the club. After the business meeting, a social hour was held, and re-measures of elder and cake were served. Hospital Reports Many Colds "Although there are no cases of contiguous diseases at the hospital at this time, we have identified a director of the student hospital today, 'the attendants are being kept very well informed about the safety with colds and minor aliments and conducting physical examinations for patients.'" Read the Kansan Want Ads All-Musical Vesper Programs Held at University During Past 7 Years in Booklet by School of Fine Arts The School of Fine Arts has just issued through the state printer of Tepeka a booklet containing the programs of the all-music veeper programs given at the University during the past seven years. These veeper were instituted by Dean D. M. Swarthout during his first year at the University, and have continued each year with a series of four programs during the months of November, December, February, and March. Two programs were cancelled during this time, one because of the transferal of the University organ from one campus to another and one when the University discontinued school a week early preceding the Christmas vacation in 1928 because of ill health. The programs constitute in a sense an experiment in program building, looking toward a type of high grade student who is best suited for musical literature, shall yet be of a character and of such interest and variety that it will appeal to the general student body of a large state University. This kind of on concert programs seem to do. In the seven years, the co-operation and assistance of the Fine Arts faculty members have made it possible to co-host a series of events each year, and it is the aim and endeavor. The hoodlet contains also the programs of the summer session vests, which are made up large by numbers given at the regular vests during the summer. to continue this record for several years to come. A limited number of copies of the upper series are available in museums. An additional series is being cultivated from these. The first upper series for the 1920-34 school year is subscribed to the State Library. CORRECTION An error in the Pachacamac advertisement in last night's Kansan, might have conveyed a wrong impression. The statement in which the error was made should have read that the Pachacamac's "are presenting a ticket of qualified candidates who have been chosen by representative freshmen men and not by an executive committee of five fraternity men." SATURDAY SPECIALS $1.00 Nyseptol for sore throat 75c .50 Pepsodent 36c .50 Ipana 36c .50 Pebeco 39c .35 Revelation Tooth Paste 27c .35 Energie 27c $1.00 Listerine 69c .45 Kotex 2 for 70c 50c Kleenex Free 50c Kleenex Free .85 Dancing wax 63c Many other specials 5c Candy Bars Rankin's Drug Store Where Students Trade FRESHMEN Get Out and Vote FRESHMEN OPEN YOUR EYES Tonight 2 Fraternity 3 Non-Fraternity 2 Fraternity 3 Non-Fraternity Rumor has it that the prime motive for the organization of the new Apostle group was for political gain. Is hiding behind a sham of "school spirit" and traditional betterment a courageous issue to stand upon. The Oreads point to the lack of spirit during the reign of Pachacama on the Hill—they do not consider that school spirit rises and falls along with the success of athletic teams. They point to lack of competition and monopoly on the part of Pachacama. It is feasible to see that the field has been open for three years and the repeated victories of the party in power were due to their efficient organization, and consistent fulfillment of platform promises. The Apostles were organized for political gain. Beta Theta Pi is represented by ten men in the group, and the remainder of twenty four men are divided among houses which are sure to align with the New Oread coalition. Non-fraternity men, are you represented as Apostles? Absolutely not. The new Oread Party will claim credit for holding Hobo Day. Let it be known clearly that on Tuesday night, October 14, the Men's Student Council passed a resolution expressing themselves in favor of Hobo Day before any publicity became known from the Oread party yesterday. The origination of the Apostle group was prompted by scholastically ineligible members of Pi Epsilon Pi who had shown insufficient interest in that group to remain affiliated. Freshmen, were the men who chose your ticket a representative freshman group? NO. THEY WERE FRATERNITY MEMBERS OF SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON, ACACIA BETA THETA PI and PHI KAPPA PSi. This statement is true, yet you are being led to believe that the Oread party's basis for existence is for the Fraternity men to sponsor and promote your welfare. OPEN YOUR EYES. Did Oread non-fraternity men help with the selection of their candidates? Absolutely not. The assertions of the Oread party in yesterday's Kansan were insidious in that they attacked student government in general, but did not have the guts to cite specific instances wherein Pachacamac was weak or was "pampering" the administration. You call yourselfs the Oread party, yet you do not want to fight a political battle. You cry for sympathy because you are young, weak and unorganized. You want to be represented because you have lain dormant for three years. You have not tried to run during this time, and it is because you were whipped. While you are crying for sympathy show the student body how you will benefit Hill politics and student government by holding office. You attempt to tear down a ten years' constructive program by popular approval and recognition of an outlaw pep group, organized "without sanction of the administration." Weigh the facts of the case—the Oread party is the exact repetition of the old Black Mask coalition, which in their spring election in 1927 presented a platform and candidates which they called equitable, and on it were 23 FRATERNITY MEN AND ONLY 9 NON-FRATERNITY MEN. This is the same group which call themselves Oreads. Do you non-fraternity men sincerely believe that they are working in your interests or in theirs? We throw open our records for the last fifteen years and challenge you to find one year wherein the non-fraternity man was not either equally or greater represented on the Pachacamac ticket than the fraternity man. 'Select Freshmen--Freshmen Selected' Tonight PACHACAMAC presents its candidates or election at the Freshman Election in Central Ad. Auditorium at 7:30 o'clock. When Pachacamac asks for your vote it is asking you to vote for ABLE MEN, CONSTRUCTIVE POLICIES, and High Ideals and Traditions. 3 Non-Fraternity 2 Fraternity THE TICKET FOR PRESIDENT CHARLES SMITH 3 Non-Fraternity 2 Fraternity Engineer. Non-Fraternity. Lawrence. Jayhawk staff. National honor society. Student Council. President pep club. Business manager of high school paper. Advertising manager of high school annual. Vice-President HI-Y team. Captain tennis team. Manager of intramural team. FOR TREASURER BOB UPLINGER For Dance Manager Engineer. Non-Fraternity. St. Francis. Walter R. Simmons Editor high school paper, President of senior class. President of HI-Y. Football (four years), Annual staff, Kansas City Star oatorial contests, Debate (two years). Senior play, Junior play, Chairman for the season. All admitted, licensed publ. until August, 1930. Pep club, Band, Orchestra, Glee club. Upper tenth of class scholarship. Engineer. Non-Fraternity. Olathe Business Manager of high school administration, early support. 8 semesters on honor cell, national honor society. State representative of high school student council, president of high school student council. For Dance Manager Don Leach Engineer. Fraternity. Kansas City, Mo. Freshman cheerleader, K.U. band, head high school cheerleader, national honor society. Pep club, president literary society. manager track team; vice-president mathematics club; president matrication club play. Hi-Y.C. manager library club dance, orchestra. For Intramural Manager Frank Nimmocks College. Fraternity. Scandia Assistant editor of newspaper, vice-president Junior class, assistant editor of annual, vice-president Sophomore class, secretary-treasurer of Freeman class, vice-president Glee club four years, orchestra four years, club two years, in two senior plays. "Pachacamac Promises--Pachacamac Fulfills Compare the Qualifications