THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Physical Education Department Warns Against Class Cuts Gymnasium Credit Is Necessar, For Gradation, Says G. B. Patrick G. B, Patrick, instructor in men's gymnastics, throws out a broadcast warning today, to all men desirous of eventually receiving a degree from the University. The warning is in the text and we will watch out for indiscriminate cuts. The department went into executive session last week over a letter received from a last year's student, Mr. Patrick said. The letter was written by a four-year student who finished last year with 122 hours of credit in the college, and was enrolled in an online course, yet failed to receive any credit in exercise, due to his negligence in appearing for class periods. The writer expressed himself as being in favor of the rule requiring four semesters of gymnastics credit from every student, but gave as an excuse the fact that he played golf and tennis during his college career and had little time for other kinds of exercise. "Unfortunately," said Mr. Patrick, "a rule is a rule only when it applies to all. This student had credit to aprep, and probably needs a degree to help him in a business way, but he could not have worked because that it would be unfair to grant him credit for work he never took and trouble to think about. Fechis his golf and tennis would have gotten him exercise credit if he had taken income from his employer, but it is too late now. What is a rule for one must go for all." Aggies Win Cross Country Wilson Takes Wrong Route at Finish and Loses The cross-country team ran a great race against the Aggies Saturday and should have won, but lost, 27 to 30. "Acc" Wilson started off at high speed and a furious pace for Henry, the Agrio captain, to follow Half. He was able to lead a safe lead ever his nearest rivals. He heve his his way. Instead of turning as a sign clearly indicated, he kept on. Discovering his mistake, he raced back, only to see three Agies far in the lead. Wilson tried to close the gap, but the handicap was too great. The best he could do was to finish fourth. Three Aggies, Henry, Willey, and Von Reese, finished in order, then came the entire Kansas head, headed by Wilson, and the other three K. S. A. c. men. At that, the time was fast, 2450, shattering the course record held by Watson. The length of the course is about 4.7 miles in length. Wildcat Defense Holds Jayhawkers To a Ti (Continued from Page One) the backfield were two Jayhawkers whose play drew respect from the Bachman men. The line-up: Agges ... Position ... K. U. Sebring ... R.E. ... Griffin Stain ... R.T. ... Holderman Bschindler ... R.G. ... Higgins Gunnell ... Lonborg Hahn (C) ... L.G. ... Davidson Nichols ... L.T. ... Mosby Weber ... L.E. ... Black Swartz ... Q.B. ... Wilson Brandley ... F. ... Spurgeon Stock ... L.H. ... Krueger Sears ... R.H. ..McAdams First downs earned — Agigres 4, K. U. 18. Offensive plays including forward passes — Agigres 35, K. U. 78. Total net gain of offensive - Agigres 110 yards, K. U. 287 yards. Average gain per play — Aggres 3.1 yards, K. U. 3.7. Forward passes successful — Agigres 7, K. U. 4. Forward passes incomplete — Agigres 4, K. U. 7. Gain passes, includes runs after passes — Agigres 103, K. U. 74. Knuts (number) — Agigres 7, K. U. 5. Average of punts - Agigres 47 yards, K. U. 49 yards. Average runback of punts — Agigres 1.4 yards, K. U. 5. Penalties - Agigres 4 for 11 yards, K. U. 4 for 40 yards. Field goals tried — Agigres none, K. U. 2. Fumbles - Agigres 3, K. U. 2. Times ball lost on fumbles — Agigres 3, K. U. 2. Touchdowns - Hahn, Agigres; J. Wilson, Burt, Agigres; P. Brendley for Brendley, Lasswell for Scandin, Steiner for Stahl; K. U., Cave for Holderman, Burt for Spurgeon, Shannon for Krueger, McLain for Griffin, Boone for McLain. C. E. MeBride, Missouri Valley college, referee; B. L. Cleary, University of Oklahoma, umpire; A. A. Schabinger Ottawa university, head lineman. More Library Help Here Than in Previous Year Twelve more regular workers are on the library payroll this year than land. This includes all departmental libraries as well as Spooner. Inexperienced workers are paid 25 cents an hour. The maximum amount set by the chancellor, paid to experiential workers, is 30 cents an hour. The books of the School of Education have been moved from the basement of Spooner to the main floor. This necessitates more assistants in the main room. In the Geology library it has become necessary to employ an extra worker, and the student help in the various other departmental libraries has been increased according to their needs. Gridiron Gossip Glick Schultz The Jayhawkers lacked the punch. They failed in the final drive when a small gain would have meant so much. The Agie forward wall stiffened, it is true, but a team that gain consistently in mid-field should be able to exert that extra ounce under the goal posts. The hummadlers were at the station at Manhattan to meet the two specials. Between three and four hundred arrived in Agggileville early Saturday morning via the coal car route. Counting them all, there must have been 1,200 K. U. students at the game. The Kansas cheering sections were scattered, however, and the Aggies had the advantage. Mae's band came on the field at 1:30, just an hour before the game. Five minutes later the Aggle band of seventy-six pieces appeared. The Aggle band was the larger in numbers. Mae's music sounded the better to us. The Ku Kus and the Wampus Cats, the pop organizations of the rival schools, were next on the field and soon displayed their wares. Between halves they both appeared again, the Wampus cats foretelling an army victory in two gridon warriors, while the Ku Kus 101 of a Jayhawk triumph through a sham bull fight, the Agnie cow taking the count in the end. Like the game, the stunts were about a tie. The Wampas Cats displayed the following slogan: "We'll plunge your center, skirt your ends, and tear the feathers off your hen." They left out the forward pass, which was the only effective Aggie weapon There are some who say that the Jayhawkers have lost their jinx over the Aggies. The game next year will establish that point. Both teams got breaks, but the majority went to the Bachman crew Saturday. When Hahn, the Aggie captain, intercepted Wilson's pass, he had a clear field ahead and a wall of interference behind. Lonborg was the closest Kansen man and white shih. Grant Farmer, the loss was too great. Here's a bint to the Wumpus Cats. We use simplified spelling and hence t is "Fraser" and not "Frazier." McAdams had one bad punt Saturday. There was a strong wind blowing from the southwest and the Jayhawks were facing the wind. The wind caught the ball. It dropped about five yards in front of Mac. Lonborg broke through several times and threw the Aggies for a loss. When the Jayhawk touchdown late in the second period was called back, the Kansas fans were disappointed and expressed it. But MeBride saw a foul and called it. That is the referee's business. This decision was hard to take, however. Wilson's pass was low and Krueger barely caught it, scooping the ball from just off the ground. After a catch like that, he deserved a touchdown. But rules are rules. In our estimation the vaunted Aggie team failed to show. On paper, before the game, the Manhattan team had the dope all its way. The Aggie line and the Giants was a strong line. The Aggie offensive failed. Now for a few statistics. Kansas gained 287 yards on the offensive, the Aggies 110—this includes grains from passes. The Aggies flipped seven passes for 103 yards and Kan- The Aggie backfield was all Stark. He tried the line and he tried the ends to no advantage. He is a great player, but even wonder halves must have a hole. has completed four for 72 yards. This leaves the Aggies gaining 7 yards through serimignment while the Jay's made 144 yards by serimignment. The Clark machine earned eighteen first downs, the Bachman men four first downs. The ball was within the Angle 40-yard approximately 45 minutes of the game. In other words the Angle 10-yard bigger all but 15 minutes of the battle. Now turn for a minute to the Oklahoma-Nebraska game at Norman. The Cornhuskers won, 39 to 7. Nebraska earned only sixteen first downs, two less than Kansas earned against the Aggies. Oklahoma made four first downs, the same number as the Aggies. The Cornhuskers gained 238 yards through scrimmage while scrimmage netted the Jayhawks 214 yards. Oklahoma gained 84 yards in scrimmage, the Aggies 7 yards. The Kansas backfield is to be entirely reorganized this week according to an announcement made this morning by Coach "Pooty" Clark. Potty indicated that the first backkeeper, Ken Griseno, quarter, McAdams and Shannon, halfbacks; and Burd, full. However, the practice this week will Pi Beta Pi antiformes the initiation of Sue Bidwell, Evelyn Lowman, Charlotte Alken, Laurie Robinson, and Elizabeth Wheatley this afternoon at 5:30 at the house. Several Sigma Chi freshmen enter alined with a steak roast at Wind nill Hill Friday night. probably see several different combinations at work. WIEDEMANN'S Quality Merchandise on a close margin of profit is responsible only for Our Popular Price Drink a: MALTED so thick you can hardly draw it through a straw MILK Our Popular Prices A Special Hallowe'en Dinner— Tuesday, Oct. 31 YE TAVERNE 6-7:30 p.m. In college for your themes, papers, letters and lecture notes. Out of college for all your personal writing. This machine will be your friend for life, making your work easier, making your time go further. In College and Out of College you need a Remington Portable The Lawrence Typewriter Exch. 737 Mass. Lawrence, Kas. Remington Typewriter Co., Inc. 107 W. 7th St. Topeka, Kas. Remington Typewriter Co., Inc. 1021-23 Grand Ave. K.C., Me Also the most compact—fits in case only 4 inches high. Price, complete with case, $60. Remember—it is the most complete of all portable typewriters — Standard Keyboard, with four rows of keys and no with four rows of shifting for figures. *Panasonic Ribbons for Remoting Portable Typewriters* *each cach* - $5 a dozen WANT ADS LOST- Phi Delta Theta in small, white gold, diamond points. “W. L. H.” on back. Finder notify W. L. Huguenh. Phones 248. —O-2 WANTED—Single room by student, close to hill. Leave address at Kansan office. O-31 FOR RENT - Furnished rooms for girls, vacated by sorority. Four doors north of Jayhawk Cafe. 1328 Ohio. Phone 2203. —N-1 SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY for students (male or female) who desire to earn enough to more than pay their We make clothes. We do alterations on both women's and men's clothes, reeling ladies' and men's overcoats, cleaning and pressing. Suiting you, anywav. That's My Business SCHULZ THE TAILOR 917 Mass. St. Go to Manhattan? Let us clean the Aggie soil off your clothes. NEW YORK CLEANERS Phone 75 way through college. Pleasant work, after school hours. Write J. F. Stanley 3446 Wayne Ave., Kansas City, Mo. -S79 PROFESSIONAL CARD "R.J. W.O'BRYAN, (Dentist) Special attention to prevention and treat- ment." 804 Perkins Building. Tel. 507. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclu- sive Optometrists). Eyes exam- nated; glasses made. Office 1025 Mass. Oread Shining Parlor CHARLIE'S Best Shines in Town Miss Sarah Lyon will talk on "K. U. Overseas" at the regular Y, W. C. A. meeting Tuesday afternoon in Myers Hall at 4:30 cclock. --Wear a large Size? Varsity Sale will continue but a few days only, so get yours early. Size 10 1-2, 11, 11 1-2 widths B-C-D only! Monday and Tuesday HELENE CHADWICK AND RICHARD DIX —So temptingly appetizing All large sizes from broken lines of shoes and oxford have been grouped for quick disposal. The season's best patterns are represented and affords an opportunity to buy below actual cost to manufacture. IN and piping hot delicious student lunches there is only one place and that too is —and real prompt service THE OREAD CAFE Just a Step from the Campus E. C. Bricken, Prop. are the hot savory meals to be found at the Oread. A Clyde Cook Comedy "THE SAILOR" "YELLOW MEN AND GOLD" A thrilling drama of tropical adventure by Governor Morris. The thrills you haven't known since childhood's first glimpse into the realm of adventure and romance. Monday Only SHIRLEY MASON Bowersock IN "THE NEW TEACHER" The adventures of a society girl who wanted to do something worth while. She went to the East Side for adventure—she had plenty. Love will find a way even in the slums. A Lee Kids Comedy "A PAIR OF ACES" Both Theatres Wednesday Inspiration Pictures Inc., Chas. H. Duell, President, presents: