THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XVIII. "BEAT THE AGGIES" RALLY FRIDAY NOON Prof. MacMurray's Talk Will "Tear Integers into Fractional Parts" THUNDERING 3,740 THERE Gloom Emanates From Man hattan—K. U. Must Furnish the Pen To provide for a rally Friday noon the morning classes will shortened five minutes each. The schedule follows: 8:30 to 9:15 9:25 to 10:10 10:20 to 11:05 11:15 to 12:00 E. H. LINDLEY. Chancellor A "Thundering, 3,740 rally" is scheduled for Friday noon. All classes will be shortened to make room for the rally which will be held in front of Robinson Gymnasium at 11 a.m., according to Sandy Winner. "Impress upon them the idea that no man or woman is excused from the rally Friday," said Winsor this morning; "Those who have no classes at 11:30 are requested to remount the Hill for the rally. "K men will guard the exits from the campus and every living soul who calls Mount Oleh his school home." A muskat is a huskaty athlete with a busker club. The Aggies have been spreading too much tough, according to Cheerleader Winston, Kansas has got to get up some pep or the game will be a failure Saturday. "And don't you worry," Sandy said this morning. "That game's not going to be a snap. Kansas is going to have to put everything she has behind that team in order to win at all. The Aggies are like a set of lamb and wild. When I need to undoubtedly get something that looks like a football squad on the field." Besides Dr. F, C. Allen, who will deliver one of his spectacle pep talks, Prof. Arthur Mau Murray, "K*K*K*K*K* The mob, which has been ordered to beeller* ain, will form around the band in front of the Gymnasium at the witching hour of twelve and will march off the Hill in an orderly column. Hop Manager Give Detailed Ac count of Blowout SOPH HOP BUDGET IN Programme $ 85.00 Invitation 10.00 Music 175.00 Decorations 150.00 ubility 90.00 Entertainment 50.00 Refreshment 250.00 Miscellaneous 100.00 In accordance with the new constitution of the Men's Student Council a budget of the expenditures of the Soph Hop has been turned in to an auditing committee by Dan Phillips, manager. The budget is as follows: Total $910,000 This budget assures the students of the University of a real party, in which every dollar taken in will be based on the party. The refreshments are to be particularly good, according to the managers, and a greater part of the expenditures are for this purpose. "Instead of the usual cup of cole coffee and thin sandwich, there is to a real feed," said "Doc" Calum former of the refreshement committee. McAdoo to Speak Friday A Wm. G. McAdoo, will speak from its rear end of Santa Fe train N. 6 o'clock evening about 5:50. He is on this way to Kansas City where he will speak in Convention Hall. The event will be in Lawrence about Lafen minutes. Wendle Wesley, student at the University in '16 and '17, visited at the Upsilon House Saturday and Sunday. Mr. Virgil Reams spent the week at his home in Kansas City, Hallowe'en Party Will Provide Fun For All NUMBER 34. "Every member of the faculty hurged to be present at the Halloween party in Robinson gymnasium, Friday evening." The committee agreed the committee in charge today. Plans are well under way and preparation for more than a thousand persons is being made. There will be at least three big stunts given and running in order that everyone may do the same thing at the same time. The Men's Glee Club has promised to and if Sandy Winsor is in town, a part of the evening will be turned over to him, with full authority from the club, anything he wants to toward instilling plenty of pepper into the crowd. GRUELLING PRACTICE FOR FOOTBALL TEAM Tang of Autumn Weather Puts Renewed Vigor Into Varsity Another day of gruelling work for the Varsity has passed, and the coaches are not predicting a big victory. The weather Wednesday afternoon we had the real first football weather the men have had this season. There was a marked change in the way teams prepare and had to keep moving to keep warm. Seririmage last night was with the freshmen, and three times the varsity lost ten yards, trying to make a play. They were Spurgeon playing at fullback was going good, and seemed to be making big gains through the freshline. But there is according to the numbers, the offensive playing of the varsity. "Bear" stories come out of the Aggie camp would indicate that the farmers are playing in hard luck, on account of injuries to their star players, but even this is not enough to make the varsity quit working. on "about to" of the shelter practice that they had with last night it not being communicated aside from saying the varsity under the driving of "coaches Allen and Laslett are putting in every minute of the time between now and Saturday to build up a machine that will win a winning fight with the Argiles. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28. 1920. The freshman backfield is a stone wall of defense and usually find a hole to slip through to get a varsity man behind the line. Coach Lindsay has been giving them Aggie plays this week, and expects to have them play in the practice games to Manhattan. As a reward for the work done this season, the freshman squad will be taken to Manhattan next Saturday with the varsity Dr. Hubert Sheppard In Rufe King Trial Dr. Hubert Sheppard, assistant professor of anatomy, was the first witness on the stand in the trial of Rufe King, charged with the murder of John Woody of Maple Hill, in 1909. The testimony of Doctor Sheppard hinged about a small bone from the neck of the skeleton, alleged by the state to be that of Woody. Doctor Sheppard testified that it was a thyroid centric of the skeletons of men hanged revealed that strangulation had broken a thyroid bone. The bone submitted was broken and partly decayed about the 'edges', and the witness testified that the fracture occurred previous to the burial of the body. The defense in an attempt to break the testimony of Doctor Sheppard that the skeleton was that of a man, exhibited a copy of an anatomy text and pointed out statements contrary to those of the witnesses. Doctor Sheppard said that he had worked with the doctor because he used that text and that it was wrong. Miss Clara Pelton *c*21 and Miss Thelma Fernald *c*24 will go to Kansas City Friday. They will go from there to Manhattan for the K. U. vs. Manhattan. Pelton will stay in Manhattan over the week-end and visit with friends. In the opening statement, the state's lawyer gave a brief account of the evidence the state would use. Miss Missyda MacGregor, c'20 will come to Lawrence after attending the Teacher's meting at Topeka. Miss Missyda Caryn Curlagh in the Benton H. S. this year. PROPAGANDA ISSUED FOR K. U. REUNIONS Alumni Association Will Distribute Leaflets at Four Teachers' Meetings "NEW ERA" GIVEN BOOST Information Put Out on How to Organize Former-Student Clubs "How You Get in on the New Era" is the title of a full page advertisement of the Alumni Association which will appear in the next issue of Graduate Magazine, and which will be given to be given out to be given to be given at the K. U. reunions at the state teachers' week. The K. U. reunions will be held Thursday and Friday nights, at the four Kansas cities where the meetings are being held; Topela, Hutchinson, and Independence, The reverse side of the leaflet is a reprint from the October Graduate Magazine, an article by Chancellor E. H. Lindley, on "Ridicovering the University," together with an excellent The Chancellor message to the Chancellor's message to the graduates and former students is embodied in twelve tense admonitions, bringing out clearly the necessity of thinking of the institution in terms of state service, legislative responsibility and cooperation with the industries of the state. The advertisement gives full details for the organizations of Alumni and Former Student Clubs. "The How and What To Do." Alumni of the University, in contact with the University through the Alumni Association, and to safeguard their alma mater by practical application of the slogan, "The Truth About K. U." Publicity aid and work for student union members is asked. "Realize that K. U. is ten years behind in her buildings," the advertisement states. "Its budget is based on pre-war standards, while its opportunity for practical worth is limited." The coming session of the state legislature is all-important from the K. U. standpoint." Mrs. Annah Schover Boel, of Wampea G. B. '93, will spend the weekend with her daughters, Miss Ethet Smith, assistant state food analyst, and Miss Sarah Boel, who is enrolled in the Graduate school. "OH, CINDY" A SUCCESS Opal Petharbridge, c 23, spent Sunday at her home in Basenor. Over $600 Net Profit From Y. W. C. A. Play More than $600 net profit was gained from the presentation of "Oh Oh, Cindy" Monday and Tuesday nights at the Bowersock Theatre, according to Miss Kathryn Gunn, general secretary of the Y. W. C. A. "It was a success from the viewpoint of finance, and the public is able to determine whether it came within their reach." Munn said that we have even "raised Munn guilt." Thayer Art Collection Exhibited at Washburn "The gross receipts for the two nights amounted to $1620 which was half again as much as was required to put on "F1" last year. But $600 will swell the general fund of the company, and will fund that already has been accumulated in the financial drive ending Friday." Pi Upsilon announces the pledging f Dee Miffin, c 24, of Attica. In an art exhibit being shown at Bowsworth Hall at Washburn from October 20 to November 10 are a number of oriental shawls and rugs from the Thayer Art Collection of the University. These make up the see-through exhibit, the exhibit, the first part being thirty six oil paintings by John W. Carlson. In Mrs. Thayer's collection are Japanese combs of carved ivory, laquer combs with pendant ornaments, and other. There are necklaces beautifully mounted and sword guards wrapped in different metals. Mrs. Thayer's exhibit is limited to Japanese combs and a Japan, China, and the display is typical of oriental life. On the opening day an instructive lecture will be given by Mrs. Thayer, and on other days the lecture will be repeated by others in charge. Rooters' Special Leaves From Santa Fe 9 O'clock The special train to Manhattan Saturday morning will leave from the Santa Fe station rather than the Union Pacific, as was first announced. A fare of $0.05 is charged over the route chosen, while the Union Pacific charge amounted to $1.18. The fans, team, band, and Kukus will change to the Geek Island station in Topeka, and will arrive in Atlanta at noon, as it is scheduled today. CHORUS TRYOUTS FOR FOLLIES END FRIDAY Tickets to the Kansas rooting section are selling fast, according to director of athletics Allen, whose office is distributing the admissions. "Mike" Aebner, director of athletics at the Aggie school, has wired that he has had to turn away several humiliating moves in order to buy tickets, and that if there are any of the Kansas seats left, they can be sold in Manhattan. The train will leave Lawrence at 9 o'clock sharp. Best of Ensemble Candidates Will Be Selected as Leads, Says Committee Folies chorus truyts are being continued this afternoon and tomorrow in an effort to get the full number of singers and dancers for the big W. S. G. A. spectacle to be staged next month. Candidates, both men and women, are requested to appear in Room 308, Fraser Hall, between and 5:30 o'clock Friday afternoon. The program will be examined by the selecting committee. The selecting committee was not swamped with applicants at the first tryouts Wednesday afternoon although much good material presented itself. About forty women and twenty-five men are needed for the chorus positions, and the committee urges all students with sing dancing ability to appear be fore the committee by Friday after noon. The people who show up best in the chorus tryouts will be selected for the leads, according to the committee in charge of east selection. Arrangements have been made with the committee for tryouts of several special stunts, of vaudeville character and otherwise, which have been originated and worked up by individuals. Any one who has a committee should be given an opportunity to present his or her committee next week, by making arrangements with the chairman of the committee, Jacelle Cleveland. Faculty members from the School of Fine Arts and the public speaking department will be present at the trystuys today and tomorrow to aid in selecting the talent to appear in the "Folles of 1921." Charles 'Check' Slawson, A. B. '20, was in Lawrence for the Ames game Saturday. KuKu's WILL STAGE COW-MILKING STUNT WILL CARRY COWBELLS Form Behind Band and Parade Aggieville After Special Arrives Saturday The KuKu Klan will be at Manhattan, in costume, to take part in the parade from the special train, and to put on stunts before and between halves of the Jayhawker-Aggie mixup Saturday. This was decided at a meeting of the Klan in Fraser Hall last night. The members of the Klan will sell concessions and megaphones on the train, and will form behind the band on the parade from the station through Manhattan Saturday noon. Every member of the Klan will meet at the Santa Fe station in Lawrence before she took shifu Kuko Lloyd Young at 8:30 o'clock Saturday morning, a half-hour before the special leaves. The Klan, under the direction of Cheerleader Sandy Winsor, will also appear at the pep convoction and "Thunderning 3.740 Rally" to be held at noon Friday in the gymnasium in preparation for the Aggie game. The team will wear their blue headgear only for the pep rally, according to Winsor. Extensive plana were discussed for the Manhattan demonstration Saturday morning at the meeting. Every KuKu will bring a cowbell. Several signs and placards of "anti-Aggie" sentiment will be carried, Stunts are being framed for the challenge. The assistant pass the clever "grayway" scene staged so well between halves last Saturday. Final arrangements will be completed this week for the play-by-play telegraph report from the game with Oklahoma at Norman, to be bulleted in the gymnasium within five minutes after the play is actually made, according to a committee report to the KuKus. K. U. A "RICH MAN'S SCHOOL?" W. A. A. Meeting Postponed. The meeting of the Women's Athletic Association called yesterday in Fraser Hall was not held because of an insufficient number of members present to constitute a quorum. The committee, which posted until 4:30 Monday afternoon, are bers of the W. A. A. are urged to be present at that time. Petition For Engineering Society There was a short business meeting of the Civil Engineering Society Tuesday afternoon to consider the petitioning of a student chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers to be founded at the University. This petition will be made. Bessie Louise Sitz, fa21, and Rutil Hertel, c21, will spend the week end at Topeka. The impression that the University of Kansas is an aristocratic institution who inmates lead gay, butterfly lives at the expense of pluracrete parents is an unfortunate one, yet it continues to thrive apace. The "poor but honest" boy, according to those who hold to the "plute" idea, has no chance to succeed at K. U. either socially or politically, since the sons of capital, so they say, dominate the life of the institution. The large number of students, both men and women, who are earning their expenses while at the University, shows that the school's enrollment is distinctly not confined to scions of multi-millionaires. And a further survey of the University's leading students shows even more clearly what the make-up of the student body is. These students were elected as the best fitted individuals for the positions they occupy, and represent the greater majority of K. U. students. The following survey of the officers in the various schools, classes and organizations of the University as to the occupations followed by their fathers is interesting, to say the least, and the conclusions to be drawn therefrom are obvious. John Bunn President Senior Class Mechanical Engineer Addison R. Massey President Junior Class Retired Hay Prayer President Sophomore Class Parmer Horace' Alexander President Student Council Engineer John Tracey President Men's Student Council Civil Engineer Helen Olson W. S. G. A. Brickman Bell Miller W. S. G. A. Railway Conductor Arnold Bell Engg School Motor Car Dealer Clarence Bailey President Law School Merchant Marguerite Adamu President Women's Pan-Hellenic Retired Physician Grace Gaskill President Men's Pan-Hellenic Retired Physician John Bunn Editor Y. M. C. Engineering Ferd Gottlieb Editor Jayhawker Merchant Burt Curtiss Business Manager Jayhawker Advertiser Marie Shaklee W. S. G. A. Marine Mary Olsen Pres. House President's Council Salmoner Jennie Glinnond President Women's Team Clerk George Neil Captain Football Team Decased Ernest Urlhamt Captain Football Team Catcher Fred Murphy Captain Baseball Team Player Ida Tarbell to Speak At Teachers Association One of the most noted speakers at the State Teachers' Association now in session at Topeka, will be Miss Ida M. Tarbur, who speaks Friday evening in the Auditorium, between Southwest and Eighth on Quincy Street, beginning this evening will be Newell Dwight Hills, of Chicago. The Association will also be addressed by Governor Allen, sometime during the Teachers, instructors, and professors from all over the state are attending this convention. At least 200 people attended at the four different meeting places of the convention, is the estimate issued from the offices of the School of Education this morning, which exceeds last year's attendance by 2,000 people. MacDOWELL TO BRING NOTED ACTRESS HERE Must Pledge Sale of 250 Tickets For Dorothea Snimpney A campaign to bring Miss Dorothea Spinney to the University will be started by members of the MacDowell fraternity tomorrow morning. Two hundred and fifty tickets must be pledged before her appearance is assured. She will appear in the representation of "Alcestis" or some other Greek play. She will attend at the University a few years ago, and the people who saw her at that time are enthusiastic for a reappearance. Miss Lorna Marie Raub, president of the local chapter of the MacDowell fraternity, met Miss Spinney at the colony in Petersborough N. H., last summer and obtained her consent to come. The campaign will be in charge of a committee of the members of the fraternity and every one will be solicited to sign one of the pledge cards for one or more tickets at $1.00 each. The subscriptions are not payable until the 250 tickets have been subscribed for. Miss Spinney is an English actress and a personal friend of Miss Margaret Lynn of the department of English. Plain Tales From the Hill To Advisers of Wom,n belong the polls—or at least the inclination to poll everything. To the front comes our chief punter, who is as filled with wit as Bobby Brownhack is permeated with obedience to Paul Dunn. This chief punter declares that the big gun referred to yesterday should be in front of the Law building for the purpose of shooting snipes. This is the time of year when letters home contain these lines. "Well, dad, I don't know whether I'll be able to get through the year on as little money as I counted on or not. Every day that I had expected. However, compared with the way the other fellows spend money, I'm almost stingy." The Soph Hops that men manage live after them; the good is oft inferred with their bones. This Plain Tales editor is handicapped for material because he has never had classes under Professors Boynton or Mac Murray. However, shouts the multitude, that is no handicap. It's a bonus. No, Hortense, Mr. Harding is neither er a Black Mask nor a Pachacamac He washes his face. Emory Pterbeferbane of Baseher, visited his sister, Opal Pterbeferbane, c. 235. Saturday and attended the Kansas-Armes game while here. Quill Tryout Closes Friday The tryout for Quill Club will close Friday night. Anyone who wishes to submit a resume before that time. Fifty manuscripts, according to Deean Mallet have been received up to date upon which a committee is working. About fifteen members will be chosen from this list until December 16th by the committee and judged without the name of the writer being known. George Foster registrar announces that the printing contract for the Student Directory has been let to a firm outside the city. Let Directory Contract Miss Tommy Matlock of Marian is the guest of Miss Francis Huendegart, c '24. HILL MEN FORM PART OF BIG MASON CLASS Twenty-two Students and Two Of Faculty Included in Fall Reunion TO END WORK TODAY Music and Other Entertainment's Feature Week of Grind For Craft The Fall Reunion Class of 1920, generally acknowledged the banner class of the Valley of Lawrence, will witness the final ceremony this afternoon and become full-fledged 32-year Scottish Rite Masons. This class is the largest ever handled here, and swells the membership of the University Orient of Kansas, to approximately one thousand. Among the Scottish Rite novelists are the following twenty-four University of Kansas an Orval Bradley, Ralph M. Buffington, Carroll D. Clark, Ward R. Cullum, Burleigh E. DeFar, Dale C. Dillon, Frank S. Dewell, Clarence H. Durkin, Arthur W. Heftling, Carl R. Fitzpatrick, Holland, Holland, Broneck Jordan, Richard H. Johnson, J.K. Lyster, Oscar V. Mangionian, Ralph C. Miner, Ralph E. Morrison, Benedick L. McMillen, Shirley W. Peters, Harold P. Shores, William E. Swarner, and John R. Van Ruskible, Coach Adrian Lindsey Wiedemann, Instructor in Architecture, are also included in the class. The work has been in full swing since Monday morning when the candidates commenced registering. Excellent musical programs have been the feature of each day's work. The class was given a motor trip about town yesterday afternoon as a diversion from the steady erudition. Tuesday the Chamber of Commerce was host to the Scottish men at a luncheon in the club rooms. Chancellor Lindsey sland Thomas G. Fitch, sovereign grand inspector of Scotland Rite Masons in this state, added that the Chamber of Commerce and their guests. Mr. Fitch told of the dormitories erected by the Scottish Rite at Texas and Oklahoma state educational institutions, and inferred that such action might be considered desirable at the University of Kansas. Chancellor Lindley stated that such dormitories provide the great benefit, and expressed the option to Fraternity is the best organized and most efficient organization to carry out an enterprise. The Reunion will conclude tonight with a banquet for all Scottish Rite men and their wives or friends. The class orator, W. H. Moys, will express the sentiments of the class to the old members. The Order of De-Molay will serve the banquet, and Schreibers Five-Piece orchestra with the music Songs and yells will be given by the men, and a social evening will conclude the ritualistic ceremonies of the week. WIDMER IN BIG BOUT Will Meet Dudley Steele at Kansas City Tonight Tonight will be the crucial test for Henry Widder, e22, when the gong sounds for his ten round decision bout with Dudley Steele of Kansas City at the Armory, 39th and Main, Kansas City, Mo. Widmer will weigh in at about 140 pounds and will be in the best of condition for he has just completed a very rigid training in Robinson Gymnastics. Although Widmer has won two golds, he fights via the knockout route it is set to by fake fans that Dudley Steele will not be an easy victim. Widmer is recognized by bistice critics in Kansas City as being one of the best men in his class in this part of the country. He will be seconded in his bout tonight by John Old who was training Widmer's next fight will be the champion of the thirty-fifth division. Day. To Give Intelligence Test Professor Rosenow, of the department of physiology, will conduct a series of phychological tests in the grade schools of Lawrence next week. These will be in the nature of intelligence tests and will be carried on the test themselves as well as that of the pupil. Mr. Donald Means, e'23, spent the week-end in Topeka.