THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Vol. XXIII Plans Announced for High School Editors' Meeting Round Table Discussions Banquet and Luncheon Will Constitute Program The complete program and schedule of meetings for the state high school editors' conference to be held here Nov. 13 and 14 was announced this morning. Beginning with the registration Friday morning and ending with the K. U.-Grimmell football games on Tuesday, no two days of meetings, round tables, banquets and luncheons are offered to the young guests. The complete program follows; FOUR PAGES The complete program follows: Friday morning: Registration of students for the University Daily Kansan; 10,000; university convention. 11:50; Round table for advertising and circulation managers, Mr. Dill. Ro in 10,000; News for high school students, Ms. Benson, room 102; Room 104; direction of a supervisors, on a day of a high school news, Ms. Fritil, Mr. library. Friday afternoon; 2:00, Women in journalism, Miss Mahin, room 107; Round table for faculty supervisors on the business side of the paper, Mr. Dill, journalism library, room 108; Visitors will be served in the "Sky Parlor," Journalism building, by women in the dement. 4:00, The high school annual; Business session of the KKU board of trustees, association, room 102; Round table for faculty supervisors on the typographical appearance of the high school paper, Mr. Keister, journalism library, room 103; Round table through Dyce museum and other places of interest. Tea Given for Visitors Friday evening: 6:30, Annual Press Club dinner, University commons.会议;专营; the library of the introduction of courses of journalism into the University of Kansas; Announcement of content for high school newspaper awards, made by the Department of Journalism. In conclusion, program of meals, talks and stunts. Round Table Discussions Saturday morning: 9:00, The business success of a paper, Mr. Dill, room 107, Style and news display, Mr. Benson, room 152, Room 102, Round table for those interested in reporting, criticism of papers, question box on practical problems, Miss Young, room 102, Round table for those interested in editorial writing, criticism of papers, question box on practical problems, Mr. Flint, room 107, Round table for business managers and advertising managers, question box on practical problems, Mr. Dill, news room; Room 108, on the editorial paper, Miss Mahin, journalism library: 11:00, Experience meeting for high school editors, (reports on achievements in the past and undertakings for the future), room 102; Experiences meeting for business managers of high school papers, room 167; Experiences for teachers on news, on reports and writing for the high school paper, Mr. Benson, journalistic library. Saturday afternoon: 2:00, High school editors will be guests of the Men's Student Council and the W. S. G. A. at the gridraphics event of the K. U. Grimfield football game in Iowa, Robinson gymnasium. --- Seabird and Blade to Initiate Seabard and Blade 16 inimical The Seabard and Blade imitator will have week one because of inclement weather, will be held on Armistice Day, Nov. 11, at a camp not far from Reno, according to the military science department of military sciences. The Scabbard and Bind, a national honorary military fraternity, selects cadet officers each year from the military units of the University. These officer pledges will pitch the camp and prepare it for the night. Lieut. H.F. Myers will be initiated as an honorary member of the organization. On account of the all-university conventation at 10 o'clock Wednesday morning have been arranged as follows: First hour, 8:30 to 9:05 Second hour, 9:15 to 9:50 Third hour, 10:00 to 10:45 Fourth hour, 11:00 to 11:35 Fourth hour, 11:45 to 12:20 Lindley to Attend Dinner for British Ambassador E. H. Lindley. * * * * * * * * * * * Chancellor E. H, Lindley will go to Kansas City Thursday to attend a dinner which will be given in honor of the victims of the ambassador to the United States. The dinner, which will be given by the Knife and Fork Club and the Society of St. Andrew, will be held at the Mueblesbach hotel, and is an annual affair celebrated on the anniversary of Armistice day. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1925 Chancellor Lindley has been asked to deliver an address. Special Permission and Return by Bus or Train Required After 11 P. M. House Presidents Bar Dates in Automobiles to K.C.Later Than 11 Women coming back from Kansas City later than 11 p., m. must have the special permission of the house mother, and must come back either on the bus or train. Chaperone is required if they are in automobiles Women in organized houses cannot go to Kansas City in automobiles to show, with dates unless they are back; by 11 p. m., or else properly chaperoned, according to a ruling from the National Labor Commission at their meeting Monday afternoon. The house presidents council and the group leaders will have their pictures taken at 11 a. m. Saturday, Nov. 14 at Squaresia stadium, it was doomed. Enforcement of house rules was discussed. House mothers must be notified in advance when women are called into the house and end the advisability of enforcing the quiet hours and the early bedtime rules was emphasized. Houses must be quiet from 8 to 10 p. m., and after 11 p. m. every evening excepting The suggestion that any woman leaving the library before 9:30 p. m. with a date be regarded as having violated the date rule, was discussed. The suggestion that an adult library date was for an escort home and should not be infringed upon. The men's Glee club will hold a mixer at Wiedemann's*tea room Wednesday night following rehearsal at the club. The club will hold its rehearsal beginning at 7:30 as usual, and will have a dinner with the club director of the club. The club will hold its rehearsal beginning at 7:30 as usual, and will have a dinner with the club director of the club. Men's Organization Will Meet at Wiedemann's Glee Club to Hold Mixe The club usually practices in the auditorium of Marvin hall. Professor Larmoremere said, and Wednesday night's down-town rehearsal and get-to-knowing game has the monotony of hard work which has been the rule so far this fall. "All hard work and no play makes a glue club dull," the director said this morning. "so we have are many people who play following Wednesday's rehearsal." The K. U. glee club is preparing for the joint concert with the University of Missouri glee club the evening preceding the K. U.-M. U. football game. The Missouri glee club and the Kansas club will each sing several numbers, and then the combined clubs will sing at least two numbers. Both clubs will sing at least three numbers, both numbers which will be sung by the entire group of ninety or more men. The rule effecting the rushing of high school girls was amended so that it reads, "No junior or senior in Law." The rule also requires a sorority house under any circumstances," at a special meeting of the Women's pan-Hellenic yearleaders after Two Rushing Rules Made by Women's Pan-Hellenic A rule concerning mid-seminar rushing was passed, and now stands, "Girls entering school at mid-seminar shall not be bid or spiked till 6:00 o'clock of the third day after she has matriculated." The possibility of giving a pan-Helenlenic dance was discussed but it was decided to wait until after Christmas. No plans were made. Alpha Delta Pi and Alpha Ze Delta were appointed to plan and give a health program for the next meeting of pan-Hellenic. No.56 Business Students Hold Convocation; H.W. Arant Speaks Types of Securities Are Subject of Address by Dean of K. U. Law School "Securities in Business," was the subject of Dean H. W, Arant, dean of the School of Law in his address before the students of the School of Business at the second School of Business Convection this morning. Dean Arant, in his address, covered briefly five of the more common types of business securities, namely; Lien, Shield, Guarantee and finally guardy. Of the list mentioned, Dean Arant asserted that the mortgage was probably the most common type of security and went on to explain how the conjugation of one's property from one person to another. Next in order was the lien, which he stated existed chiefly in favor of persons in public ownership, valid only for a limited length of time. Of the remaining types of securities, the conditional sale, the nledge and the guaranty; Dean Arant asserted that the most common is the conditional security, more commonly referred to as the "instalment plan" or the guarantee of the goodness the title until the final installment is paid. In concluding his address Dean Arant extended an invitation to the students of the School of Engineering, event they wished to delve further into the subject, were welcome to come over into his department where their wish was fulfilled. In addition to Dean Arant's address, plans were announced for the School of Business party to be given to students from the University of which will be announced later. (Salomon Service) Experiments With Water Fleas Prove Plan Possible Sea Fish May Be Farmed Kington, Ont., Nov. 10.-Scientific farming of the ocean may result from the experiments of Prof. A. B. Kluck of Queen's university. Experiments are being made in true fish culture, corresponding to the fertilization, seeding and weeding of dry land crops. The investigation has already determined the part, which the floating life of fresh waters and the creatures which teem in the sea, play in the diet of larger fish. The next step is to decide how much each microscopic plant and animal is indulged in, light and dark, acidity and salinity; and to what extent the aquatic creatures are limited by one another. These factors have been so accurately determined in the case of microscopic sea plants, and of the copepods or water fleas that eat the plants and are themselves the prey of young fish, that Professor Klugh is now able to successive crops of both sea weed and copepods. Phi Sigma, national biological research society, will hold initiation services for new members on Thursday at 5:38 p.m. in room 384, snow hall. Attendance must be by membership; David S. Pankratz, U. D. Milhare and Jack Figursigy of the department of anatomy; A. H. Gaston, Carl E. Long, Paul E. Duve, Frances D. Murray, David Moyer and Harvey Moyer of the department of bacteriology. Phi Sigma Will Initiate New Members Thursday The Canadian biological board believes that the experiment will help to provide a rational basis on which to establish conservation. Pauline Hildinger of the department of botany; R. E. Lohhern of the department of the chemistry; Charles Witkowski of the department of O. Day and Homer Abercrombie of the department of entomology; Wilbur F. Potter and Mark Ballard of the department of physiology; Wilbur F. Potter and Martha Otala Otd of the department of zoology; P. E. Schellenberg and P. H. Ewert of the department of psychology; Dr Raymond H. Wheeler and Prof. Wilbur F. Potter of the department of psychology Automobiles killed 20,000 people in this country last year and injured 600,000. Wire Flashes United Press Washington, Nov. 10—Eliminating and slashing taxes, the House ways, and neons committee today write into the tax bill $100,000,000 reductions on automobiles, tobacco, and alcohol, to wither other varied industrial levies. Washington, Nov. 10.—The combined resources of 18,658 national banks in the United States, Alaska, and Hawaii aggregated $25,659,327,000 on Sept. 29, an increase of $2,146,453 on the United States Treasury announced today. Washington, Nov. 10.—The cessation of all business activities for a few minutes at 11 a.m. tomorrow was advised by President Coolidge today as an appropriate observance for Armistice Day. Entertainments Planned for Group by Chamber of Board of Regents to Visit University of Kansas Next Week Commerce "It is a rare opportunity and a great privilege for the business men, the faculty members and the community at large to honor the Board of Regents when they visit Lawrence, and to recognize the business man who is interested in the city of Lawrence and the University for they are connected together said Claude Scott, secretary of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, in a letter to Lawrence and Regents to Lawrence Thursday, Friday and Saturday of next week. This will be the first official visit of the Board of Regents to the University. They are making a visit to the five different schools of the state which are under their jurisdiction, and representing body of the state schools that was created by an act of the state legislature last January. Kansas University will be the last school for the board to visit and they will arrive here from Pittburg after visiting the K, S, T, C in that city. Besides visiting the University they will also visit the medical school in Roehlstown. According to Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the Alumni Association, this dinner will have nothing to do with upcoming arrangements being made. Lou L. LaRaut, assistant professor of education, was elected chairman of the club. The purpose of the club is to have individual members make studies of specific works of current literature and educational problems. He also teaches a course at meetings which will probably be held about twices a month. A research club was organized by about 35 members of the Graduate School at a meeting held in Fraser 'bull yesterday afternoon. Along with other entertainments planned by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce plans have been made to honor the Regents with a dinner on Thursday, Nov. 19, at 6:30. The University will join in making this dinner a success. The dinner will be held in the Masson Temple for the kickoff of the Bureau Office and at the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce. Graduates Hold Meeting to Start Research Club Dr. Stouffer Back From Educational Meetings in East Red" Grange the Importan Man of the Country in Newspapers, Says Stouffer "Red Grouse was the most important man in the country, at least as far as the New York newspapers were concerned, a week ago Saturday," Dean E. B. Stouffer said following his return from New Haven and New York, where he met the founder of the American University, and Dennis of Graduate Schools, and the American Mathematical Society. "The sessions of the Association of American Universities and Doans of Graduate Schools were held at Yale, and an event of unrational interest of the University of Iowa read. It was entitled, 'Placement Examinations,' and the speaker advocated department examinations to be given before a student's admission to the department. The speaker felt that such a system would determine a student's fitness to take work in the department, and would aid the faculty in eliminating students who were unable to work which they wished to take up. Yale Dean Snakes "This is a rather unusual thing which Dean Snashers is advocating, and as far as I know the experiment has been tried in no other school besides the University of Iowa, Dean Cronk of Yale read a paper on "The Two Functions of a Graduate School," and Veron Kellogg, secretary of the National Research Council, gave presentations for Hodgers of the Degree's Degrees. President Ayledeo of Swainton, President Farrard of Cornell, and Mr. Kepper, president of the Carnegie Corporation, discussion on the origin of foundations. Former K, U, M in East At the intersection of the Mathematical Institute in New York, I saw Prof. W, S. Hunter, now of the physiology department at Clark University, and Prof. S. Lofcheft of the mortality professors here at the University. They seemed much pleased with their new work, but each one of them told me that he had never been bappy. He was here at the University of Kansas. Jay Janes to Costume on "Old Timers' Night" "Others whom I saw while I was back East were: Frank Strong, r. who is a student at Yale; Robert Coghill, A. B. 21', M. S. 22', who is now a research fellow at Yale and son of our own Professor Coghill; Donald Hettler, A. M. 23', who is taking graduate work at Yale; and Paul Smith, M. S. 22'. On my way to Lawrence I stopped off in Chicago, where I spent two days studying in the John Crean Scientific Library." The Jay James will be in costume "OR Timers Night," it was decided at the regular meeting of the organization Monday afternoon at 4:30. Plans were also discussed for affiliating with other women's ppcl clubs, and for the forming of a national organization. Maud Moss was appointed chairman of a committee to revise the constitution of the Jay James. Recently 12,478,500 European corn bowers were found in one 30 acre field in Canada. Candidates for Debate Squad to Have Tryouts NO KANSAN—ARMISTICE DAY November 11, which is observed as Armistice day, comes to tomorrow. Since there will be no afternoon classes on the Hill due to the holiday, the University Daily Kansan will not be published. Debate truyns will be held in the Little Theater in green hale at 7:30 this evening to choose a squad to work on the question concerning the World Court. The judges will be Prof. H, B. Chubb of the political science department and E. C. Buchler, director of forensic. Each speaker will be allowed five minutes for constructive argument. The group of speakers would be chosen to work on the subject and from this group the team will be chosen that will meet Missouri University in the first debate Deceme- K. U. Memorial Service for World War Dead to Be Held in Fraser A service in memory of the Uni- versity of Kansas students and graduates who lost their lives during the war will be held in Fraser chapel at 3 o'clock, Wednesday evening Nov. 11. Christian Associations Assisted by Student Organizations Have Charge This Armistice day service, held under the auspices of the K. U. Christian associations and the student or organizations of the Lawrence churches is a part of the emphasis on Christian education in the program of these societies. A mixed quartet composed of Guila Gress, Marguerite Fahre, Aubrey Popejoy, and Ray Wright will sing two numbers, Cancellor E. H. Lindley will lend the worship. The address of the evening on the subject "Keeping Faith" will be given by Dr. Lindsay Mason, Director of World War, and now of the department of speech and drama are at the University. Wesley Roberts, president of the University Christian Endorsews society of the Christian church and, "Every student who is apprehensive of the death of his beloved sister war dead ought to be glad to have the opportunity to do them honor." Printed programs for the services will include the names of the K. U students who died in the recent war League Closes Convention (United Press) Five Year Program Planned Against Saloons Chicago, Nov. 19—The Aulafan-Soon League today pledged itself to a five year program to effectively enforce the Volunteer Law, closing its office, and holding an convention actually closed last night with the adoption of a resolution, chiefly of which was a request to Secretary of Treasury Mollon that he show the same energy in enforcing the new laws in collecting income and other taxes. The resolution, brought before the convention from the executive committee, was granted with thunderous acclaim that was received without hesitation. Lee Derry Pleads Guilty; Receives 10-Year Term Loe Deary, former University of Arkansas athlete and class leader, pleaded guilty today to charges of grand larceny and burglary, and was sentenced to a concurrent term in the county jail for 18 years, by Judge Judith Moums. Derry was arrested in September after having stolen articles of clothing and valuables from the Sigma Pi Epition fraternity houses at Lawrence and Manhattan, where he had been a guest. Instructor Takes New Position Dr. Robert Isaenberg has accepted a position as head of the department of pharmacology at Rosedale and will leave at the beginning of the second semester to take up his new work. Doctor Isaenberg has been on the Hill since the first of the year as an instructor of the pharmacology classes formerly taught by Dean Sayre. Grand Secretary of Phi Chi Hero Dr. T. R. B. Pearson of Nichollsville, Ohio, who was a local fraternity, has left Lawrence after being the guest of the local chapter of the fraternity. A banquet was held on May 10 at the house in honor of Doctor Pearson. Governor Paulen Will Give Address Before Students American Legion to Assist University Authorities in Putting on Program Governor Ben S. Paulen will give the Armistice Day address to the students of the University and visitors at Convocation 10 o'clock tomorrow morning. Final plans have been completed for the entire program, on which Governor Paulen will be the principal speaker. The local post of the American Legion will co-operate with the University authorities in putting on the prowess of the officers and signizing of the Armies of the recent World War. Representatives of the Legion will occupy the platform along with the Governor and his party to celebrate the occasion and other University officials. Legion to Give Programs Besides this co-operation with the University, the local American Lodge will need speakers to all of the public schools of Lawrence and will put on a memorial program. Guitea at the Lodge will participate in these programs, which by all indications will be attended by large numbers of people. A special section of the auditorium will be dedicated to the Lodge and their families, along with a section for University officials and faculty and their families. About two hundred chairs will be reserved at the Lodge for the gymnasium for these two sections. A musical program has been arranged by Dunn Sworthout of the School of Fine Arts. On this program will be Eugene F. Christy, Professor in the School of Fine Arts, who will present his work with ArtistsinDay. The entire University band of 100 pieces will play for the convocation. They have been practising a number of Nature lessons which they will play for the concert. The music of the convocation will be broadcast by KFKU. The entire University will celebrate Armistice Day in the closing of all classes in the afternoon. The Watson Library will close from 12:30 to 5:30; and the University Daily Kanman will not publish a paper tomorrow. Series of International Nights to Promote Friendship Filipino Night to Be Held The Compassipolitan Club will hold Filipino night at the house, 1653 Indiana street, Nov. 14, at 7:30 p. m. This is the second of a series of international nights being conducted by the organization. Through the series of programs the members of the club are educating to come into close contact with their peers and to learn more about the ship, the movement for world peace. The Philippine Islands will be the topic of discussion at the meeting. Henderson Martip, a resident of Lawrence and vice-governor general of the Philippines during the first part of President Wilson's administration, will be the main speaker of the articles, dating from the revolutionary period to the present time will be exhibited. Chi Omegas Entertain for Chapter Inspector The Chi Omega society entertained for Miss Elizabeth Jackson of Loxington, Ky., chapter inspector for the West, at a tea from 5 to 8 Monday at Miss Jackson, Mrs. Mary V. St, Chair, and Frances Patterson, Chi Omega president, were in the receiving line. Mrs. George O. Foster and Mrs. F. W. Gaunt served. Miss Jackson will leave today to be Miss Jackson will leave today to be the guest of the Manhattan chapter. ... All organizations or individuals room for either the high school editors conference this week end, or for homecoming next week, are urged to call Mrs. Bryant, at Deaf Husband's office. Over one month, we need models for these two events. Dean Agnes Husband 1