Kama athletics are still pure. The Carnegie committee didn't invest; so it *us* UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Generally fair to night and Friday; frost tonight; warmer Friday. The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas Vol. XXVII No.86 AROUND MT. OREAD A meeting for all women on the Hill interested in becoming members of Y. V. will "Thursday afternoon at 3:30 in Henley house, Florence Kieser, ed30, was elected president of the Physical Education Club at a meeting held yesterday by women majoring in physical education. More than forty women are majoring in this department, heading to Miss Ruth Heover, head of the department of physical education. D. E. H, S. Buley was the speaker at the weekly School of Pharmacy assembly held this morning at 11:30 in the Chemistry building and auditorium. "Special Foods of Europe" was the lecture illustrated with slides. A group of violin players by Prof. Woldemar Geltch and a selection of solos by Margaret Dremon, faunch, soprano, will make up the 8:30 to 10:30 U radio program this opening. The numbers will be announced as given. Dann Haenhall, Prof. D, H. Spencer and several senior pharmacy students attended a dinner and meeting at the Kansas City Athletic Club, last evening, given by the McKenzie brothers to explain the company's plans for the future. Eastern representatives were in charge. Elections were held this morning at Marvin hall for freshman representatives on the Engineering Council. Edward Ripoll of Topka was elected secretary of the department of mechanical engineering and a member of Phi Kappa Psi. The second series of Y. M. C. A. uncleens will be held at 12:30 Friday, in the Union building. The main speaker on the program will be Dr. Dwight Bradley pastor of the First Congregational church, a congregation of 10 years and recently appointed to the Old First Church of Newton Center, Mass. D. Pitigma Alba, honorary political science trainee, ment this afternoon before the meeting. This members are elected on the basis of scholarship and interest in the field of political science. Business students year's program were also considered. Sigma Pi met Monday in room 21 of east Administration building. Mr. Purdy, instructor in the department, presented a case on vision. A social committee was appointed, consisting of Cree Warden, Harrison and Frances Carnegie. Quack Club held its regular meeting last night in Robinson gymnasium, where they played a game out to the new ploides. The meeting was conducted by Alice Sheron, president of the club. After the meeting members and ploides played Dam R. A. Schwepper, professor, the School of Education, left Wedne day morning for Minnesota where I worked as a teacher east division of Minnesota Education Association, which is to be held Wisconsin and Manhattan today and Mrs. Louise Holdman Withers, A.B. 22, is the guest this week of Dr. F, B Sherbon, director of the Bureau o Child Research. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1929 "Ball" Jeffrey, honor man 28, who last year was head basketball coach at Baker University, and who attended law classes on the bill as a sideline, is attending Harvard University Law School this year. An anonymous gift of $290,000 was recently given to the pension fund if Cornel University to be used for援助 relief of retired finally members. A stereotypical lecture on "Martin Lutheran and the Reformation" will be given Sunday night at the Latham Library about sixty hardened slides have been obtained which display the outstanding events of the Reformation. The real nature is being sponsored by the Lutheran Student Association and all students interested in the subject are invited. A discussion on the World Court led by Miss Louisa K. P., past national executive for the administration of education in South Africa, College League of Women Werey yesterday afternoon at a meeting in east Administration building. The matter will be discussed later, but no announcement of it will be made until next season. The league will meet next Wednesday, Oct. 30, at 5:39 p.m. to continue the discussion on the issue. Jayhawkers Will Fly Here for Homecoming According to plans the University of Kansas will have a flying homecoming this year. There will be 150 students in Oak, several planes from Wichita, and two large planes from Detroit, Mich. Former graduates from Kansas State University are furnished by the Exchange Trust Co., which owns an airplane transportation service. Loey May Marriott, an employee in this company, Other classes from southern Kansas will bring former students from other states. They will also be taken twice between Kansas City and Lawrence for their first two years. Kathryn T. Nelson, Soprano And Karl Bratton, Tenor. The voices of Kansas participants in the national radio audition contest will be broadcast by station WHIB WFN. The program will be a 9 p.m. tomorrow evening at 9 p.m. Are Choser Contestants from Lawrence who will take part in the contest are Kathryn Langmade Nelson, sorrano and Karl H. Bratton, teor, n Besides the two singers representing Lawrence, both of whom are students in the School of Fine Arts, two former fine arts students, Louise Murkens and Sophiepe and Leander Munkeen of Parsons will take part in the contest. The two contestants scoring highest honors will represent the state at the district audition which will be held in Dallas next month. Kansas listeners may play a deciding part in the selection of the state's audience, since the votes of the radio audience will count 60 points. The judges will allow the jury of musical authorities who will co-operate in judging. All of the contestants are between 18 and 25 years of age and have never been heard professionally as singers, represented in the state context, are represented in the state context. W. S. G. A. Plan Progran Awards of $25,000 in each and 10 musical scholarships will go to the 10 singers who are chosen to compete. The awards will be given by New York. This year the response to the invitation to enter the competition was more auditions in towns and cities of the United States than during 1927 and 1928, the two previous auditions. Vocational Guidance Will Be Led by Florence Jackson The tentative program for Vocational Guidance week, Nov. 19-21 which will be held in Lawrence, is submitted by the W. S. G. A. Every morning from 9 a.m. until 12 p.m., Miss Florence Jackson, the "individual conferences," in the rest room of west administration building. The subjects of Miss Jackson's "Occupational Progress of Women," and "Occupations of Women of Today." Tuesday room there will be an hour of honors to honor Miss Jackson; on Tuesday evening she will be guest of honor at a superior meeting of W. S. G. A. for her coronation, given for her at Corbinal hall. Any woman student desired spee- cial conference with Miss Jackson must apply applications as soon as possible in Dept. Husband's office. Miss Jackson will be the speaker at the University convalescion which will be Tuesday, Nov. 19. Band Will Not Be Taken To Nebraska This Year For the first time in 29 years the band will not accompany the football team on its trip to Nebraska, it was announced that a board of directors Tuesday evening. The athletic department has usually taken the band on at least two trips a year, going to two schools and three others. The next, on account of the expense incurred in making the trip, the directors agreed that the band would play for the home games this year and only go to Oklahoma only this year. New York, Oct. 24—(UP)—One of the worst breaks in the history of the New York stock exchange came today when wave after wave of sell-offs dropped down to $10 per dollar of dollars were clipped from stock values. Athletic Officials Are Unperturbed at Investigation Kansas Was Not Included In the Carnegie Probe Chancellor And Allen Say The release of the Carnegie Foundation's investigation of college athletics this morning has around mounds of university officials. Heads of many if the institutions which were involved in the report, their opinions concerning the report Allen Say Chancellor E. H. Lindley, who expressed much confidence in the committee's handling of the law-making statement; "Immachus at the University of Kansas was not included in the Carnegie investment in the university," he reported. I have confidence in the ability of the commission and believe the report will have a wholesome influence. H. W. "Bill" Hargis of the University coaching start said that he had a big influence on porters to Dr. Forrest C. Allen, director of athletics for the University. If there is to be any criticism related to giving Hackell Indian football players room and board, that criticism must be dressed up. Mr. Hackell was told by Frank W. MacDonald, director of athletics at the Aritz institution, in reply to the inquiry regarding Hackell's part in the Carnegie port project, that it was said, simply because a students at the Indian school receive room and board from the government. Doctor Allen, in commenting upon the Carnegie report, stated: "I have nothing to say since the University was not included in this investigation." (United Press) Charges made by the Carnegie Foundation for the advancement of teaching that athletics in American colleges are subsidized were given but little support in the statements of college authorities interviewed today. The comments follow Columbia, Mo., Oct. 24 (UP) — Commenting upon a survey conducted by the Carriegic Foundation in regard to intercollegiate athletes, Dr. Stratton D. Brooks, president of Missouri State University, received compensation from the institution for playing on its athletic teams while he has been in office. are more minor errors in the report of the granting of the University of Oklahoma is reasonably correct, President W. B. He admitted several athletes are aid while working for the university at denied the university proselytized e imported athletes. Iowa City, Iowa—lown officials were jubilant today as the result of statements in the Carnegie report that the school was not seriously involved in prescribing of athletes. The belief was expressed that the report would help Iowa in obtaining reimbursement in the Western Conference. Dalin, Texas, Oct. 21—(11P)—There is no substituting of athletes in the southwest conference nor are they promised "cute boys" to play for Dr. R. N. blackwell, director of athletics at Southern Methodist University, and today in commenting on "bulletin 23 made public by the Carnegie Foundation." Prince of Italy Escapes Bruschella, Oct. 21.-(UIP)-In the shadow of the监狱Unknown Solder's tomb, the romance of Crown Prince Humphrey of Italy and Princess Marie of Sweden were misused tragedy today as the heir to the Italian throne escaped the bullet of a youthful would-be assassin. The attempted assassination occurred soon after a royal proclamation honored the engagement of the couple. The acquaintance was picked up bodily by the police and carried to a police station where he gave his name to the police. He was 9 years old, a student from Milan, Italy, and said he came to Brussels from Paris on the night train, arriving in the capital capital in time to join the announcement of the engagement. In the automobile of King Albert in Cairo, Prince Humphrey had driven from Jerusalem to the Cenotaph to place a wreath on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. Youth Attempts Assassination During Celebration Hollywood, Oct. 21—(UF) —A disastrous fire swept the Consolidated Film Laboratories here early today, causing the death of at least one person, injuring six others and resulting in an estimated in excess of $8,000,000. Wire Flashes --at Land, employed at the laboratories, died of burns a few minutes after he was pulled from the flamming building. Police and firemen said they believed others perished but that an accurate check could not be made Washington Oct. 24, (UP)—Joseph R. Grundy, the small wrestler manufacturer of Bristol, who is proud of the fact he has influenced tariff legislation ever since there was a bipartisan effort to ban it. Investigating Committee today to tell what hand he had in the pending Republican bill. North Platte, Neb., Oct. 21.-(UF) >The giant land, Land of the Soviet, carrying Russia's good will焊, took off from the local airport at 8:35 a.m. m. today for Chicago, their next overnight stop. The five nationmate from Moscow m. 4:30 p. m. to reach Chicago by 1:30 p. m. today. Topeka, Kan., Oct. 24.—(UF) —Topeka mourned today the passing of one of its most prominent women with the murder death here last night of Mrs. D. W. Mulvane, wife of the Republic National Presswoman. Mulvane was frequent a guest at the White House in Washington. Seattle, Waach. Oct. 24- (UP) a two-year flight of students and alumni of the University of Washington to Kirkland, where coach has been successful. The mentor's resignation today is in the hands of Earl K. Campbell; graduate management attack on Glauco's school to Wawasha's griefless campus since 1927. Louisville, Ky., Oct. 24—(UP)—Two negroes who drove an automobile onto the tracks of the path of Prohibition station, near New Albany, Ind., last night, were under arrest here today, the negroes. They were detained at Clifford and Christian Ind., were said to have confessed that they intended to wreck the automobile to collect insurance, but that they intended to disobedient Hoover would aboard the train. Kansan Staff Appointed Board Approves New Personne At Meeting Wednesday The news writing staff, as announced by Lawrence McCalla, managing editor includes编辑eile Meigh Ansley make-up editor; Catherine Hannen amuse editor; Lester Suller, night editor; Lauren McKee, telegraph editor; Leah Mae Kimbado, telegraph editor; Wesky McCalla, exchange editor; William Nichols, alumni edit The news and editorial staff of the Kansan for the next four weeks were approved by members of the Kansan board in a meeting held yearly. . . . . Illness had forced Mrs. Hall to remain in bed for the post year, but her illness was serious until this week when she rapidly became worse and suddenly M. , Eliza E. H.ull, mother of Miss Myra Hull, associate professor of English, died at the home of her street, about 7:30 p.m., yesterday. Funeral services, which will be conducted by the Reverend Mr. Bachus, and the Rev. Charles A. Bichard, will be held at the Rumley Chapel at 4 p.m. Fund services will be held at the former home in Bloomsbury Saturday. William Daugherty, editor-in-chief, has chosen Clinton Feeney and Gladys Baker to act as associate editors for the next four weeks. Alpha Xi Delta, house, 12 p. m. Alpha Omaha, Pi house, 12 Mrs. Eliza E. Hull Dies At Home of Daughter Alpha Omicron Pi, house, 12 p. m. Alpha Tau Omega, house, 12 p. m. Friday, Oct. 24 Hallowe'en party, all-University, Union building, 1 a. m. AUTHORIZED PARTIES Phi Chi, house, 12 p. m. Lutheran Students Association, party, 11 p. m. Kappa Alpha Theta, house, 12 p. m. Sunday, Oct. 27 Sigma Alpha Epsilon, steak fry, 9:30 p. m. FOUR PAGES AGNES HUSBAND. Dean of Women. Tau Sigma Holds Final Tryouts of Semester Final troffees of this semester for Dan Sigma, women's honorary dance security will be made at the class meeting this evening, according to his friend, honors officer ho jeru organization and professor of physical education. Women who are in the class and who are eligible for membership in the organization are: Helen Lawan, Diane Cordell, Louise Irwin, Doria O'Donnell, Mamia Munyay, Helen Hemosey, Virginia Robb, Robert Moberly, Alderbury, Michael Powell, Souriere, Franklyn Argentright, Barnard Barticides, and Mary Stacey. Business School Now to Accept Two Years of Engineering Credit Fiften Hour Regulation To Be Eliminated; States Dean of Business Credit from the School of Engineering will be accepted on the same basis in the School of Business as in the college since the elimination of a regulation which formerly limited the amount of engineering degree receiving to Dean Frank T. Stockson, according to Dean Frank T. Stockson, of the School of Business. The elimination of the restricting regulation will make it possible for an engineering student to transfer to the school of engineering, where he can from the college. The engineering student however, who makes this transfer will be required to make up pre-business studies in economics and accounting. Some schools have a pre-business curricula in the School of Business, but such a requirement has not been in effect here; consequently an en- gagement experience may enter the School of Business from any department of engineering. "There is a general movement throughout the country," said Dean Bracey, Board of Education and Engineering into closer touch with each other. There are many lines between schools but in extremely valuable, and in some cases it is absolutely easier to School to School than to work in engineering, not so much for the contents of the courses as for the habilies of precision developed from the experiences. Student Believes India Will Soon Have Freedom India, according to statutes, is about two-thirds under the control of the British, and while apparently submissive, the natives want freedom. They are going to have it if it is possible, and while Mahatma Gandhi advocates non-violence he seems assured that we would have to learn its doa. Ruan said. India will experience a serious social upheaval in the near future according to Kankanik Rao in his talk to the Freshman "Y" club Tuesday evening. The daring work of Mahatmigur Jhulma, a human rights activist, already succeeded in wrecking castes in many of the Indian cities, he says. On the first of December a multitainment will be issued by the still functioning, though powerless Indian government, to the British government, who has been unable to prove that serious complications may arise from this movement. Adela Hale is Formally Presented to Battalion Installation of the R.O.T.C. battalion officers and formal presentation of the honorary colonel Adela Hale to morning in front of Fowler shop. The only change in the officers elected last spring was the cadet battalion commander. Cadet Major Charles Owens was elected to fill the place of Cadet B. G. E. Berg who attended this school this year on account of illness. The leucantenns of the platoons formed wysteady are: Company A, 4. B, Stafford; Lambert's, platon 3, V. Stafford; platon 4, George McKenna. Company C, platon 1, J, G. Barnes; platon 2, E. Stidham; platon 3, Sam Hall of Fame to Be New Feature in Jayhawker A Hall of Fame will be a new feature of the athletic section of the Jayhawk. This will contain pictures of each of the major athos in the Big Six. The announcement was made by Horace Sancy,艺术编辑. Another new feature will be the sports write-ups. These will be signed articles, written by qualified writers. of the Carnegie Foundation, and his associates. One Playcr in Seven Receives Support For Ability in Athletics, Carnegie Foundation Report as Result of Three-Year Inquiry of 112 American Institutions New York, Oct. 21.—(DP)—Athletes in American colleges are subsidized today to a point where one in every seven receives support because of his athletic ability, a ballett issued by the Carnegie Foundation for the advancement of teaching declares. An investigation which took three and one-half years finds few colleges and universities guiltless of the charge of proselytizing. Educational institutions from coast to coast are directly accused of pernuring prominent athletes to attend and of paying those who directly or indirectly, for their activities, with public benefit, to port to be “the darkest single blot on American sport,” is charged to more than 100 of the schools which were investigated by Dr. Howard J. Savage, staff member $^◆$ Only 17. Guiltless Out of 112 educational institutions visited by representatives of the Carnegie foundation, only 28 were found in sports and accumulation of adulting athletes. SWEEEPING INDICTMENT OF COLLEGE FOOTBALL IS MADE IN BULLETIN BY INVESTIGATING COMMISSION "Ballet No. 23," as the Foundation's latest report is known, white-washes only 17 of the colleges and universities of recruiting athletes, while 28 are declared to have been found guillotines of subsuming athletes included in its database. Yale, Cormeil, Chicago, the United States Military Academy, Woolsey and Williams are among the schools at which the Carnegie investigators found in evidence of commercialization of the cannery and incorporation came of unsheathed. Schools at which no evidence whatsoever of recruiting athletes was discovered. Massachusetts Agricultural college Middlebury, Trinity, Trufts, Tulane College of Wooster, Emory, Iowa Massachusetts Institute of Technol As for the rast, they were charged n as more or less degree of contributing to commercialism, "the fundamental factors in American college athletes." Bribe One in Seven Other institutions hold to be all most blameless, were: Amherst, Chicago, University of Colorado, Cornell Oblink and Vanderbilt. Bribe One in Seven. The total assay showed that about Mrs. Hall will illustrate her lec- ture with 40 shawls from her hosti- ers in India and four shawls in America. She has in her collection Kashmir shawls, and shawls from Russia, Spain, Scotland, and some English and colonial specimens. Mrs. Hall will tell something of how the shawls were made and the history Mrs. Hall Is To Lecture About Shawls Tomorrow Mrs. Archibald M. Hall of Indianapolis who is recognized as the foremost American authority on Oriental American and early European shows will speak in the auditorium of one of the building teams row afternoon at 4:30. Mrs. Hall is being brought to Lawrence by special arrangement with the School of Fine Arts. Later in the season she is to give talks at St. Louis, Hot Springs, New Orleans, and Houston. The lecture, in addition to fine arts students, is open to the public; no admission will be charged. General Electric Starts Interviews With Seniors Seniors in the School of Engineering and Architecture who will be graduated at the end of the first semester by Lc I. Means, representative from the Schenectady works of the General Electric Company, and Marshall Havinbill from the company's headquarters in preparing employment after graduation. three senators in the department of electrical engineering, and three in the department of mechanical engineering, probably be granted in February. Advanced Standing Group to Elect New Officers The election of student officers of the advanced standing members of the "Y" group will take place at a meeting in the cafeteria and a Launcheon in the cafeteria will be followed by a meeting up at 6:30 p.m. Sam Carter, executive secretary of the Y, M. C. A. Nelson, the election will close the meeting. The lowly has come into own in the form of a scholarship at the University of Idaho. Students of the agricultural department of that university will compete with each other for a cow, instead of pecuniary prizes. The proceeds from the cow will be intended for a host, another form. school for at least another term. one in seven of our present day college athletes is paid, in one way or another, for his athletic ability. For the rest, the Carnegie committee's report was fairlyding. Dordan, Columbia and New York University in the East, Wisconsin and Northwestern in the Middle West, Southern California and Oregon, Upper South and the West. Some in for special condensation on he grounds of prescripting. "A nationwide commerce" in eligible athletes is described in detail and condemned by the investigators. Catholic colleges and universities are listed as furnishing assistance to students of athletic prowessies. Notre Dame, Fordham and George Washington Condes at Arizona, Missouri and Utah give out paid jobs to their boys, the foundation's report charges. Colleges where athletes cannot obtain jobs except through the regular college employment bureau are said to receive aid from Stanford, Yale, Bowdoin, borellay, Bingham Young and Columbia. Brown, Denver, Northwestern, Purdue and Wisconsin are named as leaders in the development" of the system of finding jobs for athletics is to be found. Few schools are cleared. Little research is conducted, is brought to light, but theexperience in the college world may make training, since a place is called a trade. Dealing as it does with kindred subjects relating to college athletes, "Bulletin No. 22" is a concerned chiefly with the business of revenue for colleges. The paid football coach comes in for some attention, with the information that his average salary, at 100 institutions investigated, is $61,107, or approximately $1,000 a year more than the average highest paid professor. rine Foundation's bulletin divides the subject of proacting into two parts, recruiting and subsidizing. Canada Among the great universities only the seventeen schools mentioned. When it comes to subsidizing, which is described as indirectly rewarded by the $20 million out of 112 educational institutions—and seven of these Canadian—are cleared of the charges in question. Michigan, Chicago, Cornell, Dalburn, Emory, Illinois, Laval, McBill, Marquette, Massachusetts Agricultural College, Purdue University, Ottawa, Queen's, Reed, Rochester, Saskatchewan, Toronto, Trinity, Tulane, U.S. Military Aerial Operations, College of Wooster and Yale. As for athletic scholarships, 75 are available at Penn State, the report declares, a like number at New York University and 25 at Colgate. Southern California has $40,000 in such funds annually. Syracuse is $1,000 annually. "The number of subsidized players on first class varsity football teams throughout the country probably is more than 50 per cent." Doctor Savage said. When it comes to inducing high school athletes to attend, Chicago, Cornell, Washington State and the University of Colorado are rare contacts. They may only "rare and occasional contacts" with such prospects, the bulletin says. On the other hand, "an intensively organized, sometimes sizable system, that may co-ordinate or utilize numbers of age groups," and "the existence of such schools as Michigan, Northwestern, Orkester, Southern California and Wisconsin." California, Pennsylvania and New York University are named by the Foundation's report as schools at which students have attained honors for correspondence inviting school boys who have attained athletic promise to attend. The athletic department takes over the coaching duties of Denver, Drake, Michigan, Montana State, Ohio, Wesleyan, Oregon Agricultural, Rutgers, Southern California, Vermont, Washington and Wisconsin, according to the bulletin.