Weather Partly cloudy with continued cool. 1 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Stuaent Paper of the University of Kansas New slogan hits Mt. Oregn. "Best Mizzou 100 to it." VOL. XXVIII LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1900 FOUR PAGES ATHLETIC BOARD CLEARS K. U. FOOTBALL MEN XA No.40 Homecoming Plans Call for Two Big Rallies Next Week Turkey Run, Annual Event at Celebration, to Be Run Nov. 6 ALUMNI TO REGISTER Two pop rallies will be features of the homecoming program here next week. One will be broadcast over WREN Thursday night, and the other will be an outdoor rally on the camelot before the night before the Nebraska game. In a meeting of the presidents of the various campus organizations yesterday, the head cheerleader, told the plans for the rallies and asked the organization to help students with the thuism among the students for the rallies and other features of the Homecoming. Pep talks and musical numbers will be included in the program for the radio rally to be broadcast from 10.15 a.m., at the Memorial Union, the following evening, the outdoor rally will start off with a display of fireworks, continue with yellos and short pep talks and break up in time for the Memorial Union building at 8 p.m. Advertising Distributed At the meeting yesterday Fred Elsworth, alumni secretary, distributed samples of the letter stuffers which he is expecting to come. There stuffers give a complete outline of the program for the summer retreat; convenient size to include in letters home to friends and alumni who may attend a few days programs will be distributed among the organized houses and in the anybody body will have a chance to get them. New Registration Plan E. R. Eilbahnen announced the turkey run, an annual event at homecoming, on Tuesday, Nov. 6. Every organized group on the campus is invited to enter 10 men each to run the 2.4 mile race. The participants wear duck, deer and hen offered as prizes. Entrants must be class A physically fit. The race will start at 4 p.m. from Louisiana street where it meets the Ottawa road and the medicine- football game is over. Details of the new plan to res- titution of guests were discussed by Nam Snyder. All organized houses have been asked to co-operate with the W.S.G.A. to obtain a complete and registration of guests for the week-end. Manuscripts Due Dec. 15 Prizes of Sixty Dollars Offered for Libretto and Music Each house will report its guests daily so they can be listed upon the building's website. Building Alumni may consult the bulletin and readily find any of their records. Dec. 15 was set as the deadline for musical comedy manuscripts at the W. S. G. A meeting last night. Prizes of $50 for the libretto and $3 for the music will be offered. Manuscripts may be turned in at Dean Agne Houldman's office. Frances Wilson, instructor in the department of speech and drama art courses, will be given March 2, 3, and 4. The students have formerly directed the pre- WERNER CALLS CONFERENCE OF DAD'S DAY COMMITTEE That the Dad's day committee will meet at 4 tomorrow instead of at 4:33 as previously stated we were in Warner, chairman of the committee in charge of arrangements. The meeting will be held in room 1 in the Administration building. Assisting Mr. Werner are Prof. W. Baumgartner, Elizabeth Meguiar, Mra E. H Lindsay, Mrs C. Mc Neil, and Melissa Nichols. Students on the committee are Kenneth Mousser, Fern Snyder, Daniel Beyer, Ida Parcon, and Joseph Knack. COURSES IN BRITISH POETRY TAUGHT BY K.U. PROFESSOR Helen Rhoe Hoopes, professor of English, is in charge of two courses in Contemporary British poetry offered by the Extension department. One class meets at 10:30 Saturday morning at Horace Mann school, 818 and State streets, Kansas City. Kan education teacher, the Teacher college of Kansas City, Mo. BUNN WRITES OF RECREATIVE PROGRAM FOR STANFORD MEN Activity Time Starting at 4 p. m. Cannot Be Interrupted by Academic Work. Says Former Coach A letter has been received by Dr. F. C. Allen from John Bunn, Stanford University, Calif., former baseball and tennis player. He wrote a very interesting angle on the Stanford program regarding recursive time, a praises that perchance is indulged in by many basketball players, why Stanford has such a high standard of athletic excellence. Bunn writes as "From 4 p. m. on is activity time here. Other departments must secure 1800 Students Eligible to Vote Next Tuesday 1010 of These Are Residents of Kansas Outside Doug-bs County Nearly 1800 students of the University of Kansas are of ageing age and 1910 outside of Douglas county, according to a compilation by Iceland Barrows, or of ageing. 469 Voters from Lawrence 469 Voters from Lawrence of the 1783 voters of the University student body, Lawrence and subject to the general laws; 23 others are from Douglas county outside of Lawrence, and must go to their home precincts to vote: 1010, of whom 741 are ten and 289 women, ensured to cast "absentee" ballots The city of Lawrence is arranging to open one special polling place for these student voters where they may obtain a copy of the absentee ballot which each student may fill in with the names of the county candidates of his home county. Students eligible to vote will be instructed to vote at this special polling place, and their ballots will be transmitted by the county clerk to the clerk of the student's home county, as provided by To Obtain Sample Ballots The political science department of the university sampled samples of the officers of the district so that students may learn names so that students can name their home all of the candidates of their home. Residents of other states, numbering 207, have been invited to call on the governor. If it is possible to vote by mail in their states. Students from Colorado, for example, can vote by mail lots from their home counties, mark them, and return them to be counted at the polls. Professor Guild points out that the possible absentee vote of University students is almost exactly the same as the vote cast in the August primary. Speech Department Will Hear Talk on Campus Problems Troubles for the Campus Problem, contest will be held in the Little Theater on Monday, March 20 at 7:30. All those entering the content will deliver three-minute speeches, concerts and performances. Juniors and seniors who contemplate turning in maneuvers to Quill club for the purpose of trying out for the organization should do so at once, according to Kathryn Hayes, president of menus for maneuvers at Thurday. Nov. 6. The eight best contestants will be selected from those trying out, for the final contest, which will be held Nov. 6. The winners will receive a parquet of speech and dramatic arts, announced that all those wishing to enter the contest should notify her her organizer. The article must be an original short story, typewritten, and signed with a nom de plume. The author's real name should also be in an accompanying encyclopedia. DEADLINE FOR QUILL CLUB TRYOUT PAPERS IS NOV. Judges for the contest will be selected from the speech department. The maneuver must be placed in the Quill club box in fraser hall. Quill club is a national literary organization composed of juniors and seniors. *Presenting him with a painting of Bai Sanden, well known painter of Lindborg, presented Pi Beta Phi with one of his latest paintings, entitled "A Kanaa Scene." Margaret Sanden, his daughter, attended the 1983, and was a pledge of Pi Beta Phi. Presents Painting to Sorority permission from the director of艺術 to take men away from their acco unts after this hour. Instead of caking, the atomiak book forward to some form of atti canon is set aside for divitional. Of course, there are few women here, which may help this atti canon. Bunn is especially well pleased with his work. He is now drilling his varsity basket ball aquad three times a week and his freshman team three days a week. TO HOLD FIRST MEETING The first meeting of the Y.M.C.A. advisory board will be held at 6 noon tomorrow at the University club. This is the first meeting with the new officiating staff. Y.M.C.A. ADVISORY BOARD The officials of the advisory board are: Dr. Frank Strong, honorary chairman; J. J. Wheeler, chairman; J. R. Sinclair, yee-chairman; and J. J. The board will consider the student budget as presented by the cabinet and draw up the policies as well as the actions taken by the organization during the year. There will be no other meeting of the Y.M.C.A. this Thursday night because of it being the fifth Thursday this month. Haughton Held in Death of Underworld Leader Claims That Weissman Went for Hip Pocket Before Shooting Kansas City, Oct. 31, 2019—Solly Kamanan, 35 year old, gambler and investor in Kansas City's underworld, died at 3:45 p.m., Kansas City's city blood unit in the collished late yesterday by Charles Haughton, 64-year-old operator of a racing informant. Haughton, accompanied by his attorney, appeared at police headquarters shortly before 6 o'clock. His body was identified to the assembled detectives as the man who shot Solly Weissman. After the show-up the race officials took a brief tour of the office of the chief of detectives where he made a detailed statement of all that transpired after he met Weissman he gave himself to the police last night. "I went to the turf to inspect a machine that had been reported out of the building," said his first I saw of Wesman. He was asked there an I entered. Before I even had an opportunity to speak to him he hurried down and handed him his hip pocket. Then I shot him." Haughton made making his statement with authority. Mr. Wesman, who was released on $2,000 bond, Massant, indicating there would be no prosecution, announced, "It is a plain fact." To Select Kaufman Jury James E. Hayes, prosecuting attorney, announced he would ask death sentences for Kaufman, who was pleaded guilty to a felony being lured here by Kaufman with a promise of employment. Her body was discovered Park three weeks after the murder. Kansas City, Mo., Oct. 29. (UP) - Selection of a jury to try Paul Kaufman, 31-year-old World War veteran charged with the crime on Aug. 17 of Arvus Woolley, 15-year-old Wold Woolley. Today in a crowded courtroom here. Marjorie Nelson and Virginia Blue were elected to fill vacancies in the Delta Phi Delta, national art fraternity, in a business meeting held last Confessed Slayer Goes to Trial Pleading Insanity Miss Nelson was elected to fill the position of the CEO and the Blue Book of the office of pilot officer. The publication of the Delta Phi Delta fraternity and Miss Blue's position is The confessed slayer is going to trial over protest of the defense attorney, who claimed he needed more time to prepare the case. DELTA PHI DELTA ELECTS Blackmar Lecture Tomorrow **LETHUR TOBROWN** Prof. F. W. Bishaw the third of his series of six lectures on "The Early History of Mankind" toorrow at 4:30 p.m. in Fraser theater Rescuers Report Location of Eight Entombed Miners OFFICERS FOR VACANCIES Workers at McAlester Find More Bodies, Apparently Dead From Gas THIRTY MEN TRAPPED McAlester, Okla. Oct. 29 — (UP) Rescue workers pushing slowly into the lower levels of the littered and gasoline-stained wreckage today that they have located the bodies of eight embarked miners. The bodies were burtled on the sixteenth level of a mine near Albuquerque, wreckled by an explosion Monday night. Apparently the men died from poison gas. Meanwhile officials announced the discovery of the body in the mine. Previously it was thought 29 were involved. One of these was killed by the blast and his body re-entered the mine. A new muster brought announcement today that 22 men were missing in addition to the eight bodies. No effort was made to bring the victims to the The state women's athletic association conference meets at Wichita, Nov. 25-26, in Oklahoma City. The Kansas chapter will have charge of a sound table discussion on "Intramural Fitness." Workers continued digging through the chocked passageway. They had reached the eighteenth level. Eleven Delegates From K. U. Will Attend Wichita Conference On Friday afternoon, Nov. 7, the delegates will be taken on a tour through Wichita and will stop at the Wedham airport where airplane will be given to all the delegates. Fri. November 14, in the annual W. A. A. banquet will be held. The delegates from the W. A. A. organization here that will attend the conference are the W. A. A. and J. Jane Byrn, Elizabeth Bryan, Margaret Laughman, Helen Lawen, Lois Moon, Frances White, Florence Sherborn, R碧罗 Hroeher, O'Alice Phite. NEWS OF 1930 GRADUATES GIVEN IN RECENT MAGAZINE "Classmates of '30," a feature in the graduate magazine, gives the listing list of members of the class of '30, and their present activities. Dick Gafford, Kansas' Phi Beta lapsus academy company in company, in Rochester N. Y. Clarence Mumma, president of Chuck Student Council last year, and student Jude Reid, now living in June, and are now living in Bartlesville, where Mr. Mumma is with More of the class entered the teaching profession than in any other line, and there was great interest in coaching, the former at Holton, and the latter at Dodge City, Alice Sherer, an instructor in Iowa, Iowa, and Elizabethtown Sherron is in the department of physical education at Ida. Cleared by Board This feature will be continued in the November issue of the Graduate magazine. Freshman Commission to Meet The Board of Education freshman commission will be held at 4:30 Thursday afternoon. Must Beulah Morrison will talk on "Adapting One's Respect" Freshman Commission to Meet "All allegas for the campus chest drive must be turned in at * Henry Weller's office not later than 3 o'clock tomorrow after- er morning," said Heyward, aed said today. "Different ori- ganizations and individuals should submit allegas which will convey the thought of the entire cam- Two prizes will be given to the *writers of the best slogans.* The *first prize* is a trip to Columbia and a ticket to the Missouri-Kan- napolis. The *second prize* will be a ticket to the Tiger name. Slogans should be turned in at Professor Werner's office, room 1 in the Administration building. Judges for the contest are Dean P. Fink and Miss Frances Wilson. Shanghai Aye Deng Technology Slogans Are Due Tomorrow The campaign, which is entirely a student drive, will begin Nov. 10 and end Nov. 13. Its purpose is to solicit money for five organizations of the freshman, the freshman club, the freshman bar, Y.M.C.A., Y.W.C.A., the Red Cross, Douglas County Tuberculosis association, and the Christmas tree fund. --- JIM BAUSCH Jim Baucus, of Wichita, playing his second and last year on the Kansas football team was declared "not ineligible" by the athletic board which met this morning. Baucus was placed on the first all-Big Six list son last season. Teviotdale Will Speak On Orient Over KFKU Homecoming Radio Rally Will Be Given Thursday, Nov. 6 at 10:15 p.m. One of the November features over KFKU will be a series of talks given by some of our faculty members of the Economics department, Prof. Tevidwalt, who came to the University of Kansas from Leeland Stanford University, has spent one year traveling in Europe. On Nov. 14 he will speak on "Some Primitive Methods of Transport in the Mountains" and be "Some Domestic Industries in China and Japan." This series of talks will follow the series on "The Voting Process in the US," and give his final talk Nov. 1, and on Nov. 9. Prof. W. A. Dill will conclude the series Play in Electronics: New Paperbacks in Play Prof. Robert W Calderwood will talk on speech in the "Practical Amateur" course, which will take place six weeks Prof. Allen Crouten has been discussing the stage in the same series. He will conclude his series with a talk with a talk of "Lighting the State." Prof. H. B. Chub will continue his "Interpretation of World Affairs" on Thursday, Oct. 30. The subject of his book is "The United States of Europe." A special homecoming radio rally which is being arranged by the athletics department will be given Thursday. Nov. 6 from 10:15 to 10:45 p.m. The Nebraska-K-U homecoming game will be broadcast Nov. 8, at 14:55. On Nov. 15 the dull's day game at which the Nebraska-K-U team will gamble in Kanoa will also be broadcast. On Nov. 16 from 4 until 5 o'clock the first school of Arts all musical vespers will be broadcast. The symphony orchestra of the University of Kansas will be presented by Prof. Karl O. Kuensperger on Nov. 24. There will also be several choir and piano works. On Nov. 27-28 KFKU will dispense with the regular program for school music lessons, provided that arrangements arranged by Prof. H. C. Tayler of the department of piano. Other musicians will be admitted. BUSINESS STUDENTS APPOINT EDITORS OF STUDENT PAP At a recent meeting of the student officers of the School of Business the following students were appointed to the faculty positions of Dr. D.Phillip Beauty Jr., br. 31, editor Justine Rodges, bus. 31, associate editor; and Curtis Halti, bus. 32, junior editor. Royal Couple Misses Storm The first issue of the J-Hawk Business News, which is the School of Business student paper, will be issued about the mid of November. Rome, Oct. 28—(UP) -King Boris or Bulgaria and his bride, the former Princess Giovanna, have experienced only a few hours of rough weather abroad the royal yacht, Ferdinand. Reports that the royal bride and groom were in the Mediterranean from Brindisi in the Mediterranean from Brindisi to Varna were discredited. EVIDENCE PRESENTED TO DATE IS NOT CONSIDERED SUFFICIENT TO DECLARE PLAYERS INELIGIBLE Decision Follows Big Six Action of Offering Alternative of 'Clearing Up' Conditions or Being Ostracized by Other Schools in Conference Schedules After a three hour meeting of the Athletic board this morning in which 45 pages of facts concerning the eligibility status of the University football squad were discussed, the board passed the following resolution: "With the evidence as collected and presented to date, the board feels that it is not justified in declaring any mem- of the present football squad insultable." This was unanimously accepted by the members. This action was taken after the Big Six faculty representatives last week had offered the University the alternative of either cleaning up objectionable practices, such as alleged recruiting and sub-sizing of athletes, or being virtually extracured from the Big Six. The regular mid-week variety was called off to give everyone one chance to play the rally. The Jay Jones, Kut Kan, will be there to help lead the game. Pen Rally Tonight A special pop rally to give the football team a send-off to Pemsvilvan will be held at the University of California, David Newcomer, who will lead the cheering in the absence of Or Rattledge, has announced the Athletic Conditions Will Be Investigater Central Intercollegiate Member to Discuss Eligibility of Players The Central Intercollegiate conference expects to clean up the ailth conditions prevailing among the memb schools following a meeting in Hay Friday of a committee designed to improve the standards of the North Central Association of Colleges and Universities. The committee is composed of R. I Parker, Hays, C. R. Phipps, Empori Stone, J.W. W. Jound, Southwestern. Eligibility of athletes along with employment and scholarship will be the chief topics of discussion of the committee. The seven schools in the conference are Southwestern, College of Emporia Wichita, Washburn, and the Hays, Emporia, and Pittsburgh teachers colleges. FINE ARTS STUDENT RECITAL SCHEDULED FOR TOMORROW The regular weekly recital of the students of the School of Fine Arts is an opportunity for tomorrows Administrators to memoritur. The program will consist of five piano numbers and two voice numbers. Last week's recital was performed by Prof. Earnest Fowles be substituted The program: "Polonieau" (Mozawkowski), David Grindol, piano; "When Song is Sweet" (Sans-Sucii), Leverett Chandler, voice; "Congratuitur" (Prestner), voice; "Dancing With You" I Feel Like a Motherless Child" (rr. by Armis Fisher), Laetta Walker, voice; "Caprice" (Hutcherson), Leon Jensen, voice; "Piano of the Eloes" (Kroeger) Muriel Volker, piano; "Scherzo in B (Chopin), Raymond McNedney, COEN AND ALLRED TO PLAY FINAL MATCH TOMORROW Junior Cenar and George Allred will play the final match of the varsity elimination tournament on the varsity team at the stadium at 3 o'clock a.m. tomorrow afternoon. After the tournament game Coen and Sterling Culling, an outstanding freshman player from Kansas City, will play against the matches match with All-12 and Prosper. PHYSICAL ED DEPARTMENT PHYSICAL ED DEPARTMENT TO GIVE TEA FOR WOMEN This is the first tea ever given by this department and it is being given so that the freshmen and sophomores have better acquainted with the majors. Read the Kansan Wantads. The women's physical education department will give a tea Thursday afternoon. The women are in the men's gymnasium. All University women are interested in physical education. - Dean George C. Shaad, faculty representative of the University of Arkansas, will be presented at Columbia adequate enough to declare members of the Jayhawkmen.* James Bauch, Jayhawker star halfback, it was reported to the athletic center as principal player who charges were cut, and others who has twice been drawn into such controversy, was declared "not in competition" with the other members of the squad. Expresses Appreciation The board expressed appreciation of the very thorough and ardous work in finding a private attorney, in finding facts for the case, a quick and high pressure investiga- The board said it understood that the chairman used own use, also authorized the continuation of the vice of Mr. Thiele at the discretion of the chairman of the board, Chancellor Gillen. The board meeting was attended by anaclerc E. H. Lindley, R. W. Smith, M. B. Moore, C. F. Allen, Shaad, Karl Klooze, and F. C. Allen, faculty members. Alumnus members were included: W. S. Briedenthal, Tom Bishop and Kenneth Meuser were the student rep- Several Angles Considered In the investigation carried on this month, the University is considering the charges made by the University of Missouri and other big Six universities. The Shad, University representative at the Big Six meetings, brought back from Columbia, and also rulings of the North Central Association of Colleges and Universities. The Omaha World-Herald stated recently that it had learned from a Big Six conference wave that the conferencestations with Kansas in an attempt to save the conference from probable attenence Central Association of Colleges and Schools. The paper said that the Big Six officials had received word that the assignment of Big Six athletes, and that this investigation would injure the status of both the University and other colleges. I did not self. It was for this reason that the Big Six officials made their decision to assign them to the University, the article explained. The North Central association is an academic body, and its purpose is to offer athletic training for students in athletics out of proportion to classroom size. Thus, the rule is expulsion from the associa- tion with its resulting loss to transfer pri- vious education. It is also for all students of the expelled school. Parking Fines Are Unpaid Delay May Force Dismissal of Students from Classes That the students are still delaying the payment of parking fines was announced at the business office today. An attempt may be made, an official of the office said, to have students attend classes until they meet this obligation. According to a traffic report the parking of unissued cars on the camper site was one of the few only 11 penalty tags were issued yesterday, one third warning, two secu The first warning tag does not call for a fine, the second requires a payment of $1, and the third $2. Waffle Supper to Be Held Nov. 4 A questionnaire concerning the Neergo problem on different campuses was held at the University of Melbourne meeting held at Henley house last night. A waffle supper was planned for the next meeting, which will be held at Henley House, Nov. 4, at 01:55. ---