Friday must visit another week to be presented to Don Their "Cute" Caps. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas Weather Mostly unsettled to night and Wednesday. Slightly warmer LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1925. AROUND MT. OREAD Berniece Palenek, A. B., 29' is now on the staff of the Tolisa Hotel Publications at Tuba. Miss Palenek was won the Sigma Nu alumnaism, and was a member of Delta Zeta, Sigma Phi Phi journalism society and W. Y. C. Wa and various committees. Paul Endacott, B. S., 23, of Detroit will be in Lawrence Saturday to spend five days with his father and Mrs. Frank Endacott, 41, Ohio state. At the time of his graduation, Endacott was chosen honourably by the Michigan alumni given. He is a director of the Kansas Alumni Association and president of the Michigan alumni club of DePauw. Forrest O, Calvin, A.B.29*, assistant advertising manager for the Nutrum Feed Mills of Kansas City, who manages a farm with a per week is considerably improved. Calvin, who was a prominent activist man while on the HHJ, and his family, expects to be released from the hospital by the end of the week. Charles Sternberg, c'33, was operated on for appendicitis at the stu'd diapartary Friday night. He had required to be improving satisfaction torsy. Miss Natalie Coutas, c'ensl, Wiel itta, who underwent a serious operation at Lawrence Memorial hospital reported to reporters at getting along nicely. The first regular meeting of W. S. George tonight at 7 p.m. in the room restroom, a building called Arab Weidman, president of the organization, will be in A bady wrecked Ford coupe and a bady bent fenew of a Hupomobile were the results of a collision between the two cars on a street in a victorious vegetative afternoon. The driver of the Humbleman was Maurice Clavenger, 69 who was the lawyer for the kidnapped court was the driver of the Ford. He wife and another woman were with him. Henry Gonzales, A. B., '20, of the Chicago department of the Westinghouse Electric Company, is visiting friends in Lawrence.' Mr. Gonzales refers to take up work in the Westinghouse sales department, Pittsburgh. Pa. Oread High School, which is used as a laboratory for the School of Education this year, boasts a 60 percent increase in enrollment over their previous records. All students who are enrolled must pass a rigorous test for physical deficiencies, as well as a strenuous examination in scholarship. Business School Larger Increase of 16 Enrollments Over Last Year total enrolments in the School of Business for this semester have jumped far ahead of those of has fall. The number of students enrolled in this program are the previous year. There are 77 seniors and 69 junior's and specials. For economics the number of course enrollments is 1,949, almost 275 more than the first semester of last year. The gain has been almost evenly divided to the junior college group, right margin in favor of the junior college group. Marketing classes have 37 persons in 2 sections. The three hour and five hour course in economics history have a combine total of 225 enrollments in five sections. Other large sections are business organization, elementary statistics and investments. Fee Deadline Tomorrow Only one more day remains during which students may pay their fees. The deadline is at 5 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. All students enrolling at the first of the year will be required to have their passport renewed tomorrow afternoon, the names of students who have failed to pay their fees will be turned over to the deans of the various schools, whose duty it will be to trap the deligent students from the class. No.16 "All students who have not paid their fees should do so at once." Karl Khooz, burglar, said. It is the policy of the University to drop all students who have not paid their fee when the deadline arrives. --some local anaesthetics. Many investigators have sought means of avoiding the occasional cases of poisoning by local anesthetic products, was developed as a substitute for cosine. However, bad reactions occasionally follow even the use of a local anesthetic product and Doctor Lungy, following along the line of some previous workers, became aware of harboring acid gave protection against convulsions from procaine. They reported their work with an i-o-methyl barbituric acid about a Patients Ask for More of the New Pleasing Anesthetic in Use Now A new anesthetic, which puts patients to sleep so pleasantly and easily that they ask for more, has been developed by the associate professor of pharmacy at the University of Kannai, and Dr. J. S. Landy of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. Few please unawareness of the many many of the local anaesthetics are claimed for this new aid to surgery, which has the impressive name of sodium ion-amyletal barbituric acid, or aminidyral as it is more common. Doctor Isenberg began his work on the anesthetic a year ago last summer, and after a year's interval of teaching at the University of Kannapolis, he returned to school at the Mayo Clinic. Having been granted leave of absence for a semester, Doctor Isenberg will remain in Rochester, Mn., to continue with his research. He will not until the second semester, when he will resume his teaching here. The work grew out of the old problem of how to offset the bad effects of Typhoid Epidemic Threatening Country Throughout the Flooded Area Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 1, -(UP) The tropical disturbance that occurred last summer has struck Pemacona, Fla., yesterday have passed near Georgia county in the wake of Hurricane Ike. The Atlanta weather bureau said that reports received by it today indicated that the high pressure area was moving across Georgia towards North Carolina, where the Cape Hatteras. The disturbance should reach Cape Hatteras by tomorrow, and may develop into a hurricane when it reaches there. Savannah, Ga., Oct. 1—(UP)—Airline riders in the flooded state of flood-induced phlood splitting over the coastal country south of here where wells and springs were tarnished to be danger throughout the lowlands It was predicted that the flooding would be Thunderset. Pensacola, Fl., Oct. 1—(UP) Menger reports from isolated villages along the Alabama-Florida line early this week in a coastline adjoining Pensacola on the east may have suffered heavily in the burricane which caused widespread but superficial damage here and no casualties, but the district to the cattail ward was well protected by weather officials announced today that they had established the direction of the current storm's wind without word as to its exact location. Geologists Study State K. U. Professor Heads Partie Mapping Formations Five parties of the state geological survey have been mapping the geological formations of Kansas during the summer. The first party under the supervision of R. C. Macro, professor of geology at Caltech, was assisted by the eastern part of Kamas. He was assisted by Mark Jewett, assistant in geology. Three parties under the supervision of Dr. K. K. Landez of the department in 1985, and Ms. Ellison, they studied Cloud, Republic, Mitchell, Obsoire, Triego, and Ness counties. Over Lander was master of the department of Reloit College, Reloit, Wilis, and R. G. Moss and Lyndon Morrow assistants in 19th grade of geol The main purpose of the survey was to study the geological structure of the various counties in Pennsylvania and map of the entire state. We wish to make at the same time, a survey of the mineral resources of the different localities. Dr. G, L. Knight of the department of geology, assisted by Harold Hawins, engaged in mapping the formations in Rafter county. A new member of the surveys, Mr. M. K. Ellas, is leaving Wednesdays morning for Wallace county, where he is to make similar investigations. He was recently came here from the University of Wisconsin, is engaged in microeconomic studies of the soil conditions in cem and western Kansas. "I will make no estimate as to the time it will take us to complete the project, but we completed only five counties, and so our time before we are finished." In the course of a year's further work, Doctor Landy has used the anaesthetic experimentally, and for the benefit of patients, over a thousand times. It has lessened the apprehension from which some of the patients come, and has eliminated convulsions that occasionally come on from the use of procaine. Surgicians who have employed the anesthetic have found that patients who have used it once prefer it again for if any reason. They note that it quenches patients before operation and adds to their comfort afterwards by producing a semi-conscious state for from three to ten hours after they have returned home. Nausea and vomiting greatly lessened or completely eliminated. For some time, as with any new procedure in medicine, the patient will be used must condition to be carefully selected to eliminate risk. However, patients who are ill with a serious or severe neck or near failure, be freed from the dread that some of them have of being put under anesthesia. Kansas Instructors in Economics and Business Will Meet Annual Meeting Will Be Here Are Chosen Oct. 18 and 19; Speakers The annual meeting of Kansas instructors in economics and business will be held here Oct. 18 and 19. And the only part of the program. Some of the principal speakers will be Dean R. Davis of the college, Law Dean, David M. Hahn of the college, administration of the University of Nebraska. Those in charge hope to get one of the officers of the Federal Bank at Kansas City as a cochlearist. Various members of the conference will be assigned to discuss the main issues by the speakers. The meetings will be in room 212 Administration building. A dinner will be given by the staff of the School of Business for the other attentions the conference Friday. The students will join the汤master, Jono the toastmaster. The conference was established at the University of Kansas in 1928. It was held every other year at Manhattan. Invitations have been sent to instructors of the university, and it is estimated that about 20 men will be here from other Kansas. It is estimated that about 20 men will be here from other Kansas. Two hundred and fifty candidates were present at the dramatic club tryouts which were held in Fraser theater at 4:30 aforementioned afternoon. "At about 4:30 p.m., fifty per cent larger than ever before," Prof. Allen Crafton of the dramatic department. Prof. Robert Calderwood addressed those present, and outlined the nature of the tryouts and wore tests in reading. The actual preliminary tryouts were held this afternoon at 2:00. Tryouts will not be completed this afternoon, however, it was announced, and you are welcome to opportunity to try today do so tomorrow afternoon at the same hour. Dramatic Aspirants Meet The map shows the general topography of the state, and the various streams and their drainage areas. It also shows the various outropings of formations are shown by different colors as they proceed across the state, and an accompanying map illustrates the various outropings by a west cross section. New Topographical Map Is On Display in Haworth A new topography map of Kansas is on display in Haworth Hall. It is the work of Doctor Moore of the Geology department. 50 Receive Instructions for Preliminary Tryouts This map was one of the exhibit at the Free Fair at Topeka and at Hutchinson. 35 Reinstated Normans, Okla., Oct. 1, —UP) Thirty-five of the 62 University of Oklahoma students suspended today by the board of regents. The were exonerated of violating the "no paidling" rules, the "no parking" rules of the "Jazz Houset" and "Roff Neks," pep organizations, were suspended. The other 27 students were charged with signing a plebeia or of expulsion. "I will observe and obey all the regulations of the board of directors and governers its students so that they will co-operate and give their support and influence to the board of observance and obedience of all rules and regulations of the board of observance," he said by the general student body. The pledge which the authorities dictate must be signed if the students keep their scholastic standing was; - The ban against the two pep * organizations was made perman- ent by the board order. Blackmar to Speak at an All-University Meeting Wednesday Sociologist Will Tell About Eearly Days and Places Of Interest Doctor Blackman will talk about the early history of Lawrence and Kansas. The University is participating in a celebration, celebrator through the convocation. Dr. F. W, Blackmar, a member of the department of psychology at Kansas University, will deliver the main address at the all-University convocation, Wednesday, Some of his publications include *appeals*, published in 1891; "Charles Robinson," first governor of Kanaan University; 1902; "Encyclopedia of Kanaan History." 1912; Outline of Sociology; 1921; and "History of Human Society." Doctor Blackman joined the University faculty in 1888 after receiving his Pr.D. degree at Johns Hopkins Univ., and served as the department of sociology since that time. He was dean of the Graduate School from 1896 until 1922. Uni- mate of this department was part of his teaching work, he was a member of the department of sociology. Doctor Blackman is an authority o several books on Kansas history and i an authority on the early history o this section of the state. Y.W. C. A. Advisory Board Reorganized at Meeting Members of the Y, W, C, A. advis- board board met last night to reorganize the team, which included a chairman, as there are several new members on the board this fall. The new members are Mrs. Mildred Land Gray, MRS. Karen Walton and Mrs. Black, assistant professor of maths matics, Mrs. V, K. Bruner, Mrs. I, Medea, Mrs. C, R. Rankin and Mrs. C The reminder of the personnel on the board consists of Miss Ann McCracken, instructor in philosophy, vice chairman, Miss Helen Titworth, secretary, Mrs. A. T. Walker, treasurer, Mrs. J. C. Baker, dean of the college, Mrs. J. H. Mitchell and Miss Hannah Oliver, associate professor of Latin and Greek. Mrs. Frank Strong was made a permanent member of the board in 1920, and ex officio members are Mrs. E. H. Lindley and Miss Agus Household. Nineteen Students Placed On Law School Honor Rol Ingham and Chambers Address Kwanis Clubs The honor roll for the School of Law was posted yesterday. The honor students for last semester are Stuart R. Carter, John B. Burkee, Stuart A. Clark, John D. Carroll, Paulus, George Maurice Pope, A. Paul Snyder, Ruth Van Riper, of the class of 1929; Elizabeth N. Arnold, B. Scott Burry, Brumley W. Conway; William Wilson, of the class of 1930; and Silind G. Edwards, James D. Gilmore, Alfred Kurnar, James T. Lumb, Alfred Kurnar, James T. Lumb, and Leroy Leroy, Raymonds of 1931. H. G. Ingham, director of University Extension Division, addressed the Topesa Kiwians club last night in her celebration. He traced some of the early history that involved Lawrence and his sisters' blasts for the Lawrence celebration. plans for the Lawrence celebration University Women Plan Organization of Voters League New System for Members To Take Active Part Is Planned For Marcia Need, e30, president of the K. U. chapter of the College League Women Voters, announced today that she has been desired to keep herself informed as to matters pertaining to state and local elections to membership in the organization. Campus The league was organized three years ago. Ruth Van Riper, LLB, 23) was the first president. Under her leadership, Miss Alice Wilson, her national name, not on a license, obscured for study in Europe, she was chosen admirer. A tea will be held Thursday afternoon in the rest room of Central Administration building that all interment services will take place and discuss plans for the coming year. Marcia Chadwick, A.B. 29, was the representative of the new chapter to the national convention of the League of Women Voters which met in Chicago in April, 1928. The League assisted the political science department by carrying out of the new convention which was held more the same year. Paula Cost, A.B'29, and Marcia Chadwick are the other women who have acted as president. Last spring eight University women attended the State League convention which was held in Topeka, and various national officers have been the guests of the chapter hero. During the W. S. G. A, election last year memorial service society condemns urging every University woman to vote. Members of the cabinet supporting Marcia Need are: Vivia Harberson c30, vice president; Gladys Menard c20, vice president; and Lacie Wilkins c90 secretary. Four Lectures to Be Given in Literature Course Faculty Talks Announced A program of four lectures on the contemporary nature of English in the city, J. F. Lowe is announced by J. F. Lowe as instructor in the department of English and chairman of the committee. The crowded schedule of the student which prevents his attending the eight lectures of former years has been extended for a reduction of the number. --program is not definitely arsenal, but will include several musical alumnae, remarks by Chancellor Lindley, and possibly several short fea- The contemporary literature lectures which primarily were planned for the freshmen are designed to give information as to the best authors and a selection of their works. Upperclassmen are presented of time but who want to be well read also may attend the series. Faculty members of the rhetoric section of the English department last year lectured on Thomas Hardy George Bernard Shaw, Theodore Dreiser Joseph Conti, and the rest anne desencloses in modern literature. FOUR PAGES The instructors who spoke were Mirek Helen Rhoda Hoopes, Miss Cora Mulheen, Miss Esther Wilson, Mell Carl Niemeyer and Mr. Jr. Wilson, Mell Carl Niemeyer and Mr. Jr. Wilson. The programs will be held on Thursday afternoons in room 205 Fraser hall. Committee Plans Program For Annual "Dad's" Day The program for the annual Dad's day was started yesterday afternoon when the committee met in central Administration building and discussed The usual banquet will be held at the Memorial Union building at 6:30. Tickets will be on sale down town and also by student solicitors. A committee composed of Henry Werner, Fred Elworth, and John Mize was chosen to select a speaker and a toastmaster for the evening. Another committee, composed of four people, chose Claire Mumne, Ammie Kent, Robert Wagstaff, Miss Elizabeth Megnaur, Miss Nicholas will have charge of the banquet. Northwestern University freshman co-eds have adopted a new fad of wearing green buttons to announce their graduation. The parental is parralled to that of the freshman men who are made to don green caps upon their arrival. Heads Kansas Engineer Raymond F. Brady, e30, Lawrence, was elected editor of the Kansas Engineer, quarterly magazine for the School of Engineering and Architecture. At the same time last spring, he E. Hargrove, e30, directed an敛ness manager, John M. Kane, e30, Bartleville, advertising manager and Paul S. Wall, e31, Osborne, circula- Raymond F. Brady This year the governing board of the Kansas Engineer has undergone a revision. The president of the engineering council and the seniorJennifer Ritter, an executive vice president, with the editor and the business manager, form the governing body. This Year The Kansas Engineer Will Function Under New Governing Board Advisory Staff for Magazine Includes Five Elected Men A revision of the governing board of a magazine published by students in the School of Engineering and Architecture will be the important factor in the organization of the magazine, the first issue of which will appear in Octo- The governing board of last year, picked at random from the engineering students was found to be disaffected with the editor of the Enkierer, and this year a new idea was instituted. The motion to do away with the old board and to give more freedom to the president of the engineering council, the senior and junior representatives to form a governing body of the board was passed by the council last spring. This new governing body perform the same duties as the old one; it app calls the four major officers to be elected by the council. With the new board the staff feels that the governing body is going to work on the magazine and form a governing staff that will increase the service of the Kansas Engineer, according to the government. Faculty Presents Recita Soprano and Pianist Open Year Before Packed House An audience filling every available seat in the Administration auditorium and with people standing nearby, including the piano, and Miss Ruth Orcault, pianist, of the School of Fine Arts facade in the opening rectal of the season. Miss Moore sang three groups of songs. The first group was from the classic period, featuring songs from Handel, Boyce, and Bach. The second group was from the man and French schools of the romantic and modern periods, with choice songs from Schumann, Respigh, and Fondroutine. The last group was entirely made up of songs in English, and was accompanied an accompaniment for Miss Moore. Miss Orrente chusse to present in her two groups of piano solo selections that were for the *Walking Man* manager arrangement of the "Walks of the Flowers" from Techchowkowsky which closed her second group was a travaura number This evening at 8:00 in the auditorium, the annual Atwater-Kent voice contest will be given, to which the public is invited. Old Yale Building Burns New Haven, Con. Oct. 1—(UIP) —Fire of undetermined cause virtually destroyed North Shaw one of the oldest schools in Sheffield scientific school campus today. Hereby, classrooms, administratio- bness and courses were breathed by the blaze. mammals or lightly clad student, gave Yale cheers for the firemen who had been called out. Kansas Gridsters Prepare for Clash With Illinois Team Twenty-Five Men Will Go to Urbana for First Football Game of Year The team will go by rail and will leave Lawrence Thursday evening at 7:18. Names of the first-string players who will compose the squad will not be published until after Wednesday, probably not until Tuesday morning. Twenty-five men, the cream of material offered by the varsity squad, will make the trek to Urbana to battle for Kansas in a clash with the Ninja. Big Ten champions, on Oct. 5, Coach Bill Hargens announced today. Kansas Studies Hini Plays With but a few practices remaining before the real action of the season begins, the Kansas grid coaching staff is devoting its time to intensive final preparations. The exchange of plays between Kansas and Illinoi has furnished the mentor with an amateur concentration idea for last-minute ideas. News comes from the illinois camp that the freshmen squad is drilling on the Kansas plays and, equipped with these, will seriimpage the Blint variety. Kansan has a similar idea. The two players chosen fresh crew in the plays furnished by Coach Zupke. Before Thursday, the first-year man will work them on the older skydawk grid, and Hargas will watch the result. After chalk-talking to his proteles last evening, the head coach spent most of the workout period with the team, listening to them and shell formation, running signals and giving special attention to masing. While Hargweff worked various combinations in development of a better baseball game, he reected the other members of the balllueing department in signal elays. Mike Getto, line coach, keeps his men rounding on fundamentals, showing off his skills in drilling at tackline and cherrieing. Jim Bausch Back to Lineup Jim Bashack back to humble the long practice of dummy mimicking a signal, with signal plays with dummy opponents, found the candidates digging in with lots of driving power, all hopeful of winning the race, and a chance to get at Illinois. With Jim Bauch, powerful epophore fullback, returning to practice in a game against the opposing night after several daws' absence because of a cold, and Lefty Fisher recovered from his shoulder injury, the entire aggregation is in tiltop position. Reports were prevalent on Mt. Oread early this week that several scouts from Illinois had attended the Haskell night game Friday evening and stayed over for a view of the Jawaharlal Nehru national honor is believed, however, to be unfounded and has not been verified by anyone. Pep Committee Chooses Cheer Leaders Today Tryouts are being held for the cheerleading staff this afternoon at the stadium. There are 15 applications have been sent in but 10 more will possibly be received. The head cheer leader will be chosen from the senior class, two assistants and the juniors, three assistants and two alternates from the sophomore class, and four assistants and three alternates from the freshmen. Freshman Initiation Ceremonies Postponed The freshman initiation ceremonies which were scheduled to be held in the stadium Thursday night were presented for one week according to a statement this afternoon from Raymond Nichols, assistant to The postponement of the initiation ceremonies on one week was decided because of the anniversary celebration of the city's centennial. The ceremony was posted next week, Oct. 10, 11 and 12. The initiation is postponed to Thursday, Oct. 10, that people at the ceremonies in the stadium and the ceremonies in the stadium. The doming of freshman caps also will be postponed until Friday, Oct. 11, because the caps are to be worn until after initiation. The Washburn Dramatic Club has merged with the Art department. The plan is to form a theatrical company based on the lines of a professional group.