Football, rally to meet the football team at 10 this morning. Same Fe Station. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas Weather Fair today, Likely warmer tonight in the northeast Vol. XXVII No. 20 LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1929 Society Around The Hill Margaret Wallace, who has been a patient at the Lawrence Memorial Hospital for several days, is reported to be improved. Milder Elder ente Memorial Hospital ye real treatment. Today, ported to be improving. The School of Medicine held an election Friday afternoon at which the following officers were elected: Freeman m. J. B. McMullen; Bob Meyers, Wichita Trees, D. C. Mellott, Edwardville, Sophomore: Pres Harris Evans, Conway spring; Vice-pres. Roy Moser, Mike Dick Leafgen, Lawrence Phi Delta Phi, national legal fraternity announces the pledging of Claude McFarland, Kansas City; John Brand, Kansas City; Kathleen Thompson, Kansas City; Thomas Greene, Marvin Sieger, El Dorado; Forrest Jackson, El Dorado; Stanley Toland, Wichita; Buzzi, Wichita; Orval Walden, Leontophris; Humberto Tozak, L. W. Roscorrase, Washington; and Wilford Latz, Smith Center. Alpha Kappa Lambda announces the pledging of Joseph Denton, of Denton. The Hous mothers' club will have as their first meeting of the year, n a o'clock luncheon at Wiedmann's Monday, Hostesses will be Mrs. Hill P Wilson, Ms. Emma Fagun, Mrs. Jen Mitchell, Ms. Belle Malone, Mary G. Alison, Mrs Elizabeth Edwards, and Mrs. Gertrude Pearson. Mrs. E. H. Lindley, Dean Agnes Husband and the new house mother, on the Hill will be guests of the club Ralph Cochran, Ford Harbaugh John Bowdish, and Frank Woodbeam member of the New York Basketball develp to Uriana, Friday, to attend the Kansas-Illinois football game. Guesses at Corbin hall over the week-end area. He was one of many visitors, Davis, and Elizabeth Roatation of Leavenworth, Mrs. S. J. Davies and Mrs. A. J. Stevens of Kan- "With Love," a poem written by Miss Frances Haul, fa3-11, appeared in the July-August issue of The Harp. Published in magazine The Harp published at Laredo. Roberta Works, of the Alpha Omicron Pi house, is spending the week end with her parents in Humboldt. Herbert Watters and Logan Waitb both of Tulsa, are guests at the Phi Mu Alpha house this week end. Linda Windhorst of the Delta Zeta house is the weekend end-in Teoka visiting friends, Maurice Brown and Katherine Fennell, checking the week-end at her home in Perry. Mr. and Mrs, J. P. Osborne, of Humboldt, are spending the week-end at the Gamma Pbi Beta house with their daughter, Marjorie Osborne. Amie Marie Miller and Bunny Nelson, of Lansing, were guests at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house over the week end. Guests at the Kappa Sigma house this week end are Floyd Shields, of Kansas City, and Harry Watson, of Topeka, and Forrest Snyder, of Topeka. Alma Bartlett of Miller is visiting at the Alpha Omicron Pi house this week end. Gonevieve McClary, Elain Franks, and Margaret Barrum of Hiwataa, are guests of Josephine Waste at the Albai Chi Omga House this week Alpha Omicron Pi guests over the week end are Halbur Bartlett, of week end are Halbur Bartlett, of enworth. Open house was held at Westminster hall Friday night. Lois Gillis was hostess for the boys and the boat. The evening was spent playing games and having a general good time. The plants are in bloom now. The same nature next Friday evening. About 12 men were present at the meeting of the advanced standing committee of the Y. M. C. A. a last Thursday night. Harry West, president of the meeting, will be present and meet tomorrow will be hold every second and fourth Thursday of each month. Theta Phi Alpha society held open house Friday evening with Fred Agnew's orchestra furnishing the music for dancing. Garden flowers were (Continued on page 3) University Will Play Large Part In 75th Anniversary Celebration The University of Kansas will play a large part in the celebration of the 125th anniversary of Lawrence, Oct. 19, 2014. It is on the band, and floats of the historical parade on Friday afternoon, the night of football and basketball game with Kansas State Teachers' College of Emporia on Saturday afternoon, both of which be measured by the number of hosts practicing. All public speaking will be held at the University stadium, and the Memorial Union building, as part of Pleasant's Fenland's banner on Friday night. The series of historical events planned to be presented during the three days of the sesquient-tenant holiday, which was characterized by situations representing the settlement of this territory, the crowding out of their habitats and the various hardships of the pioneers. the various harpses of the poets. On Thursday afternoon a raid will be staged by border ruffians and the Eldridge hotel will be "burned." This Fifty Planes Expected to Come to Airport Dedication Saturday Formation Flying, Stunt Flying Free-For-All Races Make Day's Program Fifty more airplanes of all make and sizes are expected to be in Lawrence for the dedication of the Mu mipal Airport on the morning of October 24, 2017, will have a great deal to do in determining the number of planes that will come," said Dr. Lyle S. Powell, in charge of the program, "but a Year blimp is a great thing here." It is hoped that a Good Year blimp will be here for the event but a definite statement of its coming can not yet be made. The dedicatio n is to be one of the features of the mid-century anniversary of 50 city. At 10 a. m, Saturday air planes land in Los Angeles and Omaha will leave Lovenwood, and Omaha will arrive in groups and do formation flying from Omaha on there will be a brief journey to Los Angeles. A 15-mile race for OX-powered planes will be staged at 11 o'clock, prizes amounting to $150 to be given to the winners. Fifty dollars in prizes will be given to winners in races for the 25-miles free-for-all at 12:15. After 1 o'clock no special attentions are planned but客舱 attendants are invited as long as they please. Passengers will be taken up during the after- Sigma Pi to Initiate Five Candidates Must Show Albity and High Scholarship Sigma Pi, national honorary psychological fraternity, will hold initiation services Tuesday evening. Oct 18 at 11 a.m. East Administration building. The committee in charge of the initiation is composed of Doctor Beutah Morrison, chirurgiae, who will be initiated are: Doctor Domke Purdy, Chlid Cehdester, Mr. T. D Bertha Frett and Dr. Warrington. The organization is open only to those individuals who show marked ability in research in the field of experimental psychology and whose genius KFKU Broadcasts Piano, Violin, and Organ Toda A radio program will be broadcast over KFKU this afternoon from 3 to 4 and members of the University's School of Fine Arts will play. Ten numbers are to be offered by the university, against and by Géorg Kurtemberg violinist. Karl Kurstein, leader of the University orchestra, will then play *Suit 2* at Suites*, which will be followed by *Selection Groups* (*Selections*), Glow Schmucke Carnival*. In Kurstener's second group, he will offer three selections, "Romance" by Siding; "Largetto" by Barbara and the Round and the Goblin" by Goblin. Greene will play the first group McDowell's "Second Sonota," second and third movements. Greene will then conclude the program with four selected numbers on the organ. All Kansas Aggie football and basketball games played at Manhattan is broadcast over radio this KSA YES, but year's games were not broadcast. is expected to be one of the most spec tacular scenes of the program. Friday will be Pioneer Day. At 9 a.m. jeeck that morning Gage Clyde M. Reed will make an address. More than 100 float units, of 155 of which had been prepared by Charles E. Holmes, in charge of the parade, will take part in the historical parade Friday afternoon. After the parade and a ceremony, Mr. Reed will be public speaking by Nebraska officials at the stadium. At 6:30 p.m., the Bison's banquet will be held on building in charge of William E. Connelley, secretary of the Kansas Historical Society. The chief address for the evening has been pre-printed in the Kansas lawbook Lawrence, Episcopal bishop of Massachusetts. The Reverend Lawrence is the son of Amos A. Lawrence and James A. Lawrence, and was named. Amos Lawrence never visited the city but he was secretary of the Emigrant Aid Society and made the first financial contribution from which funds for the founding of the University grew. Friday is Pioneer Day As the last big feature for the three day program the Kansas gridiers wl compete with the K. S, T, C, team O Emporia, Saturday afternoon. Plan a presentation day to be held at 6th and Massachusetts streets Saturday night. With the Haskell-Baker football game, to be played at 8 oclock Friday night, the Haskell stadium at 8 oclock Friday night, the Haskell airport. Saturday morning the Lawrence Municipal Airport will be dedicated. The airport is located on the campus of the University by Governor Robinson, first governor of Kanaa, for educational purposes. It was leased to the University in be used for the airport. Airport to be Dedicated Student Reservations for Football Season Must Be Made Friday No Activity Books Will Be Sold After that Date; Books Needed of Cannot Student reservations for the game Saturday must be made before Friday noon, according to an announcement. Students and faculty members are to bring their athletic books to the office for reservation. Reservations without student tickets will not be admitted unless they have their reserved seat tickets and their activity books which must be brought before gate before the game. However, students will not be admitted unless they have their reserved seat tickets and their activity books which must be brought before gate before the game. Seats will be reserved in a special cheering section. Only students and faculty members owning activity books will be reserved in this section. Since there is a limited number of books left, all students and faculty members who are planning to buy books for purposes according to fficials in the athletic office. The athletic activity book entitles the buyer to attendance at all athletic events for the year. Besides the regularly listed events, owners of the Kansas Kansas Aggie freshman game on Nov. 9, by presenting their books at the gate. There will be no reserved scafs for this contest. This is an additional feature not originally included in the listed athletic events. Officials at the athletic office want it made especially clear that books and reserved seats are not transferable. Also, all books and must both be presented at the gate for entry to the games. Reservations which have already been made, may be secured at the office at any time be Friday. A suit against the Union Memorial corporation was filed by Clarence V. Leigh, contractor, Saturday in the office of D. F. Smith, county clerk. Leigh alleges in his petition that the sum of $800, due for work on and materials for the Memorial Union building, has not been paid to him. He says that the work was done at the authorization of representatives of the union. Local Contractor Sues Memorial Corporation The attorney for Leigh is F. B. Dedds and in the settlement of the account the interest on the money is asked by the plaintiff. At Ohio State University rushing among securities does not begin until Oct. 4 and lasts until Oct. 13. Students who lend their athletic tickets at Tulane University, New Orleans, may be expelled. Freshman Initiation to Be Broadcast on Thursday, Oct. 10 Radio Listeners to Hear New Students Pledge Loyalty to School Over K F K U are to have a distinctive part in the loyalty ceremony of new student initiation. Representatives of the upperclassmen will reaffirm ties after the freshman class takes the cathode of loyalty. Freshmen will be seated in the main section of the stadium directly beneath the entrance. The Ku Kui's will probably be in charge of the seating arrangements. A section will also be received for a tournament of the ceremony till Oct. 10, makes it an important contribution on the part of the museum to a non-anniversary celebration program. For this reason the program is expected to draw an unusually large number of townpeoples. The history of early Kansas, the founding of Lawrence, and the opening and development of the University are linked in such a way that the ceremony is a fitting and sympathetic part of the anniversary program. New students and freshmen will rally at North College hill, the site of the first building of the University. They will wear black and the new cheerleaders will be in charge of the gathering. The fire basket of Mortar Board and later in the program will be lighted during the gathering. Then the freshmen will work on their basketball team and will start at 8 p.m. this year. The oath of allegiance by the new students, the upperclassmen, the seniors, the faculty and the address, the Crimson and Blue, and the Rock Chalk will probably be broadcast by KFKU according to present plans. In case of rain the initiation ceremony will be held in the University auditorium. Press Club to Plan Meet 200 Kansas Editors Expected At Roundtable The K. U, Press Club will meet Tuesday afternoon at 3:30 in the journalism building to make plans for entertaining the editors of Kansas daily and write stories on campus around which will be held here on Oct. 18 and 19. Several press organizations meet during the roundtable. The Kansas Press Association is associated with which George Marble of the Fort Scott Tribune-Monitor is president, will have its annual meeting. The board of directors of the Kansas Press Association will be a part of the Brown of the Horton Headlight presiding. Mr. Brown is vice-president of the association but will have charge as John C. Mack, editor of the Newton Kansan, and president of the organization and unable to attend. The editors and their wives will be guests of the University as a banquet on Friday at the Club's entertainment committee is to make arrangements for the banquet and during other social periods while the editors are here; On Saturday afternoon the visitors will receive a football game for the K. U.-K.K.A.C., football game Last year the roundtable was attended by 200 Kansas editors and their wives. The meeting this past week brought more editors from Kansas dailies. At the K. U. Press Club meeting officers will be elected for the year, All majors in journalism have been invited to attend the meeting. "Arlie Simmonds and his Collegians," an old hill band but with a somewhat changed personnel, played at the varsity in the Union building last night. Simmonds left Kansas during the last spring and since has enjoyed the privilege of playing to large audiences throughout the Eastern states. "Arlie" Simmond's Band Returns to Universit RAILY THIS MORNING Rally at the Santa Fe Station at 10 a.m. m. Every student of the University is asked to attend a rally. A boy, a girl, a man, a m. to welcome the Kansas football men from the Illinois The cheerleading staff is anxious that the students come und back the team. --of Oct. 19 Bennett's Airway Fleet Will Arrive this Morning The Bennett Airway training fleet of Kansas City will arrive at the Lawrence airport this morning between 10:50 a.m. and 12:30 p.m., ensuring a pilot with at least 3,000 flying hours and a student, are expected to come in the aircraft, requiring an additional plane will make the flight. The planes will remain here today with all student flying and instructing students on the aircraft student aviation enthusiasts may see what will be done in the aviation club to be organized here soon. One plane will remain here until the next crich job will be yesterday and Ray Harkins, both from the Bennett schools said that it was probable that they would have to train the Sunday training base for the school if sufficient interest was shown here. The two men will also need to be trained by the students the work of the flying school. Prof. E. D. Hay of the engineering school can also explain how the students are unable to go to the field today. Fraternities Asked to Co-operate With Dad's Day Program Adviser Asks Houses to Hold No Banquets on Evening Franterizas of the University were asked today by Prof. Henry Werner, men's student adviser, to have no banquets at the houses on the evening of Dad's Day, Oct. 19, in ordainment all Dads. He asked his daughters to U. might attend the banquet which will be held in the Memorial Union building that evening. Plans are being made for over 600 people at the banquet. Each man or woman will be seated, and is here for the K. U. and K. S. A. C. game is expected to take place. At 9 in the evening following the banquet the annual Jayhawk Wabble will be in the Memorial Building sponsored by the Jay James and Kus perry councils and the joint councils. All fathers will be invited to attend the dance. The program for the banquet has not been planned as the committee's work thus far has been on the more important features of the day's sch- the ticket sale will be handled by the Owl institute, junior masters honorary visiting. Invitations are being sent to all of the fathers of University students. As the dance comes on a close evening the organizations in charge are making preparations for a large number of guests from K. S. A. C. who are here for the game will also be invited to remain for the dance that evening Sale of Tickets Starts For Dad's Day Banquet FOUR PAGES AND MAGAZINE The ticket sale for the Dad's Day banquet will start tomorrow morning and there will be a large number of organized houses and to the student body in general will be carried or booked. The banquet, which is to follow the Kansas Agie game, on Thursday, scheduled for 5:45 p.m. to build a team. The will be concluded by the annual Dad's Day varsity. Raymond Nichols, head of the dinner committee said, "The banquet is for university as well as men whose fathers are here." Tryouts for El Atenco Will be Held Thursday The advisory board of El Ateneo, the Spanish club, held a meeting Friday afternoon, Oct. 4. The purpose of the meeting was to decide when tryouts would be held for their clubs will be held Thursday, Oct. 10, at 4:30, in room 113, EAST Administration building. The club members will help to judge and the suggested material is short dramatic sketches, original Spanish poems and poems in proper poems. Three minutes is the time limit for presentation. Any member if the club will be able to give further information or Miss Billiton in the department will answer any questions. Last Psychology Tests Were Given Yesterday These students who took the tests were: Joseph Harpke, Joseph Parker, Jr., George Stephens, Robert Rausel Johnson and Owen Paul. Psychological tests were given, this morning, in the Administration building, to those students who had been rolled late. ILLINI CHAMPS REPULSE KANSAS INVASION BY 25 TO 0 SCORE IN OPENING GAME OF SEASON Peters, Promising Successor to Grange, Leads Urbana Eleven for Two Powerful Drives in Second and Third Periods To Sweep Across Goal Line Four Times Urbana, Ili, Memorial Stadium, Oct. 5—Coupling a stonewall defense with a powerful driving offense the University of Illinois, twice Big Ten champions, bowled over the invading University of Kansas Jayhawks because a crowd of 35,000 here this afternoon by a $2 to 0 score. Kansas beceeded in holding the strong Illini eleven scores in the first four periods, Zach Cook's man ran over a pair of touchdowns in both the first and third periods. 'Iron Mike' Is Now on Duty as Reporter in Kansas Newsroom and thirty thirds. Kansas never got under way properly until late in the game when the Mechanical Printer Installed to Facilitate in Printing of Pie Cakes of Big Games "Mr. Mike," the mechanical reporter, has reappeared in the University Daily Kansan's news room and is now on duty during the greater Chicago protests. The news that is fed to him from the leased wire to the University Press. "Iron Mike," for the benefit of those not familiar with newspaper p parlance, is an energetic little black box that automatically prints news that is sent to it over a wire. Technically the instrument is used to connect a machine and in the last few years practically every newspaper office has added two to its equipment. Two of the machines have been installed for the Kansen so that in the event one should become out of order the other can be immediately wiped off. In the United Press offices an operator sits before a sending machine with a keyboard greatly resembling a typewriter and as the copy is brought into view it is moved to a screen of words. Instead of the written word appearing before him the keys make their perforations in a strip of narrow tape which is run through a recording machine and when the tape comes off the electric circuit in much the same way as a player piano roll opens and shuts the air stops. This current is then transmitted over a wire to the Kanman office and sends it to the station and Kansas that are on the same news circuit. As those electrical impulses come over the wire, "Mike" receives them and by a murmur of mechanical ingenuity, they are printed on a long sheet which are printed upon a long sheet of yellow paper that continually passes through a platoon of the machine. One advantage of the machine is the fact that to a great extent it eliminates mistakes that are liable to be made by people who report it over a telephone. By its constant activity it allows the editor a wider range of subjects from which to choose his news and the duplicate of him to depend on a steady volume. These machines have been secured to facilitate the printing of the results of the games and the ball games. During the world series a play by play report will probably be posted in the journalism building, where the team's activities until the final report can be given. Women to Start Games Board Elects Representatives From Sororities Sorority intramurals were organized Friday afternoon at a meeting of sorority intramurals in the U.S. Miss Rita Hoover, the faculty adviser of the organization, is president, Leah Hacke, director of the selected secretary-treasurer. The intramural board elected by representatives is composed of Ruth Brendelstein, Kappan Klee, Carol O'Neal, Ci Omegae and Wilma Taylor, Delita Zeta. Entry blanks for the tennis doubles and decle tennis doubles were given out at this game. Each organized house may enter four tennis teams and six deck tennis teams. The rules of the organization were read to the rehearsal board. Then explained and will be posted on the bulletin board in the women's gymnasium. Fraternities at the University of Minnesota are facing a serious problem: student standing. Eighteen of the thirty-five national fraternities on the campus failed to maintain a "G" average last year, according to a making a thorough investigation of scholarship in the "Greek House" at the university was placed on probation as a result. mine game when the Jayhawkers led by Lawrence, Fisher, and Payne, unorked a terrific drive from their own 18 to 9. When Lawrence fumbled to lose the ball seven yards from the Illini goal line. starting on the Kansas 18 yard line Payne and Lawrence took turns at carrying the ball and succeeded in advancing to first down. It was the only offensive drive shown by the jackhawks the entire game and led to a score against son and blue team come back again after Mills pointed to Lawrence and hammered the Illinois viciously, before coming down on downs the Illinois 27 yard line. Kansas camped on the field shortly after 2 p. m., and the band struck up a tune for the flag raising ceremony. Captain Lyman won the toss, and chose to defend the south goal receive the kicker. The teams then gathered for the two teams gathered for the fray and a slight northwest breeze swept the field. Humbert kicked off for Illinois to Pete Bausch who was down on the Kansas 28 yard line. After a series of plays failed to gain Katie Bausch in the 16-yard line. From then on the first period was all Illinois with the ball remaining in the Kansas territory most of the time. Efforts to plump the Kansas line were futile, and the Illinois soon found the end unreachable. The Big Tons champs rushed the ball down the field after a series of line backs, end runs and exchange of punts, to win the game, as well as the quarter ended. Here Kansas displayed a powerful defense that completely battered the outfield in a series of plays and interference on four successive plays at the line. A moment later Humbert, Timm, and Yanukas, had brought the ball back to the Kansas six, from which Yanukas scored around left for the first counter of the game. The famous function and the score stood 6 to 0. Illinois scored again at the close of the ball when Robinson knitted his way through the Kansas line to plant the ball behind the goal. Peters again failed, and the half ended shortly after Coach Zupka jumped into possession o. the ball nearly the entire half, while Kauai failed to register a first down. Coach Zuppie sent in almost a new team the second half and Kansas was unable to cope with the heavier and stronger attack early in the half which netted the Urbana team its third touchdown. Receiving a punt from Lyman deep in his own territory against Kansas team he tackled the Jayhawker 14 yard line where he fell after eluding a last Kansas tackler. Before the crowd had regained its equilibrium, the giant Hilii ran again but failed to add the extra point. Late in the same period, after much handling of the ball, Root, substitute Illini back, raced around the Kansas right end behind perfect interference for a key shot. In the second seventh point, Petra kicked the seventh point and the score stood 25 to 0 from then on. Soon afterward, Kansas uncapped its bone offensive drive of the game, but the team's teams battled evenly on the Illinois 36 yard line. Today honors are being humbled out to a host of athletes at Urbana Zoppke used to coach in the institutes. While Coach Bill Hargis may speak a word of prince to Art Lawrence and Foster McGee, he still warns, and deserves mention, too, Schmidt and J. Bansel played well on his team this season, likely to cause much worry to Big Ten teams this season, judging from his bighair showing, coaches said. This afternoon. The summary and line ups follow; 141 7908 Kansas team was first to appear on the field and the hams played during the flag raise our ceremony. Captain Liam won the two and chose to return for Liberty Island in 2014, when he was worn on his uniform by a teammate. He was worn on both legs and ten to go for Karmel. Schmidt belt him off for an extra game, but out of bounds for no gain. Gaspard punted him out for an extra goal. Damn left his tack for a yard and line. Damn left his tack for a yard and line. Damn left his tack for a yard and line. in Illinois lineups. Gordon at left (contributed on June 4) (Continued on page 4)