THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LANDIS IS MOBBED BY FANS AT CALLED GAMI Crowd Vents Anger on Judge When Umpires Decide Day Too Dark YANKS AND GIANTS TIED Fans Thought Sun Was Stil High Enough For Playing Polo Grounds, New York, Oct. 6—Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis was mobbed by two or three thousand angry baseball fans at the Polo Grounds yesterday evening after the game between the Yanka and the Blue Devil, in what the umpires called darkness at the end of the tenth imminent. Interest was at fever heat. The score had been tied by the Yanks in the eighth inning. The sun was still above the horizon, and the teams were just trotting on the field for the eleventh inning when the umpires announced that the game was called on account of darkness. Ulterior Motive Suspected The crowd was angry. They saw no reason for the calling of the game except to stretch the seven games promised to eight. They were keenly interested in a tie game carried into extra innings in the Big League. Judge and His Wife Composed Then somebody saw Judge Landis standing in his box with his wife, talking to friends, and he booed at the Judge. The crowd, anxious to vent their anger on someone, pressed closer and hissed and booed him. The crowd was to clean up baseball and this was a "bed of a wav" to clean it up. Judge and His Wife Composed The police closed in around the Judge and his wife, but he waved them aside and came out through the mob, pushing the surging crowd away. They hurried up to the program and threw them at the white-haired gentleman as he was making his way to his car. The Judge was very angry, but when he reached his car he soon recovered his composeure, and said that such things had happened before with no bad results. Mrs. Landis was smiling all the time. R. O. T. C. Will Use Nationa Guard Rifle Range TARGET PRACTICE BEGINS Rifle practice by the local R. O. T. C. unit will be started the latter part of next week, according to a statement issued by Capt. H. G. Archibald this morning. Considerable time and money has been expended by the local units in preparation for the variation of the rifle range, which is located at Six Corners, about 10 miles northeast of town. The firing points have been placed in condition and telephone communications established between the University and the The R. O. T. C, is considerable in debt to the Kansas National Guard which has given the University unifi free use of the range. A number of the members of last year's team are back in school this year. They, together with several new men who have enrolled from Citizen's Military Training Camp and Junior R. O. T. C. units, should make a strong impression at City Rifle队 this year. Cecl I U Bradley is captain of the team. "Broken in Limb But Not in Spirit"—Rex Rex has returned. This means more battles for Pi, the most sophisticated dog on the hill. Rex is a shaggy airbird who hot blies about on three legs, the fourt being broken and in a plaster cast Pi and Rex became engrossed in a very heated argument one day, all of which resulted in a fracture of Rex's foreleg. Later while leisurely crossing Oread "Boulevard" he was run over by some "squeer contraption" which completely broke the already fractured limb. For this reason he was removed to the hospital for several weeks, but he is now back on the hill to recuperate and to continue his arguments with Pi. Order More Books from Paris Spooner Library has ordered a shipment of over fifty books from J. Terenqu, book-seller in Paris, at a cost of 1,043 francs. The books are expected within a few days, and will be turned over to the library of Rochester, where they are shared. Two sets of scientific work in French by Lavisoir and by Fourcroy have arrived and will be removed to the chemistry library. Elephants And Peanuts Feature Kappa Phi Ride Yesterday was a gala day for Kappa Phi. A "White Elephant Ride" was held in honor of new Methodist girls. Three white elephants, bearing sighs "We know our potatoes," etc., came shaking along with their trunks waving in the air. Over fifty girls were on stage, with mindful of their heavy load and with snorting and bellowning, bounded out of the city. Arriving at the grove the girl roasted wienies around a campfire and games were played and songs sung. Finally, after the elephants were fed peanuts, and the moon was coming up over the hill, the girls rode back to town to the tune of "Good Night, Ladies." CROSS COUNTRY TEAM GETS STIFF WORKOUT Captain Wilson Has Loweree Time of One Record Already This Season Capt. "Jimmie" Wilson is putting the aspirants for the cross-country team through intensive workouts while Coach Carl Schladenmann is in the cast with "Fotsy" Clark and his football sound. Last fall the best time made on the two and one-half mile course here was 13:24, made by Patterson, and two years ago the fast figure was 13:46. Wilson, already this season, has whittled the record to 12:53. The strong contenders at the tryouts the day of the K. U.-Washburn game are: Wilson, Captain, Schauh, Merrill, Coggil, Ming, Mings, Pratt, Lewis, Graddy and Wunch. The first team men will compose the regular team. Tomorrow they will make their first workout on the five mile course, a race that will count largely at the all-Valley meet at St. Louis, Nov. 11. W.A.A. TO GIVE FROSH MIXER Thursday, October 7, Is Date Set for Entertainment Plans were made, at the first meeting of the W. A. A. which was held Wednesday afternoon, for a party to be given Thursday, October 11, at 7 o'clock, in Robinson Gymnasium for all freshmen women and women who have entered the University for the first time. About thirty women were present at the meeting owing to the closed membership ruling which the Kansas council adopted this year relegated women to health at least 125 points before she can become a member of W. A. A. The purpose of the party will be to acquaint new women students with information regarding K sweaters; to meet the W. A. A. women; and to have a general mixer. Regarding the change in the membership plan, Nestor Moore, president, who attended the W. A. A. convention in Colorado last April, reported that she found Kansas the only university having open membership. She said Moore will adopt the same plan as other institutions in choosing members. "If women come here from other schools, who have taken part in their school activities, will turn in their points to Jean Bennet, at the gymnasium office, they will be given credit, providing the school belongs to the Athletic Conference of American College Women," according to Miss Moore. "If other women in the University having points turn them in they may have enough for membership." Margery Ashby was elected swimming manager, to fill the vacancy by Olga Fulton, who is not in office. She also endorsed at the meeting that she attended members be 100 per cent in the purchase of student enterprise tickets. Commerce Society Plans Activities For This Year Gamma Epison Fp honorary commerce sorrority, hire its first meeting of the year last week, to discuss membership and activities for the coming year. The local chapter was installed March 4, 1921. Ruth Lennen, c23, is the president of the organization. At the annual convention last spring, consolidation with two other national commerce sororities was accomplished. Pi Sigma Chi Chi have now taken the name and印 of Kamma Epsilon Pi, making a total of seventeen chapters. Gamma Epsilon Pi was organized by the University of Illinois in 1918. Elizabeth Meade, fa'24, and Clara Ferguson, c, 23; went to Wellington yesterday evening for a few days visit at the home of Miss Ferguson. Evidenced in Every Class, Meth ods and Customs as Est ablised Fact ARGENTINE IS UNDER AMERICAN INFLUENCE Buenos Aires, (By mail to United Press)- North American penetration in the Argentine is now evident in every fact it has evoked in every market. penetration, cultural penetration, legal, industrial- in methods, in customs, in everything, to the vices. In the economic order of the republic many great banking institutions and many important American firms are definitely established. Five or six years ago there was not a single number of an American firm have and very few firms were all-American. All the newspapers now carry large ads of products of the United States. The merchants talk of American commercial methods, and when they want to tell an employee to accelerate his activities, they advise he be more "Yankees," to think rapidly and work quickly, to lose no time. In court cases when a lawyer has made a good case and can find no further precedent in Argentine law to support his argument, he cites laws or precedents of the United States. The judges themselves uphold their decisions by citing pronouncements of their American colleagues. In cultural aspect also the Argentina people incline toward America, while European development is receiving less attention. The newspapers receive their news largely from American agencies, the United Press maintaining a leading position. Daily many columns are filled with news and comments of the United States. The part of the population which understands and speaks English, which is large, reads the American magazines, papa, etc. A few years ago boxing interested nobody. Footwear known to be popular is as much enthusiasm for boxing and football, as well as for tennis and even baseball, as in the Anglo-Saxon countries. The smart dressers attempt to copy American styles of wearing apparel. The devotees of the movies ape the customs and habits of the stars of the silversheet, where they see how people live north of the Rio Grande. Even in the cabarets, salons, and social functions, the tango is giving way to the fox-trot, the shimmy, and the "Boston." Alpha Epsilon Iota, women's medical sorority, will entertain pre-medics and first year women at a party at Honey House. Tom Wye is so smart and so popular with the best dressers that you expect it to be high priced. TomWye KNIT JACKET Many men think that a Tom Wye is a knight jacket that is seen only in country clubs, yacht clubs, and $800 cars. Let's Straighten This Out in Your Mind You are right in your idea that it is worth a lot, but its price is only KNIT JACKET Our Cash Price Two-pocket style $7.50 Two-pocket style $ 8 “C” Four-pocket style our 33rd Anniversary prices on odd trousers Forces to Be Mobilized For First Campus Day (Continued from page 1) fessor Okerblad in front of Marvin Hall. (Continued from page 1) Architects in front of the observatory to Professor Goldsmith. Mining engineers in front of Haworth Hall to Professor Young. Chemical engineers west of Marvin Electrical engineers east of Marvin to Professor M. Johnson. Mechanical and industrial engineers in rear of Marvin Hall to Professor Tate. Six hundred engineering students have been given definite assignments to squad leaders, according to lists posted in Marvin Hall and Chemistry building. A large program of fruitful camp work has been arranged. The largest student stone wall around Potter Lake, moving brick west of Administration building, grading road in front of Marvin Hall, cleaning territory south of road west of Marvin, and laying sidewalk at new electrical laboratory. Students will step by step at 8 o'clock. The Law forces will direct their chief energies to cleaning up Marvin Grove. Hand axes are especially needed by the Laws, as well as scythes and rakes. The Schools of Pharmacy and Medicine will meet at the east end of the Church Saturday morning. Their equipment will include essentially the same tools as the law students are requested to Chemical engineers west of Marvin Hall to Professor Kinney. FOR RENT - One room brick cottage. Furnished and suitable for light housekeeping. Moderate rent. Corner suite and Tenth floor. Phone 2570. —64 TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY LOST-Black leather coin purse contain four keys, on campus Thursday. Reward for return to Business Office, Fraser Hall. O-10 LOST—Fountain pen without cap, between Spooner and Ohio. Finder please call 2572. O-16 Insist on Wiedemann's Ice Cream Purest For Over 50 Years Purest For Over 50 Years or this week we will Honey Fruit Salad Strawberry Brownie Pineapple Grape Chocolate Vanilla Brick or Bulk 12. 8 Ambrosia Pineapple specii Sunday Bricks Honey Fruit Salad and Vanilla Pineapple Grape and Vanilid Phone 182 The Florsheim Shoe Smart enough to please the most extreme trim enough to suit the more reserved. Florsheim shoes are worn wherever good fellows get together. Oxfords or Shoes $9. BAPTISTS HAVE YOU ACCEPTED ITS HEARTY INVITATION TO; THIS IS YOUR CHURCH 1. BECOME AN AFFILIATED MEMBER. 2. ATTEND ITS SERVICES. 3. ENGAGE IN ITS ACTIVITIES. 4. ENJOY ITS FELLOWSHIP. "THERE IS NO TRUE EDUCATION WITHOUT RELIGIOUS EDUCATION." Y EVENING 7:45 p. m. The World's Series by Radio 2nd Floor! Sermon by Rev. Eliot Porter. $1.00 Every Freshman Must Wear a freshman Cap—The Freshman Cap Season Is On—Get Your Caps Today. Ober Freshman Caps, of the Better Kind, for You at --all 592 and reserve a table for Sunday evening dinner. BELLS FLOWER SHOI Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS Phone 139 825 1-2 Mass. Your School Days They will long be remembered as the good old days at K. U. The days when you met the bunch at Brick's and talked things over—where it was quiet and comfortable, yet—with an atmosphere of pleasure and University life. THE OREAD CAFE E. C. Bricken, Prop. Just a step from the Campus Varsity Dance! F. A. U Hall SATURDAY NIGHT October 7,1922 Blanc's 6-piece Orchestra