"Dose College Make Any Difference?" **For** answer be at con- vocation tomorrow. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas Probably am late, night and Tuesday, changing to show in west portion. Vol. XXVII AROUND MT. OREAD The homecoming committee held a meeting this afternoon at 4:30 in the alumni office. The committee discussed plans for events homecoming week. Dean S. B. Bruden spoke on the subject of the Kansas Bible College, yesterday, at the Christian churches of DeSoto and Bonner Springs. Jackson Scholtz, noted sprinter and one time member of the United States Olympic team, visited Coach Brathek's morning office. The morning. Scholtz is headed for the Pacific coast and is spending his time coaching short stories. He will be here a few days. Mr. V, M. Wiley, newly elected president of the Dad's organization, is planning a meeting of the officers at 10 a.m. Tuesday in 10. At this time plan for a constitution will be drawn, and the practice of the club's purposes will be revised. Dr. William L. Burdick, vice-president of the University, delivered an address yesterday at the dedication of the Memorial Park Corporation of America. He spoke in the dedication services of the memorial service, and the one at St. Joseph, Mo. The ways and means committee of the Kansas State Board of Agriculture will place cards for the banquet on Tuesday night in honor of the members of the Kansas State Dean's Council. No. 39 Miss Meribail Moore and Prof. Kair斯特贝, of the School of Fine Arts, accompanied by Miss Ruth Ort-gutt, gave a joint recital last night in the Academy, Leavenworth. The program was of varied interest and included compositions of Bach, Verdi, and Kreisler. A group of English, Irish, Protest folk songs also was given. Three hundred students attend a three-hour concert. Ray Walters, B. S., 20, Bucarest, Romania, was a guest at the Delta Tau Delta house over the week-end. Mr. Walters is a geologist for the Standard Oil Company, of New Jersey, where he will complete the remaining three years of his nine years of foreign service. “El Ateneo,” Spanish club, has selected 22 new members. They are: Rosa Fearl, Joan Ferrero, Wheeler, Michael Ankerman, Ether艾尔莉, Joan France彭, Maxian Kennedy, Jessic Nichel, Cecil Gardner, Daniely O’Reilly, Sundrum, Arlene Fouls, Madeline Fouks, Vera Seyer, Elizabeth Molyder, Carolan Diclado, Alexandra Gimenez, Jerry Hatcher, musicist, Helen Holke, Heiner Harper and Bernice Stugard. They were selected from Spanish students who met the requirements of the club at its last two meetings. Announcement has been received at the office of the School of Architecture, of the date of the national conference on architectural engineering fraternity, which is to be Nov. 24, 25, and 26. Prof. G. M. Beil and Paul E. Kaiser of Architecture are national officers of the fraternity and plan to attend the meeting, which is to be held at the University of Minnesota at Minneapolis. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1920 The Southwestern Liberal Association of the Uttarian Christian church will present evening events. Meetings of the lag delegates will continue over Wednesdays at the Uttarian Tribal Center. Unitarian Association To Hold Meetings Here The speakers for the meeting are Pres. Sydney Snow, Meadville Theological school, Chicago. See Curtis W. Reece, D. D., of Westport, civitas arborum; Robert M. Foster, George Patterson, of American Untarian Association of Boston. Pen and Scroll Club to Interview Candidates Interviews to meet promising candidates for Pen and Scroll will be given today and tomorrow. They will be submitted during the autumn trouts have been read and if candidates display sufficient interest and willingness in a job, they will be invited club as pledges at an inform service next Tuesday evening. Fort Akinson, Wis. — (UP) — A stalk of corn on which seven perfectly formed ears were growing was harvested this fall by Max Strunk Milton Beach Improves; Is Taken From Hospita Milton Beach, bush '71, was taken to his home at 1915 Barker avenue Saturday morning. Beach was a victim of weeks ago. He is healded improving from the serious wound and seems to be past all danger of complication. Roland Lagan, Lawrence high school boy, charged with assault with intent to kill Beach, was arrested on Wednesday and was bound over to district court for trial on the criminal pocket ballast or the first or second week of November. Pantages Must Serve One to Fifty Years in San Quentin Prison Greek Showman Loses Cour Fight to Eunice Pringle. Young Dancer Los Angeles, Oct. 28, — (UP) -- Alexander Pantages, for years the premier showman of the West Coast, played a losing role in his greatest triumph as a result must spend from one to 60 years in San Francisco penitentiary. The 51-year-old Greek multimillionaire will be called before Superior Court in Athens, Tuesday teneses. At that time his attorneys will present a motion for a new trial against him. A jury of seven women and five men found him guilty of assaulting a 72-year-old Prijeh after deliberating 54 hours. They recommended the "mercury" of the suspect. The jury preferred the word of Miss Pringle, an amateur dancer to that of the man who ran a smallklon dike stake into a $29,000,000 business The verdict was returned in the courtroom in which his wife, Mrs. Leis Pantages, was found guilty of manslaughter a month ago. She claimed Pantages, on the pretext of giving her the footlight career she desired, lurped her to his office on Aug. 9 and attacked her. Pantages denied her charge and accused him of torturing a Justice Judge released Pantages on $3,500 bail and then remanded him to a cell in the county jail. Display Work in Topeka An exhibition of eight canvases by Prof. Raymond Eastwood and seven water colors by Prof. Karl Matter, both of the department of painting, will be on display at 8 tion at the Washburn college at Washburn colleges in Topeka. Mattern and Eastwood Have Paintings on Exhibit Several Spanish landscape canvases painted by James Gillett, instructor of painting and drawing at Wadsworth Academy, work of four New York painters will be grouped with the Kansas artists canvases. Their work, landscape and portrait, demonstrates the painting of contemporary painters in the city. Professor Eastwood's work consists of scenes of the eastern coast, especially near Provincetown, Mass., where he has painted for several Professor Matthews' group of landscape water colors are of Kauai scenes, several of which were recently displayed at the Kauai Art Insti All women who are going to Nebraska for the game must be vaccinated, have transportation, and chaperone at the Dean of Women's office by Friday no. Any woman going in a car must have permission from her parents to hers. Any woman staying over night must register her name with the Nebraska police department to is stay and who will return. The advanced standing commission of the Y. W, C. A, will hold a meeting Tuesday at 4:30 in Henley house to elect officers for the group, and Mary Spencer, chairman of the commission, will fill from other campuses to be present. Group Officers of Y. W. To Be Elected Tomorro Arah Weidman, Pres. W.S.C.A. At the last meeting of the commission two weeks ago, a nominating committee chairman, chairman, Eleanor Johnson and Glennys Hilks, was appointed which will present the names for the members of the committee. The remainder of the meeting will be turned over to a discussion of plans for the commission officer will be in charge of the meeting. Pres. W.S.G.A First: western "Paid Jayhawkers Beat Ames," Says Des Moines Paper cuttor Makes Retraction for Sweeping Charges Made Against Kansas "Laughing up their sleeves on the Carnegie report, the reputedly well compensated athletes of the University, told me. 'He's a goddamn athletics amateur' Saturday, 33 to 10. In football, money talks only in whippers, but it scores many a win." "Not every player on the Jay- hawker team, of course, accepts medicine or does what he needs, who do needn't blush. Modern football be what it is, they earn it." Thus reads the first paragraph of a signed article which appeared upon the cover of *The New York Times* edition of *Yesterday's* Dee Moines (Low) Sunday, Register. Then the article reads: "Figure it out for yourself. If I Red Gremble, after his football days, earned $2,000 a game, and rattled up the whole field, I fallback Dan Bausch's three touchdowns of Saturday worth? If he gets much more, that only the $31 a week or about $10.23 for each goal. "That is our goal! That's dirt cheap." "The Ames boys from Iowa's coedhole, playing for the fun of it in the first game against courageous football, but they seemed blushed by the prosperous hired players." Having spent himself on this imminent situation of affairs, stimulated by the caricature investigation and by the routing handed his favorite State team, Mr. Miller turned his attention to the young togs with the following comment: "Kansas's gaudy uniforms, with the brightest red jersey ever seen herealtoes, might be called danger-lightly referred to as a 'cow college.' But the person most infuriated by the color was a young Kansas canned Jim Bauch, who is built in skinny jeans and runs like a yearling ect. . . . Ces Taylor, sports editor of the Register, was called this morning on the long distance phone by Dr. F. C. Miller, a specialist in brain injury that explained that, since he was in Columbia Saturday as an official at the Missouri-Nebraska game, the Miller would not have been printed or it would never have been printed. It seems that Mr. Miller was assigned by the Register to write a series of special feature articles on the issues of brain injury. The Miller is not a sports writer, he made no investigation whatsoever before ex- (Continued on page 3) Four Initiated by Scarab Informal Dinner at Green Owl Follows Ceremony Engineering Society Will Hold Meeting at Lincoln Formal initiation for four men to Sarah, architectural environmental educator in the city of Marvin hall. The men initiated were John Schotz of Elsworth, Aron Zieckes of Eudora, William Vandiel and Logan McKibbens of Klan After the initiation ceremonies an informal dinner was served at the Green Owl Club, a private institution of Engineering and Architecture acted as tombmaster and responses were given by G. M. Roal and Verner Smith, both of the school of Computer Science, president of Scarcah; and the new students. Alumni present were Erick Johnson, Herbert Pennington, Earl Burke, Earl Horror, all of Kansas City. A large number of the faculty from the School of Engineering and Architecture will go to Lincoln, Neb., where he will visit the Kansas-Nebraska section of the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education, to be held there until October 2015. A definite program of the meetings has not been received here but a number of K. U. men will be on campus. Mr. Hawley will speak on aeronautics, and Prof. F. N. Raymond, who will give a report on the national conference held June at Colorado Springs Office, will speak in the department of civil engineering, as chairman of the Kansas-Nebraska section, and will preside at the meeting. Read the Kansan want ads Spezini, Italy, Oct. 28.-(UP) -The Imperial Airways Indian airliner which was forced down in the Gulf of Genoa and whichankedin a storm while being towed to safety, was also shot down several miles off shore here today. Wire Flashes Limeau, Mo., Oct. 28—(UP)—Fire companies of three towns and several volunteer volunteers halted a blaze today which swept through two 2-story homes near the river; near damage estimated around $50,000. No one was injured. Washington, Oct. 28—(U1) Secretary of State Stimson today announced reversal of a policy that had led to the Coldidge administration in connection with the effort of Count and Countess Elizabeth Dudley to visit the United States. Stimson said the pair had applied for visa and orders had been issued to grant Pariz, Oct. 28—(UP) Raymond Poincaré made it clear today that he does not intend to return soon to politics by an announcement that he plans n long夜 on the Riseis in a strong enough to make the vip. Washington, Oct. 28. — (UP) —The nomination of Richard J. Hopkins of Kansas to be U. S. district judge in Kansas was favorably reported to the Judicial Council on Monday but no action was taken on the report by the full origenes. Georges Clemencen, who has been recovering from a critical heart attack, continued to improve, having passed a good night. Cleveland, Ohio, Oct. 21—(UUP) - Aviation accident claimed five lives in Ohio yesterday. A plane crashed on December 21, was in the crowd which saw him fall 2,000 feet to his death in an attempted parachute crash, where an air cirrus was in progress. Sault St. Marie, Mich., Oct. 28—(UP) A subdued Lake Superior will bear all sailors homeward today at the U.S. Naval Base in Mystic from death in its fury last Tuesday, The men, members of the crew of the freighter Chicago, were marooned on desatec Michigan island, 100 miles from Port Huron. Ship crashed onto its rocky coast. Washington, Oct. 28—(UP)—Opa hope was held today for the recovery of Senator Theodore E. Burtton. He will be in Washington to his home for the past several weeks. Rome, Oct. 28.—(UP)—Prince Dermonhard von Böglau, the German Empire's fourth chancellor who met his greatest challenge in 1834 to keep Italy faithful to the Triple Entente, died here today. He was 80 years old and had been for sixteen months at 6:50 am, after uncontended consciousness. Snowflies will be accompanied, the Bureau predicts, by fresh and strong winds. Weather in Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas and Oklahoma is predicted to be cooler within the next 36 hours. Kansas City, M., Oct. 28—(UPS) Stock raisers in Nebraska and Kansas were warned today by the government. Weather Bureau to protect their herds against enemy preyed to fall in both states tonight or tomorrow. Kansas Alumna Publishes Article in the "Nation" A two-page article entitled "Ella May's Songs," telling of the suppression and hardships faced by the immigrants, and a few incidents of the life of Ella May Wiggins, union leader, with songs composed by her, appear on page 9. This article was written by Margaret Larkin, who received her A. B. degree from the University of New York in progressive writer residing in New York. Amos to Speak Before K. U. Graduate Women The story was dated from Charlotte, N. C., on Sept 20, after Wiggins was shot to death on her way to a union meeting at Gastonia. Special invitations are extended to graduate women of the University to attend a dinner meeting of the University Women, Wednesday evening at 6:30 at Wedemarka, Daeh Yiunhwa W. Ams., Wednesday evening at 7:30 at Wilhil on "Fellowship and Opportunity Research Work for Women" made before Tuesday night. Plunge in Market Today Takes Toll of $5,000,000,000 Little Investors Wiped Out Big Speculators Get Panicky and Sell Stocks New York, Oct. 28.—(UP) Five billion dollars in stock market values were washed away today under the breaching of last Thursday's great break —plunged downward in what was considered the greatest break of all Leading issues plunged despite renewed additional support given by big bankers—a group headed by J. P. Morgan Chase and its disastrous drops. In the downtown stocks touched new lowes. Leaves from 10 to 50 points were recorded and one of the stocks on the floor dropped 119 points during the day. United States Steel, leader in the movement which carried stocks to great heights a few weeks ago, led in the swing downward today. Last week, the steel company it lay down to 191, stopped and started up again. But it was a hort-lived rally. Soon Steel started utapping again, and went below 160 mark. This started the final break that brought all along It was a riot for the big traders. The "little fellows" had been chased out in that somewhat punky few hours last Thursday. Today it was the men who could trade in the expensive stocks who grew over millions of dollars, valuable value stocks it prices which meant millions of dollars in losses. Starts Irregularly The market today started irregularly, and finally a tremendous selling wave, estimated at a basis of 100,000 shares a day. The bankers and other banks went to the offices of J. P. Morton and Company, a gesture which when employed last week brought the urn in the market to nearly $2 million in aid effect. There was a better tone. Stoeks picked up, but United States Steel and other makers receded. The word went out that the bankers were going their own way, Valines added and the close found pieces around the lowes of the day. Cities Service have in- duced low-cost Utilities, the Cubs broke also; Chicago stock prices were off 1 to 50 points; wheat lost half of early four-cent gains brought out by farm board support of that commodity; cotton eased in food market collapse; rubber prices in markets were affected by the drastic selling wave on the financial exchanges. Call and time money rates remained unster and this helped bonds where only the convertibles had real defiances. Foreign exchange quotations also were higher, especially when the near its record high for the year. When General Electric was breaking more than 40 points, the big accounts were going overboard in large amounts. A long list of small holders also was sold out, but the big holders were felt by the big stockholders. TICKERS RUN. A little more than an hour, they run blind to the close they were nearby and one-half hours beware when giving indication they would run until after 5 p.m. before reaching the last question. At the bottom today, the Dow Jones average made a new low for the year. The rail average was down sharply within touching distance of the low. Tickers Run Behind London, Oct. 28, - (UP) The carb market was excited again today by the crash on the New York Exchange, wrecking Anglo-American stocks were Secretary Gives Speech Before Freshman Y Club The Freshman "Y" club will be given a personal talk by Sam Carter, executive secretary of the Y. M. C., at its weekly meeting in Myers hall at 7 o'clock Tuesday evening, with Ms. Mustafa. He will be present and will deal primarily with the later adolescence stage in the life of the college man. The talk will be personal in its approach and social in its outlook. Specific problems will be discussed and we much interpretation as posi- All members of the club are especially urged to be present and take part in the discussion. Lynn, Mass. (UP)—A baby born to Mrs. Victor J. Whitehouse has five fingers and a thumb on each hand. The infant otherwise is normal. FOUR PAGES Speaker from New York Will Entertain at Forum The speaker for the moon luncheon forum for Friday, Nov. 8, will be Miss Olive Gould, of New York City, who will speak on the topic of travel in trip India. She will talk on some phases of Indian life and needs from the viewpoint of western civilization. An announcement from the Y. M. C. A. office in regard to the fireside forums this fall shows that they are likely to be overrun, and will get under way soon. All houses wishing information in regard to their speakers may get information from Deans of Women Here for Fifteenth Annual Meeting of Advisers Does College Make a Difference Theme of Opening Session Tomorrow Miss Amos' first address will be given tomorrow at the University of Florida's Office of Posts College Make Any Difference "invocation will begin at 10 o'clock. The program for the conference will as follows: 12:10 p.m. administration building; 12:10 p.m. lunch-break—noon; m. room office of the Dean of women, 220 Administration building; 12:10 p.m. lunch-break—noon; m. room office of Home Economics, University of amazes); 2:00 p.m. first session spencer-Thayer Museum; appointment (recurring fee); m. room office of Women as a Personnel Officer; Miss Amos; 7:00 p.m. formal room; Crystal room, Hotel Elite The fifteenth annual state conference of the Kansas Association of Jeans of Women and Advisors to the Fashion Industry held in hyrae W. Amos, the principal leader of the meetings, invaded that hall with a large number of guests will be given tonight by Chancellor Mrs. Lindley in honor of Miss Amos. The reception begins at 8:50 Drive On Wednesday Automobiles for the entire session will be furnished through the courtesy of the Lawrence Branch of the American Automobile Association. Women. Automobiles for guests will be at the Hotel Eldridge at 8:15 p.m. Automobiles will leave the Hotel Wednesday, Oct. 30, 9 a.m., second session, followed by lunch and symposium, Grill Room, Hotel Elkhorn; businessman conference, Personal Office; Miss Amos; 3:30 p.m., Drive. The drive will include visits to Liberty Memorial high school; Waltham high school; orbital high school; industrial building, Union Building. Miss Amos has been secured by the Kansas State Teacher's Association to appear before the college departments. Miss Amos is Dean of Women at the University of Pittsburgh. She is also president of the College Foundation of Deans of Women, and holds many other prominent positions. Dean Husband President The officers of the state Association are: president, Dean Agnes Husband, vice president, Miss Grace Irwin, Bashir University, president, Ellen W. Sisson, Liberty Memorial high school, Lawrence. The committees of the association are: President, Michele W. Sisson, Evelyn Elynn College of Emporia, Emporia; Misa Chelle White, Southwestern University, University of Iowa; Miss Leaversworth high school, Leavensworth. Resolutions committee; Mrs. Hate Moore Mitchell, Kansas State Teachers, College, Pittsburg; Mr. Mary P. Vern Zile, Missouri; Ms. Laura L. Ewing, Manitou; Miss Laura L. Ewing, Topca high school, Topeka. Ku Ku Initiation Was Held For Seventeen Yesterday Ku Ku, local chapter of Pi Epsilon Pi, held initiation for the following men Sunday evening: Gordon Fucker, Henry Asher, Robert Mann, Moy Weatherhead, Robh Martin, Sam Sun Lamp, George Scholfe, William Powell, Fred Fleming, Orm Mc Jane Lembren, George Leibmann, and Ruth Lordwick. After the initiation a midnight lunch was served to the new initiates at Brick's. Senate --- In Congress Today United Press House Senate continues debate on rate in chemical schedule of tariff bill. Judiciary committee receives reports of subcommittees. Meets for introduction of bills ans to adjourn for three days. Pittsburgh Dean Will Be Speaker for Convocation Thyrsa W. Amos To Talk On "Does College Make Any Difference" Tomorrow Convocation Schedule First Hour 8:30-9:05 Second Hour 9:15-10:00 Corvocation 10:00-10:50 Third Hour 11:00-11:35 Fourth Hour 11:45-12:20 Mies Amos is in Lawrence to attend the Kansas Association of Women Teachers conference Wednesday. She will be the principal speaker at these meetings. Thyra W. Amos, dean of women at the University of Pittsburgh, will speak at the conversation to be held tomorrow morning at the University auditorium. Dean Amos has chosen "Dear College Makes My Difference." Holds Many Offices Besides being dean of women at the University of Pittsburgh, Miss Amon is president of the National Association of Women in Medicine and a member of the national committee on recognition of colleges, American Association of University Women, International Federation of University Women, and many other similar or Miss Amos holds an A.B. and an A.M. degree from the University of Canas. To Lecture at Dean's Conference. Miss Ames arrived this morning at the lecture of the Deans' conference. Dean Agnes Humbard of the University of Kansas is president of the association. Miss Agnes has made a request, "Make any Difference," has been chosen to answer the questions of many students and American people who really wonder if the attending college will prepare them for today's world. Miss Ames has studied the subject thoroughly and will give her answer in her address tomorrow. The annual convention schedule. Convocation will be held at 10 a.m. Republican Party Leaders Plan For 1930 Elections Farm Group Takes Action Washington, Oct. 28—(UP)—While Republican party leaders in congress deny any intent of seeking to deny the tariff bill in the senate, the farm bloc wing is looking with wonder at the extraordinary preparation which the leaders are preparing for the 1950 congressional election. The actions of the bloe—putting bill, eliminating the flexible proc bill, eliminating the flexible proc bill and severely cutting the proposed industrial increases, have aroused It was reported Sen. George W. Norris, representative, Nebraska, who supported the Democratic presiden- tial in a special session, who has opposed the tariff bill, had been informed by friends that he was marked for serious opposition. The senator also said that D. Mckelie of Nebraska, being groomed to run against Norin for the senate next year, and that Mckelie will support the farm board and help. It was made known Ott all, Kuhn of Kuhn, Lobb and Company, had decided to nominate him as senatorial campaign committee of which Sen. George Moses, Republic, New Hammurabi, is chairman. Kuhn's decision was an intention of raising any unusual sum of money to oppose the farm group in the congregational electorate. Flying School Opened Officially On Sunday The Curties, flying and ground school at the Municipal Airport and Fort McKenzie students from the University enrolled for instruction and had their first More students would like to take the lessons, said Prof. Earl D. Hay, "but because of financial constraints they cannot do so." The school has two planes, one a Fledglings, which is used for instructing children, and another which will be used for sightseeing and commercial trips. The two planes are taken care of by a mechanic and an instructor. Nothing definite can be given about the R.O.T.C. aviation unit which the plane is flying, and the K.U. The petition which was gotten up last week has received more than enough signature, expressing a desire to return, and it has been sent to the chancellor.