UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII. WILL ENFORCE DANCE RULES—MRS. BROWN Student Interests Regulations Will Be Carried Out to the Letter "The rules made by the committee on student interests covering dances and parties will be enforced to the letter henceforth," says Mrs. Eustace Brown, chairman of the committee. "Hitherto I have been more or less indulgent because so many are not familiar with the rules, but as some students have seen fit to take advantage of this lenience, I shall obliged to enforce the letter of the law." The rules referred to provide first, that any person or organization wishing to give a dance or other party attended by both men and women students, shall obtain written permission from Mrs. Brown; second, that they shall fill out an information blank telling, among other things, the name of the child in the absence of the last detail, Mrs. Brown will attend in her capacity as official chaperon for student affairs. Who Gave This One? "For the most part the students have done very well as regards obtaining permission to give parties," says Mrs. Brown, "Although I may say in passing that the committee is still officially ignorant of one of the largest parties given on the Hill this year. Only a very few, however, have filled information blanks with me, and as they are intended to contest school affairs, I must record of student social affairs for the year. I must ask all those who have omitted this little detail to attend to it at once. This means everybody who has given a party since school began and has not filled out a blank." No 'Phoney Business As a matter of convenience, Mrs. Brown has often given permission verbally—usually over the telephone. But from on this will not be sufficient. It will have to be in writing. "Some of this procedure may look like red tape," Mrs. Brown said in conclusion, "but it is the rule, and the committee intends to enforce it. I have been lenient because I trusted that every student meant to do what was right in these matters, but from now on I must insist that the result be followed up and their entirety. My office hours are from 9:30 o'clock till 11:30 o'clock in the morning and from 2:30 o'clock till 4:30 o'clock in the afternoon." COUNTY CLUBS' OFFICERS COULD NOT GET TOGETHER Proposed Central Organization in Still a Non-existent—May Meet After Thanksgiving The meeting and organization of the inter-county club scheduled for yesterday afternoon did not take place, because only two or three of the presidents were there. It is probable that no meeting will be held now before the Thanksgiving holidays, as Victor Bottomly, president of the Men's Student Council, does not believe that all the presidents can be gathered at one time during the football season, able after the close of the football season, however, the meeting will be called and the club formed to get it work and help boost legislation needled by K. U. and the state schools. To make the intercounty club and the whole organization a successful unit, every club must see that it's president and officers take an active role in the operation, at which permanent officers will be chosen and the program planned. The organization will be announced in the Kansan. Thirty-nine county clubs have been formed to date: Jefferson, Marion and Kingman counties being the last in the band wagon. The officers of the Kingman county club are: president, Fred Hard; vice-president, Leonard Kirsch; secretary, Josephine Gillett; treasurer, J. J. Kalker; plenary editor, Ed. Wolf. They also have a social committee which is planning a big banquet and football game at home during the holidays. The personnel of the social committee is: Lena Hendry, Clifford Sykes, and Anna Johnson. Coach Wheaton is being assisted this week by Pat Crowell, Shorty Hamil and Bunny Wilson, formerars on Kansas elevens. NUMBER 50. Subscribe now for the Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY MAY NOT GET POST-VICTORY RECESS Question up to Senate Which Will Not Meet Until After Thanksgiving UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS FRIDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 20, 1914. It is not likely that the students will be given a holiday if Kansas beats Missouri tomorrow. The question of the affair is up to the University Senate and it will not meet until after the Thanksgiving vacation, when students, unless a special session is called, which is very improbable. Some time ago the Student Council recommended that the holiday be given from Tuesday noon to Wednesday noon, instead of Monday as heretofore. But now there will be none. AMERICA TO TEACH WORLD Chancellor Says Burden of Enlightenment Now Falls on America. "The Universities of the United States must take up the work of education of the world, since the European war, and to do so must maintain a higher spiritual ideal," said Chancellor Strong in the last of his morning prayer talks on the war and its effects. The Chancellor made the point that the next few generations of Europe would have to spend their lives in building up the economic development of the states, and that the burden of the education would come across the Atlantic to this generation. Heavenly schools already were ready for the tasks and cited figures and facts to buttress his belief. Two hundred *students* crawled from a warm bed into the cold Oread Bath. PERSONS SHOULD SEE JOY OF RELIEVED BELGIANS "If those who are giving so generously in America could have shared the joy of the people of Brussels when the news came that the first locker and helmet had arrived at Route de Corsay and vessel to come by the way of Antwerp for Brussels, they would have been repaid many times for the sacrifices which generosity on such a scale must require," says Millard K. Shaler, "01, the representative of the American Relief committee in Belgium. "Conditions in Belgium are far worse than the stories would indicate," Mr. Shaler writes after having made a trip over the entire country. SCHWEGLER ISSUES MANUAL ON HINET-SIMON SCALE USE Raymond A. Schwegler, associate professor in the School of Education, has recently prepared a teachers' manual for the use of the Binet-Simon Scale. This is a well arranged pamphlet of fifty-six pages including a historical sketch of the Scale, general directions for testing, a verbal assessment and a scale of the interpretation of the results, appends giving simple methods of eye and ear testing and a bibliography of fifty-one titles. This work of Professor Schwegler may be of service to all who have to do with training of subnormal children, as well as to teachers who wish to be informed of progress that has been made in this field. Copies will be sent, to any teacher on request as long as the edition lasts. Increased interest is shown in the work of the lecture department of the extension division this year. Eight lectures have been given and arrangements completed for ten more. The following members of the faculty will deliver lectures within the next few months: HIGH SCHOOLS DEMAND UNIVERSITY SPEAKERS Prof. H. P. Cady at Olathe, November 20; Prof. F. R. Hamilton at Arkansas City, December 2; Dr. W. Burger at Elmo, December 4; Prof. DoWitt at Arkansas City, December 11; Prof. R. A. Schwegler at Conway, December 15, Olathe January 15 and February 5; Prof. C. A. Dykstra at Olathe, March 16; Prof. C. A. Dykstra at Olathe, March 19; and Prof. G. M. Mitchell at Newton, March 12. The University Debating Council has received a contract for a debate with Drury College, a Congregational school at Springfield, Missouri, calling for one debate to be held at each school. Drury asked H. T. Hill, of the public speaking department, says that the contract will not be accepted. Want to Debate us Send the Daily Kansan home. DR. GRAHAM TAYLOR TALKS TO STUDENTS Social Worker Makes Address at 1:30 Convocation in Chapel "Civilization has suspended," said Dr. Graham Taylor this afternoon at Prunner, in his address, "The Outlook is the Shadow of the Great War." "This is a war of science. No tap of drum, no blare of bugle, no flare of flag, to relieve the funeral march of fighting men," said the speaker. "This is a war of science." The shoul be marked. Other Events on Program Three addresses made up the joint session in Snow Hall last evening. Supt. M. E. Pearson, president of the Kansas Confederation of Charities and Correction, Judge Roy T. Osborn, president of the Kansas State Society of Criminal Law and Crimi- secretary William T. Cross, secretary of the National Conference of Charities and Correction, were the speakers. This morning's session was disarranged by the rally and other outside matters. Dean F. W. Blackman opened the session with his paper on "Modern Prison Management." At noon luncheon was served to the members of the two organizations and invited guests in the Gymnastium. Plates were laid for sixty-five. Six officers from the Federal pris siege in New York, which arrived hi monger, to attack the rebels. This afternoon's session will consist of a number of papers and a round-table discussion of "Mother's Pensions." In the evening a joint session will be held in the Plymouth Congregational Church, when Graeme Searle, Chairman of The Motion of Community Welfare by the Cooperation of Voluntary and Official Agencies." Chancellor Frank Strong will preside. SENIOR ENGINEERS WILL GO TO CHICAGO SUNDAY Students With Members of Faculty to Make Annual Tour of Inspection Next Week Thirty-six seeniens and four members of the faculty from the School of Engineering will leave Sunday for Chicago, Illinois and Keokuk, Iowa, on the annual engineering tour of inspection. The men will be gone a week returning November 29. The trip will be made in two special Pullman coaches over the Santa Fe and the Burlington roads. Representatives of the roads are at the University today making arrangements. In Chicago the party will stay at the Hotel Planters. Ten hours work is laid out for every day of the stay in Chicago. The men will study the plants of the Western Electrical Company and Edison Company, the Indiana Steel Company, The International Harvester Company, office buildings, bridges, and other engineering works. From Chicago the party will work to inspect the big dam and power plant on the Mississippi at that place. The professors in charge of the trip are, Prof. H. A. Rice with the civils; Prof. A. H. Sluss with the mechanicals, and Prof. C. A. Johnson with the electricals. Dean P. F. Walker will also make the trip if he is sufficiently recovered from his illness. Fifty reproductions in colors of great masters have just been received by Prof. W. A. Griffith, of the art department. They are Medici Prints and from the Medici Society of London. They will soon be framed and put on exhibition in the Administration Building. This trip is an annual event for the senior Engineers and is a necessary part of the work for those working in lines from the School of Engineering. University of Kansas alumni who are located at Chicago plan to give the man a banquet one evening. R. Zachary Chicago is making the arrangements. ART DEPARTMENT RECEIVES PRINTS OF OLD MASTERS Another art exhibit similar to that given last year will be given next February. The collection to be exhibited will be selected by a committee of the American Art Federation It will be chosen from the exhibit now being held by the New York National Academy of Art. GLEE CLUBS TO VIE IN RALLY TONIGHT M. U. and K. U. Songstors Will Appear in Pep Meeting Manager Hamilton: "I think the idea of a joint glee club sing fest a good one and should be made a part of it." He said that every student will cooperate. The final explosion of Kansas-Missouri enthusiasm will echo in Robinson Gymnasium tonight when the glee clubs of the Kansas and the Missouri Universities will give a program and, Coach Wheaton, Manager Hamilton, Pat Crowell, and Uncle Jimnie Green will talk. The big rally will start at 7:00 o'clock and admission of 15 cents—two for a quarter—will be charged. Vic Hotton-McClough, the executive of this afternoon: "I want everybody out tonight. We expect more than a thousand, and hope all the women will be there. Tickets will be sold at the door. There will be a mass of persons of the Missouri Glee Club." The Kansas Girls' Girl Club will play the musical program with a glee club. The Missouri club - thirty songsters strong - will vie with the Kansans in warbling. The Missourians took the Santa Fe trip to the coast last year and are said to have a strong club. The Kansas singers will give several selections and the two clubs will then harmonize together. Coach Wheaton has a message for the students tonight and Pat Crowell, of '08 fame, will tell of the spirit which won the championship of that season. Manager Hamilton will make a few remarks concerning the game and the rally will close with Uncle Jimmy Green's Prophecy. The program: Wheaton Chancellor Strong Alma Mater M. U. Glee Club Crimson and Blue K. U. Glee Club A Perfect Day Both Clubs Dixie M. U. Glee Club Juicefulness K. U. Glee Club Juice Awesawin' For You Wild Irish Rose K. U. Glee Club Selections K. U. Girls' Glee Club Remarks Coach Jack Wheaton Spirit of '08 Pat Crowell, captain of the '08 Outdoor Teams Atlético Manager W. O. Hammon Prophecy Uncle Jimmie Green Doomed Tiger Burns as Students' Rally 'Round Fire Rally! Rally! Rally! They rallied from everywhere when the 10 o'clock classes dismissed. The chapel was like a sizzling pudding, and the overflow filled the halls, the steps, and even the railings around the steps. Pep! Why there was so much peep that it could hardly be contained in the assembly room. After the twisting of the Tiger's tail when Jo Wren brought the animal from its cage, Uncle Jimmy mounted the stage. "Kansas has the spirit," he declared. "And I am glad to see it come back into its own. The team is not discouraged by its defeat last week, and we are going down to the Field tomorrow to fight to win." Then Berwick, all by himself, picked up that big tiger and the crowd tumbled down to the front of Fraser Hall where a mountain of nice dry boxes was awaiting to devour the beast. Berkwick lifted the animal to his final rest, and the rest began. Red fire shot from the nostrils of the outraged yellow critter. The crowd laughed and twisted his tail, while the flames leaped higher and hotter. Snake dances were started but the fire was too warm for comfortable dancing. Tiger tailwere falling, and black smoke poured upward until the last ribs of the jungle brute were blackened and charred. Valiant Jo Assists The band played "Crimson and the Song" a fitting djur for so a death. When the pyre burned low, the funeral was over—the annual funeral which brings joy to the K. U. heart. DEAN AND MRS. TEMPLIN GO ON ANNUAL VACATION Dean and Mrs. Olin Templin left this morning for their annual winter vacation in the south. They will spend Saturday night in Knoxville, Tennessee, in order to take a boat on a broad river on the following morning. They will first stop at Flatville, South Carolina, where they are to remain a week. From there they will go to Brandon, Florida. They will not return until after the Christmas holidays. YELLS, SONGS, PEP, YARNS, ALL IN THE PEPPER-BOX Fourth Year Students Flood Mixer With Pep and Ginger-All for Miaqoe Rally! Rally! Rally! O! ok, yoi you! you! H. A. Rice on a chair singing an original song. Professor Van der Vries beaming with that "well win" smile. Uncle Jimmy radiating pep and glowing with enthusiasm. Swede Wilson twangling a banjo with fingers that produced irresistible rattle music. Profs, seniors and grads shaking hands, singing songs, twisting the Tiger's tail, and prophesying success for old K. U. The occasion for it all was the senior pre-Missouri game mixer for the faculty and the old grads at the hall. All of them, the pep was there, also the apples. Coach Wheaton started the enthusiasm when he talked on the team and its chance to win the big game Saturday. He told of the new era that is dawning at K. U. An era in which every student in the University is going to be behind the team because of the apopulous enthusiasm will overcome all difficulties and sweep an irresistible team to inevitable victory. Fierce (?) Boxing Bout Professor Van der Vries opened with one of his famous stories and kept the excitement going so that when Pat Crowell, her brother of the ever-loving Jill, told the boys how they used to do it, he was received with cheers. He advised a more comprehensive plan for obtaining football material and asked the seniors to get every man who looked good out on the field. Then Harlan and Blackman played Jack Johnson and Jim Jeffries while the two played tennis. Next Prof. H. A. Rice sang his original song to the tune of "He Rambled" and everybody joined in on the chorus. "Professor Van der Vries started his talk by telling a tale," said Prof. Goldwin Goldsmith, "but I want to start by asking that every man he help put one more kink in that yellow tiger's tale." Bunny Wilson, who piloted the Jayhawks last year, explained the reason for the recent shifting about of the men on the team and supplemented Crowell's plan for better support of football by the student body. Bunny Chirps Up Uncle Jimmy Green, her of a hundred football rallies, closed the mixer with a plea for more spontaneous enthusiasm during the football season. "What K. U. needs," he said, and he spends his spontaneous spirit which ends in riot. "The cent pep which makes a team wild for victory. Some students let their enthusiasm carry them away. It was done recently and what did the leaders get—thirty days. Nevertheless K. U. needs spontaneous rallies. These cut-and-dried affairs lack the energy to be anybody anywhere. I hope and believe that Tiger is going back to his hair with another knot in his tail." WOMEN WILL FORM BIG K. U. ON FIELD TOMORROW "K. U. formed by marching women, on the field, at the Missouri game, will be in my opinion, an excellent, way of showing Kansas 'i' call of Chancellor Strong this morning, 'i' am most heartily in favor of the idea." Miss Evelyn Strong and Miss Mable Elmore, are to head the women that will form the letters on the field between the halves of the game tomorrow. Twenty women have been chosen to form the points of the letters, and to guide the marching. All that the women who have practiced will have to do will be to follow the leaders. The women are to march in double one-breed bearing red hunting, the other blue. The leaders will carry the biggest banner to be found in Lawrence. At the command of Cheerleader Berwick, at the end of the first half, every Kansas woman is to leave her seat, and come down on the field. "Do not think that because you have a date, you are excused," says Jo Berwick. "The men will expect you the pop, and the woman who referees the man" will not be thought any more of, if she goes down on the field." Doctor Goetz has asked that all the women who are going to the game to wrap up good and warm and come down to McCook this afternoon and go through the forming of the K. U. several times, under her direction. The big game will start at 2:30 o'clock. Ushers will report at 12:30 o'clock, as the crowd is expected TIGER CROUCHES FOR LEAP INTO KANSAS Ancient Football Foes Meet on McCook Gridiron Saturday for Game Do you want Elizabeth Morrow, the spirited yell leader of the women's rally, to assist at the game tomorrow? If you do, day so at the rally tonight. There is a considerable demand for Miss Morrow and she will help lead the cheering if the call is insistent. Let her know tonight. His appetite wetted for Jayhawker meat, his favorite dish, the old tiger leaves his lair in the Missouri jungle tomorrow to seek his prey in the camp of the Jayhawker, his ancient foe. The struggle for football supremacy, to be enacted on McCook Field Saturday afternoon, marks the twenty-fourth successive conflict in their warriors and Kansas foeen have engaged. It will be a battle royal. Weather Forecast Favorable **Weather Forecast Favorable** From his steeple the weather man predicts warm weather for the fray. shaft of sunshine this morning, morning storm brought a promise of blue skies and exhilarating ozone for the big game. Frothing football enthusiasm is on tap everywhere. Down-town, stream the veining colors of both unlivedly draped around the street lights, flushing a greeting to in coming hosts of old grads back for the conflict. Hours on the campus are crammed with tense excitement, with cheers and rosy dreams of victory. Even the K. U. women have caught the fervor of the big event. This afternoon they meet on McCook to rehearse for the giant K U which will allow them with gay bunting between halves of the court. Morrow, cheerleader, will be present with her big megaphone to lead the feminine cohorts, in opposition to Jo Berwick. Big Crowd Expected Over on the field itself every precaution has been made for the hordes that will sweep through the big gates when the clock strikes one. The running track is choked with tier after tier of chairs and seats, awaiting the appearance of spectators. Thirteen thousand people will be on hand when the Tiger swoops down on the Kansas fold. the referee's whistle will blow promptly at 2:30 o'clock. A moment later a pigskin, hot from the toe of a moleskin warrior, will go skimming through the keen blue and inward. Arms of another rushing player. And the game will be it will be Fight! Fight! Fight! If the Tiger is slain a happy Jayhawk will scream a victorious defiance to tomorrow night, while the fires blaze and the Thundering Thousand roars its delight. Football Flashes Fresh From Field of Battle "It was the best practice we ever had," was Coach Wheaton's comment on the Varsity signal practice yesterday afternoon. For two hours, the first and second teams ran up and down the field, practicing line bucks, end runs, punting and place kicking. Wheaton drove his men fast last night and they responded as they had never done before. Kansas will not unload many fakes or freak plays against the Tigers tomorrow. There will be no spectacular plays but Brewer's men will find a powerful offence in the Jayhawker backfield and a more powerful defended line in the change in line up worked well as night. Rober ran at fullback and held the ball. Grayat halves. The new ends, Detwiler and Heath, seemed familiar with their duties and grabbed several hard passes. Adrian Lindsey, the punter for the Jayhawk eleven, joined the first squad yesterday afternoon and executed several punts behind the line. It was Lindsey's first appearance since he was injured in the Drake game. His knee has almost recovered and it is probable he will be called upon to boot against the Tigers tomorrow. The Tiger team left Columbia this morning on a special for Lawrence. The band and glee club is in Kansas City today serenading the high schools there. The first special train pulled out at noon today and the second special will depart tonight. A holiday was declared at noon today.