Halls guilt need guy A arts a cars a Beco nearly bea caled and the leftea part in rooma. they the muses goo physica is gui of the porties or the Sore large largem centre the part laten not cut genu the deve ties hat they gree hor as dau loss legs I have div hoe on an do we fi he ga in MEETING TO ARRANGE ATHLETIC SCHEDULES Valley Conference Representatives Will Pass on Changes in Rules MAY HAVE EASTERN GAM Surprises in Football Program Intimated by Coach F. C. Aller The regular December semi-annual meeting of the Missouri Valley Conference of Faculty Representatives and Coaches will meet in the Hotel Baltimore in Kansas City at 10 o'clock tomorrow morning to arrange the tennis, track, and football schedules for the coming year, and to pass on the revisions in the handbook and to receive information about the Missouri Valley games which have been made by the committee of officials and rules. Among the expected changes is one placing the javelin throw on the list of field events again, as it has been decided that the javelin throw is only dangerous when it then proper precautions are used to avoid injury. The question of changing the date of the annual track and field meet will also come before the conference meeting. Designs for a medal that may be used for all conference events cost $100 is offered for the accepted design. The faculty board members are Dean D. W. Morehouse, Drake University; Dean S. W. Beyer, Iowa State University; Dr. C. Williams, Washington University; Prof. C. C. Williams, University of Kansas; Prof. W. G. Manley, University of Missouri; Prof. D. D. Griffith, Griffin University of Oklahoma. The coaches who are members of the board are: F. C. Allen, University of Kansas; Z. G. Clevenger, University of Missouri; M. F. Ahearn, K. S. A. C.; Ben G. Owens, University of Oklahoma; H. G. Huff, Grinnell College; F. L. Loahring, University of Wisconsin; C. M. Mayer, Iowa State College; and H. L. Gray, Washington University. The schedules for the University of Kansas teams will be with practically the same teams as the last year, though Coach Allen promises that there will be some surprises in the new schedules. It is expected that it will be armoured with at least one Eastern football team for next season. Blame for Denver Strike Equally Divided—Devine Dr. Edward T. De Vine, associate editor of The Survey, talked to the University Club last evening on the recent tranmway strike at Denver from the viewpoint of the investiture committee of which he was a member. The tramway company furnished the strikebreakers with riffles which were used in a careless manner causing unwarranted bloodshed which resulted in the churches of Denver taking a hand in the matter. The result was that the firefighters had a selection of an investigative committee of which Dr. DeVine was a member. Dr. DeVine pointed out the fact that Denver is possibly the only city in the United States that has no traction company. It seems that they have no such word in their dictionary and it is apparent that they are over eight thousand miles from London where the tramway property exists. According to Dr. De Vine the blame for the violence and bloodshed was the fault of both the employees and the employees. The rising cost of operation made it impossible for the company to operate at a profit with the mates, while the employees were not really getting a living wage. Authorize United States To Intervene in Armenia Genova, Dec. 2. —The League of Nations today authorized the United States, Brazil and Spain to intervene in Armenia. The action followed acceptance by President Wilson and the governments of the other two nations of the League's invitation to arm the Armenians and the Turkish nationalists. President Paul Hymans read Wilson's acceptance to the assembly today. As he concluded, there was great applause. The acceptances of Spain and Brazil were received with enthusiasm. The League interpretation of Article X of the covenant was declared by Lord Robert Cecil today to be the sole legal basis of member states is not guaranteed. Basketball Practice Appeals to Freshmen The large number of spectators for Varsity basketball practice yesterday afternoon was finally explained when Coach Howard Lasalli called for freshman basket ball men. There were about seventy-five men present at the meeting yesterday, of which about fifty had uniforms of some kind. Srubby explained to them that they were not going out for the freshman team but that they were going on for the Varsity. "It will do you more good to come out this year than it will next for you you will all your elementary training now," he told them. "We will be relieved of all the work that we are doing of our school so we can devote all our time to plugging along and giving all our attention to making up the Varsity for next year." HIGHS TO PLAY HERE Fort Scott and Kingman Wil Decide State Champion- Further showing the interest which the University of Kansas feels in all high schools of the state, the Athletic Association has tendered an invitation to Fort Scott and Kingman high schools to send their all-victorious football teams to Lawrence for a post-season game to decide the state championship. Both eleven have gone through the season with unsuited 541 points against its opponents. Fort Scott warriors have defeated stronger teams than has Kingman, but their point score is not so high. Beloit and Horton are two other state teams that have come through an undefended season. These two schools will also tangle in a post-season combat, but they are not geniuses enough to allow followers to be classed as champions. The game between Fort Scott and Kingman, if arranged, will be scheduled sometime this month. Zora Mehmed, reputed to be the oldest man in the world, is ill with indigestion. Mehmed is 184 years old and this is the first time, that he has ever been ill according to a press statement. Mehmed is it because of a set of false teeth. New Set of Teeth Will Add 50 Years Until his illness, Zora was a humble at the Turkish Naval Base, that is a carrier of heavy weights, ranging from 250 to 1,000 pounds. When he was 45 years of age he tried on, a hat, to lift 500 pounds with its teeth and ruined them. In 1850 he obtained a set of false teeth. These he used in combat. He got another set which he claims are the cause of his sickness. "I will be all right again when I get a new set of teeth and will then be in shape for another 'half-century'," he said. Mehmed was born at Bitilis, Turkish Armenia, in 1747, just before the American Revolution. He has a son 90 years of age and a young daughter, age 50. He offers his passports as well as the birth records at the mosque at Bitilis as proofs of his age. The mayor of Seattle declared a half holiday Saturday, November 27, for the dedication of the new Washington Stadium. A battlefield fired a cannon and during the ceremony an airplane dropped a football on the field. FOR SALE -Young man's suit at most new, Size 38 or 48, Cost $70. Will sell for half. Call 1446 Red. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY LOST—Gold Bar pin between 1234 Oread and Little Theater. Call 2304. Reward $3.00. 56-5-204 Should take a business course— Because it offers you the necessary practical training for an office position if you want to start at a good salary. You Our catalogue sent on request THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN America's Greatest From Hall of Fame Some of America's greatest men could be picked out by any school boy or girl without difficulty; others who are sometimes recognized as among the truly great men of the country would have some difficulty picking a list of the sixty greatest names of his country's citizens. The New York University Hall of fame undertakes that task—but it catters the job over a considerable period of time. Dean Frank Blackmar of the Graduate School, one of the doctors, and his associates have selected the following names as representing America's best: Authors: Emerson Longfellow, Iring, Hawthorne, Lowell, Whitteir, Olimes, Poe, Cooper, Bryant, Bancroft, Motley, Parkman. Educators: Morace Mann, Mark Hopkins. Men: Preachers and theotogists: Jonathon Edwards, Henry Ward Beecher, William E. Chamming, Phillips Brooks, Jason Manning, George Fargo; Geo. Pebboy, Peter Cooner Scientists: John J. Audubon, Assa Gray, Louis Agassiz, Joseph Henry, Engineers and architects: Nana Missionaries and explorers: Daniel Boone. Prynking and burglars. None. Inventors: Fulton, Morse, Whitney, Howe. Soldiers and sailors: Grant, Farrar-gut, Lee, Sherman. Lawyers and Judges: John Marshall, James Kent, Joseph Story, Rufus Cheats. Rulers and statesmen: Washington, Lincoln, Webster, Franklin, Jefferson Madison, Clay, John Adams, Andrew Jackson, Hamilton. Musicians, painters, and sculptors Charles Gilbert Stuart. Business Men: None. Musicians: Charlotte Chisman. Every five years a list of person nominated by the general public, is one hundred picks. No person may be nominated as "immortal" unless he has been dead for ten years. No name is approved unless it receives the vote of a majority of the electors. Authors: Harriet Beecher Stowe. Educators and missionaries: Mary Lyon, Emma Willard. Scientists: Maria Mitchell. Merslöw: Charlotte Gushaw. Women: Gladys—"Mabel is two laps ahead of Emily in her leap year race." Phillips—"Two laps?" Gladys—Yes-Harry's and Bob's." —J. W. Fulton, Jr., University of Chicago. "This letter is to apologize for my negligence in sending you three and one-half bucks for the Kansen. I'm getting it pretty regular now and it certainly seems good to hear some news from the old school. "am certainly glad to see evidence of so much pep at K. U. and sincerely hope it will not fall short of the boosting it gets in the Kansas. Former K. U. Man Boosts Kanshan. This letter was received by Dean Malott, circulation manager of the Daily Kanshan. Bruce A. Fleming." Mr. Fleming was in school in 1917, and 1918 and is now in business in Cleveland, Ohio. Send the Daily Kansan home. correspondence courses of study. Of these, sixty-one are state institutions and twelve are privately endowed. A. G. ALRICH HERE is a sentence that is not only true but better. The sentence is a button at the bottom. Printing, Engraving, Binding Office Supplies, Rubber Stamp Stationery, Seals, Stencils 736 Mass. Street HATCH ONE BUTTON UNION SUIT French Seal Coat was $275.00 at $200.00 means less trouble — and more comfort. It often comes with a row of nine buttons but buttons on the (which are always needed, least major repair) and results in one smooth, even all over. the content was to find a name for the most newspaper that would be distributed. So we decided to choose three of the most acceptable names on which the student body will vote. Some of the names submitted were "The Sneeu" "The Forker" and "The Sneeu." Brown Marmot Coat, was $145.00 at...$98.00 We have this super important in a variety of weights, materials and prices. For Friday and Saturday For Misses and Young Women-At Price Reductions that are Final-Only This Seasons Models are Shown A Sale of Fur Coats— French Seal Coat was $375.00 at ...$295.00 The person submitting the winning name was, according to the rules of the contest, to receive a free copy of the 1921 Razorback. The results of the contest have not yet been received. Kolinsky Marmot Coat, was $185.00 gt $137.50 Sealine Coat was $165.00 at ... $125.00 Seventy-three colleges and universities of this country now have Sealine Coat wms $185.00 at $137.50 Near Seat Coat was $150.00 at $98.00 French Seal Coat was $25.00 at $257.50 Sealine Coat was $210.00 at ... $150.00 Scotch Mole Coat was $350.00 at ... $275.00 F. B. McCOLLOCH, Druggist Eastman Kodaks L. E. Waterman and Conklin Fountain Pens THE REXALL STORE 847 Mass. St. French Seal Coat, Australian O'Possum trim, was $325.00 at ... $275.50 ALL FUR PIECES—Scarfs, Capes, Stoles. Coates and Chokers at similar reductions. Natural Lynx Coat was $195.00 at $137.50 All Fur Trimmed and Tailored Suits at Just One Half Early Prices* All Cloth and Fur Trimmed Coats of which the most are high class and exclusive models,are Reduced One Third and One Fourth For the Christmas For the Christma Formals We have all the Newest scenery Dress suits, Tie Tux— Shirts, ties, Colars, studs, Shoes, sox And gloves— And our prices Have been readjusted— 1047 Massachusetts St. CAPITAL $100,000.00 SURPLUS $100,000.00 WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Receives Deposits, makes Loans, buys and sells Liberty Bonds and other Securities, Foreign and Domestic Exchange, and Travellers' Cheques. Food Drafts in multiples of $10.00. For the Law Scrim- A good Supply of Dress Suits for Rent---- $3.00—each We have your size-