Partly cloudy to cloudy tonight and Saturday. Colder Saturday. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN So the sofas are throwing their annual wailing ding tonight; power to 'em. The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas Vol. XXVII Campus Gossip No. 69 Class Visits Insane Asylum—Dr. E. B. Pierson Honoret by Phi Chi Fraternity The abnormal psychology class under Prof. H., R. De Silva went to Tepeka today to visit the state insane hospital. The visit was scheduled to take the class over. Quill Club meet last night with Catherine Dump in charge. Paper were read by Naumi DaeSchner, Adi Hamilton, and Marguerite Davies O, M. Bundy who is sent out by the Wooldinger Electric and Manu facturing Company will be here Mei Wang of engineers graduation this year. The Christmas meeting of El Ateno will be held at the University for a discussion Christmas in Spain will make up the program after which a social hour will take place. Mr. Leon Whitney, of New Haven, Conn., executive secretary of the American Eugene Society, will spend the week-end in Lawrence in con- ference with Dr. Florence Brown Sherion concerning the program of the Eugene Society, of which Eugene Society, of which Deer Sherion is the chairman. At the child welfare conference hold yesterday in Hutchinson, Dr. Florence B. Sheron spoke on, "Negativism and Child Behavior," Dr. Maurice Mabel A. Eletlie spoke on the subject, "Attitudes We May Take Toward Child Behavior," Prof. Stuart A. Queen was chair of the session on Negativism, The Trap of Development in Social Works." Dr. T. B. Pearson of Nicholasville Ky., grand secretary of the Phi Chi fraternity, was honored by a banquet at the Ambassador Hotel in Kansas City and the Chi chapter in Kansas City. Members of the Lawrence chapter who attended the banquet were: Nelson Schuhmacher, Bill Symns, Newell Maury, Maurice Woodhall, Ted Forrester, Robert D. Smith, Williamis, Ralph Melton, Richard McKeen, Gordon Garnett, Clarence Erickson, Lawrence Schuhmacher, Tickets for the seven home basketball games will be given students now holding athletic tickets when the same are presented at the event to secure the best scaula tickets and turn it their tickets without delay. New Officers Will Meet Helen Haines, c30, who has been a patient at the Lawrence Memorial hospital since yesterday, is reported to be improving. Enlargements of photographs taken by Prof. J. M. Kellogg, school of engr., North Carolina State University, a trip abroad last summer, are being displayed on the third floor of Marvin Hall. The scenes of thecollege's spring sports, basketball, Italy and England. The enlargements will be displayed for three or four days, Prof. Kellogg has an award. Dad's Day officer who were reently elected at the Dad's Day ban quill will have their first meeting to discuss an account at 4 at the chan celer's office. Mr. M, V. Wiley of Hutchinson, who was chosen as president of the organization, has called the other two men to give her leadership; they may plan some definite program for Daua's day next year and create a new campus. She is father and sister of students of the University. Dr. J. F. Hassig of Kansas City is Vice president and Mr. Van K. Brancker The election of these officers is a new feature to the work of Dad's day. The general committee this year decided that if an organization of data could be formed there would be no interest for this affair in the future. The officers hope to work out some place whereby they can help the University with its problems. The teachers of students are vital commonly of both the students and the school. Tiger keys are awned to the members of the staff of the Colorado College Tiger. weekly news magazine, the Tiger, and on the stuff. Recommendations for awards must come from the editor of the magazine, and the members are to be senate. Dr. H. H. Lane Lectures to Snow Zoology Club D. H. H. Lane gave a lecture last night on "Zoology as a Career" before an open house meeting of the college, in the lecture room of Snow hall. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1920 Doctor Lane described four types of zoologist. First was the inpatient, second, taking the facts of nature to improve man's condition as the work of Pasture; third, the political minded who thought that the second in a desire to obtain a government position; and fourth, who knew the career of zoology for fun. Senator-Elect Vare Denied Congress Seat by Norris Resolution Washington, Dec. 6, —(UP) -William S. Vare, senator-elect from Philadelphia, and Republican leader woned a seat in the senate today he caused him to sell it $785,000 to get a senator-annual nomination in 1926. Fate Is Sealed By Members of Republican Party; Vote Is 58 to 22 The Norris resolution was adopted, by the senate declaring that expenditure of such a large sum of money together with charges of fraud corrupted the credentials of the Pennsylvania senator-elect. The senate never been able to罢免 him was thereby deleted vacant. The vote was 68 to 23. Vare's fate was sealed by members of his own party, 25 of whom voted against him. Their vote contributed the majority against him. Not a single Democratic vote was cast for him although two Democrats, Bennie and Smith of South Carolina, and Smith of Iowa were paired in his favor. Immediately after the vote was announced the senate voted 66 to 18 that Vare's election opponent, William B. Wilson, was not entitled to Cast Plays Unusual Roles After the first vote was announced Vare, white-faced, hobbled out of the chamber, bracing himself erect on the arm of his physician and a cune. With the Vare case out of the window, the taxifile dropped slightly the tariff bill which it dropped at the conclusion of the special session of congress. 'Fidelities' Group Will Portray New Type of Acting in the play, "Fidelities" by Robert Braceo, which is to be presented by the Kansas Players in Fraser theater Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, members of the cast will appear in entries from anything else tried here. Prof. Robert Calderwood, playing the part of an Italian professor of medicine who is consumed by jealousy, is making a new type of characterization. Mrs. Allen Crafton, in the role of the doctor's wife, will show University audiences a different type of acting from her usual humorous Frances Wilson, last seen as the very subtle and amusing Olivin in "Mr. Pim Passes By," will play the role of a whimsical jutishess who carries nothing for men." Professor Crafton, in addition to directing, will portray the pupil who falls in love with his professor's wife Other members of the cast are Esther Mullin, George Callahan, Herb Bard sandell, Jennette Greever. Rebecca Thatatcher, Tessiana Bike, Brian Pugh, David Kernel, Jane Kirk, Virgin Rice, Joe and McMillan. Professor Crafton considers this production the most difficult the organization has yet attempted. The movement of the plot hinges on the moods of the characters, and the impact of these moods even after death. Mrs. F. Wilson Becomes Tau Gamma Housemothe The department of dramatic art tried to secure the play, "Street Seems," to be produced this Decembr. to not make the proper arrangements. Mrs. Frances Wilson, of Leavenworth, is taking the place of Mrs. Agnes Brown as Tau Gamma house hostess. She will also be her home in Kansas City during the Thanksgiving vacation, and will not be able to return after Christmas. Mrs. Wilson was Kappa Sigmiz housemother here in 1924-25. Creighton U. Elebs Two Captains Omaha, Doc. 26 (UP) - The Creighton U. Elebs have captains for next season at a meeting here last night. They are Rudy Treaden and Chase Ward. Burger, of Auburn, Neb., left guard. Students Robbed on Ottawa Road Late Last Night Two Men Relieve Victim of Valuables, Auto; No Trace of Motor Car Found Four University students, two me- and two women, were victims of two holiday men about 12:30 a clock from the main highway south of Lawrence, and were deprived of a Dodge sedan in these days; they were riding and other valuables. The four, Bert Storfer of Wichit and Jack Nichols of Savannah, Mo both freshmen in the School of Medicine at Stanford, were taken to Syracuse, and Mary Jane White, c'32 Ottawa, were returning from Ottawa to Syracuse. A mother home, when they were forced from the highway by a Chevrolet coupe in which two men were riddled. The men then forced them, at the point of a gun, to leave the car. A woman in her mid-40s entered the women, and a pocket watch from Nichole. The women also were forced into the car. Two men from Kansas City are being held by the police. They were found by two policemen, James Weed and George Trivet, at 2 lclock this morning at station at 23d and Louisiana streets. The filling station had been broken into and 54 pens taken. An abandoned Chevrolet coach was found near the station, in negotiation, the police believe that the riot had nothing to do with the holdup. One of the men then got into the Dodge and drove it away. The other left in the Chevrolet. The four students were brought to Lawrence by a passing motorist. They arrived at the police station and arrested the holdum immediately to police. Phi Beta Kappa Initiates Ionorary Fraternity Takes in Eight New Members Phil Beta Kappa initiation was held in the rest room of Administration building yesterday afternoon. Prof. F. H. Hodler talked on the subject, "Some Fallacies in the Teaching of History" from many faults and gave examples of the errors in the teaching of history. This meeting celebrated the 153d anniversary of the founding of the Kwangsa Temple on April 2, the first being held Ice, 5, 1776. On April 2 the Kwangsa temple will celebrate its 153rd anniversary. A crew of 100 was present. Prof. Eugenio Gallino poured tea. The decorations were roses and candles. Miss Bettina Koehler, chairman of the committee in charge, The initiates were Richard C. Gafar,矿场, Minnesota; Lee S. Greene, Lawrence; Ardin H. Hamilton, Wavvie Hills, Kentucky; Ruth Pratt, Kansas City, Missouri; Ruth Pratt, Jamatown; Elizabeth Rupp, Halstead; LaBeurt Bella, Clay Center. Initiatives are held every fall and spring. This is the largest fall in history. Christmas Is Feature of Kappa Phi Meeting Gamma Chi is the new name of the men's journalistic fraternity at the University of Chicago, a group of a football scoreboard is one of the immediate projects of the organization. Petitioning Sigma Delta Chi, the national fraternity, is the main purpose of the Gamma Chi, and action in this respect is expected by the next school Berlin, Dec. 6—(UP) The south pole flight of董事 Richard E. Byrd was criticized today as a "sensation for the American craft" by Major Trygran Grase, noted Norwegian explorer, Gran, a member of the board of directors of a statement in which he said be deformed than Byrd flew over the pole. A Kappa Phi picture of all pledges and activities will be taken at 10:30 tomorrow morning at Squires' studio Read the Kansan Want Ads. "Railways, Christmas Ways," was the theme of the program at the Kapka Phi meeting in Myers Hall last night. Two vocal solos, "My Sweetheart," and "The Songs of Helena Ladesick, fa 33," accompanied by Dorothy Pierce, fa 32. Talks were given in conformity with the theme of the program by Pearl Reynolds, Virginia Kennedy Mary Matthews, Jessie Kristin Glady Baker, and Omaita Johnson. Colen Balday, bar 30, had charge of the program. Norwegian Criticizes Byrd Chang Kai-Shek Resigns Chang Kai-Shek, 42, was the youngest man ever to become member of the executive council of the National Liberation Generalissimo to the Nationalist army and led the victorious drive against northern forces against Peking in 1937. Tokika—(UP) A Nippon agency dispatch from Nanking today said that General Chang Kai-Shek, head of the Nationalist government of Japan had not notified the executive council of the government he was resigning. Chinese Nationalists Los Leader of Council Annual Tree Tradition Committee in Meeting to Outline Program Annual Soph Hop Tonight Leader of Council Ethiop Eley Williams, F. H. Johnson, Rosemary Ketcham, William A. Daugherty, Clinton Feeney, Gladys Jones, Fred Mackay, James Jones, Fred Ellworth, Helen Heaton, Henry Hugh, Dean K. M. Davis, Charles M. Baker, Dean L. D. Martin, Richard C. Bickell, KleoZ, Dean George C. Shaud, Dean Heyer Wrenor, Harold Ingham, Dean Agnes Husband, Dean R. A. Schweg, Lowell Hinshaw, Bob Myers 'rof. Henry Werner Names 60 Activities A meeting of the Christmas program committee will be held in room 10 of the Administration building this afternoon at 4:30 to plan the annual event. It is a traditional policy of the University to have a program the week before the precedent was broken due to the influenza epidemic which caused school to be let out early. A Christmas trains put up and the program ran. Some plan such as selling candles to students has been used in past years to raise money for scholarship funds. For example, the money was given to a Russian student and his wife in order that they might complete their work for college. There are 60 students and faculty members on the committee this year and Prof. Henry Worner, men's student adviser, is the chairman. Members of the committee are as follows: Dick Mullins, Dorothy Tedlock, John Mize, Merle Miller, Arthur Gromb, Tom Long, Curtis Skagga, Margaret Norstad, Tom D'Marcaff, Michael Straight, C. Behsa Thelma Furnish, F. Carlton Myers, F. Paul Oshern, Amanda Wuff, J. C. McCanes, Mumma Mumma, Arab Cleidman, Harry Watson, Sarah Kobe Bob, Karen Birchwood, Adela Hale, Dick Gafford, Elizabeth Sherbon. Use Christmas Decoration for Class Dance for Class Dance Decorations for the Soph Hop tonight will carry out the Christmas motif, and are the most pretentious ever attempted for h class party in recent years, according to Anne Kuehl. Mr. Armour of the decorations committee. AUTHORIZED PARTIES A false ceiling has been constructed over the main part of the dance floor, in the Memorial Union building, in the shape of the bottom of a large dome. George E. Lee and his recordist orchestra will play from a huge fire place, which has been constructed to carry out the Christmas decorative seismic. This will allow plenty of dancers, according to the committee. "The Soph Hop will last from 9 till 1 o'clock and no other "HlP" parties are authorized," said Jack Turner, c31; and Carl Egullet, c31, who, in turn, has joined the manager John Bayer, f31, are putting the闹 over for the Junior class. Other decorative features symbolic of the Christmas season will be evergreen trees, mistletoe, holly, and a synthetic snowstorm. The party will be chaperoned by Dean Agnes Husband, Mr. and Mrs Fred Ellsworth, and Mrs. Eva Onks Friday, Dec. 8 The Soph Hop, Union building, 1 a. m. Sigma Phi Epsilon, house, 12 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 7 Delta Zeta, house, 12 p. m. Alpha Gamma Delta, house, 12 m. Agnes Husband Dean of Women --the post-graduate medical study conducted this week at Bell Memorial hospital by the School of Medicine at University of Kansas closed today. County Clubs to Appoint Leaders of Each Section Special Division of Annua Will Be Comprised of High School Students Tentative plans were made yesterday afternoon at the meeting of the general county club committee to have a two-page section in the chapter 22, 22 Kirkwood high school leaders. Folders containing directions to chairmen of clubs were given out and explained by Joan Lewis, chairman of the general committee. The special section in the yearbook will be a distinguishing feature of work of the county organized by the George Chumna to the general committee, provides for a division of the work according to population and attendance at the University. There will be 11 divisions with from four to 17 counties. Featured in Yearbook The chairmen of the county clubs in each division of the state will decide which two counties shall have the leadership. This group is to be based on scholarship, popularity, participation in school activities, achievement and school leaders from each section will be chosen from two different high schools each year making a group of 20 school leaders. Under the direction of Fred Elsaw- son, sponsor of the county club of including leaders from high schools of Missouri, principally those of Kau- don. Convocation. Dec. 11 County club convoitation will be Wednesday morning, Dec. 11. Postgres containing information as to the meetings of various clubs, will be placed on the campus this week. Students will notice the place of meeting their particular county and to arouse interest among students to attend the meetings. One officer will be elected at the meetings and special plans for vacation programs will be Concludes Medical Study Sessions Held at Bell Memorial Hospital End Today Internal Medicine-Diagnosis was the general topic discussed in the sessions which have been held daily since Monday. After each session visiting physicians were permitted to submit cases to the clinics which were Dr. William S. Middleton, University of Wisconsin, Dr. J. C. Meaker, University of Michigan, Dr. Harvey G. Beck, University of Maryland, and Dr. George E. Brown, University of Minnesota, were among the professors who lectured and conducted the clinic Snowden Excludes Women From Finance Committee London.—(UP)—Political forecasters look for a feminist uprising in the Labor party as a result of the Senate's rejection by the Exchequer, to include a woman in the personnel of the re-ministry, and to pursue an inquiry into Finance and Industry. The situation is intensified by the fact that it was Snowden himself, who, as a member of the 1924 cabinet, was the first woman on important financial committees. It was recalled that he was he appointed Mrs. Barbara Wooton to serve on two committees. Mrs. Wooton was then only 26 years The feminists refuse to believe Snowden would have found difficulty in discovering women with the necessities in banking, finance and credit. SIX PAGES Bronsville, N., Y. Dec., 6—(UP)—After 34 years of married life, Mrs. Lena Morkenweck seeks a separation from her husband on the charge that he taught he to drink to liquor. She was granted $500 each and been granted $50 a week alimony. Samuel Morgenweck, retired plumber, denied the charge. Resents Likuor Lessons Dr. A. Herbert Gray, emeritus clergyman and statesman from London, stated that the typical habit of the clergyman is to interview with a college reporter. If courtesy is capable of promoting higher ideals, the younger generation must be given similar relations such as have never been attained before, Mr. Gray thinks. Dr. Canuteson Says There Is No Increase in Flu "There are no cases of influenza at the student hospital," was the statement made by Dr. Ralph I. Caundon, director of the Student Health Service. The number of colds, sore throats and similar cases have been more severe than number, he has been more severe since the Thanksgiving holidays. Robert Borth was dismissed this afternoon and Clinton Feeney is improving after an operation for appendicitis. Hutcherson Makes 12 Points In Discussion; Last Noon Negro 'Y' Secretary Discusses Prejudice in Speech This Noon Luncheon “If I were a white student interested in removing the evidences of race prejudice, I would seek out students who that group build up sentiment to overthrow the entire structure of race prejudice,” was the statement of W. Wendy Kramer, a history lecturer from Wichita at the noon luncheon forum in the cafeteria today. Although he asserted that speechmaking is becoming unpopular, Mr. Hutcherson risked unpopularity by being vicious about the various vanced these 12 points: There is a race or color line recognized and acknowledged by the Negro. He deploys its direction but not its existence; it does not all the good things of life above the line and the Negro is forced to remain below the line. The only possible outcome is a vertical line where the Negro is the most likely of life without changing his identity: Race hatred is not geographical its intensity. Mr. Hutcheson state that students in North Carolina and Tennessee are attempting to change the nature of which students in Kansas were fearful. The hot beds of race prejudice are no longer in Atlanta, New Orleans and Savannah, but in Detroit, Pittsburgh Race prejudice and race hatred on antipathies are not analogous terms, social equality and social intermingling are not analogous; our prejudices are not identical ignorance; the negro draws a nice distinction between western Christianity and the teachings of Jesus; race or color prejudice is our greatest challenge; religious prejudice because it deals with such inevitable and unchangeable factors. Other differences can be removed and a common basis for discrimination cannot be but race or color cannot be changed; race prejudice is not inherent; racial discrimination is economic as well as social, and the Negro is more desperate because of inter-racial incarnation than established circumscriptions. This was the last of the noon, luncheon forums for this fall and was attended by a record group of 60 people. Next Tuesday there will be a dinner hosted by Mr. Chang house on China, Mr. Woo and Mr. Chang will assist in the discussion. Two Fraternities Robbed Thieves Take Watches and $67 in Cash From Houses Thieves entered two fraternity halls on Saturday, Upsala and Sigma Pi Epilogue early yesterday morning, and stole about $67 in cash and several phones. At the Delta Upsilon店 $42 in cash was lost while nothing else was touched. The Sigma Phi Epsilon house suffered the loss of $15 and several watches. Entry at both houses was gained, apparently, through the back doors of the houses. Members say the thefts occurred some time after 2 Two Blasts Kill 5, Injures 14 Munhall, Pa.—(U4) While investigators were digging in the house, another explosion in the basement of a drug store next door rocked the town for the second time within 24 hours and injured four persons. In yesterday's attack, five killed and more than 50 were injured. House Senate In Congress Today United Press The senate votes on Norris resolution denying seat to Senator-elect John Kerry in the 2016 election rejecting contest raised against Vare election by William B. Wilson. House The house takes up Interior de partment appropriation bill. Big Six to Protest Bausch Eligibility; Rumors Indicate Missouri U. Will Not Bring Charges, Brewer Says, In Reply to Reports Kansas City, Dec. 6—(UIP)—Big six officials meeting here for their testimony may end their session with a less formal response regarding the eligibility of Jim Baushea of the University of Kansas, it was indicated recently that rumored about the conference headquarters that charges would be presented that he was subsidized during the hearings. Eligibility Discussion Tomorrow Conference eligibility rules are enforced by faculty athletic representation who may meet tomorrow morning. The charges, C. L. Brewer, athletic director of the University of Missouri, said would not be presented by the court. The Brewer said no charges against Bamch had been heard either by the coaches or directors of athletics at the university. Schedules for baseball, tennis, swimming, and track were agreed upon by the directors. The Drake Re- president will be held on May 26 and 27. The Kansas Rolleys will be held at Lawrence April 19. The conference track meet will be held at Lincoln May 23 and 24. The con- ference matches will be held at the same time. The indoor track meet, which this year will be held in the field house of the University of Missouri at Columbia, is scheduled for March 7 and 8. The club will be the scene of the indoor swimming meet to be held March 7. Bausch is "Dumbfounded" He denied any connection with the circulation of such a rumor here on the Hill and seemed surprised con- clarifying that the report coming out of Kansas City. Jim Bauer, K. U., fullback and promising candidate for center position on the basketball squad, was "dumbbounded" when informed of the "rumor circulating about the K. U. campus" that he was to be charged with professionalism at the current location of 86 athletic officials in Kansas City. The University administration was not aware of the reported protest of Bausch's eligibility, and indicated that he should be questioned. The school since early football season relative to the effect that other schools might register protests against Bausch on "professionalism" grounds, the presidents said, is not known at the Chancellor's office. Sociology Is Translated Professor Blackmar's Book Now in Czech Language "Outlines of Sociology" by Frank Blackman, professor of sociology, and John L. Gillen, professor of sociology at Macmillan company has been translated recently into the Zech language and published at Prague. The original of this book was written in 1914 by William Macmillan, who published by Macmillan company in 1905 under the title of "The Elements of Sociology." In 1914 he associated with him Doctor Gillen in revising some of the articles and lines of Sociology," which was published by Macmillan公司 in 1915. A second revision was made in 1923, which included the writesthe "being in March, 1928." Doctor Blackmar has received a copy of the translation. Edsel Ford's New Yacht Left Stranded on Reef New Bedford, Mass., Dec. 6.—(UP) —Edelst Ford's new $490,000 yacht, launched only last month at Naples, FL, built by a reef near Honeysuckle lightship about four miles off Point Horsecreek Beach. Ford was not aboard but Capt. John C. Burchard men were taken off the stranded craft by the crew of coast guard boat 287 which had been dispatched to escape from the base at Wood Hole. Violent Storm Near Madrid Violent Storm Near Madrid Madrid, Dec. 6—(UP)—A violent storm demolished many buildings and an army drove a dozen people, eight seriously, near Madrid and other sections near there last night. California and Pitt to Meet California and Pitt to Meet Lewis-Henry, the University of Ukraine's University of Southern Cali- nada announced here today that the University of Pittsburgh, will be its opponent in the annual Pasadena tournament of the NCAA basketball game. The game will be in the rose bowl.