UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXX Cunningham Wins Big Eastern Race, Defeating Venzke Jayhawker Runs Good Mild to Take Wanamaker Event by 10-Yard Margin CRITICS LAUD KANSAN Gleenn Cunningham, star KanaMil, miler, celebrated his first eastern inission last Saturday by winning the Glenview A. game. Raven A. A. games from Gene Venkes, world indoor mile champion, Cunningham's time for his first race in Madison Square Garden, was 4:13, a full hour longer, Venkes, who was the race last year. Before a record crowd of 17,000 spectators, the Kansan ran a smooth race, unscoring a final drive, perfectly timed, that found the rest of the field unable to hold the pace. Vernike finished second, followed by Coan of Pennsylvania and Lermond of the N. Y. A. C. Eric Nay, i.e. Swedish star, took the lead early in the race setting the pace for the first three games. Lermock took the lead when Ny tired, only to lose it to Venzek, who was closely followed by Cunningham. The defending champion in the race held his position until the last lap, when Cunningham started the winning spurt that gave him a 10-yard margin at the finish. Ny Takes Early Lead To Return to East Ny, making his American debut and running his first mile race as well, collapsed on a turn in the sixth lap and was unable to finish. Cunningham, who returned to Lawrence early this week to enroll for the second semester, will again invade eastern track circles later in the month. He plans to enter the Easter mile in the New York A. C. meet on Feb. 16, and the National A.A.U. 1500 meter run at New York on Feb. 25. Victory in the Waramaker mile established the Jawahiri flash as a definite threat in the indoor mile record, and eastern sport followers are still confident that he is Vernor who last year set a world record of 4.121 in the mile mile, is expected to reach the peak of his form during the latter part of the month, as Jeunesse has said. The next meeting of the two will bring forth a record-breaking performances. Daniel Ferris, secretary-treasurer of the Amateur Athletic Union, added his praise to that of the Eastern crites. He said the performance when the Kansas star had not been in a track suit for ten days previous to the meet. He predicted that the Jayhawks would break the records in a few months and the end of the indoor track season. Named for Wanamaker Cup Cunningham is being considered for the Warmanaker cup which is given to a top-tier international performance at the Wanamaker meet. His only competition for this cup is Toppe, who upset the dash predictions by defending a great array of dash stars which included Frank Wysey, the California state star, who called the "world's fastest human." INFORMATIVE WAR PICTURE TO BE AT PATEE THEATER An authentic war picture, "The Big Drive," will be shown at the Pace Theater Feb. 15-18. This picture is not being shown for entertainment; it but presents the first official United States pictures of the World War. The scenes were taken from the secret archives of eight warring nations. Major Koenig of the military science department is co-operating with the management of the military equipment. Several weeks ago some members of the journalism department as well as faculty members attended a preview Harlan Page to Be a Sooner Normal, Feb. 8. — (Special) - Harla Page Jr, son of Past,页 Former butter coach and now assistant at the University of Chicago, has arrived at the University of Oklahoma to take an geology course and participate in athletics. Upon his arrival page called Coach Gustavo, a baseball coach, who gave him a suit and immediately sent him in against the Scorer var y in scrimmage. Student Recital Postponed Student Recital Program The weekly student recital will not be presented this week. The recitals will be resumed Feb. 16. Fire Causes Huge Damage LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8. 1933 Leavenworth Conflagration Causes Loss of Nearly $200,000 Leewardown, Feb. 8 — (UP) Fire broke out here today in the basement of a clerar store and spread rapidly to adjoining buildings causing damage. All city fire fighting equipment was marshalled. Firemen were handled by a 20 below zero weather. Fire Chief Otto Gelser was injured when he fell into the place of plate glass. John Raney, a fireman, collapsed from exposure. The buildings destroyed included the Endres and Kirkmeer cigar store, the E兰 slawband shoppe, and the Hub Clothing company. Afterbuilding Jobin would probably could desperately to keep the flames from other near-by structures. Missouri Students Lose in Fire Columbia, M., Feb. 8—(UP) Six university of Missouri students, all from Kansas City, were left homeless by an early morning fire that damaged a Columbia boarding house. Some loss of personal property was caused by the child Kid Kidd, Roy Toster, Frank Guearth, William E. Smith and Jack Parsell. Insurance partly covered the loss. CONDENSED WIRE NEWS Landon Signs Tag Bill Landon Signs Tag Bill Topka, Feb. 8—(UP)—Governor Alf Landon today signed the new auto- mobile license tag bill which cut the cost of licenses to approximately one- half that of last year. One Killed in Wreck Green Bay, Wis., Fed. S., (UP)—One person was killed today and six were injured when a passenger train was wrecked 15 miles north of here. Kansas City Robbers Escape De Valera J. re-elected Duhlin, F. b. 8—(UP) - Emenon de Valera, victorious in the recent general election, was re-elected president of the Irish Free State by the Dail Eireann at its first meeting here today. Phi Sigma to Have Speaker Bank of America Citi Bank, Inc. Feb. 8 — (UPP) Four banks robbed the Brotherhood State bank here today of between $1,900 and $2,000. The men escaped in an automobile to H. E. Almanzari, cashier, Duran and, savings teller, fire at them. Professor Lawson Will Talk on "Mush of Insects" Tomorrow NUMBER 97 Professor Paul D. Lawson of the entomology department will be the guest speaker at the Phi Sigma, recovery night, and the Entomology Night, according to James Berman, Ge. president of the organization. Professor Lawson will speak on "The Music of Insects" and discuss the variety of insects with insect fossils for producing sound. While he will touch upon all types of stirring organs, Professor Lawson said, he intended to discuss the sound producing organs of the kaydid especially. According to Breman, Professor Lawson gave this talk as an introduction to these organs in and is giving it again by popular request. The annual award for research work will be brought up during the business meeting which will precede the talk, Broman said. This award is given each year to the student of biology who makes the best piece of research during the past year. It is highly appreciated and the award will be made sometime in April of this year. The meeting will be in room 206 of Snow hall at 7 o'clock. Recovering Fresh Operated James Harris Herriott, student in the School of Engineering, is recovering from a knee operation performed at Lighthouse. Dr. Arthur Anderson, the attending physician, reported Herriott to be convalescing satisfactorily. Herriott is a patient in the Walkins Memorial hospital. Recovering From Operation All students who for financial reasons find themselves unable to continue their University work this semester are urged to consult Professor Henry Werner, men's admission student, room 1, Administration; Miss Agnes Husband, dean of women, 229 Administration; or Elfred Wiellman, alumni secretary, Administration at the earliest moment. E. H. LINDLEY, Chancellor. Spring Semester Ushers in Tasks of Many Kinds Frat Tax, Ten Cent Meals Activity Plan Among Local Unsettled Problems GOOD SPORT OUTLOOK When the 8:23 whistle blows tomorrow morning the curtains will rise on the spring semester of the school year 1023-23, bringing with it many unsettled problems. Enrollment will be concluded this afternoon except for the last enrolments and rn-enrolments scheduled for Saturday. There were no figures available as yet on the size of the second semester enrollment. One of the major problems facing the fraternities is the fraternity tax which was upheld by the State Supreme Court late last month. Action over the state is expected shortly, but nothing definite as to the line of action the fraternities will take has been disclosed as yet. New Ballot on Activity Plan Everyone at enrollment time was confronted with a student council ballot calling for another vote on the student activity ticket. This is another unsettled problem from last semester when a student council ballot returned a majority vote in favor of the activity plan but only two-thirds of the student committee supported it. This second ballot divided the features other than the Jayhawk and Kansan into one group and required a vote on all three. The result of this ballot will not be ready until the end of the week. Another new problem is concerned with the enrollment in that it provides a method for worthy students to remain in school by taking advantage of the ten-cent meal plan. Next Monday, we will have some assistance to remain in school and who are in an upper scholastic group, will start eating its meals at the Union Building under a co-operative plan which will reduce the cost of each meal to ten cents so that the daily meals of ten students will cost only thirty cents. Sport Clubs There On the sport horizon there is a brighter outlook, with Kansas' basketball entry in the Big Six setting the pace. The Jayhawks meet Missouri on Saturday and a victory in this battle will probably mean that the Jay- Hawks pick up its title if it defeats Oklahoma in the game of the season here, March 3. Short Outlook Good In dramatics, "Uncle Toms Cabin" will be presented again tonight and tomorrow night. The final lecture course will be next Tuesday night. Thus the opera opens with problems and pleasures much the same as other repertors. Judge C. A. Burney, l97, Dies of Heart Diseas Glenn Cunningham, the Kansas entry in the mile event of the Olympics, entered the Wanamaker meet in New York last Saturday and won the mile event defeating much stars as well. He wrote the Eastern sport writers "eat" their words about "substituting Venze for Cunningham in the Olympics," the cry rushed by sport writers last summer just before the Olympic games started. The eastern sports writer wrote college letters to a soccer team that was the latest test and predict that he will break the indoor mile record before the end of the season. Played on Football Team Which Defeated Nebraska in 1895 Jefferson City, Mo., Feb. 8—(UP)—Clarence A. Burney, member of the Missouri supreme court, and distinguished Kansas City judge, died unexpectedly here today. He was strenched with heart disease and died while a physician was preparing medicine for him. Judge Burney attended the rural schools of Franklin county, Kansas; attended Lawrence University and went to Lawrence in 1893 with $5 in his pocket, a man's note for $100, 40 acres of wheat and a laundry agency from the Ottawa laundry, to obtain his law education at the University of Kansas. Football appealed to him, and became his best friend. Three Letterman in Football Football appealed to him, and became his chief sport. In 1853 he made the varsity team, and played half back for the football team. He played over the Nebraska eleven, 8 to 4. Judge Burney received his law degree from the University of Kansas in 1857. He received letters in football in 1894, 1895 and 1895. Forty Students to Use Meal Plan Starting Monday Applications May Still Be Made to Ellsworth, Werner and Dean Husband With accommodations needing reading, more than 40 students will begin Monday at 8 a.m. to take advantage of the ten-cent meals to be provided on the $1.80 a week tickets, Henry Werner, men's student adviser, has hopes of 60 students, although arrangements will accommodate 75. Entire Cast Turns in Good Performance in Revival of 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' by Kansas Dramatic Club Meals will be served at the Memorial Union in a separate room from the cafeteria, at 8 a.m. 12:30 and 5:30 p.m. Students must give two weeks notice before quitting. A balanced diet will be offered and no second will be given. No addition to the staff of the cafeteria will be required. CUT RATES AT NEBRASKA Mr. Werner said today that applications may still be made at his office or to Fred Elworth or Dean Ham. Requirement calls for a "C awe-ward." Linein, Neb, Feb. 8—(Special)—University of Nebraska students who eat at the college of agriculture cateraies will now be able to board for $3 a week. The plan was approved Sat. by the Regents, and is not effective. Co-operative Plan Adopted in Ag College Cafeteria A portion of the dining room is to be screened off where the students on the $2 rate will take their meals family style. Students who desire, will be given duties in connection with the meal (except cooking) and serving the meals. CAN ACCOMMODATE 7 Usually it is customary to go at great length and hand cut little bouquets to various members of the cast- forgetting no one, it's a student enterprise, you know—but, this time, we are not going to do that. We feel in a misery mood and our compliments will be sparingly doled out. The regents announced also that the cateria in the Temple building, on its 20th anniversary, would be closed later this year. The school year, due to lack of patronage. By Jerry Penney But, let us say that little Miss Elizabeth Craftson as EVa gave a demonstration of acting that put to shame many actors. When the production. Mrs Craftson played her part Chancellor to Topeks Chancellor E. H. Lindley is attending a meeting of the Board of Rogents in Topeka today. Chart of Characters Uncle Joe George Harris Mr. Clay Shelby Diness Fleicher Complimen Cute Legro Simon Legro Marks Sam Loker Gamie Quimbs George Shelby Harry Milan Eva Osborne Marcia Cassy Topsy Chloe Fremelire James Cherry* Wallee Bloch *Bella Nuckles *Bella Nuckles *James Pateren Frank Amberburd *William Stone *William Stone *Dari Karen Elliott *Edward Foote *Kenneth Ewing *Eugene Hulse *Ellenbore *Winfred Wilfried *Elizabeth Crainter *Elizabeth Crainter *Janie Poole *Grace Sullivan *Marc Ritter *Marcia Leagan *Lucia Wiegner About half a house greeted the play last night and in view of the above paragraph their names should be printed, too. Despite the fact that hands were frozen and ears frost bitten, the audience was thrilled at the advantage for the dramatization of Harriet Beecher Stowe's abolition novel was well received. We are changing the style of this review and placing the cast of characters ahead of our impressions—which are usually more important —because they appear in the snow and ice last night for K.U. Dramatic club's presentation of "Uracle Town's Cabin" is worthy of some sort of special commendation and as attached Elfs and crossed the ice tomb, laughter for bravery if for nothing else. sweetly and with restraint, without the usual fluffy dramatization of the average Todd show little Evan, but more like a kid's TV show. An altogether charming little setter. Another youngster, Bobby Ellsworth played the play of Harry 'Kevin'ison and although he spoke no lines, his terror at the turn events in the play were taking seemed too real to be genuine pantomimes. Perhaps he had stage And, if he did so can tell him, besides, it was what the part required. James Christie in the title role—that doesn't seem just right, was his name Uncle Tom's Caitlin—or rather his voice possessed the melodic and melodic quality of the darky of the old South. He played it in a different addition to Professor Crafton's recruits. George Sheibly and Eliza, played by Eugene Hibbs and Winfred Stillwell were good examples of the stiff-legged school of acting of the 1860 era. Hibbs over-acted a bit, as did Miss Stillwell, but what's the odds? The role of Phincess Fletcher was taken care of in a consumate manner by James Patterson — the eminent author of life under the big tops—who handled the transitions of the part in great style slipping from the Quaker thee and thy to Ohio farmer vernacular in such a way as to afford great amusement to the audience. Patterson afforded one bit of unconscionable pride to him, who raised his hands in prayer thereby disclosing his wrist watch. Roll Nuckles as St. Clare was effective although we lost sight of his various speeches in marveling at the variety of hirate adornment with which he had made up. His hair was black, his sideburns brown, and his mountaineer beige colored. We kept wondering that freak would have been on poor old St. Clare. In our opinion, this is the best job of acting Nuckles has done for many a moon—perhaps, he belongs in the stiff-legged school, or perhaps it wes the lace that influenced us. Nevertheless, a good hand for the Mrs Nuckley' s lace. William Stone played the part of the horse-whipping villian, William Legon, and Mr. Stone took care of his assignment in a capable way, despite the fact that he came when, after Marks shot him, he staggered a step or two and "shot" (this brought down the house, but one cannot blame Mr. Stone for the script. Marcela Bitter at Topsy and Frank Annelberg at Pumcite Gute did everything in their power to transport the audience back to Robinson gymnasium on the stage unless they are adagio dancers—and they don't care much—and we would have been better disposed to Ritter and Annelberg Leaving the theater last night, we overheard someone remark that University audiences are appreciative of Professor Crafton's efforts to revive an old time play each year. The companion of the maker of "The show Uncle Teen's Cabin" had been buried too long and should be left interred. Be that as it may. See the play and then make your own remarks. School Appropriations Senate Committee Seeks to Know What Salary Reductions Are Possible Topcala, Feb. 8 — (UP) — Executives of state educational institutions were scheduled to appear before the senate ways and means committee tonight for questioning regarding possible reductions of salaries. Four members of the state board of regents appeared before the committee last night and conceded certain salary reductions affecting citation; but gave the committee no estimate as to what reductions would be recommended. The Miller bill fee will be withheld from consideration until all committee members can be present, Miller said. Miller's bill scales down educational institution salaries from 1 to 4 per week. The bill would allow Tangonioke said he could count on a majority of but one for passage if all members are present. Salaries should be revised individually and not on a blank percentage basis, the reagents implied. A committee member said the educational institutions' appropriations bill would not be ready before early next week. Manhattan Fraternities Will Request Rehearing Organizations Refuse to Pay Penalties Demanded by Treasurer Several days ago, representatives of the fraternities appeared at the treasurer's office to pay the bank taxes, in accordance with the surnames court decision, but declined to add penalty payments to the face of the taxes. Manhattan, Kan. Feb. 8—(Special- Fraternities at Kansas State College today decided to suit the supreme cour for a rehearing on its decision require- ing that fraternity be removed from bathroom be asked to be paulled on delinquent tax payments. Later, the fraternity met with the county commissioners, but were unable to reach agreement. Following the latter meeting, attorneys for the fraternities announced the determination to ask the court for a re-hearing FRATERNITIES TO MEET Question of Procedure Under Tax Decision to Be Considered William "BILL" Avery, president of the House Presidents' Council, today called a meeting, to be held tomorrow afternoon at 4:30 in central Administration building to consider steps to be taken herein in view of the supreme court decision requiring that fraternity property be taxed. He had no preliminary announcement to make as to the nature of proposals to be considered, nor did he have any comment to make on the report from Manhattan that the Kansas State frenewals were to be cancelled and re-earring, especially as to the master of penalties incurred on the delinquent inax. second semester at Kansas State, started a week earlier than it does at the University, and the fraternities there have thus been able to take earlier action on the ruling of the supreme court. DINSMORE ALTER RETURNS FROM TUCSON CONFERENCE It is probable a problem of research in cycle-analysis will be undertake jointly by the two astronomers. D Douglas has invented a machine to compute angular velocities and Dr. Walter will probably handle some of the later mathematical work Dr. Dimmore After, professor of antronomy, returned the first of the wee from Tuson, Ariz., where he had beed for a week conferring with A. C. Donglass, director of the Steward observatory. WEATHER Karas -- Generally fair in eastern and southern portions. Useless in northwestern portion tonight and in southern part so cold tonight in eastern portion. ... Architectural Society, Marvin bell 12 p. m. Saturday, Feb. 11 AUTHORIZED PARTIES Friday, Feb. 13 Saturday, Feb. 11 Hobnail Hop, Union, 12 p. m. AGNES HUSBAND Alpha Gamma Delta, house, 12 p. m. GONES HUSBAND Dean of Women Mercury Tumbles to Sub-Zero Mark Through Midwest Cessation of High Winds Brings Some Relief as Low Temperatures Continue SNOW FALLS IN TEXAS Kansas City, Feb. 5—(UP)—Below zero temperatures were general throughout the middle west today while in the South there was some snow that was broken by the humming mercury. In Kansas City thermometers registered 13 below and forecasters said at no time during the day they would a mark of 5 below but ex- Cessation of high winds brought considerable relief from the cold. Ski generally were clear and it was possible to swim the cold wave would枪 tenth. In the Rio Grande valley, temperatures were below the freezing mark during the night. It was believed citrus fruits were saved by smudging. Sub-zero recordings were reported in western Texas and the Pan-handie district. Amarillo reported 8 below, Big Spring 6 below, Abilene 3 below. It was 3 above at Dallas where two inches of snow fell last night. Scores of live stock were frazed. In western Oklahoma crop damage will be heavy. At Omaha the reading this morning was 18 below. To 22 Below at Hays Topken, Feb. 8 — (UP) — The lowest temperatures in many years were recorded in Kansas today. The range of readings was from 12 to 23 degrees below zero. Hays reported 23 below, Goodland 23 below, Dodge City 18, Concordia 16, Topkeen 14, Wichita 12 and Kansas City 13. Students Nipped by Cold Blasts of Oread; Trains Delay Some DOZEN EARS FROZEN These tales of how dad walked five miles through wind and snow to the little red school house will hold sight interest for University students, who have recently run up against the real article themselves. In fact, some undergraduates are said to have feared scorpiony about that cold wave experienced at Valley Forge. Others assert that even Admiral Byrd and Admiral Randall had felt the concealing bliss of the sable-toward wind which hated between the Memorial Union and Dyre Museum yesterday and today. Twelve students received treatment for frozen cars at the Warkton Memorial Hospital in New York, who developed the hospital for information regarding fruit-bitten cars. The undergraduates treated at the hospital were subjected to lee pads to restore circulation. The ears were screamed with salve and boiled in cotton. According to Dr. Cannanion, she noted that used to in cases of burns. Students returning from the west on a morning Santa Fe were delayed more than an hour between Emporia and Barlingine when a frozen signal coverted the train. The Madison walled shad of the train as it proceeded slowly. FINE ARTS FACULTY MEMBERS ATTEND WICHITA MEETINGS Seven members of the School of Fine Arts faculty are attending meetings of the Kansas State Music Teachers association today and turnover in Wichita, Mrs Alice Kahn, Professor Roy Underwood will present a piano recital. The University String quartet, composed of Dean D. M. Sweatwharf, Karl O. Kuehrsten, Connard McGrew, and Walden Getch, will play. Professor Kauerstien will perform music from the museum. Professor C. S. Skilson is also attending this meeting. INGLESODE CLUB PROVIDES FIFTY DOLLAR SCHOLARSHIP Recipient of a check for $50 for a scholarship established by the lnfslide club of Lawrence, was announced today by Chancellor E. H. Lindley. In sending the check, Mrs. Minnie B. Walker, representing the club, said it was hoped the amount would assist in keeping a deserving student in the University. The club previously afforded a $300 loan scholarship for seniors. --- PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1933 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Editor-in-Chief ... PAUL V. MINER Amelia Betts Associate Editor Maurice Rice Managing Editor SUNNY KROSS Mackenzie Editor Arno Kretmanmayer Editorial Assistant Toniphrech Editor Vivian Perkard Shore Editor Charles Colman- mernke Exchanger Editor Exchanger Editor Mable Brown Sunday Editor Dornish Smith Sunday Editor Dornish Smith ADVERTISING MGR. MARCARET INCE Advertising Manager Silvia Krower District Manager Jake Jackson District Manager Jon Robinson Robert Kwon *Joe Morgan* *Margaret Joe* *Robbert Wilkens *Jason Milne* *Sidney Kwan *Jimmy Millenan* *Alfreed Brooks* *Ira McIntyre* *Emery McIntyre* *Arkansas McIntyre* *Dorothy Smith* Telegrammen Business Office - K1, 6 Bank of India - K1, 6 Night Connection Office - K10, 6 News Room - K10, 6 Publication House for time and on Sunday afternoon in the lab in the Department of Kanara, from the Department of Kanara, from the Department of Kanara, Subscriptions house $4.90 per year, payable in advance as second-class notice, September 17, 1938, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1933 TODAY, A NEW EDITOR Today we became an editor. Today we became a tiny cog in the giant machine that grinds out the world's news. Today we became a relatively unimportant laborer in the ranks of those who make up the Fourth Estate. Today we made a start in a grand profession with wonderful opportunities before us. Things are in one hell of a mess as we start out. We haven't figured out quite clearly yet what we have to offer for their betterment, but we're going to add our little bit with the sincere hope it is worthwhile. Lack of understanding, experience, and knowledge will hamper us for a while, but willingness to learn should be a way out of that difficulty. We're honestly and thoroughly ashamed of our ignorance, and determined to make up the deficiency by old-fashioned use of mind and muscle. Laziness and procrastination, however, if not vigilantly guarded against, will thwart our plans. What we need is something or someone to spur us on when we lag. An all-absorbing desire to make good would serve, perhaps, or maybe a wife and children. Anyway, today we became an editor. Perhaps the date will never be significant in the history of Kansas journalism, maybe it's not the red-letter day in my life that we secretly hope it is, but at least it's a start. LET'S HAVE A DEBT SETTLEMENT OF OUR OWN The decision of the state supreme court Jan. 28 that Greek organizations should be taxed did not come as a surprise to fraternities and sororites at the University. The groups for the most part had correctly read the handwriting on the wall and had allowed for the taxes in their budgets. That is, they had tried to find somewhere in already sadly deflated and woe-begone appearing budgets enough to cover this added expense. Most of them have looked in vain. The tax comes at a time when the Greek houses are already having a difficult time trying to make both ends meet. Few if any houses on the Hill are filled. There are fewer students who can stand the added expense that living in an organized house entails. Deflated family incomes have necessarily resulted in curtailting expenses of those attending the University. Yet with the decreased revenue, the overheard expenses of operating the house continue much the same. It costs nearly as much to heat and light the half-empty house. The water bills are not paid, whether or not the house is operating at capacity. And practically every organization on the Hill is paying on its house. In many cases, the national council of the organization has had to take over this expense for the time being, the local chapter intending to take back the burden when it is able to assume it. The Greek organizations, just like the rest of us are having financial troubles. And this added tax burden, coming at this time, is apt to prove the final straw for some of the houses. They will not be able to provide for this expense and some of them doubtless will be forced to close. This probably will not constitute a housing problem, since there are enough rooming houses and eating places in Lawrence to care for those who will be forced to vacate the organized houses. In fact, it is probable that in the event that all the fraternities and sororites on the Hill should be forced to close, the room and board accommodations of the student rooming house section would be sufficient to care for the students who had been living in the Greek-letter houses. But such an eventuality should not be allowed to materialize. The fraternities and sororites should not have to close. For with their passing the University would suffer. No one, we feel, doubts the value of the Greek organizations to the school. During Homecoming, the Relays, High School Editors' conferences, Kansas Editors' Roundtables, State Teachers' meetings, and all other meetings of organizations and groups at the University, the fraternities and sororites prove amiable and efficient hosts. The University authorities always call upon the organized houses for board and room facilities. And the whole-hearted and capable way in which they have always responded has been an excellent force for good-will toward the University on the part of the visitors. The Greek organizations are instrumental in socializing the student, in developing in him the best qualities of citizenship. Being one man in a group of forty men or one woman in a group of forty women is a very good way to learn to live in peace and harmony with your neighbor. There are too many real values to the University in having the Greek organizations as part of the system for them to be allowed to go on the rocks financially. Some way of saving the houses must be worked out. One way of helping the situation would be to arrange some sort of settlement between the county and the fraternities. The payment of three years of back taxes with accrued penalties all in one lump when the organizations already are perilously near the financial shoals would be well-night fatal to the Greek-letter houses. If a settlement could be effected that would reduce this burden, the houses might struggle through somehow. Such an arrangement would be in harmony with recent trends of moratoriums, debt revision, and general easing of relations between debtor and creditor. Such an arrangement would be well worthwhile if it would mean that the organized houses could continue in operation. Whether such a proposal could be consummated and whether it would be possible under the law would have to be decided by legal authorities. During the recent flurry of final examinations, the question of employing the honor system frequently was raised in student circles. Under this plan, a student's honor would be the only inducement to use the dishonesty in an examination. Honor Systems Seem Doomed in Age of Ingenuity— Honor systems are being experimented with throughout the country. Some apparently are successful; others are being abandoned. Here at Indiana University, it will be difficult and it would be difficult to determine if students would be more honour on examination if it were in force here. Unacupulous students, knowing the role of police, sometimes take advantage of this. An elaborate system of cribbing has been devised. Perhaps you were not too busy in the course of a test when you want to have noted some of the following skills to be followed by dullards about you: Our Contemporaries A long narrow strip of paper with matches glued at both ends was rolled up from both ends and held in place by a rubber band. It could be manipulated easily in the plam of the hand and was very popular with the less scrupulous students, judging from its wide range of materials books were filled with visual facts and placed in the blue book to copy from while taking the examination. More meticulous students purchased yellow lead pens and with hard lead inscribed information on the sides of the penshell. This, no doubt, was very baffling to assistants conducting the tests. Adhesive tape containing memo-paper was pasted to the inside of the write pad in order to many who had little faith in their memory. This "crib" also seemed to work well beneath mesh stockings. One of the most original methods of cheating, perhaps, was that used by a young lady who made index cards of her course and placed them inside her chair. What professor would debulate a perennial question frequently to serviously powder her nose during the turmoil of an exam? Another ingenious fellow made a complete circular crib movable around his bigger above the knee. He then made a sill in one of the grooves of his curtains to slide down and thank you. There were many other术者 cheating employed, almost albeit too daring to believe—all of which brings us to the question at hand: if such practices can be employed successfully in a room half-filled with students and teachers, watching professors and their assistant tutors, students under an honor system1 - Indiana Daily Student. On Other Hills A complete printer telegraph apparatus, receiving news dispatches from all over the world, has been installed at the University of Minnesota to supply copy for the journalism class in order to give the machine types out the news of the world, continually from 7.50 a.m. to 3 p.m. daily except Sunday. A lars' contest was held at the University of Minnesota, and a fitting trophy was awarded to the person who put over the biggest lie and got away with it, in the limited time of three minutes. Second-hand American tires are exported to Serbia and Latvia to be made into footwear. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXX Wednesday, Feb. 8, 1832 No. 97 Six hundred fifty-eight dances were held on and off the campus of Ohio State University last year by campus organizations. Bend rehearsals will be held at 7:30 tonight. It is necessary for every member to be present. J. C. McCANLES, Director. There will be a very important meeting in Professor Skilton's room at 4:30, Friday, Feb. 16, in preparation for program Sunday. All members are required to attend. annellee's office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication days and 11:30 a.m. on Saturday for Sunday issues. The Engineering Book Exchange will be open to receive and sell books Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Monday, Feb. 8, 9, 10 and 13, from 8:30 to 4:30. All engineering texts in present use will be sold at students' own price. K. U. SYMPHONY AND LITTLE SYMPHONY: KARL O. KUERSTEINER, Director. ENGINEERING BOOK EXCHANGE: There will be no rehearsal this Thursday evening. The first meeting will be held Tuesday afternoon, Feb. 14, at 3:30 in the University auditorium. The little symphony will meet Wednesday, Feb. 15, at 3:30 in the University auditorium. KARL O. KUIPERFINED DREXTON MEN'S GLEE CLUB; BAND: C. E. KINDSVATER, Chairman. HOUSE PRESIDENTS' MEETING: Regular mid-week variation will begin next Wednesday ¢ening. Feb. 15, at the Memorial Union building. OZWIN RUTLEDGE MANAGER. MID-WEEK VARSITY: There will be a meeting of the house presidents Thursday at 4:30 p.m. in room 108 of the Administration building. Every house is urged to have a meeting of the House Presidents on Tuesday. --was when the cloven hoof became unmistakably visible. The May Day Mystery Octavus Roy Cohen Copyright by Octavus Roy Cohen. SYNOPSIS AAAAAAAA A CHAPTER 1 — Annotette Payton, a former New York Giants player, resumes Jason Payton's attorney attention to Ivy Welch, seventen-year-old with bitter recruitment, the third-time winner, another student long. They're in a date with him. Thayer and Vernon are a date with him. Thayer and Vernon CHAPTER 12—Larry Welch, Twy's private professor. You're university, in apposition to me. You must be the master's friendship with Thayer. Welch and Tony Payton are in love with each other. To be can do in the matter. Tony then asks Thayer if he is wife only in name. CHAPTER IIII 一 Everything seemed to be summed up in her simple statement. She spread her arms heeledly, and the young man stared at her. "I had hoped not to tell you"—she was speaking in a soft, tired voice—"until we should have been divorced or had the marriage annulled. He asked if I had died or gossip or whatever it would have been. I was waiting until graduation. Then I was going west or to France or somewhere and quietly have the whole misunderstanding ended. But I don't know what happened to change things about Larry." "I understand, I wish you had told me before, though, and going back to the beginning . . . what caused out to—to become unfortunate?" She gave a little smile of dislike. "Several things, Larry. I talk frankly—because it is your right to know. Before we were married, Pat and I agreed that the marriage was to be a more formal summer. We were to have dinner with Mr. Murchard since he came to Marlanc—but that all was. It wasn't long after the ceremony that he made it clear that he didn't intend to keep the bargain." Her cheeks were flushed and Larry' were dred white. "No need to go into detail. It wasn't very pleasant. I didn't regard myself as his wife and told him so he would be there, and he led it to another..." and then we had our first quarrel. She gave a short, bitter laugh. "One can find out a good many things about a man when he is thoroughly angry. I found that the guy was too mad, and we had finished I told him that he might have saved himself the trouble of going through with a marriage core money. I told him I intended to get a divorce immediately, and then, Larry was when the clown blood became us." "I hated that idea, Larry. I love "I married. I wanted my degree from here. I stalled him off, and was sup- pressed that he seemed content to wait. He then disappeared-he came to me and asked the ship of a large sum of money!" "Good Lord! You don't mean . . . ", "Freeledly, Blackmail. I refused and be threatened to spread around them and to force them to keep them to keep secret. No divorce, and just no annulment. He intended to tasminate . . . , to let the student body form its own opinions. I called him and he admitted that he was. He never miss the amount he wished to borrow—which was true—and, any way, I leaned it to him. In the months after he graduated from college, money, Larry—just to keep his dirty mouth shut. And it lilt the amount. It was terrible to feel that I was bearing him by a man whose name I received as my boyfriend. I wanted to mend it to by us ting for an annu- ment. Then I'd think about the embrassment of staying on at Marlton after the gossip became general—and I would have planned to plan to wait until after I had my degree. Then to end the affair legally." She passed for a moment, then turned impulsively toward the man. "I wonder if you understand?" "And you think I was cowardly?" "Not a bit. I think you've been rather fine about it." "Of course I do, dear." She noticed his manner of talking: there was nothing soft or gentle in his voice. It was oblivious that he was quiet, and he effort to keep himself under control. She was surprised. It was the first time in the four years she had known him that she had ever seen him gripped by anger. There was someone behind her. A set of his hips and the blue of his eyes had changed to an ley gray. Pat. Goodness knows I'd be the last one him to blame for wanting to marry you. I even*' he besitched that an instant, and his cliché — unloaded — blame him when you told me that he wasn't awful keen about keeping his part of the bargain . . . , about *at least* until summer for a honeymoon. "I've kept pretty quiet, Tony," he said, choosing his words with meticulous care. "At first I was all with "But the rest of it . . . it's pretty rotten. That any man should have married you because you have a little money; that he should have black-matted you for two years; that he should have been—well misha to him. That this has pretty hard, Tony; perhaps because I care for you so much. "Then there Ivy. I was fair to him about that, Ivy's a nice kid, and pretty—even if Ivy is my sister. If he knew what business they were doing their business, but if it lacks a married man—and that kind of a man, . . . He creeps傻逼. "I'm going to have a pretty straight talk with Mr. Patron Thayer. A pretty d—n straight "No!" She was on her feet and her hand was on his arm. This new Larry frightened him. "Can't you see that you mustn't clash with it?" He'd be able to get masty and spread the story. You mustn't go to him now." "I've got to. Leave yourself out of it, if you wish. I will get to consider Ivy. His affair with her can be permitted to run on." LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusively 1025 Mass. TAXI 25c Just Phone 65 Jayhawk Taxi Ike Guffin. Prop. "That's true," she said thoughtfully. Then an idea came to her and she looked up brightly, "Let's compromise, Larry. You go chant with lry. See if you can do that." She course she mustn't know that I'm Pat's wife. But see if you can't get her to do what you want—to stay away from Pat. And meanwhile I'll go to Pat right now. I'll tell him that he if concludes the truth to the whole campus. That will spike his guns. Don't you see that the sensible thing? "This time, Larry," she said. "I'll make him understand that I'm not bluffing." We Are Ready to Again Serve the Best Meals in Town. THREE MEALS Breakfast. 7:30 to 8:45 Lunch. 11:30 to 1:15 Supper. 5:15 to 6:45 "Do you think you can bluff him, Tony?" at the Cafeteria (To be Continued Tomorrow) Genuine Welcome Hint to the Wise--- The new Kleenex Handy Packets are convenient to carry and use and are a saving on the laundry bill. SPECIAL For This Week Only MOORE'S NON-LEAKABLE FOUNTAIN PENS 2 Packets for 5c Hint to the Wise---- $33_{3}^{1}\%$ off Rankin's Phone 678 1101 Mass. Kenneth Reid, managing editor of the architectural publication, Pencil Points,"written "The success of our initiative is an instinctive feature for design and a technical skill in construction, but also a complete cultural background. Architecture research should be a concentration, a keen mind." SANDWICH BLUE MILL 1009 Mass. After College WHAT? IN ARCHITECTURE, certainly, brains rate 100 per cent. "... intensive concentration, a keen mind." That's why in this business, as in college, a pipe is the favorite smoke. Get out your pipe now, light up, and through the curling blue puffs of water you breathe, reach the road to those years after graduation. If you're not already an Edgeworth smoker, there's a new smoking satisfaction for you. Edgeworth's blend of fine old burleses is distinctive, different. You'll know — after the first puff. Want to try it before you buy? Write for free sample packet. Larke & Bro.Co., 105 S.22d St, Richmond, Va. * A tours investigationEdgeworth the edgeworths has been on EDGEWORTH SMOKING TOBACCO Buy Edgeworth anywhere in two colors. Ready-Rabbit Ready. Edgeworth and Edgeworth Plug Slice. All sizes - 135 pack pockets to pack up. Some sizes in vax sealed tape. EDGEWORTH VISION GROUND READY RUBBED MATERIALS EDGEWORTH EXPLOITING PLUG SICE EDGEWORTH THE MASTER OF THE HARDWARE $100 YOUR UNION offers you a big dollar's worth Architecture? Ping Pong Table for Women. NEW FEATURES THIS SEMESTER Ping Pong Table for Women. Another Ping Pong Table for the recreation room. Free Checking for men at Midweek and Regular Varieties. (Women's checkings here heretofore). Circulating Library. Fountain Tickets, $2.75 value for $2.50, available for members only. Free Privileges for Members: Mid-week Varieties (Stags fined 10c. Women will be required to show their membership cards). Checking for Men and Women. Bulletin Board Ping Pong Tables Checkers Chess Playing Cards Dominoes Newspapers Magazines Radio Meeting Rooms Towels Information Bureau Men's lounge and smoking room Women's lounge and recreation room Other Privileges: Recreation Room (open only to members but a small charge for use of pocket billiard and snooker tables) Basketball court, lunch, candy and regular water drinks) In addition, Your Union houses the following other campus activities: W. S. G. A. Book Exchange Office of the Jayhawker Office of the Men's Student Council Office of the Women's Self Government Association University Cafeteria Varsity Dances Lost and Found Bureau M. C. A. Get all these privileges this semester PAY YOUR $1.00 WHEN YOU PAY YOUR FEES WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 8, 1933 PAGE THREE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 102 Well-- Such Stuff! "Of course it's cold outside." But this is just the time of year when it's most fun to hike over to a Varsity Dance and meet the gang. 1930s Yes-and his Hotel Eldridge Orchestra Is Playing for the That's Right! 'Bugs' House Hobnail Hop Saturday Feb.11 9 o'clock to 12 o'clock Sponsored by the ENGINEERING COUNCIL The "Hop" Is a Party for The "Hop" Is a Party for --Engineers --Geologists --Medics --Pharmics --College Boys -(Also "Laws") SOCIETY Serorities Give Spring Rush Parties The Valentine motif is being used by several sororities in decorating for spring semester rush parties which are being held this week. Among the Valentine parties had night were the informal dimmers given by Alpha Xi Delta and Pi Beta Phi and the formal dinner of Alpha Chi Omega. Alpha Omicron Pi entertained a color scheme of pink and blue Chi Omega and Alpha Omicron Phi will entertain rushees at formal Valentine dinners this evening, and Gamma Phi Beta and Alpha XI Delta will have informal dinners, the latter using black and white in decorating. Miller-Alexander Kappa Alpha Theta announces the engagement of Marion Millek of Topeka to Crescent Alexander of Bartlesville, OKla, both former students of the University. Mr. Alexander is affiliated with Phi Gamma Delta. ADMISSION DATES—75c—STAGS M. Paul Rankin entertained with a bridge lioness and handkerchief shower Monday in observance of the anniversary of Mrs. R. A Schweigler. Kappa Phi, Methodist church service, will entertain with a Valentine party Saturday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Edwin F. Price, 1299 Tennessee street. Josephine Leo, c/35, is in charge of the arrangements. Guests at the Delta Zeta house Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. George W. Wolf of Leaverworth, and Mr. and Frank Van Deventer, Kauai City, Ca. Alpha Gamma Delta entertained Eugenia Chancellor, a funnel, and Bennie Jean Daniels, e'36, at luncheon yesterday. The cabinet of the Y. W. C. A. will neet at 4:30 p. m. tomorrow at Henley house. Betty Shirk of McPherson was a dinner guest of Kappa Kappa Gamma last night. Sigma Alpha Mu announces the pledging of Harry Koluva of Kansas City, Kan. Delta Union entertained Joe Lovewell of Topeka as a dinner guest last night. W. C. Emigh of Coffeyville is guest at the Acacia house this week. Steve Houston of Chetopa is a guest at the Sigma Nu house this week. Delta Chi announces the pledging of Lee Mitchel of Kansas City, Kan. FOR RENT: Rooms and board for boys, near Campus. Rates very reasonable. Call 2814. 1241 Louss. — 103. Twenty-eight ads or less 1. I use invoice number 6 in insertions. I. Large ad adds prompts. WANT ADS are ACCOMPANIED BY CASH. Want Ads FURNISHED 4-room: modern house. Dosirable for couple or three men students. Phone 248M8. 804 Mo. St. FOR RENT. To young men, teacher, or married couple, pleasant southeast front room in private home. Private room in private home. Corner, 114. Kentucky. Phone 2314M. Ink Slide Rules Drawing Pencils BOYS' CLUB: Come where you can all get you all can eat. Home cooked meals; good variety; 21 meals for $5. 1122 Ohio St. - -102 Coe's Drug Stores FOR RENT: Single and double rooms; and apartment; for boys. Reasonable. One block from campus. Call 1127W. 1247, Ohio. Mrs. H. Garrett. GIRLS: Board and board, $23 monthly. Board optional. Use of living room, grand piano, radio. Every home private phone. Each kitchenette. 140 - 190 phone 1763. Tomorrow You'll Need a Notebook! TO RENT: to graduate or mature woman; pleasant rooms on top of the Hill. At 1236 Oread. Phone 1351—1099. 1347 Mass. FOR HENT: To married couple, pres- sioner, or upper classman, furnished living with piano, radio, etc. Gauge. Garage. Phone 107. 107 Phone. Phone 2956. - - - - with paper and dividers free. ROOM AND BOARD for three boys, Nice big room, Excellent meals. Make us an offer, 1338 Vermont, Haugh Club, Phone 1278. -101 Leather Note Books Note Papers Fountain Pens Large Canvas Notebook ROOMS FOR BOYS: First class double and single; one-half block from Cafeteria. On ear line, oppose field, in 2128 Mins. St. Phone: 1234. $1^{00}$ 411 W. 14th Phones 521 - 516 for your Big "Moment" of the MINUTE 99 VALENTINES WHERE THER she's a panther woman, a smart sophisticate, or a Mary Pickford, you'll find in our varied assortment of Valentines just the card to strike a responsive note in your favorite femme. IN HOTEL ELDRIDGE Virginia May Flower Shop WE ALWAYS LOVE YOU FOR BOYS: Double rooms, $10 and $12; single, $8. Hot water at all hours. 1347 Kt. -95 APARTMENT for Root: Available for second semester. Will accommodate three people nicely. Newly decorated, Rhode Island. Phone: 254-871-6341. Phone: 254-871-6341. -38 WANTED: Several hays to board. Good food, family style, all you can eat, prices low. Make up your own club. Good location. 1042 Chicago. -101 "A' GRADES depend on the condition of your eyes. Have them examined and glasses fitted by F. H. Roberts, Optometrist, 833 Mass. St., -101 MEN: Good double rooms, $6, $1.50, $1.25 each person; half block from accommodation. Sleeping porch and parker accommodations. Phone 2092, 1222 Miss. *OR RENT: Striately modern 4-room bungalow, close to University and business districts. Call 124 West 132f. v phone 1305M for admission. 08h YOUR TIME is valuable. Have you watch put in perfect condition now. Jewelry store, $33 Mass. St. AUSTRIAN AMUSEMENTS ---Visit Our--- Rental Library You'll find the new books. here. 15c for 5 days. 1021 Mass. THE BOOK Tel. 666 NOOK USED & NEW TEXTBOOKS LAST SEMESTER One-Sixth of the textbooks We Said Were Used Textbooks. CANVAS NOTEBOOKS 2 and 3 Rings .60 DRAWING Ream TYPEWRITING PAPER (300 Sheets) .60 INSTRUMENTS Rubber Aprons Large Size 30x46 .75 Richter-Post Dietzgen Kueffel & Esser SLIDE RULES All Deasing Instruments AUTHORIZED by the UNIVERSITY DESK LAMPS Regular $1.75 Special $1.19 Special JAYHAWK STATIONERY 60 Sheets 1 package envelopes .75 Ream Notebook Paper No.13 and No.6 .95 1401 Ohio Rowlands. BOOK STORES 1237 Ore. What Is it about CHESTERFIELDS? ALEXANDER BELENKIN Well, I can't tell you much of anything about what is in Chesterfields BUT I smoke a good deal, and I noticed that they said that Chesterfield Cigarettes were milder and tasted better; so I smoked a package or two and found it to be true. I also noticed that the cigarettes were well-filled, seemed to be the right length and the right circumference, and burned uniformly—not up one side and down the other. I liked the aroma—very pleasing. I liked the appearance of the cigarette — the paper, dead white. The package rather appealed to me. I don't know exactly what it is, but I just like 'em. It's about the only luxury that I enjoy; so I think it's all right for me to have a good cigarette, and I believe Chesterfield is just about the best. Chesterfield Radio Program — Every night except Sunday, Columbia coast-to-coast Network They Satisfy Westerfield CIGARETTES MADE BY DAVID BROWN CO. EASTERFIELD people know it . © 1935, LIGGETT & MYERS TOMCCO Co. PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8. 1933 OUR PRICE Mat. and Eye, 5-15c VARSITY NOW! ENDS TIMES "Everybody says I'm Crazy!" And How! The Funniest Fellow on the Radio Now on the Screen! Added "Follow the Leader" With Ginger Rogers ED WYNN (The Perfect Fool) Maybe I'm Wrong OUR PRICE Mat. and Eve. 5-15c PQRs PATEE WHERE BIG PICTURES PLAY NOW! ENDS FRIDAY LOVE TO HER MEANT GIVING ALL! Annen CARROLL CHILD OF MANHATTAN John BOLES FORMAL THEATRE SHOW 20e to 7 22e After 7 Shows 3-7-9 MARSH John BOLES from the Dance Company of Fashion and Performances EXTRA SPECIAL STAGE ATTRACTION Nites 7:30-9:30 BLACKBIRDS OF 1933 You've been hard the MILLS BROTHERS But You Ain't Heard Nothin' Yet, Will Till You Beer. THE 4 SHARPS AND DANCING TRIO Watch For Date True! Real! Authentic! "THE BIG DRIVE" From the Secret Archives of 8 Warring Nations Title Aspirations Call for Missouri Defeat by Kansas Years Jayhawkers Have Not Bee Victorious at Columbia for Past Five Hot on the trail of their third successive Big Six basketball championship, the Jayhawkers of Dr. F. C. Allen at the university of Kansas, come to a high hurdle in a game with the UCLA Bruins at Columbia at Columbia, Mo. Saturday, Feb. 11. That the meeting with Missouri at Columbia, the scene of the battle is somewhat of a jinx to the Jayhawkers is made clean when records reveal that it was back in 1927 that the Kansas team has lost downey in Tiger Stadium. The Jayhawkers have twice since then fought their way to the conference title. | | W L | Pet | Pts | IPs | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kansas | 5 | 1 | 800 | 195 | | Oklahoma | 2 | 4 | 800 | 147 | | Missouri | 4 | 1 | 800 | 132 | | North Carolina | 3 | 4 | 800 | 148 | | Kansas State 5 | 2 | 4 | 333 | 160 | | Iowa State | 2 | 4 | 130 | 182 | Brewer Field House ... Since the Mississippi games at Columbia were transferred to Brewer Field House three years ago it has seemingly been a hard matter for a visiting team to win a game. Some of this lack of interest has not doubled due to the raised playing floor which eight feet out from the court sidelines, drops twenty-seven inches to another floor level. Formerly, tennis netting was placed around the floor to stop the ball from falling off when out of bounds, but this proved so dangerous to players forced to jump over it on going out of bounds far too that Dr. Allen called Coach Gilles Peterson not just this netting for this coming game and it was agreed it would be done. M. U. COURT UNUSUAL Kansas Loves Only One Man Kansas has come through final examination in good shape, losing only Erin Vancei, letter guard, and the victory over Nebraska, 43 to 20 at Lincoln, Feb. 4; now all the Kansasiens will go to Cincinnati. The Jets lawmakers will go to Columbia in good shape this weekend, and in light of their 35 to 27 victory over the Tigers in a game here this season should be favorites if the Columbia court jinx can be eliminated. Two officials, Dawntail Team of Tompkins, and Jack North of Doc Moores, will work the game at Columbia. These same officers worked the Missouri team in this season. In mass conference games this season only one officiant is used. The Kenyan lineup has settled down to Paul Hartington and Dick Wells, forward; Bill Johnson, center; Elmer Schmale and Gordon Gray, guards. Welts and Gray are sophomores who have found their scoring eyes of late and are valuable men on defense as well. Standing of the Teams WHERE STUDENTS MEET VACATION BASKETBALL At Linceton, Jan. 23-Nebraska, goal. Bowell 2, Hokkien 5, Hokkien 1, Henrien 11, free throws, Farrocks 1, Hokkien 3, Henrien 1 Iowa State, goals, Ludwig 3, Wegner DICKINSON TONIGHT - TOMORROW HELL-BOUND FOR HAPPINESS!... D FANTASY FRIDAY - SATURDAY POSTAGE PAYMENTS GARON D'ORSE - RTA JOBANM WYRNE GIGGER - ALEE WIRE VIRKLE TEASDAH LUXURY LINER Screen Song Comedy-News CHRISTIAN HANING Friday Eve, 9 p.m. - Fashion Review on Stage WHERE STUDENTS MEET Chester Morris - Genius Tobin In the Funniest Comedy Sensation of the Year “THE INFERNAL MACHINE” At Norman, Feb. 4-Oklaoma, goulah, Anderson 1, Beck 4, Main 2, Browning 4; free throws, Anderson 6, Beck 2, Le- cowen 1, Total 31 2: free throws, Anderson 3, Hood 3. Score by halves: Nebraska 8 17-25 Iowa State 7 9-10 Missouri, goals, Coach 4, Wagner 2, Miller 1, Jorgenson 2; free throw, Cooper, Miller, Jorgenson, Passer, 1 each. Total. 28 Oklahoma ... 8 23----31 Missouri ... 17 9----26 At M马亭滩, Feb 3—Kansas State goals, Graham 4, Stone 3, Brown 1, Dalton 2, Skrodat 2, Boyd 4; free brown, Brent 1, Dalton 4. Missouri, goals, Cooper 3, Wagner 5 Miller 1, Jorgenson 1, free throws Cooper 1, Wagner 3, Miller 3, Jorgenson J. Score by halves: Kansas Aggies 21 14-33 Missouri 21 28 At Michigan, Feb. 6—Cruitham, 28 Migorii, Jr. (Non-conference). THIS WEEK'S GAMES Jayhawk Five Swamps Cornhuskers 34 to 20 Feb. 9—Iowa State vs. Kansas State at Ames. Feb. 10—Drake at Ames (Non-conference). Feb. 11—Kansas vs. Missouri at Columbia. Nebraska vs. Oklahoma at Norman. In a rough between-seniornes game at Lincoln the Jayhawkier court squared evamped the Nebraska five to the tune of 34 to 50 last Friday night. The Kansan hounds held out. The Cowboys decreased by one point during the second period. Two Kansas Players Pile Up More Points Than Opposing Team Those Thin Worn Soles Just Won't Get by Now. Stop in we will fix them while U wait. Johnson and Harrington were high scorers for the Jayhawkers, making 11 and 12 points respectively. Johnson was taken from the game on personal foils when the second half was 12 minutes old. Gray dropped in three field goals. Jackson scored four points. Wells scored the other four points for the Jayhawkers. Hokul, Nebraska guard, made seven points to lead the Huskers' scoring. The Nebraskans found difficulty in The Kansas aggregation was especially good in hitting the basket from around the foal time on the sides. The team also field goals and the Corvins did. ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP It's a cold welcome you get outdoors, but it's a warm welcome to study and lounge in its cozy, popular style. It is luxurious and famous for its coffee. Welcome to New Students George Spears, Proprietor De Luxe Cafe breaking through the Jayhawkers' defense, getting away for only a short rally early in the second half. Kansas--34 G PT TP P Wells, f-e 2 0 4 Harrington, f 4 4 12 Jewett, g 5 11 Gray, g 3 1 Schuake, g 0 0 Curl, c 0 0 Curle, f 0 0 Benn, f 0 0 Klass, g 0 0 Totals 14 6 34 8 Nebraska—3) G FT FT BF Bowell, f 1 1 3 2 Missou, f 1 0 2 2 Sauce, f 1 0 2 Henrion, g-f 0 0 0 0 Hugf, g 1 5 7 0 Lunny, f 0 0 0 0 Farring, g 2 0 4 2 Coppel, g 0 0 2 2 Totals 7 6 29 10 Score by halves— K. U. 22 14-34 Nebraska 7 13-29 Send The Daily Kansan home. The Stadium Barber Shop FRANK VAUGHAN. Prop. 1033 Mss. Phone 310 Haircut, 25c — Shave, 20c Subscribe for OUR PRICES HAVE NOT BEEN RAISED! THE KANSAS CITY STAR Headquarters PHONE H. L. NEVIN 847 Mass. St. 17 Distributor 13 papers — 15c per week 1930s SPRING FASHION REVIEW DICKINSON THEATRE FRIDAY NIGHT, Feb. 10, 9:00 p.m. Under the personal direction of Miss Ethel Gaston of New York and Miss Lella Thayer of Kansas City. There will be presented an outstanding parade of women's public dresses, authentic dictates, and yet so delightfully inexpensive. Montgomery Ward & Co. SHOOTING THRU A Woman ILLUSION The stage is all set for target practice. The magician like his bow and arrow an aim at the ball in a眶eyes his gun and then fires it. He shoots the arrow—apparently through her—and it fires itself in the very center of the ball. And once the ball is hit, he launches the arrow. EXPLANATION: The arrow which the markman "shoots through" his assistant simply folds up into the crossbowl. The arrow which is actually embedded in the target is shot with a pistol and slides backward across dress. She releases a little spring, the arrow unfolds, and shoots straight into the ball-eye eyelid It all done on the same arc as the movement! To heighten the impression that the arrow has gone right through the girl releases a ribbon attached to the eye. In early, of the ribbon attached to the arrow in the target, KEPT FRESH IN THE WELDED HUMIDOR PACK CARGL WHEATBREAD & BANANA CHOICE QUALITY CAMELS It's fun to be fooled ... it's more fun to KNOW Like to see through tricks? Then let's look at another... the illusion in cigarette advertising called "Cigarettes and Your Throat." The audience is told that by certain magic processes tobacco can be made EXPLANATION: The easiest cigarette on your throat is the cigarette that is made from the choiceest ripe tobacco. Cheap, raw tobacco are, as you would naturally expect, *harsh* in their effects upon the throat. If you have to consider your throat, the quality of the tobacco in your cigarette is important. PETER RYAN It is a fact, well known by leaf tobacco experts, that Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE tobacos than any other popular brand. Camels are as non-irritating as a cigarette because Camels use choice tobacco. And because of the matchless blending of these coolier tobacco Camels have a rich bouquet and aroma... a cool, delicious flavor. Keep the air-tight, *welled* Humidor Pack on your Camels ... to assure yourself and your companions a fresh, cool smoke. NO TRICKS .JUST COSTLIER TOBACCOS IN A MATCHLESS BLEND UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXX Brailsford to Give Disarmament Talk for Final Lecture Subject of Next Tuesday's Speech to Be 'Why Don't Nations Disarm' IS NOTED JOURNALIST The last lecture on the University of Kansas lecture course will be help Tuesday, Feb. 14, at 8:20 p.m. at the auditorium when H. N. Braslund will speak on "Why Don't the Nations Disarm?" Braithold is well known to many audiences in America as a lecturer on international affairs. He gave the Dodge Foundation lecture at Yale University last year, conducted courses at the New School for Social Research in New York, and the Robert Brookings Graduate School in Washington, and conducted New York City Association of New York, Philadelphia, and other cities. Has Had Journalistic Career Has that Journalistic Career Braulthawk comes with a recognition, reading a journalist of his country. The late H. W. Massingham once wrote to him "There is no more accomplished journalist living than Mr. Braulthawk; no more persuasive master of the written word." In his own country he is best known as the editor from 1922 to 1938 of the literary and political weekly paper, The New Leader. This publication grew to a magazine of its own, and its of the English-speaking world and rapidly became the mouthpiece of the labor movement. After a distinguished career as student and lecturer at Glasgow University, Braithold equipped himself to travel and study for his work as an interpreter of international politics and economics. (2) His experiences in the East began with the Greece-Turkey War of 1897, when he served as a volunteer on the staff of the British military for the Manchester Guard in Cretan, Macedonia and Paris. He spent a winter in Turkey as director of a British Relief Fund, and was the British memorial officer to the Turkish army in the Balkans on the eve of the Great War. Immediately after the armistice he made a lengthy stay in Germany, Austria and Poland, and has twice traveled in Russia since the Reov Is Author of Many Books In three books he has been a pioneer of constructive thinking on the problems of world peace, "The War of Steel and Gold," published a few months before the outbreak of the consequences which must follow the imperial rivalries of the Great Powers, "A League of Nations" (1916) was the first modern book which attempted to work out in detail the idea of an international so-called force. This book is an even bolder argument for the necessity of international government. As an author Brailford has also proven his worth. The following are some of his works: "The Broom and the War God," "Macedonia." The War of Steel and Peace, "A League of Maidens" and "Poesy," and "Olives of Endless Agc." Brallisford's lectures are both descriptive and constructive. He gives vivid pictures of the life tendencies in Europe, and on this basis of fact attempts boldly yet persuasively, to sketch the changes in the world's organization which we must face, if we are to develop our civilization in peace. McCue to Review Swimmers Present Examiners to be Reviewed and New Ones Qualified To assist in meeting the challenge of drownings, locally, A. T. McCuse will arrive here Feb. 23, to review Red Cross life saving examiners and to qualify new ones, Herbert G. Alphain. The Red Cross county Red Cross chapter announces. Examiners are expert swimmers who have passed rigid tests and have teaching ability, so that through the county-wide Red Cross organization they can instruct large masses of people. The motto of the service is, according to the chartist organization. Every swimmer and every swimmer a life saver." "In the last twelve years we have killed a million men, women, and children and seriously injured 25 million by preventable water, automobile industrial, and home accidents in the United States, causing an economic loss estimated by competent authorities at forty billion dollars," Mr. Alphin said. Pangs of Hunger Banished From Horse World on Christmas Eve LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1933 Olathe, Feb. 9—(UP) The will of Mrs. Emma W. Robinson, filed last week, set aside $10,000 in a trust fund to provide annual Christmas dinners for hungry horses. The will specified the amount of hay and grain that constitutes a Christmas dinner for horses. Relatives were left $2,000. CONDENSED WIRE NEWS Riot Victim Dies Sioux City, Iowa, Feb. 8 — (UP) Rustell Mark, wounded in a recurrence of milk distribution disputes had Fri. died in St. Vincent's hospital last Mollison Hous Off Dakar, Sengese Africa, Feb. 9—(UP) Captain James Jones British, British fished off today for Natal, Brazil, on his second solo venture across the Atlantic Ocean. He the first man to cross the north Atlantic from east to west. Alien Population Decreases Washington, Feb. 8 — (UP) More persons are leaving the United States that are coming in, government immigration officials say. The last six months of a total 9,037 aliens entered the country, while 15,417 perons left. In December, immigrant aliens admitted for permanent housing in the state of Arizona 8,690 aliens left for their home lands. Mutineers Hold Shiu Congress Honors Hobson The Hague, Feb. 8—(UP) A squadron of Duxed War ships, overburrowing multinues ahead the cruises de Vwian ducks for action." It was understood the government would demand the unconditional surrender of the mutinous native seamen who soiled the ship during its invasion through Sumatran waters ever since. Bandits Roh Missouri Bank Washington, D. C., Feb. 9—(UP)—Congress today voted a Congressional Medal of Honor to Captain Richard Pearson Hobson, Spanish-American war hero. Hobson heroes the invasion that thirty-five years ago. The young naval officer took the partially dismantled corvette in *Santiago* and under hooks five feet far to the bottom, thus bottling up part of the Spanish fleet. Blytheside, Mo., Feb. 8 —(UP) Youthful bands, today robbed the Citizens bank at Blytheside of $2,500 They飞ed north toward the Iowa state line after locking Truman White, cashier, in the vault. White pressed a burglar alarm button inside the vault and was released. Franking Right to Mrs. Cooley Washington, Feb. 9—(U)The son ate today voted to confer on Mrs Grace Cooley, widow of the late president, the privilege of the free use of United States mails for the rest of her life. Eastwood Paintings Show Associate Professor Has Landscapes or Exhibit in Spooner-Thayer An exhibition of landscapes painted by Raymond Eastwood, associate professor of drawing and painting, was put on display yesterday in the Spooner-Thayer Art museum, according to Miss S. Moodie, curator of the museum. Illinois Prexv Resigns from Colorado picturing Rocky mountain scenery, and several portraits. One of the landscape paintings having the title of 'Sand and Sky' is re-represented in a new exhibition展出年 in Kansas City. According to Miss Moodie, the landscape paintings of the dunes and Colorado rock formations appear as if one were looking through a window at the original scenery. Some of the titles are "Sand," "Miss Moodie saids are": "Windseepth," "Miss Moodie saids are": "Windseepth," "Miss Moodie saids are": "August." The display is made up of oil paintings of Cape Cod dunes, landseepers from Colorado picturing Rocky mountain scenery, and several motifs. Champaign, III — Harry Woodburn Chase, who came to the University of Illinois from North Carolina University in 1830, presented his resignation request to the university to the board of trustees in Chicago, following his acceptance of election to the chancellorship of New York University. He will succeed Dr. Elmer Brown. His resignation will take effect at the end of the academic year, July 1. Utah Aggies Help Legislators Who Are Snowbound Party on Skis Takes Coffee and Sandwiches to 55 Caught in Year's Worst Storm ROAD OPENED LATER Logan, Unh. Feb. 8—(UUH)—Uhalf a junketing legislators today inspected the Utah State Agricultural College after being marooned for five hours in the year's worst blizzard. Students on skis carried sandwiches and hot coffee to the 35 members of the legislative board, who were stalked in snow drifts near Wellesville. Some of the members were brought to Logan in sleights driven by students. The others reached Logan after a snow plow cleared the track. FORTY DIE IN COLD WAVE New York, Feb. 9. (U-UP) -Extreme cold spread suffering and death over almost the entire United States today after a rare storm that hit the midwest and Rocky mountain states for several days swept over the south and the Atlantic seaboard. At least 40 Minimum Temperatures of 40 Degree Below Registered in Montana Settlement of 700 Persons Off New- foundland Coast Threatened The already difficult task of caring for the destitute was made far worse. Damage to crops and live stock was heavy in some sections. Unassured residents had been forced to board yesterday gave way to cold during the night with temperature drops of 50 degrees in a few hours. In the Chicago area where 15 death occurred, temperatures below zero. In Kansas City it was 6 below soon after midnight and getting colder. Trask, Mont., reported 60 below. Denver 16 below, Basin, Mount, 43 below. There were three deaths from the cold in Missouri. In Aurora, Mo., it entailed a row of schools for Elizabeth Williams, 13, whosum help for two schoolmates overcame by cold. She struggled through deep snow with the temperature 14 SEA EATS ISLAND AWA St. John, Newfoundland, Feb. 9 — (UP) The entire island of Sandy Point off the west coast of Newfoundland containing a settlement of about 700 acres and a settlement by the sea today. Tremedoune waves laided at the sandy foundations of the island 3 miles long and less than half an hour after the when the breakwater collapsed in the First copies of an "introduction to Practical Astronomy," by Dr. Dinnosem Alter, professor of astronomy, were received this week. The book, published by the Thomas Y. Crowell company, contains 80 pages of text matter, and an equal number of graph paper for a notes manual. Alter's Book Received Here. Crime Costs $1.96 per Person Sacramento, Calif.-CIP)—The per per capita cost of crime in California is $18.25 per person. The state's state crime problems committee. Costs $1.95 per Person Syracuse, N. Y. — (Special)—University students don't need, they snuggle, according to J. C. Cooper, driver for a Syracuse car rate taxi company. For more than eight years he has piloted students about the city, and students don't neck any more than anyone else, he says. 'Students Neck?' Taxi Driver Declares They Just Snuggle "We find the student traffic quite large part of our business," Cooper told an interviewer. "In the summer we miss it a great deal." Palo Alto, Calif. Feb 9 — (UP) — Charges that a wave of "ecuberian manslaughter" was swerving the Stanford University campus were made to day by Dean Theodore Durney, Jr., however, who is the number of the school faculty, in a letter to the Stanford Daily, Dean Hoover's allegation grew out of the death of Professor Theodore Durny in an auto accident on the campus several days ago. Student tips are low, the driver said, and the taxi men don't depend on uncle a great deal. Accidental Killing Rouses Wrath of Stanford Head “There are too many 'killers' operating vehicles in this community,” the dean's letters, published by the student newspaper, said. Exuberant Manslaughter Is Charge of Dean After Mishap Dunn was struck and killed by an auto driven by Miss Emma Force, 29-year-old Stanford co-ed, as he alighted from a bus. "I am unable to see why any undergraduate student should be allowed to have or to operate a car on the campus. Not the leet objective feature of Professor Dum's death has been the action of the press in minimizing the fragrance of the killing," he continued. Miss Force was exacerbated of blame WEATHER --- ... Kansas—unsettled tonight and Fr day; possible snow; continued cold. AUTHORIZED PARTIES Friday, Feb. 10 Alpha Gamma Delta, house, 12 " " Architectural Society, Marvin hall, 12 p. m. Alpha Phi Alpha, house.12 Baptist Young People's Union, church H. Late enrollment for all college students will be Saturday morning from 9:30 to 11:30 at Robinson gymnasium. All those who are desirous of changes in enrolment will enter at the east door, while new students will enter at the west door of the gymnasium. Saturday, Feb. 11 Dean of Women All students with transfers, gray cards, and advanced standing will enter at the center door of the same building. Japanese Ready to Start Campaign to Capture Jehol War Office Announces It Purpose, But Fails to Tell When Action Is to Begin This, the largest X-ray machine ever constructed, was built for the Harper hospital in Detroit. Mich., to serve in the world war against cancer, at a cost of $60,000. It is set up in a laboratory with 25 tons of load. MAY BE IN FEW DAYS ラッサップ Shanhaikwan, Friday, Feb 10—(UP) —Cavalrymen of General Chang Housh Liung killed an Indian soldier, mistaking him for a Japanese, it was reported here today. The Italian consul prepared a strong protest to present the Chinese nationalist government. Toko, Feb. 9- (UP)—Japanese military forces in Manchuria will begin a drive against in Chinese troops for the nuclear program, an indication in a statement today. Although there were no definite indication as to when the campaign would get under way, the native language of the country would be a matter of only a few days. China Prenares Defense Nanking, China. Feb. 9 - (UP) - The central political council today approved the general principles of a conscription law under which all military would be liable to military service. This action indicates that China is preparing to offer concentrated support to its armies in Jihol province. LEAGUE ASKS INFORMATION Detroit Has the Largest X-Ray Machine Committee About Ready to Decide on Japan's Offer of Conciliation --- Goneva. Neb. 8- (UP) - The League of Nations decided today to ask Japan whether she will recognize Chinese sovereignty in Manchuria if the Manchurian dispute is submitted to conciliation, and whether she intends to proceed with military activities in Jebol. The decision of the league's committee of nineteen regarded acceptance or rejection of Japan's final conciliation offer will depend on the answers to the two questions. The League hoped for an affirmative answer to the first, and a negative answer to the second, but did not anticipate such a suit after the indications in Tokio today that a Japanese drive was planned against Jebo slam. The League's action put the responsibility for refusing conscription upon Japan, although the price for conciliation—recognition of Chinese sovereignty in Manchuria—was admittedly high. KOENIG ANNOUNCES FIVE MEN RECEIVING R.O.T.C. PROMOTION Five promotions to Cadel Lieutenants in the R. O. T. C. were announced today for the second semester by Major Keogu, professor of military science. Those receiving promotions in the engineering unit are Cedet Second Lieutenant Paul A. Borel, c;34 Cedet Second Lieutenant John J. Brennan, c;34 Cedet Second Lieutenant Maurice J. Curaud, c;34 Cedet Second Lieutenant Elwood J. Leep, c;34 Cedet Second Lieutenant John N. Blank, m;33 Cedet Second Lieutenant court artillery unit of the R. O. T. C. Science Doesn't Wait for Stork to Announce, It's a Bov' Berkley, Calif., Feb. 9—(UP)—No longer do expect nurses to inform them whether it is a boy or a girl, accept scientists as scientists. Successful experiments with a new method of pre-natal determination of the sex of children were announced today by Dr. John N. Darn and Edward S. Sugarsman, chemist. The in 93 per cent of the cases they said. Senate Committee Drops Smith Libel Proceedings Editor of 'New Outlook Absolved in Barry Bribe Case Washington, Feb. 9—(UP)—The executive judicial committee today refuted the drafting of a bill against E. Smith's mugazine, the "New Outlook," which printed David Barry's charge of congressional bribery. The vote was nine to Before quashing the label action, the committee voted to eliminate from the proceedings any further prosecution of Barry, former sergeant-at-arms, who was dismissed because of the article. Chairman Norris of the committee said sentiment was unanimous against further prosecution of Barry. As originally drawn the resolution offered by Senator Walsh, Democrat, Montana, would have certified to the Senate the results of the state and the southern district of New York the record of Barry's unprecedented trial at the senate ar. Norris said he was convinced that the publishers of the paper had lied and lied the senate and the house. To Have 'Naismith Night' The cessation of the Kansas-fowa State basketball game here Feb. 18, is to be designated "Naimath night," in honor of the beloved athlete of the game. The athletic association and the physical education department of the University are co-operating in preparation of a brief program to be taught by Dr. Naimath. Dr. Naimath invented the game while a member of the staff of the Y. M. C. A. College, Springfield, Mass., and brought it to Kansas when he became a member of the faculty here 34 Kansas-Jowa State Game Will Honor Inventor of Basketball The six living members of the 1893 basketball team have been invited to return for the occasion, and assist in paying tribute to Di. Mnisheh. Men in basketball history will attend the basketball team for K. U. are: William F. Yahn, Lawrence; Hobert Avery, Bissin, Wye; Wyo. Hess, Hess; Pratt, William Henderson, Boulder, Colon; Eugene V. Hillerson, Boulder, Colon; V. Royal, Ottville, Kan.; William Jutten, Dallas, Texas. Six Men Die in Omaha Fire Firemen Lose Lives Fighting $250,000 Hotel Blaze Omaba, Neb. Fb., 9—(UP)—A spectacular $20,000 fire that destroyed the Millard hotel here today claimed the lives of six firemen. Fire officials listed the dead as Captains Thomas Shandle and Edward Smith, and firemen George Brandt, Frank Kane, Louis Morocco, and inspector Clarence Urban. Bodies of Shunde, Brandt and Kant still were buried beneath 10 feet of debris from a falling ice coated wall Urban, Morocco and Smith were thrown into the basement of the building. They too still were missing. Fire Loss Is $15,000 NUMBER 98 Fowler, Feb. 9—(UP)—A block of frame buildings in the business district here were destroyed by fire today at a loss of more than $15,000. Fire Chief Charles Peak suffered a heart attack after the blaze. St. Louis Debate Team on Tour St. Louis Debate Team on Tour St. Louis, Mo. Feb. 9- (UP) - Debate team will meet at St. Louis University and St. Louis University will roster at Columbia on Feb. 20. The debate will be part of a tour by the St. Louis team, during which it will meet teams of the University of Kansas, University of Notre Dame, University and Drake University. New Members Not Yet Chosen The choosing of new members for the Men's Rifle team which were to be chosen between semenators has been determined by Stegent Engle, Hall Taylor, captain of the team, said today. Result of Votes on Activity Plan Is Not Yet Known Men's Student Council Will Announce Outcome of Preferential Ballots Tomorrow FINAL DECISION LATER In a special meeting of the Men's Student Council last night, the counting of the preferential tickets for a general activity ticket was not completed. Because of the difficulty which has been in counting the various items on the ballot, the final outcome was uncertain tomorrow afternoon, Harold Denton, c'33, president of the Men's Student Council, said today. The bill for the activity ticket will come up for second reading Wednesday, and results of the ballot which was taken at arrival time will be shown on the final decision. Nothing definite is known as in the outcome if the ballot. In addition to counting the votes, the council considered the advisability of establishing a student book store. It was decided to invite the manager of the student book store at Lawrence to come to Lawrence, investigate, the situation here, and report to the two student governing bodies. Plans for sponsoring a conference for student council presidents from schools in surrounding states were discussed, and it was decided to send out a questionnaire to several schools in the region. The purpose of the conference would be to discuss phases of student government, Denton said. A committee was appointed to cooperate with Sachsen and look further into the possibilities of reconstructing the structure by down by dams several week ago. The council will convene again Wednesday night for the regular meeting. Properties Worth $2,900,060 Pay City of Madison $70,822 Wisconsin Frat Taxes High Madison, Wise, Feb. 9- (UP)- University of Wisconsin in Wisconsin sororities contributed $707,443 in real property tax to the city of Madison, a survey of the city's tax rates for 1982 total assessed valuation of $2,485,500 F forty-three fraternities, with an assessed valuation of $1,904,150, paid taxes to the amount of $45,283 $2, while on an assessed valuation of $944,500, Compared with 1031, the assessed valuation dropped 17 per cent, with the tax key being reduced 13 per cent. Phi Gamma Della, with an assessed tuition of $68230, paid $2,529.92 in taxes. This was the highest single payment. Taxes levied on fraternity and so- riority personal property added $3,077.53 to the tax authority. Added to the real estate taxes collected, this sum makes the total amountaid by fraternities and sororites in axes $70,822.16. ARCHITECTS PLAN FUTURISTIC PARTY FOR TOMORROW NIGHT What will people be wearing a hundred years from now? Members of the architectural department will portray their ideas of everyday dress at that distant date in the costumes which they will wear at the futuristic party sponsored by the Architectural society tomorrow night. The party, decorations for which will be modernistic, will be held in the junior-senior studies of the architectural department on the fourth floor of the Music Building. They are given by members of the department followed by dancing. Louise Kuhn and her orchestra will furnish the music. Clemens W. Wolf, c24, is in charge of arrangements. Dick Wiluf, c74, and James Terry, e23, head the program. Jack J. e23, and Maurice McMansi, e23, are in charge of decorations. Taylor and Peabody in Concert Professor Howard C. Taylor and Miss Irene Peabody, both of the School of Fine Arts faculty, will go to Leavenworth tonight to give a concert at the St. Mary's College in Leavenworth. Professor Taylor will play a number of piano selections, and Ms Peabody, mezzo-soprano, will sing. Wilma Milna Mae Stoner, fa3, 34 will act as accompanist for Miss Peabody. --- PAGE TWO THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9. 1933 University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Editor-In-Chief ... PAUL, V. MINER Managing Editor ... SHIUNK HROSS Make-up Editor ... Arnold Kernsman Marriage Group Editor Telegraph Editor ... Mary Parrish Sports Editor ... Chris Colasman Journal Editor ... David Hunt Exchange Editor ... Maude Brown ----day editor ... John Date Dovisio Editorial ADVERTISING MGR.. MARGARET INCIP Foreign Advertising Manager .. SINCE Kru District Manager... Jack Guthrieb District Assistant... Jack Guthrieb District Assistant... Jack Profd Robert Whitman Boston, MA Margaret Joe Stanford, CA Henry Kroeger Sidney Kroeger Berry Mellon Mary Lawrence Alpina Broeders Marilyn Kremmann Dorothy Smith Arvid Krettmann Toni McKinnon Business Office K.U. 68 News Room K.U. 26 Night Connection, Business Office - 201KUE Night Connection, News Room - 201KUE Published in the afternoon, five times a week and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of New York at Brooklyn, and the Press of the Department of Journalism. Subscription price, $4.00 per year, payable in advance. Simple copies, be each. Entered as second-class matter September 15, at the post office at lawsuits. Kansas, 1915. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1833 AS IT APPEARS TO US After a careful perusal of all available evidence, consisting mostly of press accounts and partly of conversations with embryo lawyers and political science majors, the Daily Kansas herewith endeavors to present a simple, factual analysis of the removal of David S. Barry from the senate of the United States. Boiled down to the simplest terms, the facts are these: Barry, the 73-year-old sergeant at arms of the senate, wrote an article for the New Outlook magazine, which attempted, at least, to show that not all members of that legislative body were available to lobbyists for purposes of bribery, or in plainer language, that not all members of the senate are crooks, whereupon that body arose in wrath and righteous indignation and expelled the author from its ranks. It must be recorded, to be accurate, that not all of the members followed the majority, the vote being 53 to 17 for his expulsion. Whether this whole matter leaves the senate in a position claiming that all of its members are crooks in some other position incomprehensible to us, it certainly cannot be true that all of these gentlemen whom our relatives and friends, and in many cases, ourselves, have elected belong in that classification. At any rate, there are the facts, as nearly as we have been able to compile them. Perhaps you will be more satisfied with your own interpretation. SUPREME OPTIMISM There's one thing to be said for the next occupant of the White House. His optimism is unbounded. Here he since Nov. 4, he has believed he was President elect, has gone ahead with his plans, has even spent hours worrying over the personnel of his cabin. And just yesterday did four frock-coated tellers solemnly announce the victory of the Democratic national ticket to the eagerly waiting house and senate. OUR LEXICOGRAPHERS "In one day recently" observes the Iola Register, "a just fairly careful reader discovered 'haunt' used in place of fluff" in a book by Claude G. Bowers, in a Harper's Magazine article, and in the Emporia Gazette. It's a weary, weary World." But this sanctum fears, O Register, that it is useless to clide about the matter. For years we have waged a more or less intensive crusade against this misuse of the words, all to no avail thus far. We haven't yet cured the Washington correspondent of the Kansas City Star of the habit and in the issue of the Literary Digest for Dec. 24 we found the observation, "France, in the words of her own defeated Premier, has flaunted a solemn obligation." There are times when if it weren't for the Iola Register we should be plumb discouraged. Oklahoma has begun football training, but surely there're not calling it spring practice. TENNYSON MUST NOT BE FORGOTTEN Simultaneously with the advent of the new semester come new resolutions to quit all running around, and really settle down to study in earnest. In every student conversation sooner or later bops up the topic of the poor grades made last semester, and solemnly voiced resolutions that it shall all be different next semester. The trouble is, those glorious spring days and nights that are on the way are not taken into account when these resolves are formulated. Steak fries and canoes and boat trips on the Kaw are irresistible attractions when the first chinook strikes this region. The combination of spring parties, with frilly formalms and white flannels, and smooth dance orchestras, proves too much for even the most solennel of study resolutions. But the biggest factor in the disruption of student plans for intensive study is that Tennyson's immortal lines in "Lockesyell Hall" are forgotten. These, you know about "In the spring—" PERSONALITY OR JUST DUMB? It's peculiar hom come people suddenly begin to rate. Is it their sudden increase in personality? Or is it that they can write very good papers? A few kind words and a sweet smile can often do wonders in getting that much needed paper written. Do these people realize that they are being fooled? And are they willing to do the work for the smiles of appreciation they will get? Perhaps they realize all this. And yet it's nice to be popular even though you have to pay for it. Yesterday, discussing the fraternity tax, we wrote, "The water bills are not noticeably less, whether or not the house is operating at capacity." Through some mysterious alchemy that appeared in the paper as, "The water bills are not paid, whether or not the house is operating at capacity." So this correction is run to guard against an evanlance of calls from the water department indigently assuring us that the organizations always are the first to pay their bills! A NEED Beginning a new semester, having made relatively little fuss about lack of paper towels and other formerly considered necessities, having allowed the student councils to operate in their own charming ways with little or no criticism, and in general having deported itself with a most amiable mien during the past term, the Daily Kansan finds itself forced to urge the remedy of an evil that has become apparent in its own home, the Journalism building, to witt; the drinking fountain in the Kansan news room will hardly squirt at all. Whether this is a matter for the attention of the department of buildings and grounds, or for that of the administrative powers that be, it is one for which the Kansas pleads for remedy in all urgency. If those who have the power to remedy the situation could see students and purveyors of the campus news bending over the alleged drinking fountain, lapping with their tongues like poor parched hounds in search of a precious droplet of moisture, their hearts would throb in anguish and the water department would be directed to increase the pressure. They might even call a plumber. The Kansan can stand almost anything, but this Sahara-like aridity is becoming most intolerable. The Kansan waits hopefully. Campus Opinion A recent dispatch from Cambridge, England called to my attention once again the wisdom of the administration of our famous University. It seems that there is located at Cambridge an ultra-conservative girl's finishing school. This school has a world-wide reputation for its strong social scapege of the British Isles just exactly the proper background need to maintain the social position of their country. For years this school has insisted upon strict chaperonage at all times. Recently, however, the power of the chaperonage has been protracted protests have come to the conclusion that they have been too hard on their wards. In fact, they have even gone so far as to abolish the chaperone system. Not contented with this drastic step they have gone even further. They have ruled that these young and immature students should be admitted to Cambridge University in their own womens. Tsk, Tsk, Tsk I call to your attention that we have a good deal to be thankful for. Our administration is the sole protector of the Young Womanhood of our great state, and I would like you to take job. I ask you, should we not thank our lucky stars, and say a few prayer that our future Motherhood will not be subjected to a similar temptation? Blessed be the Clearing Hours. We are doing our duty on Dread Count, roundly, and loudly. Clarence Sifers K. U. SYMPHONY AND LITTLE SYMPHONY: OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXII Thursday, Feb. 9, 1933 Noise at Chancellor's Office at 11 a.m. on morning afternoon publication days and 11 a.m. on Saturday for Sunday issues. Our Contemporaries A new type of scholarship is to be offered at the University of Kansas beginning with the coming semester, "Scholarship Meal Plan" is the name that has been applied to it. This plan has been adopted for all students who for financial reasons have found it impossible to continue their work in the classroom. Through this plan those students, who would otherwise have to leave school, may obtain meals at an average cost of 10 cents each. Through the co-operation of the Memorial Union operating committee at the University of Kansas and the director of the University cafeteria three meals a day are to be served six times per hour. The student building these meals will be served at definite hours of the day and only for those students who gain permission to eat at this special table. To gain permission, the student must go before a committee and this committee considers his source of income from the cafeteria. The student must show that the student is earnestly working toward his education. --steps and nodded to the occupants of chair and hammock. MEN'S GLEE CLUB: The Engineering Book Exchange will be open to receive and sell books Friday and Monday, Feb. 10, and Ets. from 4:30 to 4:30. All engineering texts are available for free. There will be no rehearsal this evening. The first meeting will be held Tuesday afternoon, Feb. 14, at 3:30 in the University auditorium. The little symphony will meet Wednesday, Feb. 15, at 3:30 in the University auditorium. KARL A. KUIPERSTEINEN Director The scholarship meal plan was made possible through a fund provided by faculty members and citizens of Lawrence, Kan. The plan is a worthy one too because the colleges throughout the nation. The committee in charge of granting the students the right to eat at this remarkably low rate will have to watch as faculty members come together to a number of students who could afford to eat at regular boarding places and by taking advantage of this scholarship meal plan will deplete the fund set up for the plan and deprive deserving students of the opportunity of attending school—Daily Texan. There will be a very important meeting in Professor Skilton's room at 4:30, Friday, Feb. 10, in preparation for program Sunday. All members are invited. Please bring your phone number to the meeting. SCHOLARSHIP MEAL PLAN --steps and nodded to the occupants of chair and hammock. ENGINEERING BOOK EXCHANGE: C. E. KINDSVATER, Chairman. SIGMA ETA CHI EVANGELINE CLARK Initiation services will be held at the Congregational church at 4 ackle Saturday followed by an banquet. Don't forget the guest meeting at 8:13 Ski Sunday. KARL O. KUERSTEINER, Director. The May Day Mystery Octavus Roy Cohen SYNOPSIS CHAPTER 1—Autofitness Pepton, a southern university Marshall, rushed to the attention to Tey Wylch, revenged-year-old with bitter recriminations, the non-other student long Thayer's non-other student long Thayer's a date with him. Thayer and Vernon Copyright by Octavus Roy Cohen. CHAPTER 11.—Larry Welch, Welch Toney are supposed to be by Tony Toney to end his sister's friendship with Thayer. Welch and Tony Toney are in love with each other, but he can do in the matter. Tony then tries to win her over. Then, Tony is in his wife only in name. Shortly after noon of May first—at the very hour when Tony Peyton and Larry Welch were having their conversation in Larry's classroom—two young men descended the bill turned in at the Pad Tid Teen House. A girl sat next to them, a jungle hammock and the other in a somewhat decreacher wicker chair. The roadway which descends some what precipitously from the main building to Martian road is lined on both sides with fraternity houses. University Hill stands the tallest of Ten Tue Thurs, by all odds the largest of them all. AAAAAAAAAA The main building of Marlard university looks down from the top of a modest hill upon the quiet, far-flung residential town of Marlard. The rentals of the various fraternity houses were not empty but were nearly seven of the porches, young men slept calmly in hammocks. A few Phil Glasson, his companion, was also a juniper; but even in the first hot water of approaching summer, he was immaculate—junancy. Even he was short and slender and dripped to be dynamic. He ascended nothing ever excited Rube to more than a slow, amused draw. The kid who jumped in the hammock was "Hunter" Farnum, a fat, aneurysm-like man with a brownened fitted his appearance rather more strongly than his background. Actually he was quite normal. Phill Gleason glanced at his watch; frowned; shook the timepiece violently, and then turned to his friend. "D—n thing's busted again!" he exploded. "What time, Rule?" Mr. Parmum reached into his pocket and extracted a large but reliable watch. Glesson's sharp eyes swing toward the street as a tilt, graceful figure leans on his shoulder. "To the house," he says, "Hallo!" he observed softly: "Here come What, the Web "Humphl 1 got a class at one twenty." "Twelve-thirts." Rube eyed the approaching figure of Pat Tinyer with tolerant aneurysm. He pulled her arm away, was a raw freebie so I could get a kick out of looking at that bird. A man walking in a park with three other people sitting on benches. Thayer, happily ignorant of their caustic comment, mounted the porch Rube clucked. "He's got it soft, that bimbo. Star harbor here. Ever been in that room of his?" "Yeh. Second floor, front. Day window and everything. Flicked up like a boulder of one of Louis Fourteenth's lady friends." Thayer passed through the door into the big downstairs reception hall. "Ain't He Too Sweet?" "Hello, Phil, Howdy, Rube," "He's Pa." "All it no? and If—" Rube cooked his hand on one and listened attentively. The soft summer air was cool and high-powered motor. "I think," said Rube, "that our most shrinking violet is about to approach in his gasoline They looked down the hill in time to see a long, low gray touring car of heavy and expensive type swing violently into Friturity row from Marlwood road. It jerked to a bolt under the roof of old oak trees which digs the lawns. Vernon climbed from behind the wind of the car and stirred toward the window. He was on the veranda gnashed at him closely and turned incoherently to one an "Gee. The sun is downright eclipsed, nikit it? Phil? Did you see May looking like that. Reckon they can miss his for speeding, or something?" "What's the matter with him?" inquired Gleason. There was no moulting the fact that Mix Verson was in an unstoody mood, and he was often short, positive strites, keeping his eyes focused on the ground, and would have passed to the house without a fight. MixVerson had not fled Faram named him. Verion responded without glancing at them. "Hi! Max!" His manner was forbidding. Fare num, somewhat nonploused, made a guil- tle attempt at cordiality. "Pat Thayer just came in," he called cheerfully, "He's up in his room." Norwane strumped short. *I don't give a d—n where Pnt Thaver is!* he growled. As he cashed inside the house the two boys stared in amazement. The thing was so startling that even Rube Farnum was moved to shelve his habit. "Well, I'll be asked for a two-cent stamp! I ask you, Phil; did you hear Little Mexie?" "Did I say, . . . what you reckon?" "Tube shoes bind in newwear and must have happened. Must must have happened. Wold ever dimenion Dismon not giving a d—m They discussed the phenomenon eagerly. Mac's friends and long since determined that Inoafar was Thayer was concerned, Venom was hopelessly the opposite, of animosity, therefore, come like a jagged lightning flash from a clear sky. "Something hit him hard." Robe cocked one eye at the ceiling. "You reckon it little blond, Phil? Max has been awful need for her, and they look who is being entangled around a bottle with Fatally. You never tell." --street and turned uphill toward Old Maln. Rube sank back into his hammock with a sign of infinite relief. They gazed off toward the street, each busy with his own thoughts. Their recruve was interrupted by the office worker, who office her until she turned in on the walk and came straight toward the veranda. Their faces braced into a stare. "Hey, Tony!" they hailed her. "low goes it!" Antolina Peyton gave each of them a brief smile. "Hello," she said. Then her question came with starting sharpness. "Do you boys know whether Pat Thayer is in?" It was Phil Glennon who answered, "Yeah. He's up in his room. I'll call him for you." And then Tony Peyton did an amazing thing; a thing so staggeringly unprecedented that neither boy was able to move a muscle. Quite calmly Tony Peyton walked through the door and into the sacred precincts of the Pal Tau Theta fraternity house. "Never mind," she called over her shoulder, "I'll go right up to his room." Tony Patty had done the impossible—and thereby scandalized the two members of Psi San Tthea, who stared in dounded amusement at the door of a quiet dignity and smiling determination she had calmly announced that she was going to visit the room of a fraternity member, and what was even more jarring was her silence. The two boys did not know that Tony deliberately had selected this method of approach so that her mother was not bluffing. When a girl vits a man in his room, explanations for why he should be aroundly arounded—wished the man to understand that she was prepared to let the campus know of their marriage. "Well, I'll be everlastingly dog-bit!" Phil murmured, "Can you bent it, Phil? I ask you." "No!' snapped Glennon. "I can't— and neither can anybody else." "Do you reckon anybody saw her go upstairs?" "Sunpose they did?" "They couldn't, you poor sipp. Say what the he—I's happens, simp. W They reflected heavily upon the situ- station, four for the good name of their own fraternity forming their paran morry worry. "What you reckon . . .." started Farnum, and Gleason answered the unfinished question. "Nothing, except that Tony is straight as they make me. If they were to give you a gift like your last dollar they wouldn't do it in the open way that way. O, K. Rue, I know." For twenty minutes Rube Farnum and Pill Glisson sat on the veranda and watched past one Tory appeared on the veranda again. They glanced at her and saw that she seemed to be a very sensitive person, in a emotion. They also noticed that she 'was making a brave effort to appear awkward. Awkwardly, the two boys rose Tony gave them a hard little smile and said goodby. She walked to the "And that," he remarked—"is most decidedly that." "Durned if I know. Say, Phil—did you get a good flash at her?" "Yeh. But what is it?" "She seemed kind of worked up. Right mad, I might say." "She did. Sore as a goat. What you reckon?" "There's something funny, . . . And I think the more we say nothing the less we'll get mixed up in a scandal." His manner still puzzled them. The moonlike face was sternly set, glimpn a somewhat grotesque appearance in his hands. He was short, short, quick strides across the veranda. He was wearing a different suit from the one which had adorned his figure a half hour since and he seemed to have lost the thoughts of no highly pleasant nature. There was a sound of feet on the stairway inside the freeracy house. The boys looked toward the door in time to see Max Vernon come out. hot1 "Something's puzzling me," remarked Rube slowly. He descended to the walk without so much as a glance at Farmin and Glason. They noticed that under his arm he wore a scarf, and he ran into his bench his car and plush the bundle into the tomsen. Then, with more speed than grace, Vernon jumped behind the wheel, kicked the stairer, knocked his mascara and jerled into the road. "Which is the most remarkable phenomenon? Tony Poyton's visit to Put Thurby's room, or Max Vernon's visit to Tiffany's room, I ask him, Phill—which?" Glenson gave a prompt and explicated answer. "Both!" he said tersely. CHAPTER IV Ivy Welch emerged from the women's dormitory and confronted her brother, Larry, gazing at her with big-breathly affection, found it difficult to recrouche to the idea that any affair of the heart in which she was sentenced to be punished seriously. But her first words sounded the alarm. "I know exactly why you've come, Larry. It's to tell me I've got to quit Pat Thayer. The answer is that I won't do it." The tolerant smile died on his lips, and he frowned slightly. "Not about a man just about a woman," she stamped her tiny foot. "Tony Peyton has been talking to you, hasn't she? She's been filing you full of accusations of jealousy, that's all." "No-o," he answered slowly, "she's not believing." "Because I love him. And I guess I'm old enough to know my own mind." "I know it." "How do you know?" "She isn't jealous, lvy. 1 feel con ident of that." "Yes; because you're crazy about her—that's why. You take my advice Rob, and say to her of you. She's playing with me, but I can't stand this better than you do." "No. You've got to quit Thayer." Her lips press tightly together "Since when did you start telling me what i must do?" "It's for your own good." "Oh, yes—because a jolous woman wants the man who's crazy about me; that's what I did," she fumed. fooled. Honest, I never would have told Tony Gregory so be small. "She isn't that, Sir; believe me, I know what I'm talking about. She told me a good deal—" "About this afternoon?" "What?" He hesitated. "I'm not at liberty to say." "No. Certainly you aren't. I'm ashamed of you, Bind. You're not playing fair. I guess if it's so important that I keep away from Pat Thayer it's important enough for you to tell me what you know." "Naturally, she'd make you promise; because most likely whatever she said isn't so." "That isn't very nice, Sis." "And is it nice for you to come knocking Pat Thayer when you know I'm crazy about him? Is it?" He tried to be fair. "I guess it sounds pretty bad," he confessed. "What are you saying? What I'm telling you isn't messy. It isn't based on rumor. Thayer isn't any man for you. And I don't want you to say any more. You must lay off him." and you don't know anything. Well, I guess he told me all the bad things about himself that anyone else knows, but I don't know him with him, and I won't have you interfering. I shuilt positively stick with us now—are you going to have no allies? "I don't have to do what you say, I guess if you weren't at this college I'd do what I want. And I'm not going to fool you. Bud. I'll be with Pat as much as he wants me to, and I guess that is a good idea." "Not that bird!" "Even then. Now listen—" She swept her hand on her mouth, "I know she's not going, but but you all wet on this. Put it a well fellow. And he's crazy a well fellow. And he's crazy a well fellow." "Stop!" Unconsciliously, she became quite melodramatic. "I not going to let even you talk about Paltat that way." I guess if I know all her tenons . . . "Oh! That isn't fair, Larry. It isn't. You're being nasty about Pat "No." he said honestly, "I'm not." His eyes narrowed. "What do you mean: I'd better?" "You'll what?" "But—but you can't! "Because you say so?" "I mean this," she said slowly. "If you try to keep Pat Titoyer and me part, I'll marry him!" "I can't hammer any sense into your head, Ivy—so I'm going to see Pat Thinser." He cursed himself. He wished he hadn't told Tony that he'd keep her secret. "You--you just can't, that's all," he said calmly. He stared at her for a minute. She was his eldest and he knew that she said, "I'm going to give you of further argument and turned away shrewly. She jumped in front of him, "We'll see." She was afraid with indignation: "I'm going to ask him myself if he'll marry me! And don't expect that mean, that bad—because I do!" "Oh . . . you wouldn't dare! You'll be starting something." She was trembling violently and her face was clenched. "I will, the Larry—you will be starting something." She stood like little statuteshes hostel off down the path which led through the glen and so up the hill opposite. He tried it on, and he did not risk it. The precepts of the princes needlessly arise because Tony Peyon was the other woman in the case. One thing was very clear to him in that moment of worry; he must see Thayer immediately. There must be a show, as there is when teeth clenched as he reflected upon the fact that he could mighty well handle Pat Thayer. He moved away. "You're darn right I will," he said sharply. Actually, Larry experienced an exculation at the prospect that Thipper raised him more than he know. He told him how to tell a wife a rent for his overwrought feelings. (To be Continued Tomorrow) of IF YOU MISSED THE FIRST CHAPTERS "The May Day Mystery" you may secure back copies you may secure back copies of the Kansan at the Kansan Business Office. BEGIN RIGHT We are here to serve you--- Good Food Priced right Pleasant surroundings With fellow students On the Hill. THE Cafeteria THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9. 1933 PAGE THREE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSA $ ^{\circ} $ New Features at Your Union - : - : this semester Pay your $1.00 when you pay your fees. Christian Church To Have Mixer Subscribe for To Have Party Old fashioned games will be played at the Valentine party to be given by A miter for new students will be given at the First Church church twoyear night from 8 until 10 h'clock. There will be features presented by the V.M.C. A. and the Lawrence Memorial Museum, which will also be trickles, games, and games. SOCIETY Alpha Gemma Dolta will entertain a Volunteer party tomorrow night from 9 until 12 o'clock at the chapter band will furnish music for dancing. The committee in charge is composed of Kermit Geodge, c23, general chairman Glen Wakeley, gr, refreshments and Cloe Collins, reception. B. Y. P. U. To Entertain THE KANSAS CITY STAR Headquarters 847 Mass. St. PHONE 17 H. L. NEVIN Distributor Tomorrow You'll Need a Notebook! 13 papers — 15c per week with paper and dividers free. Large Canvas Notebook $100 Leather Note Books Note Papers Fountain Pens Ink Slide Rules Drawing Pencils Coe's Drug Stores 1347 Mass. 411 W. 14th Phones 521 - 516 TOWNSEND. Wooden soldiers in the war against decay To conquer the forces of decay which attack telephone poles, scientists of Bell Telephone Laboratories carry on a relentless campaign. They study many kinds of wood, test many preservatives. They isolate wood destroying fungi and insects—study them in the laboratory—search for a practical means of combating their attack. They have set out armies of stub poles in Mississippi, Colorado and New Jersey where altitude, climate and soil vary widely. At regular intervals they inspect these poles to learn which woods and preservatives are best. Such scientific thoroughness is one reason why Bell System plant becomes more efficient each year. And why telephone service is so dependable. BELL SYSTEM BROADWAY INN & SUITES TAKE A TRIP HOME BY TELEPHONING .TONIGHT AT HALF-PAST EIGHT the B. Y, P. U, of the First Baptist church tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the church, Harold Wampler, c35, is in charge of the program. All Baptist students are invited, and each is asked to bring a Valentine. Dr. and Mrs. Robert Sterling of Manfield, Ohio, announce the birth of a son. Mrs. Sterling was Ruth Barrett, a former student at the University. Dr. Sterling, 28, is the son of Professor and Ms. M. W. Sterling. Announces Birth The University club will entertain with a Valentine dance on Saturday evening at the club house. The committees in charge includes Professor and Mrs. B. A. Nash and Mr. and Mrs. D. E. A. Nash's orchestra will furnish the music. Alpha Gamma Delta entertained with a formal dinner last night. The sorority colors of red, buff and green were in decorating. Guests were Lape Osmia, c'neln, and Charlotte Hess, c'neln. New these npdges have been announced by Gamma Phi Beta: Margaret Zern and Dorothy Douglas, both of which are members of Oak Vista, Hawaii; or, of Carthage, Bernice Cook, c. 23, will complete the term as president of the Alpha Delta Pi security. She succeeds Jenni Coghlan in the position. Her experience at the end of the last semester. Alpha Tau Omega announces the pleiding of the following: Gordon Floodes, Blackwell, Okla.; Donald Marie, McDonald, and Donald Marisa, Nortonville. Mrs. Harry Lausing, of Lincoln, Nebr., district superintendent of Alpha Oriental Pi, is a guest at the chapter house. Dinner guests at the Alpha Chi Omega house last night were Dorothy Lyman, fa36, and Maurine Berg of St. John. Kappa Kappa Gamma announces the pledging of Betty Shirk of Mphelesan and Maren Meyers of Kansas City, Mo. Mrs. U. G. Mitchell and Mrs. E. B. Snoffer will entertain with a dinner bridge at the Manor tomorrow evening Delta Upson announces the pledging of Archie Galloway of Kansas City Mo. Sigma Kappa announces the pledging of Ida Lanning, c34, of Topeka. KFKU Thursday. Feb. 9 6 p.m.-Athletic Interview, conducted 10:45 F. R. Elbil Friday, Feb. 10 2:30 p.m.—Music Appreciation Period by Prof. C. Siklon 5 p.m. *Prince In and the Japanese Constitution of 1889, Ernest D. Tyler, Extension Instructor in History.* 6:15 pm.-Musical program arranged by G. Crisi Simpson, instructor in piano. Saturday, Feb. 11 College Humor in its February issue published the names of two All-American teams. Football stars of All-American caliber were also raided, "Pete" Mebtringer, "Speed" Alksen, and Ormand Beach from Kansas were listed among the group of honoree students. Teams from the various sections of the country were named. Mkehrring, Atkeson, and Beach were placed on the first Mid-Western eleven. Elmer Schake was placed on the second team. Ely of Nebraska was chosen alternate at center on the first All-American team. FOR MISSOURI VALLEY TEAM 6 p.m.—Music Memory Quarter-hour. TOUR KANSAS MEN NAMED ART BAKER RECOVERING FOLLOWING OPERATION Art Baker, c34, who underwent an operation last Saturday for a knee injury received in football last fall, is recovering and is expected to be out next week. Baker said this morning that he did not intend enter school this semester. Service for Dr. Haworth A memorial staff for the late Professor E. Haworth will be held Thursday day afternoon, Feb. 23, at 4 c locke in Central Administration auditorium Speakers will be Dr. Frank Strong Professors M. W. Sterling. C. M. Young R. C. Moore, and Chancellor E. H. Lindley. News From Home --your selection in prices ranging from 93c up THE BOOK NOOK --your selection in prices ranging from 93c up THE BOOK NOOK Gaylord — (UP) • Students in the Hopewell rural school near here have built a sod house after the style of dwelling occupied by pioneer Kanaas dwellers. Seven boys of the school accomplished the work during recess periods. The inside dimensions are four by six feet, with 18-inch walls. Larneed—(UP)—Dayton Fox, a farm boy living near here, found that a skunk rande a good pet, and if treated right did not resent to those unpleasant halters for which the striped kitten toy boy had been raised by boy and skunk ended, however, when the pet got angry at Dayton and his thumb. Lyndon—(UP)—Howard Phelon represented the fourth generation of the Phelon family here to be initiated into the Lyndon Masciic lodge when he was a grandfather. Daniel W. Phelon was initiated in 1890. His grandfather, Carl A. Phelon, became a member in 1901 and his father, Clyde R. Phelon, in 1925. Cinnamon—(UP) —Three miles of concrete, pavement on highway 50—will be laid through here this spring, the highway department has announced. In preparation for the work the city is putting in new drainage and water pipes and the telephone company is burying its lines. Lindberg—UF) — The thirteenth annual Mid-West music, art and expression contests will be held in connection with the fifty-second Messiah festival here April 9 to 16. Divisions of the contest will be piano, voice, violin, cello, organ, brass, woodwind, strings, percussion, glee clubs. Rehearsals of the Messiah chorus, directed by Dr. Hargen Brase, will begin late this month. Garrett—(UP)—The cash on hand at a fitting room did not come up to the expectations of two youthful bandits. To increase their 'hail' they ran the station for a short period, looking the proprietor in a rear room. When they had taken in about $30 they lifted up for the night. Elkhardt—(UP) —A vigilante system has been organized in Morton county to check the wave of bank robberies, insurance rates were rushed here reenforcement officers and bank robberies. County sheriff Ore Carry is training the vigilantes. Pittsburgh — (UP) — The biennial report of W. A. Brandonberg, president of Pittschung Teachers College, to the state legislature asked for $274.75 annually for the next biennium. That is why it was approved last biennium. Manhattan — (UP) — Salary reductions calculated to effect savings of $3,000 a year have been decreed for the City. The city is River县 board of commissioners. Wilhita. — (UP) — Sheikah's reputation as a defender of the home has suffered considerably in the William H. Huger family. Sheikah is just a woman with a kinder attitude much when a bandit poked a gun in Mrs. Winifred Tourillard's ribs. (Mrs. Tourillard is Haigery daughter). But when police arrived to check on her bedding, Sheikah piled loud and long over their intrusion into the home. Hutchinson, — (UP) W. L. McManey, Hutchinson's oldest citizen and Civil war veteran, is dead. Had he lived until May 16 he would have been 101. He was wounded in the second battle of Bull Run, one bullet that killed him and his army in two places. With his wife and four children he came to Kansas in 1875 in a covered wagon and settled near Wellington. Topkick—(UP)—A special court has been opened here for the benefit of motorists charged with overparking. Judges Claude Jodke William Steinwald will listen to the excuses. The night sessions will allow the ticket holders a chance to reclaim their $1 bends with new insurance during the regular morning hours. London...-(UP) -Iceland has a geyser, like those in Yellowstone Park, that spouts so regularly that watches can be set by it. It is a small geyser, called Gryla, and throws up a shaft of boiling water every hour. Iceland Bas Geyser Colorado Fugitive Fifeed Owes Case Denver, Feb. 9—(UP)-Glenn Siemer- man, central figure in Colorado's counter- part to the famous "Fugitive From a Chain Gang," pleaded before Governor Johnson. After a two-hour hear- ing the governor took his case under advisement. Shumn Alds Coin Collectors Stump Aids Collectories Raymond, Wash.—(UF)—Coin collectors are thankful the depression for a stock of old and valuable coins, they report. A 1790 silver dollar structu the light of day when bread was needed. BOY'S CLUB: Come where you can get all you can eat. Home cooked meals; good variety; 21 meals for $5. 1122 Ohio St. - -162 Twenty-five word lists; less I: 1 fourteen; less II: 2; in intertwined, 7x larger ad-prizes, WANT ADDS ARE AC- COMPANIED BY CASSI. GIRLS: Room and board, $20 monthly. Board optional. Use of living room, grand piano, radio. Every home priv- ly owned kitchenette. 1698 - 199 Phone 1703 ROOM AND BOARD for three boys, Nice big room. Excellent meals. Make us an offer, 1339 Vermont, Haugh Club, Phone 1278. -151 TO RENT; to graduate or mature women; pleasant rooms on top of the Hill. At 1236 Oread. Phone 1315 —100. WANTED: Several boys to board. Good food, family style, all you can eat, prices right. Make up your own club. Good location. 1042 Ohio. -101 MEN: Good double rooms, $6, 75.00, $8 person each; half block from Cafeteria. Sleeping porch and parlor罢 phone. Phone 2062.122 Miss. "A' GRADES depend on the condition of your eyes. Have them examined and glasses fitted by F. H. Bose, Optometrist . 833 Mass St. . 101-104 DICKINSON FOR BENT Rooms and board for boys near Campus. Rates very reasonable Call 2814. 1241 Louis. —103. YOUR TIME is valuable. Have your watch put in perfect condition now. Roberts Jewelry store. $3 Mass. St. FURNISHED 4-room modern house Desirabale for couple or three men students. Phone 2488M. 804 Mp. St. 102 WHERE STUDENTS MEET LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusively 1025 Mass. Want Ads In this chapter, we present a method for testing the reliability of the software. WANTED: A girl interested in earning part of board. 1312 Ky. Phone 2518R. -101 TRUNK KEYS, door keys, car keys, Good locker padlocks, night latches, door closers repaired. Trewery or Rutter. 623 Vermont St. Phone 319. FOUND: An overcoat in an English class-room. Inquire at 201 Fraser. -101 Mats. 3:00, 10-20c — Eve. 7:00-9:00, 10-25c NOW! Were they hell bound? ALICE WHITE - George Brent - - in - ALICE WHITE VIVIENE OSBORNE A Thrilling Story of the Sea - - - Mystery, Intrigue, Romance - - your selection in prices ranging from 93c up THE BOOK NOOK HARVARD UNIVERSITY LUXURY LINER Added Featurettes FRIDAY-SATURDAY- D Chester Morris BOOKS for your VALENTINE GIFT WHERE STUDENTS MEET Genevieve Tobin "INFERNAL MACHINE" Lewis—Ann Vickers, $2.50. New Yorker Album, $2.50. Doulas—Forelise Us Our Trespasses, $2.50. Who wouldn't be pleased to have you add one of these to his or her permanent library? Gibran "The Prophet," $2.50, Teedalsd - Love Songs, $2.75, Bloodred - Songs of the Saints, $2.00 Calisworth—Flowering Wilderness, $2.50 Barrie—Barewell, Miss Julie Logan, $1.00 Geo Gershwin's Song Book, organ by Fountain. These special editions of the hundreds of which offer for your selection in prices ranging from 95c up. 1021 Massachusetts Tel. 666 CRACKED MOTORS and Water Jackets Welded Without Removing from Car Lawrence Iron Works 609 N. H. St. — Phone 103 Ladies and Mens RIDING BOOTS A man presenting a horse. A Real Dress Boot in black and tan all sizes and widths. $5 TALON Ober's --- Let a Corsar Be Feb.14th Let a Corsage Be Your Messenger VALENTINE'S DAY To Your SWEETHEART and MOTHER The Virginia May Flower Shop We Telegraph Flowers In Hotel Eldridge—Phone 88 THURSDAY. FERRUARY 9. 1933 PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS East Coast Paper Gives Explanation of Venzke's Loss Story Says Penn Star Le Ny, Swedish Runner, Raise His Beat at Wrong Time 'NOT USED AS ALIBI At last from out of the East have come the inside story of why Gene Venkze, the pride of Pennsylvania,走到 Glen Ummingham, the Kansen County Record Company, recorded by Edward S. Hogan states that Venkze was defeated because he let Ny, the Swedish star, raise his best horse and the first half mile in too fast time. The story states that Venke wants I understood that this is not an alibi but an actual fact because he never aliahs It seems funny that the Eastern writers cannot somehow reconcile the fact that a man from Kansass who was unheard of in the East until just before the Olympics has twice given his life and the man they will barely have a decisive "taking" in the all-nill run. Eastern Writers Want Venzke Eastern Writers Want Venkze When Venkze failed to get a place on the Olympic team last summer, that hurt his confidence and coyty that Venkze had an off day in the trials and Cunningham should be displeased by the Pennsylvaniaian in the Olympic games. The Kansas mude these critics look had when he finished fourth in the Olympic mile, the first American to finish. Last week he defeated Venkze in Washington. His admission that after all Cunningham is a great miler. Now this clipping arises saying that Venzie made a mistake by letting Ney set his pace. We do not doubt the veracity of this statement, but that is part of the race and if he makes a mistake in the way he ran, he may ringham let Venzie set his pace until the final lap and then showed his heels to the Pennsylvaniaian. This should settle the matter, but Eastern writers still believe that Venzie will defeat Cunningham in the Batter肌. We do not deny that this is possible but we must make sure Venzie has considered he ought to something in one of the races. New York Times Has Story In the Monday New York Times there was a large picture of Cunningham which was taken by D.Amere in the Memorial Stadium and came Cunin to watch the game at rufio. In the article Daley says: Below the picture was a two column story pertaining to Cunningham and his coach, Bill Hargiss, written by Arthur J. Daley of the Times staff. "When Venuzko raced his 4-10 mile a year ago, the former New York Athletic Club entry set a mark that most persons thought would stand for a long time to come. Cunningham was little known then, just a fair-to-middling mid-Westerner who gave little promise of becoming a new mile sensation. "But the record gathering of 17,000 spectators who witnessed Saturday's mile and the case with which the Joyhawk runner vanquished the reductible Vendake are beginning to see how safe the figures of 4:10 are." Daley also goes so far as to say the next race between the two stars will be a tess-up. "Robertson has always been one to bring his men along slowly, so that they do not reach the height of their effectiveness too early in the season," says Daley. Venzek may well be the Venzek of 1922 in three weeks. and a faster Cunningham is likely to be in there with him." Smashes His Own Record Versatile Sooner Runner Breaks 880 High Mark by 3 Seconds Norman, Feb. 9 — (Special) — Glen Dawson, University of Oklahoma's graduated distance runner and member of the 1932 United States Olympic team in the 3,000 meters steeplechase, broke his own 880-yard record by three seconds in a time trial on Saturday, then went west with the west wing of the stadium here Saturday, and then departed for the east to run in the big indoor meet. Dawson ran the half in 2 minutes, 3 seconds here Saturday, excellent time considering the difficult track. Scooner track enthusiasts believe Dawson the most versatile distance runner in America. Developed by Coach Jacob, Dawson has run 440 yards in 49.4 seconds with a running start, the half in 1 minute 53.9 seconds, the 1,600 yards in 2 minutes 33.7 seconds, the mile in 4 minutes 18.6 seconds, the two-mile in 18.6 seconds, the two-miles in 3 minutes 53.3, three-meters steeplechase in 9 minutes 18.6 seconds, five miles in 23 minutes 37 seconds and six miles in 30 minutes 19 seconds. K-Aggies Improve Standing Two Victories Come After Four Defeats When Skrndski Is Shifted Manhattan, Felo. (*Special*)-Better its standing in the Big Six basketball race, with victories over Iowa State and Missouri after four straight losses, the Kansas State College basketball team has five remaining games on its schedule, four of them conference affairs. The shifting of Captain Andy Stirrad back to a guard position in the Oklahoma game seems to have been the change which snapped Kansas State from its worst finish to the first the Christmas holidays the Wildcats had made a good showing, but sickness and the loss of a regular guard who dropped out to concentrate on his books for the last six weeks, wreaked havoc throughout. The offense went to not陪 with it. Skradski's shift to the guard position gives Kansas State two potent scoring threats at guard, and left room in the front end for the alternation of Breen, Grimam, and Stoner. Dalton has most, and perhaps best, promising sophomore center, did not become eligible until second semester and will not compete this season. Weekend Games Will Be Important to Big Six Race Kansas, With Conferenc Lead, Meets Missouri; Nebraska Goes to Oklahoma K-AGGIES ARE STRONG Leading the Big Six basketball跑 by a half a game, the Kansas Jayhawkers go to Columbia next Saturday night to meet Coach George Edwards' Missouri quintet in a game that will have an important bearing on the conference standings. The Tigers, tied with New Orleans outside chance for title homers, but another defeat would put them definitely out of the running. The Jacksonwellers' closest contender, Oklahoma, on the same right meets Nebraska for the first time this season. The Sooners will determine when the title will be decided. If both Kansas and the Sooners win, it is highly probable that the game between the two to be played in March 5 will be a championship tilt. Jayhawks Have Edge Pre-game dugs give Konsa an edge over the Tigers in the game this weekend. Dr. Allen's team turned in a 35-37 victory over Miami earlier in the season, and in view of the Tigers' performance, is favored to respond. Offsetting this advantage, however, is the "jinx" which has prevented a Kansas team from winning a basketball game three years ago. few years. Not since the Brewer Field House has been the scene of the games have the Jayhawks defended Missouri except at Lawrence, in spite of the fact that there were no former championships in that time. With his reserve strength weakened by the loss of Ernie Vanok, letter guard, due to scholastic difficulties, Dr. Allen will undoubtedly attempt to carry the burden of the training as much of the time as possible. The five men who will be called upon to carry the burden of the title drive from now till the end of the season are Paul Harrington and Dick Wells, forward, and Tom Hancock and Greg Brown and Elmer Schake, guards. Gay and white said Sand Well "We are a team of sophomores, playing their first year of varsity basketball, but both have shown themselves to be fully capable of handling the duties of their positions. A team that will probably give the team a bit of experience in the remaining games of the season is Kama Sela. The Aggies, after getting off to a poor start in Big Six play, have come out of their slump and are playing a brand of basketball that has moment for their future opponents. Men's Intramurals Basketball Schedule Announced The next intramural basketball tournament for all girls and boys, 13. E. R. Elbaz, director of intramural athletics, announced today. Mr. Elbaz plans to hold the championship tour- nament in closing the season early in March. --follows: Sept. 30—Kansas State Teachers col- The schedules for the coming games and the standings of the teams will be announced in tomorrow's Kansan. Basketball Schedule Announced All student wishing to compete in wrestling must turn in their names to Peter J. Mehringer so their eligibility may be confirmed. Monday, Mehringer announced. Wrestlers Called Out Practice to Start Early This Term for Indoor Track Coach Hargiss Has Eight or Nine Lettermen on Which to Build His Team TWO MEETS ON LIST With the indoor track schedule limited to two meets this season, work of the University of Kansas track队 under Coach H. W. Hargus has been an impressive accomplishment swinging into full stride with the beginning of the second semester today. The first meet scheduled for the Jaya-hawkers is Feb. 25 with the Haskell Indians, and will be held on the in-road K.U. The only other indoor meet for the entire team is the Big Six meet at Columbia, Mo, March 11, Glenn Cunningham, star Kanaa distance runner, and the indoor meet in the east in February. Only Eight Letter Men Back Coach Hargill has only eight letter men available out of the 21 granted letters last spring, and may never be selected. Coffman, all-around athlete and member of the United States decathlon delegation in the Olympics last summer, continues in school the second semester and competes in track. There is some possibility he may not compete in track, but it is of eligibility so as to be able to compete in football as well as track next year. Another letter man will be added to the Kansas team in Jay Floum, doth man, who lettered two seasons ago but whom is the season because of injury in football. Although Kansas finished second in the Big Six meet indoors last year the Jawharbys scored only 28 points and of those who won points only Cunningham, Ray Flick, co-aptain-elect, and Coiffman are eligible this season. Cunningham Holds Records Lettter man available this season through an on-site, half mile. Paul Borel and Hally Ritter, distance runners. Tom McAurea, high jumper; Phil Beeley, pole vaulter; Jace Livelier, javelin; and Amex Cox, buriller. With only Cunningham and Flick on the squad who can be rated as a constant high point winners in past seasons the outlook for Kansas placing high in conference meets this season seem considerably dimmed. Cunningham holds the conference indoor mile at 1.833 and the outdoor mile at 4.133, and finished third in the indoor two-mile last year. Flick finished second in the 60 yard indoor high hurdles and first in the outdoor 129 yard highs in 147 seconds last year. Both Cunningham and Flick can be counted on for points in one or more events this season. Outstanding new material is limited but unless first semester exams cut down some of the sophomores a goodly number of lads with possibilities for development will be on hand for Coach Hargiss to work with in all events. One of the new men expected to show stuff is Elvyn Dres, 200 pounds sophomore. The team will be the national interscholastic 12-pound shot put record at 58 feet 10 inches New Material Limited Dees has not been working out with the shot much yet but he should be able to do 46 feet in the indoor season. Ormond Beach, star fullback who also was considerable of a player, is now a forward, trophy and may help to maintain the prestige which Kansas has held in the weight events the past few years. A Thanksgiving game with the Matadors of Texas Tech at Lubbock on Nov 30 has been scheduled as the ninth game in 1933. Kansas State football schedule. At least three of the 1832 opponents will be new. They are Michigan State, which last only one game last season. Texas Tech and St. Louis University. Texas Tech is coached by Pete Cawton, an old friend of Coach Bo McMillin, and is a member of the Border States conference. The Wildcat schedule thus far is no follows: Aggies to Play Texas Tech at St. Louis. at 14, Moisiru at Columbia. Sept. 30—Kansas State Teachers college of Emporia at Manhattan. Oct. 6 (night) St. Louis University Ten Games Probable Schedule for 1933 Participation Maphattan. Oct. 28—Kansas University at Law. TRENCE. Nov. 4-Michigan State at E. Lan- cing Nov. 11—Iowa State College at Ames. Nov. 18—Oklahoma University a' Norman. Oct. 14—Missouri at Columbia. Oct. 21—Nebraska University Manhattan Nov. 25 - Opent Nov. 30 - Texas Tech at Lubbock. ENDS FRIDAY Oct. 6—(night) St. Louis University at St. Louis. Mahattan, Feb. 9—(Special) -The Kansas State college wrestling team, one of the best in the Big Six under Coach B. R. Patterson, will open its home season on Feb. 10 against the Central Teachers of Edmond, Okla. Kansas State Grapplers Wrestle Central Teachers Tomorrow The Wildcats have had only one dual this year, defeating Kansas university to 5. Following the match with the Rams, the Wildcats played Salma for a match with Kansas Wesleyan on Feb. 14. A return engagement with K. U. is tentatively scheduled for Aggies Open Home Seaso Big Week End Special Saturday Only June Roberts, captain of the Kansas State team and its representative in the 153-pound class, is holder of the Big Six title in that weight and also has held the title for the past two years. Paul Warner, representative in the 145 pound class, likewise has two Missouri Valley A. A.U. titles, Griffith, Wildcat 150 pound, finished second in the Big Ten and was out of school last season. Football Practice Starts STAGE ATTRACTION! Nites Only 7:30-9:30 NOW! Sooner Coaches Plan to Take Advantage of Cool Spring Days Norman, Okla., Feb. 9 — (Special— An early six-week spring football practice which every varsity and freshman player must regularly attend, will start at the University of Oklahoma shortly after the beginning of the second semester, announces Lewie Hardage. Sooner head coach. "We plan to start early in February while it is cool and finish sometime in March before the spring sports begin," he said. "We have three coaches: John "Bo" Rowland, line coach, who is already conditioning himself for the spring practice by playing basket-ball." EXTRA SPECIAL The Sooner coaches, starting their second season here, will divide the men into two squads and play five practice games during the six weeks period. BLACKBIRDS OF 1933 All Kinds of Women Have One Kind of Name for Women of Her Kind! mancy Carroll CHILD OF MANHATTAN PATEE HERE BIG PICTURES PLAY Featuring 4 SHARPS and DANCING TRIO “CENTRAL PARK” You've heard the MILLS BROTHERS But You ain't hear Noblin Yet. Joan Blondell Wallace Ford Guy Kibbee Starts Wednesday And Don't Forget the Date Real! True! Authentic! "THE BIG DRIVE" First Authentic Pictures of the World War Two Kansans Leading in Conference Scoring Johnson Averages 11 Points a Game in or Out of Conference William "Skeeter" Johnson, all-Big Six center of the University of Kansas basketball team, has scored 143 points in thirtree games, this season, or an average of 11 points a game. This record comes from 69 points in six conference games, and 74 points in seven non-conference games. He is leading the Big Six conference individual scorers and is the only member of the Kansas team to have scored 104 points in the game. Date: Paul Harrington of Kansas City, Kana, junior forward, is second high scorer for Kansas. He has made five-one points in conference games and 36 in conference play. For a tour of 87 points for 12 games, Leading scorers of the Big Six in conference play are: G FG FT PF PT Pp Johnson, Kansas C 6 28 15 49 Pc Harrington, Kansas C 6 21 9 6 51 Harrison, Kansas C 6 19 9 6 51 Skokie, Kansas S. C 6 18 7 8 Cooper, Missouri C 5 15 9 11 30 Browning, Oklahoma C 5 18 9 11 30 Kansas, Kansas C 5 13 9 11 30 Hobot, Neilskau C 5 13 9 11 30 Wabash, Neilskau C 5 13 9 11 30 Beka, Oklahoma C 5 14 9 8 44 Dallon, Kansas C 6 14 9 8 34 Dallon, Kansas S. C 6 12 9 6 31 Anderson, Oklahoma C 5 11 9 8 71 Weigner, Iowa State C 5 11 9 8 31 Gray, Kansas 6 7 2 11 15 Schuake, Kansas 6 5 2 11 16 9mm, Kansas 5 3 0 1 6 7amek, Kansas 2 1 2 1 4 Sand The Daiky Kansan hokou. Sand The Daiky Kansan hokou. OUR PRICE OUR PRICE Mat. and Eve. 5-15c VARSITY NOW! ENDS FRIDAY THE PERFECT FOOL ED WYNN "Follow the Leader" With Ginger Rogers Also: Comedy - News SATURDAY ONLY— SATURDAY ONLY— Big Double Program WILLIAM POWELL KAY FRANCIS JEWEL ROBBERY "Trapped in Tia Juana" also Chapter 4—Jungle Mystery Chapter 4- Single mystery Soon—Million Dollar Legs Why Pay More Don't take chances, get those worn soles replaced now. We use the best of leather. ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP STARTING THURSDAY--- TOPCOATS-OVERCOATS Your Choice of Any in Our Store Your Choice of All Lined and Unlined Gloves Values up to $4 Sizes 7½ to 10 $1495 Your Choice of All LEATHER JACKETS $5.85 Values up to $8.95 — ONE HALF PRICE — Manhattan - Idd Shirts on Sale Manhattan - Ide Pajamas on Sale These prices are final and the lowest we have ever offered "Good Clothes." CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Give Her FLOWERS - - the Breath of Romance Send her a Valentine that carries a sentiment, a Valentine that sums up the meaning of Valentine's Day flowers. Two hearts with wings To my Valentine Give Her Corsages, cut flowers and plants reasonably priced. "Flowers of Distinction" WARD'S FLOWERS Phone 621 921 Massachusetts Flowers of Distinction Phone 621 USED & NEW TEXTBOOKS LAST SEMESTER One-Sixth of the Textbooks We Sold Were Used Textbooks. CANVAS NOTEBOOKS 2 and 3 Rings Ream TYPEWRITING PAPER (500 Sheets) .60 .60 Rubber Aprons Large Size 30x46 .60 .75 DRAWING INSTRUMENTS Richter-Post Dietzgen Kueffel & Esser SLIDE RULES All Drawing Instruments AUTHORIZED by the UNIVERSITY DESK LAMPS Regular $1.75 Special $1.19 1401 Ohio Special JAYHAWK STATIONERY 60 Sheets 1 package envelopes .75 Ream Notebook Paper No. 13 and No. 6 .95 Rowlands BOOK STORES 1237 Oread UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XXX The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas Ellsworth-Werner Continue Efforts to Help Students About 440 Letters Mailed to People of Lawrence Explaining Needy Gr Cases NAMES ARE OMITTED Continuing their efforts to obtain positions for deserving students, Henry Werner, men's adviser, and Fred Ellis, recent graduate, recently sent personal letters to several of the faculty and people in Lawrence. These letters are stories of students who do not have sufficient experience to help them to continue with their studies. According to Dean Werner, 440 letters were sent out, each one containing a resume of the circumstances which will force some 40 students to leave college. Twenty-four hours after the circulators were put in the mail, he said, the student would be asked to interview one of the students whose case was stated in the letter. No Names Attached There were no names attached to the paragraphs, Dean Werner stated, but there are 45. Students needing assistance are written in a brief and concise manner. Students were asked to hand in their reasons for needing financial aid and 40 were told they had not. The letters were then sent out to various members of faculty and many well known citizens of Lawrence who it might offer assistance to the students. The students, themselves, Dean Werner said, absolutely refuse to accept charity, they will, however, accept any type of odd jobs or a loan which they pledge themselves to pay back. Everyone of these stories have been investigated, he said, and those deemed needy were included in the circular. The two following paragraphs were chosen at random for examples of this type of stories in the letter: List Two Paragraphs 16. "For two years 100 per cent self-starting with no chance of money coming in," he said. "It is one the last lap of an engineering course. Is a senior with an A-minus average. He needs $10 a month." $40 worth of work enables him to carry out his studies. 26. "This girl, age 22, is a senior in 36. "The girl, Grade her interests are B and B plus. Her family is on a farm and can pay only one half of her expenses. She works for which each pays $7.50 a month, she light do housekeeping. Whenever she can, this girl goes to work, even for a meal. Has had soda fountain experience. She needs more house work, so she works for work, for cash to care for expenses." CLASS LESSONS IN MUSIC AID STUDENTS FINANCIALLY A number of University students have enrolled for the class lessons in voice and piano that are being introduced this semester to aid those who are financially unable to pay the full fee. Four students divide the cost of an hour's instruction among them so that for the hour lesson under several conditions, one student is a lesson. Arrangements have also been made whereby two students may share a thirty-minute lesson period on the same financial arrangements. Other arrangements may be made at the Fine Arts office at once. ADVANCED SWIMMING OPEN FOR FURTHER ENROLLMENT Herbert Alliph, swimming coach, announced this morning that there is room for more students in the advanced swimming and life-saving classes. Actual work in the water will start the next week and enrollment may be made Saturday. LAWRENCE. KANSAS. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 10, 1933 Alphin said that the water in the pool is heated to approximately 75 or 80 degrees and a circulator keeps the water at the same temperature all over the pool. LAUREL EVERETTE ANDERSON TO PRESENT ORGAN VESPERS Laurel Everette Anderson, will present the fifty-nine vapeus organ recital Sunday at 4 o'clock in the University Mr. Anderson will present a program of four numbers including selections by Jongen, Yon, Mendelsohn, and Handel. University Bars Students From Classes for Owing Bills University, Miss. Feb. 10 - (UP)—The University of Mississippi taught its students the necessity of paying bills by barring 90 of them from classes until they had paid for meals they ate in the University hospital. "If college students can't remember to comply with their financial obligations promptly, then it remains the duty of the University administration to ensure that financial management John. O'Connay said, 'We do not think our aid is severe.' The aliquent accounts range from 25 up. An English instructor also was included in the list of delinquents. CONDENSED WIRE NEWS Denies Posing as Representative Cherbourg, France, Feb. 10—(UP)—William Bulllit, American writer arriving from Paris today to embark on the Europa for New York, denied he had posed in Europe as a representative of President-elect Franklin D. Rocevelt. Protest Increase in Bread Cost Madrid, Feb. 10—(UF) Forty were arrested for putting bills pro- posed against an increase in the price of bread Major General Collins Dies Washington, Feb. 10—(UP)—Major General Edgar T. Collis, assistant chief of staff, and Spanish-American war and World war veteran, died at Walter Reed hospital today after a long illness. Hoover's Anniversary Washington, Feb. 10 - (UP)—Today is President and Mrs. Hoover's thirty-fourth wedding anniversary. They planned to celebrate very quietly, an invited one a few personal friends or join them for dinner tonight. Mr. and Ms. Hoover were married Feb. 19. 153, at Monterey, Calif. Bar Lotteries From Radio Washington, Feb. 10—(UP) —Spend a through a bill mandating federal radio regulation authority, the senate broadening out to outlaw broadcasting of letters. Choir Entertains Hoovers Wire Tapping Restricted Washington. Feb. 19.—(UP) The rich deep needs of Negroes吹穿 through the east room of the White house today as the chair of Tuskegee Institute entertained President and Mrs. Ellen Johnson-White thirty-fourth wedding anniversary Washington, Feb. 10—(UP)—Senate appropriations committee today refused to trim another 10 per cent from prohibition enforcement funds, but alter sharp debate outlawed wipe tapping as a means of detecting liquor violators Hugh Gas Reservoir Explodes Strassburg, France, Feb. 10—(UP) >A huge gas reservoir exploded at Neukirchen in the Saar district taking a heavy toll of life. First reports said almost all were killed. The tank was 250 feet high and contained 120,000 cubic meters of gas. New York, Feb. 10—(UP)—Mrs. Curtis Dall, daughter of president-elect Roosevelt was listed today by an advertising agency as open to radio engagements on commercial programs consistent with her public position. ROOSEVELT'S DOUGHTER OPEN FOR COMMERCIAL BROADCAST The announcement that Mrs. Dall would undertake advertising broadcast was made in a letter issued by Bruce Quisenbury, Inc., which it says, has charge of the radio activities of Will Rogers and Helen Wills Moody. An early showing of the new spring fashions will be given at the fashion show to be sponsored by Montgomery Ward and company on the stage at the 2013 Tribeca Film Festival o'clock. The Jewel trio, juvenile dancers, will be featured on the program Miss Hoopes to Trenton, M. Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes, assistant professor of English, left this morning for Trenton, M. where she will be a guest of the XCIX club, the women's club of the town. This club is enterteresting and one of many colleges which is located in Trenton. Miss Hoopes will read modern poetry on a special arranged program for such a group of students. DOWNTOWN STORE SPONSORS NEW SPRING FASHION DISPLAY Miss Hoopes to Trenton, Mo. Federal Warrant Issued in Latest Lindbergh Action Extortion Charges Face by Two Men and One Woman in United States Court BONDS SET AT $25,000 Roumoke, Va., Feb. 10.-(UP)—Three federal warrants were issued today for the arrest of Norman Harvey, 28, Joe Bryant, 19, and Mrs. Norman Harvey charging them with sending threatening communications through the mail on June 6, in connection with Coleman Charles A. Lindbergh on his death of kidnapping his second son. The warrants were issued by Assistant United States District Attorney P. X. Parsons, to United States Commissioner Charles Fox Jr., before whom a hearing was expected later in the day. Bends of $25,000 each were required for the two men and $5,000 for Mrs. Harvey. Bryant and Harvey both continue silent today except for denying that they had anything to do with the kid-napping of the late Charles Lindbergh, Jr. Bryant's mother, Mrs. Henry Bryant said he was getting kindling from the wood yesterday when he found the $17,000 check. STILL PROTEST INNOCENCE Two Men and Woman Claim They Know Nothing of Plot Rearcoke, Va. Feb. 10—(UP)—Two young men and a woman to protest their innocence of a bungling attempt to extort $5000 from Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh by threats of kidnapping his second son. Federal and state police officials pressed investigation of the plot. The three, Norman Harvey, 26, his wife and Joe Bryant, an illustrator youth of 19, underwent an all night inquisition by detectives but clung stubbornly to the story that Bryant had "appeared to see a check for $17,000 in a tree stump and so he thought he'd catch it." Federal authorities revealed that the charge of using the mails for attempted extortion might be used in this case but that the more stringent kipping law passed during the search 'for the first Lindenchild child probably could be involved since the state transportation of a kipping victim. The check "found" by Bryant had been placed in the stamp by detective Robert Johnson after long negotiations with the IRS and their demands from $59,000 to $17,000. New York, Feb. 10—(UP)—The Diamond Horseshoe turned to the gallery and the pit today in an appeal to save the Metropolitan Opera company. Woolly society families which have been accused of violating public subscription to make up a $300-$500 fund to guarantee a short season of opera next winter. Attempt to Save Onera To Present Faculty Recital Taylor and Anderson Will Appear in Program Monday Night Howard C. Taylor, professor of piano, and Conrad McGrew, professor of violin, will appear in the faculty recital which is to be presented Monday evening at the St. John's institution auditorium. They will be assisted by Roy Underwood at the piano. Mr. Taylor will play numbers from Beethoven, Schumann, and Niemann. He will also present the first performance of a concert paraphrase on the piano. The works were composed by Carl A. Prayer of the School of Fine Arts faculty. Mr. McGrew will unite with Mr. Underwood in a presentation of the Cesar Frank Sonata for violin and piano. Senate Bill Reorganizes State Education Board Additional Groups Will Be Represented If House Approves Bill The bill as passed by the senate would continue the membership at eight as at present, but would give additional groups representation on it. The new board would consist of two members of the faculty or president of some state institution of higher education, two members of the faculty or president of a private college or president of an independent city schools, one superintendent of county schools, and two business or professional men or farmers. Topoka. Feb. 10.-(UP)-Senate approval was given today to a bill for reorganization of the state board of education. The board at present consists of the heads of all the state's institutions of higher education. The bill now goes to the House for its consideration. --as Asked Kansas—Generally fair tonight and Saturday, not so cold tonight. WEATHER Alpha Gamma Delta, house, 12 p. m. ... AUTHORIZED PARTIES Friday, Feb. 14 Architectural Society, Marvin hall, 12 p. m. Alpha Phi Alpha, house, 12. Baptist Young People's Union, church, 11. University Men and Women's group, Christian church, 8 to 11. NUMBER 90 Late enrollment for all college students will be Saturday morning from 9:30 to 11:30 at Robinson gymnasium. Hobnail Hop, Union, 12 p. m KONES HUSBAND, All those who are desirous of changes in enrollment will enter at the east door, while new students may enter from the west door of the gymnasium. All students with transfers, gray cards, and advanced stand will enter at the center door of the same building. Japanese Cabinet Plans to Reject Conciliatory Plan Decides to Refuse Chinese Nominal Sovereignty Over Manchuria CLASH EXPECTED SOON Tokio, Feb. 10—(UP) —The cabinet met in extraordinary session today and it was reported to have decided upon a negative reply to the question of the League of Nations committee of 10 as to whether Japan would agree to nomi Chinese sovereignty over Manchuria because the final breakdown in the League's effort to conclude the Sino-Japanese dispute. It was understood Foreign Minister Yaanua Uchiha was advising Youkeu Matsauka, Japan's representative at Genoven to deliver the cabinet's reply to the Minister of Education including a resentment of Japan's position in the Manchuria question, will be telegraphed to Matsauka shortly it was understood. Upon its delivery to the League it was generally believed Matsauka would delegate delegation would be ordered home. Troops Prepare for Clash The view of the committee of 19 that any settlement of the Sino-Japanese situation on a conciliatory basis would be unacceptable unless Japan agreed to China's nominal sovereignty in Manchuria, which could be achieved in government circles. The cabinet meeting at which the foreign minister explained the situation as brief, indicating that the committee's action had been accepted. Unofficial spokesmen predicted Japan's withdrawal from the League would be announced within a month. would be announced within a month. Meanwhile a renewal of hostilities between Japanese and Chinese troops appears at hind. Green-clad French soldiers block the border of Jebel al-Mucken provinces here. Chinese forces were reported to have attacked and burned two villages. Sino-Russian Pact Rumored Tokina, Feb. 19—(UF) Belief that the U.S.-China hareu moved a tentative accord between China and Taiwan alliance was current here today. The government was now officially advised that Eugene Chen, Chinese nationalist leader, recently discussed the proposed peace with the Russian embassy in Paris. FRESHMAN COURT PRACTICE WILL BE RESUMED MONDAY Scenes and Persons in the Current News Freshman basketball prescive will be resumed Monday evening at 3:00 and will continue until the end of the season on the same schedule used last The remainder of the season will be devoted mostly to scrimmages among picked teams of the freshman squad of the Big Ten, and other sport in which there is a group of freshmen who spend three or more months at hard training with no glory and not even a game with a junior college credit and recognition by the school. $\textcircled{1}$ $\textcircled{2}$ $\textcircled{3}$ 1- Stainlass Patck, new ambassador from Poland, who presented his credentials to President Hoover. 2- Plimes of the Second brigade, United States marines corps, lined up at Anacasa naval air station after their return from service in Nicaragua. 3- Sketch of the reviewing stand to be built in the court of honor of the White House for the museo de las Artes y las Ciencias as president; the center is modelled after Federal Hall in New York where George Washington was inaugurated. Citizens of Cambridge had protested in such numbers that the entire issue of 3,000 copies was held up until an attempt could be obtained from authorities. Lee Loevinger, editor of Minnesota's SkI-U Mah, died the action. "The policy of censorship, long known to be a futile one, reaches such proportions as this only at Harvard and Minnesota," he said. Protest of Citizens Causes Barring From Mail of Harvard Lampoon Minneapolis, Feb. 10—(UF)—Because "Tutors, Just Tutors," latest issue of the Harvard Lampoon, resembled the general appearance of "Babies, Just Babies," a children's magazine, too closely, it has been banned from the mails, a press dispatch stated yesterday. Faculty Members Attend Music Teachers' Meeting Members of the School of Fine Arts faculty, who attended the twenty-fifth annual meeting of the Kansas State University Wichita, arrived home this morning. These in attendance were C. S. Skillman, Walderman Geltch, Mrs. Alice Moncrief, William Pilcher, Roy Underwood, Eric Barker, David Grean, and Dean D. M. Swartbout Eight in Fine Arts School Assist in Program at Wichita In the absence of Otto Fischer, president of the association, Professor Gelcht, the immediate past president, presided at the sessions and at the banquet as tostmaster. Karl Kuesterer was chairman of the violin round table; Mrs Alice Moberried presided over the Underwood appeared in a group of piano solos; and the University String quartet played. Two compositions of Professor C. S. Skilton were featured on the program, the Indian Fantasie for cello played by Phillip Abbasi, and the song "Mucken, the Bear," sung at the recital given by Lemuel Kirkby, with the composer at the piano on both occasions. Many Die From Bitter Cold The banquet was held last night at the Hotel Lassus with Victor Murdock, editor and Kansan, as the principal speaker. Professor Skilton in a brief talk reviewed the 25 years of history of the Kansas association. On Wednesday evening the delegates were guests of the Civic Music association for the piano recital of the eminent English pianist, Myrna Hess, who appeared on the University concert course two years ago. Winter's Heavy Toll Shown as Bitter Wave Recedes By the United Press Known deaths totaling 130, with death of 11 persons on a missing schooner in doubt, was the toll today of the record. Two people died while Wind driven aurf atail into the homes of fisher folk on a Newfoundland sands pit, endangering lives of the 700 inhabitants. A four day reign of blizzards, ice gales, and record breaking cold left death and suffering over viverra that had been killed to death in the streets and on priaries, burned to death in fires, were asphixated, and struck down by vehicles. The death toll by state: Illinois 20, Chio 20, Missouri 15, Michigan 10, Pennsylvania 9, Oklahoma 7, New York 5, Indiana 5, Iowa 5, Louisiana 5, Texas Oregon 2, Minnesota, Washington, Missouri, Alabama, and Montana, one each. TRYOUTS FOR WRESTLERS WILL BE HELD NEXT WEER Wrestlers who will compete against Missouri Feb. 17, and Kansas State Feb. 25 at Iowa City will try to be held Monday afternoon in the stadium, and in a final tryout it be held in Robinson gymnasium Tuesday night. The wrestling alert, announced today. The wrestling team has been boosted with the announcement of the eligibility of Darrell Eagle, c35, winner of the open 135 pound bout. Discoverer of Mentholium Diels Wichita, Feb. 10- (UP)—Mrs. A. A. Hyde, 78, wife of the president of the Mentholium company, died here today. Mrs. Hyde was credited with the discovery of Mentholum. She was born in Iowa and made the first in a kitchen kettle. Her husband is known internationally as a philanthropist and a leader in the Baptist church. Registration Bill Aimed at Students Now Outside City Election Activity Causes Legislative Comment About West Hills Residents AFFECTS BAKER ALSO As amended the bill requires registration of all voters in all townships of 1,000 population or more in counties of 25,000 to 30,000 population. Topeka. Feb. 10.-(UP).Go the motion of Representative G. K. Melvin (Rep.) Douglas county, the house of Representatives yesterday amended and recommended for passage the bill by Higgins of Johnson county for registration to reach students of the University of Kansas and Baker University. "They do not vote like students of an institution of higher learning, but like a bunch of sheep, guided by whoever gets to them." "In our county we have a large number of residents of 'fraternity row' who wear in Wakunan prefecture," Melvin asks. "They are not required to register." Baker students vote in Palmyra township, the Douglas member added, so he desired the measure be made to include his county. NEW REGISTRATION POLICY Present Law Requires Listing of Voters Only in Cities of First Two Classes The present state law of Kansas requires registration of voters in cities of the first and second class. Lawrence is of the latter classification. The Higgins bill, copies of which are not at hand, would apparently require preparation of a pre-election registration list by some official, presumably the county clerk, and Gins bill would apply to Wakura township, which surrounds the city of Lawrence on the west, south and east. It has a population of more than 2,400 persons, and east more than 1,300 voices according to C. O. Bowman, county clerk. May Extend City Limits While this U-shaped precinct is several miles wide, the greater part of the inhabitants live immediately adjacent to the boundaries of the city. For some time anitation has been on going to an extend the city limits to take in those persons living there. According to E. A. Wesetemeyer, city clerk, it is probable the larger number of the voters of Wakarusa precinct will soon be within the city, and, as residents of the city, subject to registration before being allowed to vote. County Clerk Bowman said he be- manded to registration in any precinct having the large number of voters that Wakarusa precinct now has. Few Live in Fraternities Few live in Fraternities. There are eight fraternities and sororities in the so-called "fraternity row" west of the campus, with a probable number of 240 to 200. It is estimated that about 100 of these are of voting age. Don Elkins, a resident of the district, said there was considerable student interest in the election last November, and strong efforts made to get out all students who were against the students voted at the Commons building as absentees so their votes could be counted in their home counties, where their chief interest lay. He said he doubted if a similar situation — with the general election — would arise again soon. CYEUS CRANE WILL SPEAK AT LAW SCHOOL MEETING Cyrus Crane, president of the Missouri State Bar association and head of a law firm in Kansas City, will be the speaker at the opening Law School convocation of the second semester to be held in the Little Theater of Green River University. Mr. Crane's subject will be "The Practice of Law." All who are interested are invited to attend the convocation. Pre-law students are especially urged to be present. Robert David, dean of the School of Law today. Hobnail Hon Is Saturday The Holloman Hop will be held Saturday night from 9 till 12 in the Memorial Union ballroom. The Kansas Engineers are sponsoring the party, "Bugs" House and his Hotel Eldridge orchestra will play. One feature is that all those chired in cordonnails will attend for 80 cents. The public may attend. PAGE TWO FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1933 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS University Dailv Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE KANSAK BENNETHCK, KANSAS Editor-in-Chief PAUL V. MINE Assistant Editors Muriel Rose Amelia Bettle ... SUNKEY KROSS Manager Editor ... ARRON KERNAMM Night Edition ... CALVIN KERNAMM Night Edition ... VIVIAN PELATZ Sports Edi..t ... CAROL KERNAMM Society Editor ... MARGARET IMMUNE Society Editor ... MARGARET IMMUNE Alumni Editor ... JANE BURLEY Department Manager ... DOSELL KERNAMM ADVERTISING MACH ... MARGART INC (UK) Director Manager ... HICK Director Manager ... JACK COLLINS Katherine Joord Memphis Robert Hewlett Robert Hewlett Ridley Kline Ridley Kline Terry Milligan Matthew Lawrence Matthew Lawrence Allison Breuckle Arnold Kreiman Arnold Kreiman Jimmy Scott Jimmy Scott Business Office ... K.U. 6 News Room ... K.U. 2 Night Connection, Business Office ... 2761K Night Connection, News Room ... 2762K Published in the periodical, five times a week and on Sunday monthly in the department of Journalism of the University of Kansas from the Press of the department at Subscription price, $40.00 per year, payable in advance. Simple login, in each. Enrolled as second-class matter November 19, 2010, at the office at lawrence, Kansas. AN APPRECIATION OF THE POLL TAX With the abstinence of the poll tax, which seems certain now that both the senate and the house of representatives have passed a bill providing for that action, will go one of the real distinctions that came on a fellow's twenty-first birthday. For even surpassing the thrill of knowing that now you really could vote was the pleasure of having someone say, "Well, Willyum, ye'd better watch out now, they'll be a tryn' to collect that there poll tax on ye now." Somehow it didn't seem like a follow really was old enough to vote until that ceremony had been gone through. The reason was that unless a fellow was lucky, his birthday wouldn't be near election time and the necessity of paying the tax was the first tangible assurance that he really was as awfully, terrible old as he was. Paying the tax definitely ranked him as a man, made him feel one of the men-folks, gave him license to join in their political discussions and add his bit to the exhortations and expectations on the shaded porch of the general store. Reaching man's estate will lose some of its savior and picturelessness when the poll tax is no more. But it is a move for the best. The first thrill of paying the tax was the last. From then on it became a burden, and was avoided and evaded as frequently as possible. It was a thorn in the side of the collector as well as of the males who had to pay it. Collection of the tax became hapazhward and desultory and for the most port ceased. It was definitely a "misuse" tax, and its abolition is a step toward a better tax program. At last the height of Hill sophistication, or perhaps the supreme manner of insult, has been reached. A couple wandered into Fraser theater last night just before the last act of the play began. ARE GENTLEMEN BARE? It is a grand old name, that of gentleman, and has been recognized as a rank and power in all stages of society. To possess this character is a dignity in itself commanding the instinctive homage of every mind, and those who will not bow to titular rank will do homage to the gentleman. His qualities depend not upon fashion or manners, but upon moral worth not on personal possessions, but or personal qualities. The real gentleman should be gentle in everything, at least in everything that depends on himself, such as carriage, temper, constructions, aims, and desires. He ought therefore to be mild, calm, quiet, even, temperate, not harsh in judgment, not exorbitant in ambition, not rapacious, nor oppressive. Do we have one on the Hill? A new instructor on the Hill this semester is just about from one to five or six jumps ahead of his conferees of the faculty. He gave a quiz at his first class meeting yesterday. RULES FOR GIRLS There should be no reason for the modern young woman to be unpopular with men; she has only to conform with the rules they lay down for her behavior, it would seem. Of course, there is the matter of complying with the regulations, but that, the man say in effect, is her look-out; we have made the rules, the rest is up to her. The newest set of regulation was promulgated at the University of Colorado Friday, when six students announced the qualification specified for the co-ed to be chosen queen of the engineers' bail First of all, the boys said, ou queen must smoke mild, inexpen-sive cigarettes. Mild, evidently, the boys could smoke them toe and inexpensive as a concession to their own pocketbooks. For the girl niece buys her own. Then she must detest strong cigars and pipe and must not chew tobacco, the lads maintained. Well, that's right, most girls don't want to any way. At this juncture the student committee became very diplomatic and indulged in some delicate phrasiology. She must abhor al-coholic beverages, was the master piece that resulted. And finally the girl to be chosen queen must be susceptible to the attention of a man, whatever that may mean, and must be able to say good night graciously. Such sets of regulations show that it's easy enough for the girl to induct how the boys want her to be, but sometimes she is led to wonder if after all its worth while, or the upshot of the whole matter, elder sisters will tell her, is hat man sooner or later comes to greet with the standards she has decided on for herself all by herself, and gives them the stamp of its approval. Of course, he usually ints himself on the back because he has finally agreed with him on mat matter, but that's all right, man is like that. The Kansas yesterday carried a headline, "Dozen Ears Frozen" over a story telling of twelve students who had suffered nipped ears from the cold. Either that headline writer never learned to count, or some circus could pick up some darn swell one-eared side-show freaks here on the campus! And probably get them at a bargain, too! GALLANTRY Gailantry today most often consists in saying the most empty things in an agreeable manner. It is the sure read to the favor of women, and yet is really nothing more than the appearance of extreme devotion to all their wants and wishes, a delight in their satisfaction, and a confidence in himself on the part of the actor as being able to contribute toward it. Yesterday this column contained an editorial pleading for a more adequate stream of water from the drinking fountain in the Kansas news room. Today the fountain will not work at all. Our Contemporaries Rationalizing college students all over the country are beginning their semi-annual enrollance against the examination system, if editorials appearing in other college papers are any indication of student feeling. Nebraska students have written to the university at some of the features of the educational system which stress to such an extent passing examinations and getting grades. DONT BLAME THE SYSTEM, BLAME YOURSELF Having themselves in mind particularly, perhaps, college editors point to the fact that with the stress put upon final examinations, students are prone to overfeeding on the major part of the studying done in the course is done during the last few hectic days preceding the final examination. The amount of value derived from a course in which the facts are known is not so, so is doubted, and we just think so. For those who think the examination system childish, we can only say it must necessarily be so. Some idealists point to the system in use in some European institutions where the student directs his own study activities largely, and uses his own initiative. He is not bound by the necessity of taking a periodical examination and is not forced to be studying for his own benefit and what he does or does not do is his own business. Here again, it may be pointed out that the final examination receives more stress than it does in American colleges and universities. A thoroughly comprehensive series of examinations must be passed before a student graduates from an institution of that type. And furthermore, the system is in use where most of the students in less numbers are being handled. It seems obvious that in a system of universal education, such a scheme would be unworkable. The system is criticized also because it, puts a premium on remembering facts and because it tends to evaluate a student's worth in the course by grading him on his remembrance of facts as set forth in the large big probe. In the last analysis, all of these criticisms are not faults inherent in the examination system. If a student so organizes his work that he has it all to memorize, then it makes that a fault in the majority of cases. If the examination is merely a quiz on facts, and makes no attempts to determine whether the students has gained a knowledge of the general principles of the course, that is primarily the fault of the instructor either in his organization of the course or his composition of the examination. If the grade in the final exam is poor, this part upon the results of the final examination, that is most certainly the fault of the instructor. The grading system and the examination system as used at Nebraska and other American institutions are far from perfect. The criticism that indulges requirements and preparing for examination is largely true. Learning for learning's sake is rephased by learning for the sake of grades. But bearing in mind that no one will be very versified are designed for large numbers of students with all types of minds and all degrees of ambition and intelligence, it is hard to figure out any other scheme which could be applied and still be successful in meaning anything but waited time. There are advantages to the final examination. Studying for it often gives a better perspective of an entire course than any other method. If the course is properly organized, the ability to select the significant features of the course is enhanced in the final examinations, is a valuable ability for students to cultivate. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXX Friday, Feb. 10, 1933 No. 99 It is a pleasant thing, no doubt, for those of us who have ill-used our time to sit and console ourselves into believing that we are the victim of a poorly ordered educational system, but it is not always the truth—Daily Nebraska. Ernest Vaughn, F32, was granted at C. P. A. degree at the state of Texas. He is the sixth graduate of the School of Business to receive the award. Vaughn is at present with the Eckhall-McCarty company in Emporia. Jayhawks Flown Laurence T. Greiner, b28, has been appointed advertising and sales promotion manager for the Goodrich Rubber company in Akron, Ohio. Notice due at Chancellor's Office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication days and 11:30 a.m. on Saturday for Sunday issues. --- Burham Humphreys, 29, is a chemist in charge of the shipping department for the Barton Salt company at Hutchinson, Texas. Edward Doyle Kennedy, '70, is an officer in the government air service and will be sent to the Canal zone in April. J. C. Warner, 21, has been appointed vice-president of the R. C. A. Raditree company located at Harrison, N. J. There will be a Valentine party at the church this evening at 8 o'clock. Please bring five cents and a Valentine. --- SIGMA ETA CHI; rittition services will be held at the Congregational church at 4 a.m. Saturday followed by an banquet. Don't forget the guest meeting at 8:15 Sunday OLIVE DOUGLASS, Publicity Chairman. B. Y. P. U; EVANGELINE CLARK. The May Day Mystery Copyright by Octavus Roy Cohen. WNU Service. Octavus Roy Cohen SYNOPSIS --- CHAPTER I—Anomette Peyton, a former basketball player at Marlins, resumes father Thayer's attention to Ivy Welch, seventeen-year-old ending with bitter reticence, the second non-other, another student, long. Thayer's older brother, an old dame, a "date" with him. Thayer and Version GISAFFITT Lloyd. Last year, Wielson,Keys and Pitcher worked together to build a friendship with Trayner. With each other, Wielson does not what other men do. When he is married to Trayner, he will be married to Trayner. CHAPTER III—Larry determines to see *Chayer*, his sister and her association with the family, until she has appealed to her husband at a fraternity house. Max Verriess lives and goes to his room. Tony ends up leaving the house almost immediately afterwards, wishing in a statue of himself that apparently clothing to be tanned leave the house almost immediately. Rube Farum and Till Gleason were still longing on the veranda of the Palat Tsi Thea house. It was Rube who saw Larry first. CHAPTER IV "And now another," he drawled. "Here comes Larry Welch looking like someone and sucked him below the throat, and let out anything he's coming straight here." But even Farnum did not take his own words seriously, and so his jaw dropped as Larry passed his own treasury house and turned in at Tihu Tihu. "Pat Thayer in?" he asked. "Yeh . . . unstairs." "I'll say this much," commented Gleason after a five-minute silence; "Pat Thayer has sure gotten popular with a mixed crowd." Then, when he had entered the house, they looked at one another bewerbledly. The affair was too puzzling for mere conversation. Occasionally one would shake his head, but speech was so awkward that the other was thinking in circles. "Yeh . . .." agreed Rube, "Or unpounsi!" Wait, the prompt says "Maintain the original document structure and content." The word after "unpounsi!" is a comma. The word after "Rube" is a period. So it's: "Yeh . . .." agreed Rube, "Or unpounsi!" Wait, t For five minutes more nothing happened. Then at ten minutes past two o'clock, Larry Welch appeared in the doorway. He crossed the veranda with quick steps and descended to the walk in a single jump. The two boys stared into him, the two girls directed their gaze toward each other. "Happy lad," commented Glenson. "He looked almost scared." From upstairs in the fraternity house there came a wild shriek; and an old woman who was standing pause and then the howl were repeated and there was a sound of feet running heavily down the stairway, and on the floor lay a pair of shoes to the startled ears of the two boys. At fifteen minutes after two o'clock , and almost before the melow chimes of the quarter hour had died out from the tower of Old Main . something happened; something screwed terrible, something which jared their hearts to their feet and caused cold sweat to break on their foreheads. They recognized him instantly; Mike Carumiclo, junior of the fraternity house. He graduated Farnam's arm, he was a member of the cadets' cause; only the gibberish of terror. "Oh! G'd - d . . . oh, my G'd - d !" vermaura it a dissolved, wild-eyed figure which was making passionate gestures and struggling finally to say some Furum grabbed Carmelo by the shoulder and glued at him. "What's the matter?" he asked hoarsely. "Wh what's all the yelling about?" Carmicino covered his eyes with his hands. Carmelino gestured wildly toward the interior of the house. said it be grounded. "Somebody has murdered Mother Thyeer!" babbled, crouched, shaken, sobbing Jantler, the two fraternity brothers faced each other. Their eyes were distended with horror as they struggled to understand what Mike Carmelo brought to them. They led the Jantler to a chair, where he forward, his squirt, muscular legs were caught in the air, their bodies were badly shaken, but at least they tried to think clearly, and Farmun's voice, when he questioned the Jantler, "Meester Thayer!" he croaked— "Meester Thayer!" "You say Mr. Thayer is dead?" Cupcake shuddered. "Si-sl, signore. He is quite completely murdered. He is on the floor at her boes room. There is much blood. He does not breathe. Hice heart it does not beat. I am quite sure he is dead." "I see the door of Meester Thayer's room is not entirely shut. I look in the mirror, and there's no floor. I think that is very funny that she hasn't moved," and not move. Perhaps he is drunk "Good Lord. . . How did you find him?" M. E. SCHNEIDER "Somebody Have Murdered Meester Thaver!" So I think I will put him on the bed and shut the door so nobody will know he is drunk. I go in the room and then I see the blood—and—and— "I stand there for a minute. Two minutes. I do not understand that Meester Thunyer is so kind to me have come to a sad ending. Then I see he is dead and something grab me and run, then I feel with a dramatic gesture. "I cannot breathe. I cannot move. I am scared." "You=you mean someone really "You—you mean someone really grabbed you?" "No! Michele's eyes rolled with terror at the very thought. "I mean I feel as bad the somebody does that, and I feel as afraid the frighten. And I run downstairs." Gleason locked up. "We'd better phone the police, I hate. If we don't call the cops we get ourselves mixed up with people we'd better phone the dean, too." Glennson walked unnately into the fraternity house and called the Marland police station. Then he telegraphed to the dean and returned to the It was a ghastly thing—made even more glray by the perfect day; the sensuous, flower-scoured breezes of first summer; the carcasses, grooming habits and carefree vitality and carcass youth. And upstairs the body of a young man lying dead. Murdered. It wasn't believable. The two young men were appalled by their own knowledge of surrounding circlings. They knew which might prove damning. (To be continued: Sunday) IF YOU MISSED THE FIRST CHAPTERS of "The May Day Mystery" you may secure back copies of the Kantan at the Kantan Business Office. Look At Your Shoes — Everyone Else Does At Least Keep Your Heels Straight and Get a Shine. ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP 17 Mass. 11 W. 9h The Stylist says-- "It seems to me the Suit's the thing for Spring" And they speak a various language They are newly arrived from the New York mart. The tailored suit with mannish hip-length coat. $ 25.00 $ 29.50 The dressier type with fur at cuff, elbow, or shoulder with blouse of lingerie or gay taffeta. $16.75 The swagger suit with finger tip coat or cape. Organdie Neckwear First Floor Specials Crisp organdie bows in plain, corded or crepy material at 50c, 75c, and $1.00. The Cats Whiskers! Lacy Sweaters Perky Scarfs Collar and cuff sets with new high necklines in organicle or cropes at 50c, 75c and $1.00. Silk crepe or taffeta scarfs, short stubby, fan or V shapes, all bright colors in prints, stripes, and checks at 59c and $1.00. Short puff sleeves and very high necklines are features of these new spring sweaters. They come in sizes 34 to 40 and are priced at $1.19. Yardley Set Candles for Parties Weaver Special in Hose For your next party you will want, of course, to use candles for decoration. Our 18 and 12-inch candles will not drip or smoke and are slow burning. They make a bigger, bright flame than most candles. The colors are lovely and will harmonize with any color scheme. They are priced at 10c each. With a regular box of Yardley's English lavender soap a 75c bottle of Yardley's English lavender free! We want you to try this world's most famous perfume. $1.05 a box. WEEK END DRUG SPECIALS 25c Williams Talcum For men 9c. 50c Palmolive Shamncoo 29c 35c Frens Sanitary Napkin 2 for 25c 39c Mckesson Shaving Cream 2 tubes 39c 2 pairs of Noblesse, 59c hose for $1.00. 2 pairs of Estelle, 79c hose for $1.50. FRIDAY and SATURDAY Valentine Candy 25c to $2.00 Dram Sale Imported Domestic Perfumes Shailimar $1.19 Guelques Fleur .33 Evening in Paris .50 Losigan .49 Subillite .39 Ciro Jasmine .79 Fleurs D' Amour .33 Memories of Paris .29 Geurlains Liu .1.70 Geurlains Mitsouko .80 Seventeen .47 Blue Rose .33 Sweet Orchid .29 Lostemps Desillas .39 Locust Blossom .19 Lajade .39 Queen of Hearts .19 Ben Hur .19 Cappi .29 PHONE 20 WE DELIVER Free Motorcycle Delivery Johnsons Whitman Losso Wills Icahn Press Shuped Rexes Wrapped for Mailling No Extra Charge --- Noon Day Hot Plate Lunch 25c Roast Capon Dressing With Gravy Fruit Salad Creamed Asparagus Rolls & Butter Coffee - Milk --- ROUND CORNER DRUG CO. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1933 PAGE THREE A. G. ALRICH Printing Engravings Binding, Rubber Stamps, Office Supplies Stationery 736 Mass, Street UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS New Features at Your Union this semester - : - : from Rankin's We wrap for mailing Pay your $1.00 when you pay your fees. VARSITY SHOWS 2:00-7:00-9:00 15c To Hear Miss Lynn Miss Margaret Lynn, professor of English, will address the Westminster Forum at its meeting Sunday at 5:30 p.m. in Westminster hall. Her subject will be "Why Read Novels," Eleonor Prowe, c'25, will lead the devotional. Alpha Gamma Delta to Have Valentine Dance Acacia Elects Officers George Hazeen, *e.ucll.* was elected venerable dean of Acacia fraternity last night. Other officers chosen are senior dean, Sidney Holburn, *c*;35; treasurer, Sidney Holburn, *c*;35; treasurer, George Hazeen, *c*;44; and secretary, Gene Erwin, *c*;34. Lost Times Tonight ED WYNN Alpha Gamma Delta will have a Vance dance from 9 to 12 p.m. tonight at the chapter house, "Bugs" House and his band will play. The girls will be dressed up by Mrs. C. H. Landez, Mrs. Frances Goodell, and Mrs. Franklin A. White. Among the out of town guests will be Burgest Heinemann, James Colt, Ruth Learned, Sheeran Sherer and Doreen Larson. Carly City, Mia, and Clarence Urnes of Bison "Follow the Leader" Sat. Only The Great Jewell Robbery and Terrorist Attack Trapped in Tia Juana Request — Sunday Only — Request EASTERN SOCIETY "MILLION DOLLAR LEGS" a Grammy Picture with JACK OAKIE W. C. FIELDS ANDY CLYDE - BEN TURPIN - LYDA ROBERT HANK MANN - GEORGE BARBRIER - HUGH HERBER! DICKIE MOORE - SUSAN FLEMING TON a Ramadan Gift REMEMBER VALENTINE'S DAY With a Nice Box of Valentine Candy Take some pictures of the campus while it's snowbound. We have Eastman's films and Kodaks. Rankin's Drug Store "Handy for Students" 11th & Mass "Handy for Students" Phone 678 Mr. and Mrs. Kair Klooz entertained his bridge chair at dinner at the University club Wednesday evening, followed by their home, 1110 West Campus road. Dinner guests at the Sigma Alpha Epillon houses last night were the LaVern Wright, ed33, Octavia Harris, cunc!; Dougley Doughlass and Margaret Guzmán. Twelve-d wordes or least 1 inch. these, 2 inches, 3 inches, 4 inches. rate. WANT AID ARE ACCOMPANIED BY CASEL Delta Zeta will entertain rushees at an informal Valentine dinner tomorrow. Alpha Chi Omega announces the pledging of Garnet Hughes, e³⁴, and Dorothy Lyman, fa³⁸, both of Low-lying Australia were held this day at 5 a¹⁰ clock on 5 a¹⁰ clock. Pi Beta Phi wishes to announce the pledging of Margaret Williamson of Independence, Mo., and Margaret Crounin of Tulsa, Okla. Miss Irene Peabody, assistant professor of voice, will entertain with a bridge luncheon Saturday at the Manor. Chi Omega announces the pledging of Evelyn Farber, c'uncel, of Clayton N. M. Sigma Chi announces the pledging of Preston Clark of Wichita, and Junior Surgeon of Dodge City. TRUNK KEYS, door keys, car keys, Good locker padlocks, night latches, door closers repaired. Trewong & Rutter. 623 Vermont St. Phone 319 FOUR nicely furnished rooms, 87 to 134 a month. Breakfast and dinner, 514 a month. Discount if both board and room are taken. 1200 Tennessee. — 105 Margaret Williamson of Independence, Mo., was a guest of Kappa Alpha Theta last night. Want Ads Brought Back for a second visit by POPULAR DEMAND RED NICHOLS IN PERSON AND HIS 11 WORLD FAMOUS • PENNIES • FEATURING JUNE REA • TONY SACCO • ERNIE MATHIAS FRIDAY NIGHTS are COLLEGE NIGHT University students and alumni enjoy a colorful interchange music of the Grill Right in the Grill And remember, the convert is only fifty cents! The Grill's most popular bond in 1932 and the second most popular orchestra ever to play in Kansas City. MAKE RESERVATIONS IN ADVANCE NEW REDUCED PRICES Lunchbeans . . . 65c. 85c Full Course Dinner . . $1.50 Couvert at late supers only—30 on Saturday Sunday evening Family Supper Only $1.00 for Full Course Dinner and Dining Bill (a m. (No Couvert) FREE RATINGS! A. At Down Your Storage and Club Auto Parks No. 1 and 2. WANTED: A girl interested in ear- nuring part of board. 1312 Ky. Phone 2518R. -101 FURNISHED 4-room modern house, Desirable for couple or three men students. Phone 24838. 684 Mo. St. 11. FOUND: An overcoat in an English class-room. Inquire at 201 Fraser. FOR RENT: Rooms and board for boys near Campus. Rates very reasonable. Call 2814. 1241 Louis. —103. FOR RENT: To young men, teacher, or married couple, plentiful southeast front room in private home. Private room in private home. Carrier 146 *Kentucky*. Phone 231-849. WANTED: Several boys to board. Good food, family style, all you can eat; price right. Make up your own club. Good location. 1042 Ohio. -101 ROOM AND BOARD for three boys. Nice big rooms. Excellent meals. Make an offer, 1538 Vermont; Haugh Club. Phone: 1378. -101 GILHS: Room and board, $20. smooth, Board optional. Use of living room, grand piano, radio, Every home prevail. Kitchen, linen cabinet, Phone 1703 - 108 - -408 BOYS CLUB. Come where you can get all you can eat. Oven cooked meals; good variety; 21 meals for $5. 1122 Chic St. - -192 TO RENT: to graduate or mature women; please rooms on top of the hall. 135 Orced. Phone 1315 — 100 YOUR TIME is valuable. Have your watch put in perfect condition now. Roberts jewelry store. $33 Miss 54. THE "A" GRADES depend on the condition of your eyes. Have them examined and glasses fitted by F. H. Roberts, Optometrist, 833 Mass. St. —101. CAFETERIA LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusively 1025 Mass. --have earned a part or all of their expenses during the past six years. NEW MUCHBACK GRILL More Than 200 Students You are helping these worthy students by eating here and you will get excellent food at low prices. Try Our 25c Meal. at UNREDEEMED PLEDGES ABE WOLFSON Wrist Watches, Fountain Pens, Drawing Instruments, Shot Guns, Revolvers, and Pistols at Much Less than New Prices. MONEY LOANED ON VALUABLES Phone 675 637 Mass. Served Daily 13 papers - 15c per week Established 1868 835 Mass. Phone 182 LUNCHEON The place to stop for a refreshing fountain drink or appetizing sandwich is our beautiful new Walnut Room. Wiedemann's 11:30 a.m. to 2 p. m. Also 5:30 till 7 p. Saturday and Sunday THE KANSAS CITY STAR Subscribe for When Down Town---- H. L. NEVIN Distributor PHONE 17 Leather Note Books Note Papers Fountain Pens School Supplies Ink Slide Rules Drawing Pencils Large Canvas Notebook $100 with paper and dividers free. Coe's Drug Stores 1347 Mass. 411 W. 14th Phones 521-516 People know it.. CINEMATOGRAPHY Chesterfields are Milder WHEN you ask a Chesterfield smoker why that's his brand — he generally comes right out flat-footed and says . . . “It’s because They're Milder!” So we're going to keep on doing everything we know how to keep them that way. That's why we look for and buy the mildest and ripest tobaccos we can get. That's why we age them in our warehouses till they're mellow and sweet. We believe that even the shredding of the tobacco...and the quality of the paper it's rolled in, have a lot to do with the even-drawing, mild smoke that people enjoy in Chesterfields. You can bank on this...every method known to science is used to make Chesterfield a milder, better-tasting cigarette that satisfies. THEY'RE MILDER — THEY TASTE BETTER Chesterfield Radio Program—Every night except Sunday. Columbia coast-to-coast network. Masterfield CIGARETTES UNLIMITED CARD TREE IS UNLIMITED CARD TREE IS $ \textcircled{1} 9 3 3, \textcircled{L i g o r t e t} $ & Myers Tobacco Co. Chesterfield PAGE FOUR FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1933 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Jayhawkers Face An Old Court Jinx in Tilt Tomorrow Kansas Has Not Defeated Missouri on Home Court for Pest Five Years SCHAAKE IS INJURED The Probable Starting Lineups **Probable Starting Lineup** KANSAS MISSUOE Harrisoning F C Harrisoning F C Johnson C G Schako or Urie G Gergen J Miller Jenner Jergen Facing a jinx that has kept Jay, hawker quitters from winning at Columbia for five years, Coach Cornez C. Allen's basketball squad will invade Tiger territory tomorrow night to defend one-game lead in the 12th place. The team took a light workout has night and wiltaper off with a short practice this afternoon. Coach Aller reports that all of his players are in good shape, and he has cut down or scrimmage to avoid possible injury Missouri, although it lost to Kansas by a 27-35 score earlier in the season, has defeated two conference opponents in its home games this season, winning from Iowa State and Nebraska at Columbia. Race Grows Hotter With the race for conference honors growing hotter, the Jashawkers must win tomorrow night if they are to continue to set the pace for the other Big Six teams. Okhama, only one pane behind Kansas, is rated as a probable State tournament winner. In the event of a State tournament, would take the lead. George Edwards, Tiger coach, has shifted his listup somewhat following a disasterous road trip, on which his team lost four consecutive games. Barry Sanders, who has been assigned a starting birth with Stuber, will not start due to a recent injury. Wagner will remain at center, with Miller and Jorgenson at guards. Johnny Cooper, sensation of last year's season, will replace Passer in the starting lineup. Kansas Regulators to Start The Kansas startling inertion will be the first team to use most of the week in practice, the combination that has seen the most action in previous games. Harrington and Johnson, who are the conference's two leading scores at present, are assured of starting positions, as is dunne The other two players, Gray and Wells, have displayed the best basketball of any of Dr. Allen's group of sophomores, and their work, both on offense and defense, is on a par with that of the sound veterans. sophomores, and their work, both on offense and defense, is on a par with that of the squid veterans. Schake and his team practiced in practice the afternoon and Schake developed a charley home. Dr. Allen did not know of the injury until just before practice yesterday and did not allow the Kansas guard to participate in practice. If Schake is not ready to start tomorrow, Urie will be at the other guard post as he was used at that position last night. Carl Baldwin also other possibility at the next pest but his ankle is still weak from an early The same nine men who made the trip to Nebraska will go to Columbia. They are Johnson, Harrington, Schaake, Gray, Wells, Card, Ursula, Kiasa, and Benn. They will leave here at 7:00 p.m. on Friday for a midnight train out of Kansas City. Scores of Kansas-Missouri games since formation of the Big Six. Missouri Karsu 38° 31° 34 34 33 33 20 20 12° 17° 29 18 22 18 20° 40° 13 31 26 19 26 22 16 24 27 35 Exhibition --- Men's Intramurals Men's Interamateurs The final intramural basketball schedule for the 2023-24 season, announced today by E. R. Elbel, director of intra- national teams, is as follows: 6:30 p. m—Acacia B vs. K Sig B and hi Pi B vs Psi Gam B. `bi P1 b vs Phi Gam B` `P 1 p, m - Sig Nu v vs Phi Gam and` Gayhawk v. 15, L. 10 p. m.-Jayhawk v. Acacia and S [1] 10 p.m.—A Chi Siq vs Phi Mu A and Delta Ci cv, S P E. o0 p p m . - Kayhawk B vs Gli Chi B o1 Ph Doll B vs Jachwk B 9 p. m.-College vs Engineers and Graduates 10 p. m—Chi D Sig vs Sig Chi and A K Poi vs Phi Chi 10 p. m.—A P O vs Theta Tau and Telescope vs D U Foh. 17 For 11-17 Delta Tau vs Beta and A T O vs Rowlands. 7 p. m.-Ph Pit vs Pi K A and AK Pi k. K K 8:50 a. m—Anastia B vs Phi Cam B and Kappa Sga B vs Phi Delt B 8:50 a. M—A O P vs Phi Mu A and v3.50 a n I - A T O V i m and A n Acacia w D C H 10:30 s. m—Phi Gam vs C D S and Tennessee vs Wakushana. 11:30 m — M A L vs D U and Phi 1. p.m.-A Chi Sig vs Theta Tau and Phi Chi vs Phi Beta Pi. 6:30 p. m—Acacia B vs Jayhawk B and Sig Chi B vs D T D B. PATTEE WHERE 810 PICURES PLAY SATURDAY Ends Toulte Lords Tonic Nancy Carroll "Child of Martha" and Sting Attraction Come Out! Let's Have Some Laughs-Thrills-Chills-Romance SOMETHING NEW CEN CENTRAL PARK EVERY MINUTE IN INAN BLONDELL · WALLAGE FORD · GUY KIBBEE Also-Clark and McColloch Latest Comedy Hits Krazy Kat Cartoon, and Devil Horse BIG SPECIAL MIDNITE SHOW 11:15 Saturday Nite PREVIEW SHOWING WHISTLING IN THE DARK The LAUGH-THRILL Hit of the Season! W You'll Laugh! Shriek! Howl! Cheer! Gaunt! Applaud Ernest Trux - An Merkel - Johny Hines IMPORTANT! Come at 10 O'Clock and See 2 Complete Shows for 25c Sunday Thru Tuesday "Whistling in the Dark" 9. p. m.-Kappa Sig vs Beta and A F O s, S P E. 10 v s S r 10 p. m. Phi Psi vs Sig Chi and Phi Dtlt 10 p. m.-College vs Graduate and Education vs Engineers. Feb. 2 10 p. m.—"B" elimination game and "B" elimination game. 6 30 p. m—Kayhawk B vs S A E B and A Chi Sig vs A P O. 9 p. m—Sig Nu vs S A E and D T 10 p. m.-Triangle vs Pi K A and Phi Mu Alpha vs A K Psi, 7 p. m.-Phi Delt vs Beta and A K game. 9:30 a. m. —K Sig vs D T D and C D N. Bok, Phl. Accela vs S L E 1 p. m.—A K Psi vs Theta Tau. 10.50 a D chi vs D phi game and D Chi vs A T O. 11.30 n. m- Phi Gium vs Sig Chi and Acacia vs S P E S A M vs Howlands. 9 p. m.—S A E vs D U and College 6. 30 p. m.—K E K vs Tennessee and S A M vs Royals. Aggies Defeat Iowa State 9 p. m. —A K L vs Phi Psi and S A M vs A T O. 10 p. m. —Jayhawk vs D. Chi. 10 p. m—Engineers vs Graduate and Wakagurasi vs Phi Bhi Pi. Graham Sinks Free Throw to Elke Out 28-27 Victory Ames, Feb. 10—(Special) -With only a few seconds of play remaining, Ralph Graham dropped in a free throw to give the Kansas State five a one point margin in the conference game. The final score was 24 to 27 28-27 Victory Bachman to Be Named Michigan State Coach The lead see-sawed back and forlitt throughout the game with the Cyclones holding the lead at the end of the half, with the lead going through scoring with 13 points and was the high point num of the game. Dalton led the Angles in scoring with ten points. The Kansas State -- 28 G FT Breen, f. 3 0 Graham, f. 2 2 Steuer, f. 2 0 Dabbs. 5 0 East Lansing, Mich., Feb. 10—(UP) The Michigan State News weekly student publication at Michigan State College, today said that Charles Bachman, football coach at the University of Florida for the past five years, will be named successor to James H. Crowley as head sportan football mentor. Student Paper Says Former Aggie Mentor Will Succeed Crowley Bachman was graduated at Note Dame in 1817 and has coached seven years at Kansas State and five at Florida. Boyd, g ... 2 2 Skradski, g ... 0 0 The Number Totals 12 4 G Iowa State—27 G Ft Ludwig, f 0 2 Thompson, f 0 1 Anderson, f 5 3 Wegrege, c 3 1 Hook, c 0 0 Dill, g 2 0 Totals 65 The Price — Jayhawk Taxi Ike Guffin, Prop. $ ^{4} $ The Name- 25c Order Street Lights Shut Off Sullivan, IA—IndUP)—With municipal funds tied up in a defunct bank and the budget pretty small, the city council has ordered all but eight lights extinguished. Clothes for Spring are lower in price. We are showing the nicest line of woolens that we have ever had in years, at prices that have never been so low. Some very attractive patterns as low as $16.50, suit or topcoat. And remember-on the Screen! Tonight - Tomorrow Suiting you is my business. Schulz the Tailor 917 Mass. WHERE STUDENTS MEET DICKINSON Shows 3:00 - 7:00 - 9:00 TONIGHT ONLY! On Our Stage at 9:00 SPRING FASHION REVIEW EXTRA! EXTRA! EXTRA! EXTRA! EXTRA! EXTRA! THE JEWEL TRIO Broadways Favorite Youngsters Screen. Tablenr. CHESTER | | GENEVIEVE MORRIES | | TOBIN "THE INFERNAL MACHINE" USED & NEW TEXTBOOKS One-Sixth of the Textbooks We Sold Last Sumester Were Used Textbooks. 1401 Ohio @ Rowlands 1237 Oread BOOK STORES Rabbits and Radishes Babies and Bouquets Carrots and Cabbages all from an EMPTY TUB! --- Right before your very eyes the man of magic draws rabbits, vegetables, flowers, fruits—even babies—all from an *emtip* tub! What an astonishing fellow he is! EXPLANATION: The *assorted magical*, babies, carrots, cabbages, rhinos and other magical "props" are not created by magic. The tub has a false bottom that is conveniently displaced, and numberless wonderful things spring to life in the magician's nimble fingers. They do literally "spring" because they are made to compress into the bottom of the tub, taking their natural shape as the magician lifts them out. SOURCE: "Tricks and Illusions" by Will Goldstom, E. P. Dutton & Co. IT'S FUN TO BE FOOLED ...IT'S MORE FUN TO KNOW CAMEL HUMIDITY PROTECTING PREMIUM QUALITY KEPT FRESH IN THE WELDED HUMIDOR PACK Tricks are legitimate on the stage but not in business. Here's one that has been used in cigarette advertising...the illusion that blending is everything in a cigarette. Copyright, 1923. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company EXPLANATION. Blending is important...but it makes a lot of difference what is blended. Inferior tobacco can be blended to cover up their humble origin. But your taste soon detects the trick. The proper use of blending is to bring CA CAMELS out the full "round" flavor of mild, high-grade tobacco. It's the costliness of the tobaccos, as well as the blending, that counts. A It is a fact, well known by tea tobacco experts, that Canneis made from finer MORN EXPENSIVE staples than any other popular brand. Hundreds of thousands of dollars have been spent by others in the attempt to discover just how Camels are blended. The blend is important. But all the while Camel spends millions more for choice tobacco...to insure your enjoyment. Light up a Camel. Relax, while the delicate blue smoke floats about you. Enjoy to the full the pleasure that comes from costlier tobaccoes. Keep Camels always handy...in the airtight, welded Hidador Pair. NO TRICKS ..JUST COSTLIER TOBACCOS IN A MATCHLESS BRAND IN A MATCHLESS BLEND 一 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NUMBER 100 VOLUME XXX The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas The Current Scene In this the first appearance in the Daily Kaman of the column which will appear periodically and spassmodically from time to time, we feel constrained to give a word of explanation. This column will be the joint effort of several of the members of the department of music, our staff, our staff, Feeling, as we do, the need of some medium through which gossip can be verified—or at least find its way into print—rumor have its innings, personalities their limelight, and dark corners made bright with the search-light of truth, we take our bow and The Current Sienna become a reality for us. We feel moments of your lovely needed time. As Ben Bernie says "We hope you like it!" That the ten cent meal plan at the University has received much publicity and of a telling nature was evidenced yesterday on Massachusetts street when a pan-handler hit us. Instead of asking for money for a cup of the coffee, the planker, "Brother, can you spare a dime, see我 Fred Elaworth about a meal." The problem confronting the fraternities and sororites on the Hill is a grievous one, we grant. Just as a hindrance, what they must do in order to salvage something from the wreck, we need to move the plan being tried out in several California colleges; to wit: The fraternities owning huge homes have opened their houses and taken in another fraternity or sorority, the two living in the same house, using the same dining hall, and keeping up with their organizations. The group making the move of course relinquishing their own house. Think it over, Greeks. It's not such a bad idea. By the way, does anyone know how the Pi Phi's are situated financially? LAWRENCE KANSAS SUNDAY FEBRUARY 12, 1923 Of course, it's only rumor, but we understand that the local Phi Gams are going to go before their national convention and seek a privilege that has been granted to them by the organization. The young men of the Kansas chapter wish to have the national body bestow an honorary membership on a member of the fairer sex group; they are also an annual. You guessed it! Dean Ague Husband is the lady in question. Our operative at Twelfth and Oreaux reports strange goings on at an apartment, at that corner, occupied by a couple of dawntower athletes (wearing K's). Probably just a will of-the-wisp, but it may bear watching. We get our first good look at the gal that the Sour Owl titled the Hill's Most Alluring the other day. We had voted for the College Widow, but now we go publicly on record as being desired of changing our vote Sorry Eunice. We understand that since the frat tax went through, the dear sisters of the Kite are mighty glad they didn't start the mortgage manager on Terness so we could buy Throne (on alumna, of course) put the damper on the girls ambitions. The text book question is again in burning problem. We know for we know to taddle a couple of books we used—slightly—last semester only to be informed that a new edition was out and that no could be made of the used copies. Life is so difficult—even with ten cent meals. A certain young professor in the confines of West Ad is quite an enigma to his friends. He tells nothing about himself and is consequently quite the man of mystery. In his lectures he dwells on how a child can recognize which probably makes him a Fugitive From A Chain Store Gang. Pretty poor? Bear with us. Is the Chai Omega house closed? . . . That's the fun of columning . . . Make all those cute little dots periods, to you . . . when you can think of nothing . . . else to do . . . It's good training too, the shipping clerks this like, to check goods . . . to check someone else graduate should know . . . Well, we'll be seeing you again, soon. That Old Rascal Depression Favors Smokers In Cigaret War New York, Feb. 11. (UP)—War between the four big tobacco companies of America spread to a new front today and cigarette smokers benefited by the lowest retail prices since "sweet capes" were a nickle a pack 30 years ago. The war entered the financial phase when the American tobacco announced a new tax on tobacco products for $5.50 a thousand Lucky Strike, less the usual trade discount. Other companies followed suit. As a result cigarette buyers at the nation's leading chain stores were able to buy a package, a carton, or a dozen cartons at the rate of 10 cents for a package of 20. Diplomatic Battle Nears Crisis Under New Forces Observers Believe Japan Will Take One of Two Positions Washington, Feb. 11. — (UP) The diplomatic battle between Japan and the western powers appeared to officials here today to be approaching a crisis under the impetus of new forces. Observers expect either that Japan will withdraw from the League of Nations and challenge the right of the Ocidental powers to mediate in far Eastern affairs or take a positive position sufficiently to accept a satisfactory form of conciliation with China. Primary among the forces is the new note of firmness in the League of Nations conservations with Tokio. This, combined with the French ones, one a change in British policy toward support of the Chinese position against Japan. Britain as one of the most powerful members of the Allies was infiltrated. The entire Genovo body. The second is a growing belief in Geneva that Japan has been "bluffing" and that in a crisis it would modify; its adamant position against interference with the present regime in Manchuria. This transition in British policy, to carry the analysis further, is believed to be more than an insult to anger at what Nanking had come to regard as Britain's pro-Japanese policy at Geneva. Britain has a large trade with China, and naturally feared that its commercial position might be damaged by a boycott if anti-British feeling spread to the United States, but can position on the far-eastern problem as a counter balance to forthright demands for war debt revision. Now as a result of all these factors it appears that the league may record its first defeat in World War II of Manchukuo and further may condemn Japan for its attack on Chinese sovereignty. The only alternate would be acceptance by Tokio of a conciliation formula having due regard to United States Is Invited Geneva, Feb. 11—(UP)—The League of Nations sub-committee drafting a resolution on the Manchurian crisis decided today to invite the United States and Russia to name representatives to serve on a committee which will be charged with application of the assembles recommendation. TEACHERS ATTEND MUSICALE AT ARCHER HOME YESTERDAY Miss Marian Moore, associate professor of voice; Miss Ruth Orcutt, assistant professor of piano; and Miss Francis Wilson, instructor of Spanish and dramatic attentive a musicalist, attended Archie Hawitta yesterday. Miss Moore sang several soprano solos and was accompanied on the piano by Miss Orcutt. Miss Wilson gave readings. WEATHER Kansas—Generally fair, not so col today. Basketball Scores Brought to you by Florida 43, Vanderbilt 27 Georgia 42, Auburn 21 Notre Dame 38, Pittsburgh 31 Iowa 34, Purdue 30 Illinois 38, Wisconsin 25 Penn 33, Cornell 24 --- McCanles to Lead Band in Program Thursday Evening There will not be an issue of the University Daily Kansas, Monday, Feb. 18, on account of Lincoln's birthday. Twenty-sixth Annual Concert Will Feature New Numbers Written by Director Under the direction of J. C. McCandles of the School of Fine Arts classes the twenty-sixth annual mid-winter band concert will be played next Thursday evening at 8:10 in the University Auditorium. 85 IN ORGANIZATION The combined hands numbering 85 pieces will play a varied program of light open, overtures and marches. The program will be comprised of the following numbers: an overture, "Wienna Dance," an introduction, Spanish dances, "Boleros, Allegro, and Con Spito," (M. Mozzokwsky), "Caprice Italien," (P. Tschukowsky), "Parade of the "Wooden Soldiers," (L Jessel); a revere, "Golden Sunset" (George Finder); and selection from a repertoire "Three Twos" (Kosehma). Professor McCanless has also an ability to play three numbers written by himself. A march, "Kansas University," was performed at the commencement services in 1632; a song, "Give Me Back My Childhood Again," will be sung by Chester Frasier; fa'mcl; and another song entitled "My Pal," to be sung by Professor McCanies has composed approximately 125 pieces of music, some of which have been published. "I write more for the enjoyment than for the money," he stated when asked how many songs had been published, "and I have sheet after sheet of music which has never been played anywhere but on the Hill." Professor McCanness has led the bands of the University in these mid-winter concerts for twenty-five consecutive years. The concerts were first held in Fraser theater, until the band became too large for the stage and the band was forced to leave the concerts have been played in the University Auditorium. The 85 students who comprise the band personnel are as follows: Cornetz—R. Virgil Parker, Ralph F. Huffenbarger, Timothy Turrell, C. Willey Asling, Leslie Pennner, Kenneth Kingbury, Charles F. Killen, Robert Wilson, Robert Nicholson, Richard Bairdridge, Harry Davy, Robert G. Richelle, Harold Sinnig, and John Stolper, Robert Slater, Robert Lawson, Roger Blades, Harold Dyer, Roger Kaiser, Jack Lix, Robert Sanders, Robert Spivey, Lawrence Trombines--David M. Sawyer, For- mer of the Washington University, Randi Banks, Duane Tubbs, Robert Bai- dard, Everal Wenkman, Clinton Hesford Carroll F. Shukus, Paul L. Wilbert Carroll F. Shukus, Paul L. Wilbert Bartiones—August W. Anneberg George B. Wilson, Enoch Johnson, Melvin H. Stockwell. Saxophones—Cloye A. Newman and Aaron Hutchens. Drums and traps-Sydney David George Allen, Logan Lane, Saul D Kass. E-flat clarinet—Arthur Rawlinson, Joseph Mallory. Altos--Robert Cury, Clifford E. Elsie Arnold Edmonds, William F. Koch, Robert S. M., Kenneth Robbert English, Kenneth S. Dan Morris, and Max Gibson Dean Stouffer Will Speak Bassoon—Lakin Hunter. Bass Clarinet—John H. $ Joseph Mallowy. Piccolos and flutes—Leland Randles. Oboe—George Wood. Piceolos and flutes -Leland Randles, William Gaugh, Jr. Bass Clarinet—John H. Scott, James D. Bennett. Dean E. B. Stouffler of the Graduate School, will be the speaker at the meeting to be held in the private diving club at G3S on a clock Tuesday evening. Graduate Club to Hear About Fascism and Hitlerism His discussion will comprise impressions of Fascism and Hindenburg. He has spent nearly a year in Italy since the regime of Mussolini, and was in GER during the war, seriously injured. Adolf Hitler is attempting to emulate the practices of II Duce. Mettings of the Graduate club are open to all graduate students. Members buy their meals separately at the cafeteria and eat together in the preregistered room. Students also speak or other entertainment. The meetings are over by 8 o'clock. By Jean Jacques Kremen Homeless Search Frantically for Dead Relatives After Explosion in Germany Kremer Describes Copyright, 1988, by the United Press Noukenicur, Germany, Feb. 11.-(UP)- Thirty thousand men and women, deprived of their livelihood by the gas tank explosion which wrecked the city and took a toll of 170 dead and 1,000 injured, wandered in a daze through their shattered homes today. Many of them, their clothing tattered and torn, had to be restrained by police from rushing into the charred and ruined streets and huddled together in the cold, rush forward each time rescue workers brought out a corpse. It was a scene of war-time desolation, a long line of fire engines and ambulances advanced as though to a giant wall. Two men and children were wandering 10 kilometers from Noumenkirchen, their clothes torn and burned. Six kilometers from the city, the wave of fugitive crowds would not penetrate country to reach the oak. Brailsford Will Speak on Disarmament Topic From a hill last night I looked down on a sight of indecisible misery, illuminated by great columns of flames from the bennice plant. The shadowy forms of hundreds of buildings outlined against the flames as they ran between collapsing houses while police sought to maintain order. Tuesday Night's Lecture Will End Community Series H. B. Navairford, who is to lecture on "Why Don't Nations Diaspo?" next Tuesday evening will arrive in Lawrence Tuesday afternoon, according to the University of New Orleans. Nichols, secretary to the chancellor, is on his way from California and will stop at Santa Fe to give a lecture at the University of New Mexico. This is the last lecture on the University lecture series at 20 p. m. in the University Auditorium. Brulafield has been known as an authority on international affairs for many years. He has spoken before foreign ministers and has occupied the largest cities. He distinguished himself first when he was a student and lecturer in the Glasgow University and has traveled extensively in search of material for the several books he has Some of his best works are: "The Broom and the War God," "Macedonia," "The War and Steel and Gold," and "War and Peace." In these volumes, Brailford has conducted columns on world affairs for many magazines here and abroad. One of these can be found in the "The World War" international杂志, and international articles published in New York. Brailford's lectures are descriptive is well as constructive. They are vivid picture words of life in the Europe of today, and Brailford seldom lets diplomacy interfere with his descriptions and the listing of bare facts concerning a city in peace, so close our civilization in peace, said Nichols. aw Convocation Postnomed OF AURORA. The law formation which was scheduled for Tuesday has been postponed until Feb 21. Cyrus Crane of Kansas will speak. MISSOURI DOWNS JAYHAWKERS 21--17; OKLAHOMA WINS. TAKING FIRST PLACE McDermott's Five Defeats Huskers by 39-35 Margin Nebraska Leads Most o Way Failing Before Last Minute Spurt HALF-TIME COUNT 23-10 Norman, Okla. Feb. 11—(UP)—The University of Oklahoma tonight stepped out into the led of the Big Six conference. While Oklahoma was defeating Nebraska, the pace-setting Kansas Jayhawks fell later before the University of Oregon did. The Dermott's squad undisputed lead in the conference as the result of their 39 to 35 victory over Nebraska tonight. The Soocers literally battered the Main and Browning, Oklahoma guards, went through the strong Nebraska defenses for scores during the second half and turned the side of The Sooners literally battered the heavy Nebraska squad down, breaking its morale in the final minutes after the Cornhuskers had led throughout the game. At the half Nebraska was ahead 23 to 19. Abraham Lincoln 1809--1865 Herrion, Nebraska center, was high score of the game with 14 points. He was easily the outstanding performer of the game for his team. For Oklahaea, Browning, who a sick kid to play, turned in a spectacular scoring performance making four field goals and two free throws. The smooth working Nebraska were master of the game. When Main turned the acces at $3 all, the Nebraska offensive machine cracked. It was Oklahoma's fifth victory in Big Six conference games this season. The team has suffered one defeat. The Oklahoma–30 FG FT TB Beck, f 2 2 9 Anderson, f 1 0 9 LeCevrille, ee 1 0 9 Main, g, c 4 1 9 Bross, g 1 0 2 Coll, f 0 0 2 Munson, c 0 0 2 Potts, g 0 0 2 Beringham, g 4 0 10 Tyler, g 0 0 0 Totals 10 6 7 39 FG FT TP Nebraska–35 35 FG FT TP Basswell, f 4 1 11 Murray, f 3 2 11 Lanney, f 3 2 8 Henton, c 6 2 14 Saucer, g 2 0 14 Haik, g 2 0 14 Parsons, g 0 0 0 Belka, g 0 0 0 Totals 14 7 35 Referee—John B. Olds, Kansas. Totals 14 7 35 Topcake, Feb. 11.—(UP)—Headed by Governor Landon, a group of Kansas attends the annual Lincoln Day ban-tion of the Association of Young Republicans of Missouri at Kansas City tonight. Columbia, Mo. Feb. 11—(UP) The University of Missouri observes its ninety-fourth anniversary today. No formal ceremonies were held. Abe Lincoln BIG SIX STATISTICS Standing of the Teams W 1 L Pet. Op. Okalahoma 5 2 741 261 Kansas 5 2 714 196 Kansas State 3 4 429 192 Nebraska 3 4 393 178 Missouri State 3 4 197 183 This Week's Games Feb. 13-Kansas State vs. Nebraska at Manhattan. Feb. 17-Missouri vs. Oklahoma at Columbia. Feb. 18-Kansas State vs. Iowa State at Big Six Scoring Feb. 18—Kansas vs. Iowa State at a award Johnson, Kansas G FG FT FF F2 F7 Wagner, Missouri G 12 9 75 72 Harrison, Kansas G 21 9 6 51 Browning, Oklahoma G 21 9 6 49 Cooper, Missouri G 18 10 12 40 Bowell, Nebraska G 18 10 5 45 Skadek, Kansas S. G 18 7 8 43 Boyd, Kansas S. G 18 7 8 43 Boyd, Kansas S. G 17 8 9 9 University of Nebraska Conducts Questionnaire Compulsory Activity Ticket Is in Effect, Inquiries Show Some form ex* compulsory blanket tax on all students to support athletics and extra-curricular organizations is now in use in 20 of the 32 schools re-requiring questionnaire sent by the student counted at the University of Nebraska showed Seven schools have never investigated or considered the plan. In four, the blanket tax has been considered but rejected by the board of regents or trustees. Iowa State, the remaining school to answer the questionnaire, has opposed the blanket tax but the president is withholding put it into operation at present. - . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Result of Student Activity Plan Vote Proposition number 1 - (Same as original ballot) - failed. Proposition number 2 - (Now plan with dayjawker and Kanan) - passed by more than two-thirds majority. - Proposition number 3 - (Jayw * * hawker added to proposition No. 2) * passed, but not by two-thirds ma- * lory. 1 Proposition number 4 - Kansan added to proposition No.2, failed. 2 Harold Denton, president of the student council, said that the vote indicated a huge majority in favor of the new plan without the Jaw-hawker and Kansan, with more favoring the Jawhawk than the Kansan, added that dotted figures would be given to the Kansan, Thurday. --- In schools now using the plan the annual fee ranges from $5 to $38, with $17.68 as the average for 20 schools. Six of the reporting colleges say that the cost to the individual student understands the separate subscription and ticket prices for the events and publications included before the plan was adopted. One reports that the price is higher; one that it is the same; and the other As to gross revenue to the activities and organizations included in the plan, nine report an increase. one reports a decrease. The rest fail to reply on this respect. The activities included in this plan in other schools which have it are the same as would probably be included in the current curriculum. The schools allow a few limited exemptions. Vespers This Afternoon Laurel Everette Anderson Will Present Program of Organ Music Laurel Everette Anderson, University organist, will present the fifth ninth vesper organ recital this afternoon at 4 o'clock. The program will consist of the following numbers "Persene O'Autenne" (Jongen) "Somata 1" (Mielssonelsson) "Somata 2" (Kristiansson) from the "Water Music" (Handel). "The Sunday vesper organ recitals are planned to give to the University, and to the community a quiet hour of the best in organ music." D. M Swarthwalt, dean of the School of Fine Arts, will speak at noon no apology, and that persons entering or leaving do so only between numbers." Tiger Jinx Holds as Kansas Drops Important Battle Allen's Five Goes Into Second Place; Dick Wells High Scorer With Eleven Points COUNT, 14-10 AT HALF Columbia, Mo. Feb. 11—(UP)—The Tampa猛虎才团结 hold their home court victory jinx over the Kansas City wildcard competition, winning her touch, 21 to 17. No since 1927 has Kansas won a basketball game at Tiger soil, and the defeat tonight was a severe blow on the Tigers' season of Dr. F. C. Allen and his quintet. Kansas was heading the conference before the game in Columbia on night, with a record of five victories and one loss. The team lost to Coach George Edward's wounds, coupled with Oklahoma's 29 to 35 victory over Nebraska at Norman, shaves the Jayhawks into second place a half game later. In three games, show five wins and one loss. Missouri Plays Slow Game The Tigers were crazy tonight in the game, which left Missouri defent of the season. Cutch Edwards, who never has agreed with the 19-second and center line court codes, flouted the new rules tonight and had his team play a slow, a fast game in the offensive half of the court. At the inference, Missouri hung up, Missouri leading 14 to 10. The second period showed even fewer scores, each quintet ringing up seven markers. At one time in the closing half, with about ten minutes to go, Missouri had conquered the Missouri stall and went into a monometry 16 to 15 lead. The Tigers came back快 to hit an advantage, taking a 17 to 16 advantage. Kansas did not overcome the margin, although several Jayhawker margins in the winning minutes. A Missouri Comeback The victory was a great comeback for the Tigers who were defeated in their last four starts. The game was close, however, and Missouri was not assured victory until the final game. The score was tied five times during the 40 minutes of action, twice in the opening period and three times in the last ball. The contest was as rough as it would have been for any player, because for the ball under the basket, and on a few occasions as many as six players were on the floor. Bill Johnson, KU's rangers center, who is leading the conference in individual scoring, was guarded closely by the Tigers and held to three points. The Tigers had a handshoot in the opening minutes of play, the first one hung up by Kansas. To Dick Well, Jayhawker sophomore forward, went the scoring honors for the night. He connected for 11 three field goals and five free throws. Captain Norman Wagner was high point men for Missouri with eight points. Wagner Opens Scoring The Tiger captain opened the scoring with a basket near the free throw mark, but Johnson came back a minute later with his one-handed affair to give Kanaa a bucket. Deadlocked, he pulled off the save, the Missouri forged ahead as the result of two goals from the center of the court by Johnny Cooper, forward, and Denver Miller, guard, coupled with a pair of free throws by Cooper and Wagner. This gave the Tiger a lead with the draw remaining to a close. Wells kept Kansas in the running with a basket and two gift throws before the half time gun sounded, with Missouri in the lead, 14 to 10. It was Wells again who made the Jayhawks dangerous as the second period ended. He broke lose for two field goals in the early minutes that put the two quintets into a tie, 14 to 14. A minute later the two teams were again tied, 15 to 13, made possible by tally losses on the part of Wells and Wanda. At this point of the game, with 10 minutes elapsed, Elmer Schanke, Kansas guard, gave the Jayhawkers a Continued on page 4 This is a blank image with no text or content. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Editor-In-Chief ... PAUL V. MINER Murreau Inc. Marquis Riese Managers Editor SUNNY KICKS Annual Advisor Night Editor Marques Grouve Editor Chuck Edison Skew Editors Colleman Coleman Marquis Riese Exchange Editor Made Brown July Sunday Drew Jones Decoondoo ADVERTISING MGR. MARGARET ICE Lennon Johnson District MGR. Joshua Johnson Associate Editors Amelia Batte Robert Whitman ... Mavillier Israel Benjamin Browne ... Mavillier Israel Dibru Krom ... Dijttime Marcel Brittany Butler ... Washburn Ira McCray ... Washburn Annelid Kevermann ... Washburn Jonathan Fournier ... Joseph fourth Business Office K.U. 6 News Room K.U. 2 Night Connection, Business Office 270K Night Connection, News Room 270K SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 12. 1933 Today is Abraham Lincoln's birthday. The nation will interrupt its daily routine to pay homage to the memory of the Great Emancipator, a memory which the passing of years enhances in the minds of the American people. Subscription price, $4.00 per year, payable in advance. Single copies, 16 each. Entrusted as second-class matter September 17, 1918, at the office at lawrence, Kansas. America asked much of Lincoln. Faced with a crisis that threatened to prove her undoing, she turned to him for the inspirational leadership that held her only hope of survival. Gladly he responded, dedicating his every effort toward the preservation of the Union, and at last losing his life in the fight in which he alone could have shown the way to victory. Only the courage, the indomitable will, the kindly and understanding spirit of a Lincoln could have brought this nation intact through the Civil War. Lincoln did it, and the nation has lived. Published in the atterraux twice a week and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kansas, from the Press of the Department of Journalism. Today America faces another crisis, not potentially so dangerous to her existence, perhaps as was the other, but surely one that casts shadows of doubt on the future. Is it not possible that in the personality and character of Abraham Lineohn, we of today may find a light to guide our footsteps safely through the present crisis? YOUR PLEDGE Maybe college students are pampered and soft and useless, but they didn't raise half the chomox over the snow and winter weather that the heftier older generation did. A dance floor, a man's lounge billiards, card games, a radio, a fountain, and a swell place just to sit and rest—the University commits. That's the Memorial Union But a building with such accommodations needs resources. The Memorial Union, as a part of the University, therefore turns to the University for upkeep. Since the building is not used for class work and only for student entertainment, however, a small fee is asked of each student. Why shouldn't University students today also pledge their little hit? The Memorial Union has been made possible through pledges which were raised following the War because it was felt by students and friends of the school that a memorial building should be erected in honor of University soldiers who died in France. A NEW INDUSTRY WITH POSSIBILITIES Imagine going through the severest winter without the fear of catching cold; imagine sleeping untrebled by heat on the warmest mid-summer nights; imagine a home with furniture that need never be dusted; with rugs that need never be cleaned; imagine having the air in your home stay at an even temperature the year round; imagine that air always at the same degree of humidity, exactly the right degree. Imagine all these things and you have some idea of the potentialities of the newest of America's giant industries, air conditioning. For many years scientists have been working with this problem, and now a solution is ready, a solution in the form of an electrically-operated device that will heat air that is too cold, cool air that is too hot, dry air that is too moist, and moisten air that is too dry. In other words, air conditioning makes the atmosphere of a room just the right quality and temperature for comfortable and healthful living. It cleans the air and washes it, freeing it from dust and germs. Nor can the commercial possibilities of the new industry be overlooked. It has been, estimated that in America alone there is a potential market of more than $55,000,000,000 for equipment that will do this work. Theaters, department stores, and banks, as well as private homes, all furnish possible prospects, along with counties other types of institutions. Significant also is the fact that development of the new industry will mean increased opportunities for the employment of both capital and labor. Industrial and scientific advancement have defeated former depressions. May not history repeat itself again? LINCOLNIANA —Henry Watterson. Bern as lowly as the Son of God, reared in penury and squalor, with no gleam of light nor fair surroundings, it was reserved for this strange being, late in life, without mame or fone, or seeming preparation to be matched by his own power. He commanded at a supreme moment, and intruded with the destiny of a nation. Where did Shakespeare get his genius? Where did Mozart get his music? Whose hand amused the lyre of the Scotish plowman? God, alone and then alone, inspired the god of God was Abraham Lincoln, and a thousand years hence no story, no tragedy, no epic poem will be filled with greater wonder than that which tells of his life and death. If Lincoln were not inspired of God, then there is no place where he can provide or the interposition of divine power in the affairs of men. English Opinion of Mr. Lincoln—The London Critic, in the course of a review of the speeches of Hon Abraham Lincoln, the Republican can claim the Presidency of the American Union, than refer to his menal powers. "It is from the speeches which Mr. Lincoln has from time to time delivered in opposition to Mr. Douglas that we gather some idea of his mental strength," he writes. "The speeches of Mr. Lincoln, that he has a mind rather of the straight-forward than of the subtle order; that he makes upon print and prominent facts and argues them to plan conclusions, Charnwood's Lincoln, P. 421 (Near the end of the war) Physically his splendid health does not seem to have been impaired beyond recovery. But it was manifestly near to breaking; and the "deep-cut lines" were also broken, and the long legs were always cold. Campus Opinion Since there has been some complaint lately about lack of good sportmanship on the part of University students at basketball games, I would like to refer those complainers to an article which appeared in the Feb. 9 edition of the Lawrence Journal-World which described the sportmanship exhibited recently by another school in the Big Six. I refer to the conduct of Nebraska fans at the 如需修改本页面内容,如有疑问,请联系客服。 ate Kansas-Nebraska game in Lincoln. According to the article, their fans booed every Kansas play and playoff, and showed a disgusting lack of any semblance of sportsmanship. I never heard KU. U. students even begin to act in such a manner, and I hope I never do. **unknit that K. U. students are congratulated on their good sportmanship toward visiting teams in contrast to the lack of sportmanship shown by Nebulaus and certain other Big Six players. They are not given their disapproval of certain decisions which they think are wrong. That is only human. But they never get abusive and rude to opposing players. So I think that the Ransass City Star would do well to print something about Nebraska and her disregardless sportmanship. The students for exhibiting only human traits under the strain of excitement. There is a great deal of difference between razing an official (which of course is not the best of sportsmanship) and abusing and booing opposing players for no good reason at all. Nebraska students have always shown a lack of honor in their sports, so grossly demonstrated as it was the other night. In the Missouri-Nebraska football game last fall, Nebraska fans showed anything but a sportman-like attitude toward the visiting Missouri players. So Nebraska's demonstrations of hostility are not confined only to K.U. It seems as if our fans have still not been given a quarter to their fees. They seem to think that these contests are free-for-all instead of the supposedly keen competition between two friendly institutions of learning. I hope that Nebraska will realize that such condiment, if continued, will bring only ill-will and a bad name upon their school. I think the schools could improve a lot if they would try to use the K.U. student body as an example in good sportsmanship toward rival players. —T.M.B Our Contemnoraries UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Sunday, Feb. 12, 1953 Np. 109 - due at Chancellor's Office at 11 n. m. on regular afternoon publication day and 11:30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday classes. MARRIAGE, DIVORCE-AND THE UNIVERSITY Although one out of every six marriages in the United States is ending in divorce, a recent study of marriages of couples who met while attending coeducational institutions indicates that they live in seventy-five results in failure. --has been an ever-increasing emphasis placed upon the social sciences and their related fields. The statement is quoted from a report recently issued by Dr. Paul Popemire, director of the Los Angeles Institute of Family Relations. It is interesting from several points of view, but it appears for a moment, is not at all surprising. On the university campus of today the sexes are engaged in a social and intellectual competition which provides opportunities for each to observe character traits and intellectual capacities in the other. Marriages founded upon mutual appreciation are indeed likely to prove most permanent. But in addition, the university-trained man and woman is possessed of a greater knowledge of psychology and of the factors that determine human personality traits than is the untrained man or woman is knowledge that makes for tolerances in interpersonal relations husband and wife. Further, the college student of today secures from his studies in the social and the biological sciences a greater social stability, a greater amount of technical knowledge and a wider conception of ergonomic principles by the average man or woman who has not pursued university study. In spite of these things, however, it would seem that the modern university might more specifically attack this problem of intelligent and rational murmuring in students, because increased knowledge occasionally secured by the student on such matters, which has been mentioned above, in merely a by-product of studies pursued for other purposes, we know of only a few examples. The first designed course bearing on this topic. College curricula have progressed far from the original three FA's and today include courses dealing with every field from practical vocational matter to academic work, from classical and cultural branches of earning. During this evolution there There will be a meeting of the Mathematics club Monday at 4:30 in room B1 Administration building, Miss Lilly Somers will on "Nine Point Circus." Dean E. B. Stouffer, of the Graduate School, will speak at the meeting of the Graduate club to be held in the private dining room of the cafeteria at 6:15 Tuesday evening. He will speak on his impressions of Fascism and Hitlerism and as he has spent some months in both Italy and Germany since the activities of Mussolini and Hitler began, his talk will be an interesting, first-hand discussion. ELLIOTT PENNER, Chairman. GRADUATE CLUB: MATHEMATICS CLUB: Freshman commission and social group will hold a joint meeting Monda- t at 4:30 p.m. The subject for discussion will be "Dress and Grooming." Y. W. C. A.; ALICE GALLUP, MARY SCHRUM, LUCILE WEISS, Chairmen. At the same time there has been founded a number of special institutes and foundations concerned with family relations and the problems introduced into society by the newer conceptions of science, and the increased knowledge of eugenics. It is reasonable to expect from the universities of the country a reflection of this increased knowledge and enlightened point of view in their curricula if these universities are to fulfill their function of adequately training for participation in the modern society which he shortly becomes a part. If university students are to be carefully schooled in the arts of writing, religion, language, literature and philosophy, in the sciences of medicine chemistry, physics and mathematics, in the vocations of agriculture, business and health, or in the sciences of human relations which will probably make or wear their whole future to a greater degree than any other? It is an aspect of human affairs still left largely to chance or instint. The divorce mills of every civilized country give ample proof of the lack of success which the instinct has achieved as the bases of mate selection - Chicago Daily Maroon. STUDENT EMPLOYEE AND STUDENT EMPLOYER That such habits and lack of seams of responsibility upon the part of staff depts should have effects such as these. The more students of our more earnest students. On cannot criticize employers, and on cannot find fault with the University placement office which is, for this reason, a major burden in positioning position for its many applicants. Because of continued experience such as these, one concern that has formerly staffed an entire department with 90 University students worker at the university, has dismissed the entire group and substatted for it 18 women employed on an eight-hour schedule. The change resulted in increased efficiency and economy for the employer, and an ex-female student for student was completely exhausted. As the depression continues and each month makes more scarce the available jobs for all classes of individuals the problems and difficulties confronting the Board of Vocational Guidance are increasing in number. We have fully realized that in order to self-supporting University men and women may secure jobs, the directors and counselors of this placement office have to be exponent on ever-increasing amount of work to discover the few positions available. Recently John C. Kernan, one of the vocational counselors revealed another set of circumstances which makes the work of this University service department still more difficult, and of whose existence we had not guessed. Thus concern the attitudes of employers to toward student labor, adverse attitude towards students, and student workers themselves for what we can see little excuse. These employers who have made custom of hiring students for part o full time work over a period of several years frequently report dissatisfaction with the ability and regularity of these men an women. Too frequently, there are re requests for a "night off" because of to mourn's examination or the quarter"s irregularity. It is irregularity of attendance and application because of one distraction another which enters into the life o the student part time worker an which is not allowed by the older, full time student to interfere with his bids of duty. With current business conditions de creatng the number of jobs open to all individuals, with the rate of compensation dropping seriously, with the more significant appeal of the marriage between women, it is a small wonder that the University has difficulty in finding work for the most efficient and dependable students. With this additional factor added to the situation, and created by the indifference and personal whimsie of the management at the reports from this office in Cobl 215 that several thousand positions are nevertheless found each year. The working student today is en joying a privilege that many thousand of adult men would welcome. That induction will be an important aspect of the attitude of employers toward student labor. All the promotion and all the personal effort of the many college and university vocational offices will go for naught if the students themseek to pursue their part-time, university help. On the other hand, efficiency and application earnestness and initiative, upon the par of these same students, can tenderness to answer the number of position that will open among college worker--Chicago Daily Maroon. The German club will meet Monday at 4:30 in Fraser hall. Herbert Schupe will speak on "An American Student' Experience in Germany." German Club to Meet The May Day Mystery Octavus Roy Cohen Copyright by Octavus Roy Cohen. SYNOPSIS --- CHAPTER 1 — Automotive Peyton, a New Yorker, returns Peyton Thayer's attention to Ivy Welch, seventeen-year-old who has been unable to endure with bitter recriminations, the teenage boy another student, long Thayer's friend, another student, Thyer and Vernon, a wife with him. Thyer and Vernon CHAPTER 10: HI-Jarry Welch, Iwel W, b completed his first freight on the front section to aid the war and applied for the freight protection to end the war. Tony Welch also is in tow with the train to Paris. He is married to Tymor Welch who CHAPTER 15. The intern is determined to see Thayer and end his association with the hospital. Thayer has been until she has appealed to her husband, who lives in a room at a fraternity house. Max Veritas services and goes to his room. Tony ends services and goes to his room. Tony ends services and goes to his room. Tony leaves the house almost immediately afterwards, violently in a state of rage that apparently clobbing to his feet, instantly apparently clobbing to his feet. A small car jerked to a hull in front of the fraternity house and two men alighted. One of them was tall and broad and wore the uniform of the Marinard police force. The other, wearing civilian clothes, was short and CHAPTER 1V - Wells's appeal to the Senate, the fraternity he determines to see Tearay. Despite Ivans' presentations, he does annotate and after his leave, Caricature, and a final reckoning, he is enabled in the threat Raven, Nararoo, the chief, taxes charge of the case. Students strolling on the Row or lounging on the verandas of fraternity houses, stared with sudden interest at Pal Tau Theta. There was a general movement in the direction of the house. A young man from Laudonia moved to the university and the policeman who stood on the lawn of Pal Tau Theta. "What's wrong, officer?" The cop answered tersely. "Murder?" "Good G--d. . . . You don't mean." "I don't mean nobit, young feller, Somebody's been murdered in yonder and nobody's to go in or git out, That's all." The stunted young man told his companion. The news sped from tip to lip. Who was it? 13, No, not Huey Peech. He was the first person perch. Then somebody mentioned Pat Thayer. Many persons mentioned Pat Thayer. No one knew where the rumors started, but Thayer's name was on a bulletin board. He allowed nobody to approach within hearing distance of the group on the veranda: the militant, positive figure of John Rogan, chief of the Marlins battling the pitcher,Petitized with fear and trembling violence; Rube Farnum, tail and flapped and frightened; Phil Glasser, reduced from his customary alertness to his miniature of his usual negative self. Rionan was questioning Parmara. Rionan was struggling to be fair and honest to remember things and yet to remember them. He absolutely and absurdly miserable. Then there emerged from the Main building a tall and dignified man before whom a path opened in the throes of studenza. Whitman Dean, dean of students at North Carolina University fraternity house and was promptly stoned by the policeman on duty. "No further for you," snapped the officer. Dean Boyd spoke quietly. "No. That'll be John Bongan yonder." And he gestured toward the veranda. The policeman called out to Reagan, "This guy is the big boss, Chief. Oh he come up?" "Will you ask him if I may spend to him? I'm dean of the college and I'd like to find out what has happened." "Are you in charge, Officer?" Roagan's keen eyes surveyed the dean. He jerked his head affirmatively. The dean mounted the veranda steps his arrival sending a glow of thanksgiving through the branches of his office. He kissed him. His spoke directly to Rangan. "My name is Whitman Boyd," he said quietly. "I understand that someone has been killed." "Let him through." "Good G—d! Then it's true—I heard the students gossiping." "Murdered. Young feller named Thayer." You've heard nothing else. "No. That's why I came. To find out." "Well—he's dead all right enough. Stabbed in the throat. "Tain! pleasant up in that room." "The what do you wish done, Mr. Rea gan?" "Just exactly nothing," mild the deactive crisply. "Night now I gonna 'phone handquarters for a couple more harness bells to police the grounda. Nobody's come in here and no one's going to move them, so it isn't move from them they are." "You mean," gasped Gleason, "that we're under arrest?" John Reagan grinned broadly. "Not yet you aln't, youngeller. But don't get impatient." CHAPTER V The town of Marland spread风采 from the foot of the hill on which stand the buildings of the university, the University, in the chief shopping center of Marland. Archer street caries at the corner, and University is the chief shopping center at the four corners which mark the intersection of Oak and Archer there are two gas filling stations and two open on Oak street, and next to one of them, one door from the corner, facing Archer street and west of Oak, is the home of the Marland National bank. The Marineland National bears an enviable reputation. It is small but burrow, and on its roster of directors owns two restaurants and a weight even in the city of a quarry million which exists twenty miles away. It is spoken of boastfully by natives of Marineland, and Randolph Holmes, is a real power in the community. This morning—the morning of May third—Randall Flake sit at his desk in the office which was marked "President-Private." He was a twn. web designer, whose hair matched the gray of his bank building. He had a fine, broad forehead and iron-gray brows from beneath which a pair of keen eyes pecked in a manner which gave an impression of unimpeachable edginess. He was mugged at attentively at a tiny bit of p板board. There was printing on its surface--printing, not embossing. He said simply: lankera' Protective Ass'n James H. Hanvey "Our best operative arrives Marla morning May Third." Mr. Fletcher's eye coved to a yellow telegram from New York. It was from headquarters of the Banks' protective association and was very Mr. Fiske heaved a sigh of relief as he prepared to shift a very great burrow into the sand and one professionally equipped to hear such burrows. He looked up at Miss be: picked up the slightly soiled card which lay on his desk. "Show Mr. Hanvey in, please." Miss Seward put out a bony hand which trembled in protest. Fiske frowned. "Surely, Mr. Fiske—not that man! The—the terrible person who gave me that card." "I don't understand, Miss Seward. This man is a great detective." "There's a mistake, Mr. Fisk. This person couldn't detect anything. I'm very sure of that. Just wait until you see him." She vanished in triumph, and Randolph Fisk stared after her. "What in the world, . . ." Then he be smiled. At least she had prepared him for a somewhat uncounted person. Probably he was wearing a costume, squared-toed shoes, a checked vest and a dime's worth of chewing tobacco. Queen how these detective chaps always dressed so that there was no mistaking their preoccupation. Randolph Fisk saw the door swing open. Then Mr. Fisk was recalled infurriculate. Jim Hainey was everything in the world which one is quite sure a deodorant would do. It dried and sixty pounds of败酱油 was distributed with healthy inositic effect; it wubbed he moved . . . and seemed to move with vast reductions. But it was the head which rose above triple chins that filmed Randolph Randolph, who was a schoolmate and round and utterly expressionless. Randolph Fisks was quite sure that never before in his life had he seen someone so intelligent of intelligence. It was—yes, by George—it was the eye. Round it was colorless as the orbs of a fish. "Uit-uhh, In person. Largely. I might say." The mass of flesh stood in the doorway. Flake knew he was breathing; Flake knew he had been rather remarkable contraction which appeared in the neighborhood of Jim's house, and rhythmically. Handloch Flake kept his eyes fascially on that particular apparatus. It hung from a ceiling in front of a mirror, far to nothing which the banker has ever before set eyes upon. It was lonely and silm and seemed to be made of wood. Then, without warning, the silence was punctured by a sleepy, drawly voice. "It's a toothpick. Mr. Fiske." "You are James H. Hanver?" "Huh!" The banker jerked himself together. "Wh-what's a tooth-nick?" "This!" Hanvey touched the trinket affectionately and detached it from his chain. "Swanless piece of jooly five gourmet gave me a piece of its solid gold—equestrian karat. Great invention; feller don't always have to be running around hunting toothpicks when he got one of those, but touching it touches a percussion a wooked little brain at Randolph Flake. That tellman gave a perceptible pump. "It-it's very—very remarkable," he murmured. "I am kind of funny-looking, ain't" I. Mr. Fiske? Mr. Randolph Flake was completely stripped of the poise upon which he added himself. He did not answer. Hanvey rattached the toothpick to the chain. The banker was staring and said, "Is that a dog eye?" opaque eyes of Jim Hanvey were raised slowly until they met the gaze of a small dog. "You are James H. Hanvey?" "You're the man the B. P. A. sent down here to investigate the robbery?" "Yes." Mr. Fiske was getting himself under control. He sought refuge in frankness. "I imagine my actions have been exceedingly discourant, Mr. Harvey. I apologize and only wish to explain that you somewhat stirred me. You see, you are not—well, not amuse the detective about which I read." --never could figure out how they do their tricks." "I wish I was," breathed Harvey estatically. "Goose! I love mystery stories. They fells sure are slick." "I Am Kind of Funny-Looking, Ain't I, Mr. Fiske?" A CASE OF LOVE. "And you don't work like the detec- tions in books!" Another shock for the banker. He blinked. "Golly, no. I don't ain't stick, Mr. Fiske. I don't hardly know any dickers who are. Lemme tell you something." The desk and his sleepy eyes held the attention of the bunker. "My kind of work isn't hard. And why? Suppose I go on a case. I smart off wrong, but I don't know where I'm out on the wrong track—I start again. Something always. A detective can make all the mistakes he needs to do one thing right—he lands the man he's after; see?" "The B. P. A. wired me" he said slowly, "that you are their best operative." "But the crook, gosh! the poor feller haws," he said. "In the sun, he's caught. He has to do everything right. The detective only has to do one thing right. And there Flake had been studying his visitor, he was amazed now to find himself warming to the unninety person. There was an almost childish simplicity about Hanwyn which gave Flake concern. Hanwyn himself insisted that the man was a caricature. The banker gasped. "Crooks are your friends? I—1 never heard of such a thing." You say they don't do your. "Well, the high class crooks don't. Only the burns." "I guess not. But can't you see how much easier it makes things?" "Good Lord!" Fiske leaned back in his chair and regarded Havney with wideeyed wonder. "You are quite the most remarkable man I've ever met." For the first time, Fiske smiled. "And the fattest." Haney's eyes twinkled for a mo- crowlet pocket of his coat and pro- tected thin and vicious-looking projects. He extended these toward his com- panion. "Have a cigar?" Fluke thanked him and accepted one. He held the card from the other, held it up to his eyes, and vault relish. He blow a cloud of smoke across the room, and Fluke turned to face him. "They are kind of strong," said the detective genius, "Some folks like 'em." Fisho struggled heroically against he asphaltiging effect of the violent umes. Then they got the better of dim. "May I open another window?" he inquired weakly. "Sure. That'll be fine." Hanvey the second e cigar which lay unlighted on the desk. "Ain't you going to smoke yours?" "I'll try one of my own, if you don't mind." (To be continued Tuesday) IF YOU MISSED THE FIRST CHAPTERS of "The May Day Mystery" you may secure back copies of the Kansan at the Kansan Business Office. Kansan Business Office. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 12. 1933 PAGE THREE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS DONT HAVE WET WEET When this special offer is good for the next two weeks. Half sales, all grades, 65c to $1.25 Rubber heels, 25c to 50c All shoes repaired are shined FREE HATS CLEANED AND BLOCKED Two hats cleaned and blocked $1.25 or 75c each. All work carries an unconditional guarantee. OMAHA HAT WORKS 717 1/2 Mass. Phone 255 [ ] 03 Is Waltz Time but Sweet FLOWERS ENCHANT VALENTINE BOUQUETS Done in the Valentine Manner at the The Virginia May Flower Shop Valentine's Day, Feb. 14th In Hotel Eldridge 1. 下列叙述正确的是( ) SOCIETY TREASURES OF GOD Theta Epsilon To Have Rush Tea Thetia Epstein, Baptist church sorcery, will entertain ruskenes at a Valentine tea this afternoon from 4 until 5 o'clock at the home of Mrs. C. W. Thomas, 1128 Mississippi street. Fern Harris, edifice; wunil; pour Lourdes, edifice; edoulin; and Rowean Longbore, c33; are in charge of arrangements. Sigma Eta Chi Initiates Four A dinner followed the initiation service held by Sigma Eta Chi, Congregational church security, yesterday at the Plymouth Congregational church. The initiates are Frances Grey, c36 Hazel Jire, c36; Ida Jean Polom, c36 and Kathleen Keeshan, c36. Mrs. C. H. Laude, Mrs. J. N. Gilbert, and Mrs. William Huntig will entertain with a Valentine lunchon and bridge at the Manor Tuesday at 1 p.m. Girls will be Deen Agnes Hunseth, mothers of the organized houses. Dinner guests at the Kappa Sigma house today will be Mr. and Mrs. Dave Condon of Atchison; Vivian Andrew, c'urel; Marian Myen; Lauren Allen, c'34; Helen Stabus, fa 36; Jane Bittulle, c'38; and Harry Davis, fa 36. Dinner guests at the Alpine Dein Pha house today will be Edild Wail, c34; Loren Baerke, c35; Kathleen Myers, c38; Nancy Drake, c38; Eljean朱蒙, fa 36; and Miss Pearl Cain of Kansas City, Mo. Alpha Chi Omega will entertain the following guests at dinner today. Allison McClure, c36; Charles Mitchell c1unl; and John Sturgeon, gr. Kappa Alpha Theta held pledging services at 5 p., m. Friday for Dorothy Berry of Cushing, Okla, and Mary Julia Jones of Wichita. The Newcomers club will meet Thursday at afternoon 2 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Dugald Jackson, 1504 Mississippi street. Genevieve Horn of Kansas City, Kan., a weekend guest of Iris Olson c'35 at the Alpha Delta Pi house. Ellen Davis of Wichita, and Grace Jones of Topeka, are weekend guests at the Alpha Omicron PI House. Morris Bruner of Burlington will be a dinner guest today at the Sigma Chi house. At The Churches Twelve morning Eagle Updates Sunday morning, followed by morning worship at 10:30 o'clock The Rev. Robert A. Hunt will speak on "Loyalty-Tested and Triumphant." Wesley Foundation Fellowship hour at 5:30 p.m. The Wesley Foundation League will meet at 6:30 p.m. The last of the series of co-operative sermons will be presented at 7:30 p.m. The subject will be, "Youth Thinks It Is Good to Be Human," and the lowing will speak: Helen Heaston, f. 33 Gleta Markham, e. 33, Gladys Baker, f. 31, Vernen Bottin, m. 36, and Harold Harding, f. 33. The University Men's club will present a musical program. Plymouth Congregational University class will meet at 9:45 a.m. Dr. Raymond H. Wheeler is the instructor. The Rev. Ronald J. Taman will meet at 10:30 a.m. C. will speak, with the J.U.C. lock service. Sigma Eta Chi will have a guest meeting at 5:15 p.m. with Evangelina Clark, £35 in charge of the program. The Fireide Forum supper meeting will be at 6:15 p.m. The Rev. Tomlyn will present another address at this time. First Church of Christ Scientist Sunday School at 10 a. m. follower MANICURE by morning service at 10 o'clock. Subject, "Soul." Meetings which include testimonies of Christ Science healing and every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. Bible class at 10 a.m. in m, followed by divine service at 11 o'clock. Sermon subject, "The Incorruptible Crown." Fellowship lunch at the parish house at 5:30 p.m. The business meeting of the Lutheran Student Walker league will follow at 6 o'clock. Evening session at 7 p.m., "Conversion," will be the subject Presbyterian Immanuel Lutheran MANICURE YOU'LL BE INTERESTED in our coupon offer, good for 25c on one dollar's worth of work. For instance, a shampoo and manicure, regularly $1.00 are 75c with a coupon. Stop and get one, they are good until April 1st. Also, worth $1.00 on a $5.00 permanent. Stadium Barber and Beauty Shop NEVA COOK. Mgr. 1033 Mass. Phone 310 Sunday School at 9:45 a.m. "I must Have God" will be the subject of the Rev. Theodore H. Assumar's sermon at The University of California 'aunel', will sing the offerees' oath, Professor Margaret Lynn, department of English, will speak at the meeting of the Westminster Forum at 7:30 p.m. to be asked to "Why We Should Read Novels." First Bantist Young People's mixed class for University students at 9:45 a.m. "Personality" will be the topic for discussion Morning worship at 10:50. Sermon subject, "Rethinking Missions." Friendly bear at 6 p.m. followed by regular dinner at 7:30 a.m. clock Subject, "Christian Speeches." Evening services at 7:30 p. m. Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. The Loyal Helps class will be in charge, On the Rev. Seth W. Slaughter will speak on the subject, "Can a Man be saved?" at the 11 o'clock service. Student Fellowship hour at 5:30. William Crum, gs., will speak on the subject, "Thinking in the Past." Christian Church School at 9:45 a. m. The Junior琴室 will play "Swedenborg and His Philosophy" will be the subject of a talk by Isaac G. Ens at the Forum meeting at 10 a. m. M discussion will follow. Young People's group will meet at 7 p. m. for an hour of discussion. Unitarian Trinity Episcopal Use Public Address Union Operating Committee Makes Plans for Using Audition System Communion church at 8 a. m. followed by church school at 8:45 o'clock Morning prayer at 11 a. m. Classes for confirmation will hok their first meeting Sunday, Feb. 19 a 6 p. m. Consideration of a public audition system to be placed in the ballroom of the Memorial Union is being made by the Union Operating Committee. Final decision on its installation depends upon the number of membership fees paid this semester. The system will be operated in accordance with occasions which may be held there. The rental library of recent books was set in the lobby yesterday. All faculty members and students may take advantage of this library. Members of the Union will be given a special rate. After Feb. 13, only members of the Union will be permitted to use the games and play in the recreation room. All members of the Union may use the check room free after presenting their objections. Others will be charged the usual fee. This semester the women students attending the mid-week variates will be admitted only upon presentation of their membership cards. Owing to the interest the women have taken in ping-pong, a table will be placed in their lounge. The Memorial Union Operating Committee hopes to add new benefits to the membership card during the semester. Major W. C. Koenig announced the following appointments Friday: to be battain color-seargent, cedet technical sergeant J. K. Hitt; to be cadet MAJOR ROENIG ANNOUNCEMENT SELECTION OF SERGEANTS MAJOR KOENIG ANNOUNCES to be bead mergerts the following have been selected: George E. Stewart, Albert W. Luster, Luzerue H. Roberts, Harold L. Smith, and William E. Pine. first ergentis, Thomas Page who will be assigned to Battery "A" and Kenneth J. Hodson who will be assigned to Battery "E". Spanish, Greek, Latin: Learn labor savings methods of acquiring vocabulary. Use of card index classification analysis. Trial lesson, 352. Photos 321. five words, or least one I want five. 6 insertions, the Larger adds prunus. WANT ADS are ACCOUNTED ACCOMPANied by CASH. Want Ads HAVE YOUR application photographs made at Moore Studio, 719 Mass. (upstairs-exclusive). Phone 964, -125. FOUR nicely furnished rooms, $7 to $12 a month. Breakfast and dinner, $14 a month. Discount if both board and room are taken. 1200 Tennessee. — 105 TRUNK KEYS, door keys, car keys, Good locker padlocks, night latches door cloors repaired. Trewery or Rutter. 623 Vermont St. Phone 319 WANTED: A girl interested in earning part of board. 1312 Ky. Phone 25188. -101 FOUND: An overcoat in an English class-room. Inquire at 201 Fraser. Stewart E. McMillan, 14, ITT, formerly United States consul to Warsaw, has been appointed as consul to Piedras Negra, Mexico. FURNISHED 4-room modern house. Desirable for couple or three men students. Phone 2488M. 804 Mo. St. FOR RENT. To young men, teacher, or married couple, please southeast front room in private home. Private room at Knoxville College, Corner 116. Kentucky. Phone 35344M. FOR RENT: Rooms and board for boys, near Campus. Rates very reasonable. Call 2034. 1241 Louis. —102. --schedules, rates, and all information Phone 590 13-PLATE BATTERY With your old battery For small cars. ONE STOP SERVICE Carter Service Firestone DEN UNI DENVER $990 IVER Two buses every day. New low fares good on every bus. Service to almost any point in America. Sample one- Go by Greyhound Bus Salina St. Louis Chicago WESTERN GREYHOUND ...22.15 4.93 New York ...28.50 4.92 Los Angeles ...28.50 7.90 Topeka ...7.90 UNION BUS TERMINAL C33 Mass. St. ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP Run-down Heels May Do for Hoboes but it Really Isn't Becoming for Students. Get a shine Bungalow Candies. 1017 Mass. 11 W. 9tb Headquarters for Mrs. Stovet's Sunday Luncheon including drink and dessert. Noon or Night Stutes The Best Place to Eat and Drink after All. 30c 10 10 **BOY'S CLUB:** Come where you can get all you can eat. Home cooked meals; good variety; 21 meals for $5. 1122 Ohio St. - -102 ROOM AND BOARD for three boys. Nice big room. Excellent meals. Make us an offer. 1336 Vermont. Hought Club. Phone 1278. -101 WANTED: Several boys to board. Good food, family style, all you can eat, prices right. Make up your own club. Good location. 1042 Ohio. -101 YOUR TIME is valuable. Have your watch put in perfect condition now. Roberts Jewelry store. 833 Mass. St. "A' GRADES depend on the condition of your eyes. Have them examined and glasses fitted by F. H. Roberts, Optometrist. $83 Mass. St. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusively 1025 Mass. The Number 65 - The Price - 25c The Name - Jayhawk Taxi ike Guffin Prop 1ke Guffin, Prop. The Private Rooms may be reserved by any group without extra cost by phoning early---present economic disturbance, we have endeavored to keep your telephone service at a high level of efficiency. PHONE 2100 You may have the meal served or go through the line. at--present economic disturbance, we have endeavored to keep your telephone service at a high level of efficiency. THE CAFETERIA --present economic disturbance, we have endeavored to keep your telephone service at a high level of efficiency. When Down Town---present economic disturbance, we have endeavored to keep your telephone service at a high level of efficiency. The place to stop for a refreshing fountain drink or appetizing sandwich is our beautiful new Walnut Room. Wiedemann's Established 1868 835 Mass. Phone 182 LUNCHEON Served Dailu 7 11:30 a.m. to 2 p. m. Also 5:30 till 7 p. m. Saturday and Sunday THE TURN OF THE YEAR $T^{HR}$ turn of the year always brings with it a feeling of hopefulness. It is custom also it is a feature of the factory. A year's operations are described. What was the result? i The end of the year found us with approximately 18,000 fewer telephones in service throughout the state. Also, one million fewer long distance calls were made by Kansans. This resulted in a substantial decrease in revenue which to meet payrolls, taxes and the money needed to operate the business. The year saw more economies instituted to offset, as far as possible, the drop caused by lost business. For most of us in Kansas, as elsewhere, 1932 was a year of problems. However, the picture of 1932 is not altogether plomy. We believe you will agree that your telephone service is good. The efforts of telephone workers were directed to this end. Despite the handicaps imposed by the 7 Every employee of the telephone company, from top to bottom, went on a schedule of part-time work. By so doing, the banks of a savings adding to the banks of the unemployed. We in the telephone business were no exception. Like many other businesses our earnings were not sufficient to pay all of the costs of furnishing service. SOUTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHON It is not for us to forecast the trend of business in 1933. But, whether conditions improve, or continue at the current rate, our company will carry on with other Kansas industries. Telephone employees, more than 2,200 of them, will still be spending their pay in Kansas. They will put back into circulation through this channel alone, a substantial part of the money you pay to the telephone service. The telephone service in Kansas will pay out in tax nearly one million dollars. Thus, another large slice of the telephone dollar will help defray the expenses of federal, state and local governments. For many years we have had high faith in the stability and growth of Kansas. We have backed that faith by raising the necessary money to erect the telephone plant which serves 88 towns and cities and provides much of the long distance telephone service which Kansans use. The rigorous experiences of the last three years have not shaken our belief in the future of Kansas. We intend to go forward, along with other Kansans, in the firm convoy that will work our way out of the difficulties of these days. J. W, MeCOY District Manager THE GOVERNOR OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK NEW FEATURES THIS SEMESTER Ping Pong Table for Women. YOUR UNION offers you a big dollar's worth COMPANY Ping Pong Table for Women. Another Ping Pong Table for the recreation room. Free Checking for men at Mid-week and Regular Varsities. (Women's checking has been free heretofore). Circulating Library. Fountain Tickets, $2.75 value for $2.50, available for members only. Free Privileges for Members: Mid-week Varieties (Stages fined 10c Women will be required to show their membership cards). Checking for Men and Women. Bulletin Board Ping Pong Tables Checkers Chess Playing Cards Dominos Newspapers Magazines Radio Meeting Rooms Towels Information Bureau Men's lounge and smoking room Women's lounge and recreation room $ 1^{00} $ Other Privileges: Recreation Room (open only to members but a small charge for use of pocket biltiard and smoker tables) (sandy lunch, lunch, candy and regular fountain drinks) In addition, Your Union houses the following other campus activities: W. S. G. A. Book Exchange Office of the Jawhawkter Office of the Men's Student Council Office of the Women's Self Government Association University Cafeteria Varsity Dances Lot and Found Bureau Get all these privileges this semester PAY YOUR $1.00 WHEN YOU PAY YOUR FEES PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 12. 1933 PATER WHERE BIG PICTURES PLAY THRU TUESDAY NOW HOW COULD HE THINK OF A HOT IDEA— W. he when he had cold shivers! You'll laugh! Shrick! How! Clerm! Gasp! Amplify! And you'll tell your friends net to miss it! WHISTLING DARK with ERNEST TRUX (Star of the Stage Hit Duplicates His Success in the Picture) UNA MERKEL and JOHNNY HINES Also another popular Musical Comedy in Teckcolor—Novelty—News 20c to 7 after 7 25c Shows 1,30,3,30,7 and 9 Lindsey to Start Football Practice Early Next Month THE KANSAS CITY STAR Subscribe for Head Coach Seeks New Material Regardless of Size or Previous Experience "There are a lot of good men around this campus who are not out for football," he said Football Coach Ad Lindsay said yesterday morning. "I would like to get these men out. They seem to be happy with Big Six football, or wouldn't have a chance and consequently fail to report for football," he added. Men who have had some high school experience are especially urged to report to Coach Linden as they might benefit from the picture better than they expect. Spring football practice will consist of plenty of scrimmage this year, as the football mentor believes in having a little scrimmage as possible during the regular season to avoid injuries. In this way, with a great deal of spring scrimmage, he can get a line on the new men who will report. TO HAVE SCRIMMAGE Coach Landsley will be assisted by the remainder of the coaching staff in the caring practice. This includes Mike Getto, Forest Cox, Froland Logan, Lee Page, Earl Feyl, and Dr. Forrest C. Ailen in an advisory capacity. Couch Lloyd displayed the fact that size is not everything when he used a 12-inch table. The 145-pound back made several rice gains in every game he played. The fact that Coach Lindsey thinks that there are men on the Kansas campus is too much to ignore, so should add a number of new enthusiasts to his spring practice group. Headquarters 847 Mass. St. Couch Lindsay is planning to start spring football practice around March 1 if the weather permits. He hopes to have a number of new men report who have never been out for the Kansas football team. These men and last year's freshman squad will report a player's last year, and last years squad so that they will get the fundamentals of Ad Lindsay's style of play. PHONE 17 H. L. NEVIN Distributor 13 papers - 15c per week DICKINSON Where Students Meet! KATE SMITH "HELLO EVERYBODY" The Song Bird of the Air In Her First Picture NOW . . . . !!! out of the air— onto your screen— into your heart— THUR. PRL MAE WEST IN "SHE DONE HIM WRONG" THUR. PRL "THE SIGN OF THE CROSS" is Coming? --only lead of the game by making good his part of a double foul that saw Miller miss when the stepped to the free throw line. PATEE TAILLE STARTS WEDNESDAY REAL WAR For the First Time Showing on Any Screen A BLAST FROM HELL! The BIG DRIVE THE REMARKS Actual Hand-to-Hand Fighting in the Frenches All the Armies of the World War in the Greatest Battles. Men's Rifle Team Selected Jayhawker Marksmen Have Started Scheduled Matches The varsity rifle squad for the coming season as announced last night by Lieutenant E. H. Coe, assistant instructor of military science; Hall Taylor captain; Royee Rearwin, c3; E.Miley c4; Guy W. Baker, c4; A.H. White, c3; T. J Craig, c3; George W. James, c3; Jay M. Wanamaker, c4; J.H. Moore, c3; C.E. Hinnesson, c3; C.Fennesson, c4; A.L. Hitchens, c4; Leroy Cooper, c3; F.Matassar, c4; H.Dill, pz; H.Williams, c5; D.E Leigh, c6; G.E. Hubig, c3; T.R Maichel, c4; J.S. Page, c3; and C.W. Asling, c4. Lieutenant Coe is anxious to have every member of the squad to come into the rifle range Monday to arrange hours for shooting. Results of the men's rifle team for this week's match with the Stanford Rifle club of the University of California totalled 1735 points out of a possible 2000. The winner of the match has not yet been determined as the scores are exchanged by mail. Those representing the University for this match were Edward Smiley, c34, who shot a score of 383 out of the possible 400 points Hall Taylor, c33, whose score surpassed 342; Samuel McKone, c36, who fired a score of 342 and Henry White, c3', who scored 337. Tiger Court Jinx Holds as Kansas Loses, 21-17 (Continued from page 1) The lead faded a moment later, however, when Cooper hit from the court to give Missouri a 17 to 16 lead. Wells tied it at 17 all with a free throw that cried the Jayhawks scoring for the evening Wagner and Miller led the game for Missouri at this point the Missouri center ringing up two free throws while Miller sweated under the Kansas basket for a set up. The box Kansas - 17 FG FT TP Harrington, f 0 0 0 Wells, f 3 5 11 Lind, c 3 1 3 Schanko, g 1 1 3 Gray, g 0 0 0 Venn, g 0 0 0 Totals ... 5 7 17 Missouri—21 FG FT TP Stuber, f 0 0 0 Cooper, f 3 1 7 Wagner, f 2 1 8 Jennon, g 4 0 0 Miller, f 3 0 0 Hafftage, f 0 0 0 Totals 8 5 21 10 Officials—Jack North, Des Moines, La, and Dwight Ream, Washburn. Men's Intramurals --are lower in price. We are showing the nicest line of woolens that we have ever had in years, at prices that have never been so low. Some very attractive patterns as low as $16.50, suit or topcoat. And remember--- The men's intramural basketball games will get under way again Monday evening, following intermission between semesters. Tomorrow's games will be as follows: 6:30 - Acacia B vs K Sig B and Phi Psi B vs Phi Gam B. 9-Sig Nu vs Phi Gam and Kayhawk vs A K L. 10-Jayhawk vs Acacia and S A M vs K Sig. The team standings up to date are as follows: Won Lost Pet Division 1 Beta 7 1 1.000 Phi Delt 7 1 875 Rowlands 5 2 274 A. T. O 5 2 714 Sigma Alpha Mu 3 4 371 D. E. O 3 4 296 S. P. E. 2 5 280 Acesta 1 6 143 D. C. O 1 6 000 Jawhaves 0 0 0 Won Lost Pet. Sigma Nu D. U 8 0 1.00 D. U 6 1 1.05 Koybayev D. U 3 2.05 Piu Gun D. C 4 3.25 Chi D. Sig D. C 3 3.71 Piu Gun D. C 4 3.71 Phu K. Pai D. C 3 5.00 S A E A. K 4 3.00 S A E A. K 4 3.00 Pi K A 1 5 1.67 Pi K A 1 5 1.00 Triangle 0 7 0.00 Division II Tennessee Club 7 5 1 1000 Phi Mu A. 1 1 0 833 A. K Psi 4 1 800 Theta Tau 3 2 600 Clothes for Spring Schulz the Tailor 917 Mass. Suiting you is my business. A. Phi Omega 3 3 500 K. Epig 3 2 498 Phi Chi 3 4 408 Phi B, Pi 1 5 167 Wakao K 1 4 603 A. Chi Sig 1 6 409 McCue to Visit University Jayhawk B 7 0 1.000 K. Sig B 7 0 8.575 K. Kiai B 6 2 1.875 Acacia B 4 2 .667 Phi Gam B 4 2 .667 Phi Doh B 4 3 .571 S. A. Ii B 4 3 .571 Phi Psi B 4 3 .571 Beta B 4 3 .571 Sig Chi B 3 4 .428 D. T. D. B 3 5 .375 A. T. O. B 2 5 .286 S. P. B 5 0 .800 D. Chi B 8 0 8.000 Red Cross Examiner Will Review Life Savers Feb. 23 A. T. McCue from the midwestern area, Red Cross headquarters in St. Louis will review life saving examiners and qualify new ones Feb. 23, Herbert G. Alphin, swimming coach, said yesterday. Savers Feb. 23 Mr. Alphin said that the Red Cross life saving program is based on the training of life saving examiners in communities throughout the United States. These examiners are leaders capable of imparting their knowledge and contacting the widest possible number of people in all ways of life. Over $400 Is Paid Each Month to University Men Union Aids Many Students In the past, the Memorial Union has received some financial aid from the University. This year its operation is made possible only by the membership fees and the small income-producing facilities within the building. Sixteen men students of the University are dependent on the labor that they do at the Memorial Union. They work in the Union fountain, in the recreation room, in the lounge, and in the check-room. Every month more than $400 is paid toward their support. Five of the students are enrolled in the School of Engineering, three in the School of Business, two in the School of Law, one in the School of Medicine, and one in the School of Fine Arts. The Memorial Union was built by students, alumni, and friends of the University. At present it is student-maintained for the student body. Send The Daily Kansan home This is just the weather to make more enjoyable a dinner in front of that great fireplace at--offers a BROADVIEW INN Featuring 35c Suppers Phone 1467 Sandwich BLUE MILL 1009 Mass. THE CAFE JAYHAWK Sunday Chicken Dinner 35c Phone 509 1340 Ohio We Deliver Brewer and Allen Agree to Lower Football Price Tickets for Missouri - Kansas Game to Be Less Than $2.50 Columbia, Mo., Feb. 11—(UP) —Tickets for the annual Missouri-Kansas football game will sell for less than $50 million in 20 years it was decided here. Previous to last year a single price of $3 had been in effect for 20 years. Last year the admission dropped to $2.50. Cherest L. Brewer and Forrest C. Allen representing the two schools in a conference here today, agreed on sectioning the stadium into seats sell out three prices. The lowest price will probably be $3, with no top price set. No decision was reached regarding the Missouri-Kansas game being played Thanksgiving day in 1933. It was understood that any action on the Turf is made via a conference between the two athletic directors next summer. To Begin Boxing Classes Harold Powell Will Instruct Men on Tuesdays and Wednesdays Instruction in boxing for men is being offered this semester under the direction of Harold Powell, c36. This course has been offered at the University. The classes will meet on Tuesday and Wednesday afternoons at 3:30 in the Robinson gymnasium. Mr. Powell will be the well-known weight champion of the C.M.T.C. MATINEE and EVEVNING 15c VARSITY TONIGHT TONIGHT "MILLION DOLLAR LEGS" With JACK OAKIE And All Star Cast MONDAY ONLY George Bancroft Wynn Gibson IN "LADY and GENT" EXTRA High School Hoofer Big Hearted Bosco TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY HAIL! The New Idol JACK BUCHANAN IN “MAGIC NIGHT” Hear Him Sing These Songs Hiking in Inchoer, “Good Night Vienna” “Just Heaven.” To my Valentine Give Her FLOWERS Two Hearts Wings "Flowers of Distinction" --- the Breath of Romance Send her a Valentine that carries a sentiment, a Valentine that sums up the meaning of Valentine's Day flowers Corsages, cut flowers and plants reasonably priced. WARD'S FLOWERS Flowers or Distinction Phone 621 931 Massachusetts Hit Songs "MOON SONG" and others from "TWENTY MILLION PEOPLE" Kate Smith's "Hello Everybody" at In Sheet Music and Records Bell's Music Store USED & NEW TEXTBOOKS One-Sixth of the Textbooks We Sold Last Semester Were Used Textbooks. DOES YOUR WANT LIST CONSIST OF: Laundry Cases Laundry Fillers Ream Type Paper Ream Notebook Paper Guaranteed Desk Lamps Blotter Pads and Blotters Notebooks, All Sizes Inks. All Brands and Colors Engineering Supplies And Don't Forget— We Still Offer You $1.25 on $5.00 Pen; $2.00 on $7.00 Pen and $3.00 on $10.00 Pen. 1401 Ohio Y Oil Colors and Brushes Design Class Supplies Notebook Work Organizers Pencils, All Brands Guaranteed Slide Rules Authorized Drawing Sets Full Cut Doctors Gowns Full Size Chemistry Aprons Card and Letter Files We Still Have Some Red Notebook Dividers for the Asking FREE Rowlands. BOOK STORES 1237 Oread UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXX Student Activity Report Is Issued by Harold Dentor Results in Two-Thirds Majority for Only One Of Four Plans Submitted The activity plan which includes athletic tickets, student enterprise ticket, union fee, and council fees, at a cost of $20 per student. The semesters, is favored by 290 odd more than a two-thirds majority, according to the poll conducted Feb. 7 during enrollment. This is the report that has prompted the student of the Men's Student Council. TOTAL OF 2,000 VOTE The results of both polls will be presented to the Men's Student Council tomorrow night at the regular meeting. The students will up for the second and final reading. The results of the second preferential vote lead to the conclusion that 89 percent of voters were entirely, although it was given a majority of 106 in the first vote of Jan. 12. The plan which includes the Jay hawker to Group 1 at an extra cost is approved by a majority of the students, but by 243 less than a two-thirds majority. The majority approving it, both by 243 and 81, of the "probably opposed" listed as "possibly acquiescent" if the rest of the students approve, and 42 more listed as "probably acquiescent" and counted neither for nor against the plan. The positive vote on the Jay hawker was 517 in favor and 571 opposed. Graduate School Against All The plan which includes the Kansan to Group 1, is not approved by the students when both positive ballots and negative ballots are 26 more votes cast against than in favor, with 94 listed as "probably acquiescent", and not counted either for or against. The ballots cast positively for Group 1, and the 58 favor the Kansan and 59 oppose it. The compiled statement of the results of the activity fee poll for the Graduate School indicate that all plans are opposed except the plan which includes the Student Enterprise ticket, Union fee, Council fees, and athletics, which is favored by more than two-thirds majority. The Graduate School is in a peculiar situation not comparable to the other schools, since it is made up of students not particularly interested in activities. Group 1, however, includes those activities which are of interest to graduates as well as underchampion. There were only 2,000 votes cast, exclusive of the Graduate School, although a ballot was given to each student passing through the enrollment line. Some refused to vote because of indifference. A great many passed by the balloting table without taking the trouble to cast their vote. Of the 2,000 voters, 835 had participated and thrown out entirely because they were either left blank or were voted in such a way as to give no information one way or the other. A compiled statement with its supplementary explanations is filed in the office of the Kansan and is available to persons seeing the complete results of the poll. More Join 10-Cent Diners Group Numbering 26 First Day Is Increased to 30 The 26 University students that reported yesterday morning for the ten cent meals was increased today to 30. The director, Evans, director of the K. U. cafeteria. The meals are served on the third floor of the Union building where the students wait upon themselves. The hours for meals are breakfast at 8 o'clock, luncheon at 12:30 o'clock and dinner at 6:00 o'clock. The special ten cent meals will be changed from day to day, and will not be served on Sunday. LAWRENCE, KANSAS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1933 Proposed Change Discussed Discussion of the contemplated changes in the organization and personnel of the National Student Council of W.Y.C.A. was held at the meeting of the Advisory Board of that organization last evening at Henley house. Talks on 'Dress and Grooming' Elizabeth Mugnier, assistant professor of home economics, spoke on the subject "Dress and Grooming" at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Social Group yesterday afternoon at Henley house. Japan Sends Ultimatums War Threatens to Sweep Southward to Larger Cities of China By the United States Another reason for China with the Japanese threatening to sweep southward clearing the province of Jebel and perhaps even storming the major cities of Tientsin and Peping appeared imminent today. The Japanese prepared three ultimatums warning the Chinese to withdraw entirely from Jebol. The Chinese deserved they would refuse and would right to the end. Japan meanwhile defied the League of Nations and world opinion by informing Geneva that it would not give Genova back to the Chinese as requested. Japs Approve Record Budget Tokyo, Feb. 14—(UP) —The Lower House of Parliament today passed the budget for 1933 which calls for expenditures exceeding two billion yen in 2017, a historic milestone in history of Japan. The budget will be adopted by the House of Peers later. First Faculty Recital Presented Last Night Taylor, McGrew, and Under wood Participate in Program Despite the icy streets, there was a good-sized crowd present at the central Administration auditorium last night when the first faculty recital of the year was presented. Howard Taylor of the School of Fine Arts opened the program with Beethoven's "Andante Favori." Program The first three movements of Schumann's "Carnival Pranks at Vienna" were presented; this number is not heard very often. Professor Taylor closed his program with "Gardens in Spring" (Niemann) and with the first public performance of the recent arrangement of the Strauss "Morning Song," a work written for a phrase by Professor Carl A. Prayer of the School of Fine Arts faculty. The number was dedicated by the composer to Mr. Taylor. Conrad McGrew, violinist, and Roy Underwood, pianist, chose the Desiren Francek violin and piano sonata for their offering. Five Staff Changes Made The next musical event on the calendar is the mid-winter University band concert which will be given Thursday at 8 o'clock in the University Auditorium. Managing Editor of Daily Kansas Names New Assistants Five changes in staff positions were announced today by Sid Kross, management editor of the University Daily. Kam appointed to the four-week period. Virgil Parker, c³⁴, who has been telegraph editor, will succeed Arnold Krettman, c³⁴, as make-up editor. Kretmann was named telegraph editor; she has also written the position, the position of campus editor. Margaret Gregg, c³⁴, who has been society and night editor, will take over the duties of the campus editor. Margaret Beaumont, c³⁴, was named night editor to succeed Miss Greggie. Josephine Coghill, c³⁴, will assume the office'seditor for the ensuing The spring registration of new students at the University of Kansas was moved on Friday. The treasurer's office was closed Saturday evening. There was a slight decrease from the number that registered for the first year, this past year, which totaled 302 students. Present Enrollment Unknown Unit Deadline for Fee Payment The total number of students enrolled this semester will not be available until after all fees are paid, as the students that attended school last semester were not required to register again this semester. Thursday is the last day students can pay their fees without a penalty of a dollar for each day thereafter until a maximum of five dollars is reached. Wheeler Speaks on Psychology At the regular meeting of Physiology Colloquium yesterday, Professor Raymond H. Wheeler, head of the psychology department, discussed the text, "Helsinki's Fundamental Propositions of Gestalt Psychology" Dr. Helsen, a former faculty of the family at the university of Kansas is now at Bryn Mawr, Penn. Legislature Says Board of Regents May Fix Salaries Miller Bill Making Graduated Cuts at All State Schools Killed in Committee NOT PARTY QUESTION Topeka, Feb. 14 — (UP) — Mary friend of the state educational institutions sprang to their defense in the state senate yesterday and defeated the Miller fee-slashing bill by a substantial margin. The vote was almost the reverse of what the Leavenworth senator, father of the bill, predicted. It was 22 to 13 for the motion of Senate Knapp. Montgomery county, to remove the governor, would be hewled by the hew he would 21 votes for passage. It was not a party fight, 15 Republicans and 7 Democrats vote against the measure which would have slashed salaries of executives and instructors in the five leading educational institutions from 1 to 30 per cent. "If we don't like their management let's repeal the regents law, not attempt to run their business," the ways and means chairman said. Leading the fight against the bun, Knapp declared it was a slap at the board of regents. Although Miller amended his bill, modification reduction of the higher brockets, and changed it to make it apply only in CES3 and 804, the Senate rejected the amendment. "The big educational institution have contributed more to making Kanas good and great than any other department." Left to Regents He praised the regents and the executives of the institutions, all of whom have promised to effect economies demanded by conditions. "The chancellor of the university, the president of the state college are not 'public enemies' as charged," he said. Money not Spent Univerty Schoen of Smith county assuiled the judgment of the board of regents, reading from minutes of their meetings. "But the money has not been spent unwisely," retorted Senator Hal Harlan, Manhattan, a K. U. graduate who makes his living in the city which is the home of his alma mater's 'friendly rival, the state college. Harlan eulogized the achievements of the state institutions in the "promotion of the humanitarian side of the race." He expressed the opinion that if he were to make a change in the board of directors, he would better selections than the incumbents. "The bill not only is a slap at the regents but at the state ways and means committee," Harlan said. Senator Friend of Douglas indered Harlan's remarks, adding that the Miller bill was one of the most backward moves of the legislature. Senator Fishman, the western Kansan wheat barn, who came to America 41 years ago. A Russian immigrant boy, he attended American educational advantages. "Don't impair the educational institutions," he exclaimed. "Education can change." Y.W.U.A. Lanier to street The Y. W.C.A. Cabinet will hold a 100 room Henley house. Miss Stella Scurlock, regional secretary of the organization, who will be visiting the Y. W.C.A. here on that day, will attend. Y.W.C.A. Cabinet to Meet Nazi Rebel in Reichstag Berlin, Feb. 14 – (UP) – Disorder broke up in the Reichstag building its self today when Nazi Deputy Hanoi attacked a member of the address attacking Jew, pushed Socialist Paul Leeb from the speaker's chair of the Reichstag supervising committee. Frank, who is over six feet tall, toppled Leeb out of the chair with one above. Hilfer's Deputy Shoves Speaker From Chair in Demonstration When Lloyd convened the committee to discuss a measure to guarantee freedom in elections, the Nzizi should have said that a "maxxiscii columnator" to preside. Stroke strode through the assembly hall, pushed Loeb off the speaker's stand, pounded the bell and shouted, "Times have changed. The National Socialists (Nazi) now represent the German nation." During the last election campaign Loeb referred to Hitler as "Adolph, the Slovak with bloody fingers." Members of all parties except the Nazi left the hall. Eight-Day Moratorium Closes Michigan Banks Suspension Order Curbs Every State Financial Institution Detroit, Feb. 14 — (UP)—Every bank and financial institution in the state of Michigan was closed today under a sweeping eight-day suspension order issued in the early hours of the morning by Governor William A. Comstock. The closing order brought to a standstill the financial affairs of Detroit, the city's largest industrial and commercial activities jn scores of farming and industrial communities of the state which has a population of more than 5,000,000. Immediate necessity for the moratorium was created, Governor Comstock declared, by a crisis in the affairs of the Union Guardian Trust company of Detroit. He said he understand the need for them and were had to close its doors this morning. HUNGERFORD GIVES SPEECH BEFORE ENTOMOLOGY CLU Banking officials estimated the holiday paralyzed approximately 1,410- 978,629 in banks and 144,407,139 in trust companies. These amounts are virtually frozen for the next eight days. Even though plans are effected to allow small with-drawals for necessity, approximately 420 state banks and 120 national banks were closed. Stores generally opened as usual and most announced they had available funds for today or longer, Professor Hungerford showed the club his "Family Album," which included photographs of eminent entomologists of the world. As he showed the photograph of each scientist Professor Hungerford told something of his work, his history, his major interests and his ontology. At the conclusion of Professor Hungerford's talk, refreshments were served. Dr. H. B. Hungerford, head of the entomology department, discussed the book, "Moths and Butterflies of the United States," by Sherman F. Denton, at a meeting of the Entomology club yesterday. Kansas—Generally fair tonight and Wednesday. No decided change in temperature. WEATHER --- NUMBER 101 Sheppard Starts Filibuster to Stop Prohibition Action Texas Senator Began on Covenant Where He Left Off Ten Years Ago CONSIDERED A JOKE Washington, Feb. 14- (UP)-An unidirectionally digged sound audibly emerged in the senate today to block consideration of the repeal of the 18th Amendment when Senator Sheppard, Democrat of Texas, announced he was resuming a speech on the League of Nations interrupted 10-year ago. The calm, unhurried voice of Sheepard interrupted a 30-minute Senate wrangle in which Senator Borah, Republican of Idaho, warned congress to ignore prohibition in order to prevent "revolution" in the United States. "Ten years and six months ago, addressed the senate on the subject of the League of Nations," she said Shepard, author of the 18th amendment. "Since that time, the League of Nations has subject and I have intended to return to it. But today is the first time I have had the opportunity. I take up the League of Nations now where I left off on July 24, 1922. I propose to reschedule every item 10 or 12 years hereafter." Sheppard smiled, the senate smile even the wets smiled. The joke undoubtedly was on the wets. Brailsford to Speak Tonight Added Lecture for English Students Set for Tomorrow Morning H. B. Bralford, noted journalist and authority on international affairs, will speak on "Why Don't the Nations Disarm?" in the Auditorium this evening Tomorrow morning at 11:30, he will give a special lecture for English majors in his course of "English" hall. The topic of his discussion will be "The Idea of Progress." Brailford first distinguished himself as a student and at Glasgow University. Since then, he has traveled extensively in search of material to be used in the several books he has written. According to Arthur Billings, c33, of the executive committee of the Socialist club, members of the club and all those interested in Socialism should attentively pursue straight. Mr. Brallock is one of the Scouting Socialists in this country. Announces Honor Students Schoewe Names Five With Better Than 99 Average in Geology Walter H. Schowe, associate professor of geology, has announced the Geology I honor roll for the past semester It includes five students, as follows Le Roy A. Cooper, e3, Kansas City, Mo.; Donald L. Hope, e4, Lawrence; Wilbur S. Lawler, c74, Lawrence; Charles W. Williams, c74, Lawrence; and C. K. Willey, c34, Eureka. The honor roll, posted each semester in the Geology building, lists only those students whose grades average 90 per week or better for the entire semester. Scenes and Persons in the Current News W.S.G.A. to Meet W. S.G.A. Council will meet at 7 o'clock tonight in room 5 of the Memorial Union, Helen Heaston, fa23, president, announced today. DEFVING THE WORLD! $\textcircled{1}$ $\textcircled{2}$ $\textcircled{3}$ 1—Hurry Frank Holthusen, New York attorney, who has been named by President Hoover as minister to Czecho- dominik to succeed A. C. Ratchetsky, resigned. 2—Chinese residents of New York city staging a protest meeting near Irani's tomb against the Japanese invasion of Jebel province. 3—Ira, Franklin D. Roosevelt photographed with Dagor Cernak on the occasion of her harried trip to Chicago to deliver an address. ON INTERNATIONAL TEAM 1920 Fred Anderson, a member of the Kansas debate team, in 1928 and 1929, was selected to represent the Missouri state at the international debates in England. Former K.U. Student to Debate in England Frederick Anderson Chosen to Represent Missouri Valley Frederick Anderson, 22, has been selected as a representative from the Missouri Valley to represent the United States in international debates in England. The honor of being chosen from this district which includes the states of Missouri, Texas and Kansas, affords this former University of Kansas debater an opportunity of entering into a new field of international debate. The University he engaged in several international debates on this campus. Anderson, graduating from the University in 1929, enrolled in the Kansas Law School for two years and received his law degree from the University of Kansas. In 1934 he joined the Kansas debate squal for four years, he was awarded the Della Sigma Rho honorary dehaining award here in 1931. During his time as a dehafter he adorned hates with team helmets. Former State Prosecutor Michigan and North Dakota Rotarians Hear Schwegler Employed at present by an Oklahoma City law firm, friends of Anderson are making up a special subscription fund among faculty and students to enable them to obtain their education. Prof. E.C. Buehler, debrief coach, has charged the collection of the fund. Dean of Education Stresses Principal Aim of Study "Education is a failure if it fails to train the student to acquire the skill needed for success in life, or to make a success of his vocation." Dr R. A. Schweiger, dean of the School of Education, declared yesterday in an ad that invited the Bowl club at 18th University. Dr. Schwiegler's view on the mounting of an education differs from the prevailing idea that holds that an education is the ability to store up knowledge. He believes that an education has for its purpose the enabling of a student "to adjust himself to conditions, to keep his balance amid conflicting influences, and to give him sufficient knowledge in order to use knowledge in order that he may live in peace with society, with his God, and with himself." "The great teachers of the future," he exclaimed, "will be those who do to stop with filling the students' minds with the contents of books, but who will make them realize the accomplishment that they may live a more satisfactory and helpful life." Dr. Schweider said that many students have overlooked the one great aim of all of one's study, the increased efficiency of thought and action which is gained through putting one's knowledge and skill to use. Anderson Reviews Book House Approves Bill Margaret Anderson, assistant profesor sor in the department of speech, pre sented a review of "Jesus, Son of Man," by Kahil Gibran, a Persian author, a nautical novelist. He vanced Stationing Commission of Y. W. C. A. this afternoon at Henley house. Topkaka, Feb. 14–(UP)—The Hous takeover today gave final approval to a bill giv- ing the governor authority to appoint the governor as the executive as he de- ries after his inauguration. Cunningham Wins International Cup for Mile Victory Wanamaker Trophy Goes to Kansas Miler for Outstanding Performance HARGISS LAUDS FEAT Cunningham won the trophy by a vote of 17 to 13 from Ketch Brown, Yale pail vaulter. Emmett Toppino, New Orleans sprint star, received 7 votes, and Arnold Adams of Bates, middle distance runner and Harry Hoffman, New York University, who ran in a 1-mile relay, each received 4 votes. The Rodman Wanamak inter- national award given annually for the most meritorious performance at the Milrose games was awarded to Glenn Cunningham, KU. miler, yesterday by the New York Athletic club, Cunningham won the mile run over Venizel, University of Pembroy Valley miler, and inbound record for the mile, and other great skis, including Nd of Sweden. 'Is Ideal College Athlete' Commenting on the award of the Wanamaker trophy to Glenn Cunningham as the outstanding athlete in the recent Milrose games at Madison Square Garden, New York City, where the Jawaharaker won the Wanamaker mile run in 413. H. W. "Bill" Hargiss, coach of track, said: "The奖牌 is an honor to the University of Kansas and to Kansas track athletics. Glenn Cunningham is the ideal type of college athlete—one whose scholarship is high and one who is outstanding in competition or exceptional training for condition." East Admires Runner The recent victory of Cunningham in the Wanamaker mile at New York, in which he defeated among others, Gene Venko, University of Pennsylvania. The win, a world world indoor record, has brought eastern sports fans to the realization that the Jayhawk runner is a real star, is the information conveyed in a letter to Dr. F. C. Allen by Waldo G. Bownman, former Kansas basketball player now owner of the Engineering News and Record of New York City. Bowman writes that although Gene Vonkze, holder of the indoor mile record, was given a number of publicity prior to Cunningham's victory, the team are giving Cunningham credit with being one of the world's greatest milers. KANSAN TO GO EAST AGAIN Cunningham Will Leave Wednesday Night for New York Glenn Canningham will leave Wednesday night for New York City on his second invasion of the eastern indoor track boards. He will run in three meets in the East this time and will return to his studies Feb. 28. The meets which the star will compete in are the Baster mile of the New York A. C. Feb. 18 in the 300-meter race, and the Boston Marathon. A. C. meet in Brooklyn, Feb. 21, and in the 1,500 meter of the National A.A.U. meet, Feb. 25. It was in the 1,500 meter run that Cunningham competed in the States in the Olympics last summer. With easter's experts conceding that Cunningham is a potential world record breaker at any of the distances he will run, his trip to the East is being watched with much interest in track circles. The weather conditions here have greatly hampered Cunningham's training, and he has not done much running since his race in the East. Debaters Go to Missouri Harold Harding, 174, and Clement Hall, 173, who are representing the University of Kansas in the debate with St. Louis University, University of Missouri, and Washington University, left today for St. Louis where the defense will play Harding and Hall will present the negative side of the war debt question. Hawaii Drops Massie Charges Philadelphia, Feb. 14 - (UP) Mrs. Thalia Fourecie Massue received with equanimity today the news that Hawi had dropped charges against the sururrer who assaulted her and accused of attacking her. "I am not surprised at this" she said. "I had been expecting it for some time." She said she had not decided whether to take action. PAGE TWO TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1932 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE. KANSAS University Daily Kansan Amelia Betta Associate Editors Maurice Ries Managing Editor SINNY HORNE Marken Editor Parker Margaret Gregg Nathan Editor Margaret Gregg Nathan Editor Margaret Gregg Tarichuh Editor Arnold Kretzman Chloe Coleman Society Editor Chloe Coleman Society Editor Marcie Brore Alhamed Editor Marcie Brore Sunday Editor Dorothy Smith ADVERTISING MGR. MARGARET INC London District Manager Lonely Hill District Manager Jasmine Hill Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Editor-In-Chief PAUL V. MINE Robert Whitman Michael Miles Sidney Krown Matthew J. McCarthy Ian McCarthy Brett Berman Mary Smith Monica Moncorz Margaret Jefferson Margaret Jefferson Betty Milligan Alpine Brookside Alpine Brookside David Smith David Smith South Smith Mountain Smith Business Office ... K.U. 60 News Room ... K.U. 22 Night ConNECTION, Business Office ... 750K18 Night Connection, News Room ... 750K28 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1933 Published in the afternoon, five times a week and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Chicago and the Press of the Department of Journalism. Subscription price, $1.00 per year, payable in advance. Simile expires, for each. Entered as second-class matter September 17, 2016, at the office at Lawrence, Kansas. IN DEFENSE OF FLAMING YOUTH And still they come! With the opening of the second semester at the University, there has appeared a new group of students on Mt. Oread. They have come from every corner of the state with high dreams of success and hopes of getting something out of college that will make them better men and women. Many of them have come with empty pockets. The first of the month will not bring a check from home. But the lack of financial support has not kept them from driving on to the goal they have set for themselves. They will be found in the laboratories and the library long after the average student has gone to more pleasurable fields. This student with the empty pockets will be found in the kitchens of the restaurants, behind counters in stores, and every place where a few pennies can be earned. The student will have to sacrifice for his mind and his ambition, but he will do it—just as 50 per cent of the rest of us are doing now. And we are called "Flaming Youth!" We wouldn't mind these midwinter cold snaps so much if they didn't mean that the newspapers would be filled with pictures of bathing beauties swimming amidst cakes of ice, or young male fools dashing about in the snow drifts clad only in running shorts. LOGICAL LOVE The casual reception of Valen tine's Day is heartening to those brave souls who have struggled long and earnestly to kill the sentimentalism of the last few decades. No longer does a young lady dream of the sadistic pleasure of allowing her beauty to fade in pinning for a handsome lover who never comes. With calculating eyes she selects a man suited to her taste, or if that sort is not available, she takes the next best and is satisfied. The young people of today have stripped love of its silly mid-victorian clothes and have found it a thing of more startling beauty than their fathers had ever dared hope Young people of today realize that love is a relative thing. They know that it is a very necessary part of their everyday life. Love is as necessary as eating, they say. And with true strength of character they defy convention and sentimentality to live more nearly as nature intended. Mush and soul-mates have disappeared from the life of youth and in their place is a physiological and psychological understanding of that mystery-shrouded innate desire, love. With a hearty "Amen," youth endures the words of the poet: If to love Meant but to sigh, I could not care for thee. Some day we're going to slip a pure white puzzle to one of these jig-saw fiends and then steal three or four pieces from him. Will he go crazy? APROPOS Finals are over, enrollment is completed, first classes have been endured. Professors have assigned long lessons just to get things started off right. New resolutions to study hard are already discarded. New classes have been settled. Students are mostly finding the right rooms at the right time. A few have even found out the names of their instructors and the people who are probably the brightest in the group. Living conditions have been adjusted. Second hand book stores have been rummaged for slightly damaged texts. Fees have been partially paid. Everything is running smoothly. Ho hum! When is our next vacation? We are about to suggest that the new Swope park lion be used as subject for another Missouri lion hunt when word came that he had finally asserted his manhood. We are glad that he has demonstrated his ineligibility for such an enterprise; but it is hard on the potential lion hunters. A PROPER STUDY DIET Science tells us that if we want to live to a ripe age we should follow a program of scientific nutrition. The main essentials are energy foods, and vitamins and minerals. After fulfilling these "requirements" we can eat whatever food we like. At the beginning of this new semester it would seem fitting to remember that proper diet can well be applied to other things than food. Many students fail to realize that by unsystematized study they slowly but surely retard the process of learning, so that when final examinations near in the spring, things are in a serious condition. OPPORTUNITY'S FORELOCK Last Sunday afternoon there was a magnificent recital of organ music in the University Auditorium. Although admission was free, only a handful of people attended. Only about half the audience was made up of college students. According to a note on the printed program, the purpose of the Sunday afternoon organ recitals is to "Give to the University and to the community a quiet hour of the best in music." Lost Sunday's service did just that. The quality of the music was excellent, and as one student said upon leaving. "It makes you feel better to hear an organ recital." Students evidently do not know what they miss. They pay hundreds of dollars for classroom training which the University gives, but they pass up opportunities for cultural development OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXX Tuesday, 14月18日 Noise due at Chancellor's Office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication days and 11:30 a.m. on Sunday for熬夜。 which are free BOTANY CLUB: CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION The Botany club will meet tonight at the home of Dr. Mix, 1344 Louisiana Street, at 7:50 o'clock. Initiation of new members will be held. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION an exercise will be held at 4:30 Wednesday in room 32 Admits. training building JESSIE'S PICKLEK President. GRADUATE CLUB: Dean E. B. Stouffer, of the Graduate School, will speak at the meeting of the Graduate club to be held in the private dining room of the cafeteria at 6:15 this evening. He will speak on his impressions of Fascism and Hitlerism and as he has spent some months in both Italy and Germany since the activities of Mussolini and Hitler begin, his talk will be an interesting first-hand discussion. ELLIOTT PENNER, Chairman. MMACULATA CLUB: Immaculata club an organization of Catholic women, will meet at 7:30 to night at St. John's Catholic church. MARY ASTON, President. The Intrumbral board for women will meet at 4:30 Wednesday. RUTH HOOVER There will be a meeting in 216 Administration building Wednesday at 4:30 members must be present. HARRIETT SHAW, President. KAPPA PHI: Regular meeting, with pledging and election of officers will be held this evening at 6:30 at Myers hall, instead of at 1299 Avenue Street. EVELYN WORDEN, Publicity Chairman. LE CERCLE FRANCAIS: Le Circe Franca se reumira mercredi, a quatre heures et demie, salc 200 Fraser hall. Tous ceux qui parient francais sont invités. H. N. Brasilford will speak to English students and others interested Wednesday morning at 11:30 in Fraser theater. His subject will be "The Idea of Progress." W. S. JOHNSON, Chairman. LECTURE FOR ENGLISH STUDENTS: Those men who have made eligibility requirements for the Men's ccs club this semester and who are destroys of joining this organization should call Profs. Katherine L. Clarke at (312) 568-4700. MID-WEEK VARSITY: TRYOUTS FOR MEN'S GLEE CLUB: Union cards must be shown by both men and women students at the mid-week variety tomorrow night. OZWIN RUTLEDE, Manager. HAROLD WALKER, President. "There will be a regular meeting of W.A.A. Wednesday at 4:30. D.Naishtan will speak on 'The Invention of Basketball.' DOROTHY LIGHTBURN." All members of the Women's Rifle Team he sure to see Lieut. Coe and sign up for practice Tuesday and Wednesday so they can start training immediately. W. A. A.; W. S. G. A. - Y. M. C. A. TEA: the GEA, VA, W.C.A. tea for new women students will be held Wednesday morning at 10 a.m., Administration rest rooms. All women of the University are invited to attend. WOMEN'S RIFLE TEAM: CAROL HIGGINS, MARY SHRUM. Social Chairmen. The May Day Mystery Octavus Roy Cohen SYNOPSIS copyright by Octavus Roy Cohen. CHAPTER 1—Antoinette, Peyton, Kevin and Mark. Marlard, Patente Marlard, Patente Thayer attentions to Ivy Welch, seventh-year- student with bitter recriminations, the ending with bitter recriminations, the non, another student, long Thayer's non, another student, long Thayer's non, another student, long Thayer and Vernon threaten us. CHAPTER 113. — Larry determines to see Thayer and end his association with the company until she has appended to her husband's room at a fraternity house. Max Veritas lives and goes to his room. Tony ends up at a restaurant afterwarms, visible in a staircase he has left apparently clothing to be worn there. CHAPTER 14. IV—Webster's appeal to the Court of Appeal that Prattless he determines to see Thomas. Prattless gives his first court hearing, that of home insurance. Fuchs issues counsel to the judge. Lindsay appeals to the judge, takes charge of hands police chief. --- CHAPTER 12—Larry Welch, Toys be appraised of do you Wendy to end his apprentice or do you Wendy to end his apprentice of do you Wendy to end his apprentice of do you Wendy to end his apprentice of do you Wendy to end his apprentice of do you Wendy to end his apprentice of do you Wendy to end his apprentice of do you Wendy to end his apprentice of do you Wendy to end his apprentice of do you Wendy to end his apprentice of do you Wendy to end his apprentices As the banker moved toward the window, Jim sighed relievedly. He received the unseal cigar and took a sip of his breath. A friend's infusion. Jim's cigars were a source of perpetual perfume; he was always afraid that some day some one would break it. **CHAPTER V—The Marlbank bank is robbed of $160,000. The robber is absorbed into the bank and apparently badly wounded. Jim Heavens, a former bank manager, and good, and honest, comes to inform the bank president, tally Hanshein he believes has. Veronan was driving the car when the robber was discovered.** Fiske seated himself again. "To'd like to hear about the robbery?" he asked. "Yeh—if you want." "isn't that what you came for?" "Reckon so." "Then why don't you ask me some questions?" Randalloph Fiske threw back his head and lunged. "You win, Harvey. Now—shoot!" Jim's face did not change. "Gosh! Mr. Fiske—how do I know what to ask? I want you to wait for you to tell me, and you are waiting until you'll sure I didn't escape from some zoo." "The roller got away with approximately one hundred thousand dollars in currency." Harvey blinked. "Lot of cash for a little bank like this." "Day before yesterday—May first— at ten minutes after two o'clock." "I plenty. We were making up the pay roll for the Mariand mills. They pay on the third." "That is Archer street," said Flicker. "The north and south street is Oak. The north and shopping street, but Archer is the line where we go to get by here all the time. You will notice that this bank is the only commercial establishment on Archer street." "Sick-up?" queried the detective, "Yes." Fiske rose and invited Hanley to follow him. They passed from his bed and ran out the hall under the amazed eyes of Miss Helen Seward. Fiske conducted Hanley to the front door and gestured to the breast thoroughbred passing east and west. "Tell me all about it." Fiske stepped back into the bank. "Our banking business starts at one in the morning and stops at two. At two o'clock daily—and on Saturday morning," he added, "too tender. We then conceal the interior of the bank by rolling the shades—" He stepped behind the open door, and then pushed from the bottom of the door. The heavy green shade rose along the glass surface until it was higher than /4 "There are similar curtains on both windows," he went on. "As soon as we get the last customer out, we pull the curtains and the employees except two or three go out for a bite of lunch. They invariably come back, which is behind my office, opens onto a little alley through which you can pass into Ouk Street. Day before yesterday the bank was free of customers entering the curtain and shut the front doors." "Easy," grunted Jim. "You sure do talk explict." "No. They never are. We have safety vaults in the basement and they are open until five o'clock. There has to be some way for clients to get into the building. We merely shalt not allow customers to keep our banking clients out." "Were they locked?" Flasks turned away, but Hanvey examined the door. He saw that it was equipped on the inside with a heavy metal canister. He turned and followed the banker. Back in Fisker's office, the banker remembered his store. Harry Holley in a fallout suit had pointed out that occasionally his eyes uncurried for a moment and he regarded the banker as a friend. "May first was a perfect day," said Fiske. "Warm and sunshine and almost like summer. As I said, we shit the floor and drew the curtains at two windows. We were in the tangkak, we were effectually conceived from anyone on the street. At the same time everybody went out to lunch except Miss Seward and myself, Miss Searow is my secretary. She knew all the people who called "Ohi" and hanwe. And then "Oh!" said Harvey. And then— "Nice young lady." There was no blot of humor in his heavy face, but Fiske chuckled delightedly. "Efficient—and sour," he explained. "Not mighty loyal." "I knew she must be something." "She was behind her desk and I had just gone out to speak with her. At one, I pushed me two o'clock on the free door opened. I hold up anything of it—a box holder, most likely. The man—" "Remember what he looked like?" "Only vaguely. He was slim and quietly dressed. He didn't look like a creek." "Crooks never do." "He walked straight up to the cage where I was talking to Miss Seward. First thing I knew about anything being wrong was when Miss Seward uttered a little shriek, I turned around and the man was painting a gun at us. "The rubber was polite, but very positive. He told us to hack into the wall. I could see him. Then he saw me looking toward the electric buttons which we have all over the room. We knew he was angry and he warned me that if I made a move to touch one, he'd kill me. I "Wise man," murmured Jim. "he herded us into the safe and followed us. I noticed then for the first time that he carried a little black satchel. He stuffed it with all the currency we had in the safe—about one hundred thousand dollars—and I went to get it from him at course. I knew he intended locking Miss Seward and myself in. "This happened quickly—but it didn't seem quick to us. Miss Seward did not see him, and she did not to scream, and also didn't. The robble moved into the main part of the house." He paused and Hanvey prompted. "Then—what?" "Iharmon Burke came back from lunch. He's the cashier and teller. He came in the back way." "What happened when he came in? " "Plenty," said Fisk grimly. "First the writer's return was when he and the robber started shooting at each other." Harvey made a chuckling noise with his lips. "This Burke must be a real figin' piece of furniture." "He is. Though I never suspect it before." "Is he here?" "Yes, they had him at the use- upal until yesterday evening. He was hit in the fleshy part of the leg. He came back this morning." Fiske touched the buzzer on his desk and Miss Seward answered the summons. "Ask Mr. Burke if he'd mind stepping in here." A few seconds later the door opened and a figure entered. Harrison Burke, who was part of the team, exhibited no surprise at the grotesque appearance of the Gargantuan defense. Harmon Burke was a little bit of a man, scarcely more than five feet in height. His stature did not have been greater than a hundred pounds. He had roving gray eyes which seemed rather bright; wrists of great length; and which seemed too large for his body. "Harmon," said the bank president, "this is Mr. Harvey. He's down here for the B, P. A, to look into our little robbery." Burke habbled forward and extended his hand. The detective regarded him in amazement. "You and the robber fought it out?" he questioned. "Humph! Tell we what happened, if you please." "You don't look like a gun-fighter." The little man glanced up in surprise. "Well—" Burke was speaking meticulously, "I went out to lunch immediately after two o'clock. I went into the kitchen, and we were route back; I suppose Mr. Fiske has explained that we always do that. I returned exactly at two-thirty because we were to be very busy that afternoon, so the pay roll for the Married mills. "I'm not." "I came in the back door and saw a man putting currency into a suitcase, then he grabbed my hand. I couldn't see Mr. Fiske or Miss Seward. I immediately suspect- "A rather natural supposition," agreed Hanvey. "And what happened then?" "He yelled something at me." "What?" "I don't know. I didn't pay any attention to him. I jumped behind the bullet and ran back. He fired at me but the bullet struck the marshal counter. He didn't hit me unnoticed. The wrenched cashier spoke as though gun battles were matters of everyday occurrence. "Oh, yes sir! I couldn't shoot a rifle from where I was. I ran around the curler of my bed. Just as he gun him and shot at the front door, him and he shot at me. That was when he hit me. I was very sorry to hear that man and that kept me from following." "And after you fell down?" prompted Jim. "Good Lord! After he had hit you?" "Yes, sir. I was very lucky, too. I hit him." "You are sure about that?" Quite positive, sir. You see, we found blood on the floor where he had been standing. And there was a trail of blood along the sidewalk and across the sidewalk to the curb." "Yes, sir. I regretted very much THE CENTER "Yes, Sir. I Regretted Very Much That I Had Not Struck Him in a More Vulnerable Spot." that I had not struck him in a more vulnerable spot." "You did a-plenty. Now, Mr. Burke, what happened after that?" The little man flushed with embarrassment. "Golly!" breathed Jim. "It was about time." Randolph Fiske faced Hanvey proudly. "Quite a hero, isn't he, Hanvey?" "Man! You said it! Mr. Burke, is that all you know about the robbery?" "Yes, sir." "Ind you ever seen the robber before?" "Not that I can remember." "No suspicion, eh?" Harvey rose. "That'll be all, Mr. Burke. And I'm really proud to have met you." Harmon Burke bowed stiffly and hobbled away. When the door closed behind him Hanvey turned to the banker. "What did you do while this was going on?" "Absolutely—as far as I could see from the safe." "Burke was correct in stating that the man was hit?" "There's a question about that. There was a good deal of blood on the floor. He must have been bleeding rather profusely, too, because he got heavier as it apprised the curb. A car was waiting there for him." "Anybody else see the robbery?" "Anyone see the escape?" "No one. A negro boy who works at the gas station across the street said he heard the shooting. But he did not have identified and so he ducked for cover." "Then no one saw the robber actual ly drive away?" "How?" "I was still in the safe. The front door was open. I saw him jump into the car." "There was another man at the wheel?" Hanvey's bulbous head moved slowly... "Same old routine. It's a wonder more of these little banks don't get stuck up." He rose and waddled to the door, which he opened. He stood for several seconds starling into the bank, then he moved down the passageway and inspected the rear door route to Oak street. He returned to Fiskle's lighted button of her terrible cigars and turned tinkly eyes on the banker. "This isn't exactly going to be easy, Mr. Fiske. Except for the stuck-up man gettie hit, there wouldn't hardly be a chance for us, because their prowess in the game would want to ask you is this: Levin's the robbery itself out of the conversation for a minute--has there been anything funny gold on around here recently? Anything that was unreal—like falling around, or anything like that?" Randall Flake was genuinely impressed. "To tell you the truth," he said, "I am sure I recognized the car in which the robber drove away." "We don't gain" to bother no innocent folks, Mr. Flake. suspicions are probably grossly unjust." "No-o, but you kind of acted it." "So-o! That sounds awful good. Whose was it?" "But there has been something peculiar." Hanvey asserted. Fiskes toyed with a blotter for a moment, "I hate to say, Havuve. My "I hope not. Especially this one. You see, in all the excitement, I couldn't be sure it was his cat." "Who was it?" "A young friend of mine who is a student at the college here, Marlard university. I could almost swear that he was waited at the car for the roller." hanney space solity, and kindly. "Idn't you better tell me the ind's name, Mr. Fiske?" The New Books (To be continued tomorrow) BANQUE MONTREAL that everyone is talking aben are for sale and for rent at "It's a nice boy, Haney, I've never met him for three years. I'm not known to any girl, I can't name her." Name—"And the banker drew a long breath; 'His name is Maxwell Verdreth.'" His name is Maxwell Verdreth. Come in and see them. THE BOOK NOOK Come in and see them. 1021 Mass. Tel. 696 KANSAS CITY 95c Sallina $13.00 New York $22.15 St. Louis 4.50 Los Angeles 23.50 Chicago 7.90 Topeka .70 Go by Greylound Bug scheduled, rates and all information. Phone 500 13 buses every day. New low fares good on every bus. Service to all most any point in America. Sample one-way fare. UNION BUS TERMINAL WESTERN GREYHOUND After College WHAT? A LAW? Former Federal Judge Edwin L. Garvin says: "A keen mind, sound judgment and unflagging industry are required to digest the volumes of laws and decisions facing the judge." The lawyer can no longer practice by ear and intuition. The science of the law is exacting and difficult." NLY "a keen mind" can absorb the volumes of information which must be at the finger tips of the young lawyer today. Perhaps that's why in this profession, as in our leading colleges, a pipe is the favorite smoke. You see, it helps a man converse, clears cobwebs from his brain. Try a pipebie of Edgeworth Smoking Tobacco—the favorite smoke among college men. "Notice how that guy is like you," you think out a difficult problem. Edgeworth is distinctive . . . that's why you'll like it. You'll know — after your first puff. Want to try it before you buy? I want to write Lara and Bro. Co., 105 S. 22d St., Richmond, Virginia. "A recent investigation showed Edgeworm the favored smoker at 33 out of 44 cold cellars." EDGEWORTH SMOKING TOBACCO Buy Edgewater anywhere in texas Ready-Rubbed Edgewater Plug Slice. All Cases. package to pound humidor tinn. Some sealed tea pots. sealed tins sealed. EDGEWORTH FATAL HIGH GRADE READY HUBBED EDGEWORTH EXTRA FLUG SICKE EDGEWORTH TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14. 1923 PAGE THREE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS I Hill Society Delta Chi Has Alumni Banquet Call K. U.-25 Before 12:30 p. m. Dalai Chi held its annual alumni banquet Saturday evening at the chamber house. Among the alumni present were Dale Johnson, George Macher, Wanghee C. Foiller, Constant J. Poirier, Kenneth Miller, Wathena; L. Perry Bishop, Osawatomi; David Holiday, Albert Kerr, Lawrence McGraw, Robert Kiddson, Joseph, M. A. R. Johnson, W. Boyd Prugh. Eri Mc Moe, Jr, Herbert Reed, C. S. DeRain, Clark Lillis, J. Frank Pigg, Duke Pierce, Kansas City, Mo; Norman Baughn, Edward Nelson and Russell Stephens, Kansas City, Kan Holmes-Smith Marriage Saturday Mrs. E. S. Holmes announces the marriage Saturday of her daughter Hollis, to Benjamin Smith of St. Louis Mo. The service was read by the Rev Carter Harter at the Trinity Episcopal Church in New York on immediate relatives and close friends. The bride is a former student at the University and a member of Alpha Xi Delta. After a motor trip to Mexico, she will make their home in St. Louis. For New Women To Give Tea The W. S. G. A.-Y. W. C. A. tea, in honor of new student students enrolled in the University, will be given tomorrow afternoon from 3 to 5 in the rest room of Central Administration building. The Social Committee of W. Y. C. W., of which Mary Shrum, c 32, is chairman, be in charge of matters of W. W. W., and the S. G. A. Council will act as hostesses. Valentine Party K. U. Dames Give The K. U. Dames were entertained with a Valentine's party at 2:30 p.m. today at the home of Mrs. Clarence Higer, 1219 Ohio street. Eleets Officers The assisting hostesses were Mrs. David Dunkle, Mrs. Lyman Henderson, Mrs. Marshall Mayberry, and Ms. Claude Wood. The Young People's class of the First Baptist church held election of officers recently. The new officers are Fern Harris of harrison president; Glen Braun-Clark of harrison; and Ruth Wampler, c 35, secretary, and Roth Rose of Lawrence, treasurer. B. Y. P. U. Elects Officers Chester Cunningham, gr. was recently elected president of the B. Y. P. U. of the First Baptist Church. Other officers chosen are vice-president, Martha Bayce, ed. 38; secretary, Helen Brown, ed. 38; secretary, Burton Brown, c30. Announces Birth Mr. and Mrs. Andews Wyman of New Haven, Conn., announce the birth of a son. Mr. Wyman was Miss Elizabeth Wyman of Professor and Mrs. A. T. Walker. Beta Theta Pi will hold initiation ceremonies Wednesday afternoon for the following: George (Speed) Akelson, 34; John Dumford, c36; Franklin Murphy, c36; Edwin Ferrin, c35; Lloyd Morgan, c36; Lyman Field, c36; Rickenbacher, c34; Frank Lynch, c36; Steve Stotts, c36; Maux Horn, c36; Phil Renick, c36; Clyde Nichols, c36 and Ted Down, c4. It will be held on Tuesday and extended by several out of town alumni, including J. C. Nichols of Kansas City, Mo, and Clyde Miller of Topeka. HUT Sigma Kappa entertained with a ten this afternoon in honor of Miss Ellen Peterson, a mission worker, on her way from New Sweden, Main to Hangchow, China. Clara Ellen Bradford, 30, of Joplin, Iowa, joined the Joplin High School Mae Omar Lair, c34, Helen Christian, c34, and Heilen Naylor, c34. Y. W. C. A. will be the hostess of the W. S. G. A. tea given tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock in the Administration building. This tea is in honor of the late Mrs. P. E. Walker University for the first time this semester. Mrs. P. E. Walker will pour Dean Agnes Husband, Miss Irene Peebody, and Professor Walden Geltch, all of the School of Fine Arts, will go to Kansas City tonight to hear Miss Rosa Ponsell, metropolitan opera star. They will be accompanied by Helen Alter, fa33, and Shirley Gibson, fa25. The regular midweek varity will be held tomorrow night in the Memorial Union building. Louis Selbers and women will play. All men and women are required to have their Union cards for admittance. Kappa Phi, Methodist church sorcerer, will meet at 6:30 p.m. at Myers hall tonight. There will be pledging and election of officers. The Rev. Edwin F. Price will review the book, "Youth and Creative Living," by Maus. Dean Agnes Husband will go to Council Grove tomorrow where she will speak at the meeting given by the Rotary Anns for their husbands tomorrow night. Miss Husband will tell of her recent trip to Mexico. The following were dinner guests at the Sigma Phi Epionae house Sunday: Mr. and Mrs, C. A. Bolen, H. L. Oberwemher, and Louise Helenousse of all, but ofutter, Mo.; andMr. and Mrs, J. B. Murkay of Kansas City, Mo. The Twentieth Century club observed guest day at its meeting this afternoon at the Pi Kappa Alpha house room. The students of Miss Amy Thompson were hustosons. Dean Agnes Husband entertained members of the W. S. G. A. council at an informal tea Sunday afternoon. Miss Agnes served Red roses decorated the tea table. Mrs. E. H. Hollans, 1530 Rhode Island street was hostess to the Zodiac club this afternoon. Mrs. George Shunad club presented the lesson on "Robert Frost." Lilys Summers, g.r. gave a tall yesterday for the Mathematics club on "The Nine-point Circle." The club was the light lunch immediately afterwards. The Immaculata club, organization of young Catholic women, will have as Valentine party tonight in the parish hall of St. John's Catholic church. Weekend guests at the Alpha Delta Pi house were Mrs. J. A. Johnson of Chicago, IL; and Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Shive of Turon. Mrs. J. W. Twente was hostess to the Tennell club this afternoon at her home, 934 Indiana street. Clayton J. Trayler of Kansas City, Mo., was a dinner guest at the Alpha Delta Pi house Sunday. The Graduate club will meet tonight at 8:15 in the Union building. Dean Stouffer will speak. Delta Chi announces the pledging of Clarence Peterson of Kansas City, Kan. Tilden to Appear March 24 Tennis Player to Bring Troupe of Professional Stars Here William T. Tilden II, world champion tennis pro, will again bring his troupe of professional tennis stars to the University of Kansas auditorium board court, it was announced today by Dr. F. C. Allen. The Tilden troupe will appear here the night of March 24, and the arrangements for the visit of the tennis great are in charge of Wilbur Coon Jr. captain of the Kanss team tennis Tilden and three foreign stars gave a much appreciated and well attended exhibition here last spring and their team won four matches much to do with renewed interest in tennis here last season. Just who the members of the troupe will be has not been learned yet. Dreher Elected President Special reduced prices over those obtaining for last year's exhibition will be in effect this year. Dr. Allen said today, but the definite scale of prices for admission for the general public and for students will be named soon. Herbert Shuey, graduate in psychology, spoke yesterday at a special meeting of the German club on his travels and spent two years at the University of Berlin. An election of officers for the spring term was held. Those elected are as follows: Hazel Rice, c36; vice president; William McCarrall, c36; treasurer; and Elizabeth Toaster, c35; secretary. Dreher succeeded Lila Lawson, c44, as presi- At the regular meeting Monday, Feb. 20, the German club will give a play entitled "Einer Musa Heilzeit." German Club Selects Officers for Spring Term at Meeting Yesterday CITY PUTS UP BARRICADE FOR ACCIDENT PREVENTION When a light rain, freezing as it fell, yesterday made streets and highways hazardous, the University spread cinders on Fourteenth between Oreand and Indiana, and sand over much of the of the streets and walks of the campus. A result of these complaints, As a result of several complaints, the city street department had signs printed Workmen Find Explosive Substance in Secluded Nook of Dyche Museum Housecleaning and moving, day traditionally disclose unexpected treasures. When the department of anatomy was moved a couple months ago from the basement of Dyche museum to the Commons building, workmen discovered in a secluded corner of the storehouse a bottle filled with a cotton-like substance. showed it was Pyroxylin, a nitrated cellulose compound and a second cousin of gun cotton. Under proper conditions—conditions not found on storeroom shelves—the substance "would have caused a considerable explosion." Workmen immediately handed the R.O.T.C., and has been effectively disposed of. Where the material came from is a mystery to the anatomy department. It has properties similar to a substance used for brain surgery, roscopic examination, and the date, 1914, on the can suggests to Dr. H. C. Tracey, professor of anatomy, that the accident was caused by World War started, to guard against a shortage if the war were prolonged. Both Dr. Sundwald and Dr. George Coghill, who were in the department at the time left the University shortly after graduation, had a supply of Pyroxylin was forgotten. The Buildings and Grounds depart- and placed on Eleventh, Twelfth, Thirteenth, and Fourteenth leading to the campus. These signs were to warn people of the dangerous conditions of the street and read 'Icey Street, Unsafe for Travel' Sidewalks and streets around them, generally slippery with cars skidding on even, at reduced rates of speed. "Impressions of Fascism and Hitlerism" will be the subject of Dean E. B. Stuart, speaking before the Graduate School, for a private dining room of the cafeteria. ment turned the material over to Lieutenant E. H. Cohen, who used a small portion to make collusion—the ordinary use of the material here—and utilized the rest for demonstrations for the alms in explosives. By use of ordinal dynamic cats, to give a sufficient number of firearms, the Parycash could be exploded. All has now been disposed of, and any hurking danger to University property removed. --- Want Ads Twelve-word语费, least 1 book, and two books of literature. Intrinsic, the Larger adults' programs. WANT ADS ARE ACCOMPILED ACCOMPANied BY CASH. JIGSAW PUZZLES cut to order. Parish owns your own pieces or we'll furnish them. Any number of pieces may be shipped to Co. 412, North Carolina Phone 522-107-167 FIRST CLASS room and board room. $0, bill $13 per month. Try us soon. 1122 Ohio. Phone 3902R -104 STUDENTS OF French, Germain, Spanish, Greek, Latin; Learn labor saving methods of acquiring vecu- bili. HAVE YOUR application photocopya made at Moore Studio. 719 Mars. (uptrast-exclusive). Phone 864-125 (upatrast-exclusive). lary. Use of card index classification word analysis. Trial lesson, 35s.. Phone $21. — 105 FOUR nicely furnished rooms, 57 to 12 a month. Breakfast and dinner, 51 a month. Discount if both board and room are taken. 120 Tennessee - 105 TRIUNK KEYS, door keys, car keys, Good locker padlocks, night latches, door closers repaired. Trenewery & Rutter. 623 Vermont St. Phone: -124 FOR RENT: Rooms and board for boys, new Campus. Rates very reasonable. Call 2814. 1241 Louis. — 123. FURNISHED 4-room modern house. Desirable for couple or three men students. Phone 2488M. 804 Mo. St. -102 FOR RENT: To young men, teacher, or married couple,pleasant southeast front room in private home. Private room at Nebraska Corner, 114 Kentucky. Phone 213-8454. **BOYS' CLUB.** Come where you can all get you all can eat. Home cooked meals; good variety; 21 meals for $5. 1122 Ohio St. - -102 LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusively Subscribe for 1025 Mass. THE KANSAS CITY STAR Headquarters 847 Mass. St. PHONE 17 13 papers — 15c per week H. L. NEVIN Distributor Don't Neglect Your Shoes They look bad. feel bad, and you may catch cold. Get a shine. Electric Shoe Shop Brought Back for a second visit by POPULAR DEMAND Red NICHOLS IN PERSON AND HIS 11 WORLD FAMOUS PENNIES FEATURING JUNE REA TONY SACCO ERNIE MATHIAS FRIDAY NIGHTS The Grill's most popular band in 1932 and the second most popular orchestra ever to play in Kansas City. are COLLEGE NIGHT University students and alumni enjoy tral thrill in the colorful entertainment of College Night in the Gall. And remember, the cowsit is only little cents! MAKE RESERVATIONS IN ADVANCE NEW REDUCED PRICES Lunchhems... 65c, 85c Fine Course Dinner... 1.00 Grillware and Tools... 50 on weeknight, $1.00 Saturday Grooming & Family Sugar Only $1.00 at Winery & Owner and Dancing till a.m. (No Couvert) FREE PARKING... At Down Town Garage and NEW MUCHLEBACH GRILL THE HUMAN CRICKET BEATS OLYMPIC RECORD! Joak, the lovely trapezie artist, stands upon a small platform. At the will of the magician she leaps *twenty feet* into the air to reach her trapezie. She uses no ropes, no ladder! A phenomenal leap for a woman , or a man! EXPLANATION: Joise didn't jump. *She was spun* 'The twenty-foot-leap is not dependent on Joise's ability, but on a powerful spring mechanism hidden beneath the stage which propels the artist upward through the air. The force is so violent that the lady wears a light steel jacket which protects her from injury as she starts her astonishing leap.' COLLEGE OF PHYSICAL SCIENCES BY MICHAEL J. RUSSELL CAMELS IT'S FUN TO BE FOOLED ... IT'S MORE FUN TO KNOW Magic has its place...but not in cigarette advertising. Consider the illusion that there is a mysterious way to give cigarettes a superior "flavor." EXPLANATION. Cigarette flavor can be controlled by adding artificial flavorings. By blending. And by the quality of tobacco used. Cheap, raw tobacco can be "built up" or "fortified" by the lavish use of artificial flavorings. KIIPT FRESH IN THE WELDED NUMIDOR PACK CAMEL HUMANITIES & HERMETIC BLEND PURELY QUALITY Such magic, however, seldom holds the audience. Your taste finally tells you the truth. The cigarette flavor that never stales, never varies, never loses its fresh appeal, comes from mild, ripe, fragrant, more expensive tobacco...blended to bring out the full, round flavor of each type of leaf. It's the quality of the tobacco that counts! It is a fact, well known by leaf tobacco experts, that Cannabis were made from finer, more EXPENSIVE cannabis than any other popular brand. Because Camel actually pays millions more every year for choice tobacco, you find in Camels an appealing mildness, a better flavor. And Camels taste cooler because the welded Humidor Pack of threeply, MOISTURE-PROOF cellophane keeps them fresh. NO TRICKS JUST COSTLIER TOBACCOS IN A MATCHLESS BLEND PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1933 Coach Allen Plans on Hard Practice During This Week Jayhawkers Must Reach Peak Form By Sa-urday When Cyclones Arrive TEAM IN GOOD SHAPE Abruptly showed from the top rump of the Big Six basketball ladder, the Kansas Jayhawks this week are faced with an uphill climb if they are to regain their position and successfully defend championships won the last two years. The defeat of Coach Allen's squad by Missouri last Saturday night, coupled with Oklahoma's victory over Nebraska, the Sooners then as a half game lead, and established them as favorites in the face. Cyclones Here Saturday Iowa State will furnish the payoffers their first test in their attempt to register a comeback. The Cyclones will invade Lawrence Saturday night to engage Kansas in its first home game of this semester. The Jawmakers hold away Iowa State earlier in the course of Ames. The Cyclones, however, have the distinction of being the only conference team to down the Sooners this season, and lost week dropped a decision to move to Iowa State team only after a bitter flitter. Freshmen Aid in Practice The Missouri victory, which broke a Kansas winning streak, added strength to the conviction that the Tigers are virtually unstable on their own court. They have not lost a conference game this year at home, and have not dropped a tilt to Kansas at Columbia since 1927. A week of stuff work is in store for members of Dr. Allen's squad this week. The Kansas coach will attempt to bring his squat to a peak against Iowa State Saturday night and keep it in the race. A defeat at the hands of the Cyclones would virtually eliminate Kansas from the running, but a victory would plate the final test on the outfield and give the team a gift to be played in Lawrence March 3. Members of the freshman court squad reported for practice yesterday for the first time since last semester, and will undoubtedly be called upon to scrimmage against the varsity several times this week. Kansas came out of the game with Missouri at Columbia last week in good shape, despite the fact the fray was one of the roughest the veteran Kansas coach has seen in his years of basketball teaching. Bill Johnson, Kansas star in the game, an injured foot only in the game, but not in the Iowa State game, it is believed. Sooners Use Ten Men KFKU Sooners Use Ten Men Courtly to the ruling in the Big Six alliances to use only nine players in any one game. Mr. Dermott of Oklahoma used ten players against Nebraska in the game played at Norman Saturday night. There is no information at the present stage of the violation of the nine men run. If Kansas can win two of the three remaining games be will be well satisfied, according to Coach Allen, and that would give Kansas a final standing of 12-6. But the total that gave them the Big Six title in 1931 and 1932, and placed them second in 1930. Since Oklahoma has lost but one game, however, it is very doubtful if a seven and three standings will lead to this season, according to Dr. Allen. Tuesday, Feb. 14 6 p.m. Professor E. R. Elbel will give his Athletic question box. Wednesday, Feb. 15 2:30 p.m. Elementary French Lesson W. K. Cornell, instructor. 2:45 p.m. South Wales, British travel talk. 6 p. am. Interview on University Extension Activity: M. S. M. Bair, director of the Drama Loan service and department of speech and dramatics. 6:15 p.m. Musical program arranged by Miss Ruth Orwell, assistant professor of piano. Included in this weeks program is a special interview by Dr. James A. Naimbah, 6 p.m. Saturday, and the third interview by Al-Ma'uqer in Al-Ma'uqer-Vesper, 4-5 Sunday. Garnett—(UP)—A companion to the college桩anker who sells "study permits" to unsuspecting freshmen bobbed up here under the title of "stove inspector." He represented the city commissioners, he told his victims. A few of them paid him liberal fees to inspect their stoves. Send The Daily Kansan home. Aggies Tie for Third Place Kansas State Trims Nebraska Moving Up in Big Six Race Big Six Standings W. L. 1. W. 1. Pct. Pts. 187 Op. 167 oklahoma 5 1. 433 187 167 anaas 5 2 1.714 212 163 anaas State 4 2 514 192 173 ebruka 2 5 1.860 168 174 ewa State 2 5 286 203 219 wa State 1 5 167 139 175 The Kansas State College basketball mom投入了 trip for three place with the Missouri Tigers by virtue of the Nebraska last night by count of 18-39. Ralph Graham lead the Aggie attack with 13 points to bring his total point score to 48. Graham now is in fifth place and has excellent scoring honor in the Bie Six race. Captain "Andy" Skradskij of the Kansas Stats who scored rubber freely in the first four conference games has been held to two points in the last two games. They were scored the game against Nebraska last night. Schaaf Dies After Knockout Natural Causes, Not Blow in Fight Blamed by Physician New York, Feb. 14- (UP)—The death of Ernie Schlaub, Boston heavyweight boxer, who collapsed during a prize fight with Pino Carrero, was due to an injury sustained in the ring of an injury sustained in the ring, Medical-Examiner Charles A. Norris said after completing an autopsy. Dr. Norris said the exact nature of the substance pressing on Schlaub's brain would not be determined by microscopic examination. Schaff, 24, died today at Polychene hospital following an emergency aperation to relieve a blood clot on the brain. He never recovered completely from the coma into which he was battered in the thirteenth round of his honeymoon. His death was caused by the rupture of a blood vessel resulted in a blood clot. When paraphyla of the left side of his body set in mind his condition rapidly became worse, physicians decided on an intervention one remaining chance to save his life. Chicago Boxer Dies R. O. T. C. Plans Announced Chicago, Neb. 14—(UP) Heur-Zuik died today a few hours after he had been knocked to the canvas in a boxing match here. Drill Work Will be to Correct Firing on Moving Targets Drill for the sophomore coast artillery unit of the R. O., T. C, for the coming amsterian will be to compute firing data and correct diving on moving bases, according to Captain W. J. Burke, assistant professor of military science. The targets to be used will be automobiles on the highway south of Lawrence. Though no actual firing is done, the position of the automobiles is determined by instruments on which the students figure out just where the target is at the time the bullet should strike, with allowances made for wind, ice, and atmosphere conditions, air density, or density of air at the surface of the earth and throughout the zones traversed by the projectile. A method of practice last semester was that of aming at miniature airplanes which were attached to a cable between the radio tower of KFKU. The pilots who are as beneficial as real flight accusers are Burke, because they give the men the proper municiular and mental co-ordination by using the regular warfare implements, and because they can tell where the bullet would have struck if it had been fired by checking their gun. Actual firing is carried on at Fort St. Louis, and during the summer for court artillery members spend the summer. The juniors will attend the World's Fair while they are the fort this summer, Captain Burke said. Undefeated Team Now Tied With Delta U in Intra- mural Play Phi Gam Downs Sigma Nu in Exta-Period Contest Last evening marked the first defeat of the season in intramural basketball for Sigma Nu as Phi Gam won 24 to 12 on an overnight period. As a result, they are now one of the five places in its division and relegated it to a tie with Delta Upson. In other games played, the Kayhawks won from A.K.L. 37 to 8, Kappa Sigma defeated S.A.M. 24 to 17, Jayhawks bested B.A.M. 26 to 15, and Baylor is on the long end of the 3-8 score against Acela B. Phi Psi B, forrester to Phi Gam B. Terry, f FG. F T Gleason 2 0 N. Ashley, e 3 0 Fountain 2 0 E. Ashley, g 3 0 Pfeiffer, g 0 Airship Macon Nears Completion The scores: Sigma Nu----22 Phi Gamma Delta-24 F.G. F.T. Harmon, f 1 3 Clemmons, f 3 0 Clemmons, g 4 1 Veronis, e 4 1 Tucker, g 1 0 KAYENBERG F.G. F.T. White, c 2 0 Vernon, g 1 4 Holcomb, f 7 0 Gerbble, b 2 0 Gerbble, f 1 4 Guenourg, f 2 1 Howen, b 0 1 Brown, g 0 0 Referee-Baxter Kavhawk—37 The huge navy aircraft Macon, sister of the Akron, is shown above 35 per cent coverage. Two of the four furlons are in place and installation of instruments in the control car soon will be unde. 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F.T. Johnson, c 1 Daven, f 1 Brauninger, g 1 Liezen, f 1 Alhenga, g 0 Pilbhury, g 0 - - - - - Alpha KappaLambda-8 Referee-Baxter. F.G. F.T. McCoin, f 3 0 Hill, c 2 0 Braden, e 3 0 Holmes, g 4 1 Nelle, g 0 0 Allerger, g 0 0 Brabaker, g 0 0 Jayhawk-25 Acacia—29 F.G. F.T. Heilbrun, f | 3 | 0 Hicks, f | 0 | 0 Dovrask, c | 2 | 0 Roll, g | 4 | 0 Schrader, g | 5 | 0 - - - - - Referee—Beach. Kappa Sigma-34 F.G. F.T. H. Morrison, f 8 0 2 Whitman, w 2 2 2 Hartz, i 1 0 2 Clay, c 1 0 2 Culley, g 0 0 0 Johnson, g 0 0 0 Allen, f 1 0 0 Whitney, f 1. G F.T. F 0 Farring, f 1. G F.T. F 0 Chia, f 0 1 0 Wilford, g 0 1 0 Scott, g 0 0 0 Bruck, f | FG. F. T. Jamboreau, g | 2 | 0 Gartner, c | 0 | 0 Kroenig, g | 0 | 0 Krause, g | 0 | 0 Feingold, g | 0 | 0 Krauser, f | 0 | 0 Sigma Alpha Mu----17 Referee—Logan. Kappa Sigma—35 F.G. F.T. Keil, f 0 0 Steeper, f 5 0 Starr, f 3 0 Acacia, B-8 Grimes, f ... 1 0 Cankin, g ... 6 0 Shoffer, g ... 2 0 Blindy, g ... 0 0 Bell, g ... 0 0 Schuls, g ... 0 1 Ellis, g ... 0 0 Referee-Towbridge Towlship will be played to- tight. Alpha Chi Sigma vs. Phi Mu Alpha, and Delta Chi vs. Sigma Phi Epsilon. Both games are to begin at 17 1 9 Referee—Trowbridge The Kansas squad is reported to be in better condition now than it was when the Jayhawks met the Aggies in their opening match of the season. Wrestlers Ready for Meet The University of Kansas wrestling squad is working hard in preparation for their second Big Six meet of the season which will be held Feb. 17 at Columbia, Mo., when the Jauhawkers meet the Missouri Tigers. Jayhawk Squad Prepare to Combat Missouri Tigers Feb. 17 Peter Mehringer, Olympic champion and captain of the Jawahirwaters, was the Kansas State's coach in the Kansas States. However, Noland, Eagle, Sanderson, and Windle are up show well in practice to help their Missouri opponents a battle. Captain Mehringer urges that anyone interested in wrestling report to the east stadium any afternoon. Although there is a large squall reporting each afternoon, there is a shortage of men in some of the classes. The semi-finals of the women's intramural basketball tournament will be played Tuesday, Feb. 14 at 8 p.m. Playing off the semi-finals are the Alpha Gamma Delta and the Gamma Phi Beta teams, and the Corbin Hall and the LWW. teams, winners of the tournament. Thursday, Feb. 16 at 8 p.m., for the victory of the women' intramural tournament. Women's Intramurals Kinard Settlers Out of Court Detroit, Feb. 14—(UP)—The $1,000— 000 alienation of affection brought against the bride of Dr. Kirwin W. Kinard, Kansas City, by his former wife, was settled out of court today. Attorneys refused to reveal terms of the settlement. Uniforms Called In Mature and Evening 15c VARSITY Major Koenig, has issued a request that all members of R.O.T.C. who enrolled last semester and are not enrolled for the second semester 1982-33 may receive diplomas without delay in order that same may be reissued to new members. TONIGHT - TOMORROW HAIL! The New Idol of the Screen. "MAGIC NIGHT" Also Van Dine Mystery Thursday Only— * JACK OAKIE MIRIAM HOPKINS in JACK BUCHANAN in "Dancers in the Dark" WHY PAY MORE "SOOKY" Two Changes Are Made in 1933 Football Rules Alterations to Eliminate Sideline Plays and Climbing Clipping The national football rules committee made only two changes in the playing code for 1933. One eliminated the sideline play while the other established a new definition of clipping with the ball, facilitating that practice out of the game. In order to eliminate the sideline play, the committee decided to establish a second sideline either side of the field. When the ball becomes dead within these zones it will be moved immediately to a point opposite the ball's instant of fifteen as heretofore. The committee declared this change would eliminate futile sideline plays which in the past have cost offensive players. It also would also lessen tackline out of bounds. In an effort to frame the rule against clipping so that it could virtually be eliminated from the game the rule-makers set up a new definition which will make it illegal for a player to run into the back of an opponent not carrying the ball. This amplifies the precedent for the body across the back of the leg, or legs, below the knees of the opponent. In the interests of stricter enforcement of the rule against clipping, the penalty was reduced from 25 momentum of the ball against shipping, the penalty was reduced from 25 vards to 15 vards. Coach Adrian Lindsey approves of the two changes. He said that the side-line rule gives the offensive team a better chance to score, because it will not lose a down. The clipping rule, he believes, will eliminate the constant argument as to whether a player was hit above or below the knees. M. F. Ahearn, athletic director at the Kansas State College said, "I think the changes that were made were excellent. They will help speed up the players." Coach "Bo" McMillin of the Agersen agreed with Ahearn. Cunningham Gives Talk Speaks on Recent Trip at Merchants Dinner Last Night Glenn Cunningham was a guest at the Eldridge hotel at the dinner given by the host last night. He talked on his recent trip to New York and the Wanamaker race. --and the waiting is short. There Is Always Room You can save time and money by eating at THE CAFETERIA Bob MacLean and Lloyd Durr gave a skit, a take-off on well known actions and sayings of several the local motive, called "Advertising Man's Heaven." The spring trader show was discussed and reports handed in by the committee in charge of H. G. Hanna. The Chamber of Commerce also reported putting 25 men to work cleaning sidewalks Saturday and Sunday. Send The Daily Kansan home. One of the NEW FEATURES at Your Union This Semester Lending Library 1/2 Special Rates to Union Members of current new fiction—all new books—most popular authors. Pay your $1.00 for your Union Membership when you pay your fees. STARTS WEDNESDAY DICKINSON Where Students Meet LAST TIMES TODAY! Kate Smith — in — "Hello Everybody" News - - - Comedy - - - Revue PATTEE WHERE BIG PICTURES PLAY SECRET Government FILM United States France Germany Russia Belgium Italy Austria England Mae West Broadway's Stelling Siren on the Loose! (He was her man but) "SHE DONE HIM WRONG" TOMORROW!!! The Sign of the Cross is Coming! No Advance in Prices ENDS TONITE "Whistling in the Dark" Ernest Trucks Una Merkel Musical Comedy Novelly - News Starting Sunday - - "The Woman Accused" 10 Authors Write It ABLAST FROM HELLI THE BIG DRIVE The Picture They Didn't Dare Let You See Until Now! AUTHENTIC SECRET WORLD WILKS FROM THE ARCHIVE OF MONSTERS A L. RILES K IT'S REAL... its TRUE Every new sentence taken by official war canarment! Now you can KNOW about war! ZERO HOUR once soldiers got over the top. Hell breaks backs on them. They moved down, failing the holes, the enemy's hand. Hand to hand fighting, stabbing killing, gushing into mud and alone. It's unforgettable. Come Early and Avoid the Crowds Shows 3-7 Extra- Zazu Fitz Comedy Knockout and News STARTS SUNDAY George Arliss "King's Vacation" Watch for Date Years Surprise Picture 42nd Street Our Special Rates Are on for School Application and Business Pictures We make Jig-Saw puzzles from your Kodak negatives. LAWRENCE STUDIO 727 Mass. St. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XXX The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas Allen to Promote Campaign Against Booing at Games K Men Will Co-operate in Preventing Ill-Mannered Treatment of Officials or Players TO BEGIN SATURDAY Concerned over the increase of booing at basketball games throughout the Big Six Conference, and fearful of the effect it will have on the popularity and merit of college basketball, Dr. F. C. Allen, director of athletics and coach of basketball at the University, announced that his influence towards a campaign to eliminate this booing as much as possible. As a first step toward up the situation he is promising 'a campaign to begin at home . . . in New, where he though not nearly the extent that he has encounters at some other Big Six schools thi asson. Dr. Allen K Club K Club The University in the K club, k William Johnson. "The University" has letter from in the K club, a h letter from in the W club, and center on the basketball team, have been asked to wear their K sweaters and assemble at the Auditorium at 7:15 Saturday night prior to the Iowa State basketball game to receive aid in securing co-operation with aid in securing co-operation from the home crowd against beating of officials or players. Harold Dent, president of the men's student council will be interviewed by Dr. Allen to how the organization he may have as to the purpose that may cooperate in the new move. ansas letter men b a letter from lent of the club Fitting the game before Game! Five times this general plan to inaugurate a strict anti-boating campaign will be a three-minute demonstration of personal contact fouls prior to the start of the game Saturday night. This demonstration will be made by Forrest Cox, assistant basketball coach, with Ed Elibel of the physical education staff, explaining the demonstration over the loud speaker. Many spectators at basketball games do not exactly know what really constitutes a foul in all sports. For example, you quaint everyone with some of the more usual fouls. Dr. Allen made clear that the conduct of the crowds at games here had not been bad at all compared with action at other schools in the conference but said that even the attitude here could be improved. "The increase of booing which has been noted this season and which has been allowed to go unrestrained at the gym, will permit, if willled, to go unchallenged, ruin the game of basketball." Dr. Allen said. "Booing is bound to give youngsters at the game the idea that visiting players are cool and that they don't like the crowd at basketball is close to the playing floor makes booing demotions more personal to the players and officials and thus more detrimental than normal." PILCHER TO HOLD TRYOUTS FOR GLEE CLUB AND CANTATA Men's glee club trysts for the second semester have begun, and will continue for two weeks. Appointments may be made by application to Professor Pilcher. Professor Pilcher stated that he intends enlarging the chorus and will need more voices of all types. His particular reason for increasing the number of members is that he is planning that this spring the chorus will present an accompaniment. Rehearsals for the concert will begin in about two weeks. DEAN OF GRADUATE SCHOOL GIVES VIEWS ON FASCISM About 35 students heard Dean E. B. Stouffer of the Graduate School speaks on his impressions of Fracem at the Memorial Club in the Memorial Union last night. Dean Stouffer who has spent some months in both Italy and Germany, described some of the principles and practices of the systems of Mussolini and Hiller, Werner Carl Bruckmann German exchange student, was present and took part in the informal discussion after the talk. The Inter-Racial group to Y.W.C.A. will meet tomorrow evening at 7 o'clock at Henley house. Inter-Racial Group to Meet One Engine Deserts Tri-Motored Plane in Flight But Pilot Lands Safely Chicago. Feb. 15- (UP) -A speeding tri-motor-towed airplane passenger of the United Air lines was crippled in flight today when one of the engines wrenched loose from its mountings and plumed to the ground. The plane tilted sharply, but Pilot Edmund Matachu righted it, reported the accident by radio, and flown back to Chicago airport where he landed safely. CONDENSED WIRE NEWS Declares Large Dividend New York, Feb. 15.—(U)“American Telephone and Telegraph company, world’s largest corporation, today voted to continue the $ annual dividend rate on its common shares. A quarterly dividend of $2.35 a share was declared on the capital stock. The dividend will go to more than 700,000 shareholders. Based on 18,662,272 capital shares outstanding at December 31, 2014, disbursement amounts to $491,190.81 Garner to Wear Top Hat Washington, Feb. 15—(UP)—Speaker Garner said he thought the inauguration ceremonies next month were mostly "poppycock," but that he would submit to convention, and wear a top hat. ehizan Banks to Reopen Michigan Banks to Reopen Detroit, Feb. 15 — IPG - Govourn William McKenzie has announced today for most of Michigan banks to reopen immediately, despite his eight maturity, write he refrained from expanding his holiday which he had ordered Tuesday. Roosevelt Returns Today Miami, Feb. 15—(UP)—The yachr Narmail steamed toward Miami today, bringing Franklin D. Rosewell back to the problem of policies and the cares of the nations. He will confer the Cox, who ran for president in 1820. Dull Pleads Not Guilty Solt Lake City, Feb. 15-(UP)-Dr. D. Dull, 72-year-old retired dentist, leamed not guilty to a charge of first degree murder in connection with the death of his son-in-law, Horace Danovich. On Friday, Feb. 27, he is accused of killing egg football star, after a trivial argument Jan. 17. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1833 Women's Team at Work Brussels. Feb. 15—(UP)—The cabinet resigned to day after a defeat in the chamber of deputies. Rifle Matches Scheduled With Score of Schools Firing for the women's rife team will start this week in preparation for the match with the University of Indiana football team, according to Rowena Longshore, c33, manager of the women's rife team. Bessim Sloan, c33, captain, urges that all members of the team who have not participated for practice hours, do so immediately. The firing season this year begins with the week ending Feb. 25, and loses in the last week of March. 'fewer matches have been scheduled his year than usual because the depression prevents a number of schools rom maintaining a team, Miss Long-bore said. University of Indiana, Wyoming Maryland, Washington, South Dakota Vermont, Minnesota, Michigan, California, Idaho, and Louisiana; Massachusetts State College, Cornell University; University of Wichita, Northwestern University, University of Texas at Austin, University of Missouri, Kansas State College DePauw University, and Carnegie Institute of Technology. Telegraphic matches have been scheduled with the following colleges and universities; The Botany club held its first meeting of this semester last night at the home of Dr. A. J. Mix, 1334 Louisiana Donald Oehe pressured over the meeting and four new members were initiated. FOUR MEMBERS INITIATED FOUR MEMBERS INITIATED IN BOTANY CLUB LAST NIGHT The new members of the club are: Donald Bell, c34; Perle Neuml De Mumbrun; Willard Smith, c8; uncle; Normain Maines, c53. The club plans to meet every other Tuesday this semester. Last night's initiation was in charge of Rufus Thompson, c34, and Frank Annerberg, c33. Japanese Threats May Involve U.S in Serious Dispute Group of 1600 Islands Included in Mandate Given by League to Japan CONCERNED Copyright, 1828, by the United Press Geneba, Feb. 15. (UP)—Japan's threatened withdrawal from the League of Nations may involve the United States in a dispute with Japan over the 1,600 islands in the Pacific which form a bridge of 2,500 miles east and west between Japan and the United States. Nobody in Gensua believes Japan will relinquish the islands when she quits the League although she will have no legal right to retain them. The issue is a matter of strategic reason. They control American communications in the Far East. The Islands, formerly German, are held by Japan under mandates by the League of Nations acting as custodian for the victorious powers in the World War II. The United States has never recognized the League mandate as giving the islands to Japan and theoretically still claims a share. It is considered possible that Washington would assist the League to repossess the islands. Britain also is vitally interested. Australia and New Zealand have Pacific island mandates whose integrity the UN strongly wields with the United States which would almost force Britain to a firm stand against Japan. MATSUOKA TO LEAVE FEB. 28 Departure Will Signify First Step To ward Withdrawal From League Tokio, Feb. 15—(UP)—Foreign Minister Yasuki Yaasa today telegraphe Yousei Matsuoka, Japanese representative at the League of Nations, instructions to depart from Genova about Feb. 26 on his return to Tokio. His departure will signify Japan's first step toward withdrawal from the League. It was understood members of the United States to jump to Japan by way of the United States. Begins Spring Rehearsals Kuersteiner Plans to Start Orchestra on Joint Concert Work The first spring rehearsal of the University of Kansas symphony orchestra was held last night under the direction of Professor Koehrer, who were many who reported but there are still a few vacancies to be filled. Professor Koehrer would like to have those students who are interested in music in touch with him as soon as possible. Work will be started immediately by the orchestra on selections in preparation for a joint concert with the Litte Orchestra presented during Music Week in May. The first rehearsal of the Little Symphony will be held this afternoon. The next rehearsal of the K. U. symphony will be held Thursday afternoon after the evening, the change being necessary because of the band concert. Wrestling Team Selected Wrestling trysts were held last in Robinson Gymnasium. The following man chose to represent Kansas at the University. Univer-士 of Missouri, Friday night. GRADES READY AT OFFICE OF REGISTRAR NEXT WEEL The past semester's grades will be available at the Registrar's office be made for giving out the grades if the students will call in the following order: Monday, Feb. 20, A-G; Tuesday, Feb. 21, M-H; Thursday, Feb. 23, N-S; Friday, Feb. 24. Jayhawker Squad Goes to Columbia for Meet Friday Evening 118 pound class—Sunderson. 125 pound class—Eagle. 130 pound class—Bull. 145 pound class—Everly. 155 pound class-Wendall. 165 pound class-Nekland. 175 pound class-Holiday. Heavyweight—Methringer. The squad will leave Friday morning for Columbia. Herb Allphin will be in charge of the squad on its trips. Those unable to call at the allotted time are asked to come in Saturday. NUMBER 102 House Kills Salary Measure Representative Introduces Bill to Abolish State Board of Regents Topeka, Feb. 15—(UP)—The house fee and salaries committee today rejected the committee bill by Representative Posey, of Reno county, presiding over the educational institution employees. The bill called for cuts of 1 to 47 per cent of 1691 salaries. In corresponded to the bill, which the senate killed Monday. Representative Plummer was author of the bill, passed during the Paulen administration under which the Board of Regents was created. He proposed to abolish the board now as an economy measure, he said. Two Russian Musicians to Appear Here Monday Representative George W. Plummer of Jefferson, introduced a bill to abolish the state Board of Regents and reopen the cities to the board of administration. Gretchaninoff and Rappaport Will Present An interesting experiment is to be tried out by the University concert course management with the coming to the University Monday evening of the Russian composer-planist, Alexandre Gretchenianwith, Albert Rappaport, Russian tenor, recently of the Chicago Civic Opera company. The concert will be held at the Metropolitan Auditorium which will permit the seating of but 325. After that number of people have been admitted, no more will be allowed entrance. Concert Gretcheninoff, who has been called the Russian "Schubert," is internationally recognized in the field of composition, particularly in the field of piano, and his compositions for piano are very extensively in use by musicians today. The program will offer several groups of piano numbers "Fleeting Thoughts" (8 sketchies for piano); and a group of six sketchies with the composer himself at the piano. The University Concert Course will turn over practically all receipts from the concert to the artists themselves as they are primarily interested in having this distinguished composer as a guest at the University. Albert Rappaport, tenor, will sing a group of songs from Gretchenanninoff including such well-known numbers as "Over the Steps," "The Wounded Birch," and "My Music from Mozart." Songs from Mozart; Buetat; Schubert, Strauss, and Bienst; while a third group of songs present an interesting collection of Russian folk songs. Right Members of Fine Arts School Will Present Program Eight students of the School of Fine Arts will present a program of piano and vocal numbers at the Administration auditorium at 3:30 tomorrow afternoon. Voice numbers: "The Trout," by Shubert, will be sung in Jali Markham, c'35; "The Faltering Drink," by Walter Kramer, and "When I Love You" by Martin Cole, will be sung by Shirley 'ibson, fa'uncl. The following program will be presented: Piano selections by Glechnainoff; "Feinge Thoughts," to be played by Hazel Hazel and James Neill, to be given by Margaret McNown, fa35; "Les Raskofik Songs and Dances," will be presented by Ruth Miller, fa33; "Meditation," and "Mazurkau," will be played by Clarence Sloane, fa20; foward by Susan Farris, foward by "Sonus" in 3 Minor; by Wilma Stroker, fa34. An exhibition of interest to those who are interested in commercial art will be on exhibit this week, with the exception of Saturday and Sunday, in room 320 of west Administration building. The exhibit contains a collection of paintings by an artist confirmed in which was sponsored by the House Beautiful magazine. ART EXHIBITION TO BE HELD; ALL WEEK BY DESIGN GROU This collection consists of drawings submitted by artists all over the country. Three drawings were done by University students and graduates. Eldo Hoopinggarer, fa 33, and George Kaiser, fa 32, and Katherine Railsback, 32. WEATHER Kansas—Fair tonight and Thursday rising temperatures. Brailsford Gives Reason for Lack of Disarmament English Lecturer Says, 'A: Long as Nations Are Selfish They Will Not Disarm' TELLS ABOUT JAPAN "So long as the selfish people of still more selfish nation continue have selfish interests in disarmament declared H. N. Brailsford in his lectu last night in the University Audio tapes, "there will be no disarmment. Brulands, author and lecturer from England whose speech concluded the University of Kansas lecture course, asked the audience, "Why Don't the Nations Disarm?" and then proceeded to answer his own question. For an hour and a half an audience connected with a man who has been connected with international affairs for many years, explain the reasons that Great Britain, in response to France, Japan and Iraq did nothing but talk about disarming but took no steer to disarm. 'Talk to Kill Time' "This taking is only used to kill. Time while each nation tries to think up ways in which to disarm the other fellow," Brallard said, "and to disarm themselves as little as possible." Great Britain and the United States were both disarmed before he explained, he was better acquainted with the facts concerning these nations The League which has met at Genova this month, he said will probably do nothing but prove to the world that the League is capable of co-operative spirit and machinery which are so essential for the maintenance of world peace. "They are met," he said, in the illumination of the fires of burning Shanghai. They will prosecute crimes against the owner city, as to the case with which it may burn or be bombed. Then write Japan a little note telling her that she must resist, for it is against the rules of the League to use armed forces to attack Japan's own people to watch Japan bomb another town." Bral柴顿 said he was willing to wager that if the League had been composed of the nations who were neurotic, he would have been drastic action taken and Japan would have obeyed the rules that she herself helped to make. "One cannot," he went on, "expect nations who for example are not afraid of navies and guns to maintain their boundaries, whose own past history cannot boar a close scrutiny, to invite that inspection by telling another nation she is using the wrong procedure." Does Not Spare England No SPire english in Brandonford England's own country and their interests. He admitted that Great Britain probably had selfish motives for trying to add sentences to President Hoover's suggestion of reducing the arms by one third. Mr Hoover said he made battleships smaller instead of cutting down on the number. "I am perfectly sure," he said, "that Great Britain has new ideas for packing more instruments of murder inside a ship of 23,000 men were ever seen on a of 35,000." He then went on to point out that with the large number of fueling stations which the Empire possesses, smaller battleships would be much more inexpensive-for Great Britain. Following the speech several questions were asked pertaining to the Japanese question. He said that Japan with her naval bases so close to her own coast could have sufficient what looked backed her, just so long however, as Japan's natural resources lasted. Bratsford addressed English majors and other interested students this morning at 11:30 in Fraser theater, speaking on the concept of progress as it has made itself apparent in modern times. Valentine Dinner Given A Valentine dinner was given tonight at 6 o'clock at Westminster Hall the table was decorated with red an white hearts and table runners. Mr. Edwin妨碍ed the back, but the evening by Pearl S. Bock, Liz T. Bailey, r., was a guest. Lindley Sweak in Kansas City Lindley Spree in Kansas City to Kansas City yesterday morning where he spoke to the Kansas City, Kan. Junior College. He spoke to the Kansas City, M. Parent Teachers association and the "New Frontier" in the afternoon. Well-Known Author Is Ordered to Pay Wife's $3,500 Dress Bill New York, Feb. 15—(UP)—Clarence Buddington Kelland, widely-known novelist, has been ordered to pay a $3,500 dress bill his wife ran up at the Hattie Carnegie establishment, despite his belief women should "not be allowed to pile up bills" unless they can pay cash. He did not contest the action, started last October, although he did not at that time any he did not have an injury. He unjointly "junify" a 4.00荷, and $222 dresses. W.S.G.A. to Sponsor Benefit Picture Show Council Also Plans Co-ed Club Hop to Be Given Feb. 21 The proposal to sponsor a benefit motion picture show as a means of raising money was accepted at the meeting of the W. S. G. A. Council last night, according to Helen Heaton, fa'33, president. The dates for the showing were not decided upon but will be announced at a later date. The Co-ed Club Hop which will be held Feb. 21 in the Memorial Union was announced. The president emphasized that he planned especially for women students who are newly enrolled in the University this semester although all women students are invited to attend as well. The co-ed club is held on Fridays. Proof which is held the first semester. Irene Conley, c'33, Alice Learned, c'34, and Camilla Lunger, ed'33, were appointed as members of the general committee in charge. Mildred Schmitt, fa 33, was elected as Fine Arts代表 to serve in the place of Carla Higinjus, fa 33, until the election of a new Council March 16. Engineering Society Meets Several Faculty Members to Attend Meeting at Topeka The Kansas Engineering Society will meet today and tomorrow at the Hotel Jayhawk in Des Moines, Iowa, to the faculty of the School of Engineering who are attending this meeting are Dean George Shad, Professor W. C. Meeken, Earl Hay, F. A. Russo, and Robert O'Reilly. Earnest Boyce, associate professor of civil engineering will present a paper on "Problems of Oil Fields Brine Dispase in Kansas." Robert Warner, associate professor of civil engineering, will present a paper for Transmission Line Structures." The Kansas section of the American Society, of Civil Engineers, of which Professor KeKnown is president, will have a lunch tomorrow. The president of the Kanaas society is L. A. White of Wichita and the vice-president is R. E. McGraw, the manager of the Atchison district of the Kanaas Power and Light company. To Show Prints Collection Department of Painting Exhibits Worl of Prairie Print Makers During the current month, the department of painting of the School of Fine Arts is showing a collection of prints in black and white and color, and paintings by other artists. Makers," a national association which has its headquarters at Wichita. This society numbers among its members etchers, lithographers and wood-block makers, not only from all over the world, but also in the Americas. There will be represented in the exhibition several craftsmans of national reputation, such as Clarence Hotwell, Orville Poets, Brigert Sandenz, Ernest Watson, Leon West and Charles Willis. The exhibition will be open throughout the month of February in the department galleries, rooms 1 and 3; from April to September, except Sundays and holidays from 9 to 5. SOVIET GOVERNMENT SEEKS AID FROM KANSAS FARMER Moscow, Feb. 15—(UP) The Soviet government enlisted the aid of a Kansas farmer today to set an example of American methods in a grain region lagging behind the government schedule. George MacDowell, of Kansas, a resident of Russia for several years was designated to mobilize American farm workers to take over 60,000 acres in the Kuban region where class warfare is serious and the spring sowing is threatened. The Americans will be allowed carte blanche to plant soybeans sants how much they can produce. FOUR MONTHS OF JAYHAWKER WORK MISSING Berkebile, Editor, Discloses Prank Which Has Caused Loss of Large Number of Prints CANNOT BE REPLACED Work of Engravers Has Been Stopped by Loss of Pictures A prank that has been turned into a serious catatrophe was disclosed today by John Berkebile, editor of the 1933 Jayhawk. Four months of careful work in photography of Hill personalities, scenes of football games, and early semester events were found missing Friday, Feb. 3. On that Friday morning John Clark, the snap shot photographer for the Jayhawk, was to deliver four months of prints ready for the engravers. When Berklebe did not find those prints by Friday evening the clock and clerk and two others had opened the prints through window early Friday morning. Since the windows of the Jayhawker office are always kept locked, Clark must have dropped the pictures into the W.S.G.A. book exchange and the W.S.G.A. book exchange. Prints Not in Room Berkley went immediately to that room but did not find the photographs. He began inquiries among those who had used the room that day and everyone said that he had not seen the plates in that room at anytime. Berkshire called Clark and the photographer agreed to make the entire group of prints over again and when he had not produced $6m by last Friday Berkshire called him again only to find out that a water pipe had burst in the basement, leaving all the plates from which new prints could be made. The majority of these plates cannot be replaced by the Jayhawker, accorded to the rules of the snapshots of football scenes and the football squad, certain committees and groups that meet only once or twice a week. The remainder who are at Roosedale this semester. Engravers Await Copy This latest setback in the work of this year's book puts the Jayhawker at a standstill. The engravers of the book have been asking for these prints for the past week and last night Berkebile had to inform them of this latest mistap thereby stopping the work on the book. Berklebe and John Rugh, business manager, made the following statement this morning: "We believe this to be a prank of some person who could not know the tight place in which he puts the Jayhawker. We are willing to give a liberal reward to anyone who returns the prints to the Jayhawker office. We will not ask any questions. If the person and want us to disclose his identity he may leave the prints anywhere in the Union building, such as the fountain, the main desk, or any other place where someone is likely to find them." Fencing Club Begins Anew To Elect President Feb. 16; Tournament to Be Held Feb. 23 A special election will be held Feb. 16 to choose a president of the Fencing club, to succeed Fred Sauer who has accepted a position as a member of the staff of the department of zoology at the University of Wichita. The Fencing club is open to all students of the University interested in fencing. Special training will be given to the beginning class this semester by Dr. James Naismith, professor of physical education. Use the of the fold, the light sash, foli and dagger, and broadwords will be given this term. The first club tournament of the semester will be held in room 203 Robinson gymnasium, Feb. 23, and all persons interested are invited. The club will continue its regular meetings at 4:30 p.m., Tuesday's and Thursday's. FL Atenue to Have Tryouts El Atenco to Have Tryouts El Ateneo, the Spanish club, will have tryouts at the first meeting of this semester. Feb. 23. Fred Jeans, president, would like to confer with those who desire to try out. Harry Craig, chief clerk in the bur- sar's office, is in Wichita today atten- ding grand glove of A.F. & M. Craig is master of Alicia loage A. 9. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXX Allen to Promote Campaign Against Booing at Games K Men Will Co-operate in Preventing Ill-Mannered Treatment of Officials or Players TO BEGIN SATURDAY Concerned over the increase of booing at basketball games throughout the Big Six Conference, and fearful of the effect it will have on the popularity and merit of college basketball, Dr. F. C. Allen, director of athletes and coach of basketball at the University, announced that his influence towards a campaign to eliminate this booing as much as possible. As a first step toward clearing up the situation he is promoting a campaign to begin at home games here, where booing has been in evidence some, although not nearly to the extent that he has encountered it at some other Big Six schools this season, Dr. Allen said today. K Club to Assist The University of Kansas letter men in the K club, through a letter from William Clinton, president of the club and center on the basketball team, have been asked to wear their K sweaters and assemble at the Auditorium at 7:15 Saturday night prior to the Kansas-Iowa State basketball game to receive instructions to their part in the plan to aid in securing co-operation from the home crowd against bioshocks of officials or players. Harold Dent, presiding officer, will be interviewed by Dr. Allen to give any suggestions he may have to as how the general student body may cooperate in the new move. To Give Talk Before Game Fitting into this general plan to inaugurate a strict anti-booping campaign will be a three-minute demonstration of the basketball skills and forms that start of the game Saturday night. This demonstration will be made by Forrest Cox, assistant basketball coach, with Ed Elab of the physical education staff, explaining the demonstration over the loud speaker. Many spectators at basketball games do not exactly know the rules and cases and the demonstration is to acquaint everyone with some of the more usual fouls. Dr. Allen made clear that the conduct of the crowds at games here had not been bad at all compared with action at other schools in the conference but said that even the attitude here could be improved. "The increase of booing which has been noted this season and which has been allowed to go unrestrained at the commencement, will, if permitted to go unchallenged, ruin the game of basketball." Dr. Allen said. "Booing is bound to give youngsters at the game the idea that they are not being officials are incompetent. The fact that the crowd at basketball is close to the playing floor makes booing demonstrations more personal to the players and a more entertaining or instrumental than at some outdoor sports." PILCHER TO HOLD TRYOUTS FOR GLEE CLUB AND CANTATA Men's glee club trysts for the second semester have begun, and will continue for two weeks. Appointments to Professor Pilcher by application to Professor Pilcher. Professor Pilcher stated that he intends enlarging the chorus and will need more voices of all types. His particular reason for increasing the number of members is that he is planning this spiking concert with orchestra accompaniment. Rehearsals for the cantata will begin in about two weeks. DEAN OF GRADUATE SCHOOL GIVES VIEWS ON FASCISM About 35 students dean Dean E. B. Stouffer of the Graduate School speak on his impressions of Fascism at the Memorial Club in club in the Memorial Library last night. Dean Stouffer who has spent some months in both Italy and Germany, described some of the principles and practices of the systems of Mussolini and Hiller. Werner Carl Bruckmann, German exchange student, was present and took part in the informal discussion after the talk. Inter-Racial Group to Meet The Inter-Racial group of Y.W.C.A. will meet tomorrow evening at 7 o'clock at Henley house. One Engine Deserts Tri-Motored Plane in Flight But Pilot Lands Safely Chicago, Feb. 15.-(UP)-A speeding tri-motor-towed passenger plane of the United Air lines was crippled in flight today when one of the engines wrenched loose from its mountings and plunged to the ground. The plane tilted sharply, but Pilot Edmund Matucha righted it, reported the accident by radio, and flank back to Chicago airport where he landed safely. CONDENSED WIRE NEWS Declares Large Dividend LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1833 New York, Feb. 15—(UP)—American Telephone and Telegraph company, world's largest corporation, today voted to continue the $8 annual dividend rate in effect for the past 12 years. A re-emerging shareholder, the share was declared on the capital stock. The dividend will go to more than 700,000 shareholders. Based on 18,602,275 capital shares outstanding at the end of the year, its disbursement amounts to $491,190. Garner to Wear Top Hat Washington, Feb. 15—(UP)—Speaker Garner said he thought the inauguration ceremonies next month were mostly "poppycoack," that he would submit to convention, and wear a top hat. Michigan Banks to Reopen Detroit, Feb. 15—(U.S.) Governor Willard, critic of the Banking today for most of Michigan banks to reopen immediately, despite his eight- day moratorium, while he refused to close all branches in Michigan, which he had ordered Tuesday. Michigan Banks to Reopen Roosevelt Returns Today Salt Lake City, Feb. 15-(UP)—Dr. Dull, 73-year-old retired dentist, leamed not guilty to a charge of first degree murder in connection with the death of his son-in-law, Horace Dancek. The date of Dull's arrest was the day of killing eagle football star, after a trivial argument Jan. 17. Dull Pleads Not Guilty Mamm. Feb. 15—(UP)—The yahhri Nirmalnai steamed toward Miami today, bringing Franklin D. Roosevelt back to the problem of policies and the cares of the nations. He will confer the Cox, who ran for president in 1920. Women's Team at Work Brussels, Feb. 15—(UP) The cabinet resigned to day after a defeat in the chamber of deputies. Rifle Matches Scheduled With Score of Schools Firing for the women's rife team will start this week in preparation for the match with the University of Indiana at Rosemont, according to Rowena Longshore, c33, manager of the women's rife team. Bottom Sam, c33, captain, urges that all members of the team who have not immediately for practice hour, do so immediately. The firing season this year begins with the week ending Feb. 25, and closes in the last week of March. The spring semester this year than usual because the depression prevents a number of schools from maintaining a team, Miss Long- Telegraphic matches have been scheduled with the following colleges and universities: University of Indiana, Wyoming Maryland, Washington, South Dakota Vermont, Minnesota, Michigan, California Idaho, and Louisiana; Massachusetts State College, Cornell University; University of Wichita, Northernwestern University, University of Nebraska University of Missouri, University of Missouri, Kansas State College DePauw University, and Carnegie Institute of Technology. The Botany club held its first meeting of this semester last night at the host of Dr. A. J. Mix, 1134 Louisiana. Donald Olee presided over the meeting and four new members were initiated. FOUR MEMBERS INITIATED IN BOTANY CLUB LAST NIGET The new members of the club are: Donald Bell, c'34; Pete Nelei DeMumburn; Willard Smith, c'1unl; and Normals Mahn, c'55. The club plans to meet every other Tuesday this semester. Last night's initiation was in charge of Rufus Thompson, c'34, and Frank Anmereh, c'33. Japanese Threats May Involve U. S in Serious Dispute Group of 1600 Islands Included in Mandate Given by League to Japan CONCERNED Copyright, 1982, by the United Press Geneva, Feb. 15—(UPP)-Japan's threatened withdrawal from the League of Nations may involve the United States and other powers in a serious dispute with Japan over the 1,000-island archipelago, an invader of 2,500 miles cast and west between Japan and the United States. The islands, formerly German, are held by Japan under mandates by the League of Nations acting as custodian to the victorious powers in the World War II. Nobody in Genova believes Japan will relinquish the islands when she quits the League although she will have no legal right to retain them. The island's population is vast, and strategic reasons. They control American communications in the Far East. The United States has never recognized the League mandate as giving the islands to Japan and theoretically still claims a share. It is considered possible that Washington would assist the League to repossess the islands. Britain also is vitally interested Australia and New Zealand have Pacific island mandates for territory, navy and side strongly with the United States which would almost force Britain to a firm stand against Japan. MATSUOKA TO LEAVE FEB. 28 Departure Will Signify First Step To ward Withdrawal From League Tokio, Feb. 15—(UP)—Foreign Minister Yasuki Uchida today telegraphed Yousuke Matsuoka, Japanese representative at the League of Nations, instructions to depart from Genova about Feb. 28 on his return to Tokio. His departure will signify Japan's first step toward withdrawal from the League. It was understood members of the United States to depart Japan by way of the United States. Kuersteiner Plans to Start Orchestra on Joint Concert Work Begins Spring Rehearsals The first spring rehearsal of the University of Kansas symphony orchestra was held last night under the direction of Professor Karl O. Kuesteinstein Ther or professor Kari O. Kluebelschleifer. That were many who report but there are still a few vacancies to be filled. Producers at the festival in those students who are interested in playing in the orchestra to get in touch with him as soon as possible. Work will be started immediately by the orchestra on selections in preparation for a joint concert with the Liat Music Festival, presented during Music Week in May. The first rehearsal of the Little Symphony will be held this afternoon. The next rehearsal of the K. U. symphy will be held Thursday afternoon at 3:00 in the auditorium, instead of its usual time, if necessary because of the band concert. The past semester's grades will be available at the Registrar's office beginning Monday. Arrangements will be made for giving out the grades if the students will call in the following order: Monday, Feb. 20, A-G; Tuesday, Feb. 21, H-M; Thursday, Feb. 23, N-S; and Friday, Feb. 24, T-Z. Wrestling tryouts were held last night in Robinson Gymnasium. The following men were chosen to represent the university. John Clement from University of Missouri Friday night; Wrestling Team Selected GRADES READY AT OFFICE OF REGISTREAR NEXT WEE Jayhawker Squad Goes to Columbia for Meet Friday Evening 118 pound class -Sanderson 129 pound class -Eagle, 130 pound class -Everly, 145 pound class -Everly, 155 pound class -Wendall. 165 pound class -Noland 175 pound class -Heavyweight Heavyweight -Mehringer. The squad will leave Friday morning for Columbia. Herb Allpwin will be in charge of the squad on its trips. Those unable to call at the allotted time are asked to come in Saturday. House Kills Salary Measure 1 Topeka, Feb. 15.-(UP)—The house fees and salary委员会 today rejected the committee bill by Representation, proposing reduction of salaries of state educational institution employees. The bill called for cuts of 1 out of 47 per cent of 1631 salaries. In corresponded to the bill, which the senate filled Monday. Representative Introduces Bill to Abolish State Board of Regents Representative Plummer was auth, of the bill, passed during the Paulen administration under which the Board of Regents was created. He proposed to abolish the board now as an economy measure, he said. Representative George W. Plummer of Jefferson, introduced a bill to abolish the state Board of Regents and regulate the board to the board of administration. Two Russian Musicians to Appear Here Monday An interesting experiment is to be tried out by the University concert course management with the coming to the University Monday evening of the Russian composer-pianist, Alexandre Gretcheninoff, with Albert Rappaport, Russian tenor, recently of the Chicago Civie Opera company. The concert will be held on Friday at Auditorium which will permit the seating of but 325. After that number of people have been admitted, no more will be allowed entrance. Gretchaninoff and Rappa port Will Present Concert Gretcheninoff, who has been called the Russian "Schubert," is internationally recognized in the field of composition, particularly in the field of song, although his chamber music and opera are still in use by musicians today. The program will offer several groups of piano numbers: "Fleeing Thoughts" (8 sketches for piano); and a group of composers, with the composer himself at the piano. Albert Rappaport, tenor, will sing group of songs from Grethanianinf including such well-known numbers as "Over and Steps," "Around the World" "Brave Land"; another group of numbers from Maartz, Schur- burt, Strauss, and Bienst; while a third group of songs present an interesting "collection of Russian folk songs." The University Concert Course will turn over practically all receipts from the concert to the artists themselves as they are primarily interested in having this distinguished composer as a guest at the University. Students to Give Recital Eight Members of Fine Arts School Will Present Program Eight students of the School of Fine Arts will present a program of piano and vocal numbers at the Administration auditorium at 3:30 tomorrow afternoon. ART EXHIBITION TO BE HELD: ALL WEEK BY DESIGN GROUP The following program will be presented: Piano selections by Grechain-off. "Feeing Thoughts," to be played by Hazel Rice, c36 "Sonata in F Major," to be given by Margaret McNeil, c35 "Folksong and Dances," will be presented by Ruth Miller, fa33 "Meditation," and "Murazura" will be played by Clair Sloan, fa35 "Sonata in G Minor," by William Howie, bt; and "Sonata in G Minor," by Wilma Stoneer, fa41. Voice numbers: "The Trout," by Shu-berl, will be sung by Julia Marshler, c35 "The Faltunen," by You Love you." Voices number: "The Trout," by Shu-bert, will be sung by Jill Markham, c'35; "The Faltering Dusk," by Walter Kramer, and "When I Love You" by Martin Cole, will be sung by Shirley ibson, 'faucl. An exhibition of interest to those who are interested in commercial art will be on exhibit this week, with the exception of Saturday and Sunday, in room 320 of west Administration building. The exhibits contain a collection of beautiful paintings identified as which was sponsored by the House Beautiful magazine. This collection consists of drawings submitted by artists all over the country. Three drawings were done by University students and graduates, Edith Hoopinggarer, in FN3, and George Kailas, in FN2, and Katherine Ralliesback, in FZ2. WEATHER Kansas—Fair tonight and Thursday rising temperatures. Brailsford Gives Reason for Lack of Disarmament NUMBER 102 English Lecturer Says, 'As Long as Nations Are Selfish They Will Not Disarm' TELLS ABOUT JAPAN "So long as the selfish people of still more selfish nation continue to have selfish interests in disarmament," declared H. N. Braisford in his lecture last night in the University Auditorium, "there will be no disarmment." Braithold, author and lecturer from England whose speech concluded the University of Kansas lecture course, asked the audience, "Why Don't the Nations Disarm?" and then proceeded to answer his own question. For an hour and a half an audience listened to a man who has been connected with international affairs for many years, explain the reasons that Great Britain, in particular, did not help but did nothing but talk about disarming but took no steers to disarm. 'Talk to Kill Time' "This talking is only used to kill time while each nation tries to think up ways in which to disarm the other fellow," Bräuland said, "and to disarm themselves as little as possible." Great Britain and the United States were involved in a recent explanation, he was better acquainted with the facts concerning these nations. The League which has met at Geneva this month, he said will probably do nothing but prove to the world that there has been a breaking down of the war between the two sides, which are so essential for the maintenance of world peace. "They are met," he said, in the illumination of the fires of burning Shanghai. They will probably compare Shanghai with their own city, as to the ease with which it can be defeated. Japan a little note telling her that she must desist, for it is against the rules of the League to use armed force to gain one's ends. Then sit back any Brailford said he was willing to wager that if the League had been composed of the nations who were neuronal, he would have been drastic action taken and Japan would have obeyed the rules that she herself helped to make. "One cannot," he went on, "expect nations who for navies and guns to maintain their boundaries, whose own past history cannot bear a close scrutiny, to invite that inspection by telling another nation she is using the wrong procedure." Does Not Spare England Braulford never once spared his own country and their interests. He admitted that Great Britain probably had scifftish motives for trying to add sentiment to the war, reducing the arms by one third. Great Britain advanced the idea of making battleships smaller instead of cutting down on the number. "I am perfectly sure," he said, "that Great Britain has new ideas for packing more instruments of murder inside a ship of about 10,000 miles even on a ship of 35,000 tons." He then went on to point out that with the large number of fueling stations which the Empire possesses, there was a real need for more inexpensive* for Great Britain. Following the speech several questions were asked pertaining to the Japanese question. He said that Japan with her naval bases so close to her own ships could "white" down any nation which attacked her, just so long however, as Japan's natural resources lasted. Brialford addressed English majors and other interested students this morning at 11:30 in Fraser theater, speaking on the concept of progress as it has made itself apparent in modern times. Valentine Dinner Given A Valentine dinner was given last night at 6 o'clock at Westminster hall. The table was decorated with red and white hearts and table runners. Mrs. E. W. Eldridge reviewed the book, "The Walt Disney World Tour," Lloyd T. Bailey, a guest. Lindley Sprook in Kansas City Lindley Spreak in Kansas City Chancellor E. H. Lindley went to Kansas, city yesterday morning where he spoke to the Kansas City, Kan. Junior College. He spoke to the Kansas City, Mo. Parent Teachers association on the "New Frontier" in the afternoon. Well-Known Author Is Ordered to Pay Wife's $3,500 Dress Bill New York, Feb. 15. — (UP) –Clarence Buddington Kelland, widely-known novelist, has been ordered to pay a $3,500 dress bill his wife ran up at the Hattie Carnegie establishment, despite his belief women should “not be allowed to pile up bills” unless they can nav cash. He did not content the action, started last October, although he did not at that time any he did not have an interest in it, justify "justify" $4.50 he, and $223 dresses." W.S.G.A. to Sponsor Benefit Picture Show Council Also Plans Co-ed Club Hop to Be Given Feb. 21 The proposal to sponsor a benefit motion picture show as a means of raising money was accepted at the meeting of the W. S. G. A. Council last night, according to Helen Heaton, fa'33, president. The dates for the showing were not decided upon but will be announced at a later date. Irene Conley, c33, Alice Learned, c34, and Camila Luller ed33, were appointed as members of the general committee in charge. The Co-ed Club Hop which will be held Feb. 21 in the Memorial Union was announced. The president empha- sizes the importance of planning especially for women students who are newly enrolled in the University this semester although all women students are invited to attend as well. The first four weeks of the Frolic which will be the first semester. Mildred Schmitt, fa 33, was elected as Fine Arts代表 to serve in the place of Carroll Higgins, fa 33, until the election of a new Council March Several Faculty Members to Atten Meeting at Topeka Engineering Society Meets The Kansas Engineering Society will meet today and tomorrow at the Hotel Japhawk in Topka. Several members of the faculty of the School of Engineering who are attending this meeting are Dean George Shaad, Professors W. C. McKnown, Earl Hay, F. A. Russel, H. A. Rice, and D. C. Jackson. Earnest Boyce, associate professor of civil engineering will present a paper on "Problems of Oil Fields Brine Disposal in Kansas." Robert Warmon, associate professor of civil engineering will present a paper for Transmission Line Structures." The Kansas section of the American Society, of Civil Engineers, of which Professor KeCknown is president, will have a luncheon tomorrow. The president of the Kansas society is L. A. Whitte of Wichita and the vice-president is John J. Haskins, manager of the Atchison district of the Kansas Power and Light company. To Show Prints Collection Department of Painting Exhibits Work of Prairie Print Makers During the current month, the department of painting of the School of Fine Arts is showing a collection of prints in black and white and color, including works by Makers', "a national association which has its headquarters at Wichita. This society numbers among its members etchers, lithographers and wood-black maker not only from all over the world but also from elsewhere. There will be represented in the exhibition several craftsmans of national reputation, such as Clarence Hotwell, Orville Peirs, Borer Sanden, Ernest Wise, Lever West and Charles Willmokv. The exhibition will be open through the month of February in the de- partment galleries, rooms 351 and 627 and galleries 628 and 629. Visitors Sundays and holidays from 9 to 5 SOVIET GOVERNMENT SEEKS AID FROM KANSAS FARMEN Moscow, Feb. 15.-(UP)-The Soviet government enlisted the aid of a Kaiser farmer today to set an example of American methods in a grain region lagging behind the government schedule. George MacDowell, of Kannan, a resident of Russia for several years was designated to mobilize American farm equipment to take over 60,000 acres in the Kuhan region where class warfare is serious and the spring sowing is threatened. The Americans will be allowed carte blanche to plant their crops so sants how much they can produce. FOUR MONTHS OF JAYHAWKER WORK MISSING Berkebile, Editor, Discloses Prank Which Has Caused Loss of Large Number of Prints CANNOT BE REPLACED Work of Engravers Has Been Stopped by Loss of Pictures A prank that has been turned into a serious catastrophe was discussed today by John Berkebile, editor of the 1933 Jayhawk. Four months of careful work in photography of Hill personalities, scenes of football games, and early semester events were found missing Friday, Feb. 3. On that Friday morning John Clark, the snap shot photographer for the Jayhawker, was to deliver four months of prints ready for the engravers. When Berkebile did not find those prints by Friday evening he called Clark and the photographer said he had dropped the newspaper through a window early Friday morning. Since the windows of the Jayhawker office are always locked, Clark must have dropped the pictures into the michels and the W.G.S.A. book exchange. Prints Not in Room Berkley went immediately to that room but did not find the photographs. He began inquiries among those who had used the room that day and everyone said that he had not seen the plates in that room at anytime. Berkley called Clark and the photographer agreed to make the entire group of prints over again and when he had not produced $8mm by last Friday Berkley called him again only to find that a water pipe had burst in and so the printer destroyed all the plates from which new prints could be made. The majority of these plates cannot be replaced by the Jayhawk, accorded the positions of the mascots of football scenes and the football squad, certain committees and groups that meet only once or twice a year. The men's teams are at Roseale this semester. Engravers Await Copy This latest setback in the work of this year's book puts the Jayhawker at a loss. He has been asking for these prints for the past week and last night Berkebile bad to inform them of this latest mistreatment by stopping the work on the Berklebe and John Rugh, business manager, made the following statement this morning: "We believe this to be a prank of some person who could not know the tight place in which he puts the Jayhawker. We are willing to give a liberal reward to anyone who returns the prints to the Jayhawker office. We will not ask any questions. If this prank is to disaffect his identity he may leave theprints anywhere in the Union building, such as the fountain, the main desk, or any other place where someone is likely to find them." Fencing Club Begins Anew To Elect President Feb. 16; Tournament to Be Held Feb. 23 A special election will be held Feb. 16 to choose a president of the Fencing club, to succeed Fred Sauer who has accepted a position as a member of the staff of the department of zoology at the University of Wichita. The Feninging club is open to all students of the University interested in taking courses in mathematics or to the beginning class this semester by Dr. James Naillith, professor of physicial education. The use of the full course materials will be given broadwords will be given this term. The first club tournament of the semester will be held in room 238 Robson gymnasium. Feb. 25, and all persons interested are invited. The club will continue its regular meetings at 4:30 p.m., Tuesday and Thursday. El Ateneo to Have Tryouts El Atenco to Have Tryouts El Atenco, the Spanish club, will have tryouts at the first meeting of this semester. Feb. 23. Fred Jean, president, would like to confer with those who desire to try out. Harry Craig, chief clerk in the burial's office, is in Wichita today attending grand lodge of A.F. & A.M. Craig at master of Acacia lodge No. 9. PAGE TWO WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15. 1933 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS ] University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Editor-In-Chief PAUL V. MINER Managing Editor SUNY KROGER Makeup Editor VIVIAR PARKer Night Editor VIVER PARKER Night Editor MARGRET DOCUMENT Award Editor ANNA HOLLIS Sunsa Editor COLLEEN CULDEN Exhancement Editor JOSEPHINE CUGHILL Exhancement Editor JOHN DUI Bunny Editor DANIEL DUSK ADVERTISING MGR. MARCHEE INC. Advertising Mgr. LON KOHLER District Editor ROBERT DUBUCK Ramon Bord Memb Robert Willey Miner Piller Robert Miner Jay Millennium Marie Lawrence Alice Bohlecki Martin Kretzmann David Kretzmann Dorothy Smith TECHNOLOGY Business Office KI. 66 Office Building KI. 66 Night Education Business Office 207KR News Room 207KR Public Schools the time and location in the department and on Napping day in students in the department. Journalism of the Department of Journalism. Education $4.99 per year, paid WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1933 Subscription price, $4.00 per year, payable in advance. Single charge, be each. Rewarded as secondclass matter September 19, 2016, at the office at lawrence, Kansas. LAUGHTER IN HELL Today America is the richest country in the world. We not only have most of the gold in the world, but have all the other countries owing us more gold than they have in their treasures. America is, in the words of the spell-binding orators, the land of the brave and the home of the free, where if you own any property you will be taxed to support congressmen's relative and robbed by gangsters who are immune to punishment because of the protection of crooked police forces. We grow more farm products than we can eat, as a result most of our farmers are bankrupt. Farmers and manufacturers beseech the law makers for protection of their products. Hundreds of thousands of young men, little older than boys, walk the highways in search of work. Millions of people depend wholly upon charity for their only means of support. Machines, the products of a cut-throat industrial system, produce, with the aid of a single worker, ten thousand boxes of pancake flower in an eight hour shift. Yet the machine has never consumed a hot cake in the period of its existence, and the worker cannot afford to buy the food product that he helps to produce. Tons of food rot in the fields and in store houses while thousands of children go to school without their breakfasts. Corner orators cry for food and clothing for their families; newspapers cry "Reds and Communists," the police beat down marchews with clubs in an effort to keep "peace." No wonder the devil sits in the comparative quiet of hell and laughs! Those woolly stocking caps may have seemed conical to some people, but they didn't look half as funny as those bandaged eard did AFTER ALL Now, on the other hand, perhaps, the closing hour rule for women is a desirable thing after all. Maybe we have been a trifle hasty in condemning this cultural lag. When one goes to the trouble of mulling over the problem a few advantages may be discovered in it. In the first place, the restriction acts as a protection for Kansas coeds, for should the villainous male prove too ardent, the curfew may save the day. "I'm sorry, but I have to go in now," the lady can coo triumphantly. When one has been gullible enough to take a blind date and the date turns out to be blind—and dumb—the closing hour regulation is a godsend for the unlucky. The agony is terminated in a few long hours. Another important advantage of the closing hour is that it affords the only time of the day when the entire ensemble of University ladies can be found in one place. Five minutes after the bell rings, all can be discovered within the confines of the various buildings. This advantage is one for the treasurer who might wish to pass the hat, or something. [THE TEN-CENT MEAL] After much talk of the depress- ension, only 30 students have taken advantage of the ten-cent meal plan which was inaugurated at the Memorial Union Cafeteria last Monday. Less than one per cent of the student body has taken advantage of the offer. What are the reasons for this? Perhaps the assistance is in the wrong place. It may be that the large body of students can get along after the fee payment and book buying hurdles have been passed. It is possible that the student loan fund and assistance from elsewhere is enough. Pride may have had an effect upon the number of students taking advantage of the plan; but retrenchment is a common thing in these times even with millionaires, so the student should feel no embarrassment in taking advantage of the opportunity. Some students who would like to take advantage of the low price meals may feel that their grades would prevent their being admitted to the group, even though those in charge of the plan have said that A's are not required and that an F might be permitted. Whatever the reasons, only a small group of students have availed themselves of the plan. Maybe the ten-cent meal plan wasn't necessary. Perhaps prosperity has stopped lurking around the corner and returned to Kansas. "A New Industry With Possibilities" conservatively states a Kansas editorial headline. In the days of prosperity—surely not forget—the head might well have been "Mammoth New Industry Slated to Revolutionize World." Since the coming of the ice age, does anyone on the Hill still believe "slips don't count." This has been such a poor year that even an insulting comic valentine would be welcome. the way that school politics is conducted at this University. The ultimate goal behind the conniving and scheming is to secure a complete party victory at the polls. Now that students are beginning to settle down for the work of the new semester the Hill politicians will emerge from their places of hibernation and action will commence. In a short while the various political fences will be given a thorough examination and the weak spots will be patched. Prospective candidates will be considered and discussed. Meetings, dark and mysterious, will be held in fraternity houses and there will be frequent and informal conferences in the booths, and across the tables, of student resorts. This is MUD-MIXING TIME To insure that victory, the rival candidates will be selected more on the basis of popularity and their vote-drawing abilities than on that of their fitness for the job. No stone will be left unturned and, if previous elections are any criterion, actual dishonesty at the polls will be resorted to and will, in all probability, go unpunished. Concepts of government such as these smack more of the political manipulations of machine-controlled cities than they do of a college community. Surely no fault may be found with the theory of political organizations. When the organization permits itself to degenerate and be motivated solely by the purpose of fulfilling fish desires, however, that machine's actions become the concern of every student. The sooner such concern is manifested the sooner will campus politicians reform. When the reform comes, then, and only then, will the members elected to the student governing groups really accomplish things worth while. In other words, if the student governing offices on the Hill are ever going to mean anything, every student in the University must take an interest in the selection and the election of candidates. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXX Wednesday, Feb. 15, 1923 No. 102 Notice does at Chancellor's office at 1 a.m. on regular afternoon publication days and 11 a.m. m. s. n. for Sunday ideas. CHANGE OF ADDRESS: Any student who moved between semesters should record his new address it the Registrar's office at once, to be included in the Directory supplement. CHEMICAL ENGINEERS: CHEMICAL ENGINEERS: There will be a meeting of the Kansas Association of Chemical Engineers at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 16, in Marvin hall. There will be refreshments W. A. HARDESTY JR. President. 'O-ED CLUB. NUMBER 1: CO-ED CLUB, NUMBER 1: Group No. 1, Co-Ed club, south of Fifteenth street, will meet Thursday Feb. 16, from 7 to 8 p.m., at the Memorial Union. Please bring five cents. CATHERINE SIEBERS, Secretary There will be a meeting of the K. U. Dramatic club at $ 8 o'clock in Green hall. GENE HIBBS, President. The Fencing club will hold its first official meeting of this semester at 4:30 on Thursday, Feb. 18, in room 202 of Robinson gymnastium. The vacancy in the office of president necessitates the attendance of all members. Newcomers are invited to join Dr. Naismith's class for beginners in fencing. P, RAPAPORT, Armorer GRADES: Students may obtain first semester grades at the Registrar's office accordir to the following schedule of names: Monday, Feb. 20—A to G, inclusive Tuesday, Feb. 21—H to M, inclusive Thursday, Feb. 23—N to S, inclusive Friday, Feb. 24—T to Z, inclusive Saturday, Feb. 25—Those unable to appear at the scheduled time. Union cards must be shown by both men and women students at the mid-week vexity tonight. OTHER OZWIN RUTLEGE, Manager. There will be a meeting of the K.U. Radio club Thursday evening at 7:30 in room 115 Majmir hall. Guy Omer will give the technical talk. All persons interested are invited to attend. DANA PRATT, President. V. I. SUNDHIVAN. K. U. RADIO CLUB: GEORGE O. FOSTER, Registrar. Those men who have made eligibility requirements for the Men's Glee club this semester and who are desirous of joining this organization should call 212-843-7965. Because of the Band Concert, the Thursday rehearsal will be held at 3:30 p.m. in the University auditorium. K O. KUERSTEIN, Director. TRYOUTS FOR MEN'S GLEE CLUB: Quill club will meet tonight at 8 c'clock in the Green room of Fraser hall. All interested members will expire matters by bringing their dues. SIGMA GAMMA EPSILON: Sigma Gamma Epsilon meets tonight at 7:30 at the home of Dr. and Mrs Schowe, 1002 Tennessee street. Mr. Patterson is the guest speaker. R. STOVER, President. Y. M. C. A. CABINET; HAROLD WALKER, President. SIGMA GAMMA EPSILON: The regular weekly meeting of the Y.M.C.A. cabinet will be held Thursday, Feb. 16, at 4:30 in room 10 of the Memorial Union. KEITH W. JOHNSON, Vice President The May Day Mystery CHAPTER VI Octavus Roy Cohen Copyright by Octavus Roy Cohen. WNII Service. The kindly face of the banker was marked by lines of worry as though he feared he had taken too much. The banker did not seem particularly interested. "Vernon," he remarked, "Maxwell Vernon, eh?" "I like him—if that's what you mean." "Yes. They call him Max." "Wisdom of power?" "What sort of kid is he?" Fike hesitated, then leaped for ward with a sudden burst of confidence. "I will have my best opinion that they have will it群品 dice you against him!" "who hasn't?" Only men I'm afraid of are these goodly; goody, nib-thenest ones. They're the cute babies! Now about Vernon? "I can't a long story. You know we have a college here. Vernon entered as a freshman in junior year and met him when he came into the bank and opened a ninety-thousand-dollar checking account. It was rather unlucky." "He has faults—" "And naturally I had a chat with him. This money was the remainder of an inheritance from his mother, she having been his surviving parent. "I should guess yes." "Exactly. In the past three years Max and I have been quite friendly, and I've been very helpful. But has rather resented what must have seemed like interference on my part." "Vernon has been running through his money pretty fast. He started slowly in his freshman year, but the word got out that he was very rich and that group of friends rather more mercenary than genuine. Max Vernon is weak; as about as a young man he doesn't believe, that though there isn't a vicious bone in his body. His first year at college he spent万元 lavishly. Last year he spent it faster. This little what he left." "Gosh! He must be a bird!" "Too many friends for his own good. One in particular—" "Who?" "I'll tell you about him directly." To stick to Vernon; when I saw his money dwindling I started having sensible, friendly talkies with him. He always confessed his weakness and always promised to draw in his horns. Then the next thing I knew there beed the big bill of big check come through the bank." "Did he have all his money here?" "Every cent. That's why I'm in a position to pay it." About a month ago he had run through his money. Didn't have two hundred dollars left. About a week ago he was on the verge of being admitted that he was broke. He said he was in a rotten fix—owed a big bill, and felt that his bonus was at stale." "Does he gamble much?" "A good deal. But that'll teach you. He wanted to borrow money of course. He asked me to lend it—at least that the bank couldn't I offer to lend him a trivial sum personally, but he said that the bank would give him a bit. He needed five thousand." "It is not that, Harry. He just don't know anything about money . . . or if he does, he's learned it in the last month, which isn't very likely. He always had thought that I should be less valuable than wasustible. Then, suddenly, it was gone. It took him a long time to understand that there was no more. He confessed to me that he had been told that I didn't have college and I suggested that he leave college, get a job and begin to take life seriously. His gambling debt—the debt of honor" he rather grandly called it—seemed to be preying on his mind. He went on to write several轨化 killing himself. I spoke to him like a Dutch nuch—" "No-piker, at any rate." "He mount it; yes. But I knew he'd never do it. I was merely trying to snap him out of his despondency. All his lightness and brightness were disappearing. But there was nothing I could do about it." "You thought he meant it?" "No one in the world could have needed or wanted money more than Max Verron thought he did. Remember that! The last time I saw him was April twenty-eight when he made a loan—and I again re-fused "On May first, a little after two o'clock, this bank was robbed of more than one hundred thousand dollars. It was very important that the holdup was implicated in that holdup." "You couldn't swear it, though?" "Certainly not. But I investigated him and he didn't know anything part of my chain of evidences. That night Max Vernon did not return to the school but left with his dog. He did not come back until late yesterday afternoon." "Because you recognized his car?" "That is only the beginning, Haney. When I remembered after the excitement died down that the car had looked like Vernon. I paid mighty little to the wheel—and it seemed to me that even in the brief glimpse, it was Vernon." Fike frowned, then looked up at Hanvey's expressionless face. "I'm trying to be fair to the boy—and to you. He went to his room at the fragrant restaurant that Hanvey's been something else than I didn't beer until this morning." "He didn't come back in the car he was going day before yesterday!" Jim flinked slowly, lightened a fresh elgar and blow a cloud of the raincloth rouge across the table. "No?" he asked with depressing lack of interest, "What did he come in?" "A new ear," said Fiske. "A brand and very expensive one." "Hum," he said. "I havey羽毛 nothing. To the bullet it seemed that I bothering to think. Just a great human bulk occupying space. Flake was up." "I don't want to be misunderstood, 'Hunney,' he said, with a hint of fear. 'He's not a big guy. I don't believe there's anything radically wrong with him. I've told you everything, hoping that I ever backed some point which may prove correct.' "Mnyne," suggested Hanvey softly, "maybe you have." "I hope so. I don't want to see Max Person get into trouble." "Gosh!" Haney increased old bias with considerable difficulty. "Hissess me, please," she said, that he's in trouble enough. Everything links him up with a bank robber. "I realize that," Randolph Flake spoke in a low, strained voice, "And pernina I'm doing him a favor." "Mmm?" "Because," explained the handler, "Td rather see Vernon conceived of compliancy in a holdout than electro- cited for murder." (To be continued tomorrow) WHY PAY MORE VARSITY Always Riddles 5c Adults 15c LAST TIMES TODAY JACK BUCHANAN "MAGIC NIGHT" Thursday Only— MIHAM HOPKINS JACK OAKE in "Dancers in the Dark" "Dancers in the Dark" Friday— JACKIE COOPER "SOOKY" Get the Varsity Habit "Where Students Meet" IF NOW! Thur, Fri, Sat, Too! it is after 6 p.m. and you need some---- DICKINSON "The Woman Accused" --- CALL --- She Was a Weather Bureau Girl— Nancy Carroll in Coe's Drug Stores "He Was Her Man But Fair and Warmer! Broadway's Blond Threat Note Paper Typewriter Paper A Typewriter Ribbon A Tube of Shaving Cream A Box of Face Powder A Good Sandwich and a Coke--- 'She Done Him Wrong' Sun, Mon- Comedy - News - Revue Knit underthings in white. Kayser sweeties, lacy mesh dance sets, Vanity Fair dance sets. MAE WEST $1^{98} - $2^{98} 411 W. 14th PHONE 516 WEAVER'S 1347 Mass. PHONE 521 White Lingerie For Initiation $ 50^{\mathrm{c}} $ to $ \mathbb{S}1^{50} $ Trillium white crope and satin dance sets, step-ins, slips both formal and informal, in tailored dress. COLLECTION OF MARY LEE CARTER'S FASHION New Spring Styles in Crepe, Satin, and Rayon Knitwear. CHATEAU THIERRY ST. MIHIEL THEARGONNE! ! The ...the Somme, Verdun, Ypres...Every important battle in the greatest conflict the world has ever known...now move before your astonished eyes in all their stark realism...Even to hand-to-hand conflict in the trenches, photographed by soldier cameramen, and held until now in the official archives of the eight enemy and allied nations! It's the most astounding picture you have ever seen! BIGDRIVE The First Authentic Talking Picture of the World War! - ADDED UNITS - ZAZU PITTS THELMA TODD in their Latest Screen "ALUM AND EVE" It's a knockout Also News Events NOW! THRU SATURDAY PATEE WHERE BIG PICTURES PLAY Positively No Advance in Prices Shows 3-7-9 --- A WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15. 1933 PAGE THREE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS . Kappa Sig's and Beta's Leading in Intramurals Acacia Good Third With 431 Points to Leaders' 559 and 529.5 The intramural race finds Kappa Sip and Beta well in the lead of other teams. Kappa Sip has the lead with a total of 559 points and Beta is close behind with 529.5. Acacia is third, having obtained 431." Results of the fall inter-organization events: Track: won by Phi Delt; runner-up. Kappa Sig. Touch football. Won by S.A.E Other division winners, D.U., A.K.Psi and Sigma Chi. Tennis: Organization winner is dependent upon the final match between SVA, S.A.E, and Rudolph. Triangle will also be determined by this match. Doubles, by rudolph-Dennison. Triangle, runner-up, Voss-Howard, S. Handball: Won by Kappa Sig. Sing. laws won by Copeland, Kappa Sig. runner-up, Morrison, Kappa Sig. Doubles won by Morrison-Copeland, Kappa Sig runner-up, McDonald-Leidig, Kappa Sig. Horseshoes. Won by Beta. Singlew won by Cae; Beta; runner-up. Dovkr Doubles won by Morgan-Robinson runner-up. Morgan-Bickett Acea. Turkey run: Won by Phil Delt; runner-up. Beta. Results of the fall open events: Pentahlon: Won by Ed Hall; runner-up. Gordon Gray. Handball: Singles won by S. Cullin- runer-up, J. Capeland. Doubles won by Barber-Powell; runner-up, Wagner- Mustard. Tennis: Singles, won by D. Curry; runner-up. H. Rudolph. Double wins by Murphy-Curry; runner-up. Hyland- White. Wrestling: 121 pound class, won by Wiesting; richer run, up, Hampton. 129-pound class, won by Emrick; runner-up, Taylor. 138 pound class, won by Engle; runner-up, Douglas. 148-pound class, won by F. A. Fennberg; runner-up, A. Anneberg. 158 pound class, won by Noland; runner-up, Downs. 168 pound class, won by Jacobshagen. 189-pound class, won by Feeuse; runner-up, Black. Total points of organizations to date Alpha Kappa Lambda | 114 Alpha Kappa Pi | 176 Alpha Kappa Omega | 153 Acacia | 431 Beta Theta Pi | 529.5 Chi Delta Sigma | 57 Chi Chi Chi | 278 Delta Upsilon | 208 Delta Tau Delta | 186 Delta Sigma Lambda | 559 Kappa Eta Kappa | 110.5 Kappa Eta Kappa | 110.5 Ochowk | 243 Pi Kappa Alpha | 131 Pi Gamma Delta | 265 The first events in the open swim meet are to be held Feb. 20. These will be considered as tryouts for the Big Six meet. Inter-organization events are scheduled for Feb. 21, and wrestling preliminaries on Feb. 28. Twenty-five words or less; 1 in fourth place. In sixes, 1/6. Large ads sur- force. WANT ADS ARE AC COMPANIED BY CASH. Want Ads YOUNG LADY with University accu- saintance to sell mold sport coats and jackets for men and women. Com- pany C. Cell R. W. Erosion. 19031M. 29013M. JICSAW FUZZLES cut to order. Furnish your own picture, or we'll furnish them. Any number of pieces. Visit Fairfax Co., 413 North Street Phone 562 -107 FIRST CLASS room and board; room $8, board $15 per month. Try us soon. 1122 Ohio. Phone 20028. -104 STUDENTS OF French, German, Spanish, Greek, Latin: Learn labor saving methods of acquiring vocabulary. Use of card index classification word analysis. Trial lesson, 35c. Phone: 521. -108 HAVE YOUR application photographs made at Moore Studio. 719 Mass (upstream-exclusive). Phone 964 - 125 FOUR nicely furnished rooms, $7 to $12 a month. Breakfast and dinner, $14 a month. Discount if both board and room are taken. 1200 Tennessee. — 105 TRUNK KEYS, door keys, car keys. Good locker padlocks, night latches. door closers pressed. Trewery Rutter. 623 Vormont St. Phone 138 124 FOR RENT: Rooms and board for boys, near Campus. Rates very reasonable. Call 2814. 1241 Louis. —103. LAWRENCE OPERCIAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusively 1025 Mass. Phi Delta Theta Phi Kappa Psi Phi Kappa Chi Sigma Chi Sigma Alma Mu Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Nu Triangle Theta Nu Wakaraus Intramurals Basketball Two basketball games were played last evening. Sigma Phi Epiono defeated Delta Chi 29 to 5 and Phi Mu from alpha from Alpha Chi 29 to 15. The scores: Fiu Mi Alpha—22 FG FT Bailley, f 0 0 Boulger, f 2 1 Porter, c 1 1 Simming, g 2 0 Underwood, g 1 0 Totals 10 2 Alpha Chi Sigma—15 FG 27 Ingle, f 2 1 Underwood, f 1 0 Kmellinow, f 0 Adams, c 0 Schmidt, g 0 Fonstein, g 1 Nelson, g 2 Laws, g 0 Totals ... 6 Referee—Affleck. Sigma Phi Epsilon - 29 FG F1 Blofield, f I Bloomfield, f I Allen, f I Bromine, f I Boehne, f I Coury, g I Carlin, f I Stahl, g I FG 0 F1 0 I 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 4 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 to Delta Chi-5 FG Murray, f 0 1 Peterson, f 1 0 Eps, f 0 0 Warner, e 0 0 Sourk, g 1 1 Mitchell, g 1 0 Withers, g 0 — — Totals ... Referee—Beach. Gamma Phi Beta and I.W.W will play off the finals in the women's intramural basketball, tomorrow at 8 p.m. In these imi-finals last night, Gamma Phi Beta defeated Alpha Gamma Delta, 24-6, and I.W.W swapped Corbina horn, 46-6. Lathrop and Whater were high scorpions in the Gamma Phi Beta-Alphi Gamma Delta game. Edie of I.W.W, a playing player of the I.W.W-Corbin game. Lawson was referee for the first game, and Larrabe officiated for the second. Send The Daily Kansan home DENVER $990 Go by Grevyhound Bus Two buses every day. New low fares good on every bus. Service to almost any point in America. Sample one-way fares: Sulina $4.30 New York $22.15 St. Louis 4.90 Los Angeles 28.50 Chicago 7.90 Tepeka 7.00 schedules, rates, and all information Phone 590 UNION BUS TERMINAL 633 Mass. St. 302 276.5 96 202.5 128 313.5 227 47 259.5 205 112.5 WESTERN GREYHOUND STEWED CHICKEN and DUMPLINGS Special for Thursday Marjorie Stacey, fs 33, and Helen Bonnar, fs 43, gave pianolections. He also prepared the menu, which rated the tea table to Mrs. Peter Emery and Mrs. Anna Bitze presided over the tea service. The Chi Omega alumnae association entertained with a tea for the mothers of the children of the home of Mrs. Solen Enery, 1613 Tennessee street. The tea was given in honor of Miss Mary Clay Williams of St. Louis international chapter inspector of the security. 18c Freda Merrick, ed.34, was eleccte president of Kappa Phi, Methodi church sorority, at its meeting las evening in Myers hall. Swiss Steak Duck Tenderloin Fresh Carrots Stuffed Peppers and so many other good foods On the 25c Plate---at the Other officers were elected as follows: Josephine Lee, c35, vice president; Mary Bess Doty, c26, recording secretary; Ona Mae Larner, c34, treasurer; and Virginia Blinn, cuncl, correspondent, secretary. B SOCIETY Pledging was held for Pence Klingberg, c'36, and Frances Smith, c'unch. Chi Omega Honors National Inspector Kappa Phi Elects Merrick for President CAFETERIA An informal supper was given by Mr. and Mrs. J, J. Kissler, Mrs. Nees Olsen, and Miss Mary Olesn, at their home Monday evening for Mr. and Mrs. C W. Thompson of Topkai, forms a committee to meet at a meeting of the American Association of University Women held at the home of Mrs. W, H. Schoebue. Gives Dinner 5. K. U. Dames Entertain Red and White hearts were used as decorations in the home of Mrs. Clarice Higger, 1230 Ohio street, at a party given by the K. U. Dances at 2:30 yesterday afternoon. The game of hearts was played at six tables. Hub score won by Mrs. Donald Fleicher, and Vernon Gantry received low score. Phi Gamua Delu will entertain its alumni with the annual Norris Pic dinner at 5:30 p.m. Saturday at the chapter house. Preceding the dinner Glen Dickinson, c38, honor pledge, will be initiated. The alumni will present the chapter with an oil painting by W. Y. Vorgan. To Have Pig Dinner Tea for New Women Held The councils of the W.S.G.A. and Y.W.C.A. were in charge of the weekly W.S.G.A. tea held this afternoon in the Acacia announces the pledging of Leslie Olson of Kansas City, Mo., and Richard Ferris and Robert Daniel, both of Garnett. Joe Cognhill of Iola, who graduated from the University at the end of the first semester, is a guest this week at the Alpha Delta Pi house. rest room of Central Administration building. The valentine motif was used in the decorations. Mrs. P, F. Walker poured. Mrs. H. K. Shildeh of Anthony was a guest last evening of Miss. Neil S. Butcher at the Alpha Delta FI house. Mrs. R. C. Morrow of Watkins hall will entertain the Thursday Team whist club tomorrow afternoon. Delta Zeta held pledging services yesterday afternoon at 5 o'clock for Castellain Children, c36, of Lawrence. A Wizard's Hat TOURIST Send The Daily Kansan home. High hist? Yes! It's the top class on the famous Minnesota, Minnesota, Poultin and Wainfield. The former two were, until recently, restricted exclusively to First Class passengers, and the latter were Cabin ships. is "High Hat" on these great ships to EUROPE Now, you pay the low tower Class rate and have the run of the ship—the best stomachs. The first public room, the bar, was empty. They were before. Rates from $106,50 one way ($89,19 up round trip), and if you act quickly, for $0 or $15 per person over the minimum rate you can have to Southampton. Have and Answer. Apply to your local agent— the travel authority in your community Subscribe for RED STAR LINE International Mercantile Marine Company International Mercantile Marine Company 1100 Locust St., St. Louis, Mo. Headquarters 847 Mass. St. 1100 Locust St. St. Louis Mo. THE KANSAS CITY STAR PHONE 17 H. L. NEVIN Distributor 13 papers - 15c per week SPECIALS FOR MEN You Get 7 for 98¢ Here's a Real Value 7 pairs of fine, long- wearing rayon and cellulose taped tops, heels and toes. Colors are black, white, and colors are stylish. 98¢ Fine fit and Long wear1 Men's Rayon Shirts and Shorts for 4 to buy them is an economy) To wear a White African-style shirts Pastel elastic top shorts Run-Resis TANK TOP SHORTS --- YOUR UNION offers you a big dollar's worth J.C. PENNEY $1^{00} NEW FEATURES THIS SEMESTER Ping Pong Table for Women. Another Ping Pong Table for the recreation room. Free Checking for men at Mid-week and Regular Varsities. (Women's checking has been free heretofore). Ping Pong Table for Women. Circulating Library Fountain Tickets, $2.75 value for $2.50, available for members only. Free Privileges for Members: Mid-week Varieties (Stags fined 10c: Women will be required to show their membership cards). Checking for Men and Women. Bulletin Board Ping Pong Tables Checkers Chess Playing Cards Dominoes Newspapers Magazines Radio Meeting Rooms Travels Information Bureau Men's lounge and smoking room Women's lounge and recreation room Other Privileges: Recreation Room (open only to members but a small charge for use of pocket billiard and smoker table) in warmth, lunch, candy and regular fountain drinks) In addition, Your Union houses the following other campus activities: W. S. G. A. Book Exchange Office of the Jav Hawker Office of the Men's Student Council Office of the Women's Self Government Association University Cafeteria Varsity Dances *-- and Found Bureau Y. M. C. A. Get all these privileges this semester PAY YOUR $1.00 WHEN YOU PAY YOUR FEES --- YOU'LL SAY WE ARE! ARE WE RIGHT? But the burning question now is whether you'll be right—speaking of dress—as another season begins. But if it's Kansas, Haskell. Missouri or Nebraska its another kind of a problem. If you were a West Point or Annapolis man, dressing right is a matter of rule —or else demerits and being locked up with a diet of navy beans. University styles demand a lot — and they're different in nearly every school. In fact, to wear the wrong thing on the right campus, is almost as bad as putting your pants on backwards for an admiral's dress parade. The surest way to avoid embarrassment is to be Ober togged — from head to foot. Ober's togs for college are right on every campus, they ought to be. We've been studying university styles and following the trends since your father was a freshman. We Suggest: € OBERS tailored-to-your-campus-suits - - - - - $19.50 and up SHOES from our college footwear shop $3.50 and up SHIRTS broadcloth, oxford, madras $1.25 and up NECKWEAR varsity stripes and solid colors $1.00 and up HATS in swanky new shapes $3.50 and up Ober's HEAD-TO-FOOT OUT-FITTERS PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1933 YOUR FATE IS WRITTEN IN THE STARS Incidentally, wasn't the depression bad while it lasted? In your life do politicians or stars exert the greatest influence for good or evil?---Give the stars an inning. FEBRUARY 1933 Horoscopes for those born in March next month. FEBRUARY THIS HANDY CALENDAR CONTAINS VALUABLE INFORMATION—HANG IT IN YOUR ROOM. 1933 WHAT DO YOU WANT? TUESDAY The name— Phone number— And location— Somewhere on this page is: that many of your fellow students DO YOU KNOW Of a firm that can supply your need at a fair price. WHERE To go into a jewelry store It is costly, people think— "If I should shop at Parsons You should make my bank roll shrink." would the Reba's be if it were not for the contributions of 50 local merchants? WEDNESDAY Now, this is utter fallacy As we will prove to you, Our merchandise is of the best, Our prices lowest, too. Ed. W. Parsons Jewelry Store 725 Mass. Phone 717 Having been born on 14 November, the sign of the split infinitive, you have difficulty understanding a comma splice and a meta term between a comma splice and a meta THURSDAY Can you afford to turn in longhand papers when our prices are so interesting? Typing Minecratching Punctuation, spelling and gram- matical errors corrected without charge. Public We will be glad to figure with you on your thesis. Public Stenographic Bureau Sarah M. Cieland Lawrence Bldg. Phone 488 TODAY Semester Exams. The flickering comet that holds swan today reflect more, especially on transportation prob- 2 2 Daily truck service to K. C. We will deliver your trunk from your Lawrence address to your K. C address with NO EXTRA DRAYAGE CHARGES. Expert local and long-distance moving. Phone 15. FRIDAY Lawrence Transfer Co. Do bright clashing col- wear on hair-do dill drush col- colors give you the jitters the Gemini is upon you. SATURDAY Drap-Dry enamel for the breakfast nook in 25 beautiful colors. Mollest-Lourey Velvay, the soft buced paint for walls, and the pattern in paper. Suggest for proper paint and color harmonies at— Lawrence Paint and Wallpaper Co. 121 West 9th - Phone 1473 (Back of Weaver's) Kansas vs. Nebraska at Lincoln. Kansas State vs. Missouri at Manhattan TODAY A short memory keeps you from being a great scholar—like prizes of the beta Kappa key is yours. 4 25c 100 sheets of 3-hole note paper, close ruled, heavy weight— All sizes of note fillers and covers. Fountain Pens, Quiz Books You hump curves when you muggle *Scorpio*s a Scorpio. You throw your wheel out of throw your wheel out of and cause unhappiness. Keeler's Book Store Picture Framing 129 Mass Phone 3 For accurate wheel alignment, For broken springs, For bent axles, see— TODAY SCHULZ The Blacksmith Born on this day you will be beaten and be fooled, but you'll find it's more fun to know. You'll also learn that look alike are different. You can get the ultimate in heat and eliminate your dust problem by calling— SCHULZ The Blacksmith 728-39 Vermont Phone 403 and about asking to "Treated" coal. There IS a difference in coal "Priced to sell for cash." Tough luck, men, have this as your birth- day. Wrinkles in your colour and baggy wear will be greatest mfortune. However, thur- curse can be overcome. University Coal Co. --and hold their shape see— That "Let-down" feeling that frequently affects those born on this earth to a Gold-complex. 8 For clothes expertly tailored to fit Frank Koch 831U$_2$ Mass. Phone 575 You will be interested in our colorful collection of antique glass—it will brighten up any dark corner. We have always specialized in pleasing fraternities and sororities with correct wallpaper. All work submitted. Your wife's pleasing ability can easily lead her to work wherever she invariably do her best work on your col- The Good Wallpaper Co. "Where quality tells— and price sells." 10 209 W. 8th St. Phone 620 Girls whose birthday is today are vigorous and athletic, hence afflicted with injury runs and lost buttons. Daily Kansas recount publication. Semester enrollment continues. Play, "Uncle Tom's Cabin." In spite of all we can do to prevent it our shirt service is coming to be known as a Domestic Relations court. We also have a complete laundry service that is just as satisfactory and economical. Independent Laundry 740 Vermont Phone 39 TODAY Classes resume sessions. Play, "Uncle Tom's Cabin." Iowa State vs. Kansas States at Amee. 937 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. Phone 683 Hosiery-mending Pleating Alterations Buttons If people whose birth- day is today could only start the day right their choice of clothes of cherries set in a bed 11 of roses. However, an end of this trouble we foresee. Smith Hemstitching and Dressmaking Shop TODAY even a rainy day looks like springtime in the rainy時 when you walk out our door fortified design designed to last till noon. Fast delivery service Hob Nail Hop. Kansas vs. Missouri at Columbia. Nebraska vs. Oklahoma at Norman. Those born on this day become france when in rushing about wildly rushing about wildly around two or three corners. If you were born on a sunny day, there everything possible to make you walk home from two miles west Let us hurry for you. When it's fast, reliable transportation you need call— 12-TAX1-987 13 Next time you run out of gas on a late date, call— No stars can touch those noises. We can't see them, but there are a half down, evil molecules that have a guilt against them. 14 Hunsinger Taxi 15 Hi-test gas with PYROIL - 14c Regular white - 12c Bullene-Skinner Motor Company 622 Mass. for quick service. We're open all night! Wrecker service. 2 Quarts of good oil - 25c TODAY Girls born under to- go learn to teach to learn of an inexpensive way to make an attractive addition to the classroom. Born today you are gifted with a musical car and perfect mechanical ignorance. Experienced, there's one that will make your motor sing TODAY University organ vespers 16 PYROIL Saturday special: 1 gal. gas free with each 5 purchased. TODAY Family reunion, Taylor and McGrew. Kansas vs. Nebraska at Manhattan. Economy Service Station 1826 Mass. Phone 1356 A liquidified graphite in a true cubical solution. But make the mixture more airy by reducing heat of friction releases it for lubrication—hey the extra 10 miles per hour of engine power is yours! Pyroil Sales Co. 731 New Hampshire TODAY St. Valentine's Day, Braulford lecture. We don't see how it's the Big Dip. We also partly true that the Big Dip exerts an enormous stresses of Co-eds born today. TODAY Y.W, and W,S.G.A. Tea for new women Final date senior pictures for Jawhawk. Quick club trysts. Special prices for repairing and remodeling fur pieces. C. Byrd Fur Co. Manufacturers of fine furs 639 Mass. Phone 1214 Popular request has prompted us to extend our offer of Crugniola and Spiral permanent waves throughout February at $3.90 TODAY Band Concert Cottage Beauty Shop The light from the star governing those born around it makes your photograph—only expert camera angle possible. Look looking! (above the Cottage) 1144 Ind. Phone 352 This offer is also good at the Palace Beauty and Barber Shop, 730 Mass--Phone 325 can keep you from looking like Snozzle Durante. APPLICATION PHOTOGRAPHS Squires Studio should be exceptionally good. Your position may depend on them. Don't take chances. TODAY Missouri vs. Oklahoma at Columbia. Fine photographs=Prices very reasonable. 1035!2 Mass. Phone 517 Tinker, the sign of the household helper, will force you to do disagreeable repair jobs without proper equipment to counteract its conservative way to counteract Tinker. 20 If Epicurus isn't a star it should be, because it has afflicted you with a pain to please sense of taste. WELDING Oxy-acetylene or Electric Auto repair Cylinder Grinding Pistons, Pins and Rings. Boiler Work. "We fix it" You should cultivate a closer relationship with your shoes at the bot-tion. You can do that they have "soles." No matter how fastidious you may In many new methods you may find a batter to make milk-filled poulties of finding tender milk-filled poulties and fresh country eggs can be quickly solved by calling TODAY Third School of Fine Arts All-Musical Verpers, 4 p.m. diet will surprise you and your instructors. Lawrence Iron Works 611 New Hampshire Phone 106 Unless you keep soles on your shoes they will feel like just a couple of heels. A lack of energy keeps those born today from belonging to a half dozen honor societies— Iowa State vs. Kansas here Girls whose birthday come today are kind and French painter who influences their spring Expert repair—Interesting Prices. Dying and shining Oyler's Shoe Shop 1346 Ohio Phone 1996J Central Produce Co. 812-14 Vermont Our Double Proteid Honey Bar at 5c contains as much food value as a quart of milk—ask for it at any fountain. TODAY We specialize in novelty ice cream molds for parties. Over two hundred years ago Agei Watteau heedekeed his pain- tures of women with coquettish "Pie-Plate" hats. TODAY Washington's Birthday. Joint Glee Club concert. TODAY The Watteau influence is noticeable in our advance showing of spring creations. Co-ed, club Hop at Memorial Union. Lawrence Sanitary Milk and Ice Cream Co. Phone 697 Ask questions — they pay big dividends to girls whose birthday is today. 24 As ask us how unnatural scalp conditions are corrected by Arno vapor treatment—why it record-les, why it's a more beautiful permanent. Iowa State vs. Oklahoma at Norman. Our alterations department can do wonders with your old hat. Lovely permanents as low as $3.50 Hartwell's Millinery 83812 Mass. Phone 817 Stadium Barber and Beauty Shop Niva Cook, Manager TODAY Iowa State vs. Missouri at Amen. Neva Cook, Manager 1033 Mass. Phone 210 If this is your birthday you were born with the key to success, but you never lost it— Don't worry. 25 KEYS MADE Furniture upholstered, repaired or refinished. Slip covers mnde. A peculiar weakness of the week is birthday in today. You have a mania for good food served amid pleas- ing cries and soundings. We buy and sell antiques. All prices greatly reduced.Call 143 for free estimates. TODAY Kauai vs. Kauai State at Manhattan Kauai vs. Kansas State at Manhattan Trauck need, Kauai vs. Harkell, at Museum Stadium, Minnesota, Lincoln Courter's Upholstery 116 East 9th Convenient parking for curb service. Born on this day you are extremely sympathetic — you can't see your gas tank—but being an adult gastroenterologist anguish — way out. The Snack Shop across from the high school. Al Withington, formerly with the Cottage, announces his new location, 27 TODAY Vesper organ recital. At the brand new jaswahk Corner store, you can pick up a complete line of Standard Oil products and Krieg feeds as savory a humburger as ever lip was wrapped. Free student parking every evening. This is a crucial time in your life - watch closely for helpful hints. Jayhawk Filling Station "The handiest corner in Town" 9th at Vermont Phone 3 TODAY one that **an A—no matter who gives** the exam. Subject: Fountain Service. a. Germ proof dish washer. 2. Quality and Flavor. a. Franklins Double ice cream. b. Spreads used. 3. Speed. **man in our own delivery service.** Conclusion: Since strenuous study requires energy, call us during the week to help you get ready. The Rexall Drug Store Across 8th from Weaver's Phone 238 TODAY State vs. Nebraska at Amos. Additional copies of this calendar may be had without charge at the Kansan office. We are printing more extra copies than we did last month so will be sure not to run out. 图 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NUMBER 103 VOLUME XXX The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas New Activity Plan Is Finally Accepted by Men's Council Ticket Includes Everything Except Jayhawker, Basketball and Kansan W. S.G.A. VOTES NEXT The activity plan which was favored by more than a two-thirds majority of the students in the poll conducted dur- ing the day, fell not night by the Men's Student Council. At the meeting, the Council voted to send a recommendation to Chancellor E. H. Lindley that he extend the deadline on the payment of fees and to help in any way possible the students who are tardy in paying their fees. A committee of four was appointed to investigate further the possibility of a student owned book store. The committee appointed was: Joe Balch, 135, Fred Black, ed33, Ed Gift, e34, and Walt Elder, e34. Council Opposes "Booing" **Council Opposes "bbling"** The Council authorized Harold Dewton to issue a statement concerning the practice of basketball games. This is in accordance with Dr. Allen's desire to eliminate all booing at athletic contests. Also a discussion was held dealing with the plan to change the Thanksgiving time to the spring semester to unite with the Zister vocation. As the plan for this season there would be one long vacation in the fall semester and also a long vacation, probably a week, in the spring semester. One reason that this change is important is because of the shifting football game to Thanksgiving day. Now Up for Approval The activist plan as adopted by the Council must now be approved by the W.S.G.A., then sent to the Chancellor for his signature and then finally sent to the Board of Regents. The bill is as follows: Sec. 1. That a general activity fee be paid to students enrolled in the Student of Medicine except those enrolled in six or less hours, and students of the Medical College. Sec. 2. That all students except as mentioned above participate in the fee with a limited number of exemptions as explained in Sec. 12 of this bill. Sec. 3. That the general activity book received by each student upon publication shall be titled its holder to the following activities: concert courses, lecture courses, athletic events (except basketball), Union Memorial privileges, and memorial services for former associations. That these activities shall be participated in as heroin education. Made in Two Payments Sec. 4. That the fee for every student paid in the course of beginning or end of the semester, that the payments shall be $800 the first semester and $275 the second semester, withdrawing from the University be made on the basis as refunded for the period in which the tuition may be fund be made those withdrawing from the University be made those withdrawing during the period in which regular tuition may be fund be made those withdrawing from the University be made those withdrawing during the period in which refundable benefits shall sacrifice the remainder of their activity books. Students withdrawing but not taking the refund, when a student's week's limit shall be entitled to their activity privileges for the remainder of Sec. 6. That a Central Committee on activities composed of the Dean of Men's Student Council, the President of the Men's Student Council, the President of the W. S. C. A., the Director of the Operating Committee, the chairman of the Enterprise Ticket Committee, the Barrars, and one other member of the committee shall have power to administer the activity fund thus created, subject to Sec. 4, and the readjustments in its distribution which shall be deemed necessary. That this committee shall also supervise the activities of the men in books, the cost of which shall be borne by the various activities in proportion to the amount which they receive from the fund. See 7.1 for each activity fee shall be distributed each semester as follows subject to minor errors by the Central Committee; first semester, $1.15 Interpreter Fund; second semester, $1.25 Operating Committee; $1.05 Student Government Committee; $4.04 Student Governing Fund; and $0.30 Preserve fund; second semester, $2.05 Academic Department; $2.95 Athletic Department; $3.03 Student Governing fund; $0.95 Union Operation Fund; and $0.65 Administer service to be used and distributed by the Central Committee subject to minor errors by the Central Committee and the W. S. G. A. in taking care of any deficits which may occur and in sponsoring any other activities for the University. Continued on page 4 LAWRENCE. KANSAS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16. 1933 Daily Kansan Gains Honor Editorial Quality of University Publication Given High Rating The University Daily Kansan is one of six college newspapers to receive the highest possible score in editoriality, according to the second annual classification of the Daily Tail Heel, school paper of the University of North Carolina. The other five were: the Cornell Daily Sun, the Columbia Spectator, the Daily Cardinal (Viacom), the Daily Cotillion (Wiacom), the Daily C.O.L. (Wiacom), A. & M.,) and the California Bruin. The total score made by the Kanman in the general classification places it high in the list of student dials, with 76 points, or in class "B" along with the Princetonian and the Minnesota Daily. The maximum total score is 100 with the following seven qualities determining the excellence of the papers; make-up, 5 points; style, 25 points; feature material 10 points; editorial quality, 20 points; news, 20 points; sports, 15 points; performance receiving a grade of 80 or above are in class "A", those whose scores are from 70 to 80 are in class "B", and those ranking from 70 to 70 are in class "C". The Columbia Spectator was rated highest with 55; Wisconsin Daily Cardinal, 92; Stanford Daily 84, and Northwestern 82. CONDENSED WIRE NEWS Colombian Forces to Advance Colombian Forces Para, Brazil. Feb. 13. (U-P) - Colombian Amazon region repaired today to advance on Letiña, jungle port held by Peruvians, according to advises received from the renter. Colombian troops were dismarked from transports at Taracca. 100 miles north of Letiña, after 'eruviens planes attempted to bomb the ramps and three guards' in Quito there the minister of war was reported o have taken command. Bank Resources Increase Predicts Warmer Weather Washington, Feb. 15—(UP)—Aggregate resources of 16,010 reporting national banks on Dec. 31, 1922, the date of the recent call for statements of the Board of Trustees. This was an increase of $744,579,000 since Sept. 30, 1922. Michigan Banks Reopen Detroit, Mich., Feb. 16- (UP)-Banks reopened all over Michigan today in the course of an eight-day gubernatorial moratorium. Reconstruction of the shaken financial structure $f$ the state progressed rapidly. Arrested on Swindle Charge New York, Feb. 16 - (UP)—Oscar Merrill Hartell, former Iowa farmer, accused of complicity in the $2,000,000. Drake estate swainte, was arrested today at quarantine on the liner to attend a fundraiser to mails to defraud the Iowa man, deported from England by the British government after living in luxury in London for more than 10 years, proclaimed that but was ordered veld for arraignment. City Editor of Star Questioned Kansas City, Feb. 16–(UF)—Taking a deposition was renamed today in honor of the city's mayor, he is Kansas City Star by the City Services Gas company. Fritz C. Hinkle editor of the Star, was questioned a length regarding a series of articles on gas prices, a reporter in gas rates in Kansas. St. Louis, Feb. 16—(UP)—A grain of popped lactose in the throat of Murray Hardesty, 6, of Springfield, Mo, was removed by surgeons at the St Louis Children's hospital here today. The child was brought here by train early today, and an X-ray picture was taken whether an operation was necessary. Membership eligibility was discussed at a meeting of Scabard and Blade, honorary military fraternity, yesterday afternoon. The recently elected president, Paul Borel, c34, presided. Other members included Elijah Lestang, c34, vice-president; James Compton, c34, secretary; and Hall Taylor, c33, treasurer. Surgeons Remove Poncorn Scabbard and Blade Meets Students Discuss Methods to Save Kansas Year Book About 75 Volunteers Meet to Go Into Troubles Jayhawker Is Facing FINANCES ARE LOW A volunteer group of about 75 students, consisting chiefly of house presidents and non-fraternity campus leaders met yesterday afternoon with Chancellor E. H. Lindley, to discuss the ways and means of assisting the Jayhawker, which is at present in a difficult situation financially. "In my estimation the Jayhawker is the best possible advertisement that we have to interest new students in the University of Kansas," stated Clement E. H. Lindley, opening the meeting of representative students. It was the feeling of the group that the Jayhawker should be continued on the present high standards of a first rate college annual. "The book," he continued, "is carried by students to practise every part of Karaus and to other states as well. We know that many letters every year from students that have seen our bookbook and are interested in entering the University The Chancellor continued his remarks on the Jayhawker and explained that the meeting had been called to decide what the students thought about teacher and whether they would support it sufficiently to publish a book this year. Professor Flint, head of the department of journalism, and chairman of the Jayhawk advisory board, estimated that it would be necessary to sell 500 more books, raise $2,000 more from organization pictures and sell approximately $2,000 more of advertising itself to make the book pay for itself. The delegation elected Harold Donte c, 35, chairman of an executive committee for the Jayhawk welfare organization, and said they already in progress, and to consider the means of reducing the present costs and increasing the subscription and advertise cost. John Hugh, business manager of the Jayhawk, next gave a short talk on the financial status of the book and the several plans that have been suggested to relieve the situation. He stated he would welcome any idea that would help the financial standing of the Jayhawk. Denton will appoint the other members of the committee, which, after the investigations will report its findings back to the group. Feature Class Hears Baker Secretary of Kansas Press Association Visits the University "short stories," said Mr. Baker, "are to a newspaper man what golf is to a business man. They give him a rest from the usual routine work." The other story is usually a mere feature with an unusual ending. Mr. Baker said. The Radio club will have a meeting of great interest to all students who are interested in radio, Thursday at 8 p.m. in 115 Marvin hall. RADIO OPERATOR TO ADDRESS UNIVERSITY MEETING TONIGH Ralph T. Baker, secretary of the Kansas Press association, visited the journalism department of the University this morning and gave a short talk to J. K. Jister's feature writing class. In the future, the country newspapers are going to require trained correspondents to write the persons rather than have a member of the community write them, because with a small group, they are the most important features of the articles, according to Mr. Baker. Sergent C. E. Engle, assistant instructor of military science, will be taken to the army hospital in Ft. Leavenworth today for observation and treatment for influenza, according to Major W. C. Koenig, professor of militar health. An absent from the rife range for about two weeks, Major Koenig said. Guy Omer, formerly an operator station WREN, will be the speaker. Engle to Army Hospital Alfreda Brodbeck, c©, 33 and Howard Turtle, c©, 44 were named associate editors of the Daily Kanan today by Paul V. Miner, c©, 43 editor-in-chief. Editor Names Assistants Graduate Elected to Presidency Floyd L. Hockenhull, A.B. 20, manager of circulation for the numerous Cappar publications of Topela, was elected president of the Midwest Circulation Association and of the Kansas University in Kansas City, Mo., yesterday. Mr. Hockenhull was a major in the department of journalism. Senate for Repeal Washington. Feb. 16.—(UP) The senate late today voted 63 to 22 to submit to the states a resolution repealing the eighteenth amendment to the constitution. The measure now goes to the house, and if approved by a two thirds vote will be submitted to the states. Resolution Passes 63 to 22 Goes to House Garner Confidence of 'Repair'风暴 February, Feb. 13; UP-Spencer Garnar won election in a runoff that the passed the prohibition repeal resolution today he would bring it up for action in the house Monday. He said he was confident he would be by the necessary two-thirds majority. Garner Confident of Repeal Varsity Management Institutes New Plan McKnight Announcees Two Hour Dances This Semester The varancy dance management, according to announcement made this week, is now making plans for the initiation of a new system of entertainment for the second semester dances. Beginning with the next舞 Saturday night, Feb. 25, all regular variaties will be only two hours in length. The new time schedule will do away with the intermission period, patrons be furnished two full hours of continuous dance music from 10' o'clock until midnight. This new feature will allow students to interact and does not affect the combined varsity and class parties or the special all-University parties. "This new time schedule is being put into effect," explained Phil McKnight, c33, varsity dance manager, "in order to avoid possible abandon of the rest of the varsity schedule, and yet to insure the continuation of University dances for the student body." "It has been necessary, after a winter season of financial difficulties, to make some change in the present arrangement. Investigation has shown that a ballet company danced at dances before 9:30, which with an intermission that usually takes a half hour, leaves only two hours of dancing. It is the purpose of the new plan to furnish this same amount of dancing and provide it for the lowered expenses save the student money by way of lowered admissions." "This lowered admission," McKnight added, "makes it possible for the varities to compete with the lowered admission prices of the剧院 and yet guard against the price of music as music provided previously." Louis Siebers and his orchestra will play for the two-hour varsity to be held a week from this Saturday in St. Louis, but it will be on March 17 and the Senior Cakwale on April 21 will probably be three or four hour parties, as has been the custom in the past few years, although the concert did not made final arrangements as yet. Motion pictures of the Wanmanaka race in New York, Feb. 4, showing Glenn Cunningham winning, have been shown. The third race will be shown the last times tonight. Seeks Members Cunningham in News Reel El Ateneo will meet next Thursday at 4:30 in 113 East Administration. Anyone wishes to gain membership Freed Jesus or Jacqueline Van Deyster. AUTHORIZED PARTIES Friday, Feb. 17 Saturday, Feb. 18 Corbin hall, house, 12 p.m. Sigma Nu, house, 12 p.m. Delta Tau Delta, house, 12 p.m. Wesley foundation, Methodist church, 11 p.m. AGNES HUSBANI Dean of Women. WEATHER Kansas—Partly cloudy tonight and Friday; slightly colder Friday. PRESIDENT-ELECT ROOSEVELT TELLS HIS STORY OF ATTEMPTED ASSASSINATION Events as They Took Place Following Speech Described by New Yorker DRIVER TOLD TO STOP Enbore the Roosevelt Special Train Encode to New York, Feb. 16—(UP)-President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt early afternoon told newspaper men his experiences as a "target for the bullets hater of president and kings." Mr. Ronevelt spoke calmly and showed no trace of the ordel in which he saw his friend, Mayor Anton Cleron, who shot down and four others wounded. "I have heard so many accounts myself," he said, "that I have been trying to think what really happened as I saw it. After I had finished speaking, someone from the talking picture people climbed on the back of the car and, 'you must repeat the speech for us.' I said I would not. Four Counts Filed on Zangara Miami, Feb. 16—(UP) - Complaints charging assault and attempt to commit murder on four counts were released Tuesday. The zangara who attempted to assassinate President-elect Roosevelt last night. The information against Zangara was prepared by County Solicitor Charles A. Moorehead. He said the complaint did not mention Mayor Joseph H. Chicago, and Ms. Joseph H. Gill, of Miami, two of Zangara's victims. "We merely mentioned the other victims of the shooting, then if either Mrs. Gill or Cermak die, we will add the charges to first death graveyard." "We have come 1000 miles for this," I said, I am very sorry, but I can't do it. Having said that, I slid off the back of the car into the seat. A man came forward with a long telegram and started telling me that it contained. While he was taking I leaned forward. Just then I heard what I thought was a fire cracker, then several more firecrackers started and back up the STARTER car, the startler car, the startler car. "I looked around and saw Mayor Cermak doubled up, and Mrs. Gill collapsed. I told the chauffer to stop. He did, about 15 feet from where we started. The secret service men shouted, 'Get out of the crowd!' The chauffer said, 'Don't look back. I saw Cermak being carried along and we put him in our car.' "He was alive, but I was afraid he wouldn't last. I got my hand on his pulse and found none. He was on the seat with me, and I had my left arm around him. I hold him all the way to the ground and his pulse constantly improved." LANDON SENDS TELEGRAM Congratulates Roosevelt on Escape From Death or Injury Topcina, Feb. 16—(UP)—Governor Landon today sent President-sheet Roosevelt a telegram congratulating him on his escape from attempted assassination at Miamu. "The news of the tragedy in which you so narrowly escaped has been a great shock to the nation," it read. Matsuka Is 'Shocked' "It would seem that only by the interference of providence your life was saved. We are deeply sorry for Mr. Cernak and the others who were injured when our vehicle struck a vehicle relieved to learn that you were spared from any harm in the affair." Geneve, Feb. 16—(UOP) -Youkaia Matsuike, Japanese delegate to the League of Nations, sent the following message today to President-elect Roosevelt: "I am deeply shocked to learn of the wretched attack on your person, but am greatly relieved by its failure. With best ain't good wishes." Foster Elected Grand Master of Kansas Lodge University Registrar I Given High Position by Masons Wichita, Feb. 16 — (UP) George O. Foster of the University of Kansas was today elected grand master of the Grand Lodge of Kannas, Ancient Free and Accepted Mason, at the annual meeting of the Grand lodge. William T. Cotter of Lawrence, was elected treasurer, a position he has hold since 1910. George O. Foster, today elected grand master of the Grand Lodge of Kaua, A. F. & A. M., came to the University in bill as clerk in the office of Chan-chao Man, and came with registration came into register of the then small University, and the year following was made registra- nt—a position he has held since 1901. He received毕业 from the University in 1901. M. Foster was made a member of Lawrence Lodge No. 6, of the Masonite order in January 1955, and in 1924 was master of the local lodge. He took additional Masonite degrees, and was made a thirty-third degree Mason a few years ago. He is also a member of the local chapter of Acacia fraternity. Mr. Foster has been an officer of the Grand Lodge of Masons since 1390, and was today elevated to the highest position in the lodge. Dr. William L. Burdick, vice president of the University and also a member of Lawrence Lodge No. 6, was ground master of the Kansas Masins in Sigma Delta Chi Initiates Sigma Delta Chi, honorary journalism fraternity, held initiation in the Memorial Union Tuesday for Paul V. Miner, e35; Frederick W. Miner, e36; Richard J. McGraw, e35. Following the initiation refresheres were served at the Union fountain. Late Photograph of Roosevelt THE EDITOR President-elect Franklin D. Roseveil is shown with Bernard M. Baruch who is being considered for the new cabinet which will be formed shortly. The president-elect and the potential cabinet member are enjoying a joke told by Baruch. Woman's Heroism Aids New Yorker in Escaping Death Mayor Cermak of Chicago, Victim of Assassins' Bullets Is in Danger FOUR OTHERS HURT Miami. Feb. 16—(U-P) President-Elect Franklin D. Rosewell, saved from an assassin ballot by the heroism of a woman, departed for New York today, leaving behind him dangerously冠中。Mayor Anton Cazon, of Chicago. Mr. Roosevelt's last act before leaving the accem of the most dramatic event of his career was to visit the Jackson Memorial hospital and express warmth of comfort and hope to Cormark of last night's attempted assassination. For five minutes he remained with the mayor whose name is on the hospital danger list, and then in turn went to the hospital where it was wounded and Miss Margaret Maximum Penalty Is 100 Years Tallahassee, Fla. Feb. 16 — (UP) A possible maximum punishment a defendant posed upon Guiseppe Zangara, who attempted to assassinate President-elect Roosevelt at Miami last night. Cary D. Lardis, attorney general of the state, pleaded guilty. "Death in the electric chair is reserved for outright murder and for criminal assault in Florida, but for attempt to murder, 20 years' imprisonment is the maximum. With five persons shot by Zanganas, he could be sentenced to 20 year teams for death consecutively, or a total of 100 years. In event any of the victims died the attorney general said the charge would be changed to murder. Kruis of Newark, N. J., W. Jillian Sinnett of New York, and Russell Caldwell of Florida, less seriously wounded. Meanwhile police were interrogating Giuseppe Zangara, diminutive anarchist who blamed "stomachache" and a hatred of the rich and powerful for the impulse that led him to fire a volley of six shots at the president-elect and his party last night. Zangara was held on the eighteenth floor of the skyscraper city hall, safe from meb anger. The condition of both buildings was reported. Gill was reported as critical today. As the president-elect wheeled softly through the corridors of the hospital he approached Mill. Gill's room where she was undergoing a blood transfusion. Mill, Gill, conscious and recognizing the presence of the president-elect, smiled weakly in response to his murmured expressions of sympathy and hope. Pollice regulations, already drastic, were tightened up as Mr. Rosewell, surrounded by his team, had a visit to the hospital. Even members of the Rosewell Special Guards for New Yorkers New York, Feb. 16—(UP)—Special guards will be provided today for many prominent public officials in New York as the result of the attack on President-elect Roosevelt's party in Miami. "Crank" outbreaks usually follow such spectacular公安罪诉警, and for that reason uniformed men have been instructed to pay particular attention to the homes of Alfred E. Smith, Mayor John O'Brien, the city hall, and Mr. Rosevelt's town house. family had difficulty in getting through the heavy line. Several thousand Miami citizens and visitors gathered behind the ropes to cheer as he passed. The president-elect atalian at the train station would go to go to the train. In the last hours of his stay in Miami he learned of the courageous action of Mrs. W. L. Cross, wife of a Miami physician, who seized the would-be-killer's hand before he could Roegswol party and deflected the bullets from their course. PAGE TWO 3 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS THURSDAY FEBRUARY 16, 1932 University Dailv Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANFAS Editor-In-Chief ... PAUL V. MINER Associate Editors Alfreda Bradley Harward Turtle Managing Editor HENRY KNOSS Makeup Editor VINCE Pinell Neighbour Editor MARGARET Group Telebright Editor MARCO Maiman Arnold Kreutzerman Society Editor JOSEPH Coughill Society Editor MADRE Brown Alumni Editor PALDEN Sunday Editor DORESTH Smith ADVERTISING MORG. MARCHEART INC. District Manager JACK Galbraith District Manager Robert Whitman Maryce Irvine Bickman Kirkson Betty Milligan Alfreda Brookeck Maureen Cawley Armand Kreiman Warren Smith Jeffrey Smith Business Office KU, 0 Business Office KU, 0 Night Connection, Business Office 297K Night Connection, News Room 767K Published in the afternoon, five times a week Published in the morning, four times a week partment of Journalism of the University of Maryland from the Press of the Department of Journalism. Subscription price, $4.00 per year, payable in advance. Stuartonie cost, 16 each. Nurtured as second-class matter September 17, 1819, at the office at lawrence, Kansas. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1933 A WISE MOVE By its refusal to make a legislative football of the funds for the state schools, the Kansas state legislature has acted in a progressive spirit. At a time like this legislatures are subjected to enormous pressure from their constituencies all centering on one idea—the reduction of state expenditures. There is no doubt that there is a need for such a reduction. But when the higher educational institutions are singled out to bear the brunt of the proposed curtailments, there arise reasonable doubts about the wisdom of such a proceeding. Especially when the legislature proposes to grapple with the problems of education is this true. The Board of Regents and the administrations of the various state institutions are undoubtedly the agencies most capable of dealing intelligently with their individual problems of education. In public statements and administrative action both of these bodies have disclosed a grasp of the current situation and have advocated reasonable economies. With such an expression of views the legislature should have rested easily. It is unfair to the citizen, and also to the youth of the state, to curtail educational progress. Higher educational institutions have already given more than a fair return to the state and to handicap their operations unnecessarily now would be short-sighted in the extreme. A few cautious students, upon hearing that the R.O.T.C. unit plans to fire at moving targets in a corrective drill, have been taking a longer way home, to stay as far as possible away from Fowler Shops. JOKING ASIDE Four months of careful work in photography of fall semester events for the 1933 Jayhawker is missing. It is thought they have been taken merely for the sake of playing a prank on the editors. If this is the correct explanation, the childish joke has gone a little too far. The dynamiting of Rock Chalk cairm might be called a prunk also, for the two destructive deeds were done without any other apparent motive. The theft of a package of prints is a serious loss to the Jayhawker, but to no one else would the pictures be valuable. Records of past events, some of which cannot be replaced, are gone; painstaking work has gone for nothing, unless the photographs can be found. The University has enough faith in its students to believe that if the theft was committed merely for a joke, the pranksters will be honorable enough to return the prints now that they realize the seriousness of the affair. The editors have arranged that they may be left in the Memorial Union without fear of identification. It is time for the loke to end. When are the profs going to quit wasting time explaining to their classes how to avoid wasting time? THE STORM IN THE EAST Once again far-eastern affairs spring into the spotlight of the world's news as another crisis between Japan and the League of Nations approaches. This time, apparently, the dispute has passed the point of being smoothed over. Some definite action must result. The League, influenced by Great Britain's interests in the Orient, is standing firm on her position that Japan must change her policies. The authorities at Tokio, reinforced in their stand by the recent statement of the Emperor, refuse to yield in any particular. The American far-eastern policy, an outside but decidedly influential factor in the dispute, remains unchanged. What will happen no one knows. If Japan's threat to withdraw from the League and seek her destiny without its aid, and counter to its purposes, is merely a bluff, it is inevitable that it will be called. In such a case, the League will at once gain the upper hand, and have a tremendous advantage in future difficulties of the same kind. If the Japanese are not bluffing, however, and the real power of the League is at once put to an acid test, the consequences are apt to be much greater than is commonly suspected. The Kansan points with mingled pride and consternation to the typographical error in yesterday's column which spoke of the ten thousand boxes of pancake "flower" turned out by a machine in an eight-hour shift. All we can say is, it just goes to show what a machine can do when it really settles down to business and takes its self serious! A FEATHER IN HIS CAP Another handsome feather was stuck into Glenn Cunningham's already heavily plumed cap when the New York Athletic club last Monday awarded him the Wana-maker trophy. The Wannamaker award is one of the most highly desired prizes given to athletes. It is presented to the contestant in the Milrose games who achieves the greatest performance. By beating Gene Venake, present record holder in the mile run, Cunningham proved his right to be rated among the best milers in the world. It was a remarkable achievement. It was the result of faithful training, and the runner deserves all the praise he will get. And when Cunningham he will the Wanamaker award he not only placed a feather in his own cap—he also added a choice tailfeather to the Kansas Jayhawker. QUIPS from other QUILLS At McGill University (Montreal) the students are worried about whether a longer kis is conducive of more bliss than a short one. One boy, in proving that it was stated that maximum satisfaction was derived when contact held over time, said that if you and a long one goes, its just a matter of time till the short one-minute wouldn't be enough—so they tell me, so they tell me —J. in Chicago Daily Monarch. “. . . Herbert Hoover was included, not because of his record as President but because of his services as war-time food administrator and Secretary of Commerce”—New York Times. Half of Hoover’s work was done from the frying pan to the fire. Make it an “a” instead of an “o”. And we’ll forget all about it—D.S. in Daily Tar Heel. The editor of The Gassette will celebrate the arrival of some Lucky Strike and Chesterfield ads by having his wife buy some T-bone stocks for the Sun-Times, which would each such an advertisement would have warned a celebration — Augusta Gazette. "There is danger in using that slagon, {Buy American}, these days. Some country with a little money left might misinterpret it for 'Buy America' and go ahead and do it. — Texas State Lose-O." Walleye girls have decided not to speak to one another when meeting on the campus because greeting the same persons several times a day is tiring. Yet how their mouths will wag over the icecups—Oregon State Barometer. After all three matches on Washington, citizens are reported planning a march on Lincoln, Neb. What about Madison and Monroe, Wis., Jackson, Taft, Calif., and Cleveland, O.T. Texas State Lose-O. Right off we want to say we think going to bed is a plenty sissy way of cursing a cold. Even at that we've been wondering if England couldn't get us off that cold standard, too—EJ. in Oklahoma Daily. Today was Mrs. Archie Highball's birthday. Archie bought her a snow shovel for a present. The Highball residence is located on three streets so Archie got the best shovel obtainable—Augusta Gazette. Bartiering has reached the college campus, it is reported. But it's old stuff to some coeds, who have been attempt-mentalized by a lack of experience for many years. -Hutchinson News. A new electrical device, when thrust into a fruit, causes the latter to give off a distinguishing sound. Probably a banana gives forth a peel, and a raspberry sounds like a bird—Texas State Lass-O. --makes him understand that Pat Thayer is unacquainted. Suppose he gets the idea that Thayer has been cheating him at cards? "I't fun to be fooled but it' more fun to know," said a student at St Thomas college, as he staggered out of the building room. W-D in Marquette Tribune. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXX Thursday, Feb. 16, 1933 No. 103 Notice die at Chancellor's Office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication days and 11:30 a.m. for Sunday tickets. Any student who moved between semesters should record his new address t the Registrar's office at once, to be included in the Directory supplement. CHANGE OF ADDRESS: CHEMICAL ENGINEERS: There will be a meeting of the Kannas Association at 7:30 this evening in Marvin hall. There will be refs W. A. HARDESTY JR., President Group No. 1 Co-Ed club, south of Fifteenth street, will meet this evening from 7 to 9 o'clock in the Memorial Union. Please bring five cents. CO-ED CLUB. DIST. 1; All seniors who expect to receive their degrees at the end of the first semester should pay the diploma fee of $8 at the business office by the 20th of March. Please refer to the "Scholarship Information" page for details. CATHERINE SIEBERS, Secretary DIPLOMA FEE: There will be a meeting of the K.U. Dramatic club this evening at 8 o'clock in Green hall. GENE HIBBS, President. Students may obtain first semester grades at the Registrar's office according to the following schedule of classes: DRAMATIC CLUB: Students may call first semester grades at the Registrar's office according to the following schedule of times: Monday, Feb. 20—A to G, inclusive Tuesday, Feb. 21—H to M, inclusive Thursday, Feb. 23—N to S, inclusive Friday, Feb. 24—G, inclusive Saturday, Feb. 25—Those unable to appear at the scheduled time. GRADES: GEORGE O. FOSTER, Registrar. K. U. RADIO CLUB: There will be a meeting of the R.U. Radio club this evening at 7:30 in room 118. There will be Gop Omer will give the technical talk. All persons interested are invited to attend. The Men's Glee club will meet in Marvin hall on Friday at 4:30 p.m., instead of at the university auditorium. WILLIAM PILCHER, Director. MEN'S GLEE CLUB: The May Day Mystery Copyright by Octavus Roy Cohen. Octavus Roy Cohen SYNOPSIS AAAAAAAAAA CHAPTER I—Antonette Peyton, 1967. A graduate of Marlind, response to Thomas' attention to Ivy Welch, seventeen-year-old, with bitter interruptions, ending with bitter recriminations, non, another student, long Taucher's life, another date with him, Taucher and Vernon a date with him, Taucher and Vernon WNU Service. CHAPTER 11.—Harry determines to see Thayer and end his association with the woman he has been supposed to her until she has been exposed to her husband's room at a fraternity house. Max Verlaine arrives and goes to his room. Tony ends up leaving the room, but Toni leaves the house almost immediately afterwards, visibly in a state of sadness. Tom finally feels较好, apparently clothing to be appropriate. CHAUPTER H.—LIEFFT Welch, 1879 begins her practice of law and is appointed by the new Governor to end the probation period of a man who each other. Which does not see what his life tells him to be married to Thayer, who tells him he is married to Tanner. CHAPTER IV, 1W—Website appeal to Chief Jake Mullen to rescind his defenses. He requested that Tearman refine his claims against the family for first house jointly, fnda Thayer's lands police chief, takes charge of the CHAPTER W—The Marlard bank is robbed of $100,000, the robber escaped and apparently badly wounded, Jim. He was taken to the dentist, cheese, and good naturech, comes to investigate the robber, Hankapalek Pike. Jim's dog, Mey Veron, was driving the car when Ms. Veron was driving the car. CHAPTER VI "It happened at the college-Mirr and university-lost before this bank was opened," said Vernon. Vernon was prevented for the killing the minute he returned to the campus. Harvey scratched his head. "I'm up in the air, Mr Flake. You're not in my line of business, you know anything about any murder, who got bumped off, and what man did that?" "Mm-hun! They are sure a h=1 on make'n arrests. Guess they feel've got to keep in practice, Whose murder was Vernon arrested for?" "I see . . . Who arrested him?" "The local police." "A man named Thayer—Paterson Thayer. They call him Pat." "Yes. I guess you'd call him that. He came to Marland two years ago and entered the junior class. He graduated from UCLA. Ugly runners followed him here. They said he had been invited to leave the two northern colleges which he had attended, was a picturecreature figure, had humiliated himself—nothing collegiate about him." "Mum! Nasty business. Thayer must have been an awful careless young man." "And his connection with Vernon?" "That's what worries me. They have been locked up to Thayer, and I think Thayer had a supreme contempt for Vernon. But that didn't prevent the older man from bleeding Max." "About twenty-three or four." "How old?" "Wards, I believe. And If any evidence is to be given the rumors which followed Thayer to Maryland, he was quite expert in manipulating them. In the past two years, Hanvey, about forty thousand dollars' worth of money given by Vernon in favor of Pat Thayer have passed through this bank." "It doesn't look good for the boy, Harvey. Thyer gets all his money overboard," she said. Then Thuer stems the one thing left to Vernon—his girl. Of course we can smile, but I fancy that even to a boy. You'll need someone else's ladya's affections could cut pretty deeply. But well go a step further; you're going to be furious, but also open his eyes. It "I think so. He must have had a rather hypnotic manner because every player we have played their two hundred game wasn't entirely straight, I found I stirred up a homeowner's nest. He hitterly resented any new rule, and he said that the five thousand dollars Vernon owed when he came to me was replayed." Then Treyor to cover a garnishment "died." "No-o. You see, no one but myself knows how deeply involved Max Verse was arrested largely on circumstantial evidence, and because it developed that they had bad a bitter quarrel on the campus less than an hour after he left." Harvey was silent for a moment. "Interesting chap, this Thayer. Regular college hear, eh?" "The idea seems to be that Thayer stole Vernon's girl." "And It was because of this that Vernon has been arrested for Thayer's murder?" "Taking all that for granted," then "went on the tanker, obviously pleased by Jim's approval, 'we can undo this'," she continued. "I could go crazy. The worm having its inevitable turn. We do know positively that shortly after our campus quarred Vernon went to the traternity and the worms had lived and made no secret of the fact that he was bitterly angry with Thayer. A little later Vernon left the place in his car and still later Thayer's head was on the tanker. He had been sathed in the throat." Fiske paused for a moment and Hanvey looked up intersely, "Durned if you isn't clever, Mr. Fike. Lennie hear some more." "And even, without knowing what you knew about the money situation, they spotted Vernon as the man, eh?" "Yes if they heard about this . . . I’m worried about the kid, Hanvey, Maybe he killed Thayer and maybe he shot himself. The result of a quarrel and a fight, the toy needs help. We have the loss of what must have appeared to him as an inexhaustible fortune; his desperation over dimes; the five thousand dollars he lost; and we have a staggeringly strong reason why he must have been mixed up in the robbery of this bank. I am afraid Vernon did one or the other, and frankly, Hanvey, I do not believe with the robber than the murder." The detective lighted another cigar. There was a silence for a few minutes and he took his place. Seward placed a card on Handlough Seward's desk. Flies glanced at it and buzzed the air. "Who is John Reagan?" asked Jim. "Chief of the Marina and detective force. If you'd rather not have him in come." "Golly! He's the one man I'd like to talk to." two minutes later Regan shouted into the room; trim and efficient. He paid no attention to the banker, but asked why he was shaking his hands. "I want to shake hands with you, Hanvey," he said heartily. "All my life I've wanted to make a real defense." Harvey grinned like a kid. "Whatcha doing, Reagan—taking me for a biggy ride?" "I mean it." The local chief turned on Fiske. "Do you know who this feller is, Mr. Fiske?" He's the cops' delight. He never makes a mistake—" "Say, wait a minute. Renegan. Please I missed more easy ones, then I'm ready. I have. But my people don't advertise the failures so awful prominent." "Hooey!" said Reagan with hearty admiration. "And the minute I heard his lies down I followed you here. I waned to do me a favor—a big one?" "Take charge of two cases here: the robbery of this bank and the murder over at the college." "Yeh. . . ?" "Man! I never fool around with TALISHA'S WORLD WAR II PRESIDENTIAL OFFICE MVE14 "Man! I Never Fool Around With Killings. They're Too Dog-Goned Messy." killings. They're too dog-goned messy." "You're handling this bank thing, tin't you?" "Then you'll have to take on the other." "Because," announced Ragan er隋, "they're tied up tight together. I don't know how they were done, but I've got the baby who did 'em both! We were gone. They were killed Thuer and then came over here and capped the milt pay roll." "Why?" Randolph Flake looked pleadingly at Hanvey, and the Gargantuan detective slowly extended his hand to Rangan. "Vernon, Maxwell Vernon." "Done with you," said Jim. "If you really want me, I'll take charge. But if I do, things are to be handled my way." "Oh, boy!" Reagan was enthusiastic. "Take my word for it, Harvine—you're the boss. I won't do nothing but hang around and listen." Reagan, if you don't mind." "Wrong," grinned Jim. "You're go nal talk—and you'll start right now." The banker nodded and Reagan proceeded. "Well, that hate the case, I say that I wouldn't like to be in this kid's shoes. I guess you want to know at the doree I got on Vernon, don't Randolph Flake started to interrupt. "I told Haney-" A big, fleshy paw was raised in ad montion. "I'd rather hear this direct from "First, the robber was using Mix Vernon's car and it's a ten to one net that Vernon was driving it. Second, after the robber occurred Vernon drove right through Birmingham and I've heard of it. You just come back from there." "How far is Steel City?" "Eighty miles from Birmingham, a hummed miles from near me. He carried the package on his back, and now one on a trade in basis. Next morning they closed the deal and Veron turned in his old car on a new lease. The smoked snackers—in cash. Now the funny part, Harvey, is that from all I can gather Veron has been broke." "What makes you think that?" Hanvey nodded. "Sounds queer, Reagan, And then what?" "Floor rug, eh? What does that mean?" "I Henry," Rojas's face was beaming with perplexed pride, "i dis covered that when Vernon traded in a house where something missing, the floor rug." "If it was the boy's car." "Yes, it was rather painful, too." "I'll it it was. Now, then, it's nuttier than it was," she said. The patoloa was bleeding pretty free and easy when he piled into the back of her. "It means this! I'm sure Mr. Flake, here, has told you all about the robbery and now Mr. Hurke and the stick up guy shot shothed each other. The feller must have been bit pretty hard because there was blood on the floor and he was holding up the blood to the between the front door and the curb. 'Mim that so, Mr. Flake?' Hanvey blinked. "You ain't no body's damfoot. John Rengan." "We'll take that for granted. Anyway, he was bleeding. That blood was red and he was rug, because we had to remember just a man who has just robbed a bank wouldn't be fool enough to sit on the floor if he was rugged, because he was curled up on the floor. Now then, I just naturally believe it would have been common sense for Vernon and his brother to wear blood-stained rug, because it would have looked pretty queer if they have looked pretty queer if they "Thanks. Now, there's one more up. I looked at the car Vernon traded in, and Jim—there was blood right by the sills, just where it would be. He had to run the floor rug before the rug was thrown away. Get what that means? It proves that there was a floor rug there originally." "Sure does, John." "Then," interrogated Randolph Fiske hopefully, "you're positive, Mr. Reagan, that Max Vernon was mixed up in the robbery of this bank?" "The case against him looks about two hundred proof, Mr. Fiske." "Why?" "I'm glad," said the banker simply. Reagan was surprised, "Glad?" "Yes." "Because if Veron helped rob this bank, then he couldn't have killed Paterson Thayer. Good G —! I remember it!" he said of his child; this boy; he does look like a person who could murder a man and go straight from that crime to the robbery of a bank, and then calmly release his own body as a idea of learning his regular life?" "He does not," answered Reagan promptly. "But Jim Hanley will tell you what I'm saying is true, Mr. Fisker; You can't tell from a feller's book just what hell do he if he gets plenty desperate. 'Am tthis so, Jim?' and they call her Tong—who, from all I can find out, is one regular fighter. This Peyton Kid comes walking down the street, and he is taller than Vernon did. And she turns in at a similar fraternity house. That give the two kids a lot because they explained to me that it's against all mankind to take over a fraternity house without a chaperone. "You see!" said Iregan triumphant. He produced a little notebook from his pocket and consulted its pages. "Here's as near as I can go to the happenings of day before yesday—May first." "Shortly before noon Pat Thayer and Max Vernon meet on the campus Thayer is walking with Vernor's girl. They have a row—bobs of the students from class 10 come in from classes and start wasting time on the porch of the—the-h-11 I don't know how you pronounce it, but it's spelled P-S-I." -"The Psi Tau Thewa fraternity house. That's a sort of college secret society like the Masons or Elks, or something like that. These are a lot harder to get at than at that. There's a long tail bird with a sad face and a big mouth and loss of sense. His name is Farnum. The other guy is his buddy; slimy little cat with sharp teeth them when things were still bat and they gave me a fastful of real done. "About half-mart twelve, Iat Thayer strolls down the hill from the college and enters this house. The guess is that cause nobody saw him anywhere else in the building. A few minutes later Max Vernon drives down the street in front of his house and looks in looksee as a couple goals, Forum and Gleason, trying to be pleasant and chatty, call out to him that suggests he wants to sit in his room. And then the shock of their lives because Vernon swings on them and says he don't give two hosts in h—where he's sitting —leaving my kids kids google-eyed. "Then, before they get over this shock, something else happens. There's a girl in school—Antoinette Peyton. "But that n't all, either. Jim; because it seems that this Miss Pigton rambles up on the porch and asks her to get out of his room and offer to叫 him. She says not to bother, she'll go right up. That knocks 'em for a goal, and they sit back gacing like a couple fish while she calmly starts a big game. The resulting question is Thayer. You call it all straight, Jim?" "Believe so, I mean. You sure have found out a heap." "I won't." promised Hanvey. "Gostil!" murmured Jim, "they must have thought he was a popular guy. Who was this new feller?" "Yeh- and there's a heap more. About a quarter past one Miss Peyton. About a quarter past two She pods to the two kids, but don't stop for any conversation. At at about a quarter before two o'clock Max Verlon comes buiting downstairs and there is such an affection as a hello. He has on a different suit of clothes and there is a bundle under his arm. He beats it out and he goes into the yard, he yawns this bundle in the yard, he goes down the hill at about forty, turning in the general direction of this bank. Later I'll tell you some details that bundle he did. Don't forget it." "Fifteen minutes later Forman and Glenn find out there's still no immune to shocks when another guy comes down the hill to the fraternity house and impresses for Pat Thayer." "Gasth!" mirrured Jim, "they must "A progres "A what?" "A professor. And a whale of a fine feller, too. He only graduated last June and knew that he was the best man in the world," his name is Welch-Larry Welch—and, while I hate to land it on him, he's got a pretty剥起-up with Thayer." "In the first place, this Miss Perton who had just been to Thirteen's room is supposed to be Wolch's girl. Everybody knows that she is about each other. In the second place, Welch is the brother of the girl that Pat Thuray and Max Vernon are." Hanvey gave not the slightest indication of interest in Reagan's story—but both the detective and the bank assured that he was missing nothing. "Who called you?" "Larry Welch remained opa-tates only a few minutes," continued Reina, as she saw he looked kind of worked up and worked up again. came out and he beasted back up the bill to the college. or five ten mines and he put on boots on the porch hear all he—bust loose inside. Yelling and screaming and all, and they hear a fellow com-posed on the porch hear all he—bust loose inside. Out on the porch comes the fainter—a wap named Carminicu. Hirs durn near cuckoo, but he seems to have seen Saw Thayer door party open and could see Thayer's light. Thought Thayer was most probably drunk—or maybe sick. Went in to straighten Thayer and—and discovered that he was dead." "Nigh-ah not 'Things' body. Carrier has that and they want to ship it o his home tomorrow. His sister is are to take charge." "Either Farnum or Gleason, I don't know which." "And you think that Max Vernon killed him?" "I almost think he did." "But a minute ago you said—" "That's the rotten part of this case, Hanwei. I've got too much doop against so many folks. I could contend with that if it wasn't for two other people." "Miss Peyton and Larry Welch Thayer's other visitors." "I see. . . ." Huwey was absorbed in his toothpick. "Where are they, John?" Reagan looked up brightly." Regina looked up brigantly. "They're under arrest, too," he announced pridefully. (To be continued tomorrow) IF YOU MISSED THE FIRST CHAPTERS of "The May Day Mystery" you may secure back copies of the Kansan at the Kansan Business Office. FOR LUNCH Ham Salad Sandwich and Hot Chocolate Union Fountain Sub Basement, Memorial Union THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10. 1933 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE THREE Hill Society Call K. U.-25 Before 12:30 p. m. Entertain With Entertain With A Bridge Luncheon Mrs. C. H. Landes, Mrs. J. N. Gilbert and Mrs. William Hutig entertained with a bridge lunchoon Tuesday afternoon at the Manor. Red sweet pea and ferns, Valentine place cards were used in decorating the tables. Those receiving bridge honors were contract, Mergetrude Pearson, high Mrs. W. U. Lovitt, low; auction, Mrs. Nauhmian, high, Mr. Nell Bletchler. Among those present were Miss Agnes Husband, Mrs. W. F. Bowersock, Mrs. Zada M. Heisler, Mrs. Niki Ogden, Mrs. Mary Allen, Mrs. L. C. Harris, Mrs. Frances Goodell, Mrs. Emma Fagan, Mrs. W. U. Levi, Mrs. N. K. Moore, Mrs. James St. Clare, Eva Oakes, Mrs. S. T. Stover, Mrs. Edith Miller, Mrs. S. White, C. A. Thomas, Mrs. Franklin White, Mrs. Bernice Burhill, Mrs. Rachel Butler, Mrs. Bell Butcher, Mrs. Gentrude Pearsona Mrs. Edith Martin, Mrs. O. W. Nauman, Mrs. Ralph Baldwin, Mrs. Perkins and Miss Lucy McCullash. Phi Mus Give Program Elect Temporary Officers A group of seven men from the Ph Mpu house, presented a recital to the Parkwood Ladies Club of Kansas City, Kana. Wednesday. The program con- voiced the theme of justice, voice; solos as well as a quartet arrangement. Those making the trip were Elmer R. Anderson, fa3; Robert Slater, fa3; 35. Albert Evens, c:3; Milton Webster, b:unl; Lyle Bailley, b:unl; Robert D. Viel, c:35; and Rollin D. Viel, c:35. Nelson-Porter Marriage Officers of Alpha Delta Pi were elected to fill vacancies Monday night Bernice Cook, c'33, succeeded Jean Coghill as president, Jennie Kearn, c'33, was elected vice-president, and Madeline Brides, c'33, rush captain. These offices are to be held until the regular election which will be in March Word was received here today of the marriage of Paul Porter, 28, to eleiano Nelson of Washington, D. C., on Feb. 17, 2016. The late President of the League of Industrial Democracy is KU DICKINSON Where Students Meet NOW! FRIDAY - SATURDAY What ___! Me Take Money? No Sir! ___ But I’ll take diamonds! (Diamond Lou) — in — Mae West (He Was Her Man But) "She Done Him Wrong" SUN-MON-TUES 10 Authors Wrote This Thunderbolt! NANCY CARROLL "The Woman Accused" 'The Sign of the Cross' Is Coming Soon New York city, Mrs. Porter is a graduate of Wellesley and a daughter of Congressman John Edward Nelscm from Maine. Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Moen of La Crossie, Wisc., announces the engagement and the approaching marriage of their daughter, Miss Olyne M. Moen to Charles Kruz Jr. of Wichita, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Proudfoot of the University of Kansas in 1031 and was affiliated with Delta Upsilon. Mr. and Mrs. David Ainsworth of Wichita announce the birth of a son, David Jr. Mr. Ainsworth is a graduate of the University of Kansas and a member of Phi Kappa Psi. He is now an oil man in Wichita. Newcomers Club met this afternoon at the home of Mrs. Dugald Jackson, 1804 Mississippi street. Ms. Frances Miller and Dr. Dennis Schultz play and dance literary art, read a play. Theta Epilogue, a Baptist church solemnly, was entertained with a buffet supper Tuesday evening by Mr. Frank Wagner at her home on University heights. The women of Corbin ball are hosts to men at an evening dance each Thursday between 7 and 8 o'clock. They invite all men to come tonight. Delta Zeta entertained rushes with a tea this afternoon, at 4:30 o'clock. Mrs. O. W. Nauman, housemother poured. Coed-club, group I. I will meet this evening from 7 to 8 oclock in the Memorial Union. The evening will be spent in playing bridge. Helen Doriscar of Kansas City, Mo. is a guest at the Sigma Kappa house. Delta Tau Delta will entertain with a party tomorrow night. Louie Siebers' orchestra will play. Dale Savage, e35, will be a dinner guest at the Triangle house tonight. Koenig Names Promotions R. O. T. C. Cadet Officers Are Anounced for Coming Semester Tel. 666 Those being promoted in the engineering unit are: Cadet Major George E. Hubrig, e33; Cadet Captain Ralph C. Ayes, e33; Cadet Captain George M. Brown, e33; Cadet Captain Theodore M. Hawney, e33; Cadet Captain Dean D. Haney, e33; Cadet Captain Harry H. Potetse, e33; Cadet First Lieutenant Edwin L. Barber, Jr., e33; and Cadet First Lieutenant James H. Compton, Jr., e34. Cadet First Lieutenant Marilou J. Chaudra, euncl; Cadet First Lieutenant W. Dickinson, e33; Cadet First Lieutenant Francis H. Dill, sp; Cadet First Lieutenant David J. Paul, e33; Cadet First Lieutenant Orffa C. French, e33; Cadet First Lieutenant Harold I. Hoover, e33; Cadet First Lieutenant Charles W. Kimye, e33; Cadest First Lieutenant Elwood J. Lee, e34; Cadest First Lieutenant Clarence R. Sifers, e35; Cadest First Lieutenant Edward A. Smiley, e34; Cadest First Lieutenant Emily A. Smith, e34; Cadest First Lieutenant Henry A. White, e33; and Cadet First Lieutenant Donald E. Witt, b33. Promotions in both the coast artillery and engineering units of the R. O. T. C, for the coming semester were announced yesterday by Major W. C. Those receiving promotions in the coast artillery unit are: Cadet Major William H. Bullard, c;33; Cadet Captain Carlton C. French, c;33; Royce S. Reirown, c;33; Cadet Captain John L. Sleeper, c;33; Cadet Captain George M. Sneep, c;33; Cadet Captain Guy W. Baker, c;44; Cadet First Lieutenant J. N. Blank, c' and m;33; Cadest First Lieutenant A. P.ОВел, c;44; Cadest First Lieutenant George M. Fiedler, sp; Cadet First Lieutenant D. Barr, sp; and George G. Newman, T34 Are You Going to Pieces? $1.00 you'll want to see our new picture puzzles done by Jack and Eric. Call them Marg. (You know, am I going to use the New Yorker, not the Washington Post?) Each puzzle contains over 300 bright, happily matched, interlocking tiles of 25x19 when finished. In six colors, colorfully interlocking. 15c and 25c ones when we can get them. Send The Daily Kansan home. Campus Map Puzzle $2.50 1021 Mass. The BOOK NOOK Forensic Schedule Includes Matches With Five Colleges Three, and Possibly Four Trips Planned; Five Matches Will Be at Home MEET ST. LOUIS TODAY The debating season of the University of Kansas is about to commence The debater spends the entire first semester in reading and studying his debalder thoroughly, and actual debating does not begin until the second semester. The debate schedule of the University of Kansas has not been definitely announced as yet, but the tentative one has been outlined. Lack of funds has greatly hindered the activities of the debate department this year, but a well-stocked library will be available that will give debating practice for every member of the squad. Professor E. C. Buehler, coach of the debate squab, announced that there will be three out-of-town trips this year, with a possible fourth if the funds can be raised. There will be live home debates and numerous inter-ethnic groups in church groups and civic organizations in Lawrence and neighboring cities. Harold Harding, 134, and Clement Hall, 133, left yesterday for St. Louis on the first trip of the season. They debated the negative side of the war debt question last night, with Wash.-Iowa native David McNaughtenitative. They debated St. Louis University today soon before the Optimist club of St. Louis on the same question. Their trip will be concluded by debating the university of Missouri tonight Columbia. Debate in St. Louis Today On March 3 and 4 the University will send a team to the annual Delta Sigma Rhio debating tournament held at Iowa City, Iowa. On March 10 a team will be send from Kansas to debate the University of Nebraska and the University of South Dakota. Every year the University of South Dakota holds one of its debates before their conference. The students will represent the University of Kansas will be honored by having this convoitation debate. Team Invited to Texas A team will also be sent to debate the University of Texas can be raised to finance the trip. Every year the University of Kansas debates the University of Texas before the high school assembly at San Antonio. The state high school debate subject is the opportunity to hear how college presents and refute arguments. The University of Texas has deemed this debate so important that if it succeeds, the expenses of the Kansas team. The University of Kansas forensic council is reluctant to abandon this trip as Texas has always proved one of the best debugging schools in the country. It is hoped that the funds available and that this debate can be held. On Feb. 21, St. Louis University will again meet a team from the University of Kansas, before an audience at St. Mary's College, Atchison, Kan. The team is a member of the University of Texas team from a Kansas team in Fraser theater. The question of fraternity taxation has been under the consideration of the Kansas state legislature since 1914. At that time the supreme court decided that "all property used for educational purposes shall be exempted from institutional" should be tax free. Fraternity houses were construed to be literary halls or dormitories. The supreme court also held that the ruling restricting fraternity property to one half acre was unconstitutional—that amount of land could not be limited. Frat Taxes Considered Since 1914; Bill Before Legislature Four Times Then in January, 1919, a bill was introduced in the house by Representative E. E. Brown, of the country distri- tutes, and Brown's friends the fraternities and sororites in Kansas Mr. Brown's main argument for taxing the fraternity property here is that Lawrence and Douglas county receives a majority of the members of the fraternities and sororities. Fraternity and sorority houses partially solve the dormitory problem at the University, the Greeks pointed out. University authorities agreed that the fraternities help to keep University academic standards high and they maintain high standards and ideals. Dr. Frank Rusch, chancellor at that time, also voiced his opinion that fraternity property should not be taxed because it is being belonged to various lodges and fraternities in the community at large. "The fraternities and sororites fill the same place in the University student's life," Dr. Rusch said. "We have in the life of the average citizen." The bill was finally killed in the legislature. On March 15 the University of Florida will debate on our campus and on March 28 the University of South Dakota will come here in a return debate. Again in February, 1923, a bill wi 18 Bedale Ambulant Over A radio debate has been arranged for Paula W. over station KMBC of Kansas City, Ms. a team from KU will meet a team composed of Kenneth Jordon, T32, and Charles Hassett, T32, former rebates at the University of Kansas who are now practicing law in Kansas City. There is a possibility of two or more debates yet to be arranged with other colleges. There has been a large demand this year by civic groups and church groups of Lawrence and this section of the state to have debates publicly. Already invitations have been received from several clubs in Topka, the Kiwian club at Atchison, the Kiwanis club of Kansas City, Kan., and numerous Lawrence organizations. It seems that this type of debate is becoming more and more popular and it is hoped that this field can be ex-ampled by some organizations as follows: Kenneth Sicuron, Gloom Sloan, Gunnar Myland, Menelous Lirus, Claudes Wood, Charles Heckler, Dernal Hults, Clement Hall, Harold Harding, Arthur Billings, Morris Hildreth, Robert Perry, and three freshman debaters that will debate junior college teams, Lyman Field, James Molly, and Screams Frighten Thieves Fall River, Mass. (U. P.)—Rudolph Holmes has his money in his pocket en route home from his variety store at night saved $100 when thieves seized him re- alized he had been away before they could get at the cash. -FINAL CLEANUP- TOPCOATS $1495 OVERCOATS Send The Daily Kansan home. Your Choice of Hart Schaffner & Marx Finest Coats — Extra Fine Values ONE LOT FALL and WINTER SUITS $14.95 FALL Buy one for right now and future wear— Hart Schaffner & Marx finest suits in this lot. Leather Jackets Values up to $8.95 $5.85 ONE LOT FALL and WINTER SUITS Buy one for right now Hart, Schaffner & Mary, kni Dress and Lined Gloves Values up to $4 $1.35 $18.95 ONE LOT One Lot $1.20 Manhattan Shirts 3 for $3.50 Slip Over Wool Sweaters Here is your chance to buy real clothes at a real saving. CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Silk Mufflers 1/2 Price Odd Trousers On Sale "HAPPY LANDINGS." The American Legion Show. Feb. 27-28. Tickets for sale by Llegion members. introduced in the Kansas legislature to tax fraternities and sororities, this time by Representative Morgan of the University that measured there was $275,000 worth of taxable fraternity property in Lawrence at that time, and if the bill became a law it would mean an additional $300,000 to $300,000 a year from each chapter. The bill passed the house and was referred to the senate committee on assessments and taxation. After duo years, the bill was killed by the senate committee. Again in February, 1925, a federality tax bill was introduced in the state legislature, this time by Representative C. F. McCormick, who was also referred to the senate committee on assessments and taxation. Again this committee came to the aid of the Greeks and in its report before recommended Breadcliff's Bill (IH7) without review. Finally in January, 1931, a bill was introduced in the house by Representative Hickes of Mitchell to tax fraternities and sororities in the state. This bill was passed by the house and was also referred to the senate committee on assessments and taxation. The committee favored on the bill, but this time it was defeated by a vote of the senate. The fraternities would pay 204 per cent of the county taxes if such action goes through. Their real estate tax FOLLOW THE CROWD Where? To Eat Good Food at THE CAFETERIA would amount to $23,719.09 and they have a personal tax which would be $1,851.18 on valuations of $13,722 and $4,626.23 respectively. $20,362.36 and $790.88 respectively. Want Ads Twenty-four words or least 1 in each line. No comma. No exclamation mark. No interruptions. The larger ad- presents. WANT AIDS are ACC COMPANIED BY CASH. JIGSAW PUZZLES cut to order. Furnish your own pictures, or we'll furnish them. Any number of pieces. Applicant Co., 413 North Springs Road Phone 3523 -107 FIRST CLASS room and board: room $6, bill $15 per month. Try us soon. 1122 Ohio. Phone 3602R. -104 ... STUDENTS OF French, German, Spanish, Greek; Latin; Learn labor saving methods of acquiring vocabulary. Use of card index classification word analysis. Trial lesson, 32c. Phone 561. - 105 HAVE YOUR application photographs made at Moore Studio. 719 Mass. (upstair-exclusive). Phone 964-125 TRUNK KEYS, door keys, car keys, Good locker padlocks, night latches, door closes repaired. Trevorery & Rutter. 623 Vermont St. Phone- 124 LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusively 1025 Mass. FOUR nicely furnished rooms, $7 to $12 a month. Breakfast and dinner, $14 a month. Discount if both board and room are taken. 1200 Tennessee. — 105 JUST ARRIVED — NEW SPRING HATS — $1.95 TUXEDO $995 Inaugurating A 'NEW DEAL' in Formal Attire All-Silk Vest, $2.95 We believe it to be a fact that nowhere in America can there be purchased a tuxedo of this quality for--- Montgomery Ward & Co. This garment is excellently tailored in a manner befitting the most exacting. The easy shoulder drape and snug waist-line of the coat and the generous width of the trouser legs are style demands of the University man which we have considered carefully. Mysterious Rope THE Mystery ILLUSION. Some member of the audience is politely requested to sit down on a chair. The magician tells him that his costume be unbuckled up in the back, and offers to correct it. Whereupon he pulls out a big coil of rope. EXPLANATION: The chair's rear leg left is made of rounding. A hole is bored through the back of the chair so that the tube leg is over it. An assistant pumps the rope through the chair leg to lift it. IT'S FUN TO BE FOOLED... IT'S MORE FUN TO KNOW! Let's look at the cigarette advertising trick called "Heat Treatment." EXPLANATION: All cigarette tobeces are treated with heat. But it is not from "heat treatment" that a cigarette gets flavor and mildness. NO TRICKS IN Mildness, flavor, throatace—all come from the use of costly, ripe tobacco. It's a fact, well known by leaf tobacco experts, that Camels are made from finer, more expensive tobaccos than any other popular brand. CA KEPT FRESH IN THE WELDED HUMIDOR PAGK CAMELS Camels have given more people more pleasure than any other cigarette. Smoke Camels, and enjoy the fine delicate flavor of costlier tobacques. E M MELS ...JUST COSTLIER TOBACCOS THE MUMIDOR PACK CANEL CANEL NATURE QUALITY CROOK QUALITY IN A MATCHLESS BLEND Copyright, 1933. B. J. Beynds to Tobacco Company PAGE FOUR THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1933 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS --ace Jayhawk in Tie With Oklahoma 13-PLATE BATTERY $3.95 With your old battery. For small cars. Firestone ONE STOP SERVICE Carter Service --ace Jayhawk in Tie With Oklahoma Mat. and Eve. 15c VARSITY TONIGHT Jack Oakie Miriam Hopkins in "Dancers in the Dark" Added Smart Set Up News FRIDAY— For Kids, 6 to 10 Jackie Cooper Robert Coogan in "SOOKY" SUN-MON— SUN-MON WILL ROGERS in "TO BUSY TO WORK" PATTEE WHERE BIG PICTURES PLAY NOW! ENDS SATURDAY A BLAST from HELL! The BIG DRIVE WAR! Official Films From Eight Different Nations! Every Major Battle! Every Important Detail! The Most Amazing Picture Ever Produced Actual Hand-to-Hand Fighting in the Trenches EXTRA! EXTRA! Another Scoop See K. U.S. Own Glen Cunningham Win the Wanamaker Mile Run at the Recent Milrose A.C. Indoor Meet at New York City The First Time on Any Lawrence Screen Also—Zasu Pitts Comedy Riot STARTS SUNDAY GEO. ARLISS "KINGS VACATION" Soon—Years Surprise Picture 42 nd STREET Coach Allen's Men Are Working Hard to Stage Comeback Victory Over Ames Will PLAY AGGIES FEB. 25 - Added to the list of cripples * * mounting up on the Jayhawker * * basketball squad won Garden Gray * * sophomore season ahead of * * * account of practice yesterday on * * account of illness and may be out * * of the Iowa State game Saturday * * night. - Johnson is still troubled with his * * arch injury but will be ready for * * the next game. Wells is having his * * side baked, but he will also be * * ready. Beam still has a weak ankle * * but he will be ready for service With three conference games remaining on their schedule, the Kansas basketball aquad returns a fighting chance to repeat its performances of the last two years and annex the Big Six championship. Firmly entrenched in second place, half a game behind Oklahoma, the Jayhawkers are preparing to meet Iowa state here Saturday night. The Cyclones have won but a single conference game this season, but that, too, has been unsuccessful, the expense of Oklahoma, the league leaders, and marks the only defeat suffered by Couch McBermott's Sooners in conference play this season. Last week the Cyclones dropped their fifth conference tilt when they lost a one-point decision to Kansas State, the Auburn Hawks, at least minute free toss by Rush Graham. To Meet Aggies Again To Meet Aggies Right A week at Saturday night Coach Allen从捷克到曼巴赫manb赫 to meet Kansas State. In addition to having an important bearing on the Big Six standings, this game will give Kansas an opportunity to even the season's score with the Aggies. The Jay-Z testifies to the Manhattan team, and then came back to defeat the Purple egers in the first conference encounter between the two teams. A Kansas victory in the first ever enk event in the season's record. The Agies, who lost their first few conference games, have improved in their play to a considerable degree as the season has progressed, and will offer the Jayhawks a much stiffer battle than they did on their previous conference appearance in Lawrence. Although out of the running for the championship themselves, Coach Cory Woods are in a position to win the Sting situations to quite extent if they win both of their remaining games. Still in Running Should Kansas score victories in these two games, however, it is entirely probable that the championship will be decided in Lawrence on the night of March 3, when Oklahoma comes here to wind up the Jayhawkers' season. The Sooners are heavy favorites to win the game, but they remain between them and the title, with a slight possibility that Missouri might obtain a tie for first place. With most of the squad in good condition, stiff workouts will continue to be in order as the Jayhawkers prepare for the Iowa State game. Bill Johnson, who received an injury at Missouri last week, is reported to be ready to play, and the remainder of the squad is in position to try and improve their morrow, with a tapping off Friday will send the Jayhawkers against Iowa State at the peak of their game. Men's Intramurals Four intramural basketball games were played last evening. Sigma Chi B overweighted Chi Delta Sigma 56 to 22. School of Education defeated the Graduate School 32 to 11, Alpha Kappa Pai won from Kappa Eta Kappa 32 to 12 and Jahayk B deflected Phi Delta Tau B 4 to 24. School of College to the School of Engineering and Sigma Chi B to Kayhawk B. --entertainments, etc. he is entering the University the second semester who not paid the first semester fee and who other students in paying the second sec- The scores: Sigma Chi-56 Fajon, f Wilson, f Johnson, c Sturpeg, g Reed, g FG, FC F, F 3 0 5 1 0 0 4 3 3 1 0 0 Cha Delta Sigmann—22 FG FT E Wilbury, f 0 0 1 McGuire, f 0 0 1 Holtzapple, c 3 0 1 Niswonger, g 3 0 1 Spelbutt, g 5 0 1 Vanek, g ___ 3 0 Watkins, g ___ 3 0 ___ — — Totals ... 11 Referee—Pennock. Totals 16 1 Graduate School—11 FG FT Engle, f 1 1 Fang, f 1 0 Hamilton, c 3 0 Nelson, g 0 Fassnett, g 0 Alpha Kappa Psi–32 FG F1 Ayres, fyes 3 0 Smith, fh 1 0 Kious, c 1 0 Thee, g 1 0 Izard, g 6 0 Schriver, g 0 Totals ... Referee—Pennock. School of Education--33 FG FT Atkinson, f 2 0 Beatty, f 4 0 Jones, c 4 1 Totals 16 10 F Kappa Eta Kappa—12 FG Vohanging, f 0 2 Mashester, f 2 2 Burtell, g 0 2 Anderson, g 0 0 Omer, g 0 0 Phi Delta Theta B-30 FG FT 0 McClure, g 3 0 Abbey, g 1 0 acrochondria, g - - - - - Totals Totals ... * Referee—Grifflin. Jayhawk f—47 FG FT M睫球, f 2 1 Dicker, f 3 0 Dicker, f 3 1 Wampler, c 11 4 McNown, g 1 0 Daughue, g 2 0 Clark, g 2 0 Swimming Meet Is Scheduled Time schedules for the women's intramural swimming meets and practices were announced last night at the intramural board meeting. There will be two intramural meetings, scheduled to be held Feb. 23, and March 1, a class meet, March 7. Practice hours were announced on Monday, Wednesday and Friday after dropouts. On Tuesday, March 230 and Saturday mornings from 10 until 12. Entry blanks and rules were given out during the meeting, and it was announced that the meet would consist of races, strokes for form, relay, and team competition. The Olympic teams won the first meet, and the DQX team won the second meet. Totals Referee—Affleck. Each intramural manager is asked to turn in by Friday the names of women on the class basketball teams. Plans are being made for an individual free-throwing tournament to be held on March 1. KFKU --entertainments, etc. he is entering the University the second semester who not paid the first semester fee and who other students in paying the second sec- 4 6 p.m. Athletic interview: Perey Parks, coach, Wyandotte High School Kansas City, Kan. Thursday, Feb. 16 2. 39 p.m. Music appreciation period with Professor C. S. Skilton, continuing the discussion of Wagner opera. 6 p.m. American-Japanese Relations, Ernest D. Tyler, extension instructor in history. Friday, Feb. 17 6. 15 p.m. Musical program arranged by Roy Underwood, associate professor of piano. The University Senate yesterday afternoon heard reports from Dean E. B. Stouffer and Prof. U. G. Mitchell on different phases of the Carnegie report. The report, including recommendations of a commission appointed by the governor, declares that the foundation educational system of the state should include the work of the junior college, and therefore of the first two years of education beyond the first two years should be professional in its character. UNIVERSITY SENATE CONSIDERS PHASES OF CALIFORNIA SYSTEM University Band Concert to Be Presented Tonigh The University combined, hands, numbering 85 pieces, will play a program of light opera, overtures and music at 810 in the university auditorium. Program Will Include Three Numbers Composed by McCanles The twenty-sixth annual mid-winter band concert will be under the direction of J. C. M.Canes of the School of Fine Arts faculty. 1 The program will be comprised of the following numbers: an overture, "Vienna Festival," (Franz von Suspke) three Spanish dances, "Bobole, Allegro" and Con Spirito, "(M. Mozkowsky)," "Coprice Italian," (P. Technikschwalt), "Jesus," (P. Technikschwalt), "Jesus!" a revue, "Golden Sunset," (George Finder) and selections from the comic opera, "Three Twins," (Karl Hochma). Professor McCanies has also arranged to play three numbers written by himself. A march, "Kansas University," which was played for the first time at the commencement services in 1982 a song, "Give Me Bick My Child," from a work by Frank Schuster Charles Fraser. faulc; and another song entitled, "My Pal," to be sung by the entire hand. "Crismon and the Blue" will conclude the program. Professor McCanles has led the band of the University in these mid-winter concerts for 25 consecutive years. Oklahoma Asks Permission to Competete Freshmen in Coming Events Plan All - State Track Meet Norman, Feb. 15. - (Special)-University of Oklahoma will ask permission of the "Big Six" conference to compete its freshman track athletes unattached in the proposed all-Oklahoma track and field meet here March 25, it was announced today by Ben G. Owen, athletic director. Meanwhile strong endorsement of the proposed meet has been received from practically every college track coach in Oklahoma by John Jacobs, Sooner coach. All have promised to bring their best men. Samuel W. Reaves, Sooner faculty representative, will make the overtures to the conference officials. Insinuach as the majority of most of the college athletes attending will be freshmen, it would make for a much faster meet if the yearlings from the University, Oakland, A. institute and others were allowed to compete. These three schools bar freshmen from their varsity squads. Women's Intramurals Finals Near at Hand Women's deck tennis and ping pong semi-finals are to be completed this week. The two remaining groups of deck tennis to be played are: Group 1: Hunter and Edie vs. Lawson and Hunter. Group II. Bender and Mitchell vs Baker and Walker. The remaining game to be played in ping pong is between Edio, M. E. or Hinshou, E. The winner will play E. E was winner in one group of semi-finals. Appleton, Wis., Feb. 16—(UP)-Five hundred determined farmers throttled the flow of milk here today as picketing began in a stunt wide strike to raise prices. All main highways were guarded by the strikers, who turned up every day at the violence took place, but the milk supply was cut materially, and approximately 30 cheese factories in the county were forced to close down. Wisconsin Farmers Strike Track Athletes Training Only Eight Out of Twenty-Three Lettermen Returning This Year Coach Hargias, with only three weeks in which to drill his train proteges for the Big Six indoor track meet, which is to be held at Columbus, March 12, is working hard with the large team that has been building it. Although the weather has been a great handicap to the track athletes, a squad of as high as 70 men has been reporting. All of the running has been on the track under the east stadium. The track has been frozen all season. With only eight lettermen reporting for the first four last year Coach Hargias said that the new material was promising. "The loss of Coffman, Sickel and Gridley will be keenly felt," added Carol Cook. "This season they have been eligible to compete this season if they were in school. Army's Motorized Artillery Is Demonstrated Men's Student Council Adopts Activity Ticket ble, such as free mixer-parties and prietainments, etc. (Continued from page 1) Sec. 9. That the athletic fee of $3.50 shall entitle the student to all athletic events except basketball, which is at its highest capacity. That the activity book shall entitle its holder to purchase a basketball season ticket at the cost of En route under its own power from Fort Brugg, N. C., to Fort Ethan Allen, VT., for a test; an experimental motorized battery of field armillary passes through Washington and was inspected by the army war college. The photograph shows Captain Campbell, in charge of the unit, explaining some of the features to General Simonds, commanding officer of the army war college. Sec. 10. Tsetr the Enterprise Conference course, or attend the concert course, the lecture course, the dramatic course, debates, interviews which would normally be included in a seminar, etc. Sec. 11. That the Union Operating Communicator will be as much as applicable to the Company and that the Memorial Union Building shall be completed as rapidly as possible. 17TH A.B.R.D. Takes Care of Variety Dances 12. That the Student Government cannot participate in any cost to the Men's Student Council giving it per cent to the Women's Self-Service dances shall be operated on a non-pro- fessional basis with the admission charge or the cost of combined activity book, and $1.00 at all not present on an activity book; provided that an activity book is presented to the price of combined class-part- ly variety dances, which prices shall be set according to the cost of combined class-part- ly variety Dances be conducted as provided in Bill No. 15 and Bill No. 26. Sec. 13. That students who otherwise may form a committee, they may make applications to the activity fee by the Chancellor or to him. If it is approved by him. That if a committee is appointed, it should be composed of per-unit members, except those with student life. Exemptions should be strictly limited to those students which will be forced out of school if not so excused. Sec. 14. That the officially signed applications from each of the above-mentioned activities to the general activity committee, the chief executive's office and that copies of the same shall be kept on file by the Chairman of the Central Committee on Activities; that the duty of the Central Committee, the Men's Student Council, and the W. S. C. A. to see that the applications are complied with. Eta Sigma Phi to Heir Walker Professor A. T. Walker of the Latin and Greek department will speak to a meeting of Eta Sigma Phi, honorary Greek fraternity, this evening. The meeting will be held at Professor Walker's home at 8 p.m. The subject of his speech will be "Martial." Stella Sturclueck, national student secretary of the W.Y.C.A. of this region, attended the regular meeting of the cabinet this afternoon at Hexley house. He was present at the various problems confronting the organization was held at that time. When U think of good shoe repairing, shining and dyeing think of the ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP Subscribe for THE KANSAS CITY STAR PHONE 17 Headquarters 847 Mass. St. H. L. NEVIN Distributor 13 papers — 15c per week Jig Saw Puzzles The evening's entertainment all for 25c $1.00 four pound Castile Cocoa soap, 49c 50c Rum and Butter flavored Toffee Friday and Saturday only, Special, 29c OUR OTHER SATURDAY SPECIALS Handy for Students 11th & Mass Phone 678 "Handy for Students" Rankin's Drug Store for INITIATION congratulate Her with carefully selected flowers . . . 2. Lilies of the Valley 3. Snapdragons — 4. Sweet Pear — 1. Roses— 5. Colonial Bouquets — WARD'S "Flowers of Distinction" Phone 621 Final Clearance OVERCOATS CHOICE OF THE HOUSE $10 Values to $18.50 No need of waiting longer for that overcoat when you can buy coatings like these at this price. Finely tailored all wool fabrics, styled with belt all around or belt in back. Not all sizes in all patterns but all sizes in the group. Others $5 and $7.95 SPRING HATS The new hats are here and there is a lot of quality packed into this low price. The styles, too, are just what the young fellow wants. $298 SPRING OXFORDS They're made by Freeman and they are genuine calfskin with calfskin counter stitching new styles for young men. $345 The The Gibbs Clothing Co. "WHERE CASH BUYS MORE" 811 Mass. St. Co. 5 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XXX The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas Fifty Legislators Will Visit Campus As Special Guests Solons to Make Inspection Tour of Dyche Museum and Hos- pilan WILL ATTEND GAME Fifty members of the Kansas state legislature will arrive at the Memorial Union tomorrow afternoon at 4 o'clock, and then proceed to a break-in association, the Chancellor's cabinet, and members of the Chamber of Commerce legislative body. The legislators, some of whom will be accompanied by their peers, meet in Copenhaegi by bus or in their personal cars. An inspection tour of Dyce museum and the Watkins Memorial hospital will be made by the man, while the ladies will be entertained by a receptionist. After lunch, Lindley. After the tour, a dinner will be served in the Union cafeteria. Music will be supplied by the School of Fine Arts. The Men's Glee club will sing a few numbers before the dinner is over. The guest will be furnished by a strung trio. In the evening the party will be invited to attend the basketball game between the University of Kansas and Iowa State. Raymond Nichols, secretary to the Chancellor, has asked that any students who wish to visit the members of the party first call at his office to assert whether or not the legislator wanted will be in the party. Candidates May Be Chosen Summerfield Scholarship Committee Asks Names From Kansas Schools Invitations to the high schools of the state to nominate candidates for appointment to Summerfield and Dayton away from the endowment office. These are appointments for the year 1933-34, and are honoring significant significance to high school students. Summerfield Scholarships are awarded annually during the four years of the college course, provided holders continue to maintain the high personal and scholastic standards evidenced at the time of appointment. INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB RECEIVES NEW BOOKS Out of 42 such scholars in the University at the present time, 27 are in the College; 10 in the School of Engineering; 5 are intending to enter the School; 3 are intending to enter the School of Law, and 1 is already enrolled in the School of Law. Five new books on international relations have been received from the Carnegie Foundation by Dean Werner of the Institute of International Relations club. The Books are: "Economic Rivalries in China" by Grover Clark; "Modern Foreign Exchange" by Franklin Escher; "Business and Politics in the East Era" by Robert S. Bastian; "War Debts and Properity" by Moulton and Pasolovsky. These books and the others which are in the club's library in Dean Werner's office are for the use of the members of the Carnegie Library for International Relations club. ACKERT WILL BE SPEAKER AT ZOOLOGY CLUB TUESDA The Carnegie Institute for International Relations club which was founded international Relations club, founded a year ago in March, is open to any one who wishes to make application to the club. There are no fees required for membership to the club. It was announced yesterday by W.K. McNown, 23rd president of Snow Zoology club, that James E. Ackert, professor of zoology and parasitology at Kansas State College, would address a recent meeting in room 200 of snow hall. Professor Ackert, a noted authority on parasitology, will address the meeting on the subject: "Host Parasite Relationships, with Special Reference to Taylor Gives Talk At the regular meeting of the Kansas chapter of Sigma XI which was held last night in the lecture room of Blake hall, Dr. E. H. Taylor spoke on "A" (2015) at Distillation in the Philippines and its Application to Paleogeography." Bausch Will Go to Europe LAWRENC. KANSAS. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 17, 1833 Decathlon Champion Accepts Place o American Team New York, Feb. 17- (UP) - Six members of the strong American seven-man track team have accepted invitations to invade Europe this summer, Daniel F. Ferris, secretary of the American Athletic Union, announced today. They are Eastman, James Baldphee, Mcalpine, Ben Eastman, James Baldphee, George Spice, and Bill Carr. George Saling, Olympie high hurdles hampion, probably will be a seventh ember. The team will sail immediately after the national championship at Chicago early in July. The first competition will be at Stockholm, and the team probably will compete in Germany, France and Italy. CONDENSED WIRE NEWS Washington, Feb. 17- (UP)-Overexpansion of the automobile industry, and road building activities, were major factors in causing the depression, D. F. Houston, president of the Mutual Life Insurance company today told the senate committee which is seeking a formula for prosperity. Autos and Roads Blamed Would Extend Governor's Power Lansing, Mih. Feb. 17. -(UAP) A resolution was passed by the Michigan senate today declaring that in the existing financial emergency of the state Republicans have institutional powers to control banking. Would Extend Governor's Power Attempt to Burn Long Home New Orleans, Feb. 17—(UP)—An attempt to burn the home of Senator Huey P. Huey and long possibly take the lives of the senator and his family was frustrated today by a watchman who chased a prowler from the home with gunfire. Extortion Plot Revealed Birmingham, Ala., Feb. 17—(UP) an plot to extort $10,000 from Nelson Hill wealth operator of a chain of grocery stores, was revealed today with the arrest of Chester Alexander, 48, unemployed auto salesman. Germany Restricts Grain Colombia to Appeal to League Berlin, Feb. 17, (UP)—The cathenin in order to support domestic grain prices, decided today on measure essentially extending the existing government corn monopoly to other cereal mills; it also on importation of wheat and rice. Colombia to Appeal to League Geneva, Feb. 17 — (UP) - Colombia defends a treaty to transfer the League of Nations covenant against Peru, with which it has been involved in a dispute over the tiny river port of Leticia. Agree on Cabinet Situation Aboard the Rosewell Special Entrance to New York, Feb. 17- (UP) - Dock Cord Hall lull of Tennessee were believed to have reached a definite understanding today on the cabinet situation. Hull, who may become either secretary of state or secretary of treasury journeyed with Mr. Rosewell from Washington, leaving the train at the capital. President William Endoread Warensburg, Mo., Feb. 16. —(UP)—President Walter Williams, of the University of Missouri, was again mentioned as minister to China today in a letter by Wallace Crosley, president of the Missouri Press association to President Obama, in writing this to urge most currently your consideration of Dr. Williams. ENGINEERING BRANCHES WILL HOLD BANQUET IN KANSAS CITY The University of Kansas student branch and Kansas City branches of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, and the Institute of Heating and Ventilating Engineers will attend a banquet at 9:30 p.m. and a meeting at 8 p.m., today in Edison Hall auditorium of the Kansas City Power and Light building. Mr. CharlesWurth, vice-president of Telephone laboratories in Scheinethe, N. Y., will be the main speaker. KFKU Program to Honor Composer Since the Russian composer Gretchenainoff will visit the campus for a special concert attraction Monday, the KFKUudio program from 0:15 to 0:30 will be presented by keyboardist Roy Underwood will present his students in a special Gretchenainoff program. Three Attorneys Appointed to Aid Zangara in Trial Arraignment of Would-Be Assassin Is Postponed After Selection of Counsel FOUR CHARGES FILED Zangars, still insisting he would not accept legal aid, was forced to acquiesce in the ruling. The small and sullen group of officers, formally accused of a murderous attack on four persons, among them President-elect Rosevelt and the three men charged. Judges Collin's decision ended the court proceedings today. It was announced that the delay until 10 a.m. tomorrow would defend counsel to study the case. Miami, Feb. 17- (UJP)- Judge E. C. Collins today posted arrangement of Guisepee Zangura until tomorrow after appointing three attorneys to defend the diminutive fanatic whose one-man plot to kill President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt should be defended on four charges, and named James McCaskell, Louis Twyman, and Alfred Rata, Italian lawyer, as counsel for the prisoner. Judges Collins' decision ended the Miami, Feb. 17 — (UP) A second blood transfusion was performed today to aid Mr. Joseph G. Hill, who is in a critical condition from wounds received in the attempted assassination of President-elect Roosevelt. The condition of Anton Cermee, mayor of Chicago, was reported satisfactory. Additional charges involving the shooting of Mayor Anton Cermak and Mrs. Joseph Gill, Miami society matron, await the outcome of their injuries. The jury heard a crowded courtroom. The spectators were orderly. Deputies were scattered through the crowd and all persons entering the court were carelessly acutis- Technocracv Not Solution Foster Says Problem Is to Get Money to Ultimate Consumer Maintaining that techneology is not the way out of the depression, William T. Foster, former director of the Pollak Foundation of Economic Research, yesterday presented a plan of his own for improving economic conditions in this country. He spoke to a small group of faculty members and students in the Central Administration auditorium on the subject, "Technocratic Pyrenees." The problem, he said, is to get more money into the hands of the attire consumer, so that he can buy more goods, thus stimulating production and raising the general price level. The higher prices, he added, will hurt benefit, the generally increased prices, according to Mr. Foster. Jewell Millard Campbell of Williamstown and a former university student will leave about March 4 for Shrewbury, La. where he will try for the job. The speaker's plan for starting a definite uprune in business is increased public works, and an increase, not a decrease in wages. He asserted that it is within the government's power to retain or retrench, he said, should not take place in any activity, and especially not in education. Campbell lettered in baseball at an outfield position last year with the Jay-hawker nine. The annual mid-winter band concert, under the direction of J. C. M.Canakes, bandmaster at the University for 25 years, last night in the "University Auditorium." Three compositions by McCansi "My Pal," "Kansas University," and "Give Me Back My Childhood Days Again." were featured on the program. The latter was sung by Chester Fran- Numbers by Franz von Suppe Mozkowski, Tchakowsky, L. Jessel, George Finder and Karl Hoschna were also interpreted by the band. The program was concluded with "The Crinson and the Blue." ORMER KANSAN TO TRY OUT FOR SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION UNIVERSITY BAND PRESENTS ANNUAL MID-WINTER CONCER The Shreveport team is a member of the Southern association. Co-Ed Hop Set for Tuesday The Co-Ed Hop, under the joint sponsorship of the W.S.G.A. and the W.Y.C.A., will be given Tuesday afternoon from 4 to 5:30 c'clock in the Memorial Union, Edna Turner, c'3S, announced today, W.S.G.A. and Y.W.C.A. Will Introduct New Women Students It is to be an informal party for the express purpose of aiding women students who are in enrolled in the University, and to help them in making acquaintances with the other women of the University. Invitations have been sent out to all newly enrolled women students, but all the other students should attend, accord to the committee. There will be dancing, together with bridge and jig-saw puzzles for those who do not wish to dance. The Co-Ed Hop corresponds to the Gingham Follie, which is hold at the beginning of the first semester. The committee has planned this event in answer to numerous requests that something be given at the second seconde. The number of making requiances with the newly enrolled women. Movie Stars Will Stop at Lawrence Next Week Thirty Hollywood High lights to Be Featured Here Feb. 24 The students of the University and those living in or near Lawrence will have an opportunity Friday, Feb. 24, 2015 at The Museum of the Famous movie actors and actresses. The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce is planning a reception for the moving picture stars that will visit Lawrence next Friday, Feb. 24. Mr. V. K. Bruner, chairman of the busine- rence chamber, and Mrs. James Comass announce the tentative plans in preparation for the event. A parade from South Park to the Santa Fe station will take place at 3:30-5:00 Friday morning to meet the train that arrives at 10 o'clock. There will be a catering service from 10:30am which will be introduced to the audience. The merchants of Lawrence are planning a co-operative sale for Friday although the tentative plans are that the stores will be closed for a short time in the morning to allow clerks to retrieve the reception at the Santa Fe station. S. E. Schwain, manager of the Patee theater, has made arrangements for a new season of theatrical fare, for some of the stars of the Warner Brothers studios coming direct from Hollywood who are bound for Washington, D. C. to attend the in- Janes Cagney will be master of ceremonies of the group that is being sent to Washington by Warner Brothers, with the co-operation of the General Electric company, to represent Holly McIlroy, the inauguration of the new president. The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce expects to put Mr. Schwain in charge of the entertainment when the train arrives in Lawrence. The group will make up of the following: Warner Baxter, Ginger Rogers, Warner E. Powell, Guk Gibeeb, Patricia Ellis, Mrs. Al Jolson (Roby Kceler), Dick Powell, Ben Lyon, Bette Davis, Glenda Farrell, Allen Jeenkins, Jo Blondell, Loretta Young, Carole Lombard, Doug Fairbanks, J., Warren Williams, and John McKenna by 12 girls, who are featured in a new Warner Brothers picture, "2nd Street," which has not yet been released. Oglin Temple, professor of philosophy, will lecture Sunday morning at the Unitarian church, twelfth and Vermont street, on the subject of "Tragedy and Comedy in Life." The service will start at 11 o'clock. WEATHER Kansas – Generally fair tonight and Saturday except unrestricted in south- eastern portion tonight. Slightly warmer Saturday. Temolin to Address Unitarians --- AUTHORIZED PARTIES Friday, Feb. 17 Delta Tau Delta, house. 12 p.m. Wesley foundation, Methodist church. 11 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 18 Corbin hall, house, 12 p.m. Sigma Nu, house, 12 p.m. AGNES HUSBAND Death of Women. League Condemnns Japan's Methods in Public Report Nipponese Blamed for Not Submitting Manchurian Dispute to Arbitration BOTH SIDES AT FAULT Geneva, Feb. 17.-(UP) -The League of Nations condemned Japan today for not submitting the Manchurian disputes to arbitration and decided that Japan's military actions could not be regarded as methods of self-defence. The report was published this afternoon and broadcast throughout the world. The report called Manchuko "a pupet state of Japan." The report said that both sides were responsible for tension existing before Sept. 18, 1931, when the Japanese invaded Muckden, but that "no question of Chinese responsibility can arise for development since Sept. 18, 1931. The Chinese use of a boycott against Japanese goods after that date "falls in the category of reprisals," the report said. JAPAN DELAYS ACTION Cabinet Waits Until Tomorrow Before Reaching Conclusion Tokin, Feb. 17—(UP)–Final action on the expected authorization for Japanese withdrawal from the League of Nations was deferred until tomorrow when the extraordinary meeting of the latter tonight before reaching a conclusion. The cabinet meeting broke up at 7 p. m. after a three-hour session behind closed doors. The session will be resumed tomorrow, it was announced. It was understood Foreign Minister Yaasu Uhida desired to confer again with Empower Hirohito before the government formerly announces its immediate withdrawal from the league. After an hour with the emperor before today's cabinet meeting, explaining the situation. Promise Resistance Jebol, Feb. 17—(UP)—If the Japanese invade Jebol they will be stopped by my troops and reinforcements sent from the south by Marshal Chang Huseh-Liang. "Tang yu-lin, governor of Jebol Province, said today in his first interview with foreign correspondents. GOODRICH RUBBER COMPANY PROMOTES KANSAS GRADUATE Lawrence T. Greiner, who was graduated from the School of Business of the University of Kansas in 1928 he joined F. Goodrich Rubber company His new position will be that of assistant to the manager of the retail stores department, in charge of all advertisement activities for approximately 575 stores. Mr. Greiner will change his head-quarters from Kansas City, where he has been doing regional advertising and sales promotional work, and will go to Akron, Ohio. He has been with the Richmond company since his graduation. Greiner took a number of journalism courses, and was the University correspondent for a Kansas City newspaper. BAYLES NAMED INSTRUCTOR OF AMERICAN LEGION CHORU Professor E. E. Bayles of the School of Education will take over the work of T. A. Larremore, instructor of the chorus of the Dorsey-Liberty Post of the American Legion, until he returns from an eastern business trip. NUMBER 104 Professor Larroneiro was formerly in the University School of Law and was director of the Men's Glee club who he was here at the University. During his career, Professor Larroneiro have been teaching in the law school at Washburn in Topika. FLINT SEEKS MEMBERSHIPS FOR KANSAS EDITORS CLU FLINT SEEKS MEMBERSHIPS Professor L. N. Flint, head of the journalism department of the University, is sending out a questionnaire to the editors of Kauas papers in search of the names of men who have been in Kansas for more than 25 years. - The purpose of the investigation is to increase the membership of the club of Kansas Editors formed several years ago. Professor Fist said that the club had no officers or dues and that it was merely an informal listing of members. Bill Johnson, versatile center on K. U's basketball team, was honored recently by being used as a model for a model in the January issue of The American Bom. Harold Keith, the author, knew Bill personally in Oklahoma City and at the UCLA football team. He canonized high school player. In the story "Toss-up," Bill is known as Swede Nelson. In weight, height and actions, he was a good athlete, accurately the exact picture of Johnson. The story is of an all-American high school basketball center and the great team he played on; of their close relationship to each other; of their separation to go to different colleges; and of their meeting once more on a basketball court in a crucial game, but on different teams. Repeal of Prohibition Will Pass, Say Leaders House Is Expected to Follow Action Taken by Senate The Arkansas delegation of seven members voted 5 to 1 for the Blaine repeal amendment passed yesterday by the Senate. The vote does not disclose Washington, Feb. 17 (UIP) - Congressional approval of prohibition repel today became a virtual certainty in Washington that Mr. Trump provided the momentum which convinced house leaders that on Monday their chamber will follow the lead of the Senate and vote to send the problem to the House for the states meeting in formal state causus. House leaders on the basis of the earlier repulse vote needed to win over only six members to the anti-roblotion side to provide the necessary two-thirds majority for approval of a constitutional amendment. This margin is provided by the action of the Arkansas representation. Tau Sigma Plans Recital Event Moved to Auditorium to Have Use of Larger Stage Tau Sigma will present a dancing recital March 8, at the University auditorium. Until last year this production has always been an annual event, but it was decided to alternate the water-carrain with it. This will be the only event of its kind to be presented on the Hill this year. A cast of approximately 40 persons has been chosen and rehearsals have already begun. Miss Dunkel is directing the recital. This year's recital is to be presented in the University auditorium instead of Fraser theater as formerly. According to Miss Dunkel, this change was made because the Fraser theater stage was moved from the auditorium to obtain the most beneficial effects. Lucienne Wagler, fa 33, and Tom Ryan, fa 35, will play the accompaniment. There will be some two-piano numbers. Tom Ryan is composing some special music for the dancers which will lend a rhythm to the angular movements of the dancers. PAUL RAPAPORT IS ELECTED PRESIDENT OF FENCING CLUB The Fencing club elected Paul Rau- port president, and Clyde Thoroman succeeded him as armorer. The club elected Eda Jane Penny, Paul Rau- port, and Clyde Thoroman to the rank of Knight. Dorothy Dangy, Helen Born, Fred Wagner, Alfred Ames, and accepted as new members in the club. Dr. James Naismith began the elec- tary instructions in the use of the all and this instruction will help the co-ordination of all persons interested are cordially invited Grades Ready Next Week Grades for last semester's work may be obtained from the office of Registrar George O. Foster next week. In order to lessen confusion of 3700 students coming at time, the register asks that students bring their G inclusive come Monday; the H to M group Tuesday; the N to S group Thursday and the T to Z group Friday. One Saturday morning who were available at the fine specified may obtain their grades. Miss Morzan Reads Poems Rose Morgan, associate professor in the department of English, read a letter from Stella Scurf of the Inter-racial group of the W. Y. C. A. at their meeting last night. An informal talk was given by Stella Scurf to Mr. Scurf, who sailed the W. Y. C. A. here yesterday. Menze's Cyclones Here for Second Tilt With Kansas Jayhawker Squad in Poor Shape; Still Favorites to Defeat Iowa State GRAY MAY NOT PLAY Probable Starting Lineup Kansas Harrisoning F Jealolh Jackson Johnson C Schanke D Schake or Been N. State Thompson Wegner Dills James Coach Louis Menze will bring his Cyclone cagers here tomorrow night for a conference game with Kansas. In the first game between the two teams at Armes, Kansas did not have the Cyclones by a score of 35 to 29 over the Jayhawkers are favorites to repeat over Iowa State tomorrow night. Before the first game this year, Dr. Forrest C. Allen, Kansas coach, stated that he would not necessarily rather see it, lose to Menzes-coached teams than to any other team in the league. In view of the present standings, the Jayhawkers cannot afford to lose to the bottom club club of the Big Six. The Jayhawkers must play with five victories and two doubles half a game behind the leading Oklahoma quintet. Iowa State is in last place, hopelessly out of the conference playoffs and unable to lose to in the game with Kansas. Missouri Meets Oklahoma Kansas should be tied for first place after the game tonight if the Missouri trick court jinx holds out. Oklahoma, the league leader, meets the Tigers in Columbia tonight and the Missouri team has not been defeated on its own court for so long that sport writers have lost track of the last time. A Missouri victory would put the Tigers back in the Big Six race, one game behind the leads. The loss would mean that they would place with Kansas. A victory for the Sooners would put them on in a strategic position to march toward a top finish. The Kansas team will go into the game tomorrow night in the poorest condition that the team has been in this year. Johnson has been bothered with a bad arch and was unable to practice at the first of the week. Gray turned up ill for practice Wednesday afternoon and Dr. Allen immediately put him under doctor's care. Wells has been having his side baked following the rough and tumble fry in Columbia last week. Schaake had a charley horse last week, but is in good shape for the game tomorrow night. If Gray is ready for action, Allen will start his regular lineup of Harrington, Williams Johnson, Schaake, and Baker. He'll be the next Bronze or, Urge, will be in his place. For the first time this season Johnson is being pressed for his high scoring honors of the conference. He has a total of 42 points in seven games for Johnson and 36 points in second place with 57 points in six games for an average of 3.5 points per game average. The average difference is not much, but the point difference is about 10 points. And night for the Kansas center would come for clinching the scoring honeys. ALL OF UNIVERSITY CAMPUS MAY BE INCLUDED IN CITY The city commissioners authorized a petition Wednesday to the county commissioners asking that the west half of University campus be taken into the city. The petition was desired in order to get police and fire protection for the entire campus. At present the west city is under construction as part of the Administration building. Economic Council Meeting Held Economic Council meeting here The Kansas State Chamber of Commercial Council meeting which was held in Topka today. As Dean Stockton, Uni- versity representative on the council, was not able to attn. Mr. Wilson read his paper. Prof. J. P. Jensen and Prof. W. F. Kissick also attended the Moratorium Extended Berlin, Feb. 17—(UP) The stand- side agreement of foreign short term credits in Germany has been extended to Feb. 28, 1934. The document was formerly signed today at the Riechs- bank. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17. 1933 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Associate Editors Alfredo Reubel, MD Bruce Wardle, MD Harry Turtle Managing Editor Manning Equity Graham Editor Margaret Editor Marshall Investment Margaret Editor Arroyo Editor Trilirquit Editor Jonathan Culligan Society Editor Jonathan Culligan Alumni Editor Jane Dube Dorothy Brown ADVERTISING MCG MARGARET INCE District Manager Margaret Ince REBSON District Manager Editor-In-Chief ... PAUL V. MINER Robert Whitman Boston Bruins Morgan Freeman Morgan Freeman Bilby Kroon Philadelphia Bill Murray Irish McCarthy Anthony Wood Aspen Smith Smithsonian Mountain Lion COMPANIES Business Office...K.U. 6 News Room...K.U. 2 Night Connection, Business Office...201K Night Connection, News Room...270K Published in the afternoon, a week a week and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Iowa and the Press of the Department of Journalism. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1933 Subscription price, $4.69 per month, payable in advance. Single enquiries, in each. Entered as second-class matter September 17, 1910, at the office at lawrence, Kansas. BOOING AT BASKETBALL GAMES A mob of bloodthirsty fight fans booed and yelled "quitter" last week when "Ernie" Schaff, young heavyweight prizefighter, was carried senseless from the boxing arena of Madison Square Garden. Two days after this demonstration, it was announced that Schaff had died from a cerebral hemorrhage. In only one way does the instance apply to the booing situation at Kansas basketball games. It shows the falseness and unfairness of fan judgment from the sidelines. When unsportsmanlike college students boo the actions of visiting basketball players and officials they are criticising unfairly. If Doctor Allen can gain success in his campaign for less booing at Big Six basketball games at the University he will perform a distinct service. He will stop the quite obvious evil of unfair criticism, and will help raise the already falling standard of sportsmanship in college athletics. A professor complained when the whistle blew yesterday that he was hoarse from coughing to keep the class awake. ENCOURAGEMENT The Kansan takes pride in the ranking it received in the survey of leading college dailies just finished by the North Carolina Daily Tar Heel. Given 76 out of a possible 100 points, it was one of the only six papers in the United States and Canada which achieved the highest possible score in editorial content. FEES ON INSTALLMENT PLAN Announcement of this honor comes at a time when the Kansan sorely needs encouragement. Financial difficulties and a seeming lack of interest on the part of University students, along with all the other causes of publishing a newspaper, have combined to form an obstacle so nearly insurmountable that all concerned have sometimes been tempted to wonder, "What's the use?" A number of students are not able to attend the University and others are financially burdened because the entire amount of fees for a semester must be paid in a lump sum. Payment is due at the time when the student must buy books and other equipment preparatory to beginning a new semester. An investigation reveals that the business office of the University could not, with its present facilities, take care of a complex installment plan for payment of fees. It could, however, with slight changes, institute a system of payment in two or three installations. It is a state ruling that those enrolling in the University must pay the fees in advance at the beginning of the semester, but perhaps arrangements could be made to alter the ruling. If a general plan of installment paying can not be brought in, at least concessions should be made in favor of those worthy students unduly burdened by the present system. PRESENT ENDS AND FUTURE Dr. R. A. Schwegler in a recent address said that many students have overlooked the greatest aim of their study—that of increasing the efficiency of their thinking and the application of acquired knowledge. It is true that most students in the hurry and bustle of University life forget the true goal of education—training for a place in society. Tomorrow's lessons are always to be prepared, tomorrow's work to be done. Seldom is there time to see beyond when there will be no more classes, no term themes, no more textbook facts to be crammed. Most students take it for granted that they will be educated men and women when they finish their college courses. They do not stop to realize that the society in which they expect to take their places is constantly changing thing, and hat if they are to keep up they must be able to change also. Such adaptation and re-adaptation necessites ability to grow and to think efficiently. Education is not completed with formal classroom training. It must continue throughout life if the individual is to thrive. The static soon drop behind. College is a good place to acquire the habit of mental activity, along with a background of vicarious and actual experience. College is a good place to learn to think. Much of the detailed factual knowledge the student acquires will drop away and be forgotten through disuse. Healthy habits of mental alertness once formed seldom decay. FRANKLY CONFESSING We of the feminine sex may be addicted, so men say, to the careless flinging away of hard-earned dollars. Perhaps we should applaud Mrs. Clarence Budding Kelland, wife of the famous novelist, in her suit demanding that her husband pay a $3,500 dress bill on the grounds that such support is justified. And again perhaps we should commend her pluckiness in demanding her just rights—but we don't. We do admit that the case is unusual, to say the least. Just imagine, you co-ed—$225 for a dress (and in this depression too), and $4.50 for hose! From what we've heard from our paternal roof concerning the reduced funds as a result of present economic conditions, we should say the husband in this case had grounds for challenging the suit. We do. But don't think us too puritanical. This modern frankness forces us to the confession that every time we think of* those dresses and shimmering hose, we—well, call it jealousy if you wish! Perhaps that's why we agree with Mr. Kelland instead of his stylish wife. If a visitor were to be suddenly transported from Mars and set down on an American campus, one of his first impressions would be the domination of profanity in the college vocabulary, nearly to the exclusion of more cultured language. ULTRA-MODERN OR ULTRA-FOOLISH? So common has this habit of emphasizing and making vivid the speech by these swear words because that college students are not even conscious of what they are saying. The words just come rolling out without any effort or thought. This trait is acquired by the freshman student to give him "college polish." By practice and repetition it increases to such an extent that he is graduated uttering a word of profanity in every ten Yet they are ashamed of this uncouth language when they are among cultured people. Slips that they make embarrass them and they vow to discard this rubbish from their speech. They mean well, but they haven't the stamina QUIPS from other QUILLS H Lincoln were alive today he would be 124 years old and far from being any help in the solution of the problems of the moment he could no more have been president. Had he been President for the last four years he would have been defeated as badly as Hoover was last November. And had he delivered the Gettysburg Address over a nation-wide hook-up he would have become into the Fire Chef hour he would have been generally criticized the next morning — J. P. H. in Chanute Tribute. Fellows, we've got to do our duty. We must not allow our duggers undergills to falter. Take advice from de Wheaton Record: Lives of Seniors all remind us We must strive to do our best, And departing, leave behind us, Notebooks that will help the less What appears to us to be the cree if the crime wave broke at Hutchison he other day where it is reported someone stole the coin box and entire loor from a pay toilet in the railroad injury—J. P. H. in Chauce Tribute —W. D. in Marquette Tribune A student at Michigan Tech, who recently returned from an extensive tour in Brazil, has found things in India just "fine and Gandhi." W. D. W. of Marquette Tribute. Students may obtain first semester grades at the Registrar's office according to the following schedule of names: The hempseed husband who used to have to go outside to smoke now has to go cut into the backyard for a bath of fresh air—Anthony Repulich. Any man with a car, a house and several grand a year will tell you confidentially that the universe is definitely friendly — E.W., in Park Stylus. Some girls would be vastly more attractive if they spent as much time improving their dispositions as they do their complexions—Daily Texan. Monday, Feb. 20—A to G, inclusive Tuesday, Feb. 21—H to M, inclusive Thursday, Feb. 23—N to S, inclusive Friday, Feb. 24—T to Z, inclusive Saturday, Feb. 25—Those unable to appear at the scheduled time. Some men have learned the fine art of turning their so-called tragedies into comedies—Daily Texan. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Yol. XXX Friday, Feb. 17, 1853 Jig saw puzzles are giving many people a liberal education in art—Augusta Gazette. TRYOUTS FOR MEN'S GLEE CLUB: veo. GEORGE O. FOSTER, Registrar. Those men who have made eligibility requirements for the Men's Gleel club this semester and who are disaffected of joining this organization should call Pro Reqs. on 312-565-7990. Noticees due at Chancellor's Office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication days and 11:30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issues. The May Day Mystery Octavus Roy Cohen CHAPTER 1—Annotate Peyton, Mark, Marathon, represents Paterson Thayer's attention to tivy Weaver seventh overruns ending with bitter reconstructions, ending with bitter reconstructions, ending with bitter reconstructions, another, another student, long Thyer, another, another student, a date with him. Thayer and Vernon The huge detective noded approval. "I'll hand you one thing. John—you sure have made a complete list of it." CHAFFET 21. Llarsr Welch, Ivory was appalled by my horry treatment to end his apprehension for my wretched condition to each other, which does not see what each other, which does not see what tells him she is married to Thayer, tells him she is married to Thayer. Hanvey was slumped in his chair, absorbently regarding his huge hands. He spoke without bothering to look up. "What does Miss Pietay say, Ion?" "Out of this bunch—yes. That is, maybe. I'm darned if I know." By Copyright by Octavus Roy Cohen CHAPTER 11—Larry determines to eat Thayer and end his association with the company. He builds a suit she has appointed to her husband at a fraternity house Max Vertebrates and goes to his room. Tony ends her relationship and never leaves the house almost immediately afterwards, visibly in a state of shame. The company, keenly loyal to apperance clothing to be worn by him, Copyright by Octavus Roy Cohen "Nothing. She admits visiting Pat Thaver, but that is all." CHAPTER 19 — Wieleski, appeal to the Senate to remove Mr. Prattleson he determines to see Therese. He responds, and after he leaves, Curmencew, who is the head of the land's police chief, takes charge of the land's police chief. "Of course she denies killing him, doesn't she?" CHAPTER VI--Thayer, Fikke tells us that he was in charge of the burning Vernon of large runs, in card game, and finally realized it. Rogers Haran to take charge of the murder between the two men and robbery. Two of the murder and robbery are under arrest as Thayer murder. **CHAPTER V - The Marlin bank is robbed of $100,000. The robber is apparently wounded, wounded, and apparently wounded, wounded, and apparently wounded, and good noticed, comes to inspect the case CHAPTER VI "Sure. She says they had a talk and she came away, leaving him perfectly happy and healthy. But that was just because he wanted quesser between her and Thayer. I asked her about it and she got right white—but she wouldn't say boo. I accused her of holding something back, but I didn't want to discuss the case any further." "Why?" inquired Fiske sharply. "Would you pick Max Vernon as a murderer?" Brian mopped his forehead with a lavender-bordered handkerchief. "I had to, Jim. I've got those three, and I know I'm right on one of 'em." "I think that what puzzles me. One time that it was Vermeer; then I come to think it must be a painting, Just when I'm sure of that I get a bureau that it must have been Welch. That is not so." SYNOPSIS "Exactly. And she had been to "Thayer's room before that. Welch is cuckoo about Miss Peyton. Somebody tells Larry she has just paid a visit to Pat Thayer in his room, what does Welch do but hatfoot it down to find out if there was a wound. And it reasonable that he'd be boiling over under those circumstances?" "Which one?" "It don't look a bit healthy for him. First of all, that Thayer was running around with Ivy Welch—that's Larry's seventeen years old. Whether there wasn't anything between them there shouldn't be, I can't say—and Welch won't. But if there were not, and Welch would be a pretty bad mombre." "Uh-huh. I've seen lots of fellers get fightin' mad at less." "And this ain't less, Jim. There's still more, I arrested Welch the minute I could get my hands on him, and I got to have some of them, him, and all I can tell you, Jim is that that feller led to me like a son-evagan." "Welch was the last person known to have been in Thayer's room before Mair Carmineu, the Junior, discovered that he had been taken into ward went to see Thayer, and he left in a burry. Then the body was found. But even if all that wasn't enough, there was nothing." "Yeh, but soft. Larry could have broke him in half--maybe." "Thuyer was a big man, too, wasn't he?" "You mean about Miss Peyton being Welch's girl?" Randolph Fiske was listening fascinated to the conversation. He was sitting behind a table covered in bloodlessness; second, Reagan's unmounted superpower of intellect. At least he had more than one while Harvey—well, Harvey was doing nothing whatever and doing it "Yes. Absolutely. It was positively shameful, the way he lay . . . , and you know as well as me, Jim that when a suspect lies all the way through he's either in pretty deep or knows who is. Am I right?" "He wanted to know right away why we should think anything so ridiculous as that Tey Poyton killed him and she had visited Thayer's room just before he—Welch—got there. I could see he was doing some fint thinking. He finally called me a d—n fool, which is quite hard to explain. How Miss Poyton could have killed Thayer when he had been there after she had gone and Thayer was alive. I put it up to him that that man was because for him to take because the fraternity house, you visited the fraternity house, then certainly put Miss Poyton in the clear but made it rotten for him. I also was thinking—though I didn't discuss this with her —so she was non, too; because Max left the fraternity house before Laury got there." "When I first arrested Welch," Reagan continued, "he blanked everything with lies. He started off by denying that he had been to see Gould and that he was less time than it takes a goal to eat a shirt. After admitting that, he said that he'd never been anything but the girl I met at his college. I told him there was a chance for him if he was innocent because we already had two other people under arrest. He asked who they were and I told him that he was not Poyton's name his whole attitude changed." Regan paused and chuckled. "And how?" Jergan stopped talking. Haney remained silent. It was Fickle who could not tolerate the uncertainty. "I nolledest Thayer was still alive when he was there, and wanted to know why I didn't let Miss Peyton go right away. I told him I didn't believe him and he informed me once that I was a certain kind of an idiot." "But surely," snapped Flake, "a man isn't going to put his own neck in a nose unnecessarily is he?" "Maybe," answered Reagan calmly, "Specialty if he's a young fool like Welch and is crazy about a girl and thinks that she did the murder." Hanvey's soft drawl broke "How about Max Vernon?" Reagan flushed. "Oh Vernon! The darn thing has got me gooey. As soon as I get one of them three crazy kills tied up with this, I remember something about one of them. The more I think the less I know and the less I know, the nutter I get." "You've done marvelously," insisted Randolph. Fibre with considerable veluence. "It seems to me youve told everything you need to know—" "Except the identity of the murderer," finished Reagan dryly, "Up to that point I've done swell." Harvey rose and waddled to the window, where his tremendous bulk leaned against the wall. He spoke to Reagan in a guarded voice. "ts he really good, or just a bag of The eyes of the Marlard detective sparkled. "He's the best in the world, Mr. Fricee--make no mistake about this case right now than I do." "Is he really good, or just a bag of wind, Reagan?" "Imphe! I think you're foolish and generous." "Thayer was stabbed?" he asked over his shoulder. Tom Harvey spoke, but without turning. "Thayer was stabbed?" he asks. "That's one of the queerest things in the whole case, Jim. We've looked high and low for that knife and we can't find it anywhere." CHAPTER VIII Larry Welch was lying full length on the bed when the door opened. His coat was on the back of the chair and his collar and tie were on the dresser. He stood in front of the at the throat and he leaped to his feet as Hanvey and Reungen entered. "What sort of knife?" He stared with amazement at Reagan's companion. Hanover was nowampaing in the hall while handkerchief and puffing like a demon, and he turned protectively toward **TOM**. The turnkey in the corridor closed the door, and Reagan performed the introductions. "Walked me all the way down here. I'm all in." "Mr. Welch—this is Mr. Hanvey, Jim Hanvey. He's in charge of this case." "You shouldn't have done it, John." "What?" The youth healthed, but Harvey's fleshy pink came out and Larry met it with a frog grip and a quick, friendly smile, blinded, nodded an insensible selfish. "Siddown, Welch. I'd like to talk with you a few minutes." It was plain that the boy was puzzled by Hanvey. By the same token, he was reassured. Reagan seemed keen, rather hawkillie. But this stranger, . , . . Hanvey his back in his head and reached his golden toothpee. "You understand, Welch, that you CHAPTER 28. BETWEEN THE FRIARS AND THE WOOLFERS. He Stared With Amazement at Reagan's Companion. don't have to talk at all if you don't want to. I'm just telltin' you that so you won't think I'm tryin' to put anything over." Larry grinned. "I understand." "I understand, sir." "I could say that anything you mentioned could be used against you. In fact, if I got angry, the more you talk, the more chance there is of me helpin' you. If you're guiltly—well, that's a gray horse of another color. And my name isn't." "I'll spent one thing more. Me and the kids are still at school, but Pa-Traver and we won't get to slip an embation into hanging something on an inexpensive man. Now—will I go on? Yes." The young man seemed doubtful. "Yan mean—" "I mean that if you want to help us, maybe we can help you. If you don't—then there a n't bit of use wasting everybody's time." Hanvey's tone was gentle, his manner disarming. He seemed so guilleless, so transparent. Larry paused slowly up and down the room. Regan followed him with his eyes. Finally, man turned and spoke to Hanvey. "May I ask you one question?" "Sure, so-cure." "Have you spoken to Miss Peyto yet?" "Can I believe that?" Haways's eyes opened slowly. "Go, Son—I know whether you can believe it or not. We don't neither of us have eyes." It was seen near Miss Peyton, and that's a fact." Larry hesitated—but only for a moment. "I believe you," he said, and then added: "I'll talk." Jim yawned. "All right, Welch. Go nehand and talk." "I—I'd rather that you questioned "About what?" "Whatever you want to know." I guess I do this. "You did go to see Pat Thayer at the fraternity house day before yesterday, didn't you, Welch?" Harvey lighted one of his obnoxious cigars and grinned at Reagan. "Maybe that isn't a bad idea, John. What you think?" "Yes." Larry's voice was low. It was plain that he was weighing words. "What about?" "My sister." "Miss Ivy Welch?" "What was wrong there?" "Nothing . . . that is, I didn't want anything to be wrong. I told Thayer that I preferred that he see less of Iv." "Did you tell him why?" "I told him that there was too much difference in their ages. He was twenty-two, not three, but a year-old kid. I didn't think it was a very good idea to let the friendship end." "Were you and Thayer friends?" "Not intimate friends—no. "But not enemies, were you?" "Certainly not." with your answer. "I don't know exactly. Seventen months. I guess." "how long had Tmayer been going with your sister?" "Anything special happen recently?" Larry's eyes were focused on the floor. "Nothing." "You just made up your mind to see Thayer without anything special happen, ch?" "Yes. When I say nothing special —I mean . . . ." He rose, walked across the room, and then returned to stand in front of the huge detective. "I spoke to my sister first. I told her that I was a little sick," said she wouldn't. "I said that forced me to see him. And so I went to his fraternity house." body was tound. So I ask you again: When you got to his room, was he alive or dead? "You saw him?" "Allya or dead?" The boy's face was white, but he answered In a level voice. "He was pillow." Larry's eyes widened, and instinctively he drew back as though to ward off a blow. "What do you mean?" he asked—and his voice trembled. "Gosh! Son-I don't mean nothin'. You told me to ask questions, and I'm just doin' what you asked." "It was such a queer question." "Maybe he... I don’t. Or course you know he’s dead now, not you?" "Yes," bitterly: "I understand they’re holding me for his murder." "Well, then—what would be more natural than what I asked you? It wasn't too difficult," Thayer was dead when you got to him. Thayer was dead when you could not have killed him, albeit it wasn't heavenly. "But if he was alive when you got there, it don't look very nice because everybody knows that you were the last person in that room before the "And you had a nice, friendly talk" "Not exactly friendly. You can't easily call it friendly for one man to call to ask him to stay away from a girl." "You're sure you didn't quarrel?" "Positive." Finally she got love. Again that strained, haggard light flashed in Laery's eyes. "No-o . . . he didn't get sore." "Not at all?" "I don't know. I was only there for a few minutes." "I'm sorry, Mr. Hanvey. Please go on." "Surely." "And there weren't any querrel?" Larry whirled on his inquisitor. "How many times do I have to tell you that we didn't querrel?" "Good. That clears things up in my mind. Now can I ask you something else?" "Yes, . . . " Larry was not plausible. "Yes--it happened just that way." "I understand. What else do you wish to know about that interview?" "Nothing." "Noone," murmured Hanvey gently. "Gosh! Son—you don't have to tell me a thing. Any minute you get tired of my question, I'll cut. I ain't aiming at it. I'll pillow up. Now if you'd rather I not ask you more questions?" The boy was surprised, "Nothing?" "Not a thing. You've told me all I need to know. According to the way I understand it: Thayer was alive when you got there and you and he were together, that is, it wasn't exactly friendly, but you didn't quarrel. Then you left. Ait't the way it was?" "Do you know Miss Antoinette Peyton?" "Like him?" Bengaz saw Larry's future stiffen defensively, and there was the briefest esitation before he answered. "Do you know Max Verron?" "He's a nice chap." "Or Miss Peyton?" "No." "When you were at the fraternity house to see Thayer—did you happen to see Max Vernon anywhere about?" "No." "Nothing more?" "You're pretty keen for Miss Peyton, aren't you?" Lorry flushed, "I admire her very much." Harvey folded his hands on his huge stomach. "You object if I ask you a personal question, Welch?" "So behead." "I don't see . . . No, it's no more than that." Amazingly enough, Hanvey did not pursue that topic. It seemed to Reagan that Jim was constantly coming back to the job and then going on another task. "Were Thayer and Miss Peyton very friendly?" "She hadn't ever mentioned him to you? You haven't any idea why she went to visit Thayer at the fraternity house, have you?" "I don't think so." "You're not sure?" Larry seemed troubled. He raised his voice and smoke vehemently, "You seen more interested in Miss Peyton than in me" he accused. "I kept talking to her, saying anything to do with Thayer's death. She left that fraternity house before I got there. When I arrived Thayer was dead, so before she couldn't have killed him." "I dog-gone if that ain't right, Son, I just plumb form that. I sure did." "Well, good-by," Son—and much obliged. The unlaughly detective bolsted himself to his feet with difficulty. He extended one fleshy new. "You—you don't wish to ask me anything else?" "Nope. I reckon you've told me about everything there is to tell, haven't you?" In the corridor John Reagan faced his companion. He could contain himself no longer. The door closed behind them, and Larry Welch, thoroughly bewildered and not a little ill at ease, stared at the mute panels. "Welch was lying!" he announced. Jim Hanvey smiled. "Sure he was, John; sure he was, But that ain't what interests me. What I crave to know is—how much? And why?" (To be continued Sunday) LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusively 1025 Mass. IF YOU MISSED THE FIRST CHAPTERS of "The May Day Mystery" you may secure back copies of the Kansan at the Kansan Business Office. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17. 1933 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE MARITIME SOCIETY Wilcox-Coombs Marriage Nancy Wilcox, c'33, and Eugene Coombs, a former student at the University, were married this afternoon at 4:30 at the home of the bride's aunt, Victoria Vernon, 129 Vermont. Rev. Carter Harrison, of New York, church, performed the ceremony. Only members of the family were present. Mr. and Mrs. Coombs will live in Mr. and Mrs. Coombis will live in Wichita, where Mr. Coombis is attending the University of Wichita. Observe Founders Day The annual Founder's Day banquet of Phi Kappa Pi fraternity will be held tomorrow night at the University Club of Kansas City, Mo. About 225 members and alumnae are expected to be present. Guests of honor will be K. L. Snyder, national vice-president, and Charles (Buddy) Rogers. Sigma Nu will entertain with their annual H-Rickey party Saturday from 9 to 12:30 p. m. at the chapter house. Bill Pipkins orchestra will play. Mr. Magnus Perkins, Mn. J. H. Kreeman, Ms. O. R. Eidh Miller and Edith Miller will be the chaperones. Dinner guests at the Dela Chi house this evening will be Mrs. Lawrence Jenese, Miss Vivian Jensen, and Miss Lucile Augustine, all of Kansas City, Mo., and Mrs. Walter Lyman, and Miss Dorothy Lyman of Lawrence. Dinner guests at the Phil Delta Thea house last night were Miss Helen Rhoda Hopes, assistant professor of English; Mr. Rice Phleps; Mr. R. C. Miller; Mr. W. H. Kruamer; Mr. George H. Helmers. Kathryn Sheppard of Kansas City is the weekend guest of Harrriet Mahon, an dEvelyn Purdie of Louisville and Josephine of Josephine Lee at Wakhala hall. The Co-eed Hop sponsored by the Y W.C.A. and W.S.G.A. will be held Tuesday, Feb. 21 from 4 to 3.50 p.m. at the Memorial Union building. Henny Sndern, national field secretary of Kappa Kappa Gamma, is a guest at the chapter house this week. A tea will be given for her Sunday. Chi Omega announces the engagement of Maurine Pearce, c35, to Daniel J. Fair, Jr., c38, of Delta Tau Delta. Dinner guests at the Kappa Alpha Theta house last night were Marjorie Nelson, 1/35, and Beverly Burns. Guests at the Sigma Nu house has night for dinner were Miss Harriette Newcomer, c33, and Miss Maron Myers Ellen Davis, '32, is a weekend guest at the Alpha Omicron Pi house. Delta Upsilon announces the pledging of Ammon Childs, of Rexford. Kathleen Teagarden, c'36, was a dinner guest at the Alpha Delta Pi house Russel Young of Columbus is a gues this weekend at the Sigma Nu house. Send The Daily Kansan home. WEEK-END EXCURSIONS 1933 SUN MON FRI SAT 1 2 6 7 8 14 Round-Trip Fares on Sale Every Friday, Saturday and Sunday Kansas City Bound $100 Trip SPECIAL dollar-saving excursions by Western Gray-tex in the Tuesday following date of purchase. Tickets good on EVERY bus on the design-class first-class service throughout PREVIEW THE WORLD'S FAIR ROAD "Four-fifths of the world is a land of arts or building. Greyhound fares to Chicago. Lowest LOSTS 1896-1996." UNION BUS TERMINAL 638 Mass.-Phone 590 Teaching Dad to Care for Baby WESTERN GREYHOUND De. Dr. Herman N. Bundest, health commissioner of Chicago, has opened a nose in child care for fathers. He is here seen teaching a young boy how to put nose on his head. A. J. H. W. H. M. B. Crafton's Play to Be Staged Plot Illustrates Soldier's Entertainment During War Time A play, "Happy Landings," is to be presented by the Darien-Lorby post of the American Legion on Feb. 27, 1946, at New York University. The play was written by Professor Allen Caffen, of the University of Kansas, when he was a member of the twenty-fifth aerial squadron in World War II and includes more than 40 actors. "Happy Landings" was written and produced by Professor Crafton for the purpose of providing entertainment to the soldiers. It was in the fall of 1918 that Crafton, then a member of the signaled, that it was found necessary to provide some form of entertainment for the idle soldiers. Professor Crafton at that time was at Klenqourt field, Toul, France. With the aid of the rest of the squadron, the play was decided and declared to be highly successful by the soldiers stationed at Touil. As nearly as possible, the play is to be reproduced as it was shown in France by the Dorsey-Liberty post. Sheets that were used for the curtains were obtained at a nearby hospital, stage fixtures and properties were obtained from a local question from ruined cities or from any other source that was available. The play is being presented by the American Legion for the purpose of showing how the soldiers in France entertained themselves. The proceeds be used to pay the expenses of the drum and huggle corps of the Donny Post. St. Louis, Feb. 17—(UF) John-Reuben Clark, United States Ambassador to Mexico, said on his arrival how to respond to Washington to tender his resignation. Responding to questions during the defense of his paper. Mr. Bullard asserted that, in all probability, a socialistic society would provide the best basis for application of the free trade theory. At the third meeting of the recently inaugurated series of colloquium, William Bullard, c32, read and defended paper, "The theory of Foreign Trade," before the Summertime scholars Professor John Ike presided at the meeting. Summerfield Scholars Me "The actual practice of foreign trade, since it results from an individual interpretation of a distinctly social phenomenon, is far removed from true theory," Bullard said. "The basis of trade is not an exchange of money, but rather the transfer of goods, must, in the long run, be equal. Comparative costs should determine the commodities to be exchanged." In conclusion Bullard contended that the removal of barriers from free trade throughout the world would bring about a noticeable betterment in economic conditions within a few months time. The next regular colloquium will be held March 10, at which time Joseph Vogler, 734, will present a paper. Bullard Presents Paper on Theory of Foreign Trade After losing his sight, Wilson entered the state school for the blind in Kansas City, Kan. He started to school when he was 12 and finished grade school and high school, a course normally taking 12 years, in nine. --work in nine, he studied basketery, chair carving, piano tuning, and other vocational work. He won several competitions in contests at the state fair in Topeka. KFKU --work in nine, he studied basketery, chair carving, piano tuning, and other vocational work. He won several competitions in contests at the state fair in Topeka. For recreation he plays the piano. In high school he was active in debat- ing. And besides doing his 12 years 6. 15 p.m. Musical program arranged by Roy Underwood, associate professor of piano. 6 p.m. American Japanese Relations Ernest D. Tyler, extension instructor in history. Friday, Feb. 17 Blindness Does Not Handicap Student Aspiring to Study Law at University Studying, even with the laborious methods which he must use, does not take all his spare time. Wilson declares. Wilson expects to be a lawyer. After graduating from the Teachers College he plans to teach for a while in a southern school, then enter the School of Law at the University of Kansas. Saturday, Feb. 18 Emporia, Feb. 17—(UF)—Blindness, according to Samuel Wilson, a negro student at Kansas State Teachers College here, is no handicap to a person. Being deaf would be a hardship, but not being blind! Saturday, Feb. 1 6 p.m. Special Athletic Interview: Dr. James A. Naismith Thus he laughs off the injury which impaired his sight when he was 7 years old and caused him to become totally blind at 12. He takes examinations on typewriter, when possible. If this plan is not practicable, he writes his answers in Brille. He reads them to the instructors later. Of course, not being able to see anything is inconvenient, he admits. Not being able to read textbooks, since they are not printed in Braille, he must have a reader to help him study. Instead of taking notes with pencil and paper, he has to pierce holes with a stylus on Braille paper. Men's Glee Club to Sing in All-Musical Vespers String Quartet Will Also Appear on Sunday's The thirty-seventh all-Musical vespers by the School of Fine Arts will offer another program on Sunday at 4 p.m. The University Men's Glee club of 40 members under F. W. Cobb will present a performance in its first public audience in three numbers. Program Three advanced music students Gavin Doughty, 32, William Howie 32, and George Trovioli, 53, will attend a concert program offered by the program, the first with the opening organ number, last two with two selections for two pianos. An interesting minute for three cellos will be given to perform in this concert, fa33, and Dean D. M. Swearthout. The University String quartet will play a movement from the "Unfinished Quartet in F Major" by Edward Grieg while a quartet composed of Professor Eugene McKee and Karl Kuestersteiner, viola, Des Swarthwout, first cell, Miss Hargiss second cell, with Professor Roy Underwood at the piano, will play two movements from the "Forelen Quintet" by Franz Schubert, a lively scherzer and variations on the song of the ensemble one of Schubert's finest works. A vocal quartet composed of Mise Meribah Morris, soprano, Miss Irene Peabody, contrata, Professor Pilchre, tenor, and Dale Vilet. c38, bass, with Miss Allie Merle Conger at the piano and Professor Laurel Eovette Anderson in an arrangement by Diels of Torrence's "Show Me By The Ways, O Lord." The vespers on Sunday is the third in the annual series of four such programs of ensemble or concerted music given by the School of Fine Arts each year for the past 10 years. The final one of the series occurs on March 19. Headquarters 847 Mass. St. Alumni Hold Annual Meets The University of Kansas alumni of Michigan and of western Washington hold their annual reunions the last of January. The Michigan alumni had a winter reunion in Detroit, Jan. 20, Walter Shannon, f29, acted as master of ceremonies. Letters from Governor Alfred M. Landon, Chancellor E. H. Lindley, Dean George C. Shaad, Mius Heiner Rhoda Hoopes and Fred Ellsworth were read. The following officers were read: J. Leibler, e11, president; Dr. Herbert B. Gaston, c21, vice president; and Mrs. Anthony Ostes, c23, secretary-treasurer. The alumni of western Washington held their dinner Jan. 28, in Seattle, Wash. In spite of the disagreeable weather 34 members were present. F. E. Case, c'99, was elected president, and Miss Joseph McCleveray, c'10, was elected secretary-treasurer, for the coming year. Dinner and Election of Officers Constitute Meetings Prof. John Ise of the department of economics addressed the meeting of Kansas alumni in St. Louis Sunday. Feb. 12 on "Present Conditions on the University of Kansas Campus." Following the address the following officers were elected: President, Ralph E. Smith, secretary, James E. Wooldridge; e26; secretary treasurer, Everett E. Carlson, e25; woman representative, Mrs. John A. Sterling, fa25. London, Feb. 17.-(UP)-Adolph Hopf plans to visit Benito Mussolini, fastest premier of Italy after the German election March 5, it was learned today THE KANSAS CITY STAR 13 papers — 15c per week Hitler to Visit Duce Subscribe for from a reliable source here. H. L. NEVIN When Down Town--at tbe PHONE 17 Distributor Established 1868 835 Mass. Phone 182 The place to stop for a refreshing fountain drink or appetizing sandwich is our beautiful new Walnut Room. Wiedemann's LUNCHEON Served Daily 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday 5:30 till 7 p.m. Saturday and Sunday Add Porcupine to Exhibit The second complete specimen of a Kannas collected porcupine was added to the large collection of mammals in which it resides. Mammals collection, here yesterday. Museum Has Second Animal of Its Kind Found in Kansas This interesting animal, about which so many fauna stories are told, was once a common resident in the northwest of the United States. It is considered extinct in Kansas for many years, and is only known in scientific collections of the state for one skin, collected in 1924, and two skulls, picked up from an ago, prior to the one received today. This specimen was killed went by Oberlin, in Decatur county about two weeks ago. Mr. W. Hibbard, c38, of the museum of paleontology here the porcupine was donated to the local collection by Oberlin, who secured the specimen. A total of 24 specimens of percupine are represented in the museum collection here, only four of which are known as the Nebraska Yellow-haired Perecine. Over in the museum it is called Erethizon Epixanthus Bruneri. Buehler to Present Paper Debate Coach to Speak Before North Central Speech Conference Professor E. C. Bucher of the speech department has been asked to present a paper at the North Central Speech conference to be hold March 3 and 4 at Iowa City, Iowa. The text of pro-seminar session is "Analyzing the Debate Question." The honor of being selected to speak to the conference has probably been conferred upon Professor Buehler in view of the fact that he has prepared debate handbooks for the use of high school students for the last five consecutive years. To date, he is the author of seven of these handbooks. The North Central Speech conference includes all schools in the Missouri valley. the Big Ten and colleges and universities in the northern states of the country. Delta Sigma Rho, the national delta society, will hold its annual tournament in Iowa City in con- ference with the North Central Speech conference. Want Ads NOTICE: The Palms Farm is serving fish, steak or chicken dinner from 11 a.m. until 2 p.m. Saturday, for 25c. --yes **LEASANT rooms for boys in com- fortable home at price you can af- ford to pay. Home cooked meals, all- day care, on week.** Phone 7488 - -110 Phone 2788 - -110 JIGSAW PUZZELS cut to order. Furnish your own pictures, or we'll furnish them. Any number of pieces. Craft Co., 413 North St. Phone 662 -107 STUDENTS OF French, German, Spanish, Greek, Latin; Learn labor saving methods of acquiring vocabulary. Use of card index classification word analysis. Trial lesson, 35c. Phone 521. — 105 HAVE YOUR application photographs made at Moore Studio. 719 Mass. (upstairs-exclusive). Phone 964. -125 FOUR更高 furnished rooms, $7 to $12 a month. Breakfast and dinner, $14 a month. Discount if both board and room are taken. 1200 Tennessee. — 105 TRUNK KEYS, door keys, car keys, Good locker padlocks, night latches, door closers repaired. Trewery & Rutter. 623 Vermont St. Phone 319 MADE FOR YOU Suiting You Is My Business. Why Take Chances on the clothes made for Thomas. Richard or Harry when you can have them made for you at the same price or less. The spring fabrics are all here. Some as low as $17.50, suit or tocape. Schulz the Tailor 917 Mass. --- CAFETERIA www.mathworks.com Brought Back for a second visit by POPULAR DEMAND Red NICHOLSON IN PERSON AND HIS 11 WORLD FAMOUS •PENNIES• FEATURING JUNE REA • TONY SACCO • ERNIE MATHIAS • PING BREAKFAST Suggestions Fruit ... 05c Bacon and Egg ... 05c Toast. 2 ... 03c Coffee ... 05c HOLS FRIDAY NIGHTS Just what you will enjoy are COLLEGE NIGHT University students and alumni enjoy a real alummy in the colorful entertainment of College Night in the Grill And remember, the courtyard is only fifty feet. 25c Sunday evening Family Supper Only $1.00 for Full Course Dinner and Dancing till 1 a.m. (No Couvert) Luncheons ... 65c, 85c Full Course Dinner ... $1.50 Cavities at late super only ~50c on week nights, 6:00 Saturdays The Grill's most popular band in 1932 and the second most popular orchestra ever to play in Kansas City. SN FREE PARKING: At Down Town Garage and Club Ana Parks No.1 and 2. --cream $1.00 Ovaline 50c Milk of Magnesia WEEK END DRUG SPECIALS NEW MUENHLEBACH GRILL MAKE RESERVATIONS IN ADVANCE NEW REDUCED BRIDges Frens Sanitary Napkins 2-25c 25c Dr. West's Tooth Paste 2-33c 25c Kleenex 19c 50c Rubbing Alcohol 17c Menu for Saturday FRIDAY and SATURDAY Roast Capon Mashed Potatoes Dressing and Gravy Buttered Asparagus Rolls and Butter Coffee and Milk Noonday Lunch Everyday 25c Miscellaneous Specials 1 lb Psylla Seed ... 39a 50 cjergens Lotion ... 39c $1.00 Coty Face Powder 89e $1.00 Squibbs Aspirin 49e 75c Witch Hazel, pt. ... 49c $1.00 Listerine ... 79c 65 conds Creams ... 39c 50 Tek Tooth Brush ... 39d 50 ingrams Shaving PHONE 20 WE DELIVER 26c 79c 39c Free Motorcycle Delivery 50c 50c Tooth Pastes Squibba Pebeco Ipana Pepsodent Kolyns 20c $1.10 39c 3-$1.00 35c Williams Shaving Cream 21c $1.00 Lucky Tiger Hair Tonic 69c 50c Brilliantine Hair Oil 29c ROUND CORNER DRUG CO. PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1933 FOR LUNCH Ham Salad Sandwich and Hot Chocolate Union Fountain Sub Basement, Memorial Union FURS REPAIRED We have all kinds of pets on hand for repairing. We also do cleaning and glazing, which includes minor repairs without charge. Removal of debris on carpet. Cornelia Byrd—Furs 81412 Mass. (upstairs) Phone 85. The Number 65 The Price - 25c — The Name — Jayhawk Taxi Ike Guffin, Prop. Mat. and Eve. 15c VARSITY TONIGHT Jackie Cooper Robert Coogan in "SOOKY" SATURDAY ONLY Double Program JOE E. BROWN "Fireman Save My Child" "RECKLESS RIDER" Also Chapter 5 Jungle Mystery SUN-MON— WILL ROGERS IN "TO BUSY TO WORK" PATEE WHERE BIG PICTURES PLAY NOW! ENDS SATURDAY The Picture They Didn't Dare Let You See Till Now! "The Big Drive" Secret Government Films Taken From Official War Records A Blast From Hell That Shakes the World Also—Zasu Pitts Comedy STARTS SUNDAY GEO. ARLISS King's Vacation It Combines the Drama of "Diarasei" With the Comedy of "The Millionaire" The Screen's Finest Actor: A Role as Human as an Emperor in His Night Shirt. Also - "Technocracy" Krazy Kaf-Novelty-News Oklahoma Will Attempt to Break Missouri Jinx 42nd STREET Is Coming McDermott's Five Will Try to Retain Big Six Norman, Feb. 17- (Spl.)—A desperate effort to break the jinx that rides with "Big Six" conference basketball teams that play on the road, will be made by the University of Oklahoma five when it meets the rejuvenated Missouri Tigers Friday night in the Brewer fieldhouse at Columbia. Leadership The Years Surprise Show Coach Hugh McDermott left yesterday, arriving this morning. He will take nine players and all practice workouts this week will determine which men go a good guess on the first seven would be, Acting Captain Beck, Anderson, Potts, Brom, Leanne C Brown, Browning and James are to be selected to be selected from Burk, Colb, Kroult, Robertson, Smith, T羽, and Vaurhn. Gwen Harold Brown's Nebraska five gave Oklahoma a whole of an argument here last Saturday night, leading to 30 to 24 mishaps in the half, but the game was fulfilled fully as good at his position as either Johnson of Kansas or Wagner of Missouri when they played here. However the Oklahoma team arose to the top with a 6-1 win over Miami, its high-scoring guards, ran in the final four minutes to score 10 points and got 39 to 35. The rangy Nebraska got more lay-up shots from block play than any team playing here in the second round, be it in excellent physical condition. Although Oklahoma at present leads the "Big Six" race with five wins and a lone defeat, that advantage means nothing since three of the four remaining games on the Sooner schedule are away from home with Missouri, Kansas, Texas and Georgia, Canada, Iowa and Lincoln. Iowa state plays at Norman Feb. 20. "Bad" Browning, sophomore guard from Eust. at present has a better scoring average than any forward or guard in the "Big Six," being surpassed only by two centers, Johnson and Wagner. Men's Intramurals Alpha Phi Ouces defended Theta Tau 23 to 8 end Delta Upson won from Triangle 27 to 10 in last evening's intramural basketball games. Four games will be played tonight. Delta Tau Delta vs Beta Theta Pi, Alpha Tau Omega vs Rowlands, Phi Kappa Pi vs Pi Kappa Alpha, and Alpha Kappa Pi vs Kappa Eta Kappa. The scores of last evening: Delta Upsilon—27 F G F T F F Noble, f 0 0 0 Kister, f 2 1 0 Jorgenson, e 3 1 1 Galloway, g 0 0 0 Butter, g 0 0 0 Lane, g 2 0 0 Triangle----19 | | F.G. | F.T. | F | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Potetz, c | 1 | 0 | 0 | | Chemy, f | 2 | 1 | 0 | | Alexander, f | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Dawson, g | 2 | 0 | 0 | | Rubeg, g | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Sherver, g | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Tatwell, g | 0 | 0 | 1 | Referee, Quigley. Independents Win Trophy In the finals of the women's intramural basketball last night I W.I.W. won an easy game from Gamma Phi Beta. The win was 31-8. Miss Hoover office W. W. Scores 31-8 Victory in Women's Intramural Basketball Finals FG. FT. FT. Hunter, f 1 2 Johnson, j 1 0 Nathan, n 3 0 Matee, o 2 0 Matee, g 0 1 Matee, g 3 0 Alpha Phi Omega-23 F.G. F.T. F. White, f 1 0 1 Rose, f 0 1 0 Johnson, e 1 2 0 Mam, g 0 0 0 Bruzelius, g 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 I. W.W. has been the outstanding team of the independent division, while Gamma Phi Beta easily conquered the organized houses. In the game last night, however, I.W.W. showed its superiority by piling up a big lead. Naismith Talks to W. A. A Inventor of Basketball Shows Scrap book of Game's Development Dr. James Naismith spoke to the W. A. A. Wednesday evening at the Robinson gymnastics, explaining how he happened to originate the game of basketball and why he used different aspects of it. Referee. Baxter. Dr. Naimish exhibited his very interesting scrapbook concerning the development of basketball. Among the books he wrote were several dealing with the beginnings of women's basketball and the types of clothing they were in early days. He also showed a number of books obtained from foreign countries. The I.W.W. team is composed of C. Hunter, E. Morgan, F. Branje, B. Jyle, M. E. Edie, and L. Montgomery. The Gamma Phi Beta tetra consists of D. Birt, C. Lathrop, H. Kinney, L. Wright, E. Watermaler, and H. Onie. A short business meeting was held before Dr. Naismith's dress. Dorothy Lightbarn, president, presided. Mary Day committee reported that a Day committee, reported that letters had been sent out to the various high schools throughout the stateiving them to send representations to which is sponsored by the W. A. A. Pyle and Edie of I.W.W. were high scorers, as also was Birt of Gamma Phi Beta. A trophy will be presented to the winners of the finals. Gamma Phi Beta received the award last year. F.G. F.T. F. Hunter, g 0 0 1 Morgan, g 0 0 1 Baker, g 1 0 1 Pyle, f 7 1 0 Edle, c 6 0 0 Montgomery, f 2 0 0 I. W. W.-31 Lathrop, f | F.G. F.T. F Kinney, f | 1 1 0 Birt, c | 2 0 0 Cake, g | 0 0 0 Wright, g | 0 0 0 Watermulder, g | 0 0 1 Opie, g | 0 0 1 Gamma Phi Beta----8 Dr. H. Lane's class in embryology, an advanced course, has the largest enrolment in the history of the department, 33, while the actual seating capacity of the class-room designed to accommodate the class is only 32. Class Over-runs Classroom Referee. Hoover. Intramural Swimming Meet Set for Feb. 21-25 Entries Due by Next Monday; Competition to Be in Nine Events The intramural swimming meet is scheduled to begin Tuesday, Feb. 21. Final events will be held Thursday, Feb. 23. In order to be considered in team competition in an event, each organization is required to swim two men in each event and may compete three. The marks of the two highest men from each organization are averaged and the one whose team average is best in an event receives five points. That team whose average is second shall receive three points, third, two points, and fourth, one point. The individual whose mark in the event is the best is the individual winner and receives one point for his team. The winning team is determined by adding team scores in all events. A player who earns a score for man for completing his event. An individual may swim either unattached or for entry points for his organization. Events to be held are the 200-yard medley relay, 50-yard dplash, plumpee, 100-yard backstroke, 100-yard backstroke, diving 220-yard dash, and 100-yard dash. Inter-organization wrestling preliminaries will be held Tuesday, Feb. 28 and Wednesday, March 1. The semi-finals will be held March 2 and finals Tuesday, March 7. Entry blanks are to be in by Feb. 20 Wrestling Starts Feb. 28 Four men may be entered in each weight but only three may compete. When more than three men make the weight for which they are entered their manager must designate inmates to participate. These are to compete. A man may wrestle in only one class. He may compete in a class heavier than his weight but **Number Drawings Show** They have been made for the open international competition. These matches must be played immediately. The pairings: Powell vs. Gartiner, Bondank vs. Larson, Lesson vs. Rudolph, Wye vs. bye, Rudolph, Wye vs. bye, Nichon vs. Reynolds, Durham vs. Wang vs. Baxter, Wye vs. koe斯特, Baxter vs. Koe斯特, Foster, Beck vs. Grimes, Lewin vs. bye, Morrison vs. Bloomquist, and Spalburgus vs. Handball Drawings Made none under his weight. Entry blanks must be signed by the hospital physician and in by Feb. 24. "Missed Date" Is Explained Missouri Expected Kansas Matmen for Meet Last Evening Five members of the University of Kansas wrestling team left this morning for Columbia, Mo., where they will meet the Missouri Tigers in a Big Six contest tonight. Captain Peter Mekhern, Olympic champion, Nolan Sander, made the trip. Herbert Alphin, swimming coach, accompanied the队. Through a understanding, Missouri officials and wrestlers believed the mat met to have been scheduled for last night, and this morning thewires between the two schools were illuminated. The explanations were forthcoming. The Tigers, however, agreed to hold the meet this evening. HARGISS TO HOLD TRYOUTS FOR TEACK MEN TOMORROW Coach Bill Hargis reports that Saturday afternoon, he will hold troys for track and field athletes. Due to the cold weather, which has hampered the men, Coach Hargis, says that the longer races will be shortened somewhat in order that there will be no danger of the men injuring themselves. He is holding these tryouts in order to get a line on his new material. Send The Daily Kansan home DICKINSON Where Students Meet TODAY AND SATURDAY Broadway's Champion Gold Digger in Action! MAE WEST — in — (He Was Her Man But) NEWS - COMEDY - TRAVELOGUE "SHE DONE HIM WRONG" STARTING SUNDAY! THE WOMAN ACCUSED "19 AUTHORS WROTE IT" NANCY CARROLL and Others Wednesday-Thursday — No Price Increase! BY REQUEST Eddie Cantor 'The Kid From Spain' COMING SOON! "THE SIGN OF THE CROSS" Tobacco to smoke right has to be a different kind of tobacco from that used in cigarettes...and it has to be made by an entirely different process... OUT in Kentucky, where they have pretty women, fast horses, and blue grass, there grows a tobacco called White Burley. It doesn't grow anywhere else in the world. There is a type of this White Burley that is best suited for pipe smoking. It is neither too thick nor too thin. It is not light and chaffy; at the same time, it is not rank or strong. "U, S.Type 31" is the government classification for White Burley. Since no other pipe tobacco has yet been found which seems to equal White Burley, this is what we use in making Granger Rough Cut. Next, we use the Wellman Method, a famous 1870 method of making pipe tobacco, to give Granger its fine flavor and fragrance. Then, too, Granger is "Rough Cut"—just like they used to "whittle" their tobacco off a plug with a jack-knife. It smokes cool, lasts longer and never gums a pipe. And finally, we want to sell Granger for 10 cents. Good tobacco—right process—cut right. So we put Granger in a sensible soft foil pouch instead of an expensive package, knowing that a man can't smoke the package. Cranger has not been on sale very long, but it has grown to be a popular smoke. Folks seem to like it. 2 Liggett oilbyersTobacco Co. © 1933 LUGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. GRANGER ROUGH CUT PIPE TOBACCO The Granger pouch keeps the tobacco fresh TEN CENTS GRANGER ROUGH CUT 象 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN } The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas NUMBER 105 VOLUME XXX State Legislators Get Information About University Kansas Solons Visit Dyche and Watkins Hospital on Informal Tour of Inspection PARTY ATTENDS GAME As a means of obtaining first-hand information about the University and knowledge of the needs of the school about 40 Kansas state senators and representatives yesterday visited Mt. Oread. The solos, some of them accompany the students of the University Athletic association, the Chancellor's cabinet, and members of the Chamber of Commerce legislative body. The legislators arrived in two charter busses from Topeka at 4 p.m. and were met at the Memorial Union by Chancellor Lindley, and the reception committee. The senators and representatives and their parties gather in the lobby where they were joined b two members of the board of regents Chancellor Lindley outlined the tour of inspection for the guests and led the way to Dyche museum. The party gathered inside and while several remained on the first floor, the Chancellor and others visited the two top floors and the basement. The warm beams, sagging floors, and cracked walls of the party and the approximate sum required for repairs given. Visit Watkins Hospital From the museum, the legislators went to the Watkins Memorial hospital and were shown the modern improved methods of caring for the health of the students. Chancellor Lindley pointed out some of the buildings which were gifts to the state by private parties. A tour through the corridors of the hospital followed a show in the building of the great improvements over the old hospital. From the hospital the party was conducted to the second floor of Fraser. Here the Chancellor presented figures which the chairman of the ways and means committee had requested. Statistics showing the increase in number of students attending the University are shown in Figures showing the percentage of expenditures and size of the budget allowed the University were compared. Chancellor Lindley explained how the increase in the number of students has not been met by an increase in the number of professors. He also pointed out that while the budget of the University was reduced 10 per cent last year and 25 per cent this year, other departments which were to get a cut in their budget did not receive it. "The board of education has suffered both cuts and larger ones that have departed in the state," he said. Chancellor Lindley declared that we have put our exigencies to the bone to stay within our budget." Fees Play Large Part He told the senators and representatives that the University is meeting almost 75 per cent of its expenses by fees charged to students. He stated, "its only 25 % per cent depend upon the state." The Chancellor then compared figures showing the increase of those who are taking graduate work in the course at the university required for four years college work. The members of the senate who were present were: Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Cofferman, Osage; A. O. Nelson, Neoah; Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Friend, Douglas; Braden Chadwick, Cherokee; Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Milne; Mr. and Mrs. C. Doleane; O. Dolanyne, Donphan; Kirk Dale, Cowley, and Roland Boyton, the attorney general, and his The members of the house who attended were: Mr. and Mrs. O. M. Balch, Neoah, Mar. and I. H. Cook, Haskell; Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Musimer, Russell; Mr. and Mrs. B. Scott, Stau- cer; El. Flitzgerald, Cloud; Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Kirchner, Hawkins; W. A. New- kbar, Barber; Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Noone, G. W. Plummer, Jefferson; E. M. Roth, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. White, Jewell; The two members of the Board of Regents who were present were Drew McLaughlin, Paola; and Bale P. Waggener of Atchison. lau Sigma Plans o Offer Interpretations t Dance Recital LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 19. 1833 No more wrong or puzzled interpretation! An explanation of each dance is to be offered with every number in the Tau Sigma recital which will be presented March 8. There is no need to misinterpret舞语, Miss Dunkel, director of this presentation, but it was important that the audience can see and understand what the dance expresses. This year three different types of dancing are to be presented. Ballet, the modern form of dancing; Denis-Shawn, which typifies a new type of lyric movement as an German, a very angular and seven mechanistic form of dancing. CONDENSED WIRE NEWS Greyhound Sued for $15,000 Kansas City, Mo. Feb. 18—(UP) —A damage suit for $15,000 was filed today in the Wyndotech County district court by David Taylor against the Western Greyhound Lines, Inc. Taylor was wounded in the foot Jan. 10 when two bands hit up a Greyhound box and terrorized the passengers. One of them shot and killed after Taylor with a borrowed gun and shot and killed the other bandit. Young Slaver to Dic Rockford, Ill., Feb. 18.-(UF)-Eighteen-year old Russell M. Williams the third time was sentenced today to die in the electric chair for the holdup slaying of a street car motorman. Judge Edward Shruffle pronounced the sentence and set April 21 as the date when the youth must die. Mrs. Roosevelt Travels Alone Weather to be Pleasant Kansas City, Mo., Feb. 18—(UP)—A pleasant weekend was premised for the Kansas City territory by Andrew M. Hamrick, weather observer. The temperature for Sunday would be in the range 40°, he said, with increasing cloudiness. Norwalk, Conn. Feb. 18- (UP) -Without benefit of secret service guard or apparently even a road map, Mrs Franklin D. Roosevelt passed through here, inquiring highway directions even as the ordinary motorist. She is on her way to visit her sons Franklin Jr., and John at Grown school. India Supplies Much Gold Wife of Ex-Kaiser Visits Germany Doorn, Holland, Fek. 18-(UP)—Princess Hermine, wife of ex-Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany, left for Berlin today for a fortnight's visit. The trip was understood to have no political impact on the process. recently the ex-kaiser was considering returning to Germany. London, Feb. 18—(UP)—Gold from India's fabulous holds continue flowing like a yellow river to London and thence to nations of the Western world. In the last 18 months India has shipped over 80 million pounds (approximately $400,000,000 at par) to London, yet the vast hats are scruely touched. It is worth noting that India possesses 420 Million pounds (approximately $2,250,000,000) hoarded. This is half as much as the United States' entire gold stock. Prepares Geological Study Former Kansan's Work to Be Displayed at World's Fair Miss Betty Kelley, gr27, is the author of a geology study of suburface formations in Kansas and Missouri which will be displayed in the hall of art and sciences in the petroleum exposition at World's Fair in Chicago this summer. Miss Kolei is the only woman in Kansas who ever completed a geologic cross-section showing subsurface formations. She has written numerous paper articles on the results of specimens to be found in different parts of the United States. Her newest work, "The Investigation of Kansas Astrocodes," will be published in a series of articles to appear soon in this issue of the Paleoontological Journal. Miss Kellet studied the profession of geology under Dr. Raymond C. Moore, head of the department of geology and state geologists. She obtained a degree and then took a year of micro-paleontology under Mr. Moore. There will be no mid-week Varnish at the Memorial Union this Wednesday because of Washington's birthday. No Mid-Week Varsity Doctors Describe Guiseppe Zangara as 'Social Misfit xaminers' Report States Would-Be Assassin Is Psycopathic and Persevering INDEFINITE ON SANITY Miami, Feb. 18. - (UP) - Guiseppe Zangarr in a social mistifier, doctors who examined the would-be assassin announced tonight. Placing a possible maximum sentence of 80 years on four counts for the little Italian-born bricklayer was described as a psychopathic person and possessed of a persevering character in order to Dr. H. Lages and T. Earl Moore. While the examination proceeded this afternoon, Zangarin's victims in a Miami hospital continued to show improvement. The bulletins stated that the condition of Mayor Anton Cermak of Chicago was unchanged, and that he was resting comfortably with temperature and pulse normal. The report did not say definitely whether Zangara is same. The report is expected to play an important part in the assassin goes on trial Monday. Governor Henry Norner of Illinois and other friends arrived to be at his side. CERMAK'S CONDITION IMPROVES Makes 'Encouraging Progress;' Mrs Gill Reported 'Better' Miami, Feb. 18. - (UP) - Mayer Auror Cermak, son of bullets intended for President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt, continue to make a name for himself. The 9:43 a.m. bulletin issued at the hospital said, "Mayor Cerakik must to rest quietly and his general condition, temperature, pulse and resuscitation normal." In a more informal statement, Dr. Frank Jinka, Cermak's son-in-law and one of his personal physicians, said, "He is coming along splendidly and everybody is pleased with his condition." Joseph Gill, the second critically wounded victim of Zambia's attack, also showed improvement. "Mrs. Gill's condition shows a decided improvement," she bullioned was signed by Dr. T. W. Haskell, for personal physician. The arrangement of Guiseppe Zangara who shot the mayor and four others in his attempt to kill Roosevelt Wednesday night was postponed until Monday. Chicago Officials Threatened Chicago, Fob. 18. —(UP)—Letter threatening "the same thing that Cerkin got" was received today by County Attorney Edmond K. Jarecki and Judge Dennis E. Sullivan of the collection suits had been dismissed. Crane Will Speak Tuesday Cyrus Crane, president of the Missouri State Bar association, will speak on "The Practice of Law." According to Dean Davis, all students who are enrolled in requirements of whether or not they are law students, are invited to attend. This set of tryouts is only for students who have never attempted a pass qualifications, Hibbs said, and only those students will be given a trial The candidates will be required to give a pantomime and read verses. The law school convolution, which was postponed last week, will be held in the Little Theatre in Green hall at 10.30 a.m. Tuesday, Robert McNair Davis, dean of the School of Law, announced yesterday. Missouri Bar Association President Will Address Law Convocation Psi Cbi to Meet Trouys for the Dramatic club will be tomorrow at 3:30 p.m. according to Eugene Hibbs, c34, president of the club. The tryouts for parts in the next play to be staged will be announced later the Dramatic club president announced DRAMATIC CLUB WILL HOLD SPRING SEMESTER TRYOUTS Psi Chi, national psychology honorary fraternity will meet Monday at 4 p.m. in room 21 of east Administration building. Election of officers will be held and plans for the coming year are to be made. Vesper Program Planned The thirty-seventh all-musical Vespers will be played today in the University auditorium at 4 p.m. The program will open with an orgn song "Fantasie in G Minor" (Bach), followed by a stringed quartet consisting of Memar Geltel first violin, Coumadine Geltel second violin, steiner, violin, and D. M. Swartwout, cello. They will play "Unfinished Quartette in F Minor" (Grieg). Organ and String Numbers Will Feature Recital Today A violin and cello quintet will play "Scherzo" (Schubert). The Men's Glee club will conclude the program with "Ave Mara" (Arcadia); "Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal" (Andrews), and "Lamp in the West" (Parker). There will be a vocal ensemble "Show Me Thy Ways, O Lord" (Torrente-Deis) by Meribah Moore, soprano Irene Bephy, contrabando William Pilcher, tenor and Dale Vilet. Allee Miee Conger will accompany them on the piano. The two vocal organists will organise will the organ accompaniment. Gordon Kinney, Genievie Hargiss, and D. M. Swarthowt will play a cello trio "Menuetoe" (Beethoven). The cello trio will be followed by two sketches from the Mother Goose Suite "Pavane of the Sleeping Beauty in the Wood" and "Ladderconette, Empress of Georgia" (Havel). William Howe and George Tervoi will play the pianos. Japan Will Not Change Attitude Toward League General Araki Says Basic Principles Will Not Be Compromised Copyright, 1923, by the United Press Tokyo. Feb. 18—(UP)—There is no possibility of a last minute change in Japan's attitude toward the League of Nations, War Minister Sadoo Araki了到 the United Press in an interview today. tions is all that can compromise the situation. Japan still demands recognition of Manchukuo as an independent state. The thin straggly-montanned general made his unequivocal declaration despite reports that the venerable Premier Makoto Sato and Finance Minister, Korekyo Pakahasi would oppose quitting the league. "We will follow our established course. Our basic principles will not be compromised." Japan still insists that direct Chinese-Japanese negotiation CHINESE ATTACK AT KAILU Communications Say Japanese Are Forced to Retreat to Shih Chia Peiping, Feb. 18—(UP)—The commander of the garrison at Kailu on the eastern border of Jebel answered a Japanese ultimatum today between Kailu and Tangui, an official Chinese communication said. The "big sword's" of Feng Chan Hai also participated in the attack, the communication said. The Japanese were forced to retreat to Shih Chin Pao because Kaki and the main Japanese concentration at Tangshan the Chinese claimed. The display included designs for magazine covers, pottery, metal work, book-binding, needle-craft, textile work, line blockures, and two wood staircases. Also shown is the shail Field's store department of Chicago were also shown. Miss Rosemary Ketcham, head of the department of design, was in charge of the display. Some of the work done by the depart ment of design was on display in the lobby of the Memorial Union yesterday afternoon. Design Work on Display Basketball Scores Work Done by University Students Is Shown in Memorial Union WEATHER Kansas—Generally fair Sunday. --- --- Nebraska 34, South Dakota 25 Auburn 16, Florida 11 Georgia Tech 32, Georgia 30 South Carolina 46, Duke 23 Indiana 29, Wisconsin 18 Illinois 26, Minnesota 22 Louisiana 26, Louisiana 29 Lewis 36, Michigan 35 Princeton 40, Cornell 32 Army 40, College 36 Navy 52, Lehigh 59 GLENN CUNNINGHAM AGAIN DEFEATS VENZKE Kansas Takes First Place Kansas Mile Star Jayhawks Defeat Iowa State 33-19; Now Lead Big Six Dick Wells Pilots Allen's Five to Victory by Garnering Thirteen Points JOHNSON SCORES Big SIX Named Kansas 6 W L Pet TP GP Kansas 6 W L Pet TP GP Okahanna 5 B 714 271 207 Missouri 4 B 571 217 203 Kansas State 4 B 251 202 223 Iowa State 2 B 285 213 209 Iowa State 2 B 143 128 208 Led by Dick Wells and Bill Johnson, who accounted for twenty-three points between them, the Kansas Jayhawks last night regained the Big Six basket after Cyclones 33-14 in the University auditorium. Missouri's victory over Oklahoma friday, coupled with the Kansas victory, sent Coach Forrest C. Allen's team back into the first position in the game, which it fast left to the Sooners last week. Overcoming an Iowa State lead in the first few minutes of the game, the Jay-hawkers steadily drawe away from their opponents and piled up a safe lead. The Jay-hawkers led the first ten minutes of play, the Jay-hawkers leading 14-8 at the half. Wells was the individual star of the game. In addition to displaying excellent floor work and a good defensive game, the lanky sophomore forward tossed in four baskets and five free throws. His passing was sure, and his work in recovering the ball from both sides was of invulnable aid to Kansas. Johnson Scores 10 Points Closely trailing Wells in point scoring and in general good play was Bill Johnson, who dropped in several neat shots from bad angles, as well as controlling the tip for the Jayhawkers. Johnson's ten points last night sent him farther into the lead for individual scoring when he made his twelve-point margin over Wagner of Missouri but the Kansas has played in one more game. Wegner, Iowa State pivet man, was the outstanding star for his team. Playing his first year of varsity basketball he had the best record in good account of himself all season, and last night played excellent basketball His height gave him an advantage in recovering the ball on follow shots, but he also taught him to consistently outjump Johnson. The Kansas team displayed a deadly eye from the free throw line, shaking eleven out of fifteen tries, but their shooting from the floor was somewhat wild. Harrington was unable to connect, as was Gray, while Johnson did. The players were usually unhappy for the basket. But if Kansas was wild, the Cyclones justified their name by being just a little bit wilder. During the last ten minutes the entire Iowa State队 was throwing the ball at the basket every time they got it, with little or no success. Captain Thompson, the only veteran on the team, after dribbling around Gray early in the game, and then firing the hoop, and counted only a free throw the rest of the time he remained in the game. Title Hope Near The Kansas victory last night almost assures that the Jayhawks will face a contest for the championship when Oklahoma comes to Lawrence a week from next Friday to wind up the Kanes. The Sooners can defeat Kansas State next week, only the Sooners will remain between it and the title. The Sooners are heavy favorites to defeat Iowa State next week and Nebraska the night after they both win. In March 3 will probably decide the winner of the conference title. No Booing at Game Conspicuous by its absence last night at the game was the booing that has been heard at previous Kansas home contests. Before the game, Wilbur F. Cohr, Jr., a member of the K Club spoke to the crowd, instituting Dr. Allen's campaign against bockey at basketball games. The crowd apparently Continued on page 4 Ten Leading Scorers Johannes, Kansas G FG FT FT FP Wagler, Missouri 8 32 16 16 16 Wells, Kansas 8 22 16 16 60 Browning, Oklahoma 8 22 16 16 60 Browning, Oklahoma 8 22 16 16 60 Boeyt, Kansas State 8 21 10 11 52 Harrington, Kansas 8 21 9 11 51 Grisham, Kansas S. 7 21 6 17 48 Graham,嫩白俄斯 7 21 6 17 48 Block, Okla 7 21 6 10 11 Feb. 24—Iowa State vs. Missouri a Ames. This Week's Games Feb. 20—Iowa State vs. Oklahoma at Norman. Feb. 24, Iowa State vs. Missouri at Ames. Feb. 25—Kansas vs. Kansas State at Manhattan mannatian. Missouri vs. Nebraska at Lin- Lincoln. Jayhawker-Tiger Battle to Be Thanksgiving Day Traditional Date Secured for Annual Classic in 1934:35 The universities of Kansas and Missouri will meet on the football field on Thanksgiving day for at least the next two years, it was decided Friday that the Directors Forrest C. Allen and C. L. Brewer in a conference at Kansas City. The decision will mark the return of the Jayhawker-Tiger grid class to its original data after several years of play and training, which was played on the Saturday before Thanksgiving, but last year it was scheduled for Nov. 12, a date hardly in keeping with the tradition that the two schools must close their seasons against the other. Until 1910, the annual battle was played on Thanksgiving day, but that year it was played in Kansas City and resulted in a $ 5 to $ 1 fee. That winter a game was played at the home date to the Saturday before Thanksgiving, and returning the tilt to the home fields of the two universities. Not since that year has the game been played away from Lawrence and Columbia. The date was again changed to Turkey day. Several years ago, at the request of the University of Kansas, the game was again moved to the Saturday before Thanksgiving to allow students to take advantage of the short vacation for Thanksgiving and go home. Since that change was made, Missouri authorities have been seeking to return the game to its Thanksgiving date to allow merchants who could not attend to the event a opportunity to attend. The conference between Director Brewer and Dr. Allen resulted in an agreement to effect. The two-year feature makes it somewhat of a trial agreement, as it would that the change might not be new. Naismith Receives Honor The first game under the agreement will be played in Lawrence on Thanksgiving day, 1833. Professor Rewarded for His Work at University Dr. Naismith, inventor of basketball, was presented a pen and pencil set by the members of the physical education department and the basketball squared between halves of the Kansas-Iowa State game last night, in appreciation of the work he has done for the University. The educator Lindley made a presentation. Dr. Naimian spoke briefly on the differences between the basketball of today and that of 40 years ago. He also introduced Mr. W. F. Yulin of Chicago, the one member of his original team which was present in the game. TAU SIGMA WILL FEATURE VOODOO DANCE AT RECITAL As a special feature in the Tau Sigma recital which will be presented March 8 in the University Auditorium, Darold Eagle, c35, of Tulsa, Okla., will give an African Voodoo dance as the incarnation of jazz. Eagle is very talented in such dancing because he has done a great deal of it before. Queer continuing and Byron Mason's Triple Trio will lend much to the mood and eccentricity of the dance. K Books Available K books are now available to new students and to those who were unable to get them during the first semester at room 10 in 10th Memorial Union. Kansas Mile Star Wins Baxter Race to Repeat Victory Numerous Upsets Feature N.Y.A.C. Games Last Night: Toppino Is Defeated WORLD'S RECORD TIED New York, Feb. 18—(UPI)-Glenn Cunningham, star *Kansas miler*, won the Baxter miler here tonight. A fight-spring on the last lap sent the Kansasan ahead of his great rival Gene Venkse of Pennsylvania, record holder in the indoor mile event. Loe Lerman won third and Carl Coun of Pennsylvania, finished fourth. The time for the event was 4:143. Ed Siegel, curly-haired ace of the Swedish-American Athletic Club, scored a stunning upset tonight when he defeated Emmett Toppin of New Orleans in the 60 yard sprint event. It was Toppin's first defeat in two years. The score was 85-72. Shaige Sugiada was timed at -96.3, bearing out Toppin by inches. Al Kiley of Georgetown University, who defeated Siegel in the semi-final, finished third in the final. Percy Bear of New York Athletic Club, world's top defensive player, won the 70-year hurdles. He was timed at 307.4, equalling the world's indoor record. He also equalled the record in his preprimary heat. John Collier of Boston Athletic Association, inter-college champion in his return to competition in the hurdles, won a full stride chinboard. James Hatfield of N. Y. A. C was third. Milton Sandler of the German-American Athletic Club sprinted magnificently in the last lap to win the 500 yard event in Atlanta on March 14. Vale was second and Haskell Derby of the N. Y. A. C was third. Pul Kanale of Bellemont, Mass., scored a second upet when he defeated McJaukee, veteran Fordham plum-dender in the two-mile handicap. Kenyali Lacombe and J.22 John Ryan of Manhattan College, with 30-yard-handstand, was third. Trio to Appear Tomorrow Famous Artists Will Present Added Attraction to Concert Course The Gretchenkannfirn, an added attraction to the University concert hall, will be aired at auditorium tomorrow at 8 p.m. The trip will be composed of Alexandre T. Gretchenkann, painter and composer; Albert Rappaport, theater and Roy Underwood. Rappaport will open the program by singing a selection of tenor solos, "Upon the Yellow Fields," "Over the Steepe," "My Native Land," and others, all of which were written by Gretethanoff, who will accompany Rappaport. Gretchenhoffin will then play a few of his own numbers after which Rappaport will sing selections by various composers and be accompanied by Underwood. Another number written by Gretchenhoffin, "Deix Mourcenux", will be played on two pianos. Gretchenhoffin will play the other. The program will close with Rappaport singing others of Gretchenhoffin, compositions. Gretchenhann, who has been named the "Schubert" of Russia, and Rappaport have just finished a season with the Chicago Civic Opera. Both men are internationally known in the field of music. Gretchenhann composes most of the music he plays and Rappaport sings the lyrics. The University Concert course will turn over practically all receipts from the concert to the artists as they are primarily interested in having the two musicians as guests at the University. The concert being held in the Administrators auditorium will hear the artists. The seating capacity of the auditorium is only 325 and after every seat is occupied no others will be admitted. Phil Baker Married New York. Feb. 18—(UP)-Phil Baker, comedian, today admitted to friends that for three months he has been married to Peggy Cartwright, English actress. Miss Cartwright was brought to New York by the Shuberts for a part in "Americana" nine months ago. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10. 1923 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Alfreda Broderick Managing Editor Cammis Editor Teacher Editor Teacher Editor Artwork Kerriman Joseph Cobbil Exchange Editor Amol Almudena Annual Editor Jane Dale Editor-in-Chief ... PAUL V. MINER Associate Editors ADVERTISING MGR. MARGARET INC! District. Manager. Jack Gallaghill Robert Whiteman Matthew Treese Maryanne Jones Elijah Krowm Billow Krown Alfreda Jordan William Millippe Ira McCarthy Jane McCarthy Dewey-Smith Marion Moore Published in the afternoon, five times a week and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Alabama, with the Press of the Department of Journalism. Subscription price, $4.00 per year, payable in advance. Single copies, each. Enquire at second-class matter September 17, 1919, at the office at lawrence, Kansas. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY, 19, 1933 THE JAYHAWKER MYSTERY When the news came out that the Jayhawker pictures were missing, students eagerly advanced many theories as to their whereabouts. Strange as it may seem, most were quick to place the blame on some of their fellow students, possibly basing their assumption on the belief expressed by the editor of the Jayhawker that the pictures had been removed from the council room after being dropped there. Now even the editor admits the possibility that the pictures may never have been delivered and that therefore the fault lies with the photographer. This theory is not unsupported by facts. The Kansas Players employed the same photographer last fall, and after his pictures of "Pygmalion" and certain plays were not delivered, found it necessary to employ another photographer. A student who was promised pictures of campus events and scenes for a Kansas City paper was never able to secure them. There are other circumstances to suggest carelessness in delivery of the pictures. Why, for instance, should the photographer deliver the pictures early in the morning when it is almost certain that no one would be at the office at that hour? And then, finding the door locked, why should he take chances on dropping them through a window when he knew they were a most valuable asset to the yearbook? In the light of all these circumstances, does it not seem strange that the water pipes should burst and destroy the plates so that no more prints could be made? Before condemning students for carrying off the pictures, those in authority should investigate and make certain that the pictures were actually delivered. Judging from the circumstances presented above, it may be revealed that it was not a student prank at all, but rather negligence on the part of the photographer. Imagine the consternation of a young miss who, after attending what she described as a "fairytale" school, many for three days, discovered that she was in a group intent on learning the gentle art of blowing gay tunes on her guitar. And there she was —without her place. THE POWER OF THE PRESS Great and potent are the powers and benefices of the press. A few days ago this column carried a plea for repair of the drinking fountain in the Kansan news room. The next morning the fountain did not work at all. A paragraph relating the fact was hastily inserted, and, lo and behold, the paper had not gone to press when came repairmen, and in less than a nonce a goodly stream of water was available to all and sundry, as well as to professors and right editors. Another difference between high school and college is that the high school students say, "I don't know," in response. The college students say, "I don't recall." ANOTHER TAX Now Uncle Sam is taxing jigsaw puzzles. Any containing more than 50 pieces, he says, is a game and taxable. Evidently one with fewer than 50 pieces may be considered child's play. There is no doubt that Uncle Sam has the right idea. He's a smart guy when it comes to grabbing a chance to get the people's money. The funny part of it is, the public won't give up the jigsaw puzzles until they're ready—tax or no tax! With Jim Bausch's acceptance of the European tour, Bing Crosby and Russ Columbo can rest easily once more. NO ADMITTANCE At the end of each semester, students who have failed to pass in 40 per cent of the class hours in which they were enrolled cannot enroll for the succeeding semester until their petition for reinstatement is approved by the board of faculty members. This system puts a premium on the art of drawing up a petition. In some cases a student may have justifiable reasons for failing to pass the required percentage of hours. The fact that he cannot actually justify his record, however, does not keep him from filling out an acceptable petition. Too often it is easy to fashion a good excuse. Re-entrance is not the only opportunity a student may have for formulating a petition. Fines and late enrollment fees are redeemed by petition. Exemptions are obtained by petition. Legal residence, in the eyes of the University, is sometimes acquired by petition. Numerous other occasions may arise on which the scholastic fate of the student will lie in the effect a small piece of paper will have on a board. In justice to students who are not gifted by nature in filling out petitions, the University should include in its curriculum some course of education along that line. We hereby petition for it. Three huzzas for "Wee Willie," but who in this great bisei" and sophisticated student body has been reading the "American Boy?" Campus Opinion Editor Daily Kansan; Upon the request of Dr. F. C. Allen, the Men's Student Council wishes to recommend to the students of the University of Kansas that further booing of the students be discouraged. The Council asks that the students co-operate in a movement not only to do away with booing at this University, but to do away with booing in all the schools of the Big Six Councils of the other schools will b The Men's Student Council, By Harold Denton, President. Send The Daily Kansan home. pabulum and patter Long, long ago, we promised ourself that if we ever became an editor, we would write, and what's more, print a column. Probably we won't be any great shakes as a columnist, but a promotion is a promise, and this is the result. Rudy Vallee and his Connecticut Yankees are to play for the inaugural ball. In view of the Democratic repeat plank, probably the tune to be played during the grand march will be the "Stain Son." Readers of the Kanusan who intend to become readers of this galley must weigh their qualifications carefully. First of all, patience* will undoubtedly be first of all, that is quiet and long-suffering. And a careful control of course, perceived sometimes to agree with ours. The gentle reader will without a doubt be called upon to exercise great quantities and the highest qualities of tolerance. A tongue that finds itself in such contexts will be highly desirable and grains of salt are an absolute necessity. We'll probably think of other needed characteristics of our reader as we go on, but all and sundry have our permission to continue where the above conditions have been met. The story is of an all-American high school basketball center and the great team he played on; of their close relationship to each other; of their separation to go to different colleges; and of their teammate, a graduate basketball court in a crucial game, but on different teams—From Kansas news columns. ... --since grinned engagging, because all the fellows they say she go up to Meester Thayer's room." "The whalehead market, for some reason, has greatly declined in recent years," said Dr. Richard Sutton of Kansas City, Mo. in the course of his study on the new school's men's City club Tuesday night. "And do you know," he added when the laughter subided, "I made that remark to a group of students this afternoon and not a soul in the audience." The University of Georgia Gevey, by way of Kansas Notes. Hold on there, Dr. Sutton. It's unfair to intimate that those students don't have a sense of humor. They just don't like you. You're not asking another joke about the depression' From the dearth of news about him in the newspapers later, we're tempted to believe that Hover is Rosevelt's "gotten man." . . . . . On Desert Soil Whew! A Utah man advocates a law to compel all persons over 18 years of age to spend half of the money they have. Such economy, when college students for many years have been spending all they have. P.V.M. Hospitality may have been unphas- sicated in the old days, but it didn't take the varnish off your furniture when it spilled - Dairy Illini. ... A profit is not without honor in any one's land nowadays. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXX Sunday, Fri. 19, 133 No. 105 Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon passions day and 11 20 a.m. on Saturday for Sunday issues. Students may obtain first semester grades at the Registrar's office according to the following schedule of names: Texas State Lass-O The faculty of the College will meet on Tuesday, at 4:30 in the auditorium on the third floor of the Administration building. E. H. LINDLEY All seniors who expect to receive their degrees at the end of the first semester should pay the diploma fee of $9 at the business office by Feb. 20. The German club will meet Monday at 4:30 in room 313 of Fraser hall. There will be games, songs and refreshments. DRIESHREU, President. COLLEGE FACULTY MEETING: Refunds for books sold by the exchange will be made Monday and Tuesday at the council booth in Marvin hall. C. E. KINDSVATER, Chairman. JDVM. PARKING PETITIONS: GEORGE O. FOSTER, Registrar. Students who have a petition for release from parking fines may present them in person to the parking committee at 4 o'clock Monday, in the office of the Parks and Recreation Department. DIPLOMA FEE: ENGINEERING BOOK EXCHANGE: GEORGE O. FOSTER, Registrar Phi Dell Kappa will meet at 7.30 p.m. Tuesday at the Alpha Kappa Lammbi house, 1332 Louisiana street. Prof. H. E. Chandler will speak. GRADES: CARLAND DOWNUM, Secretary. Monday, Feb. 20—A to G, inclusive Tuesday, Feb. 21—H to M, inclusive Thursday, Feb. 23—N to S, inclusive Friday, Feb. 24—T to Z, inclusive Saturday, Feb. 25—Those unable to appear PHI DELTA KAPPA: The May Day Mystery --since grinned engagging, because all the fellows they say she go up to Meester Thayer's room." SYNOPSIS Copyright by Octavus Roy Cohen. Octavus Roy Cohen By CHAPTER I — Antoinette Peyton, the daughter of Terry and Vernon, Marland, responds to Thayer's attention to Ivy Welch, seventen-year- old with bitter recriminations, the non, another student long Thayer's non, another student long Thayer's non, another student long Thayer's a "date" with him. Thyer and Vernon WNU Service CHAPTER 113—lairy determines to see Thayer's association with the family. Thayer persuades until she has appended to her husband at a fraternity house. Max Veritas rives and goes to his room. Toney ends her visit to Thayer and depares. Veritas afterward, visibly in a state of deep contemplation, lies lonely贴, apparently clothing to be CHAPTER 10—Larry Welch, Toy's apprentice. Howitzer to edy him appealed to his interest and to Toy's friend Tony Tovison are in love with Toy's father, but the family wants to tell him she is married to Thayer. Tovison tells him she is married to Thayer. CHAPTER V - The Marshland bank is robbed of the money with the goose after being shot and apparently body burned, Jim Moe is wounded by a bullet in his eyes, and good natured, comes to investigate the robbery. Randolph Pauk, 61, was arrested on behalf of the Moe Van Werning was driving to rob the bank. CHAFFER, IV—Welch's appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States frustrates his determination to see Thayer's request to annul his deed. The Court dismisses the first home purchase in the Caricomian land of Liam's police chief takes charge of the landlord's police chief. CHAPTER VI: Th~Theron. Fikke tells him that he was unable to find Vernon of large sums, in cardboard bags, apparently, has finally realized it. He makes Harvey to take charge of the murder by pointing both the murder and cobbery. Torvill and his covert partner as Th~Theror are under arrest as Th~Theror murder. GRAFTFIEL VI—Harris interrogates WHAK of the day of the murder. Welch is vicious in the face of his attack. Thayer was alive when he left him, but the murderer was lying dead; he is living, seemingly endowing to him his firm conviction being that he committed the resulting combination of incidents more than one time. CHAPTER VIII Summer had settled upon the Mar- land campus. The typical "hot week in May" afflicted the student body with a swirling mixture of every man and woman connected with the college was vividly interested in their studies, and the student could not very well be trained externally. Havney snorted up the stairway in Regan's wake. A uniform policeman, who had been sitting in a rocker outside the door which gave access to the room, rose and saluted Regan. The Maraud detected briefly. A half dozen undergrounds who were lounging on the lawn in front of the Lumbia Temple III house, saw John Koehler. They saw someone else, too—an arounding far man why lay back in the next sent to the delver and complained that he had been one passed the word that the fat man was a famous detective and was greeted with an outburst of derision. That Bird a detective! Ha-ha! The students, as a whole, could not believe any of the three suspects guilty. It was a nasty mess all around—the college agreed on that. "Brynn, this is Jim Hanvey—you've heard of him, haven't you?" "I never have felt no bitter weather!" It was Reagan who was forced to remind Hanvey that they were supposed to be working on a murder case, and he did not. He needed to certain chalk marks on the floor. "—Jim Haney himself in person, Jim, this is George Bryan of the Marsh land force." Jim extended his hand. "Howdy, Bryan." "Who made those, Reagan?" "Inhaney's in charge of the case now," explained Reagan. "What he says—goes, 'Pass that along to the gimmick who relieves you.'" They entered the room together, leaving a pop-oped policeman on duty at the door. Once inside Rigan stood watching as he watched his celebration communion. "Jim Hanvey?" The policeman's eyes seemed about to jump from their sockets. "Not—" "Yes. And hot as h=1. Don't you ever get fat, Bryan. It's awful in this kind of weather." Haney's fashile little eyes looked everywhere and appeared to see nothing. Reagan waited for him to do something—and was disappointed, Jim merely stood in one spot, breathing audibly and mopping the back of the stairs, until he turned, and Reagan prepared for a pronouncement of importance. "Good Lord, . . . Say, you ain't really, . . ." "?" "One thing I'm sure of," said Hanvey. "I did." "What?" "They outline the position of Tieye's body as it was when I got here. That straight line where you're standing in the mark to show how far open Carmine says the door was when he is at the feet of the body from the hall." "I can't hidding; on the level, I don't. Now me—I'd have come in here and booked the body over and remembered how it it lay. But I never would have been there after that he would just live now in my memory. I can see now. . . ." Jim nodded approvingly. "Fine work, John. I never could understand how you detectives manage to think of all those things." He opened the door and stepped into the hull. From where he stood he could see that section of the chalk position of Thaxer's feet and ankles. "Oult kidding, Jim." "That's what Carmicino says he saw, Jim." "I see . . .." Hanvey walked back in the room and Reagan followed, closing the door again. "Did you look, over his papers?" asked the fat man. "Find anything?" "I think so. I found his bank book for one thing. He deposited some large amounts and there ain't much to get him out." He was getting them from Max Vernon. "Any other deposits?" "Yes. Some small, and others as high as a couple of hundred dollars, But there isn't any record of where they came from." "From girls?" "Any letters? "Plenty. Especially from Ivy Walch — Larry's slater. Want to read 'em'?" "Mushy!" "I'may. And how! The kid was crazy about that bird and no mistake. He was her first love and all that sort of thing. There was anything I knew." Jim Hanvey was staring into the sunshine beyond the closed windows; there was a queer, soft light in his expressionly expressionless eyes. "I reckon I won't read 'em, John. I never could get a whale of a laugh out if love letters." Rogan fushed. He knew Hanney hadn't meant to rebuke him . . , but, by gosh! who ever would have sus- tured me in the mind of fish of being a sentimentalist? 1930 It Was Reagan Who Was Forced to Remind Hanvey That They Were Supposed To Be Working on a Murder Case. "What now, Jim?" Again Reagan felt baffled. There were moments—and this was one—when he believed Hanvey was superbly stupid. "Now? Golly! I dunno. What do you reckon I ought to do?" "Would you like to see Farnum and Gleason?" "Don't you want to talk to Mike Carmichello? I guess he knows a lot about Thayer and Vernon both." Jim's eyes lighted, as though at a new and year old睡觉了。 "No-o. I reckon not." "That's a swell thought, John. Where'll we find this janitor?" They located Mike Carminillo in the basement of the fraternity house, where he was expected to charge of the case and wished to question him . , . , and then there was silence for minutes during the swarty examination expressionless countenance of Haney with wonder and bewilderment. When Jim did speak, his tone was quiet— "You were here all day on May first, Mike?" Carlina's face beaten. "Oh, yes, sir. I was nowhere else at all." "Of course you know Mr. Thayer pretty well, didn't you?" Carmelo made an expressive gesture. "I know him very good. He is one fine feller." And m. sir, Veronii. "Also he is a fine fellow, Meester Hanvey." "Do you know Miss Antoinette Peyton?" The black eyes of the jantor danced with enthusiasm. "I know her good. She is—" "Sure. She is a fine feller. I understand." Jim produced his golden toothpick and loved with it. "Was that in the room with the day Mr. Thayer was killed?" "Oh, no, sir. I did not see her. Not any." "Yes, sir; she was here." "Now, you hail!" "Then how do you know she was here?" "Ihm! But you did not see her?" "No, snr. Not even one time." "Have you ever heard of her coming here before?" "Oh no, sir. Ladies, she do not come to fraternity house." "Did you see Mr. Vernon on May first about half-past one o'clock"? "Yes, sir." "Where?" "Doing what?" "I see him doing two things. First I see him go into Meester Thayer's room, and long time beyond that I see him leaving the house." "You didn't see him leave Mr Thayer's room?" "No, sir." "Where were you when you first saw him." "That was when you saw him go Into Thayer's room?" "Did you notice anything queer in the way he looked? Anything different from his regular expression?" "I was cleaning hall on the second floor." Carmine looked away and shook his head. "I do not know how you mean expression, Moester Havrew." "Noo," Was Mr. Vernon said? "You like Mr. Veron? You wouldn't want to see him in trouble, would you?" "And so you wouldn't likely remember if he was mad or not?" "No, sir—I do not be happy to see Meester Vernon in trouble." Carmicino's black eyes narrowed as they flashed to the face of the detective. "How I know was Meester Vernon mad? He go into Meester Thainya's room to talk to her, and count those two fellows is very the friends forever. No, Meester Havenny — I cannot say was Meester Vernon was just cleanl hall or I do not know." Harvey nodded approvingly, "Fine boy, Mike. You and I ought to get along great. Now, you say you saw Vernon leave the fraternity house?" "I would not say something about Mester Vernon I no, not know, Mester Hanvey. If I know he is mad, I say he is mad. If I only see his face, I do not tell you I guess he is mad, Mester Veron he is always nice to me." "Yes, sir. I see that "Where were you?" "Was he in a hurry? Was he walk- out?" "I was work" downstairs—back of the house—when I see Meester Vernon come down before he leaves. "Yes, sir—he come down the steps pretty fast?" "Do you remember if he had any thing in his hands?" "Not in his hands no sg. But he "Not in his hands, no, sir. But he have a bundle under his arm." "What sort of a bundle?" "I don't say for sure, Meester Hanvey; but I think from where I was work. It look like a bundle of clothes." "do it, look like a bundle of clothes." "Do you remember if he was wringing the same suit when he left the fraternity house that he had on when he Again Carnelino heSTATED. When he answered It was as though honesty was distasteful. "I feel moss' sure he was not wear" the same suit." "You think he changed clothes between the time he visited Thuer's room and the time he left the house, er?" "Do you know me. Larry Welch?" "Yes, sir. He is one fine linter." "Did you see him on May first?" "No, sir. I do not see him any." "I think, yes. But I do not know for sure." No, sir. I do not see him any. "You didn't see him come to this house or leave it?" FOR... BETWEEN CLASSES "No, sir. I do not see him at all. Of course I hear everybody talk that he have been here to see Mr. Thayer, me, he don't see one eye on you FOR... (To be continued tomorrow) IF YOU MISSED THE FIRST CHAPTERS of "The May Day Mystery" you may secure back copies of the Kansan at the Kansan Business Office. Sillex Coffee and a Tasty Ham Salad Sandwich at the . . . Union Fountain BLUE MILL 1009 Mass. 100% TAXI 25c Just Phone 65 Jayhawk Taxi Ike Guffin, Prop. Clothes for Spring are lower in price. We are showing the nicest line of woolens that we have ever had in years, at prices that have never been so low. Some very attractive patterns as low as $16.50, suit or topcoat. And remember… Suiting you is my business. Each meal is a good one If you are not sat isfied where you are eating why not change? Schulz the Tailor 917 Mass. here, so why not be happy by eating at the--- CAFETERIA When Down Town---- --- Wiedemann's The place to stop for a refreshing fountain drink or appetizing sandwich is our beautiful new Walmart Room. Established 1868 835 Mass. Phone 182 LUNCHEON Served Daily 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Also 3:50 till 7 p.m. Saturday and Sunday SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 19. 1933 PAGE THREE Dean Husband to Attend Convention in St. Pau UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS Dr. Ernest Watson Burgess to Address National Association 2. Miss Agnes Husband, dean of women, is leaving next week to attend the annual meeting of the National Association of Deans of Women in St. Paul, Minn. The deans of women from many of the colleges and universities in the state will meet to discuss problems which may interest to universities and university. In the college section of the convention the honor system will be the main topic of discussion. The association usually attempts to convene at the same time that the National Education association meets. In this way, Dean Husband said, the two associations are enabled to obtain speakers for both in-person and exchange ideas pertaining to methods of education. The National Education Association is holding its convention in Minneapolis. One of the prominent speakers on the program who will address the entire group of Deans of Women will be Dr. Robert C. Meyer, the dean on the subject "The Inter-Departmental of the individual and the Group." On the last day of the convention the National Association of Deans of Women was attained at the University of Minnesota. Miss Husband will visit her brother M. W. Husband, '21, and his wife Grace Quinn Hauser, '21, who are residing in Minneapolis. SOCIETY Co-ed Hop to Be Tuesday The Co-ed Hop for all University women will be given Tuesday afternoon from 4 to 3 o'clock in the Memorial Union. This party, similar to the Gingham Frolic last fall, is sponsored by the Y. W. C. A. and W. S. C. A. jointly through the Co-Ed Entertainment will consist of card games and jig-saw puzzles. Louie Siebers and his orchestra will play for them. Entertains Mortar Board Gamma Phi Beta will entertain Mortar Board today at dinner. Mortar Board is composed of the following members: Olea Markham, c; 33; Helen Heaton, f; 53; Elizabeth Ainsworth, f; 64; Angelo Kangelsdorf, c; 33; Kathen Asher, c; 53; Emma Learned, c; 33; Alice Learned, c; 43; Alice Gallup, c; 33; Alice Ma Lawrence, f; 53. Elliott to Speak Miss Mabel Elliott, professor of sociology, will speak on "Change in Status of the Home in American Society" at a program for the meeting of American Women's club to be held Tuesday afternoon at 3 o'clock at Wiedemann's. Landon at Pig Dinner Kenneth Rockwell, gr., will talk or "New Friends in Current Literature. Governor A. M. Landon, Mrs. Claude Fowler of Kansas City, Mo., and Mrs. Anna K. Hill, former housemother, were guests at the annual Norris Pig dinner for alumni held last night by Phi Gamma Delta. The dinner was followed by an honor initiation for Glenn Dickinson Jr., c36. The Newcomer club met at the home of Mrs. Dugald Jackson, 1804 Mississippi, on Thursday. Miss Frances Wilson, of the dramatic department, read a one act play, "The Flower Shop." Sweet pen and roses were used in the refreshment committee chairman of the refreshment committee for Rolland Maddox poured. Miss Minnie Moodie and Mrs. John Hankins were guests. A meeting of the new book club which has been formed under the auspices of the American Association of University Women will be held tomorrow evening, at 7:30 clock, at the home of Mrs. J. J. Kisler, 2120 North Street. Women who are members or interested are invited to be there. In a recent election, Sigma Kappa chose the following women for office: Lois Weitz, c3; Wearly, president; Alice Thrower, c3; vice-president; Zelma Snydal, c3; secretary; Frances Jordan, c3; corresponding secretary; Gene McKee, fa 34, treasurer; and Margaret Roberts, fa 35, critic. Mrs. W. C.Koenig entertained with a small lunchmeet yesterday. A bowl of spring flowers was the centerpiece of the table. The guests were Mrs. F. B. Dains, Mrs. C. V. Kent, Mrs. Jane MacLean, Mrs. J. F. Brown, Dean Agnes Husband, Irene Peabody, and Gardner. The freshmen of Kappa Alpha Theta entertained the active members yesterday day afternoon with the annual "Theta Katsup." It is the one day of the year in which the freshmen and upperclassmen change places. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond F. Coulk of St. Louis announce the birth of a daughter. Mrs. Coulk, naive DePaul D. Gansman, graduated from the University in 1928. Guests of Pi Beta Phi this weekend were Pegg Ballgwil of Emporia, a former student of the University, and Laura Jane Smart of Wichita. Weekend guests at the Alpha Omicron Pi house are Helen Conger, Yate Center; and Francis Thompson and Mary Shannon of Endora. and Mrs. Noble C. Dum of Arkansas City, parents of Jean Dum, c'unel, were dinner guests of Delta Zeta today. Fern Snyder, 31, of Arkansas City and Sue Falter of Athens are guests of Kappa Alpha Theta this weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Owen I. Corbin of Marion are to be dinner guests today at the Sigma Phi Epsilon house. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd St. Chair of Kansas City, Mo., are guests of John E Hill, e'urel today. Delbert Beach, c.32, of Kansas City, Mo., is a weekend guest of Maurice McManus, c.33. Vivien Jensen, Kansas City, Mo., is a guest at the Gamma Phi Beta house this weekend. Phil McKnight, c 73, was a dinner guest of Pi Beta Phi Saturday evening. At The Churches --- Christian Science Society The Christian Science Society which meets in the Wiedemann building at $83.50 Massachusetts street is a branch of the First Church of Christ, Scientist. Sunday services at 11 a.m. Subject, "Mind." Sunday school at 9:45 T仪 tional meeting every Wednesday evenin at 8 o'clock. The Reading room, where the Bible and authorized literature on Christian Science may be read, borrowed, or purchased, is located in this building and is open from 11:30 to 5 o'clock except Sundays and holidays. The public is cordially invited to attend services and use the Reading room. First Baptist At 9:45 the Young People's class will be addressed by Carl W. Thomas, on "How Radical Shall We Be?" At morning worship at 10:50 Rev. C. T. Cunningham will speak on "Well to Do." Mrs. Kathryn Longmage Nelson will be the soloist. At the Young People's meeting at 6:30 there will be the installation of officers and discussion of plans for the new year. There will be an evening service at 7:50, at which Rev. Cummins will speak on "Improved Life." Plymouth Congregational R. Rev. Ronald J. Tamblyn of Chapel Hill, N. C. will occupy the pit but Sunday morning. The subject of his poem will be "What God Means to Me." The University class meets at 9:45 a.m. Dr. Raymond H. Wheeler is the teacher. All University students are cordially invited to attend the class. The Fireides forum will meet for supper at 6:15. At 7 o'clock Professor W. W. Davis will speak on the Manchurian situation. Unitarian "Tragedy and Comedy in life" will no subject of the discourse by Olin Templem, Professor of philosophy, Sunday morning at 11. Danger school begins at 9:45. "The Church of Doubt," will be the subject of a Curium at 10 o'clock. At 8 o'clock John W. Hancock, People's group on "Modern Poetry." Maurice Erickson will sing "I will Dwell in the House of the Lord" (Exile). Sunday school at 9:45. The subject of the sermon delivered at 11 c'clock service by the Rev. Theodore Azsman will oversee Over Criant or Living With Him. Presbyterian At 7:30 the Westminster forum will meet at Westminster hall, where Lester Macfann will talk on "A Graduate Student's Stont on Life." First Church of Christ Scientist Sunday school at 10 a.m. Services at 11 a.m. with the subject "Mind. Meet" which include testimonies of Christ Science healing are held every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. First Church of Christ Scientist The Christian Science reading room maintained by this church is located at 108 E. 8th street, and is open every afternoon or evening for 5 o'clock except Sundays and holidays. Immanual Lutheran Bible class meets at 10 o'clock. At 11 the service will be preached by the Rev. W. Stoeenwerth. Fellowship lunchmen will be held at 818 Kingston, at 5:30. The subject of the discussion hour at 6 o'clock will be Dr. Frank Herron Smith will speak at 7:30 p.m. on the subject, "Japan, Manchuria and the Pacific Coast." Dr. Smith is well-known in lawrence, and is now superintendent of the Pacific Japanese work, with headquarters at Tokyo University. He has graduated from University and has spent twelve and a half years as missionary in Korea. First Methodist "The Student as a Social Factor" Evening service at 7:45. The subject will be "Baptism." Trinity Episcopal Early morning service at 8 o'clock. Sunday school at 9:45 o'clock. Morning worship at 11 with the sermon by the Rav. Carter Harrison. Delivers First Address KFKU Taggart Makes First of Series of Talks by University Professors --- 4 p.m. Third School of Fine Arts All-Musical Vesners. 2. 45 p.m. "Making Plots for Short Stories," Prof. W. R. Harley, associate professor of journalism. 2.30 p.m. Elementary French lesson. W. K. Cornell, instructor in Romance languages. Professor J. H. Taggart of the economics department delivered an address on "Money," at the community round table which was held in Bonn, Germany, to discuss the first of a series of speeches which will be made by professors of the School of Business at the University on current problems which are being discussed daily in the papers and on the streets. Mr. Taggart made special reference to the issues in England, France, Germany and other countries. He discussed in detail some of the current fashions underlying our popular ideas of money. The failure of our monetary system to function properly in the present crisis was outlined in this lecture. The program of addresses as arranged for the round table meetings through the remainder of February and during the month of March is as follows: Feb. 24, J. P. Jensen, "The Kansas Tax System"; March 3, L. D. Jennings, "The Economic Problems of Farmers"; May 10, M. G. Graves, instructor of journalism, will talk on some phase of advertising; March 17, D. J. Treviotide, "Our Trans- portraition System and Its Problems' March 24, John Ise 'Some Flames of Modern Economic Reform'. March 31 E. B. Dade 'Farm Refill Programs'. UNIVERSITY STAFF INVITED TO MEMORIAL EXERCISES Members of the University staff and friends of the late Professor Haworth have been extended an invitation to attend memorial exercises in honor of Professor Haworth which will be held at 4 p.m., Feb 23, in the auditorium of the Central Administration building. Professor Templin will preside and short talks will be given by Chancelor C. M. Chancellor Professors C. M. M. W. Sterling, and R. C. Moore. George C. Shad is chairman of the committee. Want Ads Twenty-five words or less 1 in each word. WANT ADS ARE ACCOMPANIED BY CASH. LTAC adds arms STUDENTS OF French, German, Spanish, Greek, Latin; Learn labor saving methods of acquiring vocabulary. Use of card index classification word analysis. Trial lesson, 35c. Phone 521. -108 PLEASANT rooms for boys in com- fortable home at price you can ean- fd to pay. Cooked meals, all of the week, per week . . . -10 14th. Phone 2788. . . -110 JIGSAW PUZZLES cut to eder. Fur mish your own pictures, or we'll furnish them. Any number of pieces. Hardcover Co., 413 North Street Phone 562- . -107 TRUNK KEYS, door keys, car keys, Good locker padlocks, night latches, door closers repaired. Trewory & Rutter. 623 Vermont St. Phonies 319. HAVE YOUR application photographs made at Moore Studio. 719 Mass. (upstairs-exclusive). Phone 964. -125 LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusively 1025 Mass. Look at Your Shoes, Everyone Else Does. Would U wear raggedly elbows? Then get your heels fixed. Electric Shoe Shop Subscribe for THE KANSAS CITY STAR PHONE 17 H. L. NEVIN Distributor 13 papers — 15c per week Weavers What's in Fashion Spring 10 What's in Fashion A Wear lace in the evening for feminine allure. $16.75 SPRING is creeping in! We're seeing it on every side! And we aren't talking about budding trees or thrusting green grass, either. For to us the first recognizable signs of spring are in the new fashions. And our departments are crammed with the magic of spring clothes—ready and waiting for YOU! 1234567890 Capes are seen on the smartest frocks $16.75 1. Prints when you dine and play bridge $10.75 Button-down the front is new in dresses $16.75 for Spring A Swagger suits in the new finger tip length $10.75 to $19.75* Many coats show cartridge pleats on the sleeves $10.75 to $29.50 Coats with new notes in fur trim at sleeve and shoulder $10.75 to $39.50 .30 2024 puff-sleeve suit, of spring's smart styles 6.75 to $29.50 The puff-sleeve suit one of spring's smart styles $16.75 to $29.50 PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1933 James J. Corbett Dies at Home in Long Island 'Gentleman Jim' Did Great Deal to Popularize Boxing New York, Feb. 18, -(UF)--James J. Corbett, "Gentleman Jim" of the prize ring and stage, died at his home in Bayade, Long Island, today. Conqueror of John L. Sullivan, the toughest galider of his time, it was Jim Corbett whose spectacular personality did more than any other human act to make pugilism "respectable" in an age when the ring was scorned by society and outlawed by nearly every state in the union. Corbett was 67 years old. His death, due to a glaucal disorder which induced heart disease, was not unexpected. Corbett died at 2:10 p.m. in the presence of his wife and John and Dennis Kelcher, life-long friends. Dr. G. Willard Dickey, his physician, had made a routine call this morning and administered a narcotic which induced a deep sleep for several hours. Dr. Dickey was not present when the old time champion passed away. The last sacraments of the church were adminstrated several days ago. Corbett died peacefully, apparently sleeping directly from the effects of the medicine. --in the weltweight class, were the only Kansas men to win their matches. Methner won a quick fall from his Missouri opponent, and Winthed gained a decision on a time advantage. Naland of Kansas lost a decision in the 192nd-class, as did Tilford in the 1930th-class. Kevin Kope, Leage, and Ewley lost by the Men's Intramurals Numerous forfeits and several large scores marked the weekend play in intramural basketball. Of the twelve games scheduled for Friday and Saturday, only six were played. Five were forfeited and in one contest, both teams failed to put in an appearance. Beta, Pti Mu Alpha, Delta Uploiton, Kappa Sif "B", Alpha Kappa Psi and Delta Kappa Phi were the largest of the largest score of the weekend going to Beta for defeating Delta Tau 45-16. The forfeited games were: Acacia de- faulted to Delta Chi, Pi K. A. to Phi Psi, Chi Delta Sigma to Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Beta Pi to Phi Wacha- rusa to Tennessee Club, and Phi Pai' B to Beta 'R'. The box scores Totals ... 20 5 Beta-45 FG FT Benson, f 0 0 Dodge, f 3 1 Crosse, c 7 1 McCornick, g 4 0 White, g 5 2 Morgan, f 1 2 OUR PRICE OUR PRICE Mat. and Eve . . . 15c VARSITY TONIGHT-TOMORROW Chuckle and Cheer With WILL ROGERS in "Too Busy to Work" EXTRA!-IMPERFECT LOVER MAGIC CARPET LATE NEWS WHY PAY MORE? TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY Welcome Back! CLARA BOW in "CALL HER SAVAGE" PATEE WHERE BIG PICTURES PLAY NOW! THRU WEDNESDAY Maybe the King can do no wrong —but you ought to see what the Ex-King is un to! Laugh, Loaf, and Be Gay GEORGE ARLISS IN "The Kings Vacation" It combines the drama of "Dissei'il" with the comedy of "The Millionaire." Also TECHNOCRACY KRAZY KAT-NOVELTY-NEWS STARTS THURSDAY JAMES CAGNEY HARD TO HANDLE Bobby Jones' "Perfect Golf Course" Opened [Aerial view of a dam] 42nd STREET IS ON THE WAY C. An air view of the "perfect golf course" just opened at Augusta by the Augusta National Golf club. It was hid out by Bobby Jones, retired amateur and open champion, and Dr. Alexander Mackenzie. Dolla Tau--16 FG FT 0 Hibb, f 1 Manning, f 2 Noel, f 0 Vorn, c 0 Trowbridge, g 5 0 Kissick, g 0 0 Totals ... 8 0 Referee: Shaffer. Alpha Phi Omega-8 | FG | FT Hunter, Bray, i | 1 | 0 Hunter, Ray, i | 1 | 0 Malone, c | 1 | 0 Kowalski, c | 1 | 0 Kowalski, R, n | 0 | 0 Totals 4 0 Phi Mu Alpha--36 FG FT Breecher, f 2 0 Gray, f 3 0 Underwood, g 4 0 Porter, c 5 1 Strumings-f 1 1 Balley, g 1 1 Totals ... 17 2 Reference: Jorgenson. Dota Upsilon–32 FG FT I Noble, f 0 1 1 Kobe, f 0 1 1 Rapp, f 1 1 3 Columbus, f 1 1 3 Lomarson, g 1 1 0 Rutter, g 2 1 0 Larve, g 4 1 2 Glimson, g 1 0 1 Totals ... 15 2 9 Alpin Kappa Lambda-0 5 FG FT 4 Crumbringer, j ... 1 1 3 Davis, c ... 1 1 3 Johnson, c ... 0 0 0 Fibbinsy, g ... 0 1 1 Gleason, g ... 0 1 1 Totals ... Referee: Baxter. Kappa App. 'B'—30 FG FT F 0 Kel, f | 3 0 Sleeper, f | 7 0 Garmes, f | 1 0 Rankin, c | 1 0 Shaffer, g | 2 0 Elgin, g | 0 0 Bell, g | 1 0 Totals 15 0 Flii Delt B'-6 FG FT Smiley, f 0 0 Changlame, f 0 0 Aubrey, f 0 0 Griffin, f 1 0 Hacgurch, g 1 0 Johnson, g 1 0 Abercrombie, g 1 0 Totals ... 3 0 Referee: Izzard Alpha Kappa Pi-25 FG FT Saunders, J 6 0 Aiden, I 0 Tioe, C 1 0 Schroeder, g → 0 Icard, Z 0 liond, Z 0 Totals 12 1 Phi Chi.-12 FG FT Kay, f 1 0 Raff, f 0 0 Wood, sherf 0 0 Way, g 2 0 Barries, g 0 0 Swangy, g 0 0 Rowland's-17 FG FT Shobe, f 3 0 Lehmann, f 0 0 Scott, c 2 1 Lault, h 1 0 Popplewell, g 2 0 Reynolds, g 0 0 Totals 6 0 Referee: McCormick Sullana, Feb. 15-(UP)—Miss Emma McConnell, a college two-d bands today and prevented robbery of the Painters State bank. Miss McConnell, a bank employee, dished from the building that were paid for the time lock to open. She called police, but the robbers had fed, taking no money. Totals 8 1 A. T. O.-I FG 1 Gillea, f 1 1 Seattle 0 0 P. berthe, c 0 1 Maira, g 2 1 Zettle, g 1 0 Woman Eludes Bandits Totals ... 4 3 Referee: Horn. Ada Marguerite Jordan, 27, is a nurse at the National Military hospital in Dayton, Ohio. Carol L. Bardo, '32, is a student technician at the St. Francis hospital in Wichita. Huskers Defeat South Dakota at Lincoln by 34-25 Score Win Non-Conference Game Lincoln, Feb. 18 — (UP — Paced by Hok-ful, Parsons and Sears, Nebraska University tonight won over South Dakota, 34 to 25 in a basketball game packed with action. By half time, Nebraska, except for the first five minutes of play, held the lead almost continuously but the lead was small in the second when Sears was broken down by the Dakotus guarding. South Dakota - 25 Olson, f FG FT I Olson, f 1 0 Buck, c 4 1 Buck, c 4 1 Brye, jn 4 2 Lewick, f 1 3 Tree, f 1 1 Abel, p 1 1 Le Hampton, c-f 0 3 1 totals 9 7 8 Nebraska - 34 FO FT F Bowell, f 1 1 1 Mason, f 1 1 1 Fenicton, c 1 0 1 Saucier, c 1 0 1 Hokuf, g 2 1 2 Parents, f 1 2 3 Lumney, f 1 2 3 Wahquist, f 1 0 1 Wahlquist, c 1 0 1 Copple, c 1 0 1 Bodle, f 1 0 1 By half time Nebraska possessed a 15 to 11 lead. Forewatched Olson and Han-Harper, the team's top scorer of the game with 13 points Bidle, Dakota center led his team with 40 points. Wrestling Team Defeated Totals 15 4 13 Referee—Ernie Adams, Omaha. Mehringer and Windle Win Two Bouts From Missouri Squad Scoring victories in only the heavy-weight and 135-pound classes, the University wrestling team last night dropped a 28-16 decision to the Missouri squad at Columbus. The meet was held following the Missouri-Ohiohua baseball game, and a crowd of approximately 10,000 witnessed the double Tanner victory. 0 Pete Mehringer, Olympic heavy- weight champion, and Fredrick Winde St. Louis, Feb. 18—(UP) - Washington University announced today the release of Robert A. Doyle as head track coach. A recruitment of the fi- iters is impossible for the school to retain a track coach, the announcement said. Track Coach Is Dismissed The former Purdue University track captain said the announcement made by Dr. E. H. Escherhart, a member of the District basketball board, came "as a distractible shock." He said he had accepted a salary of $500 a year in 1962 with the understanding it would be increased this year. Washington University Announces Release of Robert A. Doyle Doyle, in addition to his track duties, acted as assistant back-f coach for Jimmy Conzeman's football squad. He said 65 men, the largest in the history of the school had signed up for track this year. Kansas Trims Cyclones to Regain Big Six Lead Columbia, Mo. Feb 18 — (UP) — Chester L. Brewer, University of Missouri director of athletics, will coach the Browns on Saturday, announced today. Brewer rejoiced back Crandale who was dropped from the coaching roster after anaxing a Big Six title last spring. Brewer was a 4-6 player in college. He also had some professional exp.: (Continued from page 1) responded to the requests he made, for not once was there any sign of disapproval of the reference, George Gardner or of the play of the visiting team. Among the spectators was George Edwards, coach of the Missouri Tigers who have defeated Kansas and Oklahoma at Columbia on consecutive weeks. Iowa State plays the Tigers next Friday night. The box score: Iowa State f T Thompson, f 1 1 1 P 1 Aberration, f 1 1 1 P 1 Wright, g 3 2 3 3 Hood, g 0 0 1 2 Loreng, f 0 0 1 2 Jores, f 2 0 0 0 Levdig, g 0 0 2 2 Dibl. g 0 2 2 2 Kansas FG FT MFT P Harrington, f 0 0 0 Wake 'c 0 5 1 Johnson, g 3 4 2 Schank, e 2 1 0 Gray, g 0 0 0 Graf, f 1 0 0 Benn, g 1 0 1 Curd, f 0 0 0 Klass, g 0 0 0 TIGER ATHLETIC DIRECTOR WILL BE BASEBALL COACH ience before he began coaching. Totals ... 6 7 10 10 Totals Referee: Gardner, of Southwestern. Technical Foul: Klass. Official Attendance: 1973. Coach Opposes New Rules Missouri Pulls Oklahoma Out of First Place Lead Iowa State Mentor Believes There Are Too Many Regulations Tigers Give Sooners 40-20 Trouncing Before 4000 Persons Ames, Iowa. Feb. 18—(Special)—The new football rules aren't so good, thinks George Venkier, grid coach at Iowa State College. "Football will become nothing more than a mechanical game if they keep on tying it up with rules," he said here yesterday. "They seem to be trying to cover every kind of play with a rule." The difficulty for headwork or originality. This is notably true, Couch Venker says, of the rule establishing sideline zones to eliminate the sideline play. Plays of his kind, he thinks, give field generals their best opportunities to outgress their opponents. "If officials won't call the 25-yard penalty for penni-che," he added, "I don't believe they're likely to call the new 15-yard penalty. Clipping is an offense that calls for just as severe punishment as the books will allow." Columbia, Mo. Feb 17.—(Special)—Maintaining its home court jinx, Missouri pulled Oklahoma out of an undidged first place position to a tie for first place with Kansas by defeating the Sooners 40 to 30 in a conference final. The Buckeyes took early lead and never was headed by the first place Oklahomaans. Last week Missouri defeated Kansas pulling the Jalalouws out of first place and this week returned the favor for the quitter from the Kaw. At the same time the Tigers placed themselves in a strategic position to strike for the迎来 lead the moment Okahoma or Kansas failers in its championship drive. Norman Wagner, Tiger center and captain, started the scoring with two buckets and this was a lead that Missouri never relinquished. The Tigers ran the count up to 24 to 13 as the half ended. Missouri started the second half with a rush and pushed its total up to 32 before Beck scored the first two points of the half for the Sooners via the free throw route. The Oaklahomans pulled down the margin the Tigers had unassured early in the game by late baskets by Beck, Anderson, and Brown—but were never able to come within threatening distance of the Missouri score. Wagner led his teammates in scoring with a total of 13 points followed closely by Cooper with 12 and Stubber with 10. Browning Oklahoma's sofomore guard who has led his team in scoring and is among the first five leading scorsers of the Big Six, led his team in scoring with ten points followed closely by Cooper. A crowd of 4,000 watched the game which is the biggest crowd of the year so far and probably will not be suppressed in any of the remaining Big Six ames. The box score: Missouri-40 FG FT E Cooper, f 5 2 1 Fasser, f 5 0 1 Sutler, f 4 2 3 Wagner, g 4 2 3 Wagner, c 5 1 0 Miller, g 1 1 1 Jorgensen, g 1 0 0 Haffield, f 0 2 0 totals 10 18 6 Oklahoma--30 FG FT F Back, f 2 3 2 Anderson, f 2 3 0 Bross, f 1 0 0 LeCrone, c 0 0 0 Marson, c 0 0 0 Mata, g 2 3 0 Browning, g 4 2 3 Tyler, g 4 2 0 Totals 11 8 11 Referee—Pat Mason, Kansas City Rockhurst Interview Proves Interesting The Dec. 17, 1932 issue of Intercollegiate sports under the title "Air-Views on Physical Education," a radio Interview between E. R. Elibel and Dr. F. C. Allen, gives the recent interview over KFKU. Intercollegiate Sports has frequently carried complete interviews presented in the Anathemic Interview series Thursday evening over KFKU, and arranged by Prof. E. R. Elibel. Adaline Overfield, 30, is a technician for Dr. N. Cockerblad in the Professional building in Kansas City, Mo. Harry E. Jolley, 29, is a funeral director and embalmer with the Wall-Differdecker Mortuary company of Topeka. Keep Them Happy Write another letter today Crested FRATERNITY SORORITY & JAYHAWK STATIONERY 30 SHEETS CRESTED and 30 SHEETS PLAIN AND ONE PACKAGE OF ENVELOPES REGUIL AR $1.00 REGULAR $1.00 75c WE ALSO PAINT YOUR CREST ON OAK, WALNUT OR PINE PADDLES. THIS WITH YOUR GREEK LETTERS MAKES A CLEVER WALL PLAQUE. 1401 OHIO Rowlands BOOK STORES MOTTA Dollar Books THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK We have over 200 titles in fiction, biography, science, philosophy, travel, history and juveniles from which to make your selection. These books are ideal as gifts or as permanent additions to your own bookshelves. Come in and see them. THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Tel. 666 75c Fitch's Dandruff Remover Shampoo and 25c size Fitch's Hair Oil 69c A LIMITED SUPPLY OF THIS $1 VALUE WHILE THEY LAST Rankin's Drug Store "Handy for Students" 11th & Mass Phone 678 The real dandruff remover. Leaves the hair soft and velvety. Late Victor Releases Why Can't This Night Go On Forever...Fox Trot Jack Denny and his orchestra I'm Playing With Fire Fox Trot They Didn't Believe Me Fox Trot Acknowledgement Fox Trot Medley Fox trot Bennie Moten's K. C. Orchestra New Orleans . . . . . Moon Song Fox Trot Twenty Million People Fox Trot It's Within Your Power ... Fox Trot Now We're on Our Second Honeymoon ... At the Baby Parade *Fox Trot* The Old Kitchen Kettle *Fox Trot* The Girl in the Little Green Hat Fox Trot My Fraternity Pin Fox Trot You Are Too Beautiful Fox Trot Halleliujah I'm a Bum Fox Trot Both from United Artists picture "Halladish, I'm a Bum" Carole Olsen and her husband Bell's Music Store Where Students Get Together DICKINSON Hit After Hit - - Week After Week NOW! MONDAY — TUESDAY NANCY CARROLL CARY GRANT THE WOMAN Dramatized by BAYARD VEILLER ACCUSED V RUPERT HUGENS · VICKI BAM ZARNE GREY · VINA DELMAR J MÍNEVOV · SOPHIA PRORTÖ POLINN BAKS · SOPHIA KERR 10 Famous Authors Wrote It! EXTRA EXTRA MARIE POLLY DRESSLER MORAN "DANGEROUS FEMALES" NEWS COMEDY THE SIGN OF THE CROSS is coming RY REQUEST BY REQUEST EDDIE CANTOR "THE KID FROM SPAIN" Wednesday - Thursday UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Student Paner of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXX NUMBER 106 A. Gretchaninoff, Russian Pianist, Will Play Tonigh Composer to Be Assisted by Albert Rappaport, Tenor, and Roy Underwood ACCOMPANIST IS ILL Alexandre Gretchaninoff, Russian composer and pianist, and Albert Papapport, tenor, arrived in Lawrence today for their concert in the Administration Auditorium at 8 tonight. Miss Cecilia Rott Rappaport who usually accompanies the men on their concert will be joined by another due to illness. Her place will be taken by Roy Underwood, associate professor of piano. Rapport will open the program by singing a group of six selections: "The Wounded Birch Tree," "In the Disaster," "Over the Steeple," "Over the Steppe," "Like an Angie Homeward Bending," "My Native Land," and "Bercease." These numbers like many of the other selections were from the company's own company Rapport on the piano. Pianist Offers Own Compositions The soles will be followed by a number entitled "Fleeting Thoughts" having eight divisions. In this selection the composer tries to convey to the audience the trend of idle thoughts through his mind. Some of these thoughts are "Early Morni," "A Reproach," and "Nightly." At the end of this group Gretenhaein will also play "Mazarku," a Russian composition. Another group of tenor solos by Rappaport includes compositions by other musicians such as "Il Mio Teseo" (Mozart), "Ada Dem Wasser Zu Singer" (Schubert), and "The Flower Song from 'Carmen'" (Bizet). The tenor will be accompanied by Professor W. Roberts in the program Rappaport will sing another group of solos and will again be accommodated by Grechannoff. To Play Two-Piano Number In one phase of the concert Gretchen-annoff and Underwood will play a two-piano number entitled "Deux Moreaucx" in two parts, "Poeme" and "Cortegue", both of which were written by Gretchenannoff. Gretcheninoff, who has often been named the "Russian Schubert," with the exception of just one group of numbers, wrote every song which Rappaport plays. The Russian composer and Rappaport have just finished a season with the Chicago Civic Opera and the University is extremely fortunate to be able to attend Gretcheninoff and the terror as our guests. Because of the small attendances to the concerts when held in the University Auditorium, the Concert committee announced the Gretchenoffin Trio will offer their program from the stage of the Administration Auditorium. The concert after every seat is occupied, no new will be admitted. Rappaport will complete his phase of the tour by singing his last concert and will play at the other place there he will sail for Europe where another tour is being planned. He will appear in several operas at the State Opera in Vienna and he later plans a performance. ROADSTER STOLEN LAST NIGHT IS RECOVERED THIS MORNING A Ford reader belonging to Olen Roark, b33, stolen last night from in front of the Kappa Sigma fraternity house, was recovered by the police early this morning on West Nineteenth street. The car had been partly stripped, three wheels, the battery and several other accessories having been taken. The car evidence was taken from in front of the Kappa Sigma house hate has had and Roark did not know who had done it and the police called him this morning and the reported it had been found. McCue to Sneak to Assembly An assembly will be held Friday afternoon at 1:30 for the Oreed Training School in Fraser hall. Al T. McCue, field representative of the lifesaving section of the American Red Cross, will give a lecture on "What to Do in Case of Accident." Herbert Assistin assists him in demonstrating first aid Music will be furnished by the Oreed Gcle club. WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY A HOLIDAY: NO CLASSES LAWRENCE, KANSAS. MONDAY FERRUARY 20.1933 - Washington's Birthday being a legal holiday, University classes * will be dismissed. Aside from the * special special occasion * brat will be held. Watkins Memorial hospital will have holiday dispensary hours from 10 to 12. Waton library is to be located in the University's cafeteria will be closed The University Daily Kanman will not be published, and there will be no mid-week vursity at the Memorial Union. CONDENSED WIRE NEWS Families Flee Flood Waters Naksville, Tenn., Feb. 20 - (UP) - Flood waters of the Cumberland river forced more than 100 families from their homes here today. Beats and trucks were manned by city employees for removal of families from the area. The city is located on the inside of at wide bend in the river. Picnickers Killed in Plane Crash Timmins, Ontario, Feb. 29—(UP) Five persons were killed when an airplane crashed near Waiiatown Falls, 56 miles north of here in an isolated section of Ontario, reports today and. The dead were members of a prepaid insurance company for the Falls. They were killed when the plane crashed near their destination. Colder Weather Tomorrow Kansas City, Mo., Feb. 20 — (UP) "Slightly cold weather Tuesday in the Kansas City territory was forecast to day by day. M. Hammack, federal attorney, Trews.'s today's maximum temperature was expected to reach the upper 40's." Bandit Wounds Cobbler Hiackers Take Legation's Lionor Karans City, Mo., Feb. 29 – (UP) = Jacob B. Trost, 62-year-old cochiller, was wounded by a bandit today when he attempted to disarm one of two men who entered his shop and robbed him of $18. Matsuoka to Return Via U.S. Hijackers Take Legation's Liquor Washington, Feb. 20—(UP)—When a shipment of 16 cases of liquor was opened at the Rumanian labey today it was discovered hijackers had withdrawn the liquor from the bottles and filled them with water. The gold seal and tinsel had been cleverly replaced. Geneva, Feb. 20- (UP) -Yoshi Mutani Japanese diplomat to the League of Nations, was authorized by Tokyo to return to Japan via the United States. He hoped to sail on the Olympic March 1, from Southampton, and take the Tatsuki Maru from San Francisco March 23. Farmers Picket Roads Moninonee, Mich. Feb. 20.-(UP) Farmers picked roads leading out of this county today as the Wisconsin mulch Michigan. The picketing was orderly. Farmers Prevent Foreclosure Kankakee, Ill., Feb. 20, -(UP)—A crowd of 700 angry farmers surged around the court house today and预定 for the second time a scheduled sale by foreclosure of the mortgaged James Leutoff farm. Dr E. L. Trece will speak at the first spring meeting of the Bacteriology club. The meeting will be held in room 502, Snow hall, at 12:30 p.m. to-morrow. Veronion Bolton, brs. president, will lead the meeting; the meeting is to take in new members. Bacteriologists to Hear Trees TEN MORE STUDENTS APPLY FOR TEN-CENT MEAL PLAN After one week, the number of students taking advantage of the 10-central meal has increased from 30 to 40 and will soon outnumber the soqta of 50 will be reached. Mrs. Ethel M. Evans, manager of the University cafeteria, reports that a spirit of fraternity and feeling of fellowship is developing among the students. Breakfast is served at 8 a.m., lunch at 12:30 p.m. and dinner at 5:30 p.m. German Club to Initiate German Club to Initiate Initiation for new members of the German club will be held this evening. Following the initiation a member of the German club will give a play entitled, "Einer Muss Heraten." The meeting of the club will be followed by a social hour in which German songs will be sung. Zangara Receives 80-Year Jail Term for Wild Shooting Sentence Amounts to Life in Prison for Fantastic Who Would Kill Roosevelt REGRETS HE MISSED Miami, Fla. Feb. 20—(UP) Giuseppe Zangara, who fired a wolf of shots at President-elect Roosevelt and was sorry he failed to kill him, was sentenced to 80 years imprisonment to day. Zangara, who had told from the witness stand how and why he attempted to assassinate Mr. Roosevelt, was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment, the maximum on each of four counts of assault. The prisoner cally pleaded guilty to each count as the prosecutor went down the list of four, including one involving the president-elect, and another involving a defense stand said he was ready to go to the electric chair if the judge wanted to send him there. The judge then recounted the list of charges, sentencing the little, unemployed bricklayer to 20 years on each of the four counts. The sentences will run consecutively, the judge said, making the sentence equivalent to a life sentence. "I was told," Zangars tried to smile, "it is fair" he said, "I am satisfied." The judge replied, "There may be some more later." Towering deputies pulled Zangara away and led him up of the room. He laughed loudly, almost shouting, and walked through the rear door of the court room and taken up to his jail cell. Miami, Feb. 23—(UP) Marco Anton Cermice made the statement through James J. Bowler, when advised today that sentence had been imposed on Zangara:“They certainly mete out justice mighty fast in this state. If the law was enforced as it is now, we have a great tendency to reduce crime.” Cermak Lands Quick Justice Hop to Be for New Women all women of the University are invited by the Co-Ed clubs to attend the meeting. The marrow afternoon from 6:30 to 7:30 in the Memorial Union in honor of the women students who enrolled here for the first time at the opening of this institution. Dancing, Bridge and Jigsaw Puzzles Will Provide Entertainment Music for the dancing will be fur- nished by Louie Siebers and his or- chestra. Bridge and jigsaw puzzles will for those not wishing to dance. Work on Old Snow Resumed The work of teeing down old Snow Hall has resumed today after a brief interruption. The work was discontinued three weeks ago on account of cold weather. Edmur Torrell, CS3, is in charge of the arrangements. She will be assisted by the presidents of the various Co-Ed groups. Work on Old Snow Resumed Feminists Hopeful in Possible Appointment of Frances Perkins New York, Feb. 29.—(UP)—If Mi Franases Perkins becomes Secretary o Labor, feminists may win a victory in the Senate over most of the first woman to the cabinet. Although she has been married to Paul Wilson since 1917 and has a daughter Susanna Winslow Perkins Wilson, the prospective Secretary of Labor has continued to use her own name and is officially and legally Frances Perkins, not France Perkins Will. She married James Sutcliffe for Uncle Sam have had to change their names when they married whether they like it or not. Motion Ficture Dramas Offered as New Course Oread Training School to Conduct Study of Cinemas The same careful study that is ordinarily given to the spoken drama is to be accorded a selected list of modern motion picture dramas by the junior English class of Oread Training School this semester. The study course is under the immediate direction of Harold Minnewater, assistant instructor in education at Dean R. A. Schweiger and assistance of Dean R. A. Schweiger of the School of Education. That the modern motion picture is more than a pastime, and that motion picture drama may contain material of real literary value, was suggested by the National Council of Teachers of English. Studies such as are now to be undertaken by Oralc Training School in New York have been started in several places in the East. The one here is the first in the middle west. Mr. Minnifer has a class of 30, who are to view a series of pictures through the co-operation of S. E. Schwan, manager of the Patee theater. It is intended that the students shall make a careful study of each picture viewed, and examine it as to the technical qualities of the technical character of the production. One worksheet filled out by the student has 14 points, covering nature of the picture, its fundamental conflict, leading characters and their motives, and the student's opinion as to the best response to the scene that *it* _have been omitted_ Another worksheet rates in five divisions, ten different phases in the study of a picture. For example, under "social value" a picture would be rated higher than "harmful," "harmless," plus one if "wholesome," plus two if "commandable," and plus three if "inspiring to high ideals." In the same way, the five ratings from negative to plus three are given for the theme, characterization dialogue, voice, and work of the director, pictorial composition, and the spectator's enjoyment. Kansas—Generally fair tonight and Tuesday; colder in northeastern portion Tuesday. WEATHER --- It Would Have Been "Pie' for Cunningham Back in Early Dav "The mile run was won by W. G Raymond in 6:41." The timing is correct, but the event is not recent. The item is from the late September 16, 1578, and is part of the report of an impromptu field meet that some of the men, of the then young Univer- sity, attended the previous Saturday at Akers track. The winner of the mile run was a junior in the civil engineering course from 1877 to 1880, but did not receive a scholarship and a few years ago at Iowa City, Iowa. EIGHTEENTH AMENDMENT IS UP TO STATES Another in that mile race was C. L. Davidson, prep student and member of Phi Kappa Psi, and liberal contribution to the Stadium Fund. He did the mile in 7:13. Placing third was F. L. Webster, in 7:32. Webster was long a resident of Denver four was t. Dwight Thacher in 8:12. Webster is pretty fair two-mile time these days. Other events that day included a one-mile walk and a five mile walk, for which the faithful newspaper man years ago kept the time for each mile. The one-mile event was won in 9:58 by L. L. Dyche, later professor of pathology at the University, and Dr. Dyche the Dyche natural history museum. W. H. Simpson now with the advertiser department of the Santa Fe railroad, won the five-mile walk in 56:40,covering his last mile in 10:35. W M. Thacher, now a lawyer at Austin, Nev.,did his five miles in 10:35, and G. C. Smith required 61:20, his pace lagging mile by mile. Yale and Harvard Offer Business Studies in Conjunction New Haven, Conn., Feb. 20, (UP)—Yale and Harvard, traditional rivals in all fields, united today to offer a course in business law that will enable a college years between the two universities. It was the first time the universities had joined in such a project. The new course is a modification of a legal education to fit the special needs of students. The students will spend the first and fourth year in the Yale School and fourth year in the Harvard School of Business. Enrollment will be limited, and students will be selected by a committee representing both schools. BAR ASSOCIATION ELECTS ECKDALL AND BECK OFFICERS At a recent meeting of the Lyon County Bar association, Frank E. Knack, 130, was elected president and Clarence V. Beck, 126, secretary-treasurer for the year. Fifteen of the 32 members are graduates of the University of Kansas. Roland E. Boynton, 136, attorney-general for the state and president of the Kansas Alumni association and Gilbert H. Frith, 112, president of the Kansas Bar association are members of the organization. $\textcircled{1}$ $\textcircled{3}$ $\textcircled{2}$ Kansans in Current News Scenes 1- Adolph Hitler, chief of the National Socialists, who has been made chancellor of the German Republic. 2- Traucks loaded with Bolivian troops moving up to the Gran Chaco to on the drive against the Peruvians. 3— President-elect Roosevelt holding a press conference in the "Little White House", at Warm Springs, Gn. Standing immediately, at the left of Mr Roosevelt is Theodore Allard, '07, Washington correspondent of the Kansas Honor Roll Is Announced City Star, and the left one of the three newspaper stamen is Ernest Kidder Lindley, who is Chancellor and Mrs. Lindley, and staff member of the New York Herald-Tribune. Mr. Lindley is a author of a biography of Roosevelt. Thirteen Men Listed in School of Law With Hieb Grades Dean Robert M. Davis today announced the honor roll for the Law School. It includes the names of the first, second, and third year law. The thirteen men are as follows: third year, Dudley E. Brown, George W. Donaldson, H. Meek, Eugene W. Nirdlinger, Maurice A. Wilden. Second year, Richard A. Barber, Clark M. Fleming, Paul V. Smith, Leonard O. Thomas. First year, Herbert H. Hy- John H. Lehman, and Payette E. Row According to Dean Davis, any student who makes better than a "B" average is eligible for the honor roll. Paraguay Papers Say War May Be Declared South American Country Opposed to Bolivia Receiving Arms Asunción, Paraguay, Feb. 29—(UP) - Paraguayan newspapers supported the intimation today that Paraguay might declare war on Bolivia as the result of the Chilean government's decision to allow Bolivia to ship military supplies through Chilean territory for use in the Gran Chaco campaign. "The moment has arrived to declare war," El Dario said. El Orden said Chile desired peace while permitting the invasion it was necessary for a continuation of war. Allen Lauds Sportsmanship Kansas Coach Praises Way Crowd Carried Out No-Booing Campaign Peruvians Want War Lima, Peru. Feb. 20.—(UAP) Crowds parading in the streets of Lima and Calillo today reflected increasing population in Málaga onbia after President Luis M. Sanchez Cerro declared in a speech that "It is time to repulse force with force." The government issued a decree for increased military presence in civilians between 21 and 25 years of age. Strong in his praise of the co-operation shown by students and townpeople in the no-boosting campaign inaugurated in the basketball game Saturday night, Dr. F. C. Allen said that the result of this first move against impulse demonstrations here showed the small amount of boos hanged here in the crowd, only the result of thoughtlessness and not a habit with Kansas crowds. The fact that more fouls were made by the home team and called by the referee than by Iowa State shows that the crowd in not booing can appreciate that the home boys can be in the middle of a game, the captors and that Kansas crowds, like the players, can show sportsmanship at an athletic contest, Dr. Allen said. "I want to thank students and townspeople for their help in making our team stronger," Dr. Allen said today. "The movement spreads throughout the Big Six conference and to other conferences, with a great benefit to the game of basketball." ROBERT M. NEAL IS AUTHOR OF JOURNALISM TEXTBOOK Robert Miller Neal, assistant news editor of the Springfield, Mass. Republic, is author of "Newspaper Desk Work," a book just published by D. Woollett, of New York, and receiving very favorable notice. He is the son of Professor Mrs. Robert Wilson Neal, of Springfield, and grandmother of the late Edwin R. and Sirah E. Miller, of Lawrence who formerly was Stella Miller 94. Both Professor and Mrs. Neul are graduates of the University of Kansas. Mrs. Neul is a magazine and newspaper writer, and she has published Republican, Professional Neul, 798, 799, has published a number of books and in connection with other writing and with teaching conducts the department wrote the Ow's Oak," in Writer's Monthly. Taylor and Monieriff to Atchison Professor Howard C. Taylor, pianist, and Mrs. Alice Monieriff, contralto; both 'of the School of Fine Arts, will leave tomorrow for Atchison where they will appear in a joint program of music at the University row evening. The program will be held in the Atchison High School auditorium. Florence Beamer Bratton will accompany Mrs. Monieriff. Prohibition Repeal Approved in House by 289-121 Margin Republicans and Democrats Unite to Follow Action Taken by Senate RECEIVES HUGE CHEER Washington, Feb. 20. —(UP) The House today approved repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment. The action sends the prohibition issue back to the states for ratification or rejection of repeal. The voice was 283 to 121. Presidential approval is not required for submitting the proposed new amendment to the states, but 38 of the 42 amendments under amendment before it becomes effective. More than the necessary two-thirds vote was mustered in the house as the Blaine repeal resolution, passed last week in the senate, was driven through to victory by a coalition of Republican and Democrat wets. Under the terms of the resolution, congressional action will result in the equivalent of a great national referendum on the controversial question. Each state must summon specially appointed state senators who will pass on the proposed amendment. Anti-prohibitionists, while jubilant at the action, realize they are just embarking on a bitter struggle to ratification. Thirteen states can block ratification either by an unfavorable vote or failure to act. As Speaker Garner announced the vote, the House garner into a roar of applause. Despite the strict rules of the House against demonstrations from the gallery, the cheer was re-echoed in the gallery. All-Musical Vespers Given Members of School of Fine Arts Present Varied Program An audience of several hundred persons attended the thirty-seventh All-Musical Vespers given yesterday afternoon in the University Auditorium. Gavin Doughy, a graduate student in organ, opened the program with a recital of works from a music tribute from Bach. The University String Quartet presented the first movement of the Unfinished Quartet from Grieg. Following this a vocal ensemble consisting of Merihah Moore, soprano, Irene Peabody, contrato, William Pilcher, tenor, Dale Vilet, bass, with Merith Monger as the pianist and Anne McGregor as the organist presented the sacred number, "Show 1e Thy Way, O Lord." A Minut for three cellos alone was presented by Gordon Kinnon, Genevieve Hargiss and D. M. Swarthout from the seldom heard Suite Op. 87 in Beethoven, George Trovolio and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart playing at two pianas of Two Sheetbees from The Mother Goose Suite from Ravel. This was followed by the Scherzo and Theme and Variation from the beautiful Forlorn or "Trout" Quartet by Franz Schubert played by Walden-Gelchk, Garl Kuesterstein, D. M. Swarthout, Genevieve Hargiss and Roy Kittel from the University of Kansas Men's Glee Club, directed by William Pilcher, sang three unaccompanied numbers. The last Vesper of the series will occur on Sunday, March 19. WHEELER IS GUEST SPEAKER FOR TOPEKA READING CLUB Dr. Raymond H. Wheeler, of the University of Kansas, was the guest speaker of the Sunday Evening Reading club in Teopka today night. He reviewed "Decline of the West," by Oswald Sprenger. Dr. Wheeler is in charge of the department of psychology in the University of Kansas and the author of several books upon his subject. The club meets at 6:30 o'clock in the community house of the Central Congregational church. The meeting was open to the general public. - Closing hours will be 12:30 Tues- day evening owing to the holiday Wednesday for Washington's birth- day. Wednesday night closing hours will be 10:30 as usual. HELEN HEASTON,* President, W.S.G.A. * PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS University Daily Kansan MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20. 1923 Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Robert Whitman Margaret Inez Jill Doyle Robyn Green Edith Krom Bill Myllenton David Lawrence Allyson Brooke Ira McCain Catherine Arnold Kuttmanan Andrew Smith David Smith Telephones Business Office ... KU. 6 News Room ... KU. 2 Night Connection, Business Office ... 202K Night Connection, News Room ... 202K Published in the afternoon, five times a week and on Sunday morning, by students in the Deartment of Journalism of the University of Kansas, from the Frozen at the Department of MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1933 Subscription price, $4.00 per year, payable in advance. Simple single fee, for each. Noted on secondclass month September 1916, at the post office at Lawrence, Kauai. THAT LOWLY WESTERNER In Madison Square Garden last Saturday night glenn Cunningham from lowly Kansas broke the tape 10 yards ahead of the great eastern flash, Gene Venzke, in the classic Baxter mile. What a disconcerting and most vexatious sight this must have been to the Pennsylvania flies that twice now in two weeks has been defeated by this "upstart from out west," although each time Venzke has been entered as the favorite. The East dies hard. Their knowledge of sports and sportkings is so vainly limited to their own part of the country that they find it tremendously difficult to realize the possibility of some rank outsider's excelling in competition with their eastern athletes. Saturday night, for the second time in less than a week, the Kansas miker did much to shake their stubborn confidence by sprinting away from the great Venzie in the last lap before their very eyes. Loyalty to their runner is a noble expression, but if the East again fails to recognize Cunningham as the master, it will brand itself to the sporting world as a poor loser. An example of the practicality of the college student was illustrated in a Law of the Press class recently. A young woman student was asked what she would do if she were sued for damages. She replied calmly that she would take the matter to a lawyer and let him figure it out. WHO TEACHES IT? It is surprising how many students prefer to study their instructors rather than their texts and how carefully they record their idiosyncrasies. This one will take so much apple-polishing this one will not take any. This one is partial to them to men. This one's quizzes are always objective; this one's always the essay type. Most students have a memorized list of professors with them when they go to enroll. They know which ones are "easy," and which they must avoid if it can possibly be done. As soon as they begin the course they start to apply the information they have gathered about the instructor. From then on they watch him closely in order to add to the store of knowledge—about the instructor, not about the subject matter. They know if they need to listen in class or study the text. They soon discover what he likes and what he dislikes. By the time the semester is over, most students know enough about their teachers to fill a book. As for the course itself—well—! CONVENTION Convention in some form has probably existed since the beginning of time, and it will no doubt continue to exert its influence on human activity so long as human nature remains what it is. Most people instinctively seek to be obese; no one likes to swim against the tide, when it is so much easier to drift. To youth, as it attempts to seek its own answers to the questions that confront it, convention offers a serious threat; not the convention that prompts the observance of the little social courtesies along with everyone else, but the spirit of conformity that leads one along with the mob in matters where individual judgment should prevail. Too often personality is completely submerged beneath the influence of group-conformity. the trend of a cycle of society is reactionary, so that each unit of society plays its part in retarding the progress of each individual within it. The family, the church, the college, the fraternity, the social set, all exert their own pressure on a particular individual to make him conform to their standards, share their views, preach their doctrines—in short, become one of them. Because each of these groups is to a large degree successful in its efforts, we have a great major that have conformed and consequently become the average. True it may be that an advancing civilization has brought to this average group a higher standard of intelligence, better living conditions, and a progressive moral and ethical code which have combined to give it an upward trend. Nevertheless, just as surely as that average is pulling up those below it, so it is pulling down those above it. The levelling process is the same; only the results differ. Consider the change that takes place in a great number of students who come to the University. Most of them come here in the first place with a definite goal in mind, an education. Each has his own dream, his own ideal, toward which he is eager to strive. After a few months in an environment where the prevalent idea is to get by with as little work as possible, where there is no thought of meeting education half way, those dreams, those ideals, those goals begin to fade. Before long they are gone entirely, and the average group, mediocre by definition, has again exerted its conforming influence. Apparently only a few are willing to resist the social pressure upon them that is sure to follow a refusal to conform to the dietates of the herd. Only the strongest of personalities, the most indomitable of wills, can resist the adverse feeling of the crowd. Only the great have done it in the past; only those who do it in the future will attain greatness. QUIPS from other QUILLS ... In some American towns, wood money is being used. It seems that, instead of gold, they'd sooner be on a silver basis. Texas State Lass-O. There are three genders: masculine feminine, and crooner—Daily Trojan. Too many women are carrying cigar- carets in their mouths instead of safety pins...Austin Butcher in the Altoona Tribune. There's only about half a yard difference between a swell college evening dress and a wicked rudiment—Baker Orange. Some people seem most uncomfortable when they are still.Daily Texas A local lady invariably confuses Clark Gable and Jimmy Durante in her mind. It's our idea of a dirty Herald. Durante, J. P., H. in Ottawa. Herald. It is to be feared that workers won't long he satisfied with the five-day week. What they will eventually earn a day-a-week weekend — Anthony Republican. You have to provoke some people into telling the truth—Daily Texan. "We don't suppose we shall ever be able to understand why basketball referees don't work games from advantageous positions in the grandstands where, judging by the yelps of the crowd, anyone must certainly be able to see better," says TLK, in the Concordia Blade. Some of the fraternity brothers and sisters who have inherited valuable houses lately declared subject to taxes no doubt feel their entrance in college was timed a few years too late.-H.D.K. in the Manhattan Republican. Humor is getting highbrow. All you do is scrawl off a dizzy picture and then have the little kid or old lady cuss—Baker Orange. If editors could get credit for the things they refrain from saying most of us would be famous—Leavenworth Times. A local min set through two hour of motion pictures taken during the World War at a Wichita theater last night and came home feeling as if he were entitled to a bonus—Augusta Gazette. Personally we doubt the veracity of the California man who claims to have eliminated all the unusual aspects of garlic—Garden City Telegram. "Matiomiral quarrel ends in wreck," states a newspaper. He probably puts his foot down for once and forget it was on the gas feed - Baker Orange OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXX Monday, Feb. 29, 1933 No. 106 Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication days and 11 a.m. on Saturday afternoons from April 1 to June 31. COLLEGE FACULTY MEETING The faculty of the College will meet on Tuesday, at 4:30 in the auditorium on the third floor of the Administration building E. H. LINDLEY ENGINEERING BOOK EXCHANGE: Refunds for books sold by the exchange will be made Monday and Tuesday at the Council bench in Marvin hall. C. E. KNIDVATSE, Chairman. GRADES: Students may obtain first semester grades at the Registrar's office according to the following schedule of names: Tuesday, Feb. 21—To M, inclusive Thursday, Feb. 23—To S, inclusive Friday, Feb. 24—To Z, inclusive Saturday, Feb. 25—Those unable to appear at the scheduled time. [GREGIO E. FOSTER] Registrar KAYHAWK CLUB: The Kayhawk club will meet this evening at 7:30 in room 5, Memorial Jion. CONYEIR HERRING, Vice President. GEORGE O. FOSTER, Registrar. LAW SCHOOL CONVOCATION: The Law School convention which was postponed from last Tuesday will be held in the little theater of Green hall at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, Feb. 21. Mr. Cyrus Crump, president of the Missouri State bar association, will speak on "The Practice of Criminal Procedure" and are interested in presenting awards are urged to be present. ROBERT McNair DAIV, Dean. Phi Chi Theta rush dinner will be held at the Colonial Tea Room on Tues day, Feb. 21, at 6 p.m. JUANITA MORESE. Phi Delta Kappa will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Alpha Kappa Lambda house, 1332 Louisiana street. Prof. H. E. Chandler will speak. PHI CHI THETA: PHI DELTA KAPPA: RECOMMENDATIONS COMMITTEE: The Recommendations committee of the Men's Student Council will meet in room 5, Memorial Union at 9:30 Tuesday morning. Any student having recommendations for future council action will be welcome. FRED CONNER. No classes will be held on Washington's birthday, Wednesday, Feb. 22. E. H. LINDLEY. 'TECHNOCRATIC PVROTECHNICS' WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY: The Women's Pan-Hellenic exchange dinner will be held Thursday, Feb. 23 at 6 p.m. JUANITA MORSE WOMEN'S PAN-HELLENIC DINNER: GARLAND DOWNUM, Secretary. While riding in the observation car of a train last fall, M. Foster was reading the fashion notes. He came across the statement that men would wear a great deal of dark blue this winter. "Yes," agreed a fellow passenger, "they wear a great deal of dark blue if they were what they were wearing at winter." William T. Foster, former director of the Pollak foundation for Economic Research and author of several books, recently addressed a small group of students and faculty members on the tongue-twisting subject, "Technocratic Pyrotechnics." The address was purely informal and in language which every human could understand, and was based upon his own experiences. Mr. Foster recounted in his own imitable way. Some of them might we! be reheated here. Once Mr. Faster was being shown the famous Los Angeles river. Looking down at the diminutive stream of water, he asked, "Are there any fish in that river?" "There used to be," answered a resident, "but they kicked up so much dust that they choked to death." In reading a Memphis newspaper while in that city last November, Mr. Foster found this among the church choir will sing "Sear me! Oh, Lord." Mr. Foster was spending the summer in Maine last year and observed a farmer who was trying to sell a cow to a neighbor. The prospective purchaser asked, "How much milk will she give?" The farmer answered, "but she's a durned good-natured cow, and she'll do the best she can." Mr. Foster at one time in London heard a political standing for election in Parliament speech. "I know it is very unfoundable that we are going through an economic depression and just can't be helped." "You're silly," a voice drawn "run the back of the room. The speaker continued, "We are undergoing one of these current swings from optimism to pessimism, which is a part of human nature and cannot be changed." "You're silly," said the same voice. "We must listen to you," he added, "the politician stated in an master voice, "we must just wait until things get better of themselves." "You're silly," repeated the voice from the back of the room. Driven to despair, the speaker turned to the interrupter and said, "Sir, you are drunk." "I know I'm drunk," retorted the audience, "but in the morning I'll be all right, and you will be still silly." An Iowa farmer was before a congressional committee in Washington describing the effects of the depression upon his home community. Wheaton an urban congressman remonstrated that the farmers surely had enough to eat. "Yes," she joined the farmer, "but if things don't get better in another six months, we'll have the fattest lunch of all." She ranning away you ever did see. Our Contemporaries --non of Tumour; Carmelicina did not hesitate "I do not believe in faculty citizenship of college papers," said the dean of the Columbia University school of journalism recently. And Carl W Ackerman's words should carry weight. He has been associated with college publications long enough to know whereof he speaks. There are times, naturally, when school boy editors cause the administration embarrassment through immature judgment and unwide policies. They are also the case in many papers being published by college students in which there is absolutely no restriction or censorship, A. and M. is one of the fortunate cut-offs in these cases; few isolated cases the faculty has had no cause forregretting its liberality. It is Dean Ackerman's opinion that "college journalism has improved distinctly in the past 20 years. An examination of the leading papers will show that many of them are edited with professional rather than academic understanding." The truth of this statement is clearly evident from a comparison of the papers of today and those of the past. Because the provenance can be attributed largely to the increased freedom of the student editors. It is ridiculous to expect student journalists to profit from their experiences on a school publication if that experience is not properly university and administration. That is the trouble with most high school and junior college papers now. The students are little better than murientees who have worked for their mothers and matured pull the strings. Tusson, Ariz. Feb. 29—(UP) General John J. Pening was registered at local hotel today, but not under his wn name. A report he was here to undergo an operation at the veterans hospital was denied. Of course students make mistakes But it is through these mistakes we learn—Scoop in the Daily O'Collegian Send The Daily Kansan home. Pershing Incognito at Tucson The May Day Mystery Copyright by Octavus Roy Cohen. Octavus Roy Cohen By SYNOPSIS --non of Tumour; Carmelicina did not hesitate CHAPTER 1—Antinette Porton, Married, resumes Foster Thayer's attention to Lily Weach, and new season begins. ending with bitter reconciliations, the non-antinette student, Lily Thayer, a girl born with a boy, Thayer and Vernon are with him. Thayer and Vernon CHAPTER HL—Harry determines to see Thayer and end his association with the company. He goes out until she has appointed to her husband at a fraternity house. Mix Verve lives and goes to his room. Tony ends her want to Thayer as a friend, and he immediately afterwards, visibly in a state of embarrassment, lets apparently clothes to be made. CHAPTER V—The Marlinard bank is robbed at 8600 Gresham, the robber encumbered with a gun and apparently wounded. Jim, an officer, and good natured, comes to investigate CHAPTER VI — Throat Fence tells the story of the Verson man. The Verson of large sums, in cardinal colors, was initially relied upon by the family realized it. Ruggan induces the Verson into a life of crime, evidence implicating Verson in torture the Verson in York and Trown the Verson in West Yorkshire and under arrest as Thayer murderer. CHAPTER IV HI-HEARAY interruptions at the murder of a child on day of the murder. Welsh is in charge of the investigation. Thayer was alive when he left him. Thayer was taken by his bodyguard, who is in legal possession, encouraging to take him into custody, then timed the firm conversation being that which results from the resulting association with the resulting series of incidents more commonly known as "the murders." CHAPTER VIII They located Mike Carminec in the basement of the fraternity house. Beaumont explained that Hanway was in his room, and he asked him . , , and then there was silence for several minutes during which he repeated expressiveness countenance of Hanway with wonder and bewilderment. When Jim did speak, his tone was quiet — "Now, suppose you tell me what happened after Mr. Vernon left the fraternity house?" "I was work" in the back downstairs when I see Messier Van Gogh paint a painting. He wax and go up to second door. I do not see anybody when I go up there, so I start waxing the floor and after that I walk into the Thouder's door is a little bit open. I look again and I see his faces and also his legs, and I think right away it is funny he should be lying down inside — because that is funny thing to do. "Then my mind says to me that maybe Meester Thayer, he is drunk, and I think I will put him on the bed and want the other fellows to know Meester Thayer is drunk in the fraternity house because that is not nice except when they have a party. I want to get the frame of the juniper seemed to shrivel at the remembrance and there was a wild light in his eyes; "I go in the room, Meester Hanvey, and right now he is not drunk, because his throat—threat. . . ." The junior covered his face with his hands and rocked back and forth. "He is all blood, and Regan relaxed as the story finished. He glanced at the prodigious audience. "You look like a man," made Haney was lying back in his chair with eyes half closed, apparently pleased with the crowd. Rengan wanted to break the no. 4-ward silence, but dared not. Carmine the artist, who sat in the library, then sank into a chair, his sharp black eyes roving about the little room. And when Hamvey spoke, it was like a breath of fire — voiced; and about something else. "Who did you like best, Mike—Vernon or Thayer?" "Meester Thayer, sir. I like him most best." The swarthy face turned brick red, but the man did not evade. "I like Meester Thayer heat, sir, he cause I feel like him and me, we are partners." "Fish? What you mean; Partners?" "I mean ... , I do not like to say that fish are partners," "I promise, but I promise to tell the truth, Master Thayer and me, we do much business." "What sort of business?" "Whisky." Reagan sat up very straight. This was something entirely new to him. "You mean," asked Jim, "that Thayer was a bootlegger?" Carmelinel made a posture of horror, "Oh no, sir. Mester Thayer, he is one fine teller. He only gets the orders he gives me." The teacher which we are the booteefer" He paused for a moment in obvious embarrassment, and then made a further explanation. "But I am not common booteefer. Mester Hanvey, I get the orders for the college tellers, and always I know that it is good stuff." Jim Hanvey appeared to be absorbed in the mechanism of his patent MUNICIPAL COUNCIL "Are You a Regular Bootlegger, Mike?" toothpick. His eyes were focused on that device when he spoke again to Carmine. Harvey pursued his inquiry, "How was this liquor thing worked, Mike?" "Are you a regular bootlegger Mike?" "Oh, no, sir. I would not do not like that—only for the college fellers." The junior's eyes flashed to Reagan's storm free. "I hope I do not get to jail because I tell you that, sir, I'm going to be insulted. Insulted. 'Will be, Reagan.' "Whatever you say, Chief." was this liquor thing worked, Mike? "It was it was喉痛, Meester Haney: Always sometimes the boys give a party which the faculty they do not understand about, so they want liquor. Meester Thuny, that is, we have not been fit until which have never been cut. So they give him the money and he orders it from me." "I see. . . And you and he would split the difference, eh?" "Then you were close friends, eh?" "Oh, no, sir. Mester Thayer, he is ver' fine gentleman and he would not be friends with no jannister." "I see. . . He certainly was a fine gentleman. Mine—no mistake. I don't know if he was pretty good friends, not their? Did you ever hear them quarrel?" "Yes sir. For real thing, the fellows they pay me one hundred dollars a month. I pay for it sixty dollars a month. I pay for it seventy dollars and I take twenty dollars." "No, sir. Not one time even." "They used to play cards a goo deal, didn't they?" "Vernon never mixed up in this liquor business, did he?" "Maybe so—maybe not. I think maybe so." "Let me see . . . about one week ago, sir. It was a nice party. They wanted two cases." "No, sir. Just Meester Thayer." "Humm! When was the last time you bought liquor for him?" "Two hundred dollars' worth?" *Did you get it* "Did Thayer pay you for it?" The lawyer said for him, "Right away quick, sir, all except the forty dollars which he keep for himself." "Yes, Meester Hanvey; always he sees that I get my money vert' quick so the man from which I buy it off, he also does not be force' to walk." "He always looked after you, didn't he?" "Did Thayer usually pay you when he ordered the whisky or only after the boys said him!" "After the fellers they pay him. You see, it is for them and so he should not pay me until he get the money from off them." "And when he died, Mike—did he ewe you anything?" "No, sir. Meester Thayer, he did not owe me one cent." "Good." Hanvey hoisted himself to his feet, and nodded to the faniter. "That'll be all Mike." "You do not ask me no more questions!" "Nope. Nothing else. I'm much obliged for everything." Thank you, sir. Reagan led the way into the hall and thence upstairs to the main floor. Several boys, having heard that a new detective was on the case, were gathered on the veranda, struggling to appear disheurted. But all eyes were on him, and he made a figure as be and Reagan stood at the foot of the steps claunting. "What now, Hanvey? Would you like to see Max Vernon's room?" "You've searched it, haven't you?" "Find anything?" "Not a thing, but I thought—" "My Goal! you're a thorrible bight. Well, let's go. But Lordly! how I hate these steps." Harvey paired to the top floor and Reagan conducted him into a small but handsome furnished room, respendent with pennants, pillows, t筝 rackets and numerous lithographs in various conditions of deshabill tone, there was more than a hint of taste in the general arrangement. In a corner was a delicate statuette perched on a tawkod thouher. And there was a large, ornate emeritus weapon: A fencing foll, a broadword, a Malay knis, an Arab seismitr, a rusy revolver of Civil war days, a Philippine baba, a how do you dress yourself, a virginia, linnery at them, and then at he arrangement of the room. But despite the markedly collegiate It was cozy. in a joyful, humorous-good sort of way. He hawaii casually slipped into the dress, imaged, indifferently, through the masses of expensive linen. He opened the doe of the hunting closet and expired it, then the multitude of tailored outfits disclosed. "Vernon sure must be a snappy dresser, John." "Don't they have it easy? Just sitting around under the trees and talking to girls. . ." "I used to think I missed a lot by not going to college, John. Now I know it." "I looked that way to me," answered Renan enviously. "I always did wish I could afford them kind of clothes. I'll bet there isn't a suit in yonder." Harvey walked to the window and stared off toward the sprawling town of Marlind, Mid-afterpart, and most classes were finished, so that the shady mids under the trees were peering up. They seemed to be doing nothing whatever and doing it with enthusiasm, Jim sighed. Harvey sank into a chair and lighted a clear, "Might it not touch to think of a kid like Vernon having it easy like a nasty mess having it up in a nasty mess like this?" "I wish I was young again—and so not durnb out. Somehow, John, I can forget about it into my fat domo. I'd study the idea and I'd sort of die off before it reached my brain. But man! I sure have had a wait at this laugh around stuff." "You tell em, Jim. That's one reason I was glad to get you on the case. They're a nice sort, these kids. I didn't use to think so. I thought they were a bunch of crazy high-hats, but, by golly! they stick! I haven't got to tell them what else me too be'd a real guy if he wasn't so dam 'd愚健!" "What's all the military equipment?" he asked, referring to the knives and worms on the wall. Harvey moved his head laboriously toward the mantel. "I asked about that," said Reagan. "It seems Vernon has traveled a good deal and he's sort of collecting these things. That funny-looking one is from where the Malays live. I think they call it a killer. And that one over the hill is a bole, or whatever it is. Emas vexes. Vernon was a not about "Em."" "Everywhere. I'm sure I didn't miss n thing." "Funny hunch." . . But at that it "more sensible is more successful stamps or art things." He blinked. "I looked all through the room, John?" "You never can tell. . . . Just to make sure, though, we'll make one more search." Reagan started with the dresser. He rummaged through the drawers and into every corner. He inspected every ornament and spot of dust on the mantel. He looked behind pen tapes in pictures which were tacked to the wall. He opened the door of the hanging closet, where he commenced a systematic search into every pocket of every suit of clothes. It was a trollous job and Reagan—glancing occasionally into the room—was quite sure that Haver's suggestions had been entirely without anterior motive. The prejudices body was settled singly into the big chairs; the pugsgy were in the doorway, and the massive mezzanine and Jim Haney was—or far as the naked eye could see. Sleeping? Or was he? The longer Reagan was with Hanvey the less he had appeared to be obtuse, at times brilliant—and at times just plain dumb. Reagan returned to his task. If Hanvey could not get one, Reagan had ever over each inch of the ground before . . . but he had gone to job as thoroughly as he had the first. And then the silence of the room was shattered by a sharp cry from the closet. Hanvey's eyes uncurtained slowly, but he exhibited no other excitement — even when Reagan leaped into the floor and struck him between his thumb and forefinger. "Good G—d, Chief—look here." You need the trophy on your back. "Dogg, gone. . . . It's a knife. And there's blood on it, too. Where'd you find it, John?" "In the corner of the closet. On the floor I — don't understand him. Closet door is closed every day, . . ." He was more excited than he cared to show. "But weve got something here. Chief — no matter what he says. With this, it ought to be plain selling." "Because," snapped Reagan trump- phany—that is the knife that killed Thayer, and Chief-I've got another idea." "Good for you, John. What is it?" Rangan stepped swiftly to the mantel. He designated a spot on the wall of the papering a light of a lighter color. "Unless I'm all wrong, Haney," he said "this knife belongs right in that spot. And if it does—there isn't much more I can do." Xavier Vernon is the man who used it. (To be continued tomorrow) MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20.1983 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE THREE CHILI 10c at the Union Fountain Sub-Basement, Memorial Union Clothes for Spring are lower in price. We are showing the nicest line of woolens that we have ever had in years, at prices that have never been so low. Some very attractive patterns as low as $16.50, suit or topcoat. And remember… Suiting you is my business. 100000 Schulz the Tailor 917 Mass. LETS GO MANNISH It's fashion's command, and an easy to one obey. Here's the perfect tailored oxford for your tailored suits—tailored hats—your swagger ensembles. You'll be delighted with the bold, punch-through perforations and full continental toe. It's new. It's smart. It's a shoe that has everything — style . . . comfort . . . utility. Foot Delight WEMBLEY WEMBLEY The Price Is $6.50 Oro Aochoro's A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Sigma Chi Initiation Held Hill Society Look at Your Shoes, Everyone Else Does Would U wear raggedey elbows? Then get your heels fixed. Electric Shoe Shop Sigma Chi fraternity held initiation services yesterday at their chapter house for 21 men. Chi Delta Sigma entertained the fol- lowing dinner guests yesterday: Fran- ce McGuire of Independence, Mo;: Maxine Light, c'35; Dove Baxter and Robert Monett, c'28, both of Kansas City, Mo.; Walter Kuechner, c'36; William Robinson, c'36; Charles Bromell, c'35. Triangle held formal initiation Sun- day morning for Stanley Pugh, e33; Theorede Craig, e34; John Herdon, e34; and Kenneth Scherzer, e34. The initiation was followed by a banquet in honor of the new initiates. Triangle Initiates Miss Alice Winston, assistant professor of English, will review "The Ladies of America," and Mrs. F. P. O'Brien will review "Wah' Kob-Tah" at the meeting of A. A. U. W. book club which will be held at the home of Mrs. J. J. Kastler, 2216 New Hampshire street, this evening at 7:30 o'clock. Guests at the Pi Kappa Alpha house yesterday were Charles Brennheimer, Kansas City, Mo.; Phil Bowman, Salina; Phil Brighton, Tom Goy, and William Foster. Mary Winters, Werner, Peggy McKenna, Mary Pinet, and Filler Hunter, Topeka. Alpha Delta Pi dinner guests yesterday were Mr. and Mrs. C. H. labell of Kansas City, Kan.; Mr. and Mrs. C. B. King of Arkansas City; Betty David of Kansas City, Mo., a former student; George Tooley, c3; Hugh M. Powell, c4; Robert Flower, c3; Robert Sherwood, c3; Jack Lix, c1; Dickley Richards, c1; Willard Smith, c1; and George Marphy, a former student. Out-of-town guests at the Sigma Nu party Saturday night were Paul Parker, David Newcomer, Joe Newcomer; Leroy Williams and Kenneth Patman of Kansas City, Mo.; Fred Nordstrom and Bruce Rogers of St. Louis; Bill Barton of Topека; Dr. Umstead of Atchison; and Basil King of Ottawa. The initiates were Tom Arnold, Butler, Mo; Bill McDonald, Fawhusk, Okla; Herbert Meyer and William Stone, Tulsa, Okla; Michael Zeskey and Lehnd Sparks, Kansas City, Mo; Robert Browning, Arkansas City; Bruce Baker, Wellington; Charles Mitchell, Coffeefy; George Norris, Horton; Charles Black and Norman Jacobshagen, Wichita; Allen Williams, Garden City; Worley Katch, Atchison; Laken Hunter, Fort Lewis; John M. Burke, Lemster, Vallaparibo,印;Phil Brum- bellville; Paul Benson, Kansas City; Orin Parker, Kansas City, Mo. Entertains Guests Dollar Books Call K. U.-25 Before 12:30 p. m. BELGRAVE SUR LE RUE DE LA VENTE DE L'ALLEMAGNE THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Tel. 6 1923 We have over 200 titles in fiction, biography, science, philosophy, travel, history and juveniles from which to make your selection. A LIMITED SUPPLY OF THIS $1 VALUE WHILE THEY LAST These books are ideal as gifts or as permanent additions to your own bookshives. Come in and see them. Tel. 666 69c The real dandruff remover. Leaves the hair soft and velvety. 75c Fitch's Dandruff Remover Shampoo and 25c size Fitch's Hair Oil 11th Mass Handy for Students Phone 678 Rankin's Drug Store "Handy for Students" Phone 678 Weekend guests at the Alpha Delta Pi house were Virginia Mae Showalter, Mary Webb, both of Kansas City, Kan; Helen Motley, Kansas City, Mo; Mary Gabriel, City Garden; and Billie Tindall, Columbia, Mo. Dr. and Mrs. Frank Strong entertained a group of close friends of W.H. Johnson, professor of education, informally Friday evening at their home on University Drive. The party was in honor of Professor Johnson's birthday. Mad, and Mrs. W. C. Koenig will entertain Chancellor and Mrs. E. H. Lindley, Dean and Mrs. Henry Werner, and Mrs. J. A. Anderson at dinner tomorrow evening. Phi Chi Delta will meet tomorrow afternoon at 3:00 o'clock in Westinster hall. Elelean Frowe, c35, will lead the discussion on modern China. Kappa Sigma entertained at dinner the following guests: Virginia Bates of Lawrence; Lee Benton, and Jean Tuggle of Kansas City, Mio. Dinner guests at the Sigma Nu house yesterday were Margaret Riley of Kansas City, Mo, and Fred Newcomer of St. Louis. Delta Sigma Chi, professional commerce fraternity, announces the pledging of James Christy, b34, of Kansas City, Mo. Dorothy Mossmore, c'33, and Harris Sherwood, uncl, were dinner guests at the Alpha Tau Omega house Sunday. Mrs. James Naismith. 1700 Mississippi street, will entertain the Mercredi club Wednesday afternoon. The W. S. G. A. will not be hold this week, because of the holiday Wednesday on Washington's birthday. Fern Chambers and Marie Skags, both of Kansas City, Ma., were weekend guests at the Alpha XI Delsea house. Weekend guests at the Alpha Tau Omega house were Arthur Cromb and Carlton Meyers of Kansas City, Ma. Howard Little of Kansas City, Mo. was a dinner guest at the Alpha Chi Omega house yesterday. Pi Kappa Alpha announces the pledging of John Warren of Marysville. Send The Daily Kansan home. CARS WASHED and LUBRICATED $1.25 CARTER SERVICE Mayflower Descendants Will Offer Essay Prizes Firestone F Another Week Is Another Chance to Try the Excellent Food State High School Students Eligible to Write for The Kansas Society of Mayflower Descendants are offering three prizes for essays by Kansas high school students on the relationship between Kansas and old New England. Officers of the Kansas State Historical society, the history department of the State University, and other historical organizations are inquiring with the Mayflower Society in carrying out its plans. at the Announcement of the project has just been mailed to high school principals of Kansas by Prof. E. M. Hopkins of Kansas State University, the general administrative committee Professor Hopkins suggests that history and English departments co-operate in preparation of the essays, which it is expected shall range from 1,000 to 1,500 words. Contest CAFETERIA Widest possible range is given in specific titles, so long as the general theme of the essay ties together the early settlement of Kansas with New England activity, political, military, business, educational, religious. The Mayflower Society's plan calls for the organization of local committees throughout the state, where the essays, due not later than Aug. 15, 1833, are presented in the chapter of Lawrence. Here, a committee headed by Prof. D. H. Spencer, will sift out the better ones, and submit them to a final committee consisting of T. A. McNeal, of the Topeka Daily Capital; Mrs. George P. Morehouse, secretary of the Kansas Authors' club; and Kirk Meuchel, secretary of the Kansas Historical Society. Final award is to be made Nov. 1, 1933, and the three prize-winners will be guests of honor at the annual dinner Kansas Mayflower Society Nov. 21. PLEASANT rooms for boys in comfortable home at price you can afford to pay. Home cooked meals, all meal per week. 14th. Work hours. -10 to 14th. Phone 2788. -110 Twin-wire dvds or less 1 in. insertion, 2 in. 2 insertion, 3 in. 3 insertion. RATES: WANT ADS ARE ACCOMPANIED BY CASH. JIGSJAW PUZZLES cut to order. Furnish your own pictures, or we'll furnish them. Any number of pieces. Furniture, Art Café, 43 North Street Phone 562-107 -107 HAVE YOUR application photographs made at Moore Studio. 719 Mass. (upstairs-exclusive). Phone 964-1253. TRUNK KEYS, door keys, car keys. Good looker padlocks, night latches. door closers repaired. Trewery & Rutter. 623 Vermont St. Phone 318-547-8700. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusivity 1025 Mass. TAXI 25c Just Phone 65 Jayhawk Taxi Ike Guffin. Prop. Subscribe for THE KANSAS CITY STAR Headquarters PHONE H. L. NEVIN 847 Mass. St. 17 Distributor 13 papers — 15c per week Late Victor Releases Why Can't This Night Go On Forever ... Fox Trot Isham Jones and his orchestra I'm Playing With Fire Fox Trot I'm Playing With Fire Fox Trot Jack Doyne and his orchestra Fox Trot Medley ___ Fox Trot The Missouri Waltz—That Naughty Waltz They Didn't Believe Me Fox Trot Amygrus and his archtert. Jack Denny and his orchestra They Didn't Believe Me Fox Trot New Orleans Fox Trot Lafayette Fox Trot Don Bestor and his orchestra Jack Denny and his orchestra Moon Song Fox Trot Twenty Million People Fox Trot At the Baby Parade Fox *Trot* The Old Kitchen Kettle It's Within Your Power Fox Trot Now We're on Our Second Honeymoon Fox Trot The Girl in the Little Green Hat ... Fox *Trot* My Fraternity Pin ... Fox *Trot* You Are Too Beautiful Fox Trot Hallelujah, I'm a Bum Fox Trot Both from United Artists picture "Hallelujah, I'm a Bum" Bell's Music Store Spicy le turkish tol are strung to dry and cure in the sun. Well, that's something about cigarettes I never knew before Chesterfield CIGARETTES LICENSE WITH PREMIUM EDITION CHESTERFIELD -the cigarette-that's Milder -the cigarette-that Tastes Better I'd never thought much about what's inside a Chesterfield cigarette. But I have just been reading something that made me think about it. Just think of this, some of the tobacco in Chesterfield—the Turkish—comes from 4000 miles away! And before it is shipped every single leaf is packed by hand. All because Turkish tobacco is so small and delicate. Of course I don't know much about making cigarettes, but I do know this—that Chesterfields are milder and have a very pleasing aroma and taste. They satisfy—and that's what counts with me! © 1935, LINGETT & MVERS TOBACCO Co. PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1933 Mat. and Eve . . . 15c VARSITY TONIGHT-TOMORROW Chuckle and Cheer With WILL ROGERS in "Too Busy to Work" with Martin Nixon EXTRA! Actual Scenes of the Attempted Assimilation of President- Elect Rosevelt at Miami Also Imperfect Lover Magic Carpet TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY Welcome Back! CLARA BOW in "CALL HER SAVAGE" WHY PAY MORE? After College WHAT? SINCE 1930 Engineering? Harry D., Watts, P. of James Stewart & Co., Inc., builders of home and office equipment worldwide, say "World progress depends upon engineering. No wonder eager college men took toward the job; they must you must have a technical background, ability to take the course, or take advantage of the break." A recent investigation showed Edgeworth his voices woke at 42 out of 54 leading colleges **ABILITY to take the knocks." And yet brains count above all. That's why in engineering, as in college, a pipe is the favorite smoke. A appetite of good old EdgeWorthy Smoking Tobacco clears the brain for those intensive problems that confront the engineer . . . or the college man. Of course most college men know Edgeworth. " They like its distinctive flavor that comes only from this blend of fine old burlesy. Perhaps you'd like to try before you buy. Then just write it on the back cover. Then rich, Richmond, Va., and you'll get a free sample package of Edgeworth. * A recent investigation enabled Edgeworth the Buy Edgeworth anywhere in two forms—Edgeworth Plug and Edgeworth Plug. Slice. Shield. package to pack bumier.tin. some in vacuum at storage room. EDGEWORTH SMOKING TOBACCO EDGEWORTH LIMITED MIX GRADE READY RUBBED EDGEWORTH EXPAND PLUG SLICE EDGEWORTH Conference Lead May Be Dropped in K-Aggie Battle Jayhawks Must Down Kansas State to Retain First Place in Big Six TO MEET STRONG FIVE Again leading the field, the Kansas Jahawkers this week will enter the house stretch of the Big Six conference basketball race to defend their titles. The team's teams in the circuit, Kansas State this week and Oklahoma the week after. Coach Charles Corsaut's Kansas Angies, who will oppose the Jayhawks Saturday at Manhattan, offer a serious threat to the Mount Oread cage titles hopes. The Angies, after a poor start in their first conference games, have been able to gain the team to them have under-ruled in early season predictions. Led by Captain Andy Skradki, and Bus Boyd, star guard, the purple quintet has shown a brand of offensive basketball not to be considered lightly in any league. One of the Angie's pet tricks is to stage a last minute rally and path a play from the first end, a point margin when it seemed hope-less lost. The Jayahawkers, whose play last Saturday night was satisfactory in that they won the game, will probably be in better shape this week. Light workouts will be in order most of the time this week. Particularly pleasing in the game against Iowa State was the work of the first year men on the squad, for it is on these men that Coach Forrest Allen must depend to a great extent. Wells, Ursie, Gray and Bemn have all shown themselves capable of handling a regular berth in a more than satisfactory manner. With Gray and Wes in the midfield, they should ready to serve as replacements. Dr Allen is well prepared for the final games of the season. After a mid-season slump that enables his rivals to cut down his lead considerably, Bill Johnson, Kansas center, made another bid for conference scoring honors against Iowa State when he garnered three baskets and four free tosses for a total of 10 points. At present Johnson leads his nearest rival, Wagner of Missouri, by 12 points although the Kanas has played in four of the 13 points he scored Saturday night. Dick Wells has jumped to third place in the standings, 10 points behind the Tiger center. Ten Marksmen Score 3345 NOW! Rifle Team Finishes Second Week of Intercollegiate Competition The ten highest scores for the week ending Feb. 18, were announced today by Major W. C. Koenig, professor of military science. The names of the men and their respective scores out of 349 were followed: Edward Smiley, c. 349; Hall Taylor, c. 33; cap, 354; Sam McKone, c. 36;帽, Henry White, c. 348; Royce Reavrin, c. 329; T. J. Craig, c. 305; D. E. Leigh, c. 334; Guy W. Baker, c. 319; G. E. Hulbert, c. 339; J. M. Carlson, c. 343, Total points, 3345. ENDS WEDNESDAY The team has just finished its second week of competition and the scores are expected to arrive from the various colleges sometime this week. The competition last week was won by the Oregon State College, Washington University, University of Wisconsin, and the New York Military Academy. RADIO CITY TURNED THEM AWAY! PATEE WHERE BIG PICTURES PLAY Direct From Engagement at Royse New York City Music Hall First Picture to Draw Overflow Crowds to the Biggest Theater GEORGE ARLISS "THE KING'S VACATION" Also TECHNOCRACY Krazy Kat - Novelty - News The Year's Surprise Picture 42nd STREET BOUGHT BY THE CUBS Y Beryl Richmond, star left-handed for the Baltimore Orioles of the international league, who has been named the MVP for a reported price of $15,000. Sooner Five May Regain First-Place Tie Tonight Victory Over Iowa State Would Even Oklahoma With Kansas Norman, Okla., Feb. 20—(Special) The University of Oklahoma basketball team can go back into a tie for the "Big Six" conference leadership here Monday night by defeating Coach Louis Menge's Iowa State five on the Fieldhouse floor in the last home conference game this season for Oklahoma. The team will be dedicated to Elvin Anderson, veteran player, who is playing his last season. Iowa State is the team that bung a surprise 31 to 25 defeat on Oklahoma in the opening conference game of the season at Ames, Iowa, Jan. 7. Defeated by the Missouri five of Coach George Edwards, 30 to 40, before 4,000 persons at Columbia Friday night, 2017, when an early afternoon determined to turn Iowa State and assure themselves of a 600 per cent finish in the final standings regardless of the outcome of the college game. A statement from Lawrence and Lincoln, March 3 and 4. This week's "Big Six" schedule should make or break the Missouri five, which has yet to win a road game. If Coach Edward's team can break its road jinx and take both Iowa State and Nebraska Friday and Saturday, then get over Kansas State at Columbia; March 4 they'll be hard to keep from losing. But the Tigers may find Kansas State at Columbia than either Kansas or Oklahoma were, for Coach Corsart not only has a team of rangy husky veterans but in Dalton, a hustling center fully as tall as Wagner. Dr. F. C. Allen's Kansas team apparently will still close the season with seven victories and three defeats. The Jahweyhams meet the Kansas Agies at Manhattan this Saturday night, and Oklahoma at Lawrence the following Saturday. Of these two contests, Kansas will be the Kansas State state it is believed A double tie for the championship, or even a triple tie is easily possible this year. To Give First Aid Talks A series of first aid and life save talks and demonstrations will be given in June at the Duquesne County chapter of the American Red Cross, was announced by H. G. Alphas, instructor of physical education, Mr. McCue, who is special life saving field representative of the national organization, is experienced in swimming and life saving methods, having worked in Cress耕 school and as a teacher in public schools and Boy Scout organizations. McCue Will Demonstrate Life Saving and Conduct Examiners School The schedule for the three days i as follows: Allen Expects Repetition of Last Year's Standing 10:30—Lecture at Lawrence Memorial High School. 9:30—Lecture to examiners class. 12:30—Luncheon, Kiwants club. 11:30—Water demonstration for women at K. U. pool. 12:00—Milk demonstration for women at K. U. pool. K. U. pool. 0:00 - interview, over KFKU (E. R. Coach Believes Team Has Two Tough Games Yet to Play 7. 30 to 10.00-Examiners school at K. U. pool. unit. 4:00—Water demonstrations, men, at Thursday, Feb. 23 7:30 to 10:00—Examiners school, K.U pool. 6:00—Interview over KFKU (E. R. Elbelt) 1:30—Lecture at Oread Training School 2:30-Luncheon Kiwanis club. 2:30-Lecture on first aid, R.O.T.C. 9:00 a.m. to 1 p.m.-Finish examiners school. Friday, Feb. 24 Emporia—(UP)—Nine states and 88 Kansas counties are represented at Emporia Teachers College, according to the office. The enrollment is 1,502. Out in front by a slim margin in the Big Six basketball race, and with Oklahoma and Missouri still possibilities along with Kansas for the 1933 championship, Dr. F. C. Allen, the Kansas coach, said today that he is still standing by his statement of last week that he will be "well satisfied" if Kansas the season ends, ween and 3 lost, the season of the Jenkins held the past two years when they won the title and three years ago when they finished second. With the Kansas State College team to be met at Manhattan Saturday, and Oklahoma here March 3, Kansas has a number of points pointed out, and declared he would be well pleased if the Jayhawks come through with one victory in the two games. "I figure Missouri will be put out of the running after playing Nebraska this week at Lincock, and I am not so much worried," said Iowa State Friday at Ames either. "Kansas will this week in meeting the Aggies at Manhattan be playing its fifth game away from home and with two won and two lost on the road now that it has been played. The club capable of winning more away from home than it loses. So far Kansas is the only club in the circuit to win two games away from home this season, and the team at least it has won three out of five games away from Lawrence." Dr. Allen said he much feared the Aggies this week as they have beaten Kansas two out of three already this year, and Graham and Datton, the 6 best in the division, proving greatly the past few weeks. He said Kansas was sub-normal in morale and condition all last week and showed the effects of it in the game against Iowa, which won despite poor play. He explained that he removed Harrington, Gray and Johnson from the game early and sent in subs because he was impressed that the regulars were not playing up to his expectations of hard work is the program this week. Men's Intramurals --schedules, rates and all information Phone 590 The first day of the intramural swimming meet is scheduled for tomorrow. Five events will be held, the first beginning at 4:30. The 300-yard medley relay is the first on the list after which the 50-yard dash, plunge, and 100-meter dash will follow in consecutive order. Final events are to be held Thursday. Six basketball games will be played tonight; *Acacia* B'i, *v*. *Jayhawk* B'; Kappa Bs, *vs*. Beta, Phai Psi, *vs*. Sigma Chi; Sigma Chi B'i, *v*. D. T. D'; A. T. O, *vs*. S. P. E.; and Jayhawk *vs*. Phil Deit. The standings of the teams to date are: Division I— W L Pet. Beta 8 1000 Phi Delt 7 1875 Kowalski 6 2750 Kowalski H 6 750 A. T. O 4 371 S. A. O 4 450 D. T. D 3 750 S. P. E 3 375 Delia Chi 1 7 125 Jankyhi 1 7 125 Acetua 1 8 111 Division II— W L Pet. Sigma Nu 8 1889 Du L 8 1889 Keyhawks 6 3666 Phi Gam 6 3666 Sigma Chi 3 625 Phi Ake 5 357 S. A. E 4 500 C. D. S 4 544 A. K. L 4 544 Triangle 0 8 900 Fi K. A 0 8 900 Division III— W L Pet. Tennessee Club 8 1000 Pha L 7 875 A. K. Pis 4 857 Alpha Phi Omega 4 160 Phi Tau 3 350 Phi K. E 3 357 K. E. K 1 642 Wakaraus 1 7 125 Alpha Chi Sigma 5 000 KANSAS CITY Division IV— W 8 L Pct. Jayhawk B 0 1 0.00 Kagawa B 2 1 0.00 Kayahawk B 6 2 7.50 Phi Gam B 2 2 7.50 S. A. B 3 4 7.71 Acnela B 4 3 5.71 Phi Gam B 4 3 5.70 Beta B 4 3 5.70 Phi Delt B 4 5 4.44 Sigma Chi B 4 5 3.75 D. T. B 3 4 3.75 A. T. O. B 2 5 2.85 Delta B 0 8 0.00 S. P. E. B 0 8 0.00 Go by Greybound Bus 95c 13 buses every day. New low fares good on every bus. Service to almost any point in America. Sample one-way fares. Sallina $4.30 New York $22.15 St. Louis $4.90 Los Angeles 28.50 Chicago 7.90 Topeka 28.90 Women's Intramurals Swimming Meet to Be Held An intramural swimming meet will be held Feb. 28, at 4:30 p.m. between the I.W.W.'s and the sororites. Each team manager, whose names have been previously published, should hand in a record of entrances before Friday, Feb. 24. UNION BUS TERMINAL 638 Mass. St. The order of events will take place as follows: WESTERN GREYHOUND 1. Relays; four girls, each to swim one length of the pool; 2. Breast stroke form; 3. Two lengths free style; 4. Style dives—running front or swain dive; back dive; front jack knife; two op-tional dives; five lengths back stroke; 6. two lengths side stroke; 7. crawl for three lengths breast stroke; 9. three lengths crawl. WRESTLING TEAM TO MEET K-AGGIES TOMORROW NIGHT The Ping-Pong finals will be played at a date selected by the players. The final results will be determined be- tween Culpep, Culip, and Elizabeth Hinshew, c. 35. The University of Kansas wrestling team will leave here tomorrow morning by motor car for Manhattan, where he will attend a college mat team tomorrow night. The same wrestlers who made the trip to meet Missouri last week will make the trip to Manhattan. They are: 118-pounds, Wayne Sanderson, Lawrence; 126-pounds, Darold Eagle, Tulsa, Oka; 135-pounds, Elwood Leep, Kansas City, Kan; 145-pounds, Martion Everley, Eudor; 155-pounds, Jack Winkle, Columbus, Kan; 165-pounds, George Nolland, Lawrence; 175-pounds, James K. Tilford, Wichita; heavy-weight, Peter J. Mehring, Kirsten. Monday, Feb. 20 6 p.m. Campus Calendar, Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes. Send The Daily Kansan home. Make Plans Now! Starting Sunday, Feb. 26 "THE SIGN OF THE CROSS" DICKINSON Hit After Hit - Week After Week TODAY - TOMORROW "I LIVED WITH HIM!".. Hear This Cry, Wrung From the Tortured Soul of a Girl Fighting For Her Life and Her Love! You Owe it to counsel! This remarkable Production! Holds a picture of Pictures The Woman Accused with NANCY CARROLL · CARY GRANT · JOHN HALLIDAY By ten world-famous authors- RUPERT HUGHES VICKI BAUM ZANE GREY VINA DELMAR IRWIN COBB GERTEUR ATHEMTON J.P.MEVEY URSULA PARROT POLAR BANKS SOPHIE KERR Dnmatized by BEAVARD MILLER THE FILM EXTRA! EXTRA! Marie Dressler Polly Moran Comedy "DANGEROUS FEMALES" $^{5}$ Fox Movietone News -- Flip the Frog Economy Prices: Till 7:00, 20c; After 7:00, 25c EDDIE CANTOR As "The Kid From Spain" No Increase in Prices Dorsey-Liberty Post of the American Legion "HAPPY LANDINGS" PRESENTS Written and produced by Prof. Allen Crafton while in France. (The official 2nd Army Air Service Show). AT LAWRENCE MEMORIAL HIGH SCHOOL Monday & Tuesday Feb.27-28 8:15 o'clock ADMISSION 50 Cents Presented by a cast of the best talent from the Hill and town. See the original show that entertained the boys in France. You will like it. Tickets for sale by Legianniares and at the Round Corner Drug Store. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas Local Club Turns Over Subscription Money to Relays Merchants' Check for $50 Is Presented to Allen at Dinner Meeting Last Night* LINDLEY IS SPEAKER "They shall go on," has been adopted as the byword of the Lawrence Relays club number one, the club which was named after Karen Russell. That the Kansas Relays would not be held this year. This was adopted at a dinner held last night at the Hotel Eldridge for members of the club, athletic board members and newspaper men. The principal event of the evening was the presentation of a check for $500 to Dr. Forrest C. Allen, athletic director, by Walter Warmum, president of the college. The amount raised by the club to insure the success of the relays this year. A staff member of the CLERC Dr. Alessio told me that of the club in the short address that he made, that this was the type of organization with which he wished to work and which could discuss the problems faced by the athletic department. He added that he believed in this group as being the best team and that he continued giving financial aid. Chancellor E. H. Lindley, chairman of the athletic board and a guest speaker of the meeting, pictured to the meeting just what track in general and the recent court cases have brought renown not only for Kansas but for the entire state of Kansas. He pictured again the ovation received by his Kansans at the Olympics and gave a conise idea of how Cunningham is now being received not only in the East but throughout the nation. Relays Carry Kansas's Fame Chancellor Linda林斯 pointed as states as "Cummingham, Coffman, and Bausch are all children of this great event, the Kansas Relays. Through the Relays, they have been attracted Kansas and as a result of them, they are the name of Kansas and the world." Following this address, the body unanimously voted to send a telegraph of congratulations to our fellow members in his most recent race. — *o*th voted a life membership to The club voted a life membership to Dr. John Outland, the father of the Kansas Relays. Musical numbers were given by the Luther trio composed of Camilla Jeanne, and Maxine Luther. GOVERNOR UNABLE TO ATTEND Landon Sends Regrets and Adds Encouragement to Relays Club Governor Alf Landon was invited to attend the meeting of the Lawrence Relays club last night but was unable to do so because of conflicting engagements. A letter expressing his regret at not being able to attend the meeting which the club voted as life membership in the organization to the Governor. In writing about the Kansas Rangel he states: "May our Kansas stars perform their best on that day. I am sure they will uphold those high standards." The governor also described the traditional on Mt. Oread. As governor, I join with you in wishing them success, and speaking for the people of Kansas, I commend the business men of Lawrence, the athletic department, faculty and staff, and our community for continuing this fine event." Quoting from Governor Landon's letter: "A good Jawahyer, I am sorry that I can't join with you in singing the praises of all Jawahys and in commending Lawrence business men for their constructive co-operation." Luncheon to Plan Conference An open meeting of students and faculty interested in a state conference on the Economic Crisis will be held in the University cafeteria Thursday noon, 12:30 to 1:20, to plan for a delegation and preconference study. The conference will be held at Emporia March 10 to 12, and it is hoped a date for the conference will be 100 hundred students and faculty members will go from the University. Engineers Will Meet Tomorrow Baugher's The Civil Society of Civil Engineers will hold a meeting Thursday at 7.30 p.m. in Marvin Hall. Since second semester freshmen are eligible, those freshmen who desire membership must McNown will be the principal speaker Chicago Man Gets 18,000 Feet Up and Motor Dies—But He Lands LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1933 Chicago, Feb. 21 - (UP) - Roy Colton weather observer, has opened his open cook-pit plane to 18,000 feet above the city today and then, as the wind whirded at 80 miles an hour and the temperature at 95 degrees zero, the motor sputtered and died. In the open cockpit the pilot's hands nearly froze to the stick, but he kept the plane under control and the high wind toward the ground. As he reached lower levels the wind slackened and the speed of his ship increased. Faster and faster the plane descended with the wind singing about the cockpit and Colton desperately seeking an open spot on which to land. A street in a suburb presented the only possibility, and Colton chose it. The ship plowed head-on into a network of wires. Both wings were stripped from the plane, but the wires broke the fall, and it dropped easily to the pavement. Colton was unhurt. CONDENSED WIRE NEWS RFC Money for Kansas Washington, Feb. 21—(UP) The-Reconstruction Finance company today granted a $404.88 emergency relief loan to 537 families in April, during March and April. War Congress Called Asunción, Paraguay, Feb. 21—(UP) The president has decided to call an extraordinary session of congress friday to the sole purpose of asking authorities to declare war on Bolivia it was announced today. Oil Stove Explodes Fort Scott, F21. (—UP) —Mrs. Mary Odom, 17, was in a critical condition in a hospital here today as a result of being involved when a kerosene stove exploded. Lindherch on Air Trin Peru Orders Mobilization Job Newark, N.J. 21 — (UP)— Charles A. Linder, making what was reported to be his first flight in six months, left NW Airport in a single-motored plane today for an unannounced destination. Publishers Hold Convention Arica, Chile. Feb. 21—(UP)-Puerto has develoled the mobilization of all citizens from 21 to 45, advises from Carrera, Padua, said today. A large mass meeting will be held on Saturday. Chicago, Feb. 21 - (UP) - Publisher of newspapers in the Middle West assembled here today for the annual Inland Press association convention. The radio as a competition to newspapers on the major issues up for discussion. DR. ACKERT WILL ADDRESS MEETING OF ZOOLOGY CLUE Dr. James E. Ackert of Kansas State College will address the members of the Zoology club at their regular meeting in room 201 of snow hall this evening at 6 p. m. on the subject "Host Reservation" with Special Referee to the Chicken." This address will be accompanied by the initiation of new members made available to the club in the past semester. The attendance information a large attendance is expected. GRADUATES AND PROFESSORS ATTEND MEETING IN TOPEK Fourteen faculty members and graduate students attended a meeting in Teopala last week. Neil Shell gave a paper on "Loci Problems of the Triangle," Professor U. G. Mitchell tailed on the "International Mathematical Conference of Netherlands." Dean Stouffer and he had in attendance at its last meeting. Lawson Talks to Entomologists Professor P. B. Lawson, of the law school, produced a group of insects at the meeting of the Entomology club yesterday afternoon. He discussed the various kinds of stirulation and gave examples of each type of the unique and ingenious methods by which insects produce wound. Lawson Talks to Entomologists Professor G. W. Smith was elected vice president of the state section of he Mathematical association of America for the following year. W. S. G. A. to Meet W. S. G. A. to meet W. S.G.A. Council will meet at 3 p.m. in room 5, Memorial Union, Halen Heaton, fa 33, president, announced Japan Announces Official Rejection of League Report final Assembly Meeting Faces Most Critical Action in Its History CHINA WILL ACCEPT Genève, Feb. 21 - (UP) Japan officially rejected the committee report to the assembly of the League of Nations bilingual Japan for events in Manchete. The rejection covered both the committee of ID and its recommendation. It came as the assembly opened its final dramatic meeting to adopt the report which will entail Japan's withdrawal from the League. The assembly, however, faced with the most critical action in the League's history, refused to be buried, and admonished until Friar Sullivan left. Other clans also sent the report and praised China will accept the report and recommendations at Friday's session, it was forecast reliably. Today's meeting, held in the disarmament hall, was crowded with representatives of all nations. Pali Hymnas of Belgium, who presided, read a formal statement reviewing the case against 17 months' of attempted conflagration. "We hesitate to make a new appeal for conciliation, for it would be necessary not only that fresh proposals should be made to it, but also that it should reconsider the assembly not be aggrudged and that fresh military operation shall not be undertaken." He announced that conciliation of efforts are not ended until the report is adopted, but added: "He said that 17 months ago Japan had promised to withdraw her troops into the South Manchurian railroad zone (where they are allowed by treaty) as Japanese forces have crossed, but he continued, "today the three eastern provinces of Manchuria are occupied. Japanese troops have crossed the great wall and attacked Shamhakwan. It is announced that they will be prepared to occupy Jeoh." "WAR INEVITABLE" Peiping, Feb. 21—(UP)–War along the border of North China is inevitable. Marshal Chang Heuhan-Liung Marshal told George Bernard Shaw today. Michigan Bank Holiday Closes Limbing, Fee, 21—(UP) - Michigan's day bank holiday will close Tuesday. Gov. W. A. Combside and Combside Chinese Commander Says Japanese Leaders Force Situation The playwright, who arrived on the Empress of Britain on a world tour, tailored for two hours with Chang and Xiao, wrote that the impending trouble be averted? *7* TRYOUTS BY DRAMATIC CLUB TO BE HELD THIS THURSDA London, Feb. 21.-(UP) -The United war department within the last two weeks has placed orders for 38 bombing planes worth $200,000 and 114 pursuit planes valued at $1,700,000 it was learned today. The bombers are on a six-month flight from Mitsui company, and the pursuit planes from the Boeing Aircraft company. "I see no solution but war. China is powerless to save the situation. It all depends on the Japanese military program, since it is necessary for China to abandon her policy of non-resistance." Chang said. "As long as the Japanese military forces are in the saddle there is no way of avoiding war," Chang replied. Washington, Feb. 21—(UP)—Represents from London of purchase by the United government of a large order of airplanes from American manufacturers was confirmed by the war department today. The Dramatic club will hold tryouts Thursday afternoon at 3:30 in Little Theater of Green hall for "The Sauce and the Gander,"" three act comedy. The play is under the direction of Sally Banks, all the performers are requested by the Dramatic club to tryout because a large cast will be needed. LONDON DISCLOSES STORY OF U.S. AIRPLANE ORDERS Hults and Charles Hacker, Kansas debaters, went to Leavenworth this afternoon to debate a team from St. Louis at St. Mary's College. The Kansans will take the affirmative on a question relating to debt cancellation. THREE DEBATES SCHEDULED FOR IMMEDIATE FUTUR FOR IMMEDIATE FUTURE Tuesday evening, here, Clement Hall and Harold Harding will debate the negative of the same question against a team from the University of Texas, and Sunday, over radio KMBC. Harding and Harding will debate on the cancellation question two alumni, Charles Hassett and Kenneth Jordan. Washington, Feb. 21—(UAP)—Secretary of State Stimson today submitted the amendment which would repeal the prohibition law to the 48 states for ratification or rejection. The history-making action was taken only 24 hours after the house had approved a new constitutional amendment to repeal the Eighteenth amendment. The senate passed the resolution last week. On Way to States Movie Stars to Receive Elaborate Welcome Here Stimson Sends Notices of Repeal Measure Committee Completes Plans for Parade With Display of Floats Plans are nearing completion for the official welcome which Lawrence will extend to the group of movie stars aboard their special train which is to train at 10 o'clock Friday morning at the Santa Fe depot. The committee in charge has made arrangements for a parade, which will include a display of floats and souvenirs with which to greet some of movie-mount's greatest celebrities who will be attending the rear platform of their special train. The "Forty-second Street Special", given as the official title of their train, is very characteristic of its design and appearance. The ears are painted in gold and silver tintel and are brilliantly illuminated both inside and out. The movie stars have equipped themselves with a flat easel, a representation of the cinema headliners. The beach is equipped with artificial sunlight. During the 15 minute stop here James Cagney will act as master of ceremonies in introducing the 20 stars including Bebe Daniels, Joan Blendell, Mrs. Al Jolson, Warner Baxter, and others. From Lawrence the special train will go to Washington, D.C., where those on board will attend the inauguration ceremonies of President Roosevelt. Student Recital Thursday Program Will Consist of Piano and Voice Numbers Nine students of the School of Fine Arts will present a recital Thursday afternoon at 3:30 in the Administration auditorium. The following piano numbers will be played: Concert Etude (Smith) played by Emma Jou Swainey, fa'uncult (Mozkowski) by Ruth Stockwell, fa'35; Novelle Op. 18; Perpetuus, Fa'11. (No. 1) Poeture both played by Ruth Gregory, fa'uncult; Novelle in E Major (Schumann) by Helen Russell, fa'34. Numbers for two piano will include Mother Goose Suite (Ruvel) Hop O' My Thumb, and Conversations of Seven Preludes by George Travell, fsp. and William Howie. Grad. Also Concerto in G Minor, (Mendelssohn) second and three movements by Harold Diguenge, f6/38, and Professor Preyer, at second Three voice selections will add to the recital. Tees Yau (Rabey) by Corneine Dick, f'aul en, Violin Obligato by Ruth Gregory, f'aul en; Quileo Souffrance (Loonmand) and You T3 (gretchenham) by Blanche Same, f'aul **Engineers' Banquet Announced** April 7 has been chosen as the date for the annual banquet held by the American Institute of Electrical Engi- memorial Hall, by Ralph J Cheney, c. 52, will have charge of the program. Engineers' Banquet Announced --stretches for Piano "Feeling Thoughts", Op. 115, and Mr. Underwood he also appeared in two numbers for two planes, "Poeme" and "Cortage". WEATHER --stretches for Piano "Feeling Thoughts", Op. 115, and Mr. Underwood he also appeared in two numbers for two planes, "Poeme" and "Cortage". Kansas—Generally fair tonight and Wednesday; slightly warmer tonight. Somewhat colder in west Wednesday. Beginning Today Allen Orders Rest for Two Regulars Kansas Coach Believes Lay- Off Will Help Harrington and Johnson K - AGGIES NEXT FOE A three day lay-off from practice, beginning today, has been ordered for Bill Johnson and Paul Harrington of the University of Kansas basketball team, it was announced by Dr. F. C. Allen, coach, today. The players apparently have gone "stale" and Dr. Allen hopes that a complete rest from teams is necessary to recover them to their usual condition and basketball efficiency. Friday they will work out in the final practice prior to the crucial game with the Kansas Angels at Manhattan Saturday night. Harrison has gone 10-6 on offense and does not play through the entire game against Iowa State. Saturday, while Johnson scored but three points against Missouri and made 10 points against Iowa State. Johnson also was taken down by the Browns and Dr. Allen will practice with Uri re- Dr. Allen will practice with Uri re- placing Harrington, and Wells going to center and Bob Curd to forward, while his two stars are resting. Facing another crucial test in their drive for the Big Six basketball championship, the Kansas Jayhawks yesterday started a week of practice in preparation for the Kansas State game at Manhattan next Saturday night. Kansas Still Has Edge With three teams still very much in the running for the title, anything can happen to the conference standings in the next two weeks. Kansas has the worst record in the hard by both Oklahoma and Missouri. The Tigers have defeated Kansas and Oklahoma on consecutive weeks recently and, if they can break the jinx that has been following them on their way to the final, determined best for first place honors. The Sooners, favorites to win the championship since early in the season, are tied with Kansas for first place at the present time, and do not play again until a week from Friday, when they come to Lawrence for a game that may decide the race. This engagement will wind up the season for the Joywackers, who compete on to Lincoln the following night to finish its schedule against Nebraska. Two Victories Needed NUMBER 107 To win the championship and repeat their victory of last year, the Jayhawks must win both of their remaining games. There is a possibility of a two or three way tie if Kansas should break even in the two contests, losing to the Tigers. In the second Granting that Oklahoma will defend Nebraska the night after the Kansas game and conceding the Tigers victories in their remaining games would leave all three teams knotted with seven victories and three defeats each. The Nebraska hosts of the Saints can keep the Jayhawks from at least trying for the title. Coach Forrest C. Allen will continue to drill his players throughout the week. It is possible that there may be one or two changes in the starting lineup that faces the Angels Saturday night, but such shifts are by no means certain. UNDERWOOD ACCOMPANIST IN TWO MORE CONCERTS Professor Roy Underwood, pianist of the University Fine Arts faculty, went to Emporia this afternoon to be a accompanist in the concert to be given there this evening by Alexandre Gretchaninoff and Albert Rappaport in their concert here. Mrs Kappaport, who usually is the accompanist, has attended the program several days, and after having assisted in the program here last evening, Mr. Underwood was asked to go to Emporia for them tonight. Professor Underwood will be the accompanist also at Baker University tomorrow evening. HIGGINS REGISTRATION BILL DEFEATED IN STATE SENAT. Topoka, Feb. 21 — (Special) — The Higgins Bill, which would require registration of voters in townships in counties having 25,000 to 39,000 population if the township had more than 1,000 inhabitants outside of the corporated city, was rejected by the Senate election committee. This hill was directed toward University students who live west of the campus. SPEEDY KANSAN 111 Glenn Cunningham, who has two defeated the Penn miller, Gene Venkze, tonight faces a new field in the 800- meter run of the New York curb exchANGE meet. One of Cunningham's opponents will be Glenn Dawson, who used to compete against Kansas teams when he was an Oklahoma star. Cyrus Crane Makes Plea for High Law Standards Cyrus Crane, president of the Missouri Bar Association, in an all-school address to the School of Law this morning, made a plan for increasingly higher standards of ethics in the practice of law. President of Missouri Bar Association Tells Students of Ethics "The practice of law is not a business, but a profession," he said. "It should be marked by the practice of truthfulness and fruitfulness, honesty, and integrity." He condemned what he called "racketeering" practices that had crept into the profession of law through persons who sought personal gain without reason, and the anubilance chasers, and the lawyers who encouraged bankruptcy cases. Mr. Crane declared that in recent months, the number of banks in the Chicago area had decreased from 201 to 60, and that from the funds of the 202 now in liquidation, vast sums were diverted in costs and taxes to law- As president of the Missouri Bar association, Mr. Crone is endeavoring to have the Missouri legislature pass laws that will strengthen the bar association and enable it to discipline members who fall short of proper legal ethics. "The practice of law is not necessarily one in which to make a great deal of money," Mr. Crane said, "but it is one in which I personally have found a good living, and a great amount of enjoyment." Concert Given Last Night Greetaninoff and Rappaport Are Assisted by Professor Underwood A good-sized audience attended the concert presented by Alexreut Grehanich, Russian composer and pianist, who appeared last night in the Administration Auditorium in a program devoted largely to his own compositions. With him was Albert Ruppaport, a professor of music at the School of Fine Arts faculty assisted the visiting artists due to the illness of their accompanist. Opening the program was a group of seven songs by the Russian composer, including such universal favorites as "The Wounded Birch Tree," "Over the Steppe," and "Bercuse," which introduced Mr. Rappaport to his audience. The composer was at the piano. Preceding all his numbers, which were sung in French, was an explanatory talk prepared for his audience what was to follow. His second group of numbers was chosen from Mozart, Schubert, Strauss and Dunitz and as sung, were spendid playing in the quartet. Particularly outstanding was his rendition of the Mozart Aria from Don Giovanni "Il Mio Tesoro" and the Strausa "Zuegiming." To close the program Mr. Rappaport brought to his audience a group of children's songs from the pen of Mozart. He and his group recited his eight Jayhawk to Run in Curb Exchange 800-Meter Race Cunningham Faces Half Milers; New York Paper Lauds Kansas's Ability 'NOT ORDINARY MILER' Glen Cunningham, Kansas miler, who has defeated Gene Venke, Pennyglya freshman, twice in the mile run, will test his ability in the 800 meters run, five yards less than a half mile, tonight against a field of crack half milers in the New York Curb Exchange His rivals will be Phil Edwards, McGill University, Canada; Fran Nourdell, New York University; George Bullock, Duke University; Clyde Clob and Glen Dawnen, Tulsa. This is the first meeting of Cunningham and Edwards since the Olympic games in Los Angeles, when Cunningham lost to Edwards in the 1390-meter Lindley Sends Climing Chancellor H. L. Lindsey sent to the Kanan this morning a clipping from Sunday's New York Times sport page in which an entire column is devoted to Cunningham and his latest victory over Venkze. The article is by one of the prominent members of the New York Times sports staff, Arthur J. Dalley. He has written that "But the Jayhawk star is not an ordinary miler. Where others would have faded before the dazzling burst from the smooth-stringing national champion to a slamming clung to the Penn vearl." "As fast as Venke went, Cunningham stayed with him in a final whirl around the boards that 'pulled the ball' and sent it into the air. Then, just as Venke shot into the final turn, the Kansas chipped his stride and started to climb. As their spikes pounded into the banked turn, Cunningham had drawn up to Venke's 'Together for Ten Strides' "As though handeffected together, they ran for perhaps ten strikes. Certainly it was no more. Then Cunningham hit him with the ball, but he could not match the tremendous power of the Kansan's sturdy legs. Cunningham's lead was clear cut and as he broke the red rope, Vanakei had four yards behind." This is in the first part of Daley's story and afterwards he goes back again to the mile race to describe Cunningham's victory. He tells how Cunningham ran his usual headrace by letting others set the lead. He was in fourth place for the first three laps. On the second lap, he ran behind Coan. The lead shifted back and forth but Cunningham retained his second place post. On the next to last lap, Venzek passed the Kansan in a fast spurt but Cunningham never was further than two yards behind the Penn freshman. And on the last lap, the Jayhawker started his sprint that carried his name once again to every city in United States. UNITED STATES WILL PROTECT AMERICANS LIVING IN CHINA Peiping, Feb. 21—(UP) - Diplomatic and military representatives of the United States Government in North Carolina responded to a protection of American lives and property if the impending Japanese drive on Jehovah's Witness extension southward to the Peiping-Tientisin region. fighting on the Jehlab border with the post-conflict nation of Afghanistan spreading to the South was considered inevitable. United States Minister Nelson Johnson and his diplomatic and military aides decided that while alertness was warranted Americans were prepared for a difficult danger to call for evacuation. FORMER UNIVERSITY STUDENT IS NEWS REPORTER IN SPAIN Theodore A. Ediger, former University student and campus reporter, is now in Madrid, writing news from the Spanish capital. When he left Lawrence he went to Mexico City, and for a year he was the capacity of a special correspondent. Sunday the Kansas City Star printed a special story from Madrid by Ediger, dealing with the restoration of the throne as concerned with the two political groups, the Carlists and the Al-Fonists. . - PAGE TWO TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1933 3 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Michael Meyers Howard Towell Manipulator SunNY KROWS Makeup Editor SunNY KROWS Night Editor Megan McCormick Editor Megan McCormick Surbiton Editor Colleen Culternan Excellence Editor Melvin Brown Excellence Editor David Smith ALVIN KROWS Mel Editor-In-Chief ... PAUL V. MINER ADVERTISING MGR...MARGARET JNCB District Manager ...Jack Gallblatt Robert Whitman Maryanne McDermott Maryane Jaree Silverdale Kroen Billy Millington Alfrey Jacobsen Jean McCarty Annelld Keeveman Joshua Smith Josey Smith Business Office ... KUJ, 68 New Room ... KUU Business Office ... Business Office ... 72054 Night Connection, News Room ... 72054 * Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and announced by students in the Department of Administration, Kuwait. From the Freest of the Department of Kansas, from the Freez of the Department of Subscription prices, 14.00 per year, payable in advance. Single invoice, $6 each. Entered as second-class matter September 17, 2010, at the office at lawrence, Kansas. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1933 "FATHER OF HIS COUNTRY" The turn of events in history has given to few men the opportunity, or the task, if you will, that fell to the lot of George Washington. Not often has the terrific responsibility of guiding the destinies of an infant nation been placed so fully in the hands of a single leader. In this respect it might be contended that chance and circumstance gave Washington his place in history. It might be said that his fame came to him only because he happened to be available when an emergency arose. But the thing that we today respect and admire in George Washington is not so much what he did, as the manner in which he did it, the manner in which he proved himself capable of rising to each of the extremely difficult and trying situations that faced this country in its early days. We honor him today because we know that his ability, his character, and his qualities of leadership enabled him to make the most of the opportunity which presented itself, not only for himself but also for America. TROUSER TROUBLE Just when it seemed the world was settling back into a calmer routine, the women break out into another of their periodic "raches" and once more disturb the equanimity of man. Some years back it was close-cropped hair, and that masculine holy of holes, the barber shop, was no longer a refuge devoted solely to the wants of the male. Then some enterprising female discovered that smoking a cigarette was fun. The idea spread an extra package for the girl friend rapidly, and it wasn't long before was a necessary part of the equipment for a date. Finally when woman began to elbow man away from his accustomed place at the speak-easy bar the ordinary mortal thought that the epitome of the freedom of woman had arrived. Then one fine morning the world awakened to find that one of the leading feminine lights of Hollywood had been seen in trousers. Now a quaking masculine populace is anxiously, warily waiting to see just how far the thing will go, and also is speculating a bit on what, if anything, there is, to do about it. Some men take the stand that if women are to wear the trousers in the family they should be forced to bear the time-honored burdens that go with this now doubtful honor. They should be made to arise early in the morning and get down to the office so that the rest of the family may live. The husband will remain in bed until ten or eleven in the morning and then get up and prepare for an afternoon of bridge with the rest of the "boys." Perhaps he might even spend some time in purchasing a hat, not forgetting to send the bill to the wife. If he is a good housekeeper he will get back early enough in the evening to prepare a hasty dinner — the ingredients coming from the corner delicatessen. At dinner he will not neglect to entertain his mate with a detailed account of the boredom of being forced to spend his days about the house. This will be conclusive bliss par excellence. IT MAY BE LOGICAL Yesterday, by a vote of 289 to 121, the house of representatives approved a resolution favoring the repeal of the eighteen amendment. The world awaits the action that will be taken by the states on this resolution. One of the strong points favoring repeal, as pointed out in controversies of the past, has been the fact that in spite of the amendment, people still get drunk, liquor is available to any one desiring it, and the law is not enforced. The dry followers must admit this to be true. On the other hand, there is a law prohibiting one man from taking the life of another. Newspapers have printed stories of cold blooded murders so often that only the more "prominent killings" attract attention any more. Here is a law that is not enforced and yet we hear no cry of protest against it. No one raises any great cry demanding its repeal. No political party would be so foolish as to place a plank in its platform recommending abolition of this law against murder. A PAIN IN THE NECK But then, perhaps, that isn't so important or logical. Don't lock the stable after the horse has been stolen! On the same principle, perhaps, don't complain about drafts in the library when winter is nearly over! But there were, no doubt, other horses after the abduction of the first, and there most certainly will be other winters. The architect of Watson library must have been so concerned with the beauty of his subject that he overlooked the important problem of ventilation. Constant temperature is something unknown in this structure in which students spend a great part of their time. In the periodical room, for instance, it is so close and warm that one needs no sandman to induce sleep. In the general reference room, the problem is greater and of concern to more people. When it begins to get too warm for concentration, the windows are opened for rest. The chief is secured, all right, but attendant is a draft playing hide and seek around the back of the student neck. Someone sneezes, a lovely lass pulls her coat about her shoulders and shuddlers daintily—whereupon her escort obediently gets up to shut the window. And so it goes! The next morning the lovely lass wakes up with the snifflies, and her escort has a crick in the neck. Kanasa is known from coast to coast for its wind-swept plains, but an alternate wind-swept and stuffy library is another matter. Send The Dally Kansan home The recurrence of incidents such as this one should be a challenge to every American citizen to give the matter of capital punishment in this country serious consideration. So much has been said on the subject, and so little progress has been made, that to review the standard arguments against legalized murder would be almost useless. A United Press dispatch from Rockford, Ill., brings the information that an 18-year-old boy has been sentenced to die in the electric chair next April. It seems strange, however, that society is willing to admit its failure so soon. When a state declares that an 18-year-old boy, with by far the greater part of his life ahead of him, is hopeless beyond any influences that might make him a useful member of society, and arbitrarily condemns him to death for an anti-social act, quite surely the faith lies with the state. It is hard to believe that the most advanced civilization the world has known can find no better method than the electric chair of dealing with those who commit offenses against society. QUIPS from other QUILLS It is hard to be vigilant and yet not seem suspicious—Daily Texan. Education is a great thing. Those who haven't been to college haven't the nerve to try to borrow the other fellow's clothes—Baker Orange. HOPELESSLY BAD A Kane editor says that his wife has asked him to please quit striking matches on the bottom of his shoes as it tears his袜s. -Augusta Garette If Huey Long justified his own estimate of himself he would be a distinct asset in the United States senate. J.P. H. in Ottawa, Herald. A man has succeeded in taking the ed尔 out of garlic and he seems to think that he has accomplished something of great importance. We rise for information. After the elm is taken from the tree, the value is garlic? "It tastes, headlight." One local man encouraged his wife in the jig saw puzzle craze until he same home one night and found her a broken nose. He corresponded—Concordia Blade. When there's whipped cream on the dessert, you can bet something went wrong with the rest of it and the dough. You could probably another the hurdler—Dighton Herald. There's one thing about these cold winter morning—no fly can come along and perch on your nose at 5 a.m. Bake Orange And then there's the absent-minded student who forgot to cut class—W.S. in California Daily Trojan. ABCD OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXX Office: Feb. 21, 1933 No. 167 Notice due at Ghanator's Office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication day and 11 p.m. on Friday. DRAMATIC CLUB TRYOUTS: Students may obtain first semester grades at the Registrar's office according to the following scheduled names: There will be Dramatic club tryouts Thursday afternoon at 3:30 in Green hall. GENE HIBBS, President. Habita una sesión de El Atenco el juves, 23 de dezembre, a las cuatro y de la tarde, en 113 Ad. Que asistan todos los ciclos y ocenas que quieren visitar. EL ATENEO: Thursday, Feb. 23—N to S, inclusive Friday, Feb. 24—T to Z, inclusive Saturday, Feb. 25—Those unable to appear at the scheduled time GIORGE O. FOSTER Register The regular MacDowell meeting will be held Thursday, Feb. 23, at 8 o'clock in central Administration auditorium. MARY BUTCHER, President. MACDOWELL: GRADES: All persons interested in the coming Student Economic conference at Emporia will be present to be present at a luncheon held in the cafeteria Thursday, Feb. 23, at 12:20. GEORGE C. FOSTER, Registrar. STUDENT ECONOMIC CONFERENCE: The Women's Pan-Hellenic exchange dinner will be held Thursday, Feb. 23 at 6 p.m. JUANITA MORSE. WOMEN'S PAN-HELLENIC DINNER; KEITH W. JOHNSON, Vice President The W.S.G.A. Council will meet this evening at 7 o'clock in the Memorial Union building. HELEN HEASTON, President. An important meeting of all members of the Y.M.C.A. cabinet will be held hourly, Feb. 23, at 4:30, in room 10 of the Memorial Union building. W. S. G. A. COUNCIL: Y. M. C. A. CABINET; The May Day Mystery --songs like that all the time. That's why I wanted to pass the back to you. He eyed the big man keenly, "What's your idea about the thing?" SYNOPSIS Octavus Roy Cohen Copyright by Octavus Roy Cohen. CHAPTER 1—Anointette Peyton matriculated to the northern university of Marietta, resigned from Mountaineer tributions to Ivy Welch, seventy-year- renor ending with bitter recruiting, ending with bitter recruiting, the noose, another student long Thayer's noose, another student long Thayer's noose, with him Thayer and Vernon with him By CHAPTER 11–Larry determines to see Thyge and end his association with Mr. Garrison until she has appealed to her husband at a fraternity house. Max Verzant attends and gives him presents and goes to his room. Toni ends the relationship and departs. Vermont leaves afterwards. Visibly in a state of distress, Thyge apparently clothing to be less taut, apparently clothing to be less taut. AAAAAAA CHAPTER V - The Marshland bank is raided of $106,600, the rubber equipment and apparently badly wounded. Jim is cured, but he is deprived of cleanen, and good natural, comes to investigate the robbery. Rudolph Fence, the lieutenant, leaves Max Vernon was driving the bus. CHAPTER 15—Harry Welch, Ivy's brother. Harry was born a girl, and she agreed that he would be the best groom for whom she wanted to marry each other. Welch does not see him with either of them, but tells him she is married to Thayer. He tells him that Ivy will have to stay at home. CRAFTER IV—Wetzelk, appointed to the position of associate attorney for the defence he received to ask TAYLOR RICHARDSON, and after his leaves, Corwin SCHNEIDER, and his co-defendants and their police chief, takes charge of the defense. CHAPTER VI—Hijah intertwined with the day of the attack. Which is in what day of the attack, the day Thayer was given when he left Israel, and when he was sent to the land of living revenues, endowing him with his firm convictions better than any other man in the series of incarnations given by Thayer. CHAPTER VI. Th~Thermor. Fidelite truther Hammel has been systematically rebelled against. He has been accused of games, and Vernon, apparently, has been taken into charge of the murder. Hammel to take charge of the murder both the murder and robbery. Tanner is under arrest as Thayer murder are under arrest as Thayer murder. CHAPTER VIII- AS THE WARS OF ONE WEEK Faridan was the first Indian to find the second lawman. The two manhunters Tiger with whisky Ivy and Torquay with the fox were divided by the probaity After the war, the surrender of Vermont's room, but their secretary surrendered CHAPTER IX The handle wrest of polished moth, whether nested or silver,耐寒不死. The blade, which was immensely burr and pernously keen was of the finest Havney delicately to become interested. He and Reagan responded the weapon. It was a powerful delicate tool and beautiful as a polished snake. At the moment it was not a pristine stair, however, for the stair itself was made of black glass and all it most to blackness. Hanley moved away, leaving the knife lying on the floor. "I hate to look at anything like that John." "Oh, b—! it isn't that, Jim. Not like to find something when I'm on a case which means I don't have any closer to look." "I don't." "You're hard-bellied." "I see. . . . I reckon that's nut urnt, John." Harvey placed his hand behind his back. "I thought you said there wasn't anything there." "Didn't you look there day before yesterday?" "On the floor of the hanging closet—in the corner." "I did, Jim; but I suppose I overlooked it. Though I damned if I see how I did." "Where'd you find that?" Jim seemed disinclined to comment further, and Reagan did not force him. A matter of age, the chief of the security services said, "It's like you told Fisker, Jim—a dick can make a dozen mistakes provided just one time." The crook can't afford it. Harvey shrugged. "These things can happen, all right. It's queer though. . . ." "Yourself?" "Nothing, . . . , I was just think ing." Hanvey rummaged around in a dresser drawer until he found a collar He emptied it and then wried died. When the fire he returned with a roll of absorbent cotton, he lined the collar box with cotton and then gingerly placed the collar inside. It did not immediately look up. His clothes were fixed稳ently on the weapon. "True enough, John. You sure don't get any argument out of me. But it is funny you didn't see that knife when you first looked in the chase." "What?" "Nothing" "The handle of that knife, John—it's polished metal, and yet there isn't a fingerprint on it." "Well, I'll be . . . durned if you nin't right, Jim." "Cinch. Max Vermon had enough sense to polish the prints off the handle." "Funny," he said at length. "I'll sure come then," Renjamin looked up sharply, but the face of the fat man told him nothing. "Do you think I'm wrong?" "You sure think fast, John." Ryan hated that one. "Seeens like you must be right. It just looks kind of funny, though, that you didn't find that knife day before yesterday." Romain was disturbed. He was certain that he had been shot in that identical bullet, and he had found no blood. His brain was ruined, and suddenly he was able to shoot. "I've got it. Chief." 1 "What?" "The answer to that knife, First, there's the off chance it was there all the time and I just didn't find it. There's no evidence of it." The second theory is that Max Version had it with him and when he came back yesterday evening from Steel City he demolished it in three before it was this room when I eremed him." "Well ask him—that's one way of draining out. And in the second place, you can ask him to take a seat, this is—" Bogan stopped to the manuel and recovered a scimitar which bung there. "Notice how you can use it with your hands, but if you bring, Jim? Yonder is the place the dwarf was hanning—it fits that end and you can tell me a lot more time." "It sounds mighty reasonable. Question is, are you sure it is Vernon's knife?" "Mick are question about that. I sure don't look awful healthy for Miss Veron." "It don't and I'm sorry. I believe the kid has gotten a bough deal all behind. This Tanner evidently wasn't shaken. He's been through it. It's a check that he must have been retrimming Vernon at cards, and we know that he was审诉胖男利 Tanner off of courses. Caramel thinks Thinks was a nice gentleman, but he would think that. As a number of facts, was a fool and we both burnt him." "We sure do." "But that don't shake Vernon's position any harder. He guards with Thoreau about a girl. We know that he wants to be pliant, plainly. We know that Vernon was so concerned for want of money. We know that he went to Thoreau's room and that shortly afterward Thoreau took the knife with which he was killed. We find it in Vernon's room and identify it positively—or will pry identity from him. If I need to mention location of weapons. We have every reason to believe that the kid won't punch him and took part in a bank robbery, probably made a deal with him that all he had to do was drive a car, murmuring no one would ever save him. He probably made a deal with large town, even if it were hitting safely on the road. If we were Serron we were put up in that because we knew that he was a thin dime before three hours, but now he buys a new car and pays the difference of twelve hundred dollars in cash. And I also know that he has done something that he did since I just under arrest." Jim whispered, noltly, "It sort of nudges Mutter Vernon out to be a pretty touch hombre, John." "he isn't that. I just think he went nuts." Rogan was a trifle annoyed. It did not please him to have his damn burning summary greeted with even the slightest sentiment of skepticism. "Masha so. . . . But he sure stayed crazy a long time." "What's wrong with my case, Jim?" Harveyamed the hisbows in surprise. "Golly, John." I didn't say anything, did I? "I can't help it if I look funny. "I. A guy who has a face like a cestust plee and a shape like a gold鱼 is entitled to look funny, but that's." "No. But you looked funny." "Pretty near." "What do you mean? Pretty new?" "Well—" Hanna drew a long, naughty breath. "I sort of just happen to remember Larry Welch." "But, no, accent rubber. You don't really think it was Mux Veron." "Vernon and left the fraternity house before Welch got there, yet Welch said that he had a long talk with Thayer. Now it sown of seems to me, John's out if Thayer was in there, he would have noticed, wouldn't he? "Yeh? What about him?" "Hugh!" Beagan was crestfallen. "I think Larry died." "To shield Miss Peyton. He's goofy about her." "You're right. . . . But then if he gets hurt, into a nose or to shield him, don't it be he's got some mighty good reason— that he will think for thinking that kill her?" "I know, Jim—but we've got Vernon down to rights. He's bound to have done it." "Provided neither Larry Welch nor Miss Bryton did." Reagan frowned, then broke into a disappointed laugh. "You win, Jim. I kept running into "I haven't had an idea in a month. They don't come to me swift, like they do to you." "But you surely think something?" "I do—true enough. And the first time I saw her, I barely tapped to anybody about this affair. Until 4 use some of the others." "And after you do see them, you'll be absolutely bughouse. I know . . . believe me. I do." "I'll try, anyway." "Who first? Vernon?" "Nooo. I think I'll have a chat with Ivy Welch." "It's rather a glamly affair all round," Mr. Hanvey, he said, "and I do house you to solve it." Reagan conducted Harvey to the office of the dean in the main building, where he was awoken by a superintendent and appeared somewhat skeptical of the man's ability, but he was courted—and readily needed his guidance that jealousy Welb be summoned. "Yes, sir." Jim was visibly aided by the atmosphere of education which pervoked the unaperturate office. "I would like you to understand what mean you by 'satisfactory'." The dum snippet slightly, "My personal preference plays a prominent part in that, Mr. Hanvey, I should certainly hate to see either Mr Welch or Ms Peyton become any more deeply involved." "I like the boy--make no mistake about that. But he doesn't seem to be of the same face quality as the other course, someone killed Thayer." "Club-Hub, Dean. It sure seems so." The man's face was so heavy blank and his manner so soot, that the character seemed to be absorbed in intelligence. Just why a smart, alert person like Ragan should serve an unlikelike creature of Hanover's type was beyond the deaf's comprehension. He could scare the police very well answer. The door opened and a figure of yield youth, entered the room. She wore a white sleeveless dress and a short, revealing skirt. The dean introduced her and then exonerated him. He insisted that they would not be interrupted. While he bowed himself out, Ivy cried over the two detectives. She was scared to which she had been ashamed. Tremely—grit and hard—had included her. CARL SMITH "This Man Here"—She Jerked Her Bobbed Head Toward Reagan— "Is Absolutely Dumb." murdered. There were dark circles under her eyes, to tell the story of betrayal, alienation, nightmares—and she had never seen any other. The deed had gone here addressed Harvey with enormous directness. “Are you in charge of this ___?” "Are you in charge of this case now?" "Yes, Miss Welch—I guess so." "Yes, Miss Wendy—I guess so." "Well, I'm glad. This men here—she just grab her bobbed head toward you and give her deeply drunk." "Is he really drunk?" "Till my he is. Else why he would keep my brother in jail? Would anybody could talk to Larry and see that he isn't the kind who would kill anyone. That is, nobody but a cap?" Harvey turned gravely to the corn "You see what the public thinks about you, John. And seeing that we don't need any said coarse around here we talk to this young girl alone?" "Very well." Reagan rose, without resentment, and started for the door. He was met by the woman, not a tenees. "Just had a bunch I could do more with her alone. John. Suppose you make this knife down to the bottom and Version 1 he'a ever seen it before." "And then?" "Come back and come in. I got a laugh she and I will be pretty good babbles by then." (To be continued Thursday) IF YOU MISSED THE FIRST CHAPTERS of "The May Day Mystery" Mat. and Eve. 15c you may secure back copies of the Kansan at the Kansan Business Office. VARSITY TONIGHT - TOMORROW CLARA BOW in "CALL HER SAVAGE" Thursday Only— Jacet Gaynor Charles Farrell is “Tess of the Storm Country” Fri.-Sat.— ZANE GREY'S "SMOKE LIGHTNING" Seen -- Moran and Mack The Two Black Crowns in "HYPNOTIZED" ON THE HILL We cater especially to the Students. We are always open when there are classes so will be closed Washington's Birthday. Open Thursday Morning. THE CAFETERIA NOW! ENDS WEDNESDAY DATE WHOLE PICTURE FILM He is at its Best in Th's Rollingick Comedy. It's Another "Billionaire" GEORGE ARLISS "THE KING'S VACATION" EXTRA Technocare Explained Phil Harris Comedy Hit and Late News HERE THURSDAY JAMES CAGNEY HARD TO HANDLE "HARD TO HANDLE" LOOK! LOOK! 42ND STREET Owl Show 11:15 Saturday 200 Gorgious Girls in a Spectacle of Beauty, Youth, Love, Laughter, Melody, Song and Danced Feet TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21. 1933 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE 侨源 SOCIETY Recention for Gretchaninoff Following the recital last evening at the University by the eminent Russian composer, Gretcheninoff, and Albert Rappert, tenor, the members of the music faculty of the School of Fine Arts were guests of Dean and Mrs. D. M. Swanthout at their home, Valleyhurst, an informal receiver to the artists. During the evening Mr. Gretcheninoff played the Soviet National Anthem which he had been commissioned to sing. He was sung by Mr. Rappoport Because he refused to be dictated to as to the kind and type of music he shall write, Mr. Gretcheninoff is now entering Russia, but resides at Paris. The exchange dinners for the second semester, sponsored by the Women's Pan-Hellenic organization, will be given Thursday at 6 p.m. at the various organized houses. Representatives of the organizations will interchange between the houses in order to foster acquaintance relationships and different groups, according to Juannia Morse, president of Pan-Hellenic. Miss Irene Peebody, instructor of voice at the University of Kansas, sang at the meeting of the Lawrence Woman's club this afternoon at Wiedemann's. On this home and literary program today Mist Mabel Elliot, professor of sociology in The University of Kansas, spoke to the Family," and Kenneth Rockwell gr., chose as his subject "New Trends in Current Literature." Eleonor Frowe, c'35, led a discussion on modern China at the meeting of Chi Phi Delta this afternoon at Westminster hall. She was assisted by Jean Dunn, c'uncil, Charlotte Hess, c'uncil, and Frances Crilley, c'uncil. Ruth Carpenter, c'35, directed the presentation of the stunts. Mr. and Mrs. Marion T. Coolidge, 1604 Tennessee street, announced the birth of a son, Richard Thurston Coolidge at the Lawrence Memorial hospital Feb. 16. Mrs. Coolidge was formerly Miss Mildred Cutter, 25, and a member of Sigma Kappa sorority at the University. Mrs. W. J. Boungarmer, 1909 Ohio street, will entertain the Presbyterian Women's Guild with a covered dish luncheon tomorrow noon at her home. The luncheon is sponsored by the educational unit of the Guild. A George Washington birthday party will be held at the home of Rev. Charles W. Thomas, 1124 Mississippi the Baptist's student center. The party is for University students, and Rev. Mr. Thomas invites them to attend. W. W. Davis, professor of history at the University, gave a talk on Washington at the meeting of the Tennola Literary club this afternoon at the home of Mrs. H. H. Asher, 608 Louisiana street. Mrs. E. B. Stouffer, 1019 Maine street, was hosted this afternoon for the Zodiac club. Mrs. W. M. Sterling, assisted by Mrs. A. J. Mix, was in charge of the lesson on Edna St. Vincent Millay. Kappa Phi, Methodist church sorority, will have a short business meeting tonight at 6:30 creek at the home of St. John's Street, Price 150, Tennessee A dinner bridge will be given at the University club Friday evening, at 7 o'clock. Those wishing reservations come from M.S. F. E. Kester for Thursday. Alpha Omicron Pi will entertain the Delta Upsilon fraternity with an hour of dancing from 7 until 8. Corbin hall will not hold its hour of dancing from 7 to 8 o'clock Thursday evening. Open house was part of the reason of the curency exchange dinners. John W. Oyer J., of Kansas City Kans, a former student of the University, is a guest this week of the Pi Upsilon fraternity. Mrs. G. N. Watson of Independence is visiting her daughter Dorten, c34, at the Alpha Delta Pi house. Jayhawks Flown Bill Rice, 128, who visited his parents over the Lincoln birthday holiday called at the Alumun office while here in New York, said of depression he is still able to exist. Paul Warner, '29, is the proprietor of a floral shop in Dodge City. Edward John Jelden, '29, is a veterinarian in Columbus, Neb. Ruth Dunlap, 30, is teaching in Tal han, N. M. Economic Council Meets Lindley and Faculty Members Go to Topeka for Program Chancellor E. H. Lindley and several of the faculty members of the School of Business met with the economic council at Topeka, Friday, which was introduced last October by the Kansas Chamber of Commerce at Wichita. The purpose of the council is to be an educational body, its functions are to analyze, study, report and co-operate with fact finding agencies. It contains a Midwest plan to provide preventive measures rather than dragging out tacitures in order to improve occaations and business interests were present at the meeting. The group authorized three subcommittees which will report at Topocha on March 13 on a plan of inform- tion about the activities and international conditions on local conditions, study formulation of a new credit policy, and report regarding the economy of public works programs in connection with the situation of the government. Chancellor Lindley outlined viewpoints in the organization that may challenge the school, dean of the School of Business stressed the importance of research as a means of dissemination of newly discovered and successful business praxis. Other participants in the program were: D. J. Twediotale, associate professor of economics; Jen Jensen, professor of economics; F. W. Kisnicki instructor in economics. News From Home Emporia—(UF)—Mayer Frank Loutter and Commissioner W. J. Reynolds suffered damage to their dignity but were otherwise unhurt when they were chased over a high wire fence by police, then he entered the yard of a house they were visiting to make an investigation. They outran the dog Burdett. — (UP) — The Farmers Cooperative association here declared a 100 per cent dividend at the annual stockholder meetings in May, based on top of eight to bring the total to 108 per cent. Total sales for the year were $290,367, with a net profit of $100,666. Except in the first quarter, this number is greater than for the preceding year. Hays. (UP) - In these days of depression students prefer to remain students rather than go out into the un certain world, enrollment figures of Fort Hays Teachers College indicate. Nine of ten students who had completed work for a degree continued in school, working for higher degrees. Lerned — (UP) — The Larned Feed mill, operating here for more than 30 years, has been torn down. Since many farmers now have grinding equipment, business at the old grist mill has fallen off. Burr Oak—(UP)—Gus Bernard had a broken arm and an injured wrist because a mitten he wore had an extra thumb. The thumb caught while he was sawing wood and the injuries resulted. Fairview—(UP) —A night school for farmers is being conducted here by Roger Register. Register of cattle dairy industry is being given to the students. Alton—(UP) The city council here has voted a reduction in electric light rates. The minimum was reduced from 14.8 cents per each to 4.4 cents discount for an added. Highland—(UP)—The Rev. Paul D. Kennedy, who recently returned after 10 years as a missionary in the Phi-phi church, was pastor of the Christian church here. Formoso. — (UP) — Members of the First Methodist church here were entertained recently by a double quartet named James Gay, a farmer, and his seven sons. Burlington—(UP)—A Treasury surplus of $8 for every man, woman and child was shown in the city's recent financial statement. Ihainath. —(UP) John I. Hobbs hitch-likes each week 150 miles from Seward, Neb. he to drill with the guard history, of which he is sergeant Colby—(UP)—The Northwest Kansas association of Odd Fellows and Rebakhs will meet here May 5. Abilene—(UP)—The annual convention of the Lions clubs in Kansas will be held here June 4, 5, 6. Poor Ed Wynn and Eddie Canton can't last much longer. There are only so many good jokes that everyone can recognize—Baker Orange. Men used to marry for money. Now they are marrying for three square meals a day-Augusta Gazette. New Skilton Cantata Takes Theme From Old Scottish Ghost Legend Professor Skilton's new cation, "conderoga," which the Glee Club and Orchestra are preparing to give during Music Week, is based on one of the world's greatest authentic ghost stories. By Robert Louis Stevenson he is taken up with the historian Parkman, in the appendix to his book "Montcalm and Wolf." In the year 1746 Duncan Campbell, laird of Castle Invercarne on the west coast of Scotland, was visited by a distressed fugitive who said he had been kidnapped by his master for his protection from the avenging pursuer. This the laird impulsively promised, with an oath upon his sword not to betray his guest, whom he hid Museum Receives Specimen Seven Foot Alligator Is Added to University Reptile Collection a seven-foot alligator, received late a day afternoon, in the latest addition to the reptile collection at the Museum of Birds and Mammals. The specimen will probable be preserved as both skin and skeleton. The surian was received from the Sanford Zoo, of Sanofi, Fla., from the zoo director, Mr. Moughton, in exchange for two live prairie dogs sent the zoo some time ago, by C. D. Bunker, assistant curator of the museum here. The aquation of the valuable specimen, as well as several other additions to the large reptile collection, was made possible through the interest of C. O Bare, of Sanford, who received his Ph.D. here several years ago. Phi Delta Phi G&l's Park Columbia, Feb 21—(UP)—Governor G&l Park today accepted the invitation to attend Missouri legal fraternity, to be the honorary initiate at the annual ceremonies here March 31. Phi Delta Phi Gets Park in a safe place. When the pursurers arrived they proved to be his own clanmen and told him his brother had been treacheryly slain. Nevertheless he remained on them away. That night the ghost of the murdered brother appeared and demanded vengeance, which he refused. The same thing happened for two successive nights, when the spectre finally emerged at dusk until we meet again at "Tendenerda." For twelve years Dunnan inquired on everyone where this place might be, but could gain no information. In 1758 the French and Indian war began and his regiment was ordered to America and sent up Lake George to dislodge the French from their fort. Only on the eve of the famous battle did he learn from an Indian that the fort was named "Tenderness Island." He wrote to a friend in France, figure which showed him his own faces, the Highlander's warning of death. The English army suffered a disastrous defeat the next day and Duncan was one of the first to fail. His grave may still be seen at Fort Edward, N. Y. Professor Shilton spent several summers at Lake George near the final scenes of this legend and thought that a male chorus and orchestra was the most appropriate musical setting for it. His cantata is in three parts, the first dealing with the murder and the visitation; the second, the assembling of the Scottish army, with military music from the scenes of the scene on Lake George, with music in the Indian style, for which his competitions are best known. The tenor and baritone solos will be sung by Professors Pilcher and Downing. The performance during Music Week will be the premiere of this work, which is also scheduled for the National Music Camp at Interlochen, Mich. next summer and for the World's Fair at Chicago in the Fall. Want Ads Twin-wheel-dress or less! 1 lea- ter, 2 boots. Six months or 6 insurance. The larger cab pre- vails. WANT ADS are ACCO- PAIRED by CASSI. PLEASANT rooms for boys in com- fortable home at price you can afford to pay. Home cooked meals, all week or every week. 14th. Phone 2788. -110 TRUNK KEYS, door keys, car keys, Good locker padlocks, night latches, door closers repaired. Trewery and Rutter. 623 Vermont St. Phone 319. HAVE YOUR application photographs made at Monte Studio. 719 Mass, (uptairs-exclusive). Phone 964. -125 Send The Daily Kansan home. Our Shoe Repairing Is Good That's why we are always busy. Get a shine. Electric Shoe Shop LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusively 1025 Mass. We Feel That Wednesday Will Be a Nice Day for a Picnic or a Hike. Be sure you have enough Eastman Kodak films, or a brick of our special George Washington ice cream. Rankin's Drug Store "Handy for Students" 11th & Mass Phone 678 DICKINSON "Where Students Meet" Last Times Today - Nancy Carroll in "The Woman Accused" Dressler-Moran Comedy At Times Today-Nancy Carroll in "The Woman Accused" Dressler-Mora Tomorrow! At Dickinson Economy Prices! BY REQUEST EDDIE CANTOR as "THE KID FROM SPAIN" FRIDAY-SATURDAY----! FABBLE SATHEMAN Carole David Jack Lombard Manner Oakie in 'From HELL To HEAVEN' STARTING SUNDAY—! “THE SIGN OF THE CROSS” SHOWS CONTINUOUS - SHOWS CONTINUOUS 3 HEADED Woman SHE WINKS • SHE SMILES • SHE TROWNS ALL AT ONCE! ILLUSION: Look at this remarkable lady... with three lovely and perfect heads, all attached to a normal body. She appears to sit on the stage, with the lower part of her body concealed by flowers. She can wink, smile, and look up at all in the same time. Thousands of people have seen this act of magic and pronounced it a wonderful sight! EXPLANATION Audiences used to pay an extra fee to go behind the scenes to see how this trick was worked. They discovered that the three-headed woman was merely a reflection in a mirror. The glass showed the heads of the body of only one. The other two were cleverly hidden so that only their heads showed in the mirror. **SOURCE:** *Music Star Illusion and Scientific Deterrition* by Albright, Hibernia, Mc & Co. New York It's fun to be fooled ...it's more fun to KNOW This "three-headed woman" trick goes *wav back to the early days of magic*. Also old is the suggestion that protection for your throat and freedom from coughing can be achieved through some magic trick. THE EXPLANATION: The easiest cigarette on your throat is the cigarette that is made from the choicest, ripe tobacco. Cheap, raw tobaccos are, as you throat. Ripe, costly tobacco are mild, mellow - gentle. The question is whether a cigarette is made from cheap tobacco or the more expensive grades. It is a fact, well known by leaf tobacco experts, that camphor made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE tobaccos than any other popular brand. KEEP FRESH IN THE WELDED NUMIDOR PACK ONNGL PRODUCT OF NORTHWEST EUROPE CHOICE QUALITY American men and women have smoked more billions of Camels than any other brand because of the appeal of more expensive tobacco and matchless blending. Won't you stack up your own experience with a cigarette made from milk, costlier tobacco, ...against magic claims about "cigarettes and your throat"? Copyright, 1923, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company CAMELS Try fresh Camels—in the air-tight, welded Humidor Pack that seals the freshness and coolness, the mildness and flavor of Camels... inside. NO TRICKS ..JUST COSTLIER TOBACCOS AIN A MATCHLESS BLEND PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS TUESDAY, FERRUARY 21, 1933 Trackmen to Meet Haskell Saturday in Indoor Contest Hargiss - Coached Athletes Squad to Try Skill on John Levi's Indians EIGHT K. U. VETERANS In the preliminary tryouts held at Saturday Coach Hargips was able to get a line on his material. In the 60- win game Hall showed up well, winning his best test by Jay Plumley. Rogers proved his word by winning the 440-yard dash in good time. Dees, holder of the national lead, scored the record, showed up well with the weight. The Haskell Indians are reported as having a strong team this year. The team is built around Robert Holmes, who won womens last fall as a football player. Engleman is another Indian performer who will bear watchmen. He will also play for the Kansas Relays for the past two seasons, and has finished high. Saturday will mark the first appearance of a *Hargiss-coached* Kerns track team, when the Jayhawks meet the Raptors at the first indoor meet of the season. Couch Hargus has only 8 lettermets around which to build his team but it is predicted that the Jayhawks will need a second season turning from last year's squad are: Cunningham, Captain Flip, Plumley, Cox, Taylor, Niwonger, Beatty, and Bondk. Plumley was not out for another injury, but made a letter in 3L. In the distance runs Coach John Levi of Haskell will probably have joins and Bates, while Tyndle has been showing up well in the 220 and 440-yard dashes. Harjo will be entered in the weight events. Following is the list of events and the Kansas men that are entered in the meet Saturday: Cox, and Randall. Mile run: Grist. Pontryk. Fizen- 60-yard dash: Hall, Plumley, Berson Cox, and Randall. house, and Brubaker. 60 yard high hurdles: Flick, Cox, and Weaver. 400-yard dash: Graves, Rogers, Gay, Hall, Allison, Randall, Bromell, and Plumlev. 60-yard low hurdles: Flick, Cox, Allison, and Weaver. 880-vard run Bremell, Taylor, McCoy, Gard, Etzenhouse, and Brubaker. Two mile run: Niswonger, Pankratz Johnson, and Menzie. High jump: Gard and Hall. Broad jump: Mull, Bittencourt, and Rex. Pole Win? Beaty and Rogers. Shot Put: Does, Biesen, and Beach. Broad jump: Hall, Plumley, and Benson. 1826 You Can't Afford to Miss. 5 New Books Sinclair Lewis — Ann Vickier G. B. Lancaster — Pageant Wells — The Bulpington of Plain at They're for rent and for sale Bip Lockhart - British Agent 100,000,000 Guinea Pigs Kallet and Schlink The Book Nook 1021 Mass. Tel. 666 KANSAS CITY 95c Go by Greyhound Rus 13 buses every day, New how fares good on every bus. Service to almost any point in America. Sample one-way fares. Salina $4.30 New York $22.15 St. Louis .490 Los Angeles 28.50 Chicago .750 Topeka .70 schedules, rates and all information, Phone 590 UNION BUS TERMINAL 628 Mass. St WESTERN GREYHOUND CONDUCTS EXAMINERS' SCHOOL T. R. A. T. McCue, who gives life saving examiners their review test each year, will be here Thursday to conduct another examiners school. He will also give a series of lectures on the art of life saving. Men's Intramurals Beta Retains Lead Beta retained its division lead in inermural basketball last evening by deacting Kagga Sirg 20 to 23. A.T.O won from S.P.E. 22 to 15. TIP Delt defeated Jayhawk 32 to 10, and Jayhawk 'B' came out of the game with a 34 to 21 deficit. B.A. Two foulers were made, Phi Pio to Stigma Chi and D.T.D. B' to Stigma Chi 'B'. The scares: **bota Theta Fi-29** FG FT 0 Dodge, g 1 1 Orenstein, g 4 Case, c 2 0 Wittig, w 2 0 McCormach, g 2 0 Totals 12 15 F Kappa Sigma—23 f FG FT Gaffer, f 2 0 Whiteman, f 2 0 Allen, f 0 0 Morrison, c 3 0 Janggun, c 3 0 Havrine, g 3 2 Special Luncheon Dinner 50c and 35c Will Be Served on Phil Delta Thema-32 FG FT 2 Chambers, f 4 0 Breedental, f 4 0 Smith, f 1 0 McClare, g 0 North, c 3 0 Wright, c 0 Philipp, g 2 Van Cleave, g 3 0 Abberromish, g 0 Totals 10 Reference—Manning Javihawk- 10 FG FT McNamee, f 0 Hill, f 1 0 Mcoin, f 1 1 Brady, c 1 1 Holmes, g 1 0 Brubaker, g 0 0 Neale, g 0 0 Carty, g 0 0 Alpha Tau Omega--22 FG FT Gilles, f 7 0 Zetti, f 0 0 Secko, f 0 0 Mains, g 0 Roberts, g 4 Kemp, g 4 Totals ... 4 2 Referens—Allen Washington's Birthday. Feb. 22. Totals 16 21 Acacia 'B'-17 FG 7 Acacia, f 4 3 Farney, 1 0 Owen, c 0 Shewwood, g 0 Scott, g 0 - - - - - Totals 11 11 F Total Phys. Epilation—15 GF 0 Glover, f 0 Bhounfield, f 1 Alben, f 1 Brown, f 2 Geory, g 0 Corb, g 1 Jayhawk, 'B'-24 FG FT Doughead f 2 FG 0 Doughead, c 8 0 Warmup, e 8 2 MidNear, g 4 0 Clark k 0 0 Any reason that you can't eat at home or your fraternity or sorority house would be enough for you to eat with us. We will be glad. Totals 7 3 Ancient Buildings Unearthied Cairo, Feb. 15—(UP)-Streets, buildings and temples, dating from the first century B.C. to the second century A.D. have been unearthened near the ancient city of Hermopolis in excavation. Totals 5 5 DE LUXE CAFE 711 Mass. Send the Daily Kansan home Oklahoma Ties Kansas for Conference Lead geek Scores 24 Points as Sooners Beat Iowa State, 44-26 Led by their sharp-shooting captain, Andy Beck, who alone scored 24 points. Oklahoma won revenge on Iowa State for an early season defeat, by virtue of a home run. Last night's game again puts Oklahoma in a tie for first place with Kansas. Iowa State was leading 11-5 with five minutes of the first half left to play when Munson, sophomore forward, was sent into the game for Oklahoma. From that time the Sooners had the advantage of the tip-off, for the first time all season. Beck and Ankerman scored a score to 19-13 before the half ended. After the Cyclones had cut the lead to two points at the beginning of the second half, Beek went wild, scoring 13 points to put Oklahoma far in the lead. Iowa State - 26 FG FT Jones, f 1 Thomson, f 3 Lewdow, f 2 Anderson, f 1 Harder, f 0 Wegner, g 0 Ludwig, g 0 Hood, g 0 Dills, g 0 Totals 10' 6' 6' Oklahoma—44 FG FT Beck, f 11 2 Anderson, f 4 1 Lecorc, f 1 0 Manns, f 1 0 Browning, g 1 0 Main, g-1 2 Porta, g 0 Bross, g 2 Tyler, g 1 0 The box score: Referee—R. L. Pendleton, Westminster. Totale Johnson's Lead Threatened Oklahoma Player Climbs to Second Place in Iidividual Scoring By scoring 24 points against Iowa State, Andy Beck of Oklahoma went into second place in individual scoring in the Big Six conference with a total of 24 points. This is the greatest number of points scored by any player in the season for this game this season. Bill Johnson, Kansas center, scored 22 points in one game. Player G FG FT PF TP Johnson, Kansas 8 32 18 18 Kahona, Kansas 8 30 12 14 Wheatley, Kansas 8 30 12 72 Browning, Oklahoma 8 16 9 14 Pells, Kansas 8 22 16 60 Coyle, Kentucky 8 22 16 60 Anderson, Oklahoma 8 20 12 11 Warrington, Kansas 8 21 9 81 Boyd, Kansas State 8 21 8 51 Boyd, Kansas State 8 20 8 11 Women's Intramurals Swimming Meet Is Postnoned Swimming Meet is Postponed The women's swimming meet scheduled the day, Friday. Feb 28, has been changed to Tues., March 14, at the because of a conflict with the life saving school for examiners scheduled for the same day. Each manager of the intramural teams must turn in her entry blank for the most by this Friday, according to Miss Cindy Roper. The team to practice at least once during the practice hours. These practice hours are scheduled for Monday, Wednesday, and Friday after 2:30; Tuesday through Saturday morning from 10 to 12. 0 The order of events in the meet will be as follows: relay, breast form, two lengths free style, diving, two lengths back stroke, two lengths side stroke, crawl for form, two lengths breast stroke, three lengths crawl. The score for each movement is 8 points for first place; 6 for second; 4 for third; 4 for fourth in the relays; and 5 points for first place, 3 for second, 2 for third, and 1 for fourth in all other events. Practices for the class basketball teams will be held tonight, at 8 for the juniors and seniors, and at 9 for the seniors. Practices will be held again Thursday through Friday, the freshmen and sophomores at 8 and the juniors and seniors at 9. All women interested in making the W.A.A.F. asked to report for practice tonight. NEW WORLD CHAMP KFKU Tuesday, Feb. 21 6 p.m. Athletic Question Box, conducted by Professor E. R. Elbel. 2. 30 p.m. Elementary French Lesson, conducted by W.K.Cornell, instructor. Tuesday. Feb. 21 Wednesday, Feb. 22 2. 45 p.m. England and the English British Travel Talk. 6 p.m. Interview on University extension activity, conducted by Mia Suigent, secretary of the Bureau of Immigration and Fred Elworth, Alumni secretary. I 6:15 p.m. Musical program arranged y Dean D. M. Swarthout presenting om Ryan, pianist. Freddie Miller, Clecimann southpaw who was decailed featherweight champion of the world by the National Boxing Organization, took the title away from Battalino. Ellsworth C. Dent, secretary, Bureau of Visual Instruction, will be unable to appear on the Wednesday program at Lawrence University unless absence from Lawrence on that date. 230 p.m. Elementary German Less- son, Prof. E. F. Engel. Thursday. Feb. 23 Spring Practice Under Way 2. 45 p.m. K. U. News Notes, prepared by the K. U. News Bureau and read by Charles Deardorff, Jr. 6 p.m. Athletic Interview: Al McCue, American Red Cross representative. Oklahoma Gridsters Complete First Week of Intensive Drill Norman, Feb. 21 — (Special) –With little Doc Walters of Shawnee and big Clay Childs of tacca, Texas, stopping play after play in the University of Oklahoma spring football squad, with 53 wins, as its first week of training at Owen field. Coaches Lewis Hardage, "John "Bo" Rowland and Lawrence "Jap" Haskell from three teams and rushed them one at a time into a heated scrimmage against a defensive line in which blockers were the fundamentals most stressed. On one team Coates, Beck, Walters, Monnett, Bass, Yarbrough, Coker, were in the line and Fujuan, Allen, Long and Francis in the backfield. On another team McDonald, Childs, Haines, Allen, Meis, Farrell and Davis were in the line, and Art Panzse, Poynor, Robertson and Steinbeck in the backfield. On Friday or Saturday of this week the first practice game will be played Hurdler Returns to School Oklahoma Track Star of SiX Years Ago Will Strengthen Team Norman, Feb. 21 — (Special) —Al- he is nearly he三十岁 old, married, and has launted on a track shoe for five years, Ray Damon, University of Oklahoma's speedy little Indian hurdler of 1927 and 1928, is enrolled in the program, and will lay it with Coach John Jaeckel's Sooner track team this spring. In 1927 Durson wrote hurdling history at Oklahoma. He won both the 50-yard low and high hurdle races in the Missouri Valley indoor meet, tying Roy Conger of Iowa State for individual best. In the final win he won the meet. He then won the 120-yard high hurdles at the Texas, Kansas and Drake relays, although he was disqualified at the first two meets because he knocked down too many hurdles. After plining up triumph after triumph in the dual meets, he ran away from the conference outdoor meet in 149 seconds, still a university record. Dunson is eligible, having one more year of competition. He is coming back to take work in education with a teacher and teaching and coaching after he graduates. Track Men Show Up Well Eight of Last Year's 23 Lettermen Basis for 1933 Squad Head track coach Bill Hargis, in order to get a line on his new material for the oncoming track season sent his team back to practice later afternoon at the east stadium. Although the cold weather has been a great handicap for the track man who have been working out, Coach Hargas taught him how to run with the showing made by the men. The University team will meet the Haskell team Saturday, Feb. 25 at 3 p.m. under the east stadium. This meet will be held at the Goodwood and will serve as a practice meet. Coach Hargis will have only eight letter men out of 23 from last year's squad to build 'his team from, but several of the new men are showing up well and it is probable that Kanties will be team of at least medium strength. Send The Daily Kansan home. Fans Want More Action in Basketball Contests Questionnaire Cards Show Patrons Favor Passing and Dribbling Basketball with still more action would be to the liking of University of Kansas basketball patrons, according to a tabulation of questionnaire cards returned by patrons at the town hall. The data will be the auditorium here Saturday night. Of the 250 cards returned after the game, seven out of ten wanted more dribbling and eight of ten wanted more passing, it was announced today by Dr. F. C. Allen, director of athletics at Kansas and member of the national joint rules committee, and also a member of the special commission on study questions to distributing the basketball questions and playing basketball games throughout the country. The figures showing those wanting move passing and dribbling were the taller ones at Missouri for dribbling, but slightly shorter at Arizona for more passing, evidently showing the slower type of offense played by the Tigers leaves more to be desired in the latter figure. The tabulation of the cards is to be sent in to the committee for a report at the next meeting of the national rules body. One hundred and twenty-five of the fans voting said the game was all right as now played. The question of eliminating the center jump, which was widely discussed some years ago, did not interest many here as only 13 fans said they would be there. The official question ended in the exactly the same number reporting that the official was too strict, that reported he seemed to call too few fouls. Children are creatures who disguise you by displaying in public the manners you teach them at home.—Mc-Pherson Republic. After that 1:30 nap Sillex coffee gives you pep for the afternoon Union Fountain Sub-Basement, Memorial Union TIRED? Then you need this NATURAL ENERGY FOOD 4 Banana Roll 10 INCHES LENGTH 125 FT SIZED WHEAT WHEAT SHREDDED WHEAT THE HOME OF SHREDDED WHEAT WHEAT WHEAT 12 INCHES LENGTH When you see Niagara Falls on the package, you KNOW you have Shredded Wheat. FOR A BRISK, energetizing breakfast or a sensible, satisfying lunch, try two golden eggs. Shredded Wheat. Smother them in milk or cream, add some fruit... and you have a meal and sustaining meal for any time of day. ready to eat, nothing added, nothing taken away. All the bran is there, in the correct proportion that Nature provides. It's akin to wrestling with a fish, it's a trim to wrist. Join the healthy millions who eat this natural energy food at least once a day. It's at all campus eating places. Shredded Wheat brings you all the natural energy of whole wheat...ready-cooked. SHREDDED WHEAT ALL THE WHEAT . . ALL THE BRAN THE NATURAL ENERGY FOOD MADE BY NATIONAL-BISCUIT COMPANY Uneeda Bakers "HAPPY LANDINGS" Dorsey-Liberty Post of the American Legion PRESENTS After a four-months tour in France. AT LAWRENCE MEMORIAL HIGH SCHOOL Monday & Tuesday Feb.27-28 8:15 o'clock ADMISSION 50 Cents This play was produced and staged by Prof. Allen Crafton in France and was one of the few shows that had the approval and support of General Pershing and army headquarters. Now you have the opportunity to see this same show with the best talent from the Hill and town in the cast. See the original show that entertained the boys in France. You will like it. Tickets for sale by Legionnaires and at the Round Corner Drug Store. A partial list of the cast include the following from the Hi Crafton Callahan Strawn Nuckles Rice Calderwood Patteron Kennel Arbella Reynolds Kerr Inge Davis Stewart Harket UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXX Cunningham Gets Permission to Run Full Mile Saturda Kansas Miller Believes He Is Ready to Break Existing Indoor Record NOW HELD BY VENZKF New York, Feb. 23. —(UP)—Glenn Cunningham, of the University of Kansas, conqueror of Gene Venke and a winner to win the American 1500-meter title at the national championship in Madison Square Garden Saturday night with the American Can athletic Union to continue the race until he covers a mile. Gets Third Victory Cunningham believes he is in condition to heat the existing indoor mille record held by Venke at 4:10 and wants to try for it. Cunningham scored his third eastern track triumph Tuesday, when he won the 800-meter event at the Curb Exchange A. A indoor track and field games. He set a time of 1 minute, 56 seconds for the unbanked, flat arm trophy. Cunningham met a crack field of middle distance men, including Glenn Dawson, his Olympic teammate from Ohio, and the University Bulwinkle of the New York A. C., Phil Edwards of McGill University, Montreal. He finished with a 10-yard Cunningham's Gels Ovation Cunningham's performance brought a great crowd to the crowded A. New York newspaper stated that "the Jayhawker, who obtained his training racing farm boys over the Kansas prairies since he recovered from severe burns that almost crippled him in childhood, brought the speed he has exhibited in finishing the mile twice and drove inside, indoor record holder in the event." Glenn Cunningham's record in Eastern meets is as follows: Feb. 4–Warnamark mille, feature of Milrose A. A games, defeated Gene Vale on 10 yards. Time, 4 minutes. 13 seconds. Feb. 18–Baxter mille, feature of New York C. A games, defeated Gene Vale on 10 yards. Time, 4 minutes. 143 seconds. KANSAS STAR WRITES COACH Feb. 21—80-meter invitation race New York Curb Exchange A. A games defeated Glenn Dawson, Tulsa, Oklaho. Times, 1 minute, 16-8 for 2-4 seconds. Cunningham Believes He Could Have Bettered Time in Baxter Mile "Bill, Hirsgall," track coach, today received a letter from Glen Cunningham, star Kansas milter who recently graduated at the New York curb exchange meet. Cunningham says that he is roaming with Glen Dawson, ace distance man Jim McGrath, and his brother is in the room adjoining Jim Bauchau, world death champion and former Kansas star. He says that the three of them are all keeping in the best of contendency. Vernon Nash to Visit Here According to Cunningham, he does not believe that he ran a smart race in the Baster event, and feels that if he had been a little smarter in judging his pace he could have run a faster race. Will Stop on His Way to Home in Peiping, China M. Vernon C. Nash, who has for the last year been in journalism department at the University of Missouri or exchange professor, will spend Friday Feb. 24, here in Lawrence on his return to Peiping. Mr. and Mrs. Nash are to be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred J Graves, of the department of journal-sam here. Mr. Nash is head of the department of journalism at Yenching University, Peiping, China. He has been taking the place of Dean Frank L. Martin of the University of Missouri, who has been in the same position in Peiping. Defeat St. Louis Debaters A University of Kansas debate team composed of Charles Hacker, c3$, and Donald Hultz, T3$, defeated a team from St. Louis University Tuesday in an affirmative decision. Kamaas upheld the affirmative side of the war debt cancellation question. The debate was held before an argument between Mary's College, Leavenworth, Kau. CAMPBELL ABANDONS PLAN TO TRY FOR STANDING MIL Daytona Beach, Fla., Feb. 23 —(UPI)—Sir Malcolm Campbell definitely abandoned his plan to make a try for the standing mile record today when his physician told him his injured wrist was broken and he rears on his powerful racing car. Immediately after his conference the British racing driver driven his mechanic to pack the car for shipment to New York, where it may be placed aboard the Aquatina which sails for England March 3. CONDENSED WIRE NEWS VIOLENT EARTH QUAKE ROCKS SOUTH AMERICAN COUNTRY THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1933 Iquique, Chile, Feb. 23 —(UPC)—A violent earthquake, accompanied by subterranean noises and splashes of lightening, was felt here at 4 a.m. to-day. The population, alarmed, run from the houses into the street. SOUTH AMERICAN COUNTRY First reports indicated no casualties or extensive property damage. A second shock was felt at 4:15 a.m. it was feared that more damage might have caused in the interior sliding walls were demolished, and others cracked. Nation-Wide Strike Predicted Des Moines, Iowa, Feb. 27—(UP)—A nation-wide general strike with labor co-operating with the farmers was predicted today by Milo Remo. The national farm holiday movement. "The Wisconsin milk strike has demonstrated not only that farmers can co-operate, but that farmers and labor are in common a cause." Reno said. New Ocean Depth Profil San Juan, Porto Rico, Feb. 26 (UP) Sun Jun. 14 (UP), Feb. 25 (in depth in the world, 44,000 feet, or 83 miles), has been discovered north of here. New Ocean Depth Found Piccard May Try Flight San Francisco, Feb. 23—(UP)Professor August Piccard, Belgian scientist, may make a flight into the stratosphere from Chicago, he revealed today. Weather to Continue Mild Kansas City, Feb. 23. (UIP)—Continued mild weather was forecast today by Andrew Harnick. Tomorrow will be fair with temperatures reaching the middle or upper 69's. Offices Subdue Frate Farmers Kankakee, Ill., Feb. 23—(UP)—Nearly 1,000 frate farmers demonstrating against a farm mortgage foreclosure sale today were forced to retract by the governor. The farmers revolvers and clubs, and reinforced by the fire department with boots, trained on the demonstrators. Washington, Feb 23—(UP)—The house of representatives voted today to work overtime to clean up a conglomerated calendar. On motion of Majority Leader and the majority resolution to meet at 11 o'clock every morning until the end of the session, March 4, and to sit until 6 o'clock. Usually hours are from noon until 4:30 Seeks to Prevent False News Geneva, Feb. 23—(U)P—The organizing committee of the Madrid press conference recommended today that the Spanish government call a conference of representatives of government press bureau, news agencies, and international press groups on Oct. 17, to examine a proposal to "prevent the spread of false news likely to disturb peace." Landon Asks Cut in Salary Seek to Prevent False News Governor Sets Example of Economy in His Own Office Landon pointed out other evidence of economy as applied to himself. He has had the special water cooler removed from his office and the office of "special reception." Topeca, Feb. 23 — (UP) — Governor Alfred M. Landon announced today he has asked the fee and salary committee to accept his own salary from $5,000 to $7,350. Under Kansas laws the legislature cannot cut the salary of an executive official if he objects. His announcement today said he also had requested the committee to cut the salaries of employees in his office 10 per cent. "I know these are small things," Landon said, "but the small things make up big things, and when I see the department partners I think it behooves me to practise it in our own office." Graduate of Law Honored Colonel Adna G. Clarke, who received the A.B. degree from the University in 1900, was admitted to practice before the National District court for Hawaii by Judge Edward K. Benson, according to word received from Honolulu. Colonel A. G. Clarke Admitted t United States Court in Hawaii The motion for Colonel Clarke's admittance to practice before the court was denied by the judge, attorney, who was once a student of Colonel Clarke. Colonel Clarke was recently made professor of police administration in the University of Haifa. He received the bachelor of laws degree from the university in 1897. He left Kansas in 1902, and to the supreme court of Kansas on June 6, 1901. He was clerk of the district court of Douglas County, Kansas, from 1899 to China and Japan Suffer Heavy Losses in Battle Nuking, China, B21- (Friday, (UP) - China received a Japan- ic ultimatum today demanding withdrawal of Chinese forces from Jebel, and immediately replied that any aggressive action would be re- ceived. Nipponese Attack Repulsed After Hand to Hand Engagement "The fact that Japan is not only bent on attacking and seizing Jehovah but declares military operations may be extended to North China is sufficient to show a policy of aggression," the reply said. "If fighting spreads, China naturally reserves her right of self-defense, and all responsibility rests on Japan." The Japanese ultimatum promised lenency to all who submitted. Peping, Feb. 23 - (UP) - A desperate battle with heavy伤患 on both sides was announced by the Chinese today in the vicinity of Nanjing. The Japanese Chinese position after a preliminary bombing and heavy artillery attack. The Chinese reported wave after wave of Nipponese broke against the Chinese trenches as eight charges were fired. The Japanese mortar neared death into the troops. China Replies to Ultimatum Fighting hand to hand the attack finally was repulsed and the Chinese held their position, they claimed, Nanjing, on the Joloh border east of Choyang, is the most hotly contested sector of the 250 mile battle line. The Chinese reported that Japanese bombed the town itself destroying many houses. FLEET MAY PRACTICE EARLY Manila, Feb. 23 - (UP) - Development in the Far East may cause the United States to face off the United States Atlantic fleet off the Chinese coast to be advanced, naval Possibility Presented That Maneuver Dates Will Be Advanced New Rochester, N. Y., Feb. 23—(UP)—Henry Brom, brother of the late Paul Brom, refused today to discuss Los Angeles reports that he had been instrumental in reopening an investigative agency. "I won't deny nor confirm it," he said. Reports that the fleet had been ordered to Chinese waters were denied. No Comment From Bern W.S.G.A. Council Approves Student Activity Project an Now Goes to Chancellor and the Board of Regents for Final Sanction FEES WILL BE SPLIT Approval of the compulsory activity ticket plan proposed by the Men's Student Council was voiced in the meeting of the W.S.G.A. council last Tuesday evening. This plan, passed by the student body, calls for the payment of $8 the first semester and $27.5 when use is permitted. The next now be presented to the Chancellor and Board of Regents for ratification or rejection. March 4 was set as the date for the benefit show which the Council will sponsor. The picture, "Employee's Entrance," will be shown at the Pates theater. Tickets may be secured from members of the W.S.G.A. council. Phil McKnight, c32, dance manager, gave a report on the variety dances and presented his plan for the upcoming festival which will be given Saturday night. Plans for the W.S.C.A. elections which will probably be held March 20, were discussed Alice Learned, c34. Chairwoman is as publicity chairman at that time. Other guests present were: Mrs. J. C Ackert, W. A. W. Burrett, Mrs. David Dunkle, F. M. F. Baumgartner, Miss Hodges, and Herschel W. Schreck. Mildred Schmitt, fa 33, was installed as Fine Arts representative to replace Carol Higgins, fa 33 Ackert Speaks at Meeting The Snow Zoobay club initiated seven new members at the club meeting in Snow hall Tuesday evening. Dr. James E. Ackey, professor of zoology and parasitology at Kansas State College was the honor guest of the evening, delivering a lecture on "Host Resistance to Parasitism, with Special Reference on the Chicken." He illustrated his talk with charts and lan- Seven New Members Initiated Into Snow Zoology Club the new members received into the organization were: Martha Ralston, c'uel, Kansas City, Mo; W. S. Long, c'laure, Lawrence; N. A. Phelpe, c'uel, Wakefield, Mass; Sherwood Newton, c'uel, Lawrence; Stewart Clare, c'ela, Kansas City, Mo; W. A. Burnett, c'uel, Lawrence; Chu, Chris F, Mitchell, Coffeville. The meeting was termed by C. W. Hibbard, c33, who is secretary-treasurer of the club, as the most outstanding of the year, both as to interest and attendance. Thirty-three members and guests were present. WEATHER Kansas—Fair tonight and Friday continued mild temperature. Cosmopolitan Club, Robinson gymnasium, 12 p.m. --ten points; sorority vice president Marie DeMariani, vice pres- ident, Corbin and Watkins hall会 retary, librarian, social chairman, treas- urer, any officer other than president of Jay Jane, Tau Sigma, Quicks chap Brandon Woolf, Sear Owl Board, play casts, other offices other than president of organizations including women. **Corbon College**, Sear Owl Board, play casts, other offices other than president of organizations including women. Baptist Young People's Union, 1124 Mississippi, 11 p.m. AUTHORIZED PARTIE Friday, Feb. 24 --ten points; sorority vice president Marie DeMariani, vice pres- ident, Corbin and Watkins hall会 retary, librarian, social chairman, treas- urer, any officer other than president of Jay Jane, Tau Sigma, Quicks chap Brandon Woolf, Sear Owl Board, play casts, other offices other than president of organizations including women. **Corbon College**, Sear Owl Board, play casts, other offices other than president of organizations including women. Dean of Women Saturday. Feb. 25 Saturday, Feb. 25 Varsity, Memorial Union, 10 to 12. AGNES HUSBAND Pusadeen, Calif., Feb. 25—(UP) The positron linehead tied up with the neutron, proton and electron to hear the plaudts of science. Too tiny to be seen, the positron nevertheless is at the center, the positron again agrees it is the discovery of Dr. Carl Anderson, youthful professor of physics at the California Institute of Technology who works hard in hand the positron. He breaks an atomic breaker and cosmic ray purifier. The positron, as Dr. Anderson says he will call his discovery, is a positively charged electron and an electron is a component part of an atom which not more than 20 years ago was considered the smallest particle known to science. "You might consider this position brother to the electron, it appears have energy closely approximated to 100 milli volts." Anderson said. Memorial Service Today Will Honor Dr. Haworth indley, Strong, Young, Sterling and Moore Are Speakers Memorial exercises in honor of the late Dr. Erasmus Harwant are to be held at 4:30 this afternoon in the auditorium of the Central Administration building Professor Oln Templin will preside, and short talks will be given by Professors ex-Cx-Chancellor Strong, and Professors M. W. Sterling, and Moore. Erasmus Haworth, '81, was a professor of geology at the University, and founder of the Kansas State Geological Survey. In addition to University geological building was named Haworth hall. In addition to teaching at the University, he aided in the formation of the museum, contributing to supervising the work of the organization. In 1912 he was elected chairman of a committee, appointed by the National Association of Mining Schools, to urge the passage of a bill in Congress whereby the mining schools in the United States were benefited. Conference Will Be Held University Students Invited to Attend All-Day Meeting There will be a conference of Douglas County young people Saturday Feb. 25 at the Baptist church, located in Eighth and Kentucky streets. The general topic to be discussed is "The Church and the Social Crisis". There is to be three discussion groups. The first group under Rev. Theodore H. Azumian will discuss "Influences of social crises during social crisis of the past." "The second group under Rev. Carr Harrison will discuss, "Teachings of Jesus and the present social crises" Neo P. Gist, of the University sociology department will have charge of the third group which will discuss "Can the Ideals of Jesus Operate in the Present Dav Social Organisms?" Registration for the meeting will start at 9:30 a.m. m. Saturday. At 12 o'clock there will be a basket lunch, and at 6:30 p.m. b.m. a banquet will be held All University students are invited. The cost of the conference including the banquet will be 35 cents, but without the banquet the charge is ten cents. No changes in class schedules will be made by the Administrative office to enable students to see the movie stars, to bring them to the Chancellor, announced today. NEW BLUEBIRD THAT ATTAINED 272 MILE SPEED Must Cut Classes to See Stars F. M. HENRY Sip Malein Campbell of England, standing beside his redesigned 2,500 horsepower car Bluebird, in which he shattered the land speed record yesterday at Daytona Beach, Pa. The average of two measured mile runs was 272.18 per lap. NUMBER 108 BANKS REOPEN IN MICHIGAN FOR CURTAILED OPERATION Detroit, Feb. 23—(UP) —Most of Michigan's banks received today for limited operations under a modification of the holiday period proclaimed last month. The Union Guardian Trust company opened only its trust department. Officers announced a statement would be issued explaining their position. The crisis in the affairs of this institution has taken to government governor when he issued his order. Members of W.S.G.A. Urged to Check Points Revised Activity Schedule Was Recently Passed by Council In order that the women of the University may make a thorough check upon their activity participation prior to the W. S. G. A. elections, the revised point system which was passed recently by the W. S. G. A. Council is reprinted below. Women are urged by the Council to make this check-up as possible in that no complaints will arise at the time of the nominations. The maximum numbers of points that women may have are as follows: seniors, 60; juniors, 40; sophomores, 20; freshmen, 20. The schedule follows: Fifty points—President W. S. G. A. Forty points—Book exchange manager, Soriority president, President W. A. A, Y. W. C. A, or Corbin hall. Thirty points. First vice president representative, Vice President of logo Representative, Fine Arts Rep- resentative, Point System Manager; pre- vice president, Vice President of vice president W. C. W. A. secretary - fiveteen-five points; President Girl - Kappa Phi Delta, Kappa Phi Delta, Phi Chi Delta, Kappa Bappa, Kappa Theta Epsilon, Lutheran Student association, Delta Figma, Sigma Fireside Twenty points: Treasurer w. A. A. Harrison, vice president of mem- ember y. W. C. A., vice president Carbin hali, vice president Watkins Brown, vice president rife队, president of honorary rifle队, president of honorary Fifteen point; Y. W. C. A. representa- tive of W. S. G. A. W. S. G. A. second vice president, junior vice pres- sident, junior secretary, retirer, junior secretary, sophomore officers, freshman officers, W. A. V. aie president and sports manager, Pam Hellenke president, Glee Club president, Dr. Jill Cramer editor and manager, K Book editor. Chemistry Prize Awarded Committee Decides Competition Th Year Merits Two Awards Dr. E. H. S. Bailey, professor of chemistry, is again awarding the annual prize in analytical chemistry, won this year by William H. Martin, e39. Competition was so keen this year that the committee debided to award a second prize, which was given to August Grandstaff, e'cex. The first prize is a one-year membership to the American Chemistry society, including subscriptions to their publications, and the second award is a one-year subscription to the "Journal of Chemical Education." This prize has been awarded for the last three years. The first winner was Wren Gable and last year it was won by Norman Howard. TAPER IS PREPARED ON NEW SPECIES OF LEAF HOPPERS H. B. Beamer, assistant professor in entomology, and Leonard Tuttle, gr., of Baxter Springs, have just completed a new species of the leaf hopper 13 new species of the leaf hopper The leafhopper, which is a very small jumping insect common to several plants, is widely distributed, and specimens which have been described come from Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico, Florida, and other states. STUDENTS MUST PAY FEES BY TONIGHT OR BE DROPPED The Board of Rogers took no action on the Men's Student Council's application for an extension of the deadline. By official rulings of the Board of Regents applying to all five of the state schools, students who have not paid taxes are exempt from classes. Those wishing to pay should see Karl Kloos, bursar, at the business office in the Administration Building. Score of Students Are Recommended for Graduation College Faculty Discusses Probation Petitions and Passes Degree Requirement FEW STUDENTS FAIL The B.S. degree was supposed to correspond to the College's A.B. degree, but since it was limited by some pre-requisites, not often was taught by students. Usually only two or three years were candidates for the degree. the faculty of the College of Liberal Arts, at its meeting Tuesday, voted not to recommend candidates for the B.S. (College) degree after March 1, and changed the requirements for the B.S. to be taken later on the latter decree. The reimbalance committee reported that in the fall of 1922 only 83 fellows were appointed cent of their work. Of these S3 pertained for reimbalance, and 40 were absent. The committee reported also that of students who were on probation for the fall semester, 52 failed to meet requirements. Twenty-three of the 30 who petitioned for another chance were dismissed and 19 students who twice previously had failed in more than 40 per cent of their work were permitted to re-enroll. The following students have completed requirements for graduation and have been recommended to the Chinua University to receive the degree specified. Bachelor of Arts George L. Allred, Helen Jennett Alter, Margaret Lucile Anderson, Wilma Irene Banta, Ray E. Beckett, Bernice Louis Finley, Carlie Arthur Fordcey, Helen Jane Gardner, LaVerne Margaret Haskell, Harry J. Hetten Jr, Robert Henry Jarvis, Charles Stillwell Johnson, Carl D. Leonard, Charles Louis Marshall, Jack McDonald Jr, Mary Marsh, Richard McLaughlin, Harold Walthree Weatherby, William Joseph Wilson, Dorothy Modeline Woodward, Frank Maxwell Wrenn. Bachelor of Science Lee H. Horsey To Talk About Relativity Professor Stranathan Will Speak at Meeting of Engineers J. D. Strantham, associate professor of physics; J. M. Kellog, professor of architecture; and E. B. Youngston, e33, will be guest speakers tonight on the A. I. E-E., announced John Doolett, e33, president. The University of Kansas branch of the engineering fraternity will meet in Marvin牢 at 7:30 p. m. According to Doullite, "The Special Theory of Relativity" will be the topic of Professor Stratman's discussion. Professor Kellogg will speak on a non-technical subject which has not been covered in his course and will give a talk on "Mine Work." Douillet added that he would like to see all electrical engineering students present at the meeting tonight as if they were scientists who become acquainted with the new men. Debate Former Champions Kansas Team Enters in Only Inter- Racial Contest of Season The University of Kansas will participate in its only inter-racial debate of this season tomorrow night at the Grand Avenue Temple, Kansas City, Mo. A team composed ofHidden Giants and the Cleveland Cavaliers will meet a team from Wiley College who were last year the Negro inter-collegiate champions. The question will be, "Resolved? That socialism would be preferable to capitalism in the United States?" Kaiwa College will host the affirmative and Wiley College the affirmative. The Kansas-Wiley debate will be followed by a show and dance. The Kansas City Young Matron's Club is sponsoring the debate. HIGHEST HONORARY DEGREE BESTOWED ON 'BUDDY' ROGERS Charles "Budd" Rogers movie and vuduville star is making personal appearances this week at the Mainstreet theater in Kansas City, Mo. Tuesday the De Molays of Kansas City and Olathe conferred the highest honorary degree possible. In numa the Scottish Rite temple. Rogers was a student at the University in 1925, and a member of Phil Kappa Pai fraternity. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS University Daily Kansa Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS AUDIT Alfreda Broederie Editor Managing Editor Makeup Editor Night Editor Night Editor Booktie Editor Exchange Editor Exchange Editor Sunday Editor ANAIZE EDITOR Turtle HONEY BURGER Vinyl Parker Maryland Banker Maryland Banker Color Cube Color Cube Madre Brown Darby Smith ADVERTISING MGR. MARIABETT INC. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1983 Editor-In-Chief ... PAUL V. MINER Whitehill Whitney Mary Garett Margaret Teague Robert Kitter Riley Miller Billy Muller Bill Morton Lawrence Allison Immanuel Amy McKinnon Amelia Krestman Wanda Doughty Leslie Kristmann Business Office...K.U. News Room...K.U. Night Connection, Business Office ...2701 Night Connection, Business Room ...2702 Subscription price, $4.09 per year, payable in advance. Shade puppies, 18 each. Entered as second-class matter September 17, 1913, at the office at lawrence, Kansas. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1933 Published in the afternoon, five times a week and on Sunday morning, by students in the Dept of Journalism of the University of Chicago, in the Free of the Department of Journalism. A CHALLENGE How long are students going to permit the Rock Chalk Cairn, monument of University traditions, to lie descranted? How long are they going to remain inactive when its rocks lie scattered on the hillside about its former site? What was once a proud boast is now an *i n o m i n o* its heap of stones and dirt. What was once an inspiration and a declaration of pride in the University now lies strewn to the four winds. Vandals profaned the Cairn January 6, and for nearly seven weeks, no action has been done toward rebuilding it. True, the Council appointed a committee, but that, too, was weeks ago, and there has been no action. Are the students content with the situation? They shouldn't be. The knowledge that the Cairn remains profaned should be a challenge to the Jayhawk spirit of each one of us. The Administration has made clear its position. The Cairn is a student enterprise, created by Sachem and the Men's Student Council; rebuilding it should be left to student initiative, the Administration has said. And the students have done nothing. Where is our vaulted school spirit? What has happened to that famous Jayhawker pride and enthusiasm that takes fiendish delight in twisting that Tiger's tail and laughs with unholy glue at the Cornhusher's waist? Have students no interest in the symbol of that fighting spirit? Is school spirit dead or merely slumbrous? Students will have an admirable opportunity to answer in their action concerning the rebuilding of the Cairn. PERVERTED NATIONAL HOLIDAYS Yesterday was a great day for a holiday—and the campus made the most of it. The morning was made for sleeping. The afternoon sun beamed on picnics, hikes, and window shopping with equal benevolence. Spring clothes, new and used, made their bow on Massachusetts street and were tickled by a provocative breeze. Cokes sold by the barrel and picture shows did a rushing business. Probably a few persons remembered that it was Washington's birthday. No compus programs were prepared in his honor, and many townpeople registered surprise when the mail failed to arrive and the banks didn't open. But yesterday's method of holiday observance was definitely in keeping with the observance of the rest of American anniversaries. Thanksgiving and Armistice day are commemorated with football and dances; the signing of the Declaration of Independence is celebrated with a game of baseball and a good show. More and more there is a growing feeling in America that along with Sunday, holidays are made for man, and not man for holidays. This point of view has a backing of good, common sense. Strugging in a civilization which rushes through day after day at breakneck speed, man must be afforded a pause in the whirl. And still, why rationalize about our problem? A better plan might be to set aside separate days for the relaxation which is a recognized national need, and then spend some time in actual commemoration of historic system. For under the present system, all sight of the actual cause for the celebration is being lost, and the reason for the origin of national holidays is being entirely sulvered to a more relaxation from the cares of everyday. THE WIND THAT ROCKS THE HILL For the past few days, Mount Oread has been in the path of one of those winds, those gusty, southern winds that rock the very Hill. It roars in your ears, it bends the trees of Marvin grove, it cries about the old, complaining corners of Fraser局. It blows—this wind—a rollering, galloping mood of nature that might be likened to a healthy, young stallion testing its new-found strength in a steady, surging run. The spirit of spring is in the blood of this wind and its vitality and body are gathered from the firm-packed Texas plains and the red clay-sands of Oklahoma and southern Kansas. It is not a gentle zephyr; its touch is far more lusty; nor yet a force, destructive气; his mood is only playful. It is a hat-blowing wind, a mischievous wind, a wind beyond all understanding except by those who like the healthy, glowing pulses of youth. It might distress the old with its ceaseless turmoil, but what a tonic it is to look it in the face and listen to its enthusiastic story. Welcome, Brother Wind, and rock the Hill again! Campus Opinion --wife calls up to tell you that some of her ceramies from the office will be home for dinner, and can't you fix up some of the ceramics? You'd be in leisure would soon be demolished. Editor Daily Kansan; Sorry that the equanimity of the me is so easily disturbed, but women have worn trousers just about as long as men have and probably will continue wearing them. The author of "Trouser Trouble" must have only awakened for the wearing of trousers has not one of the prerogatives of man alone. How far will the move go? Well, dear editor writer, if this windy weather continues, the move will precipitate. The reason for women wearing these new Marlenses, the wind alone would justify their adoption. Especially if one is The author of the editorial is assuming a great deal when he talks of women lying in bed and arising only in time for their afternoon game of bridge. In the first place, the majority of women don't have time for bridge, and in the second place, bridge isn't the second-water any more—it's big jaws puzzle! Anyway, as you suggest, let's change rules. Let the men take over the responsibilities of running the house and seeing that Little Johnny and Susie act through the neighbor's windows. An easy job? The very worst I could wish for the writer of "Trouser Trouble" would be to see him domestic. Every try, young Launceolé? Just wait uninterrupted dishes from last night's party share with us. The whole house is covered with odds and ends to be picked up, and then your Even though keeping the family budget balanced may be a hard job, it isn't so impossible and difficult as you would picture it. Look at the girls and women already who are working, and some of them making better salaries then their friends and husbands and just a spot at the hospital to recognize the diversibility of a woman's aptitudes and interests, but it still remains a fact. If the wearing of Marlenes is such an unforgivable intrusion on the sacred rights of men that the only punishment filling the crime is to be sentenced to death, I know you will very well. Just say the word, and, presto, you find yourselves stewing over the question of whether to have lamb or beef for dinner, while we Feminine friends perched up on our office desk — thanks to Marlenes—and if the routine should become to monotonous, we'll drop over to the pool hall for a nice quiet game or call in our young musicographer to take some discretion — J.G. The Campus Muse --ind in a textbook WINTER WOODS Is winter peace. Not the slowest worm A-screen Only the sun Holds quiet lease My hands are branches Lifted there. My tired heart Soars light as air Silence, a pale A silver butterfly's Lost wing. My tired heart -Hester E. Buell Only the lareh Speaks, timidly. "Spring," she says, IACDOWELL: The regular meeting of the A.S.C.E. will be held this evening at 7:30 c.e.m. The regular meeting will be held for Freshmen, Civils, and election of spring officers. Refreshments will be held. GEORGE O. FOSTER, Registrar. QUIPS from other QUILLS Students may obtain first semester grades at the Registrar's office according to the following scheduled names: "Will remember me." Soars light as air. My hands are branches --ind in a textbook There will be Dramatic club tryouts this afternoon at 3:30 in Green hall. call GENE HIBBS, President. The regular MacDowell meeting will be held this evening at 8 cclock in the central Administration auditorium. MARY BUTCHER, President. Only the larch Don't complain because you can't make a speech. Sometimes it takes more effort to keep still than it does to talk.-Meperson Republican. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXX Thursday, Feb. 23, 1923 No. 108 DRAMATIC CLUB TRYOUTS; If all the world should be submerged This book would still be dry. Found in a notebook. If there should be another flood For refuge hither fly, If the world should be broken. In order to reach those who have something to give, the beggars of this century have been forced to substitute teachers in the classrooms of A.L.L. in Washington Student Life. Almost simultaneously comes the announcement that Mahatma Gandhi and Brown and Jones, incorporated, are going into the newspaper business. We will be there with them at Amos and Andy put out a colored section — C.W.J. in Winfield College. GRADES To the many, a university is a colony of dormitories where youth may sleep a few years more, pleasantly unaware that the world is rushing by and leaving them permanently behind—A.J.L in Washington Student Life. The larger the man the easier it is to swallow his insults.—J.P.H. in Chanutr Tribune. Friday, reb. 24-1 to 10 Z. inclusive Saturday, Feb. 36—Those unable to appear Notices due at Chancellor's office 11 a. m. on regular afternoon publication days and 11, 14, 30 m. on Friday for Sunday issues. A. I. E. E.; The Kansas University branch of the ALEE will hold its first meeting of be new semester in the auditorium of Marvin hall at 7:30 a.m. This meeting will be featured by talks by Dr. J. D. Stranathan, E. B. Youngstrom, and **rof. J. M. Kellogg**. **RICHARD FOOR.** Secretary. A. S. C. E: The MAY DAY MYSTERY A crowd gathers around a large tree in front of a building, with several people facing the camera. CHAPTER 1—Ainontette Peyton. In Chapter 2, Marluck resents Trayner Thayer's attention to twelf Wash, saventon-year-old Gabriel Gunther, ending with bitter recriminations, and marrying another student, another student, another student, long Thayer's friend with him. Thayer and Vernon marry with him. Thayer and Vernon SYNOPSIS CHAPTER 11.—Larry determines to rent a house with Ivy Tennessey to his wife and Ivy Tennessey to his wait unit she has appealed to her husband for furniture in the living room, kitchen, house, arrival and goes to his room. Tennisey ends up renting the house immediately afterward, vinily in a state of deep sadness. Tenniese does not leave the house almost CHAPTER V—W. The Marlboro bank is robbed of $6000, the robber appears as a young man, and apparently badly wounded. Jim comes close, and good matured, comes to interview. He is the bank president, tells Hanley he believes Max Werman was driving the car. CHAPTER 19—Havney interrogates Mr. Thawne about the day of the murder. Which is vague in detail, but it seems he was alive when his left hand was injured, and he is lying seemingly endowing to him a king, seemingly endowing to him a firm conviction being that he killed his own son, the resulting series of incidents mere months after the murders. CHAPTER IV. - Wetshy, appeal to the judge that Mr. Frissoni's frustration he determined to see Taper. He declares that he will not house him in jail. Fuchs' threat死,laws a police chief takes charge of a law enforcement agency. CHAPTER 12 - HILARY, Ivy. *Ivory* is a character who is supposed to be by virtue to end this chapter. When she enters each other, Which does not see what he sees but does not see what she sees but CHAPTER VIII-14. At the scene of the attack, the jailer named Thayer the jailed man who found Thayer murdered. Thayer with whisky for forbidden drink, he divided the profile. After the execution, surprised Veronica's room, finds there a woman who is accused of hiding evidence the woman with which he evidently suspected the victim. summon mirched off and Hanvey restrained the doe's office, closing the door behind him. He tiled the trim around her bed, then frightened him. She was sitting now in a stitched cloak, and her legs were bare. Her hair was pink flesh between the knee and the hem of the dress. Hanvey felt humiliated, and she totally remitted once of her disbelief. CHAPTER IX CHAPTER VI. Th-Theater, Fidel tells us that he has been bing Verson of large sums, in card games, and he has finally realized it. Reagan induces Harvey to take charge of the murder, but Harvey is not with both the murder and robbery. Tony was under arrest as Thayer murder are under arrest as Thayer murder. He settled comfortably in the dawn's swivel chair, napped his forehead and the back of his neck, and then grinned dismischingly at the girl. Copyright by O'Connor New Guinea $ ^{ \circ} $ Br Octavus Roy Cohen "Answer me one question. Miss Velch: Ain't I the terriblest looking eye you ever saw?" "Thanks. It's real nice of you to say that. And now we started talking," he said, more: I mute a regular bit, I mute the slightest desire to make a record, and I d rather never sluggish any body than do any harm to the wrong person. I don't care about this thing. I sort of agree with you. But there's a whole lot of lying going on . . . and while I don't want you to know anything, any secret that your brother is doing more than his share—which isn't helping him a bit. I want to locate someone who knows something and is walking straight. Will you or won't you?" "Good girl. Now I want you to teh me about Mr. Thayer—and your self . . . just whatever you feel I should know." I wouldn't say you were a shell. "n'thit this bad in cold weather. Here." "me me for a row of water." "heater." "Walter." He lowered his voice. "give sit at regular dicks, Miss Welcel." he advised confidentially. "If they slough everybody, they're bound to have the right one. Me—I don't hard-knock now is to turn loose at least two of the three Reagan had got in战." Jim was using police vexerurance in a deliberate effort to impress the girl, and he knew that he was succeeding. She was acutely aided by his authoritative manner. "one thing, Miss Welcel; I want you to know I'm on the level. I wouldn't try to put nibble on ever you—eccessors." If you believe that, if you don't believe that, why, there isn't hardly no use for that, to talk? The girl's blue eyes opened wide and a trount dimple appeared. "Well, I wouldn't say you were a shawk." Ivy didn't hesitate. "I will!" VIN The girl bit her lip. "I feel funny about that, Mr. Hanvey. I've tried to "I think you're all right," said Ivy firmly. "I wouldn't laugh, Miss Welch. I'm a sentimental old bird . . . and I believe in young love. Oh, gosh! how I do." W.N.U. SERVICE tell one or two people—even my breath—and they all laugh—or sneer—when I say I was in love with him." "I seventeen" she said. "I guess I'm not so awful dumb. I know about it." She looked at me and I loved him. He love with Pat Tinney. He was wonderful to me. Not always wisenewatching and showing off smart like a child, but she loved her and I guess a girl knows whether she's in love or not, no matter how much she loves you. But he—" Her eyes filled with fierce hot tensions which she dashed away. "I'm not so awful dumb. Mr. Haraway—but I can't help it." "You go right ahead and cry, Iry." Haverne's voice was infinitely gentle. He watched me walk through when I was a healer younger—and a hemp thinner-I had a girl. And I lost her. She married another woman and it fell as though she had died." Ivy sensed the very genuine sympathy and the deep human understanding. The campuses tragedy had there been. There had been the shock, the horror . . . then the fear that Larry might have done it. Only her宿妈 knew of the long hours of crying and the torture of the herism which sent Ivy Welch bravely out on the camps. But Ivy not talked to that room. She felt that Ivy felt that he understood, and would help. It was a relief to talk. "Pat Thayer and I were engaged," she said simply. "Gee. . . " "of course, we weren't thinking about getting married just yet. We were wearing a ring and I was wearing his faceright pin and he was wearing a diamond ring which used to belong to my mother." Again her eyes were flashing when on when—when he died, Mr. Harvover. Jim shook his head, "Where is it now. Miss Wewch?" "I don't know. I suppose it's still on—on his finger. I put it there my self." She suddenly buried her face in her hands. Hanvey, filled with a deep pity, watched her in silence. Then the teacher forced a smile. The teacher forced a smile. "I won't talk about it any more, Mr. Hanvey. I will try to be a good scout. You're going to help me." "No, Iy—I don't. But I do him that Larry has talked himself into a lot of trouble. And if he won't tell me, I'll find out to find it out from someone else." "Surely you don't think ___ 5" "To do you everything I know, "Good. Now first: Weren't you with Mr. Thayer day before yesterday just about noon?" "I'll tell you everything I know." "Did Max Vernon meet you?" "Yes, sir." "What happened then?" "They had a pretty nasty quarrel, Mr. Hanvey." She hesitated, and her cheeks grew white; but she answered with brave honesty: Harvey leaned forward, "Would you mind telling me, Miss Wash—what Vernon and Thayer quarreled about?" She fushed slightly. "About me." "Why?" "Well," she answered with a flash of the straightforwardness which he liked. "I guess I acted pretty迅然, and I date with Max and I stood嗅 "Because Max is just a kid. He's a good sport and all that, but he's a baby." Of course "Why?" "when did you notice any change?" Mr. Ah, I can't remember, Mr. Munoz, but he'd be horribly late. Mooning around with a face like last week's wash, and always taking serious instead of kid's old stuff. He was awful bored. Then I stared going with Pat—that's Mr. Thayer—and Max got sooner than ever. Then he asked me why, when we were to go the class truck meet, I met PAT and just naturally forgot the date—that's all. When Max met us he told me, of course, PAT wouldn't stand that." "I haven't he and Thayer always been good friends?" "Of course not. What did Mr. Thay er do?" "Oh, he辞 of treated Max like a kid. Max got awful sore. I mean, he was downright ugly about it." "He stalked off, trying to look like a man." "And you and Mr. Thayer?" "We talked for awhile and then he said he had to get ready for an after- moon class. He said if Max was sore and wouldn't take me to the track meet, he'd take me." "That was nice. . . Now, about your brother. . . " Her eyesashed, "You know he wouldn't kill anybody, Mr. Harvey, You've met him!" he's a fine man . . . he just wouldn't do anything like that. "Did you see Larry between the time Thayer left you and the time Larry went to see him at the fraternity house?" * She looked away, and he could be her fingers clapping and in chaplet touching her hand. "Please be homes Miss Wilett. If I don't get the trust you have," she said. "Yes, I saw him." "Where?" "Over at the women's dormitory, He came to see me." "I see. . . What did he say about Mr. Thayer?" Her answer came in a whisper, "Mr. Thayer." "He said—he said I wasn't to see Put any more." "They why did he suddenly come and speak to you day before yesterday?" "He wouldn't tell me. There's always been a lot of talk around the campus about Fat. He was better than the rest of them and they all hated him for being more of a man, harried her, etc. I never made any secret about it." Again her checks turned white. "Somebody had told him something." "Yes, . . . ?" Jim was infinitely patient, "Who?" "Because—well, it happened this way, Mr. Hanvey." She walked to the window and motioned him to join her in putting on shoes and lingeries are on a hill here. Way over yonder on that big bill is the women's room. There she ever wandered up on the bill because I pass through a pretty little patch of wood. There's a place down there where she'll eat, drink and play it. It's called the Flower and couples go there lots of times. It's a sort of college rule never to go in when there is a party or you're going to go in when you hear somebody. Nicholas Pyley "I see. . . And how did Miss Peyton happen to pick that particular day to tell him?" "Tony Peyton was coming from in the droomy and Pat and I were in there. Tony Peyton eavesdropped and then she told us. She—she gave Pat the devil!" "I see. . . But what business was it of hers?" "Didn't she sav?" The face which Ivy lifted to Hanvey was a study in bewilderment. "No. Of course I could tell that there was something between Tony and Pat. Tony was awful sore, and Pat was mild. He told Tony to mind her own business and that if she butted on Tony's door, he wouldn't stop. Tony said he ought to such a kid, and he said do what he wanted." "And you?" "I just stood there. It seemed like I was an outsider. I hadn't ever seen Pat mad, and I never thought Tony could get so sore." "It was a real fuss?" "Yes, sir. I think Tony must be crazy about him, and she was jealous. Anyway, I mean she acted just like that." "You don't get any hint—from either Pit or Miss Pepton—what there was, or had been, between them?" "And you think Miss Peyton told your brother that he ought to do something about it?" "Yes. . . . Larry is crazy about her. He didn't act nice. He said I'd J. M. RICHARDSON larry even 60 do that. But anyway, he could have bent it up, He never would have used a knife. "Mm-m! Did You Tell Your Brother That You and Pat Were Engaged?" have to quit going with Pat. I said I wouldn't, and he said he'd see that I did." Jim's eyes were half closed. His voice came in a slow, disinterested draw. "He was real sore when he left you wasn't he?" "Do you know if he and Miss Peyton are engaged?" "And then he told you he was going over to see Thayer, didn't he?" She seemed startled. "Not sure what happened." Don't you understand: Larry isn't that kind at all. Maybe he could have quarrelved with Fat and had a fight over it. "That was about half past one?" "I think so." "I don't think go, I mean, I think Larry would like to be, but I'm sure Tony was crazy about Pat Thayer." "Mom! You did not tell me!" "Smm! Did you tell your brother that you and Pat were engaged?" "Sure I did." "No. I just didn't remember. I wasn't scared to tell him, though." "I don't believe you were . . . Tell me. Would Larry have been likely to recognize that ring? Did he know it pretty well?" "Yes, sir. It was my mother's." She rose and faced him, and for a second a womanly dignity seemed to have settled upon her. "Larry went to see him to make him stay away from you. He was mad when he went. Yet you think he didn't kill Thaver?" "You!" she cried sharply. "Will you tell me the truth about one thing, Mr. Hanvey? Have I helped my brother or hurt him?" "You've been listening!" "You've helped him, Ivy. I give you my word on that. You see, for the first time I not a little of the truth." "I'm sure of it, Mr. Hanvey, I larry couldn't stab a man. Anyone would tell you that." "Yeh, it's me," answered Reagan from the hallway. He watched her as she opened the door. He saw her give a start, and her slim figure stiffened. "they have," admitted Jim "And they were quite good. Miss Peyton and Miss Veronica." He rondebombonally "Tin much edified, you know." He said sport and they helped me a heap." "No'm, I haven't. Honest. I've just been waiting for Jim Hanvey." "Got any hunches?" "Any luck, Jim?" "I did." "Against who?" Iry withered him with a glance and stalked off down the hall. Reagan entered the room grinning. "Show him the knife?" "What did he say?" Harvey chuckled. "Everybody," he answered. Then: "Did you see Vernon?" "He said," answered Reagan, "that the knife is his!" (To be continued tomorrow) Union Fountain Sub-Basement, Memorial Union After Vacation It's a good habit to drop in at the CARS WASHED and LUBRICATED $1.25 Firestone SPECIAL for Friday Fillet of Haddock Corned Beef and Cabbage Veal Birds Buttered Fresh Carrots Spinach And Salads and Delicious Desserts All served on the 25c meal. THE CAFETERIA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23. 1953 PAGE THREE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE, KANSAS OUR PRICE Mat and Eve 15c VARSITY TONIGHT Janet Gaynor Charles Farrell "TESS OF THE STORM COUNTRY" Friday-Saturday-- ZANE GREY'S "Smoke Lightning" with George O'Brien Added Chapter 6 "Jungle Mystery" Arrives Sunday-- Moran and Mack The Two Black Crows "Hypnotized" PATEE WHERES BIG PICTURES PLAY NOW! ENDS SATURDAY Watch the Crowd Roar with Jimmy Comes Back With a Bang-Up Hit! JAMES CAGNEY 'Hard to Handle' Watch Him Put Those Hard to Handle Dames in Their Place — When He Turns on the Heat Also—Edgar Kennedy's Latest Comedy Panic Cartoon-News The Show of Shows The Show of Shows I'll be seeing you in 42ND STREET Owl Show 11:15 Saturday Make a Date With Her Now A Gorgeous Screen Spectacle of Beauty, Youth, Love, Laughter Melody, Song and Dancing Feet A rush dinner given by Phil Chi Theta was held at the Colonial tea room. Tuesday evening, Fifteen members and guests were present. The table was decorated with yellow flowers and candles. SOCIETY Mr. and Mrs. E, D. Kiney are in charge of plans for the dinner bridge at the University club Friday at 7 o'clock. Chti Delta sigma will entertain as dinner guests tonight Olver Sheklaur, c'38; Scherel Walquist, c'unc; and Maurie Pinklin, m'26. Francese Smith; Louise Ewerl; curet, *Avice Mi Bride*, c33; and Kailn Kirkendale, cunel were guests. Juanita Morse, b33; is president of the seror- Miss Everitt won the high prize and Miss Smith received the traveling prize at bridge. Mrs. F. T. Stockton, 720 Indiana street, will entertain the Verdredi club at her home tomorrow afternoon with luncheon and bridge. Invitations are extended to all Bapst young people and their friends for the George Washington party to be held at the home of Rev. Charles W. Thomas, 1124 Mississippi, tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock. There will be games and refreshments to carry out the colonial idea. Miss Fern Harris, Pauline Louise Belts, Mrs McCully, and C. Willet Willis will assist. The University Women's club will have as their guests at the next tea Thursday afternoon, March 2, the Uni- tween Club. The tea will be given at Myers hall. Mr. and Mrs. Phill Edwards, route six, announce the birth of a daughter Wednesday afternoon at Memorial hospital. Mr. Edwards, 29, was formerly a member of the University Daily School Board and is now the Lawrence Journal World. Mrs. Edwards, formerly Frances Shepherd, also attended the University of Kansas. Sigma Phi Epsilon elected as officers Monday night Charles Maharsley, c33; president; and Armand Bumpel, c34; vice president; James Murphy, c34; secretary Colinna, c34; were retained as secretary and copresident respectively. I Mr. Schofield graduated from the Stuart Armstrong Military academy, Staunton. Va He is now promoter for the Cur- publishing company at St. Joseph, Mo. Virginia Allison Blue of Tulsa, Okla, and Bernard A. Schoelfeld were married Saturday morning in Kansas City. The bribergeon is a former student of the University, where he was director of an orchestra under his name. All Star Values for Friday Feb. 24 Really Now You May Not Need a New Pair of Party Slippers, Just Take Them to--- THE ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP We have to be good to keep busy Phi Chi Theta Virginia Team, c'uncl, of Eappa Alpha Thea attended the Beta Pig dinner in Manhattan last night. Fil Chi Theta Gives Rush Dinner Blue-Schofield Marriage Death Calls Student Home Maxine Devlin, c3, of Turon, was called home Monday night because of an illness expected to return to school Monday. 49c 2 for 95c Broadcloth fabrics in meat par- ties that are fast color. Male to fit right. A dandy school shirt. SHIRTS SUITS $2.98 HATS Spring hats in the new pinter robes. Medium and narrow snap blim styles. Harmonizing and contrasting bands. These are suits that were formerly up to $18.90. Styles that will be popular this spring. Colors are in little detail. $12^{95} Gibbs Clothing Co. "WHERE CASH BUYS MORE" 81 U Mass. Attend "Happy Landings" - Monday and Tuesday TWO BOYS STEWING BACK A TRAILER TO LIFT THE BOOKS. Moving Hoover's Belongings From White House White House workers have started the huge task of removing all of the private property of President Hoover from the executive office in the White House. The photograph shows them loading a truck with crates to be shipped to Los Angeles. Chance to Earn Money Is Overlooked by 3000 Students With Activity Tickets Approximately 3,000 students fibbed themselves out of a chance to earn from $5.00 to $20.00 when they enrolled in the course. The Chancellor, announced today, When the men and women enrolled last Sept. they were handed a green folder containing the schedule offered by the Activity ticket for the school year. Later they were asked if they had read the entire folder. Everyone responded that they had read "did" asked Nichols as he pushed one of the folders across the desk. According to Nichols, not one solitary essay was entered. This contest was sponsored, Nichols said, for the bone- On one of the pages, and it was not the last page, was an announcement that an essay contest would be sponsored by the Activity Ticket Committee offering prizes ranging from five to twenty dollars. The requirements were that the entrant be the owner of an essay ticket, and the contest was red for Feb. 10. fit of those who had a fair writing ability and who desired to earn a part of their entrance fees. The final day of the contest arrived and passed. The team was announced, also came and left. Not one student did enter an essay. "This shows very plausibly," said Nichol, "that the students do not read the pamphlets which the University goes to a great experience to furnish, but through, I expect they will read even the root notes at the bottom of programs." GERMAN CLUB WILL PRESENT ONE-ACT PLAY MONDAY NIGHT Captive and Captor Meet Again "Einer Muss Heizen," a one-act German play concerning the complications causes when the will of the father decrees that one of the sons must murry, will be given by the German club, Monday, Feb. 27, in Fraser theater. The play will begin at 8:15 p.m. and all people invited are invited to 10 Private C. K. Sink, right, known as the only living private holding the Congressional Medal of Honor for distinguished services in the World War, was born on April 21, 1937 in Brooklyn, New York. Awarded with him is Heinrich Kühler whom Shack credited near Verdun on October 8, 1956, later with nine other German and two machine guns. A Poet Laureate Looks Over New York HOLY LORD attend. All of the parts will be in German. The play is under the direction of Professor E. F. Engel of the German department. The members of the cast and their parts are Jakob Zorn, Ralph Krause, Janice Dohm, Elias Dricher, c: 38; Gertrude, Villa Frieda, c: 34; Lulie, Ermn Erbmiddg, c: 37. Actor's Wife Is Killed Hollywood, Feb. 23—(UP) -Mrs. Antonio Moreno, wife of the former screen actor, was killed today when he automobile went off a cliff on Mulhallford drive, Rene H. Dussac, 21, driver of the car, was injured. Mrs. Moreno was just as the car turned over and her body landed at the bottom of the canyon. Want Ads Twelve-word words or less 1 level Nine-word words or less 2 level 6 inquiries, Large加数 ads WANT ADS ARE ACM- COMPANIED BY CASH Dr. A, R. Mansfield, superintendent of the Seamen's Church Institute of New York, pointing out some of the interesting sights of that city to John Mansfield, poet incarnate of England, and Mrs. Mansfield, who are visiting America. PLEASANT rooms for boys in com- fortable home at price you can afford to pay. Home cooked meals, all for week or work. 14th. Phone 2788. - 110 14th. Phone 2788. - 110 HAVE YOUR application photographs made at Moore Studio. 719 Mass. (upstairs-exclusive). Phone 964. -123 TRUNK KEYS, door keys, cur keys, Good locker padlocks, night latches, door closers repaired. Trewory & Rutter. 623 Vermont St. Phone 319 LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusively 1025 Mass. = DICKINSON = "Where Students Meet." NOW—LAST TIMES TODAY! By Request! EDDIE CANTOR in "THE KID FROM SPAIN" THE KID FROM SPAIN Comedy News - Paying Tomorrow - Saturday— 60 seconds of hell for a lifetime in heaven! "FROM HELL TO HEAVEN" ALL STAR Sun. - Men. - Tues. - Wed. — Shows Continuant: "THE SIGNS OF THE CROSS" Attend "Happy Landings" Feb. 27-28 ALL STAR OFFERINGS For Friday and Saturday All ★ Value Number 1 Tweed Topcoats $20.00 Quality Greys and Tans Sizes 33 to 42 Models for Men and Young Men $1275 All ★ Value Number LADIES' HOSE 59c Limited Quantity 79c quality. Chiffon and service weights. New spring colors. Sizes 8½ to 10½. All ★ Value Number 4 MEN'S SHIRTS Up to $2.50 quality. Collar attached and collar to match. Sizes 14 to 17½. All ★ Value Number 2 Worsted Suits $20.00 Quality Greys, Tans, Blues Sizes 35 to 46 Models for Men and Young Men 79c 2 for $1.50 $12^{75} All ★ Value Number 5 Special Lof of Men's HOLE PROOF SOX 35c Quality 4 for $1.00 All ★ Value Number 6 Special Lot of MEN'S FELT HATS Including Dobbs $2.95 All ★ Value Number 7 Special Lot of Wilson Bros. Super SHORTS and SHIRTS 50c Quality 35c—3 for $1.00 Ober's HEARTTOOPOUTMOTORS ISN'T THIS THE MOST IMPORTANT STATEMENT EVER MADE IN A CIGARETTE ADVERTISEMENT? 1 I IT IS A FACT, well known by leaf tobacco experts, that Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE tobaccos than any other popular brand. We actually pay MILLIONS MORE every year to insure your enjoyment. (Signed) R. J. REVNOLBS TOBACCO CO. Winston-Salem, N. C. PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23. 1933 3 JAYHAWK JABS By SID KROSS This is my vote for a niche on the Kansas campus being turned over to Glen Cunningham, the Kansas milker who has sent the name of Kansas from his home in Wichita. He last summer when the modest (and I mean just that—ask Chancellor Lindley, Bill Hargas, Brutus Hamilton) Kansas milker won third place on the national team. He was found to place, a howl from the East was heard all the way out to California. Led by Grantland Rice, the ace writers of the present day, Eastern sports authorities said that Venkel had an off day in the trials and the then unknown Glenn Cunningham, who had been in the trials, which was the last playoff game. Uncle Sam's mike team, should give his place on the team to Venkel, so that the U. S. could make a better showing in the final games. Those sport writers were not bashful about letting the daily rug get their thoughts and feelings of Kansas, including myself fairly burned up when they read the story. But it did not bother Glenn any as he went ahead to take four place in the international mile race, being the first American to finish. You would have thought that this would have made those Eastern sport writers keep their tongues from wagging in the future about Glenn's running. When the Eastern indoor race starts, Glenwil was invited to participate because they couldn't leave the best mile in the U. S. out of them. But do you think that the Eastern papers talked about this best miler from Kansas. Don't be foolish—all the Eastern papers could think of was that Venable would be able to avenge his old final trials last summer at Palo Alto and we were Ohioatic committee that they were right about Venable. It is now a matter of record that Cunningham took Verenke into camp on two consecutive mile races and then stepped out to show that he could compete with his 300-mile one distance, by winning an 800-mile run against the best in the country. After the first race the Naioma Amateur Union announced its United States team to tour Europe and despite the fact that Cunningham had been selected for the Womankeeper, the Wemmickian was picked to represent Uncle Sam in the mile. It is no "sour grapes" theory to say that the Kansan is better to be left at home because a trip like that might run even a good man. It is a series of one day stands, strange means of transportation, strange food, and everything new so that it may mean rain to a runner like Cunningham who has not reached his full development. And Cunningham will have opportunities next year to test track sports authorities will not be able to leave him off any United States track teams. Now I am down to my most important point and that is to take one swan in those Eastern sport writers and in one particular-Granland Rice. Most people have never broken until he twice defeated Venzele this month and Rice haven’t done it yet. Rice picks a man in most sport events and boosts him no matter what happens. Rice had personal interviews with Venzie and taking a liking to him started to be his greatest booster. When Venzie failed to make the Olympic team, he told the Penn men telling how he had an off day in the trials. Since the Olympics he has not said much about the mile but Wednesday of this week his column came out once again on the mile run and it was devoted not to Cunningham whose name is on the tip of Venzie's hat. He has defeated-Gene Venzie. Those of you who read that column know that he mentioned Cunningham's latest victories only once and devoted the rest of his column trying to explain Venzie's showing this year. Allow me to quote from his book: "I can see how we need to see how he works his way out of the slump that now holds him." So summing it all up from Rice's columns one would gather that Veneka has been in a slump ever since last summer and Cunningham has been ruthless for Veneka. Don't rush readers, it won't be long until the next joke appears. Send the Daily Kansan home. TIGER COACHES WILL SPEAK IN SOUTHWESTERN MISSOURI Members of the University of Missouri football staff will leave Columbia next Tuesday for a four-day trip through Southwest Missouri, which will include speeches and visits in six cities. Frank Carido, head coach of football, E. N. Sleight, assistant coach, and C. L. Brewer, director of athletics, will go first to Springfield. The three will speak at Nevada, Lamar, Carthage, Joplin, and Web City. Hargiss Lists Entries in Practice Track Meet Indoor Program Will E With Haskell Team Saturday Entries for Kansas in the practice indoor track meet with the Haskell Indiana Saturday at 3 vclock under the east stadium were announced today by the host team, and the scores of events as listed for the Big Six conference indoor meet at Columbia, Mo., March 11, will be run off. The meet will be free and the only one in which KU athletes will have the opportunity to participate prior to the conference meet. Kansas' prospects for the indoor season are only fair. Coach Hargiss will have five letter men available out of the 23 from last spring, and this number will be increased one by Jay Plumley, captain Clyde Coffman will not be available this spring because of scholastic deficiencies. It was doubtful he would compete as he planned to use his last year of competition next fall when he could play football. The letter man back for work are Captain Roy Trayton, head coach Paul Borel, Phil Beaty Hall Taylor, and Jay Pimpley. The entries for Saturday afternoon: Mile run — Panicack, Grist, Merzio, 40 yard dash — Hill, Plamley, Benson 30 yard dash — Hill, Plamley, Benson, Goy, Brommel, Brommel, Goy 60 yard low hurdles—Flick, Plumley, Weaver, Allison. bouser, McCoy, Gard. 60 yard high hurdles—Flick, Dumm Weaver. Weaver. 2 mile run—Johnson, Thomas, Ni 2 mile run—Johnson, Thomas, Nissunner Mile relay- Rogers, Gay, Graves Hall, Allianz, Plumley Pole Vault--Beauty, Graves, Shot out--Busch, Door, Biern Shot put—Beach, Dees, Riesen. High Jump—Dumm, Gard, Hall, Basketball—Hill Basket, Walt Broad jump—Hall, Plumley, Weavet Women's Intramurals Women's Intramurals Basketball Scores Announced The final standings for the women's basketball tournament are now completed and have been announced as follows. Sororities Gamma Phi Beta 78 Alpha Gamma Delta 66 Alpha Omega 60 Chi Omega 56 Alpha Chi Omega 56 Kappa Kappa Gamma 50 Alpha Xi Delta 48 Alpha Xi Delta 41 Alpha Xi Delta 39 Kappa Alpha Pta 0 Taura Phi Beta 0 Taura Phi Beta 0 Independents I, W. W, Cavin Wilford Indiana Ecowear N. F. 83 71 60 69 49 34 Ping Pong Tourney Ends Sheila Cutlip, Delta Zeta, who the women's ping pong tournament yesterday by defeating Elizabeth Hinshaw, Alpha Omicron Pt. The total scores of the tournamen now stand as follows: Alpha Omirenon Pi 76 Alpha Omirenon Delta 54 Alpha Canna Delta 81 Alpha Delta Pi 21 Alpha Delta Pi 19 Alpha Omiega 17 Kappa Kappa Gamma 16 Gamma Beta 15 Gamma Beta Theta 14 Pi Beta Phi 10 Theta Phi Alpha 11 Clio 10 A fencing tournament will be bea tonight by the members of the Fencing club, at 8 o'clock, in the fencing room of the Robinson gymnasium. The club invites the public to attend and benathive with seven people consist of several matches with four by both men and women members of the organization. Involvements I. W. W. 60 Watkins 42 Independents 42 T. N. T 18 Fencing Tournament Tonight Mary Elizabeth Edie and Carol Hunter will play Fern Baker and Margaret Walker in the finals of the desk tennis tournaments ineterminate—the winners of the tournament. Snowballs Halt Foreclosure Fairmont, Minn., Feb. 23—(UP)—A barrage of snowballs thrown by several hundred dirt farmers broke up an attempted mortgage foreclosure sale today, Snowhalls Halt Foreclosure Jayhawker Stars Lay Off As Squad Drills for Game Harrington and Johnson Rest as Coach Allen Prepares for Aggie Tilt URIE AND CURD PLAY With Bill Johnson and Paul Herturring, first string center and forward, taking a three-day layoff from practice under orders of Couch Forrest C. Allen, the Jayhawkers will go through another workout this afternoon in preparation for their crucial Big Six game with Kansas State at Manhattan on Tuesday. The expected to report for the final practice tomorrow night, although Dr. Allen indicated earlier in the week that they might not start against the Aggies. Aggies Going Strong Saturday night's game will determine just what chance the Jayhawkers have for the conference championship. A victory over Coach Coachsan't team would earn for Kansas the right to meet the Oklahoma Sooners here next week for the title. The two teams are playing in the Big Ten, six victories and two defenses each, with Missouri in third place, a game and a half behind the pace makers. That Kansas State will not prove an easy fee for the Jawahriers is indicated by the fact that the Ames have won their last four conference games without a single setback, climbing from 4-1 to 2-1. Coach Couch has a team of husky veterans that failed to strike its stride in time to remain in the championship running, Dalton, Skradski and Boyd have been playing a brand of basketball in recent encounters that forecents on the game when the team goes to Aarville. Uric and Curd See Action With Harrington and Johnson out of the lineup, Coach Allen this week has shifted Dick Wells to center, and has been using two sophomores, Ray Urie and Bob Curt, at forwards. These two men will undoubtedly see action Saturday midnight and the Kansas coach has joined in with defensive and defensive combinations all week. The possibility of a three-way tie for conference honors is seen if Kansas should leave to Kansas State and then come back to defeat Oklahoma next week. Missouri, by winning the remainder of her games, could finish the season with seven victories and three losses. Oklahoma to defeat Nebraska in the final game of the season a week from Saturday to share the honors. MAT AND TANK MEET DRAWS KANSAS HIGH SCHOOL STAR Mantahattan, Feb. 23—(Special)-High schools of Kansas will compete for state wrestling and swimming holidays Friday and Saturday, Feb. 24 and 25 in Nicholasville here. The meet, an annual affair, is sponsored by the state high school athletic association and entries are re-registered to E. A. Thomas, its secretary, at Topkapi. The high school athletes will finish up their competition Saturday afternoon, to clear the decks for the Kansas State University of Kansas basketball game which finishes the home season here that night. Pai Chi, national psychology fraternity, held an election of new members this week. The following were elected to active membership: Miriam Murray, E. C. Thoromar, Irene Teubner, E. C. Thoromar, Midrid Fisher and Robert Black Renew Fight on B. G. Owen Norman, Okla. Feb. 23.-(UP) A renewed fight on biennie G. Owen, athletic director at the University of Oklahoma, was brewing today as members of the University Board of Regents gathered here for a meeting. Although backers of Owen who has been with the institution for 26 years, said they considered his position more secure than it had been for years, those opposing him said the question of his remaining would be taken either today or at the next meeting of the board. Owen was a student at the University of Kansas from 1889 to 1900, and is the holder of four letters in sports here. Sooner Board of Regents to Discuss Position of Athletic Director PSI CHI ELECTS NEW ACTIVE AND ASSOCIATE MEMBERSHI Those elected to associate membership were: Nadine Weber, Mona Simpson, Julia Markham, Carl Peterson, Crichton Miller, Louise Evinstein, Madeleine Dumford, Vivian Andrews, Dorothy Johnson, Robert Barnhardt, Robert Cory, James Williams, Carol Spencer, and Arthur Coll. Proposes to Drop Athletics Dodge City, Feb. 23—(UP) —Athletics will be eliminated from Ford county schools if suggestions in a resolution to the Board of County taxpayers' league are followed. Educational Program May Be Cut in Ford County The resolution asks also that teaching of manual training and home economics be suspended. By its terms, principals and superintendents would be made to do classroom work in addition to their regular assistance of clerks or secretaries. The resolution states that its suggestions are in line with other tax relief movements afoot in national and state legislatures at a time when "the people are moving to more affordable housing" Ford county, Kansas, are suffering financial destitution as never before." Swimming Races Start Men's Intramurals Four events were held in the first day of the intramural swimming meet last Tuesday. The 50-yard dash and the 50-year back stroke were both won by Pihi Gamma Delta. Beta Theta Pi and out ahead in the medley relay. The 100-yard dash, 100-yard back stroke, and diving events were held this afternoon, and tomorrow the 200-yard relay and 220-yard are to be run The results of Tuesday's events: 50-yard dash: Individual winner, Snyder, D. U. Time, 29.8. Team winner, Phi Gam, Team average, 30.3 (Chain, 30. Clemens, 30.6). Second, Clemens, 31.4 (Ryan, 29.8. Ryan, 33). Third, Signa Na. Team average, 31.8 (Fountain, 32.2. Marshall, 31.4). Fourth, Beta, 32.2. Marshall, 31.4). Fourth, Beta, 41.7 (Kennett, 41.4). Nil- 50-vard back score: Individual winner, Alexander, Phi Giam team. 33:4, Team winner, Phi Giam team. Team average. Second, D. U. Team average. 40, (Ryan. 36:8, Snyder. 45), Third, Triangle, team average. 41, (Thorne. 40,2, Cheney. 42,8), Fourth, Beta, Triangle. 41, (Redenck. 41,4, NHals. 42) Plunge Individual winner, Strawn, Sigma Nu. Distance, 46 feet 3 inches, Team winner, Beto. Team average, 42 feet 5 inches, Benoit. Team average, 39 feet 10 inches, Renick, 44 feet 6 inches). Second, Sigma Nu. Team average, 41 feet 10 inches (Strawn, 37 feet 3 inches), Michele Team average, 37 feet 4 inches) Adams, 40 feet, Synder, 35 feet 3 inches). Fourth, Pii Gai. Team average, 34 feet 8 inches, Benoit. Team average, 6 feets, Chair, 33 feet 10 inches). Medley relay: Winner, Triangle; second, Beta; third, Phi Gam; fourth, D. II Points obtained by the teams to date: Acacia, D. G. U., 21; Beta, K. Zappa, Sigma Ngu, 17; Triangle, B. Theta Tau, Kayhawk, 1. The Sigma Alpha Epsilon 'B' defeated the Kayhawk 'B' last night 33 to 29. The following is footed the team 29. The following is the box score: Kayhawk B-29 FG FT Newton, f 4 0 Varner, v 4 0 Thomas, c 4 3 Vickey, v 4 3 Johnson, g 2 0 Totals 13 13 F Sigma A Epsilon B—33 FT Dunn, f 8 0 Reeder 8 0 Javix, f 0 0 Dillon, f 0 0 Stollenberg, g 4 0 Breuner, g 4 0 Totals Referee—Affleck. Final Drawings Made Drawings for elimination of the five leaders in the 'B' division of intramural basketball have been made, according to Edwin R. Elbel, director of intramurals. The present leaders of 'B' division are Phi Gam, S. A. E. Kappa Sigma, Kayhawk, and Jayhawk. Kaylor, Jayhawk, and Kappa Sigma were matched, Jayhawk drew a bye for the first games in the elimination match. The winners of these games will then draw to determine who will play the Jayhawks; the winner of that draw and the winner of the game will play the final game. The games will start to light at 10 o'clock. KFKU Thursday. Feb. 23 6 p.m. Athletic Interview: Al McCue American Red Cross representative. Friday. Feb. 24 2:50 p.m. Music appreciation period with Professor C. S. Skilton *accommodation* with Professor C. S. Skillis, 6 p.m. The so-called Japanese Doctrine in the Far East, Ernest D. Tyler, extension instructor in history 6:15 p.m. Musical program arranged by professor, associate professor of violin Probe Bern's Death Los Angeles, Feb. 23 — (UP) The county grand jury today began investigations of the death last Labor day of Paul Born. Professor Smith III W. R. Smith, professor of education was unable to meet his classes today because of illness. Wildcat Quintet Battles for Third Place Position layhawker Game Saturday Will End Home Season for Agries Manhattan, Feb. 23 — (Special — There will be no anti-clinic in the Kansas State College basketball season, even though the early-season slump put the Wildcats out of all but a mathematical chance for the conference victory here Saturday night not only ends the home season, but comes after the Wildcats have come up out of the conference cellar with four consecutive victories after four consecutive defeats and have a chance to finish in the up-and-coming finals. The University's team is much stronger than in the early season, when at least one of Kansas State's victories was obtained simply by concentrating on Harrington and Johnson. Wells, Schaikos, Gray, and other members of the team were making working things, making the team a 5-man rather than a 2-man threat. Kansas State likewise has become very much a 5-man team team in its recent games. In the past five contests, four in the conference and one out, and all K. S. C. victories, Hugh Powell scored. Scoring among other regulars found Boidy with 27 points, Dalton with 24, Breen 22 and Captain Skradski 19. Skradski was one of the first five in the conference at mid-season, but sacrificed his chance at individual honors in the team's teams' defense from a award position. After the Kansas game, Kansas State meets one more conference opponent, Missouri, at Columbia, on March 4. This game may decide whether Tiger or Wildcat will occupy third place in the final Big Six standings, though at the end of the season,ference once the Tigers still have a good chance to finish in a tie for first. Jailing of Japanese Resented Jailing of Japanese Resented Salmins, Calif., Feb. 25—(UP) Protects the of Japanese consul general of France low countrymen who carried a machine gun brought the possibility of international complication today. District Attorney Henry Neoln ordered T. A. Mbya in jail until he could investigate his possession of a machine gun, a gun a rifle, and ammunition which he had been exhibiting to fellow countrymen. The San Francisco consul logged protest. EXTRA SPECIAL A $1.00 Bottle Lucky Tiger Tonic 49c AT Coe's Drug Stores 411 W. 14th — 1347 Mass. "At Your Feet" From the Source of Style Comes the decree of Snakeskins for early spring! Grey Snakeskin pump in high cut style. $7.50 Trim ties in grey or beige Snakeskin. $6.85 TUXEDO --- WEAVER'S Dorsey-Liberty Post of the American Legion PRESENTS "HAPPY LANDINGS" After a four-months tour in France. AT LAWRENCE MEMORIAL HIGH SCHOOL Monday & Tuesday Feb.27-28 8:15 o'clock ADMISSION 50 Cents This play was produced and staged by Prof. Allen Crafton in France and was one of the few shows that had the approval and support of General Pershing and army headquarters. Now you have the opportunity to see this same show with the best talent from the Hill and town in the cast. See the original show that entertained the boys in France. You will like it. Tickets for sale by Legionnaires and at the Round Corner Drug Store. A partial list of the cast include the following from the Hil Creation Calliban Strawn Nuckles Rise Caldrewer Paterson Kennel Arbella Reynolds Kerr Inge Davis Stewart Harker UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXX JAPANESE DEFY LEAGUE REPORT BY WITHDRAWAI Assembly Stunned When Delegation of Nipponese Leaves Meeting After Adverse Resolution 'WE WON'T BE BACK' Geneva, Feb. 24.-(UP) -The Japanese delegation, delegating world opinion, withdrew from the League of Nations assembly today after the assembly had adopted a report blaming Japan for events in Manchuria. Formal Resignation by Far Eastern Nation Is Expected Later The stunned international conclave, representing every nation on earth, sat in silence while the delegation led by the dapper Yusuke Matsuoka clad in black walked from the hall. The crowd broke into chants of support and applauded a formal resignation from the league is expected to be filed later. "We are not coming back," Matsuoka said simply. The assembly's report recommending that Japan withdraw her troops and restore the country to Chinese services, which was the subject of voting against it. Paul Hymans, presiding, announced it was unanimous, since the vote of interested parties does The session, which made history signifying the final break between the League and one of the world's major superleagues, on Monday the rallied was called, delegate after delegate voted for the resolution. When China was called, there was a slight sift of expectancy and W. W. Yen, Chinese delegate, firmly answered "yes." Japan had also called for the vote. As the suka's decisive "no" could be clearly heard in all parts of the hall. Troops Retreat After Battle, Leaving Japanese in Control CHINESE DENY DEFEAT Peiping, China, Feb. 24 — (UP)— China troops stubbornly contesty every foot of ground formed new lines in the backtracks from which in which assaults on both sides were reported heavy. Chayang is 30 miles from Peipao near the eastern border of China. Art Collection on Display Department of Design Exchange Exhibits of Student Work The Chinese denied they had been defeated, claiming they had made a strategic withdrawal to consolidate their lines. The retreat left the Japan-controlled area on a railroad from Peijo to Nanling, where fighting was especially severe. This exhibition represents an exchange of art work between the two schools. The University department of design is today sending to the Oklahoma college a collection of designs representing textile studies, stenling illustrations and other works will be shown in Stilwater for two weeks beginning Monday, Feb. 27. A collection of art work sent by the Oklahoma Agriculture and Mechanical College at Stillwater, is now on display in the exhibition room, 120, of the department of design. The designs are fantastic and are all based on imagination rather than representative of natural forms. Beaten metal work and forms of handcraft done by students of the Okayama University in room 320. Box designs, many done by the batik process, can also be seen. Such work is done by waxing portions of the design and by sealing them to remove the wax. The room will be open to the public from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day with the exception of Saturday and Sunday. DR. DE LANGE WILL LECTURE AT UNITARIAN CHURCH FRIDA The Christian Science organization at the University of Kansas has secured Dr. Hendrick J. de Lange of The Church for the position of dean. Dr. de Lange is a member of the Board of Lectureship of the mother church, the First Church of Christ, Scientist in Boston. The lecture will be given at the Christian church this evening at clock. Dr. de Lange's subject will be "Christian Science: the Science of Spiritual Understanding." The public is invited to attend. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1933 Kansan Reporter Gets Low Down on High Ups of Movie Stardom Movie royalty arrived in town this morning for a short stopover on their way to the president's inauguration in Washington. Tom Mix, Lloe Carrillo, Lyle Talbot, Bette Davis, Laura LaPlante and others prominent in the film brought their most bewitching smiles while their silver plated train waited. Thousands of fans including the American Legion and the Lawrence High School bands welcomed the star at the Santa Fe Station. Aloof from the rabble of those who sought a glimpse of their favorite actor, was a University Dilly Kanai reporter. When the straitjacket into Lawrence, were mowed by a car, La Plante is a fortunate member of the Kansan repertory staff. Boarding the train in Topeka with his reportorial credentials, the Univer- 'Japan Is Fast Plunging to Doom'Says V.C.Nash "Japan is plunging to its doom, and the price of its doom will be paid by the vast masses of Japanese who have no voice in their government." These were the words of Vernon C. Nash, who has for the last year been in the journalism department at the University of Missouri as exchange professor. Mr. Nash is also in the department of journalism at Yenching University, Beijing, China. Head of Yencheng Journalism School Speaks to Classes Here Mr. Nash spake in the journalism department this morning to classes in Editorial, Elements of Advertising, and Advertising Conv. In his talks he said that the end of the present crisis in China would probably come within the next few months with the economic collapse of Japan. He said that it will be made will probably call upon Japan to pay for the damage they have wrought in China. The question is: Will Japan be able financially to pay? Mr. Nash described conditions in Japan as being very bad. The yen was weak and American dollars are american money, is now worth something less than 20 cents. In 1900 the population of Japan was approximately thirty million, now it is approximately seventy million, which is an increase over a million a year. Mr Nash said, that in his opinion, bird nesting is the solution of Japan's pollution problem. "The Japanese attack on Shanghai about a year ago, was the expression of a huge monster striking out because it was carrying out an unfortunate strangled out of it," said Mr. Nash. NUMBER 109 Mr. Nash pointed out, however, that before condemning Japan too severely, it would be interesting to see what policy the United States would follow if trouble should arise in Panama, or what the British would do if an uprising should occur along the Suez canal. Federal Agents Investigate Alleged Plot to Press False Money New York, Feb. 24—(UP)–Federal agents working secretly today were reported widening their search for the "higher ups" in an alleged plot to flood the United States with Counterfeit money manufactured in Soviet Russia. The task of unraveling the plot has been difficult. It has entailed an intricate investigation of various cities. Agents now believe, it was reported at the federal building, they definitely hareed the origin of $100,000 in $100 bills to Russia. New York, Feb. 24, —(IIP)—Wilham H. Woodin, newly appointed secretary of the treasury in the Rosewell cabinet, said yesterday his policies until敛 off the debt were "mild wood and keep quiet." Besieged for interviews and his particular statements of policy on inflation or "sound money." Woodin received some $16 million and genially but flatly refused to discuss those or any other fiscal matters. The counterfeiting was clever and executed on a big scale. The money usually was passed without question. UNTIL AFTER INAUGURATION Turning aside all questions on banking and finance he chatted pleasantly of his brief newspaper experience when as a young man he acted as correspondent of the New York Herald and London Times in the Near East, witnessing Armenian massacres and "almost going with Kitchner to Khartoum." WOODIN WILL 'KEEP OUIET scribe scribe was welcomed into the caravan of stars from a by a Mr. Selzer of the Warner Brothers picture company. The young newspaperman was accorded the courtesy due one in his position and to the various actors on the train. "Will you have breakfast?" asked Mr. Selzer in the tone of a man who is used to command. "Sure," answered the reporter, not to be outdone in clever repartee. hand to a passing, while-coated waiter "Will you sit here please?" the movie executed ask. "That's fine. Now, I will tell you that you have a partner for me." Mr. Selzer smiled, then waved his hand to a passing, while-coated waiter. "Miss La Plante, will you dine with this young man, yes please?" And of course Miss La Plante would not miss Miss La Plante in the company of a young undergrad. Mr. Selzer turned and surveyed the car fall of screen beauties like a sultan making a selection for a visiting prince. Finally his eye alighted on the palo, blond beauty of Laura *a* Plante. Oh yes, the reporter was Kerneth Sieum and he will be open for a personal account of his experiences any after midnight, if you can find him. So it went, one half hour of pleas- ant experiences that will not be for- glected by the Kansas reporter for many years. Ms. La Pine and many others on the tour, not to speak or a life-like photo of Bette Davis who caused every-one at the station to utter sight of con- sideration. She had a morning for anyone, eh what. Dorsey Post to Present Play Written by Crafton Happy Landings' Cast Includes Several Hill Performers Performers On Monday and Tuesday nights of next week the American premiere of "Happy Landing," a show written and produced by Professor Allen Crafton of the department of speech and dramatic arts while he was an officer with the air force, conducted by the audition of Lawrence high school by Dorsey-Liberty Post of the Legion. Every night this week a cast of about 40 has been rehearsing in the Little Theater in Fraser hall to make this presupposition more believable given in France in the spring of 1919 when a home armykid had to be entertained when the end of fighting had ended. Professor Crutton has spared no effort to show the theater roars of Lawrence just what entertainment the A.F.E. provides for itself. The east is all male and has been hand picked and coached throughly. Uniforms have been nee- tored and painted exactly as it was in France, and the music and jokes will be the same. Gaul, as far as the American army was concerned, was divided into three parts, the zone of the armies which meant the battle front, the S.O.S. which was the services of supply, and the ceiling, which in aviation terms means the sky, or that part of it that could be seen through the clouds of airy France. Those troops stationed at the front, looked down upon those in the S.O.S. and even the aviators. Several University persons who have taken part in hill dramatic productions are in the "Happy Landing" cast. They are Professor Crafton, Professor Caldwell, Aberkerr, George Calhoun, Drillan, William Ingge, Farell Strawn, David Willis and Dacki Rohle Nucllex, Glaser Reynolds, James Harker, Glarner Stewart. Several movies in recent years have shown the horror of war between armed nations. "Happy Landings," the title of which was taken from the salutation of fliers to others who were to seek the enemy in battle, is produced to show how the man took their hardships. As a result, the S.O.S. was the barb of many a joke in soldier plays and so was the Y.M.C.A., welfare organization. M.P.'s who were the military police, did not escape from the sarcasm of the combat troops. Tickets may be secured at the Round Corner Drug store or from any member of Dorcey-Liberty Post. Dunleys to Give Dance Number A dancer to be given by Joe and Elizabeth Dunley will be a special number in the Tau Sigma舞女巡演. These two talented musicians will perform dance which has never been used before in a recital here: a Shaun-Shawn number, the plastic or posing type of dance. Ways-Means Body Ready to Present Appropriation Bill Committee Would Provide $1,787,500 for University; Decrease of $586,500 ROSEDALE GETS $270,500 Topeka, Feb. 24- (UP) - Under terms of the completed appropriations bills ready for introduction by the university committee, a total of $3,334,250 was to be provided for Kansas educational institutions for the coming biennium. The proposed apportionment figures are $622,750 less than the budget director's recommendations for the Provision for the University of Kansas includes: targets and possible get director's recommendations for the coming biennium. Salaries and wages ... $615,000 $615,000 $1,250,000 wages ... 191,250 191,250 382,500 Repairs and improve- ments ... 45,000 45,000 90,000 Chevron's contingent health ... 250 250 500 Geological survey ... 10,000 10,000 20,000 Repairs, Fowler labs shops ... 7,000 ... 7,000 Repairs, Dyche ... 57,500 ... 57,500 ... $1,787,500 1933-4 1934-5 Total Saturates and wages $ 86,250 $ 86,250 $ 172,500 Maintenance 46,500 46,500 83,000 Repairs and Total $1,18,300 For Bell Memorial Hospital at Kansas City, Kan.: Salaries and ments 2,500 2,500 5,000 Total $ 270,500 For the Kansas State College a Manhattan, the bill provides $1,871,000 with an appropriation of $2,671,582 two years ago, and a budget director's recommendation of $2,156,754 for this biennium. Cosmopolitan Club, Robinson gymnasium, 12 p.m. 300,000 The University (Lawrence) appraisal of the $1,787,500 is more than a half million less than the $2,374,000 of two years ago, and nearly a quarter million less than the $2,021,250 recommended by the budget director. The recommendation was that the award was $295,300 and the recommendation for this biemium was $136,000. Kansas—Unsetted tonight, followed by generally fair Saturday. Cooler tonight, and in east and south portions Saturday. The proposed item for repair of Fowler shops at the University covers fire loss of last summer, and the item for Dyche museum is to make safe the building housing the University's natural history collections. This building was used for the University instruction, is visited by thousand of Kansans yearly. The Plummer bill to abolish the Board of Regents, and return control of the state's institutions of higher education was killed in the house yesterday. To Play With Stage Liners AUTHORIZED PARTIE Friday, Feb. 24 Baptist Young People's Union, 1124 Mississippi, 11 p.m. Johnson, who will complete his college career here against University of Oklahoma next Friday night, is ex-team captain for the Stage Lions who are holding second place in the Missouri Valley basketball race and who are already listed as a contender. WEATHEK William Johnson, University of Kansas basketball center, will play with the Kansas City Stage Lions team in the national American Athletic Union tournament to be hold at Kansas City on March 6. It was announced last night. ... Johnson Will Compete in American Athletic Union Tournament Although the Stage Liners have no scheduled games before the tournament play begins, the three games necessary for Johnson's eligibility will be arranged, according to Art Marshall, manager of the team. Mu Alpna, house, 12 p.m. Saturday. Feb. 25 Varsity, Memorial Union, 10 to 12. OUR HOME AGNES HUSBAND. Dean of Women First Home Debate Tuesday The first home debate of the year for the University of Kansas will be held next Tuesday, Feb. 28, at 8:30 in Fraser theater. Kansas will meet a team from the University of Texas on the question: Should we cancel the war debts. Texas will uphold the affirmative side of the question. Cancellation of War Debt Will Be Topic for Argument Both teams are composed of veteran debaters and the question is one that has many debatable points both pro- and con. A team of presidents of Frank Knapk of San Antonio and Surgeon Bill of Houston. Knapp is a member of Delta Sigma Rho, national debating society, and is debating a variety of topics in Texas team. Bell is also a member of Delta Sigma Rho and a four-year-debate man. In addition, he is captain of the debate squal of the University of Texas and is a senior in the Law School there. Kansas will be represented by Charles Hacker, c'33, and Clement Hall, l'33. Both are members of the Law School and both have had former experience in debate on the University of Kansas squad. The judges for the debate will be: Marston McCluggage, coach at debate at the Lawrence High School; General Douglas B. Stevens, Douglas county attorney. Elizabeth Arden Named to Pick Beauty Queens New York Expert Will Select Six of Thirty Submitted Submitted John Berkebile, editor of the Jayhawker, this afternoon announced that Elizabeth Arden, famed beauty expert at Braunfeld, has hired Jayhawkier beauty queens this year. "Berklebe gave several reasons for choosing Miss Arden as judge. "The Jayhawkman has been criticized in the media for being too soft on real judgments of beauty. We expect Miss Arden to do the best job of critical judging ever done up to now." Last year the judges were Ben Batt, Katie Daly and Balleyo, and Walter Winchell. Berkebile said the Jayhawker would be out around May 15. Hold Election of Officer Civil Engineers Explain Function and Purpose of Society to Freshmen Officers were chosen at the meeting of the American Society of Civil Engineers last night at Marvin Hall. Murray A. Getz, c33; was elected president; E. Hands, c34; via Research E. Hands, c34; Peter Dewey, c33; treasurer; Rox Hunter, c33;代表 to the Engineering Council; Ray Hunter, senior representative; Ted Downs, junior representative; Carl Kindswater and William Carter, sophomore representatives; and Edwin Phelps and John McNewn, freshman represent- Professor W. C. McNew acquainted the freshman engineers with the functions and purpose of the society and the work that such was one of the first to be organized. Professor F. A. Russell gave a tribute to Professor McNewen, he, who said, had done much to keep the Society out of politics. Refreshments in keeping with the Washington spirit were served. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS HEAR THREE UNIVERSITY SPEAKER Three speakers entertained the American Institute of Electrical Engineers at the meeting last night in Marvin villa Dr. J. D. Stranathan of the physics department spoke on the "Special and General Concepts of the Theory of Relativity". Professor J. M. Kellogg disgusted by the use of meeting departments. E. B. Youngstrom e3, related his observation of minin in Arizona. The institute voted unanimously to back the engineering exhibit in the latter part of April. Each senior member was given a book entitled, "Developments in the Electrical Industry During 1923." The faculty recital of Mrs. Alice Moncrieff, of the School of Fine Arts scheduled for Monday, has been postponed because of the illness of Dean Dawn Moncrieff, a corporate date for Mrs. Moncrieff's recital will be announced later. BUEHLER NAMES STUDENTS TO TAKE PART IN DEBATE Professor E. C. Buehler has announced that Morris Hildreth, c134, and Robert Fery, c1unc, will represent the University of Kansas in a debate with the University of Florida on March 15. The tentative plan is to hold this debate before an audience at St. Mount Scholastica Academy, Attichion. Donald Hults, 133, and Harold Harding, 134, will represent the University of Kansas in the radio debate to be held tomorrow night over station KM BC. They will debate two former Kansas debaters, Kenneth Jordon, T24, and Charles Hassett, 132, who are now practicing law in Kansas City, Mo. Pepper Martin Turns Crooner CONDENSED WIRE NEWS Moratorium on Farm Mortgages Pepper Martin turns Croneer Oklahoma City, Feb. 24—UPH) (Jen Pepper) Martin this weekend joins the ranks of famous athletes who have gone croneer. The Oklahoma boy who was the star of the televised sing to sing over the radio this weekend. He plays his own accoumniment. Plane Murder and Suicide Probed San Benita, Texas, Feb. 24 (UUP) The murder of a 33-year-old flyin- structor in a plane 1,000 feet above the earth, and the subsequent suicide of his pupil today figured in the investigation of an international liquor swagging ring, it was indicated how he planned to steal planes' airports under scrutiny of the investigation board. Senate Votes on Restriction Moratorium on Farm Mortgages St. Paul, Feb. 24- (UP)-(UPC) FLOYD Boyd B. Colson today proclaimed a new moratorium that restricts mortgages until May 1 and asks the legislature to enact measures extending refi- Senate Votes on reinstitution Nelah, Nicb, Feb. 24 — (UP) The Nebraska state senate yesterday by a vote of 53-19 approved for final action a proposal to resubmit the Nebraska prohibitory law to the electorate of the state in 1934 Organ Recital This Sunday Simpson to Present Works of Bach Interpreting the Christian Year The sixth Vesper Organ Recital will be played this Sunday at 4 p.m. in the University auditorium by Prosecco, Sir Simpson, of the School of Fine Arts. He will play several works by Bach in which is depicted the Christian year as seen by the composer. The Christian year, according to the works of Bach, begins with the "Advent" which is followed by "Christmas." In successive stages as the year passes come "New Year's Eve," "New Year's Day," "Good Friday," "Easter," and on so through "Pentecost." Each event helps devoers to put into music the festival feeling of the peoples of the earth as each holiday or Holy Day arrives and passes. This is the first time such a collection of works by Bach have been played on one concert and played on the Hill. Dramatic Season to Close 'Sauce for the Gander' Last Play to Be Given This Year "Sauce for the Gander," the play which won the award offered by the Kansas players for the best drama turned in by a Kansas writer during the recent Kansas Author's contest, is to be presented March 20, 21, 22, under the auspices of the Kansas Play a comedy of midwestern life, will be presented by the Kansas Players. Troubles for "Sauce for the Gander" were held yesterday at Green Hall. A few of them have already begun in Fraser剧 theater about Wednesday. All the regular members of the Kansas Player will have roles in this play which is to close the season. arts. Ruby Philips Bramwell, of Bellville, who is the author of "Sauce for the Garden," is a former student of the University. The University of Kansas alumni living in Omaha will meet and organize soon. A letter from Jack Dressler, 29, of Fredwells secretary, to the Alumni association, says the alumni there have been trying to organize for some time but due to the lack of many names they are unable to do so. A list of names and addresses is being made out and will be mailed to them soon. Omaha Alumni to Organize MAYOR CERMAK HAS ONE-IN-TEN CHANCE TO LIVE Condition of Chicago Mayor Complicated by Hypo- static Lang, According to Physicians HAS RESTLESS NIGHT Heart Action Is Only Fair; Causes Anxiety at Times; Circulation Good Miami, Feb. 24—(UP) -Motor Anton Jami, Crik of the German city, victim of a bullet from the gun of Guisseuse Zangaura, in Brooklyn, when the report was reopened. Revoltell, was reported no death today. The mayor's condition, complicated by edits and a hypo-static lung condition, the forerunner of pneumonitis, was reported the past 48 hours and this morning. Dr. Frank Jirkra gave him "one chance in 10 to live." His staff of physiians, which includes both lungs and stump, would help to stimulate his resistance during the crisiis. Oxygen was used to assist his weakened heart action. Dr. Jirkra is the mayor's non-law. Dr. Frederick Grassner and the following baltic at 10:30 a.m. "Mayer Cormak has a restless night. The colitis continues to cause him distress. His heart action is only fair and at times causes anxiety; however, his circulation is good and the congestion of lungs has become much less. Comfortable condition is considered satisfactory, but he is not yet out of danger." Lefschetz Gets Appointment Professor Was Faculty Member at University of Kansas 12 Years Dr. Solomon Lefschetz, former faculty member of the University of Kansas, has just been appointed to the Henry Burhair Fine chair of mathematics at the Princeton university, where he served in the mathematics department since 1982 according to word just received in Lawrence. He succeeds Prof. Oswald Veblen, who recently resigned to become a member of the Institute of Advanced Study. Dr. Lefschitz served on the faculty of the University of Kansas in mathematics department from 1913 to 1923, following two years at Nebraska. Dr. Lefchetz is remembered by Kanasa as a person of unusual determination and ability, for he has achieved greatness by fighting against the greatest adds that a mathematician could hope to encounter. He last both of his hands in a chemical explosion when he discovered the mathematical calculating as well as all other "handpowered" work with the help of mechanical pegs for fingers Small Bombs Scare Havana Reports of Attempted Revolution Spread; Police Deny Trouble Havana, Feb. 24.-(UP)—Bombing in Havana early today and disruption of communication lines led to an entirely unconfirmed report that a revolutionary movement had started against the government of President Gerardo Machado. A small bomb exploded near the monument on the Malecon, Havana's beautiful neatrent drive dedicated to the victims of the Maine disaster. A dance at the Centro Asturiano, a Spanish society here, was broken up by the explosion of several small children. "Petards," small torpedoes, and pointed out that there was no damage or injury despite the fact that one exploded in the pocket of Artemio Portuno, a police officer. One policeman was slightly burned. INSULL ENDEAVORS TO FORCE PERSONAL TESTIMONY; FAILS Toronto, Ont., Feb. 24- (UF) -A motion by which counsel for Martin J. Insull, former Chicago utilities magnate, sought to force the appearance of her witness against him was dismissed by the Court Justice Court A, C. K. Cantineau. Justice Kingstone informed defense counsel, however, that he would grant every opportunity for them to cross-claim their contention against Insult in Chicago or would allow them to offer further proof of their contention that some statements made by the Justice Kingston PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24. 1933 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Editor-In-Chief ... PAUL V. MINEb Alfreda Brookeback Howard Turtnard Managing Editor SINDNEY KROSS Campaign Editor MARGARET GREET Competition Editor NATALIE MARGELTOWN Marketing Manager NATALIE MARGELTOWN Telephigh Editor ARIEL KECKUMAN Art Director KECKUMAN Chief Columnist CHRONI CLEMAN Society Editor CHRONI CLEMAN Kochere Editor MAUREEN BROWN Mature Brown Editor DORSELL Smith Sunny Editor DOREN Smith ADVERTISING MGR. MARIAGEH INCE Robert Whitman...Margaret Jeen Cole...Michael Lefkowitz Bishop Kron...Mary Millington Bill McIntyre...Alfresco Brooch Ira McIntyre...Arnold Brecksen Arnold Brecksen...Davis Smith Joshua Smith...David Smith Published in the afternoon, five times a week, on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Texas at Austin, in the Press of the Department of Journalism. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1933 Subscription price, $4.00 per year, payable in advance. Single empire, be each. Enter as second-class matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrences, Kansas. MORE SPEED! MORE THRILLS Results of a questionnaire which was issued to fans at the Kansas-Iowa State basketball game last week showed that followers of the sport think the game is still too slow. They would like to see more dribbling, more speed, more thrills, more action, in the game which already is one of the fastest sports in the world. Although more rules to speed up the game might furnish some additional thrills to spectators, the question should also be considered from the standpoint of the players. So many rules for making the sport faster have already been adopted that basketball is now even more strenuous than football. It has become a game which so tries the players that they are shaken and exhausted at the end. Even those who train conscientiously are unable to play an entire game at full speed if they do not happen to have exceptionally rugged constitutions Already the sport has progressed to the stage where many believe that it takes too much time for a student. If it were made even more strenuous we should have a condition in which the tail actually did wag the dog. Furthermore, it would probably be necessary for each school to have two or three teams of substitutes, for the regulars could not lost out an entire game. The usual political argument is one in which two people quarrel about something of which neither knows anything and which ends in each thinking the other knows nothing. SOMETHING WORTH HEARING The University debate team has a schedule reaching as far as Florida. Among the squads to be met this spring are South Dakota, Florida, Texas, Missouri, and St Louis Universities. The Kansas teams have gained a nation-wide reputation by their debating ability. This was brought out recently when Fred Anderson, a former member of the Kansas team, was selected as one of the members of the Missouri Valley debate team to go to Georgia. Isn't this reputation a good reason why students should support the University teams by attending their debate held on the Hill? Quite evidently the Japanese are confusing the League's "Cease!" for "Size!" IT'S UP TO US NOW Like a tired mother, who, weaning of the constant whining of her children demanding that they be allowed to go out and play, gives in, so congress has finally answered the pleas of the people to be given the privilege of deciding for themselves whether beer shall become a legalized part of their daily diet. Since the beginning of the controversy which caused congress to place the decision in the hands of the voting public, there has been a constant agitation for the movement that has just been taken. Members of Congress are not passing the buck this time. The people have made it so apparent that they felt the decision should be left up to them that they have rightfully been given that chance. But the wets' battle is only starting. The drys are for the first time meeting their real test. All that has gone before has been the important but wearisome details always necessary in preparing for question of such moment as the liquor problem. The people have seven years to decide. They must have their answer before then if they are to prove their competence to undertake legislative duties of this kind. MORE THAN ENTERTAINMENT One of the most progressive industries in the United States, that of motion picture production, has only recently been regarded as something of more value than a means to provide entertainment. Only in the past few years have educators begun to use the motion picture. The Oread Training School, under the supervision of the School of Education, is the first school in the middle west to adopt a plan whereby high school English students through careful study may gain the same educational value from the movie as has been derived from a study of the stage drama. The plan permits the student to view each picture from a technical standpoint, including the study of theme, characterization, dialogue, and work of the director. It also gives the students the responsibility of judging the social value of the picture. With these purposes the study of the movie should result in good. The force of the motion picture is felt in all walks of life. Therefore any plan which will give young people an intelligent and profitable approach toward the appreciation and study of the motion picture will certainly be constructive and improved taste and appreciation on the part of audiences should result in a better cinema product. Our Contemporaries A LITTLE FOLLY NOW AND THEN Numerous college papers are reminding their readers that the time of the archaic practice of initiating freshmen into fraternities by putting them in their dorm rooms, and the manances is drawing nigh. College editors in general have consistently freerned on the institution of Hell week since 1965. The college students should have outgrown. College fraternities are to be congratulated on having passed beyond the stage where the upperclassman with the most ruthless ideas and the toughest hearts has conducted the activities of Hell row. Where remnants of these dangerous practice exist they should be quelled by the most vigorous means. Where there is even a slight probability that injury of any sort may result from such an act, it will be inevitable that fraternity men will allow the carrying out of such stunts. But though the mature student may scoff with uplifted nose at the other harmless practices which fraternities carry on during their pre-initiation ceremonies, the worst that can be said is to make a freshman will testify that he thoroughly enjoy his probationary activities and nearby any unceremony will agree that despite the nonsense of the performance, he enjoyed witnessing and participating in the childish anties of his brethren. In the absence of any indications of cruel treatment of nephocytes it seems unnecessary to demand that fraternities forego all the enjoyments of a reason-ful life and that they enjoy that sort of thing. It hardly seems to assert that abuses are bound to creep in if a system of probationary activities is tolerated at all. If we are wrong, then we are dislississued about the common sense of college students and undergraduates who are vigorous repression of all activities savoring of Hell week—Daily Nebraska. The most unintelligent bit of censoring of the year has been done by Prof. W. R. Slaughter, publications adviser of Northwestern University, who has banned the word "beer" from all student publications. "Beer," says the Professor, "has nothing to do with students, no matter what is done about it in Washington." An earthquake in China, the death of King George, the election of a president, do not directly affect students. Yet students would be interested in them, and the articles should appear in college masters. While we will not grant the statement made by Professor Shaugher, nevertheless, if it were assumed, you can see no justification for his censorship. We extend our heartfelt sympathy to the editors of the Northernwestern publications and as far as Professor Slaughan, who is from Alabama, beer, beer, beer, Michigan Daily. According to reports, a course in lovemaking has been added to the curricula of college courses in bury. WT This sounds like a wake of time. We were of the old school that believes that, in subjects of this nature, impulse is the promulgator and ex- QUIPS from other QUILLS The course, no doubt, has its points, however, especially if there is a lab period in connection—D.C. in Oklahoma Daily. Messrs. Brown and Jones thought they were having a hard time to make ends meet in the hotel business, but the two worked as well while a-CWL. J.C.WIN in Windfield Courts. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXX Friday, Feb. 24, 1933 No. 199 1234567890 Pretty little coeds Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication days and 11 a.m. on Saturday for Sunday issues. MATHEMATICS CLUB: Two heads are better than one—when they are both on the same shoulders—McPhrison Republican. Away from maw and paw And a hay nouny noony And a hot chaw chaw. -EJ. in Oklahoma Daily It is hard to understand the makeup of the headline writer who insists that "Burns Are Painful." We have yet experience burns that are not painful Even Burns and Allen are getting painful. C.W.J. in Winfield Courier. Now President-elect Roosevelt announces the addition of a Preffen Frankfurter of Harvard to the staff of the University. Hot dog? - Wilson County Citizen. The shoe clerk is one man who does not agree that women are trying to fill men's shoes—McPherson Republican. The only place where promptness is no virtue is at the meeting hour of any large committee—J.P.H. in Ottawa Herald. Another benefit of the alleged depression is that it has eliminated those salemale who for the first ten minutes of conversation defied all efforts at discovery of what they had to sell—J.P.H. in Chanute Tribune. "I," threatens Paul Jones, Kansas' leading awed in the Lyons News, "if a certain dry Republican editor in this state does not send us the beautiful story of his life, he will home for several years we are going to name him on the day that national prohibition is repealed." We have not the least idea at whom Paul is aiming, nor can he him at least seven shackers by the week of the war in Chantule Tribune. Time is an infinitesimal fragment of eternity magnified into significance by man.-AJL. in Washington Student Life. The well-known stork has a faulty distributing system—McPherson Republican. Vol. XXX Friday, Feb. 24, 1933 No. 109 Noticees due at Chancellor's office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication due There will be a meeting of the Mathematics club Monday, Feb 27, at 4:30 in room 211 east Administration building. Miss Dorothy Doerr will speak on Tuesday at 5:30 in room 211 west Administration building. 26 MAY DAY SYNOPSIS CHAPTER 1—Antonietta Peryon **J** Marland, resumes Patton Thayer's attention to Ivy Wheeler, seventy-year-old with bitter recriminations, the nonchief, another student... long Thayer's nonchief, another student... long Thayer and Vernon each other. Thayer and Vernon each other. CHAPTER VII—At the scene of the attack, the two men who wielded the sword the latter will call. Toundra Thayer with whiskey for fortune and Vernon Thayer with profit for fortune and division the profits. After the ex-merchant searched Vernon's room, finds there, sourced Vernon's money, evidence the weapon with which he evidently evidenced the weapon with which he had arrived. CHAPTER IX. — To Honeng the brute warriors of the enemy, to discover that Thayer had been related discovery CHAPTER X CHAFTER VIH—Hawkeye mourns the day of the murder. Wichinca in value was in the eye of Thayer. Wichinca was alive when he left him. Thayer was alive when he left him. He is lying, seemingly endowing to him his firm conviction being that he was the victim of incidents more the resulting害人 incident. CHAPTER 11—Larry Welch, Ivy's brother, professor at the university, is a member of the college's mother's friendship with Thayer. Welch and Tony Payton are in love with each other. He can do in the matter. Tony then goes to his wife in Thayt. They but is his wife only in name. CHAPTER IV—Welch's appeal to the Board of Trustees for the pristine heir. He determines to see thieves try to find the home jointly, finds that a landlord's moive chief, takes charge of the property. CHAFTER III—larry demands his妻子 to withhold love with it. Tony persuades him to wait until she has appended to her husband's room at a fraternity house. Max Verveine lives and goes to his room. Tony ends a chaperone and depends, nonetheless, afterwards, vividly in a state of excitement, never leans, apparently clothing to be severely bruised. CHAPTER V—The Marland bank is with the money after being shot and apparently badly wounded, Jimmie G. Lewis was obese, and good natured, comes to investigate the robbery, Randolph Finkle, leaves Vanessa Vernon was driving the car, and Vernon's friends CHAPTER VI: Thayer, Fluke tells Harvey, has been systematically told to drop games, and Vernon, apparently, has been taken. Harvey to take charge of the murder, both the murder and robbery. Tony is under arrest as Thayer must be They spoke briefly to the dean and left the huddling together. Below them was the howl; long concrete stand on the deck with its windows open in diamond; men in truck suits built easily around the oval or practicing field sports; the regular indigent in playing baseball; the college baseball team. Under the trees were a half hundred cars; some empty, others full of stuff. The stands held perhaps a hundred students and through the woods one could glimpse couples—usually of children sitting slowly and talking earnestly. "I dunno. . . it ain't the education. John. But when I look at this stuff, what's written in books that those kids take away with 'em. Maybe I'm wrong, but it seems I'd sort of like to do it on four years of this kind of stuff." "No—I reckon maybe it wouldn't—for you. I'm just a softy." "What the h—1 would you do with a college education, Jim?" Octavus Rou Cohen a scene was a quiet, peaceful scene; a scence which made a profound impression on the Broddingnagian Hanvey. He was fascinated by the informality of women and how they look so different; earnest, spectated young men and women studying aggressively; a general air of stiffness and studiosure. But this . . . , why, they were upon the young folk with real envy and there was a feeling that he had missed something in life—something which he would like to go back and have. He expressed all this haltingly which he would take on, Rinkeogan looked at him in amazement. "But, I ain't paying they nintt" "But, by golly, a few years from now" "but, I'm going to go back" h—I there! he get going mongain again! Fine big itt am I to my friends for an day! They slowly descended the wall toward the Pal Tan Theta fraternity house where Rengar's car was parked. Students edged them curiously and "Yeh! and all they're thinking about is finishing up." "You said it!" muttered Reagan. "Me, I never have thought college amounted to much." W. N.U. SERVICE. buzzed with conjecture. Hanvey was relaxed. He was thinking—and Reagan was literally disappointed because the congressional disclosure regarding the ownership of the knife which had been used to kill Mr. Bush's children, and tried his truffle hurt, though he would say so. He attempted to elicit a comment from Hanvey—and went at his task circling. "You and the kid seemed to get along fine, Jim." "Ivy, Welch? Say, she's a regular, John." "Darn little cat if you ask me. Did everything but scratch my eyes out." "find out what you eventually must scratch my eyes out" "you don't say, I remind she must have a week spot for a poor old fat fat like me." "Ten to one she didn't tell you anything." "Gimme the ten, John. She told me plenty." pron. "What 5" Doubtfully. "We-ee-l, She said that she and Pat Tather were engaged. Thayer and Max Vernon quarreled just before Thayer was killed. Thayer and Miss Vernon agreed to shine in up to Ivy Welch. Then Ivy and her brother had a row, and he left her with the intention of seeing Thayrs and ordering him to lay off." "She knew we had all that dope at ready." "Maybe she did. John—and then, again, maybe she did. Anyway, it might be a body who isn't accustomed to this killing. Allowing for the fact that she'd maybe try to shield her brother. I don't think she would accept it. The cop to help us catch the person who really killed Tillen." His eyes closed slowly. "She sure was in love with him." Harvey turned slowly and regarded Deagan for a minute. "Kid stuff!" "I think that's the same mistake everybody made when they thought of her in connection with Thuyen. All they said was: Kid stuff." "What you driving at, Jim?" "Nathilin" special. Just rimbili in my speech, as naunt. Only remember falls in love, it isn't knit stuff to her, not matter what it seems like to other women. I have done better to realize that we have done better to realize that我 Weych was a woman grown. Get me? Weych was a woman grown. Get me? Hanvey shrugged. "Durned if I know," he confessed. Then: "So Max Vernon admitted that was his knife, eh, John?" "Did he see the blood on it before he made that admission?" "I—I, no, Chief, I don't that dumb, I had the blade covered when I showed him the knife. He saw it before it seen and he said, sure, it was his. I said: "You couldn't be mis- terrorized so could you?" and he heard he certainly had put him in right, he enunciated that the knife that killed him had put his foot in right, he encouraged that I showed him the bloody blade." "And what did he say?" Reagan shook his head. "He said he didn't give a d—n if he had killed Bill McCollum and didn't do with it. He's a darn fresh kid. Jim—and he hasn't told the truth about anything since I first stock him in the housekeeping. He goes over and does that." "Not yet, John. Let's go to the undertaker who's not Thayer's body. I want to take a look at it." "Come ahead." Reagan stepped into his car and Jim crawled in on the other side. "Any of Thayer's family down here?" asked Hanvey. "A sister. Seems to be a pretty nice sort, but she won't talk much. I got a little angry with him. Jim. And, of course, a father can't press that kind of an investigation too strong with a man's sister when he's lying dead in the next room." "Gosh, no." They turned into Marland road and sped along under the spreading shade trees which lined the paving on both sides. "John" asked Hanvey suddenly, "when you searched Tinsley's room did you find any jew- "Nothing but a watch and chain." "No diamond rings?" "Sure not. What gave you the idea?" Just because I overlooked Max Veronica's hard you haven't got my right to sniff that sort of stuff everywhere." "Aw, now, John—don't you go get it! needed at me. I just nailed you a question friend-like and—" "I ain't peevel, Jim. But dog gone! "I you seem to have more ideas and less words than anybody I ever saw." Jim chuckled. "Don't mind me, Kit. I'm lamb, and the less I say the smaller chance there is or anyone finding it out." "Kid yourself, Jim—if you want to,' he said. "But don't try to kid me." At their destination, the understainer conducted them into the cubicle where the police officer was sitting in the police orders. Hauvey was frankly frightened by the sight of death, and didnt even look at the body as Reagan gave a clinical discussion on the request. John Reagan laughed. ".. . , right in the neck, " he was saying and the voice came to Hanvey as though from a distance. "The due is why there was so much blood, is why there was so much blood, I asked him would it need to have been struck by a person with any strength enough to kill me, to take an east side of a keen knife would do the work. I asked him if a woman could have done it, and be said, sure, a chair could have. Then I asked the "Tell me that later," suggested flanvey hastily. "I want to get out of this piece quick." "To find that diamond ring. You see, John—at the time Pat Thayer went to his college in a ring which Iyv Welch had given him. I want to see if he's still wearing it." Reagan bent over the body. When he straightened his expression was unsteady. "Good Lord, Jim. If you didn't want to look things over, what did you come here for?" "You sure you got your dope straight, Jim?" "Yeh." "There then's something darn funny — because Thayer isn't got anything on his fingers except a signet ring." He said. "It's hard to believe. Hassov renamed贤效 eye on the "It's gone all right. John." "I'll say it has," Reagan's forehead was creased with intensive thought. Suddenly he smashed his right fist into the palm of his other hand. "And you know what it means Jim—his diamond ring being gone?" "Just this: Thayer was alive when Larry Welch went to see him. Larry saw the ring and knew it meant he wanted it, but he didn't him. Then he took his sister's ring off Thayer's finger, because he know if he left it there it could be traced back to him." 65 "burned if I know, John. But whether you are or not, you sure sound reasonable." The Number (To be continued Sunday) - The Price - 25c The Name Jayhawk Taxi Ike Guffin, Prop. Beat the Aggies George O'Brien Tonight - Tomorrow Zane Grey's "Smoke Lightning" with George O'Brien Tonight - tomorrow MORAN and MACK The Two Black Crowds in "HYPNOTIZED" Arrives Sunday for 3 Days THE LONGEST LAUGH ON THE SCREEN! Shows---- 3-7-9 Extra! Hollywood Runaround Ricksha Rhythm Late News VARSITY Prices—Mat., Eve., 15c When Down Town---announces a Free Lecture on Christian Science by DR. HENDRIK J. DE LANGE, C.S., of The Hague, Holland Wiedemann's LUNCHEON The place to stop for a refreshing fountain drink or appetizing sandwich is our beautiful new Wahkut Room. Served Daily Established 1868 835 Mass. Phone 182 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Also 5:10 till 7 p.m. Saturday and Sunday Christian Science Organization, University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas IN Member of the Board of Lectureship of the Mother Church. The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass. Friday, February 24, 1933, 8:00 p.m. UNITARIAN CHURCH 12th 8 Vermont The Public Is Cordially Invited to Attend Your Picture (from any negative in our files) FOR 89c Last Chance to Get Your Picture at This Low Price Is Saturday and Monday This price includes pictures from negatives for the 1933 Jayhawker. More than one print at the same price if desired. Frerking Studio 1021 Massachusetts FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24.1932 PAGE THREE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Soup Sandwich Hot Chocolate A good meal lunch at the Union Fountain Sub-Basement, Memorial Union Clothes for Spring are lower in price. We are showing the nicest line of woolens that we have ever had in years, at prices that have never been so low. Some very attractive patterns as low as $16.50, suit or topcoat. And remember—* Suiting you is my business. Schulz the Tailor 917 Mass. --at the GOOD FOOD Always Attracts and Also Satisfies. Praises are heard each day about the splendid assortment offered on the 25c meal. Why don't you try one? --by CAFETERIA PATEE WHERE BIG PICTURES PLAY NOW! ENDS SATURDAY The Screens Prodigal Son-of-a-Gun Gunning For Blondes JAMES CAGNEY 'Hard to Handle' Also—Edgar Kennedy Comedy Cartoon—“Devil Horse” OWL SHOW 11:15 SATURDAY 42nd STREET SMASH MUSICAL HIT 14 STARS Warner Baxter - Bee Daniels George Brent - Blya Kueber Uma Merkel - Dick Powell Ginger Rogers - Guy Kibbee and a Score of Others and 200 Glorious Girls A Gorgeous Screen Spectacle of Beauty, Youth, Love, Laughter, Melody, Song and Dancing Feet Hear These Senational Song Hit "Young and Healthy" "You're Getting to Be a Habit With Me" "Shuffle off to Buffalo" "Forty Second Street" SOCIETY CAUSE Alpha Delta Pi To Initiate Alpha Delta Pi will hold initiation services Saturday night for the following: Ruth Bordner, c. 38; Patricia Cunningham, c. 39; Maxine Miller, c. 36; Wilma Wright, c'uncel; Barbara Isabel, c. 33. A formal dinner in honor of the new initiates will be given Sunday non-Several guests and alumnae are expected Ruth Bordner was the honor point winner among the pledges. Patricia O'Donnell and Ruth Bordner tied for scholastic honors. Dramatic Club Selects New Members Names of those who passed the Dramatic club try-outs, held yesterday afternoon, were announced today by Bay City Rangers for the play will be held this afternoon. New members of the Dramatic club will be Modeline Dumford, c章姆 Charlainne Armstrong, f24; Fay 38; John Anderson, c35; Ron Stewart, d34. "The New Deal" Varsity "The New Deal" varsity will be held at the Memorial Union building Saturday. This brings a new type of varsity dance to the University campus. Because of small crowds, and harsher weather, it is 12 o'clock with no intermission. Louis Siebers and his University of Kansas band will play. Dinner guests at the Triangle house last night were J. M. Kellogg, professor of architecture; Dale Savage, e3; ChS student of architecture; Wayne Williams, a former student; Wayne Williamson, a former student. Mrs. Minma K. Powell of Kansas City, Mo., who is the art and music artist of the Kansas City Star will visit the department of the University Saturday. Mr. Ben S. Paulien, former governor of Kansas, and Mrs. Paulien, of independence, Kan., and Miss Louise McKenzie, of Kentucky, served as the Kapna E.Kappa house yesterday. The semi-annual Pan-Hellenic exchange dinner to foster acquaintances between the members of various sororities was held last night. Kenneth Status of Sabetta, and Fred Daniels of Kinsasa City, Mo., are week guests of Dela Tau Delta. Phyllis Nelson of Almere, a former student of the University, will be a guest at the Alpha Delta Pi house this week-end. The Cosmopolitan club will entertain with a party tonight in Robinson gymnastism. Mrs. Roosevelt to Go on Train New York, Feb. 24 — (UP) Mrs. Kranklin D. Roosevelt today abandoned her plan to drive her own auto to Washington and decided to accompany her husband on the inaugural train. She yielded to the wishes of Mr. Roosevelt and other members of the family in his plan. The planned plan. She also found it would have been impossible for her to make the trip without being followed by secret service men and attracting crowds. Send the Daily Kansan home. WEEK END EXCURSIONS Similar week-end bargains to points between Kansas City and Denver. KANSASCITY $100 Round Trip Every Friday, Saturday and Sunday And Every Day ON SALE Round Trip $17.80 News From Home For complete information about travel, to practically any point in America, see your local Western Grabboom agent. DENVER . $990 UNION BUS TERMINAL 638 Mass. Phone 590 Wichita- (UP) -Fremont Lee Cono chased fires all day. At the end of his bibl he went home to find food and rest. His own roof was on fire --by Horton - (UP) - A druggist's label helped Mrs. Williams Anderson to recover a suitcase the contents of which contained an opium pouch. Mr.oun found the lost piece of fugue and in a quinine bottle with a Horton druggist's label. He notified the druggist who placed an advertisement in a newspaper. The drugstore didn't offer any dollar to retrieve her property. WESTERN FICKRING GREYHOUND LIVER Elkhart—(UP) -Firey crosses blazing in farm yards and pastures near here recently have caused alarm among ranchers because the crosses might possess, but because of danger that they would ignite unreasonably dry grass and cause a dangerous prairie fire. Small boys on fire could up the burning crosses for a prank. Eldorado—(UP) —Chief of Police Bert Save had caught on fire when he backed against a stove in a garage. He had fallen from the ceiling but out the flames consuming his coat. Lindsburg-(UP)—A historical pageant covering a span of four centuries will be presented in April by school children recruited from McPherson and Saline counties under the direction of the Lindsburg Historical society. Miss Anna M. Carlson, Kansas novelist and former newspaper writer, is writing a memoir of her life at Coronado and the Spaniards, the life of the Indians, the invasion of the Smoky Valley by white pioneers, and its settlement by Scandinavian farmers Vogler to Speak at Colloquium The date of the next meeting of the Summerfield Colloquium has been changed from March 10 to Saturday, March 4, at 4; when Joseph Vogler, of the law school, will speak. Notices of personal property taxes impaid were received yesterday by many of the fraternities and secretiess from County Treasurer L. E. Hoover, with the notation that unless the item were paid within 30 days, the item would be put in the hands of the sheriff for collection. County Treasurer Gives Greeks Thirty-Day Notice Local Houses Must Pay De-linquent Personal Property Taxes The notices in this case do not affect real estate taxes, which have been in litigation the past three years, and which, under a recent decision of the state supreme court, are now due the county. The county treasurer was in Topeka today, but employees of the office said nearly all social fraternities of Lawrence and at Baldwin were invited in the list, and that the amount varies in the list, so $20 or $10 up to nearly $100. When the real estate of fraternities was put on the tax rolls in 1930, the organized houses obtained a restraining order which was broad enough to prevent collection of any taxes until the supreme court had ruled. For that reason, all property taxes were not sent out last year or the year before. The treasurer is not required to give notice of delinquent real estate taxes. Eight Try Out for El Atenco Eight students tried out for El Atenco yesterday. Mary Wheeler and Mary Frances Kavanaugh gave a dialogue. Lorela Newell, Maren Myers, and Rose Shulman read poems. Cahill-Mazquez, the Spanish painter, and Sodie Shulman sang a song. Alexander Peebles made a speech on the customs and habits in Mexico. Fight Try Out for FL Atoms Send the Daily Kansan home. TEACHERS: Before joining an agency, write us. Vacancies are being recruited. Cooperative plan ensures real-time Exchange. City, Kansas. —117 Twenty-five words or less. 1 in ten; twenty-six or more. In line numbers, 12c, larger word ratios. WANT AID ARE COMPANIED BY CASH. PLEASANT rooms for boys in comfortable home at price you can afford to pay. Home cooked meals, all meals on week e.周 16. week 14th. Phone 2788. -110 HAVE YOUR application photographs made at Moore Studio. 719 Mass. (uprastats-exclusive). Phone 964-125. TRUNK KEYS, door keys, car keys, Good locker padlocks, night latches. door closers repaired. Treworgy & Rutter. 623 Vermont St. Phone 314-578-9000. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusively 1025 Mass. 100,000,000 GUINEA PIGS Dangers in Everyday Foods. Drugs, and Cosmetics by KALLET and SCHLINK of Consumer's Research $2,000 The Book Nook 1021 Mass. Tel. 666 $2.00 SATURDAY SPECIAL OVERCOATS $1495 TOPCOATS LEATHER JACKETS $5.85 SLEEVELEESS SWEATER $1.15 1 LOT OF SUITS $18.95 1 LOT OF SUITS $14.95 Final Clean Up on Fall and Winter Garments Extra Values—At Lowest Prices. CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES The Show "Happy Landings" Monday - Tuesday Nights STOP! Look What 25c Will Buy--- 1 Tube Fitch's Shaving Cream 2 Bottle Fitch's Lilac After-shaking Lotion with Razor Harper on Side of Bottle. 50c Model D Tooth Brush All for 59c 2 - 50c Jars Model D Tooth Paste (Limited number) For your hikes and spare time — Amuse yourself with a Jig Saw Puzzle. Rankin's Drug Store "Handy for Students" Handy for Students 11th & Mass Phone 678 Be here for Relays, April 22 Some Things you have to accept our Word for.. That Chesterfield uses the right proportions of choice, ripe Domestic and Turkish tobaccos. That Chesterfield ages and cures these tobaccos properly . . . scientifically blends and cross-blends them . . . welds them together. That Chesterfield uses fine, pure cigarette paper—the best that money can buy. That all that Science really knows that could make a milder and better-tasting cigarette is used in making Chesterfields. They are as pure as the water you drink. GHESTERFIELD COGARETTES ARE A BALANCE OF BLEND OF THEINESS FROM ACTUAL TREATMENT TOBACCO AND NETS AND RECOMMENDED AMERICAN METERS BUT NEEDS IN THE BASIC MOOD ON THE BEST BOOKS FOR LISTING OUT THE EACH OBJECT NEEDED BY COGARETTES Chesterfield CIGAR but This Much you can prove for Yourself.. Chesterfields are milder. You won't find a hint of harshness or bitterness or rawness in one or a thousand. Chesterfields taste better. Not too sweet, but just sweet enough. And you can taste the difference that just the right amount—not too much—Turkish tobacco makes! They Satisfy. Day in and day out, year in and year out, Chesterfields are always the same mild, good-tasting, pleasing smoke. © 1933, LEGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1933 Jayhawks Leave for Crucial Tilt With Aggie Five Wildeats Are Big Hurdle in Path of Kansas' Big Six Title Hopes QUIGLEY IS OFFICIAL Dr. F. C. Allen, Kansas basketball mentor, was in communication with Manhattan this morning and reports that the Aggies have reached a high state of excitement over the Kansas game tomorrow. They have visions in Manhattan of again enacting the role of "Jack-the-Giant-Killer," as last year about this time the Aggie five chances to make it possible for Kansas to win the title, and this year they expect to do the same to Kansas for Oklahoma. Probable Starting Lineup Probable Starting Lineup Kansas F Harrington F Jukk F Columbia C F G Schanke F Skelki (c) Problematics F Kansas F Harrington F Jukk F Columbia C F G Schanke F Skelki (c) ten members of the Jayhawk basketball squad, accompanied by Dr. Forest C. Allen, will leave tomorrow morning to meet them will will meet the Kansas State Wildcats in a big six conference game. The men who will probably make the trip are Johnson, Schaake, Harrington and Brayton, Ursie, Curd, Klass and CasinI. A final workout tonight will close the team's preparation for the game. Bill Johnson and Paul Harrington, leftermen who have not been reporting for practice all week under orders from Coach F. C. Allen, will practice with the team for the first time since the Iowa State game. Dr. Allen hopes that the lay-off will bring the two veterans back to full play and ciddely off form for the past two weeks, and the Kansas coach decided that they were stale. Wildcats Win Four Straight Four straight innings. Four straight innings is the record of Couch Cochrane, Purple quintet for the four weeks. After getting off to a poor start in Big Six play, the Aggies have staged a strong comeback, and stand in even chance of handing the Jayhawks a defeat to tomorrow night. The Kansas State starting five, Boyd Graham, Dallon, Skradsen, and Breen, are all seasoned veterans, and now that they have struck their stride, will be a real fee for Kansas. Game a Crucial One Dr. Allen has been using his sophomore material to replace Harrington and Johnson this week in practice. Most of the scrimmages have found Walters at center, Urie and Benn or Card at forwards, and Schake and Gray at guards. It is possible that this combination may start the game tomorrow, although if Johnson and Harrington are injured, the players who have recovered from their slumps they will undoubtedly take the floor with the open whistle. According to an announcement from the Athletic office today, Ernest C Quidley, of St. Marys, has been selected as the next game, which will begin at 7:30 pm. A victory for Kansas against the Angies would assure the Jayhawk-Sooner tilt here till next Saturday night being a contest for the Big Six title. Oklahoma and Kansas are at present tied for the lead with six victories and seven goals. The opponent's victory would put Coach Allen's队 in a commanding position in the standings. Oklahoma plays Nebraska the night after the Kansas game. Examiners' School Starts McCue Directs Life Saving Tests at Robinson Gymnastium First sessions of an examiners' school for students enrolled in first aid and life saving have held last night at the University of Kansas pool. Robinson gymnastium, under the direction of A. T. McCue, field representative of the First Aid and Life Saving Service of the American National Red Cross. Fifteen members went through their pieces from 7:30 to 11 last night, and further work is outlined for tonight at the same hours. Final demonstrations will be completed tomorrow morning beginning at 9 o'clock. Students who pass the tests touror row will be qualified to act as examiners of similar work in other localities where they are being trained, but are being reviewed on their work. Mr McCue will go from Lawrence to Manhattan, where he will conduct a similar study at Kansas college beginning Monday of next week. The public is invited to attend the demonstrations either tonight or tomorrow morning. Jayhawk and Wildcat Tangle Once Again WILDCATS Coaching Staff Sponsors All-School Fistic Tourney Bill Ramey in Charge of Boxing Lessons Before Meets An all-University championship boxing tournament to determine the Hill champions in each weight division was announced today at the athletic office. The tournament is being sponsored by the coaching staff of the department, and a gold medal will be presented to the winner of each weight division, with a special cup for the team winner to be awarded. All participants will not score points in the regular intramural competition, however. Any man in the University may enter the tournament provided he takes the regular supervised b住宿 instruction and training which is to be made available by the University under the direction of Bill Ramsey, well known K U. amateur boxer. Those desired to enter must sign up at once with Ramsey who will be available each afternoon, beginning Monday, Feb. 27, in the gymnasium, Gymnasium, from 4:30 to 6 o'clock. The training period under Ramsey will the train until the final two or three days of March when the actual tournament will be announced, the dates to be an- nounced later. "This tournament is designed to determine the actual booking "champion at all weights for the University of Kansas." Coach Ad Lindsay said today, "All equipment for training will be furnished to those entering, except gym nets. We have provided competent supervised internships in order to enter, and no contestant will be allowed to go into the tournament who has not taken the preschooled training under Ramie all of which is to be free. We want every man interested in trying for a championship gold medal to enter this tournament, but the start on training must be made at once, starting Monday, as no one who is not properly competed is allowed to make in the tournament boards when they begin late in March." Each fraternity or club may enter as many men in as many weight divisions as it wishes, and each man advancing a bowl in the tournament will score **won't** Women's Intramurals Free-Throw Tourney Enter blanks for women's free-throw intramurals are now ready. Managers should get them immediately at the gym office. March 3 is the deadliest month. Any number up to six may be entered. Each woman will throw 60 times, 20 each on three different days. The team will receive the total scores will compete in the finals. Dates for the free throws have been set for: Miss Ruth Hover announced today that entry blanks for the swimming meet to be held Tuesday, Feb 28, at the Mamaroneck Community in by tomorrow noon at the barn. Monday, March 6 - 4:30 or 12:30. Tuesday, March 7 - 4:30 or 12:30. Monday, March 13 - 4:30 or 12:30. Final Tuesday, March 14 - 4:30. Volley ball—L. W. W. and Theta Phi Alpha. The finish for the women's deck tennis will be played off today between Hunter-Etie and Baker-Walker, all of L. W. W. Swimming Entries Due Deck Tennis Finals On Riffle—Group, Alpha Delta Pi; Individual, Maurine Strain. Tennis—Group, Kappa Kappa G Individual, Alice Smith, I. W. W. …thifuf HrhMYmamma GammaR Winners in the other intramural games have been: Borkhose- lae Daming, Corbin. Deck Tennis - To be played on today fling-pong. Stucca Cullin, Delta Zeta basketball-I. W. W. and Gamma Fhi Hota Horseshoes—Ida Lanning, Corbin. Buckinghamshire. HONOR WILDCAT CAPTAIN KANSAS STATE Manhattan, Feb. 24—(Special) “To-morrow night’s basketball game here between State College and Missouri,” Captain Andy Skradskis, above, of Kansas City, Kan., who is playing his second and last year on the Kansas State team. Skradskis in the second member of his team in the special basketball team in the past five years. Intramural Standings The total intramural points to da Sororities Alpha Delta Pi 280³/₃ Gamma Phi Gamma 280³/₃ Alpha Girvan Pi 290³/₃ Chi Omega 290³/₃ Kappaappa Omega 290³/₃ Kappa Kappa Gamma 290³/₃ Gamma Phi Beta 196 Pi Betta 174 Alpha Xi Xi Delta 114 Theta Phi Alpha 110 Alpha Alpha Theta 110 L. W. W. Walkins 477 T. N. F. 200 Independent 191 Corbin 190 Revenue 144 In the second day of the intramurra swimming meet held yesterday, Triangle won the 100-yard dash, Phi Gamma Delta won the 100-yard back stroke and Sigma Nu was the winner of the fancy diving event. The remaining two events, 200-yard relay and 200-yard dash, were held this afternoon. Phi Gam is leading with a total of 45 points. Beta is next with 38; Sigma Men's Intramurals Nu, 33; Triangle, 31; D. U, 28; Kaupia Sigma, 39; Phil Delti, 61; Kappa, Ghea Tu, 6; and Kayhawks, 1. These are computed from the first two days' 100-yard dash: Individual winner, Snyder, D. U. Time: 1.92. Team win- er, Triangle Team average, 1.12 Beta Team average, 1.12. Bac- tian Phi Gain, Team average, 1.148 (Chain, 1.148; Brown, 1.135; Third, Beta, Team average, 1.155; Field, Beta, Team average, 1.156; Team team average, 1.189 (Snyder, 1.092; Butler, 1.286). Yesterday's results: 100-yard back stroke Individual winner, Alexander, Phi Giam, Time, 1:14 Team winner, Phi Giam, Team average (1.65), Second, Beu, Team average, 1:37.5 (M. Nichols, 1:34.5; C. Nichols, 1:41.3) Third, Sigma Nu, Team average, 1:29.4 (McEllein, 1:38; Marshall, 1:41) Fourth, Sigma Nu, Team average, 1:29.4 (Cheney, 2:04.2; Thorne, 2:29.2). In the only basketball game played last evening Phi Gamma Delta 'B' defeated Kayhawk 'B' 30 to 27. The game between Sigma Alpha Episton 'a' vs Kaappa Sigma 'a' was postponed. This was one of the games in the playoff for the championship of the 'B' divisional these four teams and the Jayhawks. Fancy duck. Individual winner, Marshall Sigma. 106.3 points. Team average, 85.7 points (Marshall, 106.3; McLemuel, 65.2). Second, Kappa Sigma. team average, 84.6 points. 60.4 points. Pi Dhi. Team average, 67.45 points (Champlin, 74.3; Moors, 60.6). Fourth, Beta. Team average, 57.7 points (Stotts, 64.2; Robbins, 57.7 points) Mr. Goerz wrote this bit of history when it was recalled to him by recent stories of the first organized team at KU. in connection with the ceremony honoring Dr. James Naismith, inventor of the Kansas-Iowa State game last week. Phi Gam 'B' Wins Kansan Writes Dr. Allen of First Basketball Games Played in State Information as to the first organized basketball team in Kansas, has come to the deck of Dr. F. C. Allen, director of athletics and head coach of basketball at the University of Kansas, from R. A. Geerz of Newton, Kansas. Totals 15 0 0 Kayhawk 'B—27 FG FT Varval, f 1 1 Newton, f 2 1 Thomas, c 2 1 Nixon, g 1 0 Johnson, g 0 0 Powers, g 0 0 Phi Gamma Delta 'B'-30 FG 7 T Bajterles, f 4 FT 0 Chairls, g 3 0 Steiger, g 3 0 Sleeper, c 1 0 Nicoblush, g 0 0 Stilwell, g 0 0 Pells, g 0 0 Mr. Goerz writes that he first played the game of basketball at Wichita, Kansas, in 1843 and 1858, when the game was the first time a ball game came to Wichita directly from the Springfield, Mass., Y.M.C.A. Training School when Mr. Goerz had invented the game in 1858. The box score: The game as played by Mr. Goerz at All wrestling entries are due Monday, Feb. 27 and must be checked by the hospital physician. The preliminary wrestling will be held Tuesday, Feb. 28, and Wednesday, March 1, at 4:30 o'clock. The semi-finals will be conducted Thursday, March 2 and the finals March 7. Endorses. Industrial Arbuth Cat Topelka, Feb. 24—(UP) The Kansas Kansas endorsed the honey bill presentation of industrial alcohol in the state. A motion to strike out the enacting clause lost by 17 to 29. Two basketball games are scheduled for tonight. Delt Pie vs. Beta, and A K. L. vs. Triangle. The 'games will be played at 9:30 a.m. games, for tomorrow are 9:30 a.m. m kappa Sigma vs. D. T. D. and C. D. S. vs. Ppi. Shi 1:30. m, Delta Chi vs. A. T. O. and S. A. B. or Kappa Endorses Industrial Alcohol Bill Totals 12 3 Wichita, however, was not by an organized team, as the number of players wishing to play were simply divided up evenly on each side and the game went on with six or eight or fifteen or any number on a side. In 1898, Mr. Geerz writes he moved to Newton and the first team in Kansas was orgized for the Y.M.C.A. by W. C. Kusa. However, that team found no opponent and the games were played at Newton's Newton teams, the Axx and Eagles. According to Dr. Naismith, the first organized basketball west of the Mississippi was played at the University of Kansas in 1894. From 1895 to 1898 under the direction of a Mrs. Clark of the physical education department. Dr. Naismith served as head coach. Naismith had the first organized University of Kansas team in 1898. JAYHAWK JABS By SID KROSS Forecasting the outcome of sport events is like trying to figure out when "your ship will come in." Even Jack Sutherland, that venerable Pittsburgh football coach, gets only about thirty per cent of his weekend forecasts of football games correct. So I decided not to try to predict them, and add some figures in black and white in trying to dope out a possible outcome of the Big Six basketball race. Should Kansas defeat Oklahoma in its final game but lose tomorrow to Kansas State as the wise ones are picking the possible outcome, the Jayhawk will probably tie for first place. For this reason, Kansas must brake in its final game of the season while Missouri must run true to form and lose at least one of its three remaining games. If this happens the final standings of the leaders will look as fol- Kansas 7 3 .700 Oklahoma 7 3 .600 Missouri 6 4 .600 If Kansas should drop both of its final games Oklahoma will win the title regardless of the outcome of the Sooner-Cormornhunter game. This is of course, assuming that Missouri will win only two games and Oklahoma will win one, the leaders will finish as follows: Oklahoma 8 2 .800 Kansas 6 4 .600 Missouri 6 4 .600 On the other hand, if Kansas wins both of its remaining games, the Jayhawkers will have a clear cut title advantage with the standings of the lead- Kansas 8 2 .800 Oklahoma 7 3 .700 Missouri 6 4 .600 Another possibility is for Kansas to defend the Agios tomorrow night and lose to Oklahoma a week from Saturday night. If this happens and the Sooners lose to Nebraska the race will end in a tie as shown in the first section. If Kansas does the above and Oklahoma defends Nebraska then the Sooners will win championship with the standings the same as shown in the second section. Summing up all these facts one draws the conclusion that Missouri has only an outside chance to tie for the title so we will eliminate the Tigers, leaving Kansas and Oklahoma. It seems that the best bet at the present writing is on a tie between the Sooners and Jawshakers and the Stormers, who have disputed possession of the Big Six championship. All in all this forecasting is enough to give anyone a headache. Recommends Impeachment Subscribe for Recommendations impeachment Women who have voted -- The home vote today to approve the minority report of its judicial committee recommending impeachment of Federal Judge Hurdle Lauderdale. The court has rejected the new goes to the senate for trial. Send The Daily Kanson home. THE KANSAS CITY STAR Headquarters 847 Mass. St. H. L. NEVIN Distributor PHONE 17 13 papers — 15c per week DICKINSON "Where Students Meet" NOW AND TOMORROW "From Hell to Heaven" HELL or HEAVEN?? 60 seconds would tell! What Would You Do? Jack Carole David Oakie Lombard Manners Fox Moyietone News —— Comedy Too! — SUN-MON-TUES-WED— Shows Continuous "THE SIGN OF THE CROSS" Producers Demand—Mats, 10, 25c. Nights, 10, 40c Midnight Preview Saturday Box Office Opens 10:45 p.m. C 1.2 for INITIATION congratulate Her with carefully selected flowers . . . 1. Roses - 2. Spandens 3. Snapdragons — 2. Lilies of the Valley — 4. Sweet Peas — 5. Colonial Bouquets — WARD'S "Flowers of Distinction" Phone 621 WEEK END DRUG SPECIALS 8 oz. 8 oz. Imitation Vanilla Flavor 29c 2 oz. Bottle Lemon Flavor FREE 25c Frens Sanitary Napkins 2-25c 16 oz. 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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXX NUMBER 110 Cunningham Loses 1500 Meter Race to Eastern Miler Kansas Runner Leads a First But Is Step Behind Venzke at Finish BOTH MEN COLLAPSE Madison Square Garden, New York, Feb. 25—(UP) "Gene Venzke of Pennsylvania gained revenge over his arch rival Glenn Cunningham of Kansas by winning the 1,500 meter race, the second feature on the A. A. U. program tonight. The race was turned into a thrilling one, when collapsed as they finished, with the Penn star scourneled a stride ahead of the Midwestern. Cunningham led in the early stages with Venzke second. Soon Eric Ny of Sweden came up to second position, then Venzke forged to the front after half the distance had been run, and Cunningham broke past Ny. From this point on it was a dogged fight until the collapse at the finish line. Venzie was timed at 3:55.4 Frank Crowley of Manhattan was third and Raymond Sears of Butler University fourth. Metcalf Takes Sprint The University of Pennsylvania quartet won the 1,600 meter relay in 3:21. New York A. C. won second, and New York University third. Ralph Metcalf, giant negro spinner of Marquette University, captured the A. A. U. 60 meter sprint championship, outspreading a brilliant field which included the mighty Emmett Toppin of New Orleans and Frank Wykoff of Los Angeles, world's record holder for the 100-vard dash. Metalef was tined at 367. 7, which equalled the world's record established by Toppin in the first semi-finals. The old mark of 367.2 held by two runners was repeatedly broken by Toppin Metalef, and Wykoff, all of whom were at least once tined at 368. 7 during the heat of the run. Leo Seeton of New York, holder of the world record for the event, won the 16-pound shot put with a mark of .789. He was named Dues of Detroit City College was second; David Adelman of Newark, Jersey third; and Jim Bausch of Kansas City fourth. Bauch, Olympic champion, made a difference. Tie in Pole Vault Theodore Smith of New York won the broad jump. The winning leap was 23 feet, 11 inches. Percy Beard, veteran campaigner from Alabama, won the 65 meter high hurdles in *08.6*, which will be claimed as a world's record since none was listed for the event. Milton Sandler of the German American A. C. captured the 600 meter time also will be entered as a record. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1933 Mortimer Reznick of N. Y. U. won the 35-pound weight throw with a toss of 50 feet 10 inches. Grant McDougal of the University of Pennsylvania was second; Louis Lepis, New Jersey; third; Peter Zaremba of N. Y. U. fourth. Glen Dawson of Tulsa won the 1.000 meter in 2.27. Keith Brown and F. E. Pierce, both of Yale, shared first hours in the pole at 13 feet, 6 inches. James McKinley of Michigan Normal was third, and William Merrissie of Manhattan College A. A. fourth. Jim Bausch of City, who competed jointly in the pole victory and shot put, did not place. Names Alumni Committee Joe McCluskey, veteran Fordham plodder, established a new world mark of 9:62:6 for the 3,000 meter steeple chase. Harold Manning of the University of Wichita was second to McCluskey. Boynton Arranges for Nomination and Election of Officers Roland Boynton, 116, president of the University alumni association, yesterday appointed the following two committees to select nominees for officers of the alumni association for the coming year. Balfour Jeffrey, 28, Dan Servet, 70, and Erfriede Fischer Rowe, will serve on one committee, and Cindy Smith will serve on another. Thiele, 10, and Katherine Kaiser Tanner, 10, will serve on the other. The nominees selected will appear in the Graduate magazine for February and from that a vote will be taken to determine the officers. The president was selected for a one year period and the two directors are elected for five year terms. Omaha Voters Endorse Giuseppe Zangara for Mayorship Omaha, Feb. 25- (UP)—Three hundred votes of Omaha unknowingly signed a petition to place Giuspee Zangara, attempted assassin of President-elect Roosevelt in nomination for mayor of the city. One lawyer wagered another he could secure that many signatures for the candidacy of any man his colleague chose. The second lawyer took the bet and told his friend to use Zanganna's name. The petition was circulated and the attorney was signed were mostly professional men. CONDENSED WIRE NEWS London Passes on Repeal Notice Topeka, Feb. 25 — (UP) -Governor Aiton Land relied to the legislature to repeal the Eighteenth amendment. The governor in his capacity as Simmons of congress' action calling on the states to hold conventions to pass on the issue of repeal of the Eighteenth amendment. The governor in his capacity as Simmons of congress' action the legislature should take. Walsh and Bride Elade Press Havana Feb, (UP) Senator Thomas J. Walsh and his bride, the former Seniors Nieves Perez Chamouni de Truffin, wealthy widow of prominent Cuban descent, plan to leave for Miami by airplane today. Other details will be announced soon. Senator Walsh and Senora de Truffin successfully eluded the press. Law Student Kills Three Rochester, New York, Feb. 25—(UP) — A young law student, apparently maddened by constant reproof at his failure to pass the state bar examinations, killed his father, sister, and himself with a gun at their home today. He was shot in the wounded another sister so critically that doctors despaired of her life. Kansas City, Kansas, Feb. 25—(UP) —Ms. Pearl Kirk, 42, clubbed and educated Paul Payne, a negro intruder who had been dragged, dug, doubted and attacked her husband early today. The husband John F. Kirk, 72, suffered bruises on the right shoulder and leen when the negro leaped from his car for possession of a revolver Kirk held. Death Comes to Judge Frances Dostic at Topeka Former State Justice Dies Topeka, Feb. 25 - (UP) - Judge Frames Doster, 86, former chief of the Kansas supreme court died at his home here today. Judge Doster suffered a stroke of paralysis in the house of representatives late yesterday. He had aided his nephew, Representative John Riddle, Morton county, it seeking to put through the Sulley farm tenancy measure. He was for many years an opponent of national prohibition and was helping to frame provisions for resumption of the Eighteenth amendment to the U.S. Constitution, a slight stroke while sitting at the seat of Representative Riddle, Friday. DEAN WERNER TO ADDRESS FIRE PREVENTION SCHO Henry M. Werner, men's student adviser, will speak in Teppei Tuesday night at the second annual Chamber of Commerce fire prevention and safety talk on "Chemical Hazards," using demonstrations to prove his points. At last year's school Mr. Werner made a similar talk with demonstrations, but his Tuesday night address will be entirely new. Jehol Inhabitants Prepare Defense Against Japanese Cheng Teh Ft Expects Air Raids; Road to North Filled With Supply Trains Cheng Teh Fu, Johel, Feb. 25—(UP) —This city, the most beautiful in Al China, today has become the base for a stubborn military movement which the Chinese high staff confidently extolled. Waterloo for Japan imperialistic plans. MISSIONS STAND FAST The 30,000 citizens of the city are energetically dedicating themselves to two tasks, the defence of their temples and pagodas from air raids, and the defense of their palaces from pirates, gords, and munitions to the fightin' forces now in position to the north. It was admitted by the high command today that the Japanese had occupied the cities of Weipiao and Chanyang from which the Chinese troops for strategic purposes, have withdrawn in order to take up position. The Chinese prepared a fense scheme centering at Pingfangtian, west of Chayang. The expected air raids on Cheng Tzu Fu are awaited with the utmost "song froid." At the first signal the French army had ordered to retreat from Father Oscar Conard's Belgian Catholic mission. The British flag already flies over the Protestant mission where, with his wife and small child, two American Zealander refuences to abandon his past. Rumors that the Jayhawker, because of financial losses last year, might not be published this year, have been brought to the attention of the Jayhawker Advisory board. The board is pleased to be able to say that the fine co-operation of the Jayhawker Welfare committee and others, with the business staff of the Jayhawker justifies full assurance of the book will appear at the usual time. In the judgment of the Advisory Board, it was decided that the publication of the 1932 Jayhawker as planned last spring. It will be a worthy successor of the outstanding books of former years. The long and rough road into Cheng Tch Fu is clogged with warriors. In one group were at least a thousand camels swaying under the burden of tons and tons of ammunition. Ox carts, creeping wagons, and hardy little Mongol ponies jammed the highway in this procession. There was another grim note in this business of preparing to meet the onslaught of Japan's efficiently trained regiment. Along the road were heavy lorries flying the symbol of the Swastika the signal flag of China's red cross. Museum Given Glassware A group of eighteenth century watches is on display. They have double cases and bull's eye crystal. One watch of interest has in the center a picture of General James McPherson, commander of the army of Tennessee, who was killed July 22, 1864, at the Battle of Atlanta. Presentation Is Made by Former Student of University Thirty pieces of glass and china were recently presented to Spooner-Thayer by Miss Mary S. Wheeler, "I1. Items of Glass," by Miss Mabel K. Hanna and Lafayette bottle, two Bermingham book bottles, and some pink lustre. Miss Wheeler is now a teacher in the Westchester School. Another is a skeleton watch made by the New England company. Two of the watches were made in London, one by figs and Evan, the other by John Vilter. One of the time-pieces was made by Toon in Birmingham, England. With the collection is a number $k$ watch keys of varied design. Columbia. Feb. 25. —(UP)—Kansas State college tonight defeated the University of Missouri in a dual Big Six track meet here, 64% to 28%. Meet records fell before the attack of Akee who captured most of the first places. BOARD SQUELCHES RUMORS AS TO 1923 JAYHAWKER BOARD SQUEILLES RUMORS AS TO 1923 JAYHAWKER At a meeting of the Jayhawk Advisory board Feb. 25 the following were reported: Aggies Take Track Meet Schmutz of Kansas State ran the 60 yard high hurdles in 7.8 seconds, to set a new mark for the meet. His teammate McNeal set a new time for the 80-80 yard dash in two minutes and three-tenths of a second. Going also on Agge, tied the former record in the yard-dash which he ran in 6.3 secs. Kansas Aggies Win Dual Meet by 64½ to 28½ Score Jayhawker Advisory Board. By L. N. Flint, Chairman. onds. Cermak Maintains Gain Miami, Feb. 23—(UP)—Mayor Anton Cernak of Chicago has "maintained the gain made as the result of the blood conscription" given earlier today, a bulletin issued tonight said. "He is sleeping after having taken his first nourishment in 24 hours," the bulletin continued. The mayor's evening, pulse 128, respiration 20. Y.W. to Hold Convocation Play and Musical Program Will Be Presented at Meeting A play entitled, "The China Pig," will be presented prior to the business meeting, Margaret Hagen, c34, will portray the part of the mother in the cast while Margaret Sherwood, c35, Charles Armstrong, c1unch, will portray the mother. A multi-program is being prepared by Lucile Wagner, c33. The two women must be nominated from the membership of the organization at large. All women of the Unit are urged to attend, the president said. The W.Y.C.A. conversation for the purpose of nominating two women to serve on the nominating committee will be held Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 in the administrative building, Catherine Vallette, c33, announced yesterday. Elections will be held early next month. The present officers of the W.Y.C.A. are: Catherine Vallette, c33; president; Wang Edmonds, f43; vice-president; Corra Hardon, cunel; secretary; and Marc Hardon, c33, c23, assistant treasurer. Dr.'t Hooft to Address Meeting in Kansas City Y. W. C. A. Brings Native Hollander to Confer With Students Dr. Visser 't Hoof, philosopher, theologian, and student of world affairs, will hold a conference with students of the Universities in the surrounding territory in the W.C.A. building at Kansas City, Mo., on March 5. The course will be "What Students of Many Nations Believe about Christianity." Dr, 't Hooft, a native of Holland with a doctor's degree from the University of Leyden, is making his fourth visit Dr. 'T' hoftown is general secretary of the World's Student Christian Federation at Geneva, and according to advance notices, is well versed in his work in education. He is well connected and many contacts with the young people of various countries. to the United States. He has appear at many eastern colleges on the visa but due to lack of time, he will not be able to make appearances here or at nearby colleges. Consequently, the W.Y.C.A. organization has arranged to Dr. t'Hoof appear in Kansas City to meet with students in respect to the surrounding schools. "His is a first-class mind, naturally able, well-trained, together with an extraordinary wincome and attractive personality, with rare gifts as a speaker and communicator. He mediately identifies him as a trusty colleague and leader of students." in Hallifax, Nova Scotia. Feb 25, -UP) Peter Virgin, the king of the Dukobens, was given his liberty today by the supreme court, reversing a deportation. The leader of the strange sect which centers in central Canada had plead thru counsel that his return to Russia would mean certain death. DEPORTATION WRIT REVERSED FOR KING OF DUKHOBOR SECT Chandler Called to Toneka reports received by the local W.Y.C. (All students and faculty member) are presented to philosophy, history, and religion, are invited by the W.Y.C.A. to be in Kansas City on March 5 to confer with Dr. H'oeft, Catherine Valette c3, 33; president of the local W.Y.C.A. said yeah for a day at 3:00 p.m., until 5 p.m. A small charge will be made to cover registration and the dinner which will be served. It was shown that Vyrign alone knows the secret disposition of the $20-000,000 of the community home, and that should he be forced to return to Russia the affairs of the community have to be administered from Russia. H. E. Chandler, assistant professor of education and secretary of the Teachers Appointment bureau, was called to be a spokesman for the serious illness of his sister. Missouri Tigers Defeat Huskers by 39-31 Count KANSAS AGAIN TAKES LEAD IN BIG SIX Nebraska Leads Once i Second Half; Wagner High Scorer Lincoln, Neb., Feb. 25—(UIS-Missouri University basketball team fought off a second half rally to defeat the Nebraska Cornhuskers 39 to 31 tonight. Wagner the tall Tiger center worked into the basket and tossed goals right and left over the Nebraska guard's fanning arms, to put in his team ahead. Only once, 10 minutes after the first half, did Nebraska lead the Missouri team when Steve Hokuf and Pat Mason slipped through the Missouri air tight defense and put Nebraska in the lead 13 to 10. The box score: Missouri--59 FG FT Cauver, f 4 4 fuber, 2 1 Passer, 0 0 Wager, c 0 Wagere, g 7 Hafnold, g 1 Jorjenport, g 1 Milligan, g 0 Egin, 0 0 Totals 14 11 1 Nebraska--31 FG FT 1 Mason, f 4 1 Parsons, f-g 2 3 Walquist, f 0 0 Boswell, f 0 0 Henton, c 4 0 Hokuf, g 1 0 Sauer, g 1 3 To Present One-Act Play Totals 12 7 Referee—E. C. Jones, Kansas State German Club Will Dramatize "Fine" German Club Will Dramatize "Eine Muss Heiraten" Tomorrow Night A one-act German play, "Emer Muss Heiraten" will be presented by the German club tomorrow night at 8:15 o'clock in Fraser theater. The play is similar to "Miles Standish and Joha Alden" but in this story there are two young men, professors in a university who have no sympathy for women. Their only love is their sister, whom they are living becomes disgusted and reminds them of their father's dying wish that "one of them must marry." The aunt decides to frame them and brings her pretty niece to live with them. The young men are forced to draw lots to see what she proposes The older brother loses, and offers the excuse that he does not know the intricacies of proposing. The younger brother offers to demonstrate, he does, but the young lady takes him seriously and the curtain drops as she marries her All the parts will be spoken in German, according to Professor E. F. Engls of the German department, who directed the play. The members of the club who make up the cast are Jacob Zorn, Ralph Stutzman, gr; Wilhelm Kupfer, Marcel Schleidig, c; 336; Gertrude Velma Friedrich, c; 348; and Louise Erma Blodgett, c³³. Attend Education Meeting Four Professors, Including Dea Schwegler, Leave for Minneapolis Dean R. A. Schwegler of the School of Education, left Friday evening for Minneapolis, Minn., to attend meetings of the department of superintendents of the National Education association. The meetings began last night. Several other members of the School of Education drove to Minnesota yesterday to attend the meetings. They were Dr. J. W. Twente, professor of education; B. Bayles, assistant professor of education; E. P. O'Brien, professor of education. Dean Schwegel presided at the meetings of the National Association of Colleges and Departments of Education in universities and land grant colleges which began Friday evening. He is also president of the association. Basketball Scores Northwestern 30. Wisconsin 28. Northwestern 30, Wisconsin 21 Minnesota 30, Illinois 21 Purdue 37, Michigan 33 Chicago 34, Indiana 22 Arkansas 39, Baylor 30 Oklahoma 39, Army 57, Bucknell 14 Pittsburgh 31, Navy 29 Vanderbilt 38, Tulane 25 WEATHER Kansas - Fair Sunday with rising temperature. Big Six Standings | | W1 | L2 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kansas | 6 | 278 | 390 | | Oklahoma | 6 | 2 | 788 | 391 | | Kentucky | 6 | 2 | 791 | 393 | | Kansas State | 4 | 4 | 444 | 275 | | Newebraska | 4 | 5 | 250 | 274 | | Nebraska | 4 | 5 | 254 | 278 | Next Week's Games Friday, Mar. 3, Kansas vs. Oklahoma at Lawrence. Tuesday, Feb. 28, Iowa State vs. Nebraska, at Ames. Saturday, Mar. 4. Kansas State vs. Missouri at Columbia; Nebraska vs. Oklahoma at Lincoln. Leading Scorers Johnson, Kansas G FG 62 FP To10 Wagner, Missouri 40 20 11 74 Cooper, Missouri 9 26 22 12 74 Beck, Oklahoma 9 26 12 14 74 Wells, Kansas 9 24 17 17 65 Barrison, Oklahoma 9 24 17 65 Wegner, Ohio St 9 25 15 15 50 Wegner, Iowa St 9 22 15 15 50 Graham, Kansas St. 9 24 15 15 57 Simpson Will Present Organ Vespers Today Program to Be Comprised Entirely of Works by Bach Guy Criss Simpson, of the School of Fine Arts faculty, will offer a program comprised entirely of works by J. S. Barratt, a professor at the University auditorium at 4 o'clock. The feature of the offering will be a collection of pieces which depict the passing of the holidays and holy days. These pieces were taken many old religious songs and carols and treated them in such a manner as to make them classical numbers. Some of them have the original melody of the piece, held a harmony to go with the songs. The program will begin with "Fantasia and Fugue in G Minor," which is said to have been written with a harmonic scheme at least a century and a half in advance of Bach's era. This number will be followed by a collection known as "The Christian Year as Treated by Bach." Bach starts the year with the Advent "Gottes Sohn Ist Kommen," followed by the Christmas, "In Dulie Brau," a piece founded upon a famous medieval carol. Next is the New Year's Eve, "Das Alte Jahr Vergangen," only a page in length but portraying a spirit directly oppose our modern feeling on that day. The music is permeated by the chromatic nature of the preceding contrast with the preceding number, the New Year's Day, "In Dir Ist Frueade" of unrestrained joy and enthusiasm, is shown. "O Mensch, Between Wein Dun Seinder Gross," representing Good Friday, is based upon one of the chief Passionite canons of the Church. It is portrayed in "Christ Lag in Todesbanden" which was written from one of Luther's fine hymns. The story of the Acumen taken from the Old Testament by Thomas Merton in "Beut Trumphier Gottes Sohn." The story of the "Pentecost" and "Trinity Sunday" told in music terminate the chorale preludes. To end the religious program, Simpson will play "Prelude in E Flat," at selection based on Luther's Catechism. Announces High Scorers Major Koenig Names Ten Honor Men on Rifle Team The ten highest scores for those in the men's rift team during the past week were announced yesterday by Major W. C. Koenig, with a total score of 3,477 out of a possible 4,000 points. The names of those who made the ten best scores and their respective scores are as follows: Edward Smiley, c$44, 367; Samuel A. McKone, c$36, 181; Samuel M. Hoyle, $36, 189; Royce Beerwin, c$23, 194; Francis H. Dill, p$45; Edgar D Leigh, c$34, 10; J. W. Manaker, c$43, 339; Jay S. Page, c$43, 377; Guy W. Baker, t$34, 128. The scores are expected to arrive from the various competing colleges sometime this week. The competition last week was with the Iowa State College, Nebraska, Missouri, Maine, and Ohio. Last weekend was with the New York Stock Exchange; A, and M. College of Texas; and North Dakota Agricultural College. Herriot May Head Delegation Herrisii May Head Delegation Pastor, Force of POP—Former Former Edward Horsford Officer the French war delegation to the United States, it was indicated today. Jayhawks Defeat K-Aggie Quintet by 33-25 Margin Johnson and Harrington Turn In Outstanding Performances at Game SCORE 19-10 AT HALF By Chiles Coleman Kansas has won seven games and lost two, compared to six victories and two defeats for Oklahoma. The Sooners will close the Jayhawker's season on the Mt. Oread court, and Coach Hugh McCormott and his gears will go to Lincoln Saturday night for their final game against Nebraska. Manhattan, Feb. 25. —The Kansas Jayhawks took a step closer to their third successive Big Six conference win over the Tampa Bay Bulls in taking the Kansas State Wildcats, 33 to 25. The victory also placed Kansas in undisputed control of first place, a half game ahead of the Oklahoma Sooners, and a quarter game ahead of Friday night for the championship game. Led by Bill Johnson, who scored 15 points, the Jahawkers were never in danger of being overcome by the Wild-foots with a 19 to 18 margin at the intermission. Early Lead to Kansas K. U. jumped into a five point lead in the 5-10 play of three games on three free throws by Harrington and a spectacular field goal by Johnson. Boyd hung up the first point for the Wildcats with a charity shot, but Walla and Kane both hit to fill game goals, giving Kansas a 9 to 1 lead with 10 minutes played. Both teams then played on even terms for the next five minutes, and the Jahywhare were leading 14 to 7 by virtue of Johnson's sharp shooting. Captain Andy Skraski then sank with a difficult one-handed basket from the side court and a free throw made possible by Boyd's foul. Kansas was leading 17 to 9. Graham threw in another point for the Wildcats from the charity line, and Johnson connected with a field goal just before the gun to give Johnson a chance to 10 advantage at the intermission. Kansas State made a desperate attempt at a backout in the opening minutes of the final period, cutting the lead with two outs, only three minutes played, Graham, with three baskets, and Dalton, scoring a free throw, were leaders in the march. The Kansas only score during the game from Hartington's misdemeanor loss. Jayhawkers in 7-Point Rally Dr. F. C. Allen's quintet, which realized what a defeat meant in this crucible cage context, then came to life, and led by Johnson, Harrington and Wells, the Jayhawks increased their five minutes remaining to the game. Skradski, however, started another rally that appeared to be heading off a Kansas victory. He dropped in another long basket, his second of the evening, but Johnson came back for another of his many baskets. At this point Coach Charles Coussut sent Stoneer to the line-up as a forward. Stoner responded by connecting with two field goals in a row, and this followed by Graham's free throw found the score at 25. There were points behind, the score standing at 29 to 25. Harrison ingored the game for Kansas in the next minute, eluding the Kansas State defense twice to score three, and gave Kansas its 33 to 26 victory. Two Stars Return to Form Outstanding in the Jayhawk's great battle to cling to a narrow lead in the Big Six race was the senational back of Harrington and Johnson. Harrington beat Johnson 10-8, he scored in the Missouri game two weeks ago and was held pointless in the Iowa State content here last Saturday. He scored 10 points tonight, and his floor work and basket shooting was shodaward only by that of Johnson'. The K. U. star pivot man, who is leading the conference in individual scoring, has likewise been "off," and he was not too early in the season and was worn out for the final games. His 18 points tonight, however, leaves little doubt Continued on page 4 PAGE TWO SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 26. 1933 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE. KANSAS University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS **Admin Editor-In-Chief** Associate Editor Alfreda Broderick Harward Turtle Managing Editor Hilary KENNYS Minkup Editor Caroline Vigor Park Night Edit Marlene Mankoff Tobershaw Editor Arnold Kreutmann Chairman Society Editor Malwine Rowe Royal Mary Alumni Editor Jane Dune Runaway Editor Dovothy Smith ADVERTISING MGR. MARGARET INC Advertising MGR. Robert Whitman Marquette University Margaret Jensen Skyline Dilherr Shrine Judy Millipeter University of Wisconsin Ir McCarthy Marquette University William Prather Atlanta University Brendan Smith Mountain View TEMPORARY Business Office ... K.U. 60 New Room ... K.U. 25 Night Connection, Business Office ... 270K.R Night Connection, New Room ... 270K.R Published in the afternoon, five times a week and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Iowa, and in the Press of the Department of Journalism. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 26. 1933 Subscription price, $40 per year, payable in advance. Single copies, each. Entered as second-class month September 17, 1919, at the post office at Lawrence, KS. ON FEES The last day for paying fees—even with the penalty for tardiness—has come and gone, and now students who cannot pay must be removed from classes. A request by authorities to the Board of Regents for an extension in time was denied, and by the ruling of the Board, all fees must be paid by February 23. In the face of the much-heralded "financial difficulties" abroad everywhere, the question arises: Why not an easy payment system for fees? A dollar down and a dollar a week buys many other things—why not an education? University authorities have two reasons for the emphatic "Impossible" with which they answer this proposition. In the first place it is explained that the fees actually form 35 per cent of the school budget for the year. Total fees for each student enrolled must be sent to the state treasurer by the first March. This money is actually necessary for running the University, taking care of one third of the expense items in the budget. The second reason for the answer is just as definite. At the beginning of the school year, the teaching staff and equipment selected co-ordinate with the enrollment. If students made only a small down payment on their fees and then could withdraw in a month or so without paying the balance, the University would be faced with contracts for heavy expenditures, and a drastically reduced income. Students who withdraw and left Lawrence could scarcely be forced to pay the remainder of their fees, unless they wished to do so. University authorities estimate that about 600 students withdrew or were graduated from the University at the end of the first semester. This is practically the same as in former years, although the ratio is a little higher, because of decreased enrollment the first semester of the year. The figures do not indicate a crisis, however. Although some students have probably been forced out of school by the impossibility of raising enrollment fees in a lump sum, still the majority seem to have had the money, and many others have obtained it through the Student Loan fund, which they will repay each month during the remainder of the school year. As an added measure of relief, the committee has been unusually lenient in excusing students from the penalty required for the late payment of fees. Undoubtedly an easy payment plan would be a fine thing for students. But as matters stand it would take an Einstein or a Technocrat to figure out how to make one work. GOING STALE Sick to death of school, of classes, of getting lessons in this and that! Never want to see another notebook or listen to another lecture. And, furthermore, hope never to write another paper or read another history book. Hitting the old ball has knocked all the glamour off of putting out a campus daily. Searecely a moment's rest—only time to catch the train home and catch up on a few hours sleep—and the old grind has started all over again. Another semester is in full swing. Even new classes and new professors can't break the spell. Continuous, unbroken monotony. Not even a bright thought to interrupt. No inspiration. Just an insumurable obstacle booming ahead that deadens one's initiative and energy and keeps one wondering where he is going to find material for that next paper that must be on the desk by nine in the morning. Ho hum. What a life! SWALLOWED The Chinese carp and the Japanese goldfish were swimming in he sea; the Chinese carp ate the Japanese goldfish, what a curious sight to see. Perhaps the phantasy above may not be as trivial as it sounds if history repeats itself. If it is possible for Japan to conquer China, which is doubtful—probably impossible — there is always the almost practical certainty that she will be absorbed, swallowed as wore the Mongol and Manchu invaders of China in the past. Expose seventy million people to four hundred million and see what kind of combination you get. But the most important factor to be considered is the possibility that China may emerge from the gorging process filled with militaristic ideas. Such a possibility was expressed by Vernon Nash, exchange professor from China to the University of Missouri, who spoke here Friday. A development of that sort is in line with past historical events. Pre-war Prussian militarism led to post-war French militarism. What if slumbrous, paced old China emerges powerful, menacing, overbalanced by illogical militarism—a fourth of the world's population filled with the conquest fever—! It is something to think about. BEWARE! ITLL GET YOU! According to an unofficial survey, the University is in the clutches of another infant epidemic. This time it is intestinal influenza, and each day new sufferers are added to the casualty list. The first evidence of trouble leads the victim to think that perhaps the ice cream-lobster combination wasn't such a wise choice after all. But with the coming of the fever, the back-ache, and—you know, it becomes evident at last that you have it. No one is immune, it seems, to the disease, and those who have allowed their physical condition to be weakened through neglect and carelessness are easy victims. What can one do to keep up one's resistance? What should one eat and drink? For the sake of those who haven't contracted the sickness, these questions should be answered by someone who is capable of giving the information. Although you may be doing your best to keep fit, you may be next. Wouldn't it be possible for the hospital staff to issue some hints on how to keep well and happy? AQUATIC SAFETY The American Red Cross has been working for years to lower the mortality rate from drowning. Last week a representative of the Red Cross came to this campus and conducted an examiner's school for life savers, in which the best methods of rescuing and reviving were demonstrated. The purpose of this organization, in its extensive program of providing instruction and giving tests, is not primarily to prepare candidates for positions on life saving crews, but rather to educate people as to how to save lives in case of drowning accidents where there are no official guards on duty, such as on private boating parties. It is a rare occurrence to have a person drown in a supervised pool where everyone is being watched and must swim in accordance with the regulations of the pool and under the direction of the guards. Yet it is not uncommon to read or hear of drownings in small groups where no one was able to make the rescue. It is cases of this kind that the Red Cross is striving to eliminate. QUIPS from other QUILLS Several centuries ago, America was regarded by immigrants as “the promised land.” But now it’s the much-promised land—Texas State Lass-O. Phog Allen of the University of Kansas, admitted the best basketball coach in the country, has made an outstanding bid for unpopularity by his campaign against the whoooping fans who dare to criticize officials. Dr. Allen wrote that he believes citizenenge believes the admission penalty him not only to a seat but also to the right to fill the gymnasium with his vocal protests at any fancied wrong to the home town boys. Losing either the seat or the chance to exercise his lungs, he may come to the conclusion that he should listen to the game over the raid and at his wife --TLK, in Corinthian Blade-Emph. ? When Thanksgiving comes we shall sit among other things our pleasant uprise back on February 14 when we will celebrate our annual holidays. C.W.J., in Winfield Courtier. Being a rebel has long been an of-fence punishable by death, but Nicaragua has adopted a slightly less drastic punishment for the impugnant soldiers of the elite. The government is giving them a farm apiece — Kansas City Kansan. Doctors have discovered a new method of grafting leg nerves to the face. Which will probably mean a lot more about conditions—Texas State Lose-0. There are moments when we are inclined to think that after all Will Rogers is pretty clever. For months he has not been able to make it clear what pure Democratic propagands on their front pages but he has even got them to pay for it—J-PH, in Ottawa Herald. Tell your friend a lie and if he keeps it secret tell him the truth. — Daily Texan. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXX Sunday, Feb. 26, 1933 No. 110 HOME ECONOMICS CLUB There will be pledging service and dinner Tuesday, at 3:30 p.m. at the home of Wanda Elmonds, 1546 Rhode Island street, HARRIETT St., President. There will be a meeting of the Home Economics club at the home manag ment house Tuesday at 5 cck. Initiation followed by a waffle supper. Notice due at Chancellor's Office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication day and 11:30 a.m. for Sunday. Please visit us online or send an e-mail to: chancellor@ucl.edu. LORENE KALKBRENNER, President. There will be a meeting of the Mathematics club Monday, at 4:30 in room 12. Administration building, Miss Dorothy Durotney will speak on the subject "HISTORY." MATHEMATICS CLUB: Y, W, C, A, ASSEMBLY; The Y.W.C.A. assembly for all University women will be held Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 in central Administration auditorium. Following the program a nominating committee to choose candidates for offices, for election the following week, will be chosen. CATHERINE VALLETE, President. JAY JANES: RHADAMANTHI. Rhadamathai members will meet Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock in the Green room of Fraser hall. Members will bring an original poem. MAXINE LUTHER, President. The MAY DAY MYSTERY By Octavus Roy Cohen. SYNOPSIS CHAPTER I—Annetteite Payton, Marland, present Paterson. Thayer attended to yay for the alarm score. ending with bitter粹录取, the non, another student. long Thayer non, another student. long Thayer a date" with him. Thayer and Vernon CHAFTER IX.—To Reagan the knife in his hand was discovered that Thayer had been robbed discovery CHAPTER VIII. Will as the scene of the murder the jungleman who found Tauher murder the jungleman who found Tauher murder with his whiskey for forbidden alcoholic drinks the profile after the ex-servant was executed CHAFTER II.—Larry Welch, Ivy, wore a dress made for her to appraise to by our woman to end his marriage with her. We all knew each other. Welch does not see what tells him she is married to Tanzer. Well tell him she is married to Tanzer. CHAFTAIR V- $The Marlain bank is working with the money after being shot and apparently badly wounded, Jim Lieser, of Ohio, obese, and good natured, comes to investigate the robbery, H尔德利斯. Bruce, of Pennsylvania, leaves Mark Vernon was driving the car. CHAPTER 11...Larry determines to play the Player and end his association with the boy who has appended to his hair room. He asks the girl to leave the room at a fraternity house. Max Verris arrives and goes to his room. Tony ends up in the room as the boy does, not leave the house almost immediately afterward, vivibly in a state of rage. He learns less likely, apparently clothing to be worn. CHAPTER VI—Havenay interrogates the man who was killed by the murder. Welch is wounded in the attack, and Thayer was alive when he left him. The body of the man who is being seemingly endowing to his life has been tilted his firm conviction being that the resulting series of incidents mere-occurs. CHAPTER VI. Th-Thayer, Fluke tells Hawney, has been systematically robbed by James, and Vernon, apparently, has been the suspect. Hawney to take charge of the murder because he both the murder and robbery. Tony Kernigan, with Vernon are under arrest as Tuesdays. CHAPTER IV, IV—Webster appeal to the House, declaring that he will not defile himself in those sightings. He asks that the Senate hold house injuries, fights that harm the land's police chief, takes charge of the city. The Marlard jail belied fording it against the full moon of a perfect May night. Citizens of Marlard were sent to the dock to repair the creature walls, of its marble porlox, of the heavy iron bases which prechained them, so that that it would do well not to er here. Jim Hawney stood at the curb and commented in complimentary fashion, "We've been working hard to thank the heart of the local detective. Then they walked through the big gates and climbed to the warden's door. They entered the access to the prisoners at any time. The warden conducted the two men to the little room which was occupied by them." She rose as she entered; a trim womanly figure in a dark blue dress. She showed signs of the strain there was on her face, but she it. It was plain that she was making an effort to remain calm. Reign intuitively surveyed and all three seated themselves. "You understand, Miss Payton," said Hanvey quietly, "you don't have to talk if you want to." scene between Mr. Thayer and Ivy Welch. You buttoned in and a general row followed. It don't matter just what was said. The point is that you and Thayer and Ivy were all sore, weren't you? "I have no objections to talking," she answered calmly. He liked her cool, quiet, straight forward manner. He was as though she had nothing to hide and nothing to fear. "Now the first important thing I've got to find out is this. Miss Pogonian, Thayer? What is it?" Thayer? What I mean is: What right you have bawling him out for making him go. "Good. I shall have to ask questions which might be kind of—well—direct. Is that all right?" "No." The big man reached for the golden toolkit and clicked it open. It seemed intended to talk to talmud, polygony fingers were busy with that gigantic instrument. "Yes." Tony's face flashed, and, for an instant, her eyes flashed. She an swerved rather coldly: "I'm not going to waste your time with a lot of silly questions, Miss Peyton. I reckon I could start at the beginning and check up with you on how much work we are ready, just to see if you'd tell me the same story. But I won't." "I think you're presuming a good "Thank you," said Tony gratefully. "I'm only going to ask you about the movie." He nodded. "No, a bread. I mean, a bread, I mean, a bread, grin split in its lips. "That's far enough, isn't it?" MAR 1923 "Yes. . . . " She found herself warming to this big man. He seemed honest; genuinely, deeply honest. "What Right Had You Bawling Him Out for Making Love to Another Girl!" "I know," continued Jim softly, "that you overheard a sort of love deal, aren't you. Mr. Hanvey?" "No maum, Honest. I ain't as dumb as I look. I know there was something between you and Thayer. May be it was jealousy—maybe something else. But it's awful important that I find out." "Because if I don't know the truth, I've got to figure things my own way. You see, that's a sort of link in the chain that gets to be welded . . . and one of the most important things is there was between you and Thayer." "I'm sorry if you don't," plended Hanvey, "because it isn't helping body for you not to tell me the truth, that you're wrong." You hurt you any worse than having me think things. That is, unless you really killed him yourself—" "I don't see. . . ." "I didn't say you did. But listen. Miss Peyton: Put yourself in my place. Make sure to find out that there makes him so pretty little, blond. Give you him thunder—and it's clear there's something between you. At the end of that interruption, when you're walking into the room. Then a little later you walk straight up to Thayer's room in the fraternity house and a little while after you leave you know where he's going. That truth hurt you much worse than that?" "I feel that I should speak frankly. I—I have a hunch that you're not trying to trick me." "That's it, Miss Peyton. Because no matter what you want for, or what happened after you got there, it was worth it." He could start to start the whole empire talking. "Thank you kindly, m'am. And you've got me right: I swear you have." She bit her lip, then spoke sharply. "You are wondering how I dared to go to Mr. Thayer's room in the fraternity house when I knew it would smart the whole crimson gossiping crowd." She said. "I had a good reason for going there?" "That," announced Tony bravely, "is precisely what I went there." "To start gossip? JUST THE WHAT. GO "So the truth would come out, and when it did, Pat would be forced to let Ivy Welch alone." "The truth? What is the truth, Miss Peverton?" Tony did not evade. Her answer came in a firm, cool voice: "Hurry, the Internet's mislead." came in a hotel, cool voice: "I am Pat Thaver's wife." Jim blinked and fumbled for his toothpick. There was an audible gasp from John Reagon. And then, as they listened in stupided silence, Tony told-in a level, emotionless tone—of what happened to Thuyer and of what had occurred since that time. When she finished she sent herself, Himp and frightened. Suppose she had done the wrong thing before she and her duggery for Jim Hanvey. He seemed so comfortably friendly. There was something in his solid calmness which compelled me to avoid evasion. One gathered that he instinctively respected her for her intelligence, respected the former and deepened the latter. The girl took a deep breath. Her brain told her that she had done everything that said that she had done the best thing. "And so you see," she said, after a long pause, "I had to protect ivy. I knew Pat Thayer was married—but she did." "I see . . . . And, of course, you were not featolous, were you?" "No. . . . " The color flooded her cheeks. "You mean: Not then?" prompted Hanvey. "Of him!?" She gave a short, bitter laugh. "He is dead now—and this may not sound well; but I desplied him." "That explains a good deal," I was as though Hanwever did it. "You could have expected to guess that you were Thayer's wife. And nobody else knew." "Even Larry Welch didn't know then that you were Thayer's wife, did he?" Reagan's head jerked up sharply. He saw the girl start with surprise. She saw her cheeks blanch. Then he locked curiously at himself. The hive got bigger and was gazing faintly at the gluing toothpick—unapparently unmildful of the vital question he had asked. Reagan had just concluded that Jim didn't even know what he had stumbled upon in a quiet conversation. In a quiet, conversational tone. And now Tony Peyton was definitely on guard. Her tiny tits were clenched and she was sitting forward teensely, 'oh,' she said sharply. "He didn't know." "But," suggested Jim, "you told him few minutes later, didn't you?" "Who said I did?" "Goss! "Miss Peyton — I didn't梦 anybody mis said. so, I was just asking: "What did you work on? worked up. You'd think I was trying to trap you. i isn't honest, i am!" "I just suggested that you went straight to Larry Welch and told him the truth. Aln't that a fact?" "I think I'd rather not discuss it any more, Mr. Haney, I'm afraid I've already said entirely too much." (To be continued tomorrow A. G. ALRICH LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Excultically 1025 Mass. Printing Engraving Binding, Rubber Stamps, Office Supplies Stationery 736 Mau. Street 736 Mass. Street THE BLACK BOX OF SILENCE COMING SOON A mysterious invention with unheard of powers is stolen and leads to an exciting chase half-way across the continent. You'll enjoy the story. WATCH FOR IT SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 20. 1933 17 PAGE THREE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PUBLIC SAFETY Hill Society Call K. U.-25 Before 12:30 p. m. Sigma Phi Epsilon Initiates Pledges Sigma Phi Epsilon will hold initiation ceremonies today at 3 o'clock followed by a formal dinner at 6 o'clock. The initiates are Byron Walters, c35; Jeary, c34; Ceary, c6; Milton C Schnece, c36; Jean Bolton, c35; and David Fisher, c36. Guests who will be present for the initiation and dinner are Paul G Koontz, grand president of Sigma Phi Epsilon, and Elmer Hier of Kansas City; Klaus Kamaproeder, Cecil Lewis, Edwin Fisher, Harold Karole, and Glenn Lowry; Dorsey of Baldwin; Edwin Young, John Bowen, Guy Smith, Dr. James Naisbout, Courtney Clarence Freeark, and Frank McDonald of Lawrenz Alpha Delta Pi Has Initiation Banquet Bunches of violences will be used as table decorations to carry out the color scheme of purple and white at the forefront. These will be added by the new initiates of Alpha Deli Pi. Alumnae who came back to attend the initiation service and the dinner are Phyllis Nelson of Almensa; Mary Gabriel of Garden City; Ethet Coghill, and Mrs. E. B. Cook of Iola; and Mrs. Faye Eaton of Lawrence. Other weekend guests at the Alpha Delta Pi house are Mrs. A, E. Fogelbürd of Hutchinson, Mrs. A. E. Punk of Lennoxville, and Elise Lamerton of Topkapi. Chi Delta Sigma Gives Founders' Day Banquet Chi Delta Sigma is holding its annual Founders Day banquet today. A Tailored Collection of the Billy Reynolds Memorial award, which is given each semester for scholar-standing. The dinner table decorated out in red and white, fraternity colors. Among those guests present are Dr. and Mrs. I. H. Wheeler, S. P. Perkins Walter Hall, and I. N. Johnson of Lawrence; L. A. Reed, B. Beverley, W. Tlery Jr., and Leon Storm of Kansas City, Mt. James Campbell and Dependence; W. Lauw Kiester of Linwood, and Owen Watch of Manhattan. University Club Dinner Bridge The University club held a dinner bridge Friday night. The club was decorated with red candles in bronze candle sticks, red carnations were used as the centerpiece, and a paisley shawl of red decorated the center of the table. Holds Initiation Prizes were awarded to Mrs. F. E. Kester, Mrs. G. W. Stratton, and Professor F. A. Russell. The committee consisted of Professor and Mrs. E. D. Kinney, Professor and M. A. T. Walker, Professor and Mrs. A. W. Davidson, Professor and Professors and Mrs. W. Davidson. BIRD Sigma Nu is holding initiation today for the following: Herbert Donnelley, c35; and George Taylor, e1cul, of Parsons; Loren Frenk, c36, of Lawrence; Edward Fulconer, c35, ofilleborn; Thomas Hurst, c37, and Norbert Anschneit, c36, of Kansas City, Mo.; Richard Mason, c36, of William Edore, Foote c34, of Hutchinson; Eugene Gray, c36, of Horton; Richard Mason, c36, of Garden; William Eleman, c35, of Columbus; and William Inge, e1cul, of Independence. Sigma Kappa held formal initiation yesterday afternoon for Helen Christman, c34, Topkea; Attila Anderson gc, McPherson; Gladys Edwards, c35 Kansas City, Mo, Ona Mae Larner c34, Lawrence; Harriet丹斯, f35 Kansas City, Mo, Faye Fairview; and Mary Louise Harris, cuncl, Kansas City, Mo. A banquet was held following the initiation, carrying out the fraternity colors of lavender and maroon. Miss Alice Cochran, daughter of Mrs W. P. Cochran of San Francisco, formerly of Wichita, will become the bride of Augustus S. Babcock of San Francisco March 9. The ceremony will be held at Grace of Grace Cathedral in that city. Phi Gamma Delta will hold initiation tomorrow night for the following: Ben Barteldoe, c36, Lawrencie; Stuart Bardeles, c36, Greenbrown;岭, brow, Greer of the Forest; John Sleeper, c36, Topaka; Donald Green, c36, Paola; Frank Ackle, c36, Kansas City, Mo.; James Cushing, c36, Harrison and Harrison Sushing, c36, Atchison Miss Cochran attended the University from 1922 to 1924. She was a member of Kappa Alpha Theta. Aluminum Omicron Pi will hold initiation services this morning for the following: Jessamine Jackson, c'34 and Betty Brown, f'34, of Lawrence; Jeanne Martim, c'unc1, of Kansas City, Mt. and Wanda Perrina, c'55, of Topeka. Following the initiation there will be a banquet in honor of the new initiator. Phi Beta Pi held institution last night for Richard Nelson, c'34, Lawrence; Glen Peters, c'ucl, Cameron, Mo.; Orval Smith, c'ucl, Russell; Sloan Wilson, c'8, Wichita; Edward Ryan, c'36, Dennis Raglin, c'8, Stanton; Overland Park; Raymond Siles, c'ucl, Kansas City, Mo.; and Harry Lennard, c'8, Morganville. Guests this weekend at the Sigma Kappa house are Mary Lycked, Virginia Richeton, Mary Isabel Hart, and Mrs. Pearl Stickney of Leavenworth, Helenord Fear, Dorothy Kroch, and Eshler Watson of Kansas City, Mo.; Maxine English of Saranah, Mo.; and Gladys Hapler of Salina. Mr. Thomas, minister of the Young People's group extends a welcome to all Baptist young people and their friends to attend the social hour to be held tonight at 6:30 cclock following the evening at Laura Cunningham is to be in charge. Phi Mu Alpha held an informal party at the chapter house Friday night. Mr. and Mrs. Carl McClung of Lawrence were the chaperones. Mrs. Ellen Monroe of Lyons, Robert McKowen, c38 and Douglas Pierce were guests. The University Women's club will entertain housemothers of the various organized houses at the meeting Thursday afternoon in Myers hall. Mrs. R. A. Schwelger will be chairman of the committee in charge of the tea. Pledges of Kappa Alpha Theta entered the activities yesterday with the annual Black Cat tea. Each pledge was forced to bring a black cat to the tea. Dorothy Woodward of Kansas City, Mo., and Ellen Davis of Wichita are guests this weekend at the Alpha Omicron Pi house. Guests Friday night at the Phi Kappa house were Morris A. Smith James A. Graham, and Melvin Perdue of Huron. John Huckbuck of Pretty Prairie is a weekend guest at Bea Theta Pi. Robert Hinz of Leavenworth is a weekend guest at the Kappa Sigma house. At The Churches First Methodist Episcopal Sunday school classes for Universi- studies at 9:45 a.m. Warming service at 10:50 o'clock. Theme of the service. "Faith's Investment." Wesley Foundation league meet at 30 p.m. Burton Power, 33 will lead the co-operative discussion on the subject, "Youth Looks at the Church," osephine Daehnese, c33, and Derrice bryder, c33, will assist. "Better Your Life on God," will be the subject of the evening sermon at 3:00 o'clock Roland Stover, 3:32, will the solist at this service. Professor Raymond H. Wheeler will teach the University class at 9:45 a.m. Morning worship at 11 o'clock. Sermon subject, "The Religious Adventure." Irony, associate professor, will sing, write and serve (Van de Water) at this service. Plymouth Congregational Imogene High, c. 36; is in charge of the meeting of Sigma Eta Chai at 5:15 p.m. Fireside form supper at 6:15 p.m. The Rev R. W. P. Amrell will lead the discussion at the 7 o'clock service project. "What Is it to Be a Christian." Sunday school devotional hour at 45 a.m.; the men's class will be in the library for study, while will speak on the subject, "Power," to the University Women's Bible class. Morning meeting at 11 o'clock. Sermon "Is Protestantism Teaching Jeans?" Christian unbar or 'Caras Scelem' school at午10 a.m. followed by morning lesson on a Subject, "Jesus Christ." Meetings which include testimonies of Christ science healing are held every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. Student fellowship meeting and luncheon at 5:30 p.m. Paul B. Lawson, associate dean of the College, will be the speaker. The Christian Science reading room maintained by this church is located at 8 South Eighth Street and is open 24 hours a day, 5 p.m. except Sundays and holidays. First Church of Christ Scientist Presbyterian Sunday school at 9:45 a.m. followed by morning worship at 11 o'clock. Serion subject, "Is Man Worth Saving," Professor N. P. Sherwolf will speak on the topic of Looking At Religion, "at the meeting of Westminster forum at 7:30 p.m." First Twin Zebras Born in America ZEBRA Born several weeks ago in the Barnum circus winter quarriers at E Monte, Calif., the first twin zebras ever produced in this country are here seen at their first outdoor appearance. The circus men have named them Wine and Beer. First Baptist The young people's group will discuss the subject, "Evolution or Revolution," at 9:45 a.m. Morning service at 10:50 o'clock. Miss Betra Boye will present two book reviews at the young people's meeting at 6:30 p.m. They will be on "The Magnificent Obsession" by Loyd C. Douglass and "Young Revolutionists" by Pearl S. Buck. Immanuel Lutheran Bible class at 10 a.m. Divine service at 11 o'clock. Sermon subject, "The Supremacy of Love." Luncheon at the open forum discussion at 6 o'clock. Church school at 9:45 a.m. Forum 10 a.m. Subject, "The Art of Living" There will be no 11 o'clock service this Sunday. Unitarian "Mary's Example of Service," a pre-Lenten theme, will be the subject of the evening service at 7:45 p.m. "Faith and Fiction." will be the subject for discussion by the young people's group at 7 p.m. On Other Hills Graduate students at Pennsylvania State College are of the opinion that the value of honorary scholastic awards "negilegal." In a recent questionnaire 21 graduates so voted; 11 decided hey were "preceptible"; 5 "great"; and only one "very great." Their opinion, however, as to high schoolal standing --was almost reversed, over half of them considering this as "very great." TO FLY OVER EVEREST H. E. F. B. C. The marquis of Cyddeslae, "The Boxing Marquis," who has been selected as chief pilot of a British expedition which will attempt to fly over Mount Everest, which is 25,000 feet high, and the highest mountain in the world, and Cyddeslae who is twice yule-ly, the half of the dike of Hamilton. The "harbs" of Tennessee University have rallied together to put on a social function of their own. Last Saturday (March 13) the university known as the "Non-Frats" conducted their first social event, known as a "depression party," with all non-frats attending. The university invited a ten-event admission charge was made to pay for refreshments. The literal meaning of "horse sense" is being determined by an instructor of psychology at Cornell. Forty-five horses are going to school in order to exhibit their intelligence and uphold the reputation of fellow equines. They are given tests which disclose memory, observation, and color sense. Football players receive a tomosil reward for victory. They get a free hair-cut for every game they win—Swarthmore College. Corpulent campus cops, almost a tradition at Yale, have been told they must reduce their wastiness. The University's health department has issued an order requiring them to report in the gym for daily workouts. Perhaps money would begin to circulate if the U.S. Mint would print sskip on it. Mutilated and stolen books cost the University library $1,000 yearly—Ohio State University. One hundred thousand years ago Montana was the home of the biggest beasts that roamed the earth. Toledo, Ohio, Feb. 25—UF) —Seven-five pounds of air mail was burned today when an airplane crashed while landing. The pilot, Nick Laurencoma, died along alone, was uninjured. The mail was cremated to Chicago from New York. Air Mail Burns in Crash TEACHERS: Before joining an agency, write us. Vacancies are being reported daily. Cooperative plan assumes the responsibility Exchange, City, Kansas. —112 HAVE YOUR application photographs made at Moore Studio. 719 Mass. (upstairs - exclusive). Phone 984. - 125 Want Ads Twenty-five words or less. I entertise. SIX+ inches of insertion. HANDSOME. PRESENTADE. WANT AIDS. ARE COMPANIED COMPANYED BY CASH. Alter Says Scientists Need Math Knowledge TRUNK KEYS, door keys, ear keys. Good locker padlocks, night latches. door closers repaired. Trewery or Rutter. 623 Vermont St. Phone 319. Astronomy Professor Be lieves it Will Help to Handle Data "All scientists should have a knowledge of mathematics," Professor Dismore Alter of the astronomy department at the meeting of Phi Sigma last night. Professor Alter addressed the Phi Sigma society, a biological group, on the necessity of knowing mathematics with the help of one one's findings through the microscope. According to A. B. Leonard, gr. a member of the Fhi Sigma, Professor Alter performed a service for the mercy that allowed him to have the courage and tact to do as to do well, namely, pointing out weaknesses in the technique of the workers in various fields of science because their lack of knowledge of mathematics. "Biologists and zoologists have come to me time and time again." Profess. Aller said, "for assistance in the interpretation of data which needed mathematical analysis." Professor Alter recommended a training course in mathematics and an intimate knowledge of scientific statistics. This will decrease the chances, he said, of misinterpreting scientific results of scientists in general for neglecting to take mathematics into consideration when making scientific analysis. KFKU An aerial view of the National Capital made recently and showing the progress on the $200,000,000 building program of new federal buildings. In the group of new structures are the Department of Commerce building, Post Office building, Department of Labor building, Interstate Commerce building, Internal Revenue building, Department of Justice building and the National museum. 2. 30 p.m. Elementary French lesson, W. K. Cornell, instructor in romance languages. Monday --and the subsequent suicide of his 21 year old student were the outcome of a plot to steal a plane. He said charges of being an accomplice to the plot would be filed against one of the youths. 2:45 p.m. "People of the Short Story," W. R. Harley, assistant professor of journalism. 6 a.m. Campus calendar, Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes, associate professor of English. 4 Rapid Progress on New Federal Buildings CONFESSION OF TEXAS YOUTHS SOLVES MURDER-SUICIDE CASI San Benito, Texas. Feb. 25.-(UP)—District Attorney D. S. Purl announced today that three local youths had been charged with assaulting Nelson Johnson, 53,飞辅导员 Whew? Spring Tonics EAT SPRING FOODS Rhubarb Spinach Carrots Peas And so many other fruits and vegetables --at the CAFETERIA Erin McCall committed suicide after the plane in which he shot Nelson landed here. Purl said that McCall's sweetheart aided in the plot and that her testimony helped solve the murder-suicide mystery. TAXI 25c Just Phone 65 Jayhawk Taxi Ike Guffin. Prop. TOMATO MELLOW BLUE MILL 1009 Mass. PATER WHERE BIG PICTURES PLAY Sunday Shows - 1:30 - 3:30 - 7 - 9 NOW! BETTER COME EARLY The Musical Comedy Romance All Lawrence Has Been Waiting For. 42nd STREET The Greatest Musical Comedy Romance Ever to Come Out of Hollywood. Also—Cartoon - Novelty - News 10 GREAT STARS 200 Gorgeous Girls 4 Sensational Song Hits 20c to 7; After 7, 25c Always Biggest and Best for Less Honest Dependable Prices Subscribe for THE KANSAS CITY STAR PHONE 17 Headquarters 847 Mass. St. 13 papers — 15c per week H. L. NEVIN Distributor Glenurguhart PLAID SUITS Have Your Tennis Racket Restrung M See Our Windows ARE FAVORED FOR SPRING By University Men $2450 Ober's HEAD TOFOOT OUTPUTERS THE LATEST WORD IN NEW INDIVIDUAL NAME AND ADDRESS STATIONERY This new adventure gives you a wide selection of engravings and color combinations—from the 'ole' style wood block cuts to the new modernistic initial combinations. The paper comes in many delightful colors ranging from Beach Blue and Toreador Red to a delicate Gandhi Brown. 50 Folded Sheets With Your Name 50 Baronial Envelopes With Your Address MARCH SPECIAL ONLY $1^{25} 1401 OHIO Rowlands 1237 OREAD PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 26. 1933 A HARBINGER OF SPRING Tau Sigma Dance Recital INCLUDING CLASSICAL TAP; TOE MECHANISTIC AND INDIAN OLD FAVORITES and NEW FEATURES for ALL LOVERS of the DANCE March 8 8:20 P.M. Admission - 50c Tickets on Sale at Green Hall, March 3 Phone. K. U. 174 K.U. Track Team Scores 56 Points to Defeat Haskell Jayhawks Win Eight First Places in Twelve Events Run Off Yesterday MEET HELD OUTDOORS The University of Kansas track and field team, coached by Bill Hargias, secured a total of 56 points to win a meet on Saturday. The team dames yesterday afternoon. The final score stood at 56 to 48 with the Jay-hawkers winning eight first places. Although this was to have been an indoor meet, the events were completed outside owing to the weather conditions. One mile run—M. James, Haskell, first; Frazier, Haskell, second; Bates, Haskell, third. Time 4:48. 440 yard dosh—B. James, Haskell first; Rogers, Kansas, second; Tomoneh Haskell third. Time $3.6. 60 yard dash—Hall, Kansas, first Hampton, Haskell, second; Piumley Kansas, third. Time 6.2. 60 yard high hurdles—Flick, Kansas first; Dunn, Kansas, second; Wapp Haskell, third. Time 7.8 889 yard run--M. James, Haskell, first; Borel, Kansas, second; Parazoo, Haskell, third. IQ 255.5. 60 yard low hurdles—Flick, Kansas; first; Holmes, Haskell, second; Wapp, Haskell, third. Time 7.2. Two mile run—Niwonger, Kansas; first; Bates, Haskell, second; Frazier, haskell, third. Time 10.35.8 Mile relay—Kansas (Rogers, Allison Plumley, and Hall). Time 3.31.1. Shot put-Beaty, Kansas; first; Beach, Kansas; second; Harjo, Haskell, third, 42 feet, 11 3-4 inches. Pole vault—Boutty, Kansas, first Rogers, Kansas, second; Saul, Haskell, third, 11 feet, 6 inches. High jump—Dunn, Kausas, first Seratt, Gillmore, and Barryhall, Haskell. second. 5 feet. 10 to 58 inches. Broad jump—Thomas, Haskell, first Holmes, Haskell, second; Haskell, Kunsas, third. 22 feet, 2 3-4 inches. Men's Intramurals --that he has hit his stride again and is the outstanding center of the conference by a wide margin. The Beta loss, which is their first was quite an upset of the "dope bucket" and gives the Phi Delts a tie with them for first place. This makes the race very complicated. Beta and Phi Delt are through with their schedules. Sigma Nu and Phi Delt are through with their division and there is slight chance of a tie in the division in which the Tennessee club is now leading. If S. A. E. can overthrow D. U. it will give them the championship of the division. If K. E. K. wins from the Tennessee club it will place the latter team in a tie with Phi Mu Alpha for the top position in that division. However, should D. U. and the Tennessee club finish their schedules without an upset it will leave five teams to fight it out for the championship. Phi Delt, Beta, Sigma Nu, D. U., and Tennessee club. This manner as is the championship for the 'B' division with drawings being made to determine the pairings. No division cups will be awarded but the winner and runner-up in the finals will be awarded trophies. Differing from former years, in which the semifinals and finals were played on the long court, all championship games are conducted on the short courts, according to E. R. Eloset, director of intramurals. Beadie the Phil Delt-Beta game there were four other games played over the weekend. Kappa Sigma defended Delta Tau Delta 35 to 21; Alpha Kappa Lambona won from Triangle 13 to 9; Kappa Sigma 'B' defeated Sigma Alpha Epsilon 'B' 22 to 14; and Sigma Nu was winner over Sigma Alpha Epsilon 24 on one postpause, Delt-Ca forfeited and one postpause, Delt-Ca forwards A. T.O., Phi Psi to C.D.S, and Ascacia to S. P. E. The A. K.Pi-Theta Tau game was postponed Phi Dell Theta-23 FG FT Briedenthal, f 1 2 Chelsea, h 2 1 North, c 3 1 Philips, g 3 1 Gavin, c 0 0 LEFT HAND CHAMP Totals ... 9 5 Beta Theta Pi-21 ... FG FT Benson, f ... 1 1 Dodgis, g ... 1 0 Cars, c ... 1 0 McCormick, g ... 0 1 White, g ... 1 1 The box scores of Friday's and yesterday's events are: Totals Referees—Quigley and Manning. CHAMPIONS Freed Webb of Shelly, N. C, who won the national left-handed golf championship over the Miami Bilt-10 team, also won the trophy he won is shown with the trophy he won. Kappa Sigma—35 FG FT 1 Morrison, c 1 Gullifer, f 2 2 Cave, f 2 1 Ashler, f 1 0 Whitemnn, g 2 0 Johnson, g 4 0 Totals ... 15 5 Delta Tau Delta--21 FG FT Noel, f ... 2 0 Helman, f ... 0 0 Hibbs, f ... 0 0 Vorran, c ... 4 1 Doverwright, g ... 3 0 Veitch, g ... 1 0 --- --- Alpha KappaLambda-13 FG FT Brouninger, f 1 0 Pilshaw, f 1 0 Davie, f 1 0 Johns c 2 1 Althstedt, g 1 0 Puris, g 1 0 Totals ... Referee—Beach. Totals 4 5 Triangle--8 FG FT Chauney, f 1 1 Schurow, f 0 1 Gift, c 0 1 Barring, g 1 1 Alexander, g 1 0 Tathwell, g 0 0 Totals... 3 3 Referees—Beach. Sigma Alpha Ep. 'B'-14 FG FT Reeder, f 1 Dermann, f 2 Darmon, c 1 Breuer, g 1 Miller, g 1 Salis, g 0 Kappa Sigma 'B'-22 FG FT 11 Starr, f 1 1 Steer, f 1 0 Grimes, f 0 Rankin, c 3 1 Ellis, g 1 Bell, g 2 Newman, g 0 Shaffer, g 1 Totals ... 10 2 Reforms...Payment Sigma Nu-24 FG FT Terry, f 1 1 Houston, f 1 0 Paulett, c 0 0 Young, t 7 2 Pifer, g 1 2 McElliney, h 0 0 10 4 Sigma Alpha Epilogue -23 FG FT Dernau, f 2 0 Bruer, f 2 0 Frommudd, c 2 2 Vuss, g 2 1 Bond, g 2 0 Phi Gamma Delta Wins Annual Swimming Mee Six games are scheduled for Monday, at 6:30 K. E K. vs. Tennessee club and D. U. vs. Louisville; S. A. E., D. U. and Phi Chi; start at 9 o'clock, and Wakarusku with Phi Beta Pi, and Kappa Sigma I. Jayhawk B will play at 10 o'clock, vs. Jayhawk B vs. Jayhawk B the semi-final game of the championship of the 'B division. Totals 10 Referee—Manning. Kansas Again Leading in Big Six Conferenc Credit, however, should also go in the direction of Graham, Dalton, and Skradski for Kansas State. Hold to a single free throw in the first period. Go ahead, but halve the early minutes of the half at 12:50, man rally that almost overtook the Mt. Orad quintet. Skradski played an outstanding defensive game besides contributing four points to his team's tonight. He starred on the defensive tonight. His headshot secured only three points. His inability to connect from the midseamline line, missing on five different occasions, kept him from being the outstanding idle on the court. The score: Karine, f PT MT PF MF Harrison, f 4 1 3 Joe, g 2 1 3 Gelfond, c 2 1 3 Schake, g 0 0 0 (Continued from page 1) Betas Take Second Place With 61 Points; Triangle Third Pil Gamma Delta was the winner of the intramural swimming meet with a total of 61 points. By winning the 200-yard relay and placing second in the 220-yard dash in Friday's event, it increased its lead over the other teams which it obtained from events taken the first two days of the meet. Beta placed second place with a total of 48 points and Triangle obtained 46 to place third. 229-yard dash: Individual winner, Alexander, Phi Gam. Time, 3:04.5 team winner, Triangle, Team average, 3:06.1 Second, Third, Team average, 3:13.5 (Alexander, 3:04.5; Barteles, 3:22.6) Third, D. U. Team average, 3:16 (Ryan, 3:11.8; Snyder, 3:02.3); Fourth, Beto, 3:03.9; Reearn, 3:24.2; Michaels, 3:14.3) in the total points won by other some Aacacia received 6; Delta Upton 17; Kappa Sigma, 21; Phi Delta Theta, 24; Nu, 37; Tau Tau, 6; and Gaykhays Results of Friday's events; 200-yard relay: Team winner, Phi Gam. Time, 2:00.6 (Chair, Brown, Alexander, Clemens). Second, Triangle. Third, Beta. Fourth, DU. No records were broken or tied in this year's swimming meet. Most of the school records were hung up in 1932. As there were no records kept of the intramural swimming meets held during the season, results are only available to that year. The records through the years of 1929 to 1933 inclusive; 50-yard dash: Individual record. Ryan, DU. DTime .28 (1952). Team record. Phi Gam. Team average, 29.5 (1932). (Porter, Take). 50-yard back stroke: Individual record, Alexander, Phi Gam. Time, 34.44 (1982). Team record, Phi Gam. Team range, 35.6 (1982). Alexander, Forster. 100-yard back stoke Individual record Alexander, Phi Gam. Time, 1:05.6 (1922) Team record, Phi Gam. Team Team, 1:35.8 (1932) (Alexander, Porter). 100-yard dash: Individual record. Sutton, Phi Gam. Time, 1.028 (1981) Team record, Phi Gam. Team average, 1.069 (1951), Stadium, Hardcore. 220-yard dash; Individual record Sutton, Phi Gam. Time, 2.46 (192) Team record Phi Gam. Team average 3.03 (192) (Sutton, Hodson) 8 Plunge: Individual record, Garling-house, Phi K. A.Distance, 50 feet in 20 seconds (1929) Team record, Pi K. A.Distance (1929) Team record, Pi K. A.Distance (1929) Garling-house, Byleses (1929) 229-yard relay; Team record, Phil Gam. Time, 2:00 (1932) (Vernon, Tuke, Porter, Sutton). Medley relay: Team record, Phi Gam. Time, 3:14.8. (182) (Alexander, Clemens, Tuke, Sutton). Bein, g |---------| 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 Totals | 13 | 7 | 4 | 1 Kansas State—25 G | GFT | MF | P | Grabbs, f | 3 | 0 | 2 | 1 Breen, c | 1 | 0 | 3 | 2 Dalton, c | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 Gleeson, f | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 Skradkaj, g | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 Stoner, f | 2 | 0 | 1 | 0 Totals 10 5 9 10 Referee—E. C. Quigley, St. Mary's. Bolivians Lose Plane in War Asunción, Paraguay, Feb. 25—(U) A Bolivian airplane fell in flames behind the Paraguayan lines in the Nauawa sector of the Chaco war zone today, and according to a report from the occupants were burned to death. Neutral Nations Propose Peace as Violent Fighting Ragès Cyclones Nose Out Victory A squadron of five planes had attacked the Paraguayan position with bombs. Violent fighting was reported in progress. Meanwhile the first step in the new peace move was taken in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Peru held an unofficial draft of peace proposals to the Paraguayan government. One Stop Clothes Service Station After the government has had an opportunity to study the plan its answer will be sent to representatives of neutral nations meeting at Washington. Everything your clothes need but the old clothes man. Missouri Loses Game to Iowa State by Score of 32-31 The last place Iowa State team won a surprise victory over Coach Edwards Missouri Tigers Friday night by a 1-0 score at Ames. The final score was 7-6. Schulz the Tailor 917 Mass. The winning point came when Thomson, Cyclone forward who has been hampered by an injured knee most of the season, scored a free throw with only seconds to play, breaking a 21-all tie. Missouri pitched up a 9-4 lead at the opening of the first period, but the Iowans rallied and tied the score at the haf' at 16-all. Thomson made six goals from the field and a free throw to lead the scorers. Wagner, Tiger center, was second high scorer with 11 points. worst. Missouri–SI FG FT Cooper, c 0 6 Copper, c 2 5 Stuber, f 2 0 Wagner, g 3 5 Millen, g 3 1 Jorgenson, g 1 1 Hatfield, g 0 1 Totals 9 13 Iowa State—S2 PG FT Anderson, f 4 1 Larkins, g 1 Thompson, f 6 1 Thompson, g 2 Dills, g 0 0 Tempeston, g 0 0 Tempeston, g 0 0 Broad, 1 1 Totals 13 6 Referee: North, Highland Park. Sooners Win Four Falls Missouri Wrestlers Are Decisively Beaten in Big Six Meet By taking four falls and four decisions, the University of Oklahoma wrestlers defeated the Missouri Tigers. 32-0. Acting-Captain Gunter of the Sooners, who had scaled down ten pounds to the 145-pound class, registered the first fall for the Oklahomaans over Holcum in 7:40, while Musgrave, a Sooner substitute in the 155-pound class pinned Wilks with a cradle hold in five minutes. The results: 118 pounds—Schaff, Oklahoma, decision from Schaeffer, Missouri, by four minutes. 126 pounds—Hammonds, Oklahoma, decision from Copeland, Missouri, by 5 minutes, 30 seconds. 135 pounds—Jackson, Oklahoma, decision from Bartles, Missouri, by 5 minutes. 30 seconds. 145 pounds - Gunter, Oklahoma, fall from Holecomb, Missouri, with half Nelson and crotch, in 7 minutes and 40 Mat. and Eve. - 15c NOW VARSITY END TUESDAY NOW TUESDAY They're Here MORAN and MACK The Two Black Crows in "HYPNOTIZED" Extra! Hollywood Runaround Rielsha Rhymm. Late News STARTS WEDNESDAY More Dreaded Than the Jungle Beast. "NAGANA" seconds 155 pounds -Musgrate, Oklahoma, fall from Wilks, Missouri, with cradle in 8 minutes. 165 pounds -Forwan, Oklahoma, fall from Beal, Missouri, with cradle in 4 minutes. 165 pounds -Whiteside, Oklahoma, decision from Cebe, Missouri, by 7 minutes. Hesseyweight -Stuart, Oklahoma, fall from Fevered, Missouri, half nelson in 6 minutes. Referer -Berry, Oklahoma. Our Sunday Chicken Dinner Send the Daily Kansan home. SUNDAY NIGHT--at 35c Jayhawk Cafe 1340 Ohio Phone 509 We Deliver Union Fountain Sub Basement, Memorial Union Lunch at the Good Shoe Repairing Costs No More Than Poor. The at times it is not appreciated or recognized. We clean or resolver party slippers ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP 11 W. 9th Wiedemann's When Down Town---from Forty Second Street The place to stop for a refreshing fountain drink or appetizing sandwich is our beautiful new Walnut Room. LUNCHEON Served Daily Established 1868 835 Mass. Phone 182 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Also 5:30 till 7 p.m. Saturday and Sunday Hit Songs on RECORDS and SHEET MUSIC Bell's Music Store Great! Wonderful! was the comments after our premier showing. You must train yourself to this outstanding hit! DICKINSON NOW! Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Sunday Schedule — Shows continuous, 1 o'clock on. The Most Magnificent Picture That Ever Graced the Talking Screen! You owe yourself this-- $THIPENDUS SPECTACLE! . . . TERRIFIC TMRILLS!... Unvivalled in the History of the Screen Gecl B DeMILES THE SIGN OF THE CROSS WITH FREDRIC MARCH ELISSA LANDI HURON, HISTORY CHARLES LAUGHTON AND FOOD OTHERS Epic Drama of Nero's Rome. When History's Pages Ran Red! PRODUCERS DEMAND Until 6:00 After 6:00 10 - 25c 10 - 40c UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XXX The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas Students to Meet to Study Present Economic Status Emporia Conference Wil Also Draw Professors and Prominent Economists Prominent leaders in the field of economics will meet in Emproria, March 10-12, to discuss the present economic situation, with a group of students gathered from all the colleges and universities in the state. JOHN ISE TO SPEAK "We expect between 300 and 500 students, faculty members, and citizens interested in the subject, to attend the meeting," said Hilden Gilson, c'33, chairman of the conference, in an interview today. It is hoped that from 50 to 75 students from the University will attend. Principal speakers on the program will include William Allen White, editor and publisher of the Emporia Giraeus; Charles M. Sheldon, well-known author and lecturer of Topeka; John Iso, professor and lecturer at the University; W. A. Irwin, dean of Washoe College; and W. A. Anderson, agricultural economist at Kansas State College; and W. O. Mendenhall, president of Friends University. These speakers will present the various phases of the problems or reconstruction that face the world today Detailed study of specific problems will be considered in a series of roundtable discussions led by other well-known figures in the realm of economics. Further information concerning the conference may be secured from Elsie Penfield, Hilden Gibson, the W.C.A. at Henley House, or the Y.M.C.A. in room 10 of the Memorial Union building. 18,000 Will Be Graduated Many High Schools of Kansas Have Larger Classes Than Usual Between 18,000 and 19,000 seniors will be graduated this spring from high schools of Kansas, according to estimates made by George O. Foster, registrar. Each year, Mr. Foster collects from the 740 high schools and academies of Kansas, the list of candidates for graduation from each school. Among the cities offering comparison are: With a number of the larger cities still unreported, and many smaller ones yet to come, the total now is 15,627. The estimate of the total now is 18,000 is based on the fact that in sixteen of the larger cities for which last year's figures are available for comparison with this year, there was an increase of 4 per cent—ten cities show loss shows losses over the total of last year. UNITED STATES WILL ACT UNDER OWN TREATY PROMIS 1532 1533 Arkansas City 191 184 Boston 154 160 Clay Center 114 111 Columbus 165 152 Dodge City 148 146 Erie 148 120 Independence 147 108 Junction City 160 91 Lehigh Valley 154 91 Liberty 164 153 Liberty 154 160 Manhattan 183 162 Newton 163 162 Printing District 183 162 Salina 219 222 Topperd 600 122 Wildfield 600 122 Washington, Feb. 27 — (UP) — The state department announced today that the United States, acting under its own treaty commitment and judging each new situation on its own merit, will send its personnel to the far eastern problem to be established by the League of Nations. The committee is to be set up to follow events in the Far East and make recommendations as the occasion arises. The organization of the so called committee of 21, established some months ago. COMMITTEE IS NOMINATED FOR Y. W. C. A. ELECTION The nomination of four women to serve on the nominating committee for next year's officers will take place at the W.C.A. convocation tomorrow at 10 a.m. in the building, according to Catharine Vallette, c33, president. Two of the four will be elected from the membership at large of the organization and the remainder will be selected from the members of the present cabinet. The election will be held on March 7. Bible 260 Years Old to Be Used by Roosevelt in Taking Oath Hyde Park, New York, Feb. 27—(UP) Franklin D. Rosevelt will take the oath of office on the old tattered Dutch Bible that has been in possession of his family since 1670, he revealed today. For generations the Bible was housed in the churches and deaths in the Rosevelt family. It was packed for shipment to Washington today for use next Saturday afternoon. "I took my oath of office twice as governor of the state of New York on that same Bible," he said. CONDENSED WIRE NEWS Walter Hiers Dies Hollywood, Feb. 27—(UP) - Walter Hiers, rotund motion picture comedian died here today of pneumonia. Woman Dies of Burns Fi. Scott, Feb. 27—(UP) - Mrs. Janatiio Romero, 44, died when a burn suffered when a can be believed to have contained gasoline exploded, setting her clothing on fire. Sostenello Romero, her husband, was painfully burned in carrying her out of the house which was destroyed. Inaugural Crowds Arrive Washington, Feb. 27 — (UF) — The hosts of democracy were invading the capital today for a week of incubation to be climaded by the induction of new members of the presidency on Saturday. Hotels already are jammed with party leaders, appointees of the new administration, sorbants for federal posts high and low, and plain partisan enthusiasts. Inaugural Crowds Arrive Mino Workers Settle Dicontu Mine Workers Settle Dispute Springfield, Feb. 17—BUD (One of America's historic labor contemerries, the long-standing, and bitter breach between the Illinois district of the United Mine Workers of America and its international officers, was set aside by the Laws). The national president of the coal miners union, announced that his organization had been invited by a unanimous vote of the district board to assume direction of its activities. Achison Bank Closes Aitchison, Feb. 27 - (UP) -The American Savings Bank closed bank today by order of its board of directors. The bank was formed several months ago by the merger of the Aitchison Savings bank and the American State bank. Ohio Has Bank Restrictions LAWRENCE, KANSAS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1863 Cleveland, Feb. 27. —(UP)—Louis bank restrictions spread rapid throughout northeastern Ohio today banks in Cleveland, Lorain, Elyria Youngtown, Massillon, Canton, Sardauk and Akron were doing business with varying degrees of restrictions bank restrictions were purely localized three-day monorrorm was in effect. In Lima two of the three banks were restricting withdrawals. Professors Address Council Wheeler and Mitchell Discuss Problem of Interest to Mathematics Teachers At the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics fourteenth annual meeting held Feb. 24, 25, at the Hotel Nicollet in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Pro- U. M. Mitchell and R. H. Wheeler both of Kansas, delivered addresses Professor Mitchell's address given Friday evening was, "The Story of Mathematics and Its Future Development. Professor Wheeler discussed the work of Drill from the Standpoint of the New Psychology." Saturday morning. The presiding officer of the Council was William Betz, director of mathematics, Rochester, N. Y. Great Bend, Feb. 27 — (UP) — The first of 2,000 pieces of 50-cent scrip and 100,000 one-cent endorsement stamps were issued here today. Recipients of the first scrip and stamps were the printers of the scrip and 20 previous unemployed men who had been working in the cemetery. GREAT BEND ISSUES SCRIP Each person who exchanges a piece of the scraps, places an endorsement stamp on it. It is redeemable at face value and it bears 50 endorsements stamps. Geltch Presents Recital Tonight Professor Waldena Geltch, head of the violin department, is in Fayetteville, Ark., preparing this evening in a violin recital. Pi Lambda Theta to Mee Professor Ise Will Address Women Students of Education The annual open meeting of Pi Lambda Theta, honorary organization for women in education, will be held tomorrow afternoon at 3:30 in the auditorium of the Administration building. All women who are taking advanced courses in education are invited to attend. Miss Mary Grant, associate professor of Latin and Greek, and Miss Alice Winston, assistant professor of English, will pour. Arrangements for the tea will be made by the chairman of the social committee. She will be aided in serving by Allena Hicks, c;3; Mary C;38 Mary Byerley, c;3; Margaret Belfield, 32; and Ruth Kenney, secretary of the correspondence are members of the social committee. John Ise, professor of economics, will talk on "Our Educational System in the Light of Recent Economic Development." Following the address tea will be served in the W.S.G.A. room of the Administration building. Mitchell's Resignation Accepted by Big Bank Removal of Former Chairman Follows Senate Disclosures New York, Feb. 27, (UP)—Directors of the powerful National City bank today accepted the resignation of Charles E. Mitchell, its chairman and directing officer, who will serve as the bank in the world. By accepting the resignation the directors allowed him to sever all connections with the National City bank. The resignation was announced at the bank's banking committee's hearing, at which Mitchell made seminal discussions Simultaneously, James H. Perkins, president of the Cities Farmers Trust company was appointed to be the new CEO of the National City bank, replaced Mitchell. Perkins had been elected president and director of the Farmers Loan and Trust company on June 16, 1921, and was made president of the City Bank Farmers Trust and a director of the National City bank on completion of the merger of the two institutions on June 29, 1929. 19 FINANCIERS INDICTED Chicago, Feb. 27- (UP) - Nineetee of Chicago's widely known financiers were indicted by the federal grand jury today on charges of using the minds to defraud investors in various Insuln enterprises. The indictment followed a United States Government injunction against the Corporation securities company; Prominent Chicago Bankers Charged With Using Mails to Defraud The 19 inducted included Samuel Insul, Sr. depressed head of his utilities empire, now a fictive in Greece; eminent figure in North America in Ontario; Samuel Insul, Jr., son of the former头 of the empire; Harold L. Stuart, head of head; Silaui, and company; and Edward J. Doole, wealth Edison company operating unit. Kansas—Generally fair tonight and Tuesday, except rain tonight in southeastern portion. Colder Tuesday, and in north central portion tonight. Bond for each was set at $10,000. The indictment contained 25 counts. WEATHER --leaflets Tell Foreign Residents of Liangyuan to Leave, or Put Up Signals Japanese Airmen Scatter Warnings of Impending Raid REACTION IMMEDIATE Lianqiang, Feb. 27. (By counter to Chen Teb Fu.) Japanese airmen, advance scouts of the army sweeping over northeast Jebel, today dropped leaflets in English warning foreigners to evacuate the province or suffer the cones. Copyright. 1933, by the United Press. Reaction to the warning was immediate. The stuff of the Protestant mission became a mass of hunting, British and American flags together with the German ensign were hurriedly litated after the first heaf was picked up. Over this city of 27,000, half way between Choyang which is now in the hands of the Japanese, and Cheng Tech, a company that has been manned seismic the pamphlets warning of impending raids by air and land. "Foreign residents of the province of Jehol, the imperial army warn you to take temporary residence elsewhere. If this is impossible you will assemble together and put up clear signs visible on the air." Signaled by the commander in chief of the Kwangtung army. Residents began digging in behind the stout walls of the mission. Workers had constructed a dug-out six feet见地, and would accommodate about 50 children. Inside the mission compound were an American, Miss Harriet Minna, of Buffalo; a German, Miss Anna Fischer; a young woman from England, Miss Ada Blackmore; and Reginald W. Stuart and his wife from London. Across the city of Philadelphia priests were engaged in hasty preparation to protect their flocks. Spokesman Says Stimson's Note Condemning Japan Sounds Unusual TOKIO'S PROGRAM UNCHANGED Tokio. Feb. 27 — (UP) — Secretary Stimson's decision of American policy, which in general coincides with the League of Nations in condemning Japanese action in China "will not change Tokio's program", a spokesman for the government said today. Mr. Stimson's note, he suggested, did not contain his usual state documents, and he was constrained to wonder whether it was actually written or suggested by the incoming Secretary, Cordell Hull. Embarge on arms for Far East London, Feb. 27-(UP) -A temporary embargo by Great Britain on the expropriation of land owned in the house of comuna today by Sir John Simon, foreign secretary. Sir John said that pending international consultation, Britain would alter shipment of arms to the Far East. Arms Enlugee 'Foppen' Geneva, Feb. 27-(UP) An arms embargo against Bolivia, Kuwait was imposed by Great Britain, France joined with Britain in asking the League of Nations counsel to study measures to prevent continuation of the supply of arms to Bolivia and Paraguay, engaged in an undecided war in the Gran Chaco frontier region in South America. as Embargo Proposed Examiner School Completed The Life Saving Examiner school which was held three days of last week by A. T. McCue, field representative of the State Department, was completed last Saturday. Twelve Persons Pass Life Saving Test Conducted by McCue Twelve persons completed the test. Margaret Lawson, grad, received an appointment, while the following were reappointed: Robert Dill, d;34, Ralph Graves, 32, Philip Beauty, c;33, Ruth Hover, instructor of physical education. John McGrath, d;34, Dawson, d;34, Helen Bowman, Henry Thorne, eng;36, Fred Malo, c;34, Alice Learned, c;34 and Herbert Alphin, instructor of physical education. The school is held once a year under the direction of a Red Cross representative and is open to anyone who has been issued the $10 Benefit Life saving test. H. G. Alphin, live saying chairman of Douglas county, stated that the McCue was well pleased with the quality of work done by the group here. Debate Teams Discuss Cancellation of Debt Debaters "Europe can't pay but she must pay," the debate teams of the University of Kansas and the Kansas City League of Young Democrats, decided yesterday afternoon in the studies of radio station KABC; Kansas City, Mo. Kenneth M. Jordon and Charles E. Hassett, members of the Kansas state team last year, represented the team in all of the games and donated Hula Hulls, 135, and Harold Harding, 125, spoke for the University upholding the affirmative on the subject. "Resolved: That All Intergovernmental and Reparations Shall be Cancelled." Huls opened the argument by declaring the debtors cannot pay and repudiation is inevitable. "American insists on gold which they do not possess," he contended, "and the United States will not accept goods." Hassel denied that Europe could not pay saying, "As long as the countries spend money extravagantly for armaments, they are under the obligation to provide it; it is a lack of good faith on the part of Europe to consider the loans as gifts. Harding summed up his arguments by saying if we take goods it will paralyze our industries and if we demand their nations as well as arouse hatred. "It is not a case whether we like it or not," he insisted, "because if we do not cancel, they will repudiate." "American taxpayers have their own trials and tribulations," Jordan manures. "We are not paying for a war directed against them." He stated that our debtors have not adopted any real spirit of internationalism, nationalism, selfish, intriguing and nationalistic. A debate team of the Young Man's Hebrew association challenged the winner, to be chosen by the radio audience, to a meeting next Sunday. Violates Lottery Laws New York, Feb. 27 —(UP)—Bernan C. McGuire, promoter, pleaded guilty today to charges of violating the federal lottery laws in the Moose Lodge case. He was granted permission, however, to withdraw his guilty plea if the circuit court reverses his conviction in favor of the appellant and appeals the appeal under consideration. Judge Alfred C. Cox sentenced McGuire is a year and a day in federal prison. THE SEA IS FIRED BY THE MOTOR OF THE SHIP. Isabel to Be Presidential Pleasure Yacht The U. S. gambit baseball, formerly stationed in the Philippines, which will be converted into a pleasure yacht in which Fritchman D. Housewell, will revive week-end cruises after he is immerged. The new yacht will take the team to New York. Radio Crooners One Pet Aversion of Irish Tenor But he does like the movies, politics sports, literary "trash," California walking and -music. Wichita, Feb. 27.—(UP) -John McCormick, Irish teacher, has no use for crooners, the radio, photographers, dentists, war, good literature, "second fiddles" and long interviews, newspaper learners learned on McMackray's visit here. Dr. H. H. Lane Elected to Society of Vienna Head of Zoology Depart ment Receives Notice of Membership Professor H. H. Lane of the zoology department has been elected to a membership in the Palo-Biological Society in the zoology department announced today. Official Announcement Lacking on But Three of New Cabinet Professor Lane, who has written many papers on biology and paleontology was asked last December if he would consider being made a member of the faculty. He accepted and received the official notice of his election this month. NUMBER 111 Friends of the president-elect said he has known the men appointed today for many years, and declared that Ike has been a personal friend for more than 20 years. Senator Swanson is considered a "big mug" man. He is also a strong Democrat in senate's foreign relations and naval affairs committees. Hyde Park, New York, Feb. 27. — (UP) President-elect Roosevelt today announced selection of Harold Ickes of Chicago to be secretary of interior, and of Senator Claude Swanson of Virginia to be secretary of the navy. Only three more cabinets名 remain to be announced by Mr. Roosevelt, yesterday confirmed the appointment of Michael Walters of Wall Street to the retary of agriculture, and James A. Farley of New York to be postmaster general. Roosevelt Adds Two More When a writer's papers are published, Professor Lane said, the author is allowed a number of copies for his personal use. He sent a number of papers on poleontology to professors in Europe, he said, one of whom is president of one of Vienna's foremost universities. It was this professor, one Dr. O. Abel, who sent Professor Lane's name before the board of the Paleo-Biblical society. This membership entitles him the land that he received with the contents of scientific papers and journals printed in the quarterly bulletin which the society publishes. The chief line of research in which Professor Lane is interested is that of mammology and vertebrate paleontology. The society of scientific societies in the United States. These societies include scientific groups of zoology, biology, and paleontology. The society of Vienna, Germany, also serves as a society to which he has elected. 'Challenge in Depression Educators Discuss Economic Condition at Minneapolis Conference Minneapolis, Mim., Feb. 27.-(UP)—The depression and technology and their relation to education were sub- jects of a lecture by the Education association department of superintendentships today. More than 3,000 school leaders assembled here fortified themselves to meet the new frontier by attending a second meeting of a five-day conference. "The depression offers a challenge to democracy, to sanity, and to common sense, to organize capacity and financial capacity, but these challenges should not discourage us," Harlay Lutz, professor of finance at Princeton said. Professors R. A. Schwegler, J. W Twente, E. B. Eyles and E. P. Orien of the education department are attending the meeting. PRINSONER COMMITS SUICIDE AFTER AVERTED JAIL BREAK Folsom Prison, Calif. 27. Feb.-(19) —An attempted break at Folsom prison was averted today when one prisoner committed suicide rather than submit to capture, and another surrendered. Armed with home made guns, Liroyd Sampell, Los Angeles bands, and Johnny Ramone entered the Administration building and remained in charge for nearly two hours surrounded by guards. Pneumonia Attack Weakens Condition of Mayor Cermak Chicago Executive in Critical Condition; Physicians Refuse to Abandon Hope 'CHANCES DIMINISHED' The victim of an assassin's bullet continued to be in a critical condition although his physicians announced that he did not lost ground in the last 12 hours. They refused to abandon hope that the Chicago executive would yet overcome the effects of a bullet which was fired at President-elect Rosevell, but they admitted his chances were diminished by the complication. Miami, Fla., Feb. 27- (UP) - Mayor Anton J. Cermak's marmalack fight to live was complicated today by pneumonia which forced his respiration to the dangerous speed of 40 a minute. Dr. Karl Meyer emerged from the sick room and said, "Winterday, I had all the hope in the world. Today of course our hope is lessened." Meyer explained that the jump to 40 in respiration was due to the pneumonia area in the right lung near the place the blood penetrated, forcing a call to the remainder of the lung. It indicates that the tissue is being thrown on the balance of the lung. This balances the non-functional consolidated area of the lung. Cermak was given broth again today and physicians indicated that the colitis condition which had previously worn down his strength was checked. Rifle Team Scores High Women Shooters Make 919 Out of Possible 1,000 Points Scores for the first match fired by the women's rife team total 949 out of a possible 1,000 points. The results of sports teams have not yet been received. The 10 high scores which were used to represent the University of Kansas, according to Rowena Longshore, c33, manager, were fired by the following: Patricia Arroyo, c35, who shot a score of 99 cut of a possible 100 points; Maurie Strain, c37, 97; Rowena Longshore, c36, 96; Betty Loomis, c34, 95; Michelle Walters, c32, 91; Watson, c1unel, 91; Thelma Humbryp, c35, 94; Helen Harvey, c34, 93; Nadine Marquis, fa33, 93; and Thelma Hunter, c35, 92. The teams fired against this week were: Indiana University, University of Wyoming, Massachusetts State College; and the University of Maryland. Dean Davis to Make Talks To Speak Before Baker Convocation and to Rotary Clubs Robert McNair Dean, dean of the Kansas University School of Law, is to be the guest speaker at a Baker University convention tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock. The subject of Dean in the Machine Ane." Tomorrow soon Dean Davis will give a talk on "Some International Problems Inherited by Franklin D. Roosevelt," before the regular Tuesday luncheon meeting of the Baldwin Rotary club. He will also speak on the same subject a week from today, March 5, before the Lawrence Rotary club, of RICHARD BARBER AWARDED PRIZE FOR ACCURATE WORK Richard Barber, a second-year law student, has recently been awarded a prize for his outstanding work in a course on legal bibliography taught by Dean R. M. Davia of the School of Law. The prize consists of a set of Corpus Juris valued at approximately $345 and is given by the American Lawbook Society. He studied who does the most accurate work in citing authorities on 80 legal problems. Second place was awarded to Paul Smith and third place was a tie between Leonard Thomas, Oliver Claflin, and Charles M. Hengmiln. Miss Peabody Is Soloist Miss Irene Neabay, mezzo-soprano, of the School of Fine Arts faculty, returned Saturday from Tulsa, Okla. Upward to the Tulsa Symphony Orchestra in its concert Friday evening. The trip was made by plane. PAGE TWO الفارسي MONDAY, FEBRUARY 27. 1933 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS Official Student Paper or THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE KANAGA University Daily Kansar Editor-In-Chief PAUL V. MINER Alfreda Brodeck Heward Turcilla Managing Editor Nidley DICKSON Vigor Parker Cummins Editor Margaret Cullen Telemount Editor Margaret Inmanment Sparks Editor Chiles Coleman Exchange Editor Madre Brown Sunny Editor Darry Smith ADVERTISING MGR. MARGARET INCE Kansan Board Member NATIONAL INSTITUTE MEMBERS Robert Hewlett - Google Patrick Tee - Intel Bridget Brown - Microsoft Millennium Hill Jon Pilgrim - Lawrence Alpina Broadcast Joe McCarthy - IBM Joseph Kurtzmann - JAWS Joshua Smith Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Illinois at Chicago, to the Press of the Department of Journalism. Appointments Business Office ... K.U. 65 News Room ... K.U. 25 Night Connection, Business Office ... 2701K3 Night Connection, News Room ... 2701K3 Subscription price, $16.00 per year, payable in advance. Single copy, fech such. Entered as secondclass matter September 17, 1919, at the office at lawrence, Kansas. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 27.1933 IN DEFENSE OF THE STUDENTS That students either do not read the pamphlets published by the University or are wholly indifferent to the material contained therein is to be inferred from a recent story in the Kansan. This article was a report from the Secretary to the Chancellor bemoaning the fact that not one single contribution had been received in response to an essay contest with fifty dollars in prizes announced in a pamphlet issued at the time of enrollment last September. Any student who owned an activity ticket had a chance to win from five to twenty dollars by simply submitting to the Men's Student Adviser an essay of more than five hundred words on the impressions of the student activity ticket, or suggestions or opinions for its improvement. Surely such an offer was worthy of some attention in times like these. In defense of the student, there are some points to be considered. The deadline for the contest was placed at 5 p.m. February 10, five months after enrollment time. This was too long a time, it would seem, for students to remember, especially when such things of major importance as semester examinations took place in the intervening period. It might not have been a bad idea to call the students' attention at regular intervals to the fact that 'a contest was being held. An idea presented once can never produce the results possible from frequent allusion to the subject. Campus activities are far too numerous to permit the mere mentioning of a contest of this type to stand foremost in the minds of the students. Then too, the promoters of the contest seem to have relied entirely upon the pamphlet, or nearly so, as apparently the only other publication was a single paragraph in a story in the edition of the Kansan for September 20. Perhaps this is the reason the project failed. Henry Buckle, English historian, once said, "No one can have a firm grasp of any science if, by confining himself to it, he shuts out the light of analogy." THE LIGHT OF ANALOGY In trying to give to the student that so-called "well rounded education," colleges require him to take work in several fields. Although at first appearance this would seem to be a good system for giving a liberal education, it usually does not achieve this end. Frequently, instead of a unified mass of knowledge the student's head contains merely a disconnected jumble of history, geology, mathematics, and psychology. Information is not organized in the student's mind. It is like a chain The statement, voiced nearly a hundred years ago, applies to our modern school system. Colleges and universities today offer courses in many branches of knowledge, but they specialize their work to such an extent that students often do not see the "light of analogy." Particular courses have no relation in their minds. the links of which are disconnected. IT'S A SMALL WORLD What we need in our system of education is a course which combines every branch of human knowledge and which organizes the fragments of college courses into a unified whole. When we get it we shall all have a chance to glimpse the "light of analogy." No longer can one country thumb its nose at the rest of the world and think that it can prosper without the help of its fellow countries. Each time propellors whir on wheels revolve in their mad pace on land, air, and sea, the world grows smaller and smaller. In the words of Vernon Nash, professor of journalism in Peiping, China, "the world is shrinking to the size of a neighborhood." New means of transportation and new ideas have drawn the many countries into a "physically integrated and economic interdependent world." As an example of the interdependence of countries, Mr. Nash spoke to the journalism classes about the plight of Shantung, a province in China. Fifteen years ago when American women began to bob their hair, the people in this province were thrown into poverty—because 90 per cent of the world's hairstuds were made in Shantung. As soon as we recognize that this is a small world after all and begin o act like neighbors instead of realeitrant schoolboys, we shall begin to find peace and contentment. 'ARMERS OF THE FUTURE Legislators, educators, economists, and the world in general are advising youth to go back on the farm as a possible means of solving the depression, and, to some extent, of eliminating it. In imagination these advisers see an ideal situation with the young people of America on the farm forming for the nation a backbone that could not be broken. If the younger men of our country could take their families to the country where living is so much cheaper and where they can be comparatively independent, they would leave the city jobs for the older men not so hard, and much of the unemployment might be solved, they say. These advisers, however, have overlooked one point. Is the youth of today capable of working on a farm? Not that he would need to know the technical business of farming—many of our most successful tillers of the soil never studied vocational agriculture—but he would need different training from that which the cities have given him. These city chaps who arise in the morning anywhere between 8 and 10 o'clock and lodge through the day with as little effort as possible, what could they find on the farm for which they are fitted? They would find themselves faced with the problem of getting up at an hour not much later than that at which they are accustomed to going to bed. The soda and sandwich they used to consume for lunch, wouldn't make a healthy meal for a farmer. Since a jig-saw puzzle or an evening of cards simply exhausts them, they should get along nobly with a plow! No. These powderpuff boys that the cities have been producing for the past few years, who cut their teeth on trashy literature and cheap, melodramatic movies, have no place back on the soil. They wouldn't know what to do with the many opportunities there. They'll have to go on spending their time beating the wolf away from the front door. QUIPS from other QUILLS GUILTY The stands, they boo, As stands will do, Decisions good; The stands, they cheer, For it hurts, Decisions bad; It all depends. Whose score it bends, Not right or wrong. --- The husband who used to brite his wife into giving the house a good cleaning, now slyly slips a couple of buttons from his pocket into his pocket—Daily O'Collegan. G. A. in Daily Californian. Last week a youngster swallowed a knife and the physicians put him on a diet of cotton and spinach. The cotton wrapped about the blade and saved his digestive tract from damage, while the spinach is alleged to have furnished needles for food-salve. Bet the licked liked the cotton belt - Wilson County Citizen. It is dumb to call it a living wage if the death rate is lower among those who make more—Oklahoma Daily. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. 78, No. 25, Monday, Feb. 27, 1933 No. 111 in connection with Clausen's career. Girls are now obtaining truck driving licenses. It'll be nice to go home and tell your wife how you go pretty tough in Texas — the driver in Texas — State Lass-O. Three Freedonia们 who planned to go to Topela for the Kansas Day doings but failed to make the trip. enjoyed a picnic in the crowded trio into a telephone booth, puffed cigar smoke at each other, stood on each other's toes and talked loud, long and with great conviction about importance—Wisconsin City Citizen. nellier's Office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication days and 11:30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issues HOME ECONOMICS CLUB: There will be a meeting of the Home Economies club at the home manage nent house Tuesday at 5 o'clock. Initiation followed by a waffle supper. LORENE KALKBRENNER, President. There will be pledging service and dinner Tuesday, at 5:30 p.m. at the home of Wonda Ehromda, 1456 Rhode Island street. HARIETT KW, President. Jayhawk picture will be taken Tuesday noon. For details see R.O.T.C. bulletin board in Fowler shops. HALL TAYLOR, Captain. The W.S.G.A. Council will meet at 7 o'clock Tuesday evening in the Memorial Union. HELEN HEASTON, President. There will be a supper meeting of Kappa Phi from 5 to 7:30 at D17 Tennessee street on Tuesday, Feb. 28. Mrs. Dem Brumwitch, of Rancho Santa Margarita, will be the guest speaker. JAY JANES There will be a meeting of Tau Beta Pi in 115 Marvin hall at 4:30 Tuesday afternoon. HAY HUNTER, Secretary. Theta Epsilon meeting will be held at 1124 Mississippi street on Tucson evening at 7 o'clock. Members are expected to be present. MEN'S RIFLE TEAM: Y. W. C. A. ASSEMBLY: The Y.W.C.A. assembly for all University women will be held Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 in central Administration auditorium. Following the program a nominating committee to choose candidates for offices, for election the following week, will be chosen. CATHERINE VALLETTE. President KAPPA PHI: W. S. G. A. COUNCIL; THETA EPSILON: IMMACULATA CLUB: MARY ASTON. President Immaculata club will sponsor a bingo party to be held tomorrow night at 7:30 at St. John's Catholic church. The public is invited. THELMA KRATOCHVIL, President. TAU BETA PI: By The May Day Mystery Octavus Roy Cohen WNU Service Copyright by Octavus Roy Cohen. --- SYNOPSIS CHAPTER 1—Anointistate Peyton, their brother, and their sister, Martiandre, present Peyton, Thayner's attention to try Wach, seventeen-years-old, with bitter bitterness, the end- ing with bitter bitterness, the end- ning with bitter bitterness, the end- ning with bitter bitterness, the end- ning with bitter bitterness, the end- ning with bitter bitterness, the end- ning with bitter bitterness, the end- ning with bitter bitterness, the end- ning with bitter bitterness, the end- ning with bitter bitterness, the end- ning with bitter bitterness, the end- ning with bitter bitterness, the end- ning with bitter bitterness, the end- ning with bitter bitterness, the end- ning with bitter CHAPTER 11—Larry determines to take Thyer and sends his association with her. He has appended to her husband, who has appended to her room at a fraternity house. Max Verzant rives and goes to his room. Tony ends her tint to Thyer and departs. Verzant stays afterward, wickily in a state of excitement, as she feels ties apparently clothing to be heavily tied, apparently clothing to be renovated, under his arm. Ivory to her affair with Thayer to luy to her affair with Thayer to advertise to witnesses to Thayer to Dessie luy to he does, he does, he does, and after he leaves, Carmichael, Snowden, to be taken down. stubbed in the throat, Rangan, Mar- ice police chief, takes charge of CHAFFEHT 11—LASTY Wutch, Tor* is shamed by the people he has helped in order to envy him. He is friends with the hostess and each other. Weich does not see what else he tells him. He is married to Thayer. tells him she is married to Thayer. CHAPTER V—The Marlbank bank is co-working with the money lovers and apparently badly wounded, Jim Cobb, a sheriff, the cloaked, and good natured, comes to investigate the robbery, Handelton Park, Jesse Max Vernon was driving the sleeps. Max Vernon was driving the sleeps. CHAFFER Vl.—Thayer, Fiks tells Haveney that he has been under attack by large numbers of card games, and Veron, apparently has been in charge of the murder. Haveney to take charge of the murder, but both the murder and robbery, Tony and Marianne are under arrest as Thayer murderers CHAPTER IX.—To Reagain the knife of Thayer, and discover that Thayer had been snatched away by Ivy Welwyn, when her attention to Ivy Welwyn, who was captured, convinced the Maryland detective commonal. To wit Ivy, and supervised, from the store where the girl tells us what he did, to retrieve the knife what must be considered a weapon in his possession, but of the weapon in his possession, but of DAYTONA VIII—Hiawave interrogates Thomas, the master of the murder. Weich is in vengeance of the death of his sister, Tessa. Thiasor was alive when he left him, and he is being sworn to be in living, seemingly endowing to think his firm conviction being that he has been the source of incidents mere mortals. The resulting series of incidents merenade the world. CHAPTER VIII - At the scene of the battle, the jacket of the enemy was found. The jacket Jim didn't argue. He rose ponders easily and bowed with a queer courtliness. "That's all right, Miss Peyton. I promised you I wouldn't try any police training," she said. "But help me to help, not hurt, and I can't help unless I get the truth. But I ain't advising you to tell me a thing you don't know." "Let's just be quiet," she said, much obliged—and good night! "A fight, Pat Tatney was a big man. Larry is perhaps more powerful. So far as I know, Mr. Thrayer was not a coward, and no man can very well permit another to enter him without—without—well, without presenting it." He moved toward the door. Reagan inwardly seething at Haney's stolpid it, followed reluctantly. "Who?" one met Jim's kindly eyes levelly, "I was afraid." She faced them bravely. "I suppose I'm a fool," she said. "But I believe I can trust you. If you don't mind me, I'll just be glove to tell you the whole truth." "I see. . . . And why were you afraid of a fight?" As Jim opened the door, the girl spoke. Even if Hanvey did not press his advantage, Renan was fighting to restrain his own impatience—and the sense of entitlement that the big chance; an opportunity to gather important facts from a woman who had been locked up for two days "because of the scandal," she answered promptly, "larry is an instructor here. He is about to earn his degree." It wouldn't have been nice. **_** "You weren't afraid of any serious results that is physical results?" WITH, FREESH "Vog Mice?" "Yes, Miss?" But Reagan was a good sport. If he didn't understand Hawley's slow, friendly, ponderous methods, he could have done better. He had offered the ease to the fat man. "No. Of course my sympathies were all with Larry, and I knew he could handle Mr. Thayer." Jim focused his eyes on the tooth pick. "You are in love with Larry Welch?" Her cheek grew white, but she did not evade. "Does he knew it?" "So that he'd have to drop Ivy Wick—or else she would drop him. And that would make it unnecessary for Larry to interfere." "Yes. And I've told it to you straight because I believe Larry is innocent." "I hope so . . . Now would you mind telling me what happened when you went to see Thayer at the fraternity house?" I see. They before yesterday. Lauren touched him when she foolishly fooling with his kid sister. He learned that you could not marry him because you were married to another man—their sister. She said the blackmail which Thasher had practiced on you. It makes a rather damning claim. "I went there with a definite object in mind. Mr. Messner was a girl cannot bear to lose him." She rose from house without stalling all kinds of gas gun. I told him that some that he wanted the choice to nuance our marriage. You see, I felt that I could spike his guns that way." "How long has he known it?" "I think he has known it for a long time, but I didn't put it into words until—until day before yesterday." "Woo-ee, suppose we start with your visit to Larry Wolch. What did you do? How was it married to Thuray? Was he here?" "Noo. I would ask that exactly." "Because . . . well, there a nother detail we left out. Larry was quite determined that Pat should not go with Ivy any more. I had a right to seal his lips about my marriage to Pat, but I had no right to that man. I thought I could use it with Ivy, but I said knew him not to go over until I had seen Pat myself." "You were still afraid of what might happen between Larry and Thayer." "Yes. He wanted to go right over, but I begged him not to." "WP?3." They seated themselves once more and Tony spoke in a brittle voice. The thing seemed to shock him." "Did he say anything about seeing Thayer?" "Because I wanted to see Pat first." "For what reason, Miss Peyton?" "Yes-and I regretted having told Larry. But things happened so fast and I had been under such a strain for years that I—I just wanted someone to talk to." "While you were in Thayer's room . . . ?" "He was furious, of course. We quarrelled bitterly. I suppose I was an angry as he was. And then I left." "Where was he when you left, Miss Laura?" "Alive?" She caught her breath sharply. "Of course, . . . Surely you don't think . . . ?" "Standing near the dresser." "I had to ask you that. I'm sorry. Did you know that Larry Welch has been arrested?" "Do you realize that everything you have told me serves to incriminate him?" "Yes." She fung her head back, "I don't believe the truth can hurt anybody. I know Larry didn't do it, just as I knew that I did. I没能 told the plain, straight truth, and that's all. It's what Larry would have me "It isn't what he has done," said Jim softly. "He hasn't been honest with us." "And why isn't that the truth?" "If he couldn't be. He gave me his word that he wouldn't tell anybody I was Pat Thayer's wife." "I can't tell you why, Miss Peyton, a lie. I'll bet my right hand that when Larry Welch left that fraternity house. But Jaleya was dead. And she's gone." She did not indulge in dramas. She merely sat very still and her body seemed to get cold as ice. She stared at the huge figure opposite. "Then," she gasped, "you think Larry killed him?" Harvey met look for look. And she searched the moonlike face for a vexation of reassurance, saw nothing but grim honesty. "I can't say that, Miss Pepeton," he "I要anded gently. "I do believe that he led when he said Thayer was alive and now and now know why," "Why, then?" "To shield you. He had just learned your secret. He knew—probably that you had been to see Thayer. And if he didn't kill Thayer, then he found the body when he got there and saw her. It was an act of assassination as old as romance. But at any rate, it was a pretty fine thing for him to do, because by his own admission Thayer was alive while he was being executed. That must have done the killing." "Larry didn't do it, Mr. Hanvey. I feel that." The big man smiled slightly. "I don't know. Do you?" "I didn't kill him." "So do I. But if he didn't—who did?" She shook her head, "I don't know, ..." "It wasn't Larry, you say." "It wasn't Larry, you say." "He couldn't do a thing like that—even in a fight." "it wasn't one." "Is that—is that a question, Mr. Hanver—or a statement?" Hanvey rose and shook his head. "This ain't any nine cmich, Miss Peyton. If I'm to believe what I heart; you didn't kill him and neither did Larry Cox. You looks like if I carry the investigation for enough I'll find out he n'int'd dead." Suddenly he started forward: "I'm sorry. Peyton. I didn't mean to crack any burn boles. Honest. I didn't. I just a d—d blundering jackass." Out in the courtyard of the jail, John Reagan turned admiringly to his communion. "I'll hand it to you. Jim: you're a marvel. But how in h-1 do you do it?" "What do you think, John: Welch or Miss Peyton?" "Oh! I dunnn, John. Shooting square with 'em, maze. And maybe decide it. And maybe decide it. And maybe decide it. So dam sane, I wouldn't understand a lie if I heard one." "Neither," snapped Reagan. "I was Max Vernon, just like I said at first. It happened this way, and I will thank you. You went there just like she said. That went to Thaer's room and killed him — not meaning to kill him when he went in, maybe, but doing it here. In larry. Larry Welch gets there a little quicker. Things Thaor did. It puts the her body stuff. What do you think of that?" "Sounds reasonable," commented Jim guarrelly. "Anyhow, I reckon there nint any objection to kettin" Miss Peyton on bond, is there? "None whatever," agreed Reagan. He rubbed the palms of his hands together. "I feel like we're getting somewhere at last." "So do L." grinned Jim Hanvey. "The thing I am puzzled about is this: Where? (To be continued tomorrow) 100,000,000 GUINEA PIGS Dangers in Everyday Foods Drugs, and Cosmetics by KALLET and SCHLINK of Consumer's Research $2.00 The Book Nook 1021 Mass. Tel. 666 COMING SOON THE BLACK BOX OF SILENCE mysterious invention with unheard of powers is stolen and leads to an exciting chase half-way across the continent. You'll enjoy the story. WATCH FOR IT MONDAY, FEBRUARY 27. 1932 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS. PAGE THREE COMING SOON "The Black Box of Silence" Watch for It Subscribe for THE KANSAS CITY STAR Headquarters PHONE H. L. NEVIN 847 Mass. St. 17 Distributor The K. U. Dames will meet tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Paul Ballard, 1100 Kenton street. There will be a short initiation service for new members who wish to join. K. U. Dames to Initiate the cabinet for the Baptist Young People's Union was appointed last night. Elizabeth Cunningham, gr., was selected for president; Martha Boyce, e33, chairman of program committee; Wibur Bruner, gr., chairman of the membership committee; Helen Fisher, chairman of the mission committee; Robert Browne, chairman of the social committee; Burton Brown, chairman of the finance committee, and Olive Douglas, c33, chairman of the public committee. 13 papers - 15c per week CALL 1300 CALL 1300 CALL 1300 CALL 1300 CALL 1300 Eaptist Young People Appoint Cabinet 1 New Low Prices Firestone OLDFIELD TYPE 4.50x21 $5.62 4.75x19 $6.46 5.50x19 $8.66 When Bought in Pairs CARS WASHED — 50c CARTER SERVICE CALL 1300 CALL 1300 CALL 1300 CALL 1300 Hill Society Call K, U.-25 Before 12:30 p. m. CALL 130 Banana Tortellini Just a few pennies for this bowlful of NATURAL ENERGY FOOD! CALL 1300 SHREDDED WHEAT SHREDDED WHEAT SHREDDED WHEAT 14.5 OZ. (390 G) PER 2 LITERS THE SHREDDED WHEAT CO., INC. 518 E. 4TH STREET NEW YORK, N.Y. 10016 When you see Niagara Falls on the package,you KNOW you have Shredded Wheat. SHREDDED WHEAT ALL THE WHEAT . . ALL THE BRAN THE NATURAL ENERGY FOOD 118 Uneeda YOU GET your money's worth when you order Shredded Wheat. It's all of Nature's great energizing food ... whole wheat. Nothing added, nothing taken away. Just golden brown biscuits of whole wheat, ready-cooked, ready to eat, delicious and easy to digest. A treat you'll never tire of; a well-balanced meal with milk or cream and fresh or preserved fruit. And a sustaining meal that will help you SAVE MONEY! At all campus eating places. MADE BY NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Uneeda Bakers kuu Mrs. Bollard will be assisted by Mrs Herman Davis, Mrs. Charles Fleckenstein and Mrs. John Nienstedt. Dinner guests at the Alpha Xi Delta house yesterday were Janet Fletchman, Mrs. Clark Gillis, Genevieve Hartley, Grace Glaville, R炎汉 Hamilton, Betty McCompton, Howard Bowden, Compton, Mrs. Howd Bishop, Mrs. Hardob Goldberg, Louise Westfall, Helen Trunt, Mrs. Robert Rose, Helen Streeth, Elizabeth Sandon, Charlotte Struthers, Diana Treves, the treasurer of the organization, whose home is West Lafayette, Ind. Liljanne Jacobs, c. 35, entertained with a 1 oclock lunch Saturday at the home of Mrs. A. B Weaver in a room on the Upper East Side. Among those present were Frances Grey, c. 36; Helen Harmon, f. 36; Kathen McArthur, f. 36; margaret Kirchoff, c. 34; Marjorie Simmons, c. 35; Joan Miller, c. 34; Miller, c. 34; and Elenor Klein, c. 35. Delta Tau Delta fraternity hold initiation services at their chapter house Sunday morning for William T. English, Mackwillev; Carl H. Helman, Denver, Colo.; Ben M. Huay, Archdiacrine; Jonan Anzouss; and Grover Taylor, Lawrence Dinner guests at the Kappa Sigma house yesterday were Katherine Nolan, Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Taylor, and Charles Terry, Topks; Noll Tucker, Glen Parsons; McKean, Nicole; Citys City, Mo.; Charles Greer, Leavenworth; and Carl Cliffon, Lawrence Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes spoke Saturday afternoon in Kansas City, M. before the Eleanor Denny club guests. The club, consisting of high school teachers, is named in honor of a Kansas City poet and teacher. Jean Poison, c'38; Carol Widen, c'unl and Mildred Marie Whaner, ed'38. The following were initiated into Alpha Gamma Delta Saturday; Cecelia Mitchell, c38; Valere Davye, c39; Mary Frances Kavaughan, c36; Ida The Immaculata Club, an organization of Catholic young women, will sponsor a bingo party tomorrow evening at 9:30 to be held in the parish hall of St. John's Catholic church. The public is invited. Dinner guests at the Chi Delta Sigma house yesterday were Mrs. Raymond Wheeler; Ladon Kiester, H. A. Reed of Kansas City, Ma.; Walter Hall, Owen Welch of Manhattan; R. N. Johnson and F. T. Perkins. Alpha XI Delta held initiation service yesterday at 4 o'clock for Marcelo Melson, c'and, and Margaret Clement, c'and, and Hazel Rie, c'36, of Lawrence. Mrs. Karl Kleoz, 111 West Campus road, entertained her auction bridge club Friday afternoon. Mrs. J. W. Mannen received the prize for high score. Dinner guests at the Sigma Chi house Sunday were Mrs. F, S. Reed, Wichita; and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Miller of Kansas City, Mo. Mr. and Mrs. William Gough, Sr., and Mr. Dean Gouche of Chanute will dinner guests at the Alpha Tau Omega house yesterday. Dinner guests at the Pi Kappa Alpha house yesterday were Reince Rucker c'encul; Mary Lou Becker, fa35; and Eric Lambertor of Topeka. Charlotte Bangs, of Winfield and a former student of the University of Kansas, was a weekend guest of Kappa Alpha Theta. Accia fraternity held pledging services at noon today for J. B. Harrison, of Hardin, Md. Ben Chi Delta Sigma held initiation yesterday for Ben McGuire, c36, and Dale Rustman, c36. Hazelle Hedges was a guest of the Alpha Omicron Pi house over the weekend. Bob Pitner of Glascow, is a guest of Phi Kappa. Send the Daily Kansan home KFKU 2. 30 p.m. Elementary German lesson Prof. E. F. Egeel. 6:00 p.m. Campus Calendar, Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes. Tuesday. Feb.28 Monday, Feb. 27 2:45 p.m. Book Review: Van Loon's Geography. 6:00 p.m. Athletic Question Box, E. R. Eibel. Professor H. B. Chubb of the political science department, will open a series of five talks Wednesday afternoon. These talks are designed to be particularly interesting now with the change of administration. Dean of Women Returns Miss Husband Hears Discussion on College Honor Systems Miss Agnes Husband, dean of women, returned yesterday from St. Paul, Minn., where she attended the convening of the Special Association of Deans of Women. The convention was held for the purpose of discussing the various problem, confronting universities and university students at the present time. Of special interest to Miss Husband was the discussion of the honor system. This problem has been discussed on this campu to a great extent by the W.S.G.A. Council and other organizations. Want Ads Twent-sive words or less 1 in insertion. Six-sive 2 in insertion. Four-sive 3 in insertion. WANT AIRBAGS ARE AC- COMPANIED BY CASIL. TEACHERS: Before joining an agency, we use *Vacancies* are being reported daily. Cooperative plan ensures applicants' Exchangi. City, Kunze. —112 HAVE YOUR application photographs made at Moore Studio, 719 Mass. (upstairs—exclusive). Phone 964.-125 TRUNK KEYS, door keys, car keys, Good locker padlocks, night latches, door closers repaired. Trewery and Butter. 623 Vermont St. Phone 819 LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusively 1025 Mass. Miss Husband also visited her brother, M. W. Husband, 21, and his wife, Grace Quinn Husband, '21, in Minneapolis. AT THE UNION Drinks Sandwiches Candy Union Fountain Sub Basement, Memorial Union Mat. and Eve.-15c VARSITY TONIGHT-TOMORROW They're in and How! MORAN and MACK The Two Black Crows in "HYPNOTIZED" Extra! Hollywood Runaround Bleksha Rhythm Late News STARTS WEDNESDAY More Dreared Than the Jungle Beast. "NAGANA." with Tala Bireil Melvin Douglas NOW! NOW! BETTER COME EARLY PATER WHERE BIG PICTURES PLAY WORDS CANNOT DESCRIBE IT Positively No Advance in Prices. 14 STARS - 200 GIRLS 42nd STREET The Heart Song of the GREAT WINTER WAY Also Cartoon - Novelty - News AND HERE COMES ANOTHER SMASH HIT STARTS THURSDAY "EMPLOYEES ENTRANCE" WARREN WILLIAM LORETA YOUNG ALICE WHITE WALLACE FORD People know it.. "Chesterfields Satisfy" WHEN smokers keep buying the same cigarette day after day . . . it's a pretty good sign that they're getting what they want . . . mildness, better taste —a smoke that's always the same. So we're going right on making Chesterfields just as we always have . . . selecting choice, ripe tobaccoos . . . ageing them . . . blending and cross-blending them...making them into cigarettes in the most scientific ways that are known. As long as we do these things we know that smokers will continue to say, "They Satisfy". For that what people are saying about Chesterfields. If you smoke, why not find out about them? A package or two will tell you the whole story. V Chesterfield Westerfield CIGARETTES CRESTERFIELD THEY'RE MILDER THEY TASTE BETTER PAGE FOUR MONDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1933 --- Title Hopes Go Up As Two Regulars Return to Form UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Johnson and Harrington Display Early Season Ability at Manhattan AGGIES MISS CHANCES With the return of Johnson and Harrington to top form, the Kansas Jayhawks this afternoon will enter their final week of practice at least even favorites to defend their Big Six basketball title successfully next Friday night against the Oklahoma Sooners. They must be the last of the season for Kansas, with Oklahoma moving on to Lincoln Saturday to round out its schedule. Led by sensational offensive work of Johnson, with Harrington and Wells contributing their share, Coach Forest C. Allen's quintet earned its chance at the title last Saturday by trimming four players from a game in that showed the Purple squid into fourth place in the standings and sent Kansas a half game into the lead. Aggies Shots Miss It was a hard luck game for the Kansas State, which fact, however, discounts in no way from the Jayhawk's glory in winning. The Angies, after a slow start in the first period, were on the offensive a greater part of the game, but failed to hit even a rebound. He had a few shots, and Skradski, usually dead shots from the back court, saw basket after basket go glimmering, as the ball rimmed the hoop and rolled out. Graham, after a bad half开始, began to click with the opening of the second period. He secured two quick one-handed shots, and with another he lost his eye and got scared the rest of the game. The Kansas play was far from perfect, but the offense clicked often enough at the proper times, and the defense stepped up to keep their lead through the entire game. Johnson, of course, was the individual star of the game. Unable to get the tip consistently from the lanky Dalton, the Kansas center made up for it by out-thinking and out-fighting the entire Aggie team. Harrington, in addition to caging four free throws in as many as possible, came from the whole Kansas State team, dribbling more than half the length of the floor for setups. Wells Does Good Work Wells turned in two neat baskets made on charity toss of four tries, and played a good floor game. The three men Coach Allen used at guard, while they failed to score, contributed materially to the team's play. Three Men Injured The race for individual scoring honors in the conference has narrowed to Johnson and Wagner, of Missouri. The Tiger pivot man accounted for 16 points, just three less than Johnson scored against the Aggies, and stands only four points behind his Kansas rival. Each has one more game to play. Beck, of Oklahoma, is the only other man with more points overtaking the two leaders. The Sooner, with 72 points, has two more games to play, but it would take two phenomenal performances to permit Johnson to win. He have 109 and 96 points respectively. The three scores in the Aigle game came out of the game with minor injuries that will not keep them out of the game Friday right, but will mean that they will see light workouts this week. Of the three, Johnson, Harrington, Wolks, Wells is in the same condition having augmented his oak elbow injury. The game Friday night will be designated Johnson-Schauke night in honor of the two senior basketball men who are ending their athletic competition for Kansas. The time at the half will be devoted to paying a tribute to Glenn Cunningham by the Lawrence Relays club, No. 1. It will bear Cunningham's name and his Essen vasion in which he won three out of the four meets he entered. E. C. Quigley of St. Marys will be the official for the game. Men's Intramurals The weighing in for the intramuscular wrestling was done this afternoon Weight classes are divided into the 121 pound and the 138, 148, 158, 168, 178, 198, 218, 238, 258, 278, 298, 318, 338, Matches are conducted according to time schedule which is posted immediately after drawings are made. Because of the necessity of keeping within the time schedule, men failing to update their schedules require the time for their match must forget. All buits are to be seven minutes in length and if the referee does not award the bout to either contestant at the expiration of this period, two extra pe riod bouts of two minutes each will be wrestled. If either contentant brings his opponent to the mat and secures a position of advantage within the first one minute of wrestling the bout becomes contested. In any part of this continuous seven minute period terminates the match. If neither contender sustains a fall or a position of advantage before the expiration of one minute of wrestling the referee will stop the bout and the two minutes will elapse. The referee shall toss a coin and the winner of the toss may elect to go behind or underneath in the referee's position on the mat, at the beginning of the first three rounds, at the bout, no rest period being allowed. At the expiration of the first three minute bout, the referee shall stop the bout and put the contender who started with the position of advantage in the second bout to the start of the second three minute bout, no rest period being allowed. If a contestant secures a fall in the first three minute period, this terminates only the first three minute bout, and the second three minute bout shall be wrestled as though no fall had resulted in the previous bout. In case a consolation tournament is conducted of three periods of two minutes each. Fain falls only, shall count. Any part of both shoulders coming in contact with the mat for a period of two secures the foot. If the tatist tests secure falls in three minutes, two minutes, or the extra period bout, the match shall be awarded to the one securing the fall in the shorter time and its only shall be awarded points for the If no fall has resulted after the exiration of the regular period of wrestling, the referee shall award the bout > the contestant who shows greater creeping ability and aggressiveness, a better outcome and an average of at least one minute. The referee must make his decision before e consults the time-keeper's watch. In case the referee finds, after consulting the timekeeper, that the winner, according to his judgment, has less than a second's wait, the match shall be continued as an extra period bout. When no fall is secured in the extra period bout, the referee shall contest who has shown the greater wrestling ability and aggressiveness. Women's Intramurals --at the The women's intramural swimming meet will be held tomorrow, Feb. 28 at 4:30. Each organized house may enter as many as four women in each event, but each woman cannot enter more than three events. Margaret Walker, cx34, is swimming manager of this event, which is under the auspices of the W.A.W. Last year the P.D.Q.'s won the meet while the Chi Omega's took second place. The order of events which will be included in this meet are: relay, breast form, two length free style, diving, two lengths back stroke, two lengths side stroke, crawl for form, two lengths breast stroke, three lengths crawl. Basketball practice for class teams all will be hold tomorrow night at the ym. Juniors and seniors will practice 8. freshman and sophomores at 9. The mid-west physical education convention is to be held at Wichita, March 1, 2, and 4. Saturday morning there will be a special meeting for students expecting to start teaching them. The three talks to be presented are: "What a superintendent looks for in an applicant for a physical education teaching position," by L. W. Mayberry, Wichita. "How can a course preparing for physical education be used if no teaching position is secured?" by Misa Rosai, Allen of the W.Y.C.A. Toucha. "Problems of the first year in teaching physical education," by Bernie L. Goodrum, Chanute. Norman, Feb. 27. (Special)—After the Reds and Whites, University of Oklahoma spring football squads, had fought to a 0-9 tie at Owen Field Saturday afternoon in the first of five weekly spring practice games, Coach Lewie Hardge declared that he was "very well satisfied." FIRST PRACTICE GAME HELD AT NORMAN LAST SATURDAY "I was only natural that each team would present a strong defense since we had been out only one week," the Steiner mentor said. "I thought the timing was very good. I never saw a four with fine spirit and wuz this spring." Rifle Team Picture to Be Taken Members of the men's rifle team will meet at the entrance of Fowler shops to attend a charity event and be taken for the Jawahar. Those who have received awards in former years should wear them. All other team members will wear regular R.O.T.C. gear. All team members will be worn by all those possessing them. Track Marks Expected to Be Bettered in Meet University Host to High School Athletes April 21 Records for high school track may reasonably be expected to fall at the twenty-ninth interscholastic track meet to be held at the University of Kansas April 21, in connection with the Kansas Relays. Last year, four records were estal lahed, and the same number of new marks in other events were made in 1920. No meet was held in 1929. Three years ago, Glen Cunningham of Eikhart, now making history nationally for the University of Kansas, won the high school male in 431A, learning the previous record made in 1910 by Powell of Anthony. That same year, Dears of Lorraine put the 12-pound shot 54 feet, 10 inches, and Delbert White of Pleasanton set a new disc record at 153 feet, 8½ inches. The Wyndotte medley team set the other new record at 3:32.5. Teams Break Track Records Thus in half the events of the high school track meet, new records have been set within the past three years. Least year, the Wyndote relay team came back to cut three seconds from the half mile relay setting it at 13.1.5. In fact, the three leaders finished in better than the previous record. In the mile relay, Kansas Vocational set a new mark at $32.6. In section, set a new mark at $32.6. Wilhelm of Arkansas City, high point winner for the meet, made a new record for the 120-yard high hurdles at 15.7 seconds, while Little of Rock Creek put the javelin for 194 feet, 9½ inches. High Schools to Attend Meet The meet is held each year for Kansas high schools that are members of good standing of the Kansas State High School Athletic association and is run under the eligibility rules of that organization. The meet this year, as usual, will be held at Cedar Rapids A and B, the latter class being for high schools of less than 150 enrollment. Arkansas City high won the class A division last year with a total of 35 points and Wyndotte High of Kansas City, Kana, was runner up with 35% points. In class B first place went to Kansas Vocational School of Topeka with 35% points, while second place went to Waterville High with 27 points. The high school meet will be held this year, as in the past, in connection with the Eleventh Annual Kansas Relays, April 22. The high school athletes will be invited to stay over for the Kannas Relays as guests of the University Athletic association to watch a picked collection of university and college stars from all over the United States. One of the outstanding travel carnivals. Entry blanks for the interscholastic meet will be mailed from the athletic office to Kansas high schools late in March. Winners of the meet in past years: Class A Class B 1906 Central 1907 Lawrence 1910 Lawrence 1911 Lawrence 1913 Lawrence 1914 Hutchinson 1915 Torpica 1915 Wichita Co. 1917 Wichita 1918 Abilene 1919 Winfield 1920 Winfield 1921 Winfield 1922undo Winfield 1923 Winfield 1924 Arkansas City 1925 Wichita 1926 Wichita 1927 Wichita 1928 Wichita 1929 Wichita 1930 Wyandotte 1931-Not held. Dawson and Cunningham are rooming together in a New York hotel. "Mr. Frank Wykoff with three doors down the hall. We have been seenNew York," the Okhanna men added. He added that Cunningham Knights of Columbus meet March 15. Norman, Feb. 27 — (Special) "I just didn't run fast enough," wrote Glen Dawson, University of Oklahoma's football coach. He here in describing his defeat to Glenn Cunningham, University of Kansas phenom, in the 800-meter run at the Brooklyn Curb exchange meet last fall, the Wichita Falls win and Dawson was second. Dawson said Cunningham made good time considering that the runners didn't use spikes and that the track wasn't banked. Dawson was awarded a 16-inch high figure of a track athlete as the second place winner. Dawson Writes of Kansan Dickinson Co Caihun Co Anthony Pratt Chuo Humboldt Humboldt Pratt Valley Falls 1932 Arkansas City Kansas Voca. Oklahoma Says Cunningham Made Good Time in 800-Meter Run Beck's Feat Overshadowed Sooner Star Once Caged 23 Field Goals and a Free Throw Valley Falls Valley Falls Valley Falls Mulvane Chase Co. Chase Co. Chase Co. Chase Co. Perry Halstead Oskaloosa Norman, Okla. Feb. 27—(Special) The feat of an Extended University of Oklahoma forward, in scoring 11 field goals and 2 four shots, a total of 24 points, against Iowa State here Feb. 20, establishing a new individual scoring record for the Sooner Fieldhouse, prompted an extensive basketball research project with the greatest scoring achievements of all time by Sooner players since basketball was started here back in 1907. Ernest C. Lambert, of Okmoglee, captain and forward of the Sooner five of 1909, won out. Lambert, the records show, scored 47 points in a game against the Edmond. Oklahoma Teachs. Jan, 15, 1909, in the old gymnasium, making 23 field goals and a foul shot. Okalmaha won, 93 to 7. Lambert's feat was aided by the fact that the Sooners were meeting a weak opponent and playing in the old gymnasium, whose dimensions were 50x20 feet, and which had no out of bounds, and being played off the walls as in handball. Howard McCasland, tallied 35 points Feb. 12, 1965, against the Edmund team, and Homer Risen, forward, in 1918, scored 34 points against the Durant, Oklahoma Teachers. Oklahoma won this game, 116 to 13, believed to be the greatest count ever amassed by a Sooner five. CHEMICALS 100 + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + Butter University has a new course in Matrimony. In a spirit of helpfulness we suggest orientation for a Mom, you can help your own self-impulse. Suppose, that after a hard day of hunting work you came home and found three days of dirty dishes in the sink and no dinner ready. Would you throw a small bridge lamp,援 to a boy's size baseball ball or do the dishes yourself? Explain fully. As well, set down probable reactions for 2nd and 3rd offences. Enveloped迎到 the Book Nook: "You'd never guess that the same man wrote Ann Vickers and Elmer Ganyter." After College WHAT? GANGSTER Advertising? Frederick C. Kendall, editor of Advertising & Selling, says, "Advertising is still young. Yet it is already a vital part of every important industry. The professional advertisement must be made aware of the impact of human nature, but also a student of American business." "S PARKING" ideas are the life blood of advertising. That's why advertising men, as well as college men, turn to a pipe. For a good pipe with the right tobacco is man's first aid to clear thinning out a broken pipe. "The tobacco" — that's the Edgeworth Smoking Tobacco. Just one puff will tell you why. It's that truly individual blend of fine old bureles—a blend you find only in Edgeworth. Once you try Edgeworth, nothing less will do. Don't try to before莽. Pack address. Pad address Larus and Bro. Co., 109, S. 22d St, Richmond, Va. - A recent investigation showed Edworthy the favorite smoke at 52 out of 54 leading college Buy Edgeworth in anywhere in two countries. Ready-Rubbed and Edgeworth Plug Slice. All package to pound package to pound humidir tins. Some sealed tins. EDGEWORTH SMOKING TOBACCO Now that things have begun to pop in Jehol, we miss that old headline, "Japan Defiant." "42nd Street" at the Patee is what Hollywood has been shooting at for years. The show is one good after another, clever chorus work and snuppy dances. The plot would hold up alone, but with its gorgeous music it passes through this Dep' label, "A Perfect Musical Comedy." "---and then, after Elmer made the last-minute touchdown, he married the beautiful Gwendolyn and her papa bought him a bank with an honest loan." EDGEWORTH EXTRA GRID HEAP SUBLIMBED EDGEWORTH EXTRA PLUG SICE EDGEWORTH If the preceding doesn't sound like stark realism to you it would to the lad on the Emporia Gazette who suggested putting a dog tax on collegiate coonskin coats as a means of raising revenue. "The Sign of the Cross," the spectacle now showing at the Dickinson is, without reservation, a throng of fans. "There does it have a good story, but is excellently cast and affords a great deal of authentic information. Until Thursday, at least, you can make a statement of time and nickels at the Dickinson." Special for Tuesday Noon Roast Park Liver and Basen Jaked Beans Buttered Onions Buttered Onions And many other good CAFETERIA Whatever happened to the plan of Pennsylvania's Senator Reed to vote 22 million dollars for the establishment of boys' camps? It sounded awfully good to us. All you had to do to get free room and board was to prove you were an American citizen, fairly sound of mind and body and had been out of work for six months. The best of luck, Senator Reed. Could you possibly get the measure through by commencement? foods on the Send The Daily Kansan home. ·DENVER· $990 25c Meal Go by Greyhound Bus Two buses every day. New low fares good on every bus. Service to almost any point in America. Sample one- Salina $4.20 New York $22.15 St. Louis 4.90 Los Angeles 28.50 Chicago 7.90 Topeka 7.50 schedules, rates, and all information Phone 590 UNION BUS TERMINAL 635 S.W. St. WESTERN GREYHOUND LINE Starts Next SUNDAY Watch for It State Fair COMING SOON where Students Get Together "The Black Box of Silence" DICKINSON NOW! MON-TUES-WED SHOWS CONTINUOUS! Words Will Not Describe The Magnificent Splendor of This Marvelous Picture! 'THE SIGN OF THE CROSS' Producers Demand: Until 6:00, 10-25c After 6:00, 10-40c Shows Continuous Tomorrow 3:00 p.m. on THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY BARBARA STANWYCK in "LADIES THEY TALK ABOUT" TONIGHT 8:15 o'clock AT LAWRENCE MEMORIAL HIGH SCHOOL ADMISSION 50 Cents "HAPPY LANDINGS" This play was produced and staged by Prof. Allen Crafton in France and was one of the few shows that had the approval and support of General Pershing and army headquarters. Now you have the opportunity to see this same show with the best talent from the Hill and town in the cast. A partial list of the cast include the following from the Hill: Crafton Callahan Calderwood Patterson Kerr Inge Nuckles Arbella Stewart Rice Reynolds Harker See the original show that entertained the boys in France. You will like it. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXX Japan Dispatches Additional Force of 4,000 to Jehol Attacking Army Now Total 35,000; Chinese Defense Boasts 50,000 'Men Under Arms' PEIPING AWAITS RAIDS 15, 40. Feb. 28 - (T)P) - A Japanese force of 4,000 men left Shanhakwa to re-enforce the attacking army operating against Cheng Tef Tu and receiving according to military information received at Chinese headquarters today. A force of only 50 Nippones have been left to guard the city. Peiping was calm today, but a spirit of unrest has attacked the Chinese residents who are digging themselves into bomb-proof dugouts in their back yards. Amusement places are deserted and trade is at a standstill. Motor trucks have been built in hazardous and construction was being given to civilian petitions for the construction of a system of trenches along the city wall with digouts for protec- A majority of them are under the direct command of the Chinese high commission in Paris and is directed by Governor Tangu-in Jehol, and perhaps 15,000 more are operating as irregulars responsible to nobody and have only been classed as diplomats. With the 4,000 additional troops, the Japanese forces operating in Jehil may have been brought to approximately 35,000, including four and one-half divisions and two cavalry brigades. Opposed to them are perhaps 50,000 Chinese who can be described as "men under arms." Japan Says, 'America Unfair' Jan. Feb. 28—(UAP)-American in influence in the League of Nations against Japan, and prevented a satisfactory conclusion of the Sino-Japanese dispute. Yusuke Matsuoka, chief of the Japanese delegation to the United States, was charged in an interview that the American attitude had "been unfair to us." Economic Theory Leaves Student Mine Dry As Duck's Back. He Says Ise Speaks on Socialism "University students are not any more eager to learn about the philosophy of socialism than they are to learn about the philosophy of capitalism," Professor John Ise, head of the department of economics, declared in the night before the Kansas City Conference of Social Work in the W.Y.C.A. "The technocrats," he said, "should be commended for having called attention in so dramatic a way to the faults of our economic system." "The Students," he exclaimed, "are more interested in getting a date for the next dance, and the theory of their minds as dry as a duck's back." Professor Ise said he did not fear Communism since he believed that the people, being able to make good choices, should get what they want. Being a pianist himself, he said, in reference to the amount of energy required to achieve certain kinds of work that Wagner required more ergs to produce his operas than Irving Berlin required to produce his "twaddle." "It will take a super-engineer," Professor Ise declared, "and not merely an engineer to solve our problems." Schwegler Attends N.E.A. Meeting R. A. Schwegler, dean of the School of Education, will return tomorrow from Minneapolis, Min., where he has been a teacher and an assistant of superintendence of the National Education association. Dean Schwegler is president of the National Association of Colleges and Departments of Education in Universities and Colleges which met Friday evening. W. S. G. A. to Meet Bern Death Held 'Suicide' Los Angeles, Feb. 28—(UP)—All formal investigation into the death labor Day of Paul Bern, film executive and husband of Jean Harlow, actress, were dropped today. W. W. Wideman, foreman of the county grand jury said the jury "definitely was the opinion that Paul Bern died a suicide." The W. S. G. A. Council will meet tonight at 7 o'clock in room 5, Memorial Union, according to Helen Heaston, fa 33, president. PRESIDENT-ELECT FORMALLY SELECTS SENATOR WALS LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 28. 1933 Hyde Park, New York, Feb. 28—(UP) —President - elect Roosevelt today named Senator Thomas J. Wash, of Monatna, as attorney general in the new cabinet. The selection of Walsh leaves but two more cabinet officers to be formally named. Miss Frances Perkins of New York to be secretary of labor, and Daniel C. Roper, of South Carolina, to be deputy secretary. Mr. Roosevelt made the announcement of the Wash appointment without comment. CONDENSED WIRE NEWS Smith Favors Russian Recognition Washington, Feb. 28- (UF)-Alfred E. Smith, more dignified and serious than in recent appearances at the capital, warned the senate finance committee today that currency inflation was a problem. The senate insisted rather than help the country, Smith favored recognition of the Soviet government of Russia, saying: "there is no trade using them under cover." Missouri Provides for Convention Jefferson City, Mo. Feb. 28.-(UP) The House of Representatives of the Missouri legislature today passed by unanimous vote a bill providing for a constitutional convention to pass on the budget of the state and an amendment. Favorable action on the bill was predicted by scenec leaders. Student Boarding Costs Reduced Chicago, Feb. 28—(UP) The University of Chicago has reduced boarding costs of students to $125 per student to the World War, William J., Macher, university bursar, announced. Death in Farm Trouble Death in front of Trouble Sullivan, 59, died (UP)-Pearl Reedy, Hyman, died today, the second victim of a fight which resulted from an attempt to block a farm mortgage foreclosure sale. Reedy's father, Antoine, died in the wake of injuries suffered in the outbreak. Loughton Marshal Found Dead Loughton, Feb. 28—(UP)—The body of night marshal, A. H. Erdman, 57, was found today lying on a sidewalk. His head had been pierced by a rifle bullet. Authorities said they heard a report that he had received a threatening letter. Highway superintendent Killed Coffeyville, Feb. 28—(UP) Sam Taylor, maintenance superintendent for the state highway department of this county, suffered in a car accident near Tyroat last night. Taylor was a member of the 1321 state house of representatives, and had been connected with the highway department since 1929. He is survived by his widow and four daughters. Business Honor Roil Named 12 Students With Outstanding Record Announced by Dean Stockton Names of 12 students in the School of Business of the University, who attended Fall 2014, the fall semester of 1832-33, were announced today by Frank T. Stockton, dean of the School of Business. Eight of the 12 are in the senior class, and four The honor students, listed in the order in which their class average rates them, are as follows: Seniors: Earl Woodford, Lawrence (Straight "A" record); Roy Shapo, Topica Juanta Morse, Marshe City, Mo.; Heil Kinney, Lawrence; Fred O. Kiel, Kan; Heil Kinney, Lawrence; Fred O. Kiel, Kan; Irene Farrane, Overland Pack Elijah L. Marolf, Marshe City, Kan. Juniors: Oliver W. Holmes, Eudora; George T. Crawford, Lawrence; K. R. Leidig, Lenora; Lester Beisecker, Topela. Mrs. Larloremere's Fiber Bites Brick E Hopkins, 70 of New York city has been appointed county hospital in Tepeka, after an illness of a year. He and Mrs Hopkins were visiting their daughter and son-in-law, Mr and Mrs Thomas Larloremere, for the funeral of his strenched. He was a member of the Dudecimon club to which Eugene Field and Frances Wilson belonged. The body was transported to New York City Tuesday for burial. H. B. Chubb, assistant professor of political science, will conclude a series of talks over the air on international affairs in April. Professor Chubb has previously broadcasting over KFKU for the past three years on this subject. Washington Is Scene of Hustle and Bustle as Throngs Pour I Washington, Feb. 28- (UP)—Washington's Southern calm turned into kaleidoscopic battles today as the muscular president, the new president, Democracy has wuled 12 long years for a chance to look with pride upon a Washington bedecked in honor of their candidate. Now that chance is here this what they see. One hundred thousand tourists should ring their way into hotels in a vain search for rooms; notice that 250-000 visitors would be in Washington before President-elect Roosevelt became President in fact on Saturday; miles of white washed pine stands which made the heart of Washington look like a country fair; hundreds of prosperous looking individuals scurrying down streets and bottles under their arms. (Note: rye whisky was selling at $4 a half-gallon but was expected to go up in price momentarily). Summerfield Nomination Deadline to Be March 15 Detectives were watching all incoming trains for gentlemen with possible anarchistic tendencies. Preliminary Examination Will Be Given April 8; Finals May 5, 6 March 15 has been announced as the deadline for Summerfield nominations, after which time additional nominations will not be considered. High school officials throughout the state have been working to make making nominations for the scholarships. Boys in the graduating classes of their high schools who are superior in training, character, ideals and promise of future usefulness are suitable candidates, said Professor Olim Templi, Summerfield Scholarship committee. On the basis of information received with the nominations, a selection will be made of the nominees, who will be invited to a preliminary examination, which will be held at convenient centers throughout the state on April 8. From those who take the preliminary examination, about 30 of the outstanding candidates will be invited to come to the event, and about ten awards to be held May 5 and 6. About ten or twelve awards will be made to the highest candidates. Thomas to Give English Lecture William B. Thomas, instructor of English, will speak on "Stephen Vincent Benet," and "John Brown's Body," at 4:00 p.m. Thursday, in room 205, Fremantle freshman literature sections. However all who are interested are invited to attend. Thomas to Give English Lecture Summertide scholarships awards are made for merit only, without regard to the financial resources of the nominees. The monetary assistance extended is determined each year according to the actual needs of the individual scholars. The award in the form of the awards in the post three years are now in attendance at the University. The scholarships were established by Solen E. Summerfield, 99-01, who now lives in New York City. The sum of the scholarships is for each year for each group of scholars chosen. The members of the Summerfield scholarships committee are; chairman, Professor Olin Templin, secretary of the Endowment association; Dean E. B. Stouffer of the Graduate School; Dean G. C. Shand of the School of Engineering and Architecture; Professor U. G. Mitchell of the department of mathematics; Professor P. B. Lawson, associate dean of the College; Professor John Lee of the department of economics; Irwin Hill, 96" and Frank C. Crowell, 83". Dr. R. W. Hissen, 46, died in a hospital at Wichita yesterday of injury suffered in a motor car collision near Toronto, last Friday night. He was returning from a professional call at Fort Scott when the car he was driving collided with another driven by Ernest Fulhage, Toronto. Dr. Hissem was a graduate of the University School of Medicine in 12 and of Johns Hopkins University. Cornell to Address French Club W. Kenneth Cornell, instructor in feminine languages, will speak at a conference from 4:30 p.m. in room 306, Fresher hall. WICHITA DOCTOR, K.U. '12. IS KILLED IN ACCIDEN? Basketball Team Shows Fine Spirit for Sooner Game Cripples To Be in Shape to Defend Their Title Against Big Six Co-Leader BENN REPLACES GRAY With their title hops resting on the outcome of the game with Oklahoma next Friday night, the Kansas Jayhawks won against a series of workouts already keyed to a fighting pitch. Although the scrimmage session was short, Dr. Allen's variety cages took it briskly as they played an offensive and defensive formations. Friday night will be Johnson-Shakehne night, in honor of the two veterans who are playing their last game for Kansas. Records show that the Kansas center has each year played some of his best basketball against Sooners teams. Kansas fans are teammates to reap the benefits of performances in his final game. Johnson and Wells, who were both injured slightly against Kansas State last week, took short workouts last night, and will continue to take things easy for the rest of the week. Well's hip has been bothering him since the Missouri game, but Dr. Allen said yesterday that he expected the sophomore to be ready Friday night. Johnson is not sure if his last night's scrimmage failed to show that it handcapped him to any considerable degree. The Oklahoma game will mark the fourth consecutive year that the final Kansas home game has been a championship, duplicate the situation last year, when Kansas ended the season by trimming the Sooners at Lawrence for the title. Fourth Title Contest WEATHER A possibility that there might be a shift in the Kansas lineup Friday night was indicated last night when Dr. Allen Schaake, who played for Shakee in scrimmage, bends a smooth floor player with a good basket eye, may get the call against the Sooners in place of his fellow-townman, Gordon Gray, who has started most of the season. Another feature of the game, for which a capacity crowd is expected, will be a ceremony between halves honoring Glenny Cunningham, Kansas mile star, who has just returned from a highly successful eastern track invasion. The Lawrence Kansas Relays Club will be in charge of the program. Whitmore Here Tomorrow Noted Chemist May Address College Classes During Morning The meeting will be held in the director's room of the Chamber of Commerce at the Kansas State University by several faculty members from the University, Wheeler Talks in Minneapolis Professor Raymond H. Wheeler, head of the psychology department, spoke Saturday before the mathematics section of the National Education association to discuss his subject "Some Applications of the New Psychology of Learning to the Teaching of Arithmetic." Dr. F. B. Dains of the chemistry department today announced that Dr Frank C. Whitmore dean of physics and chemistry at Pennsylvania State College, will be a visitor at the University tomorrow. Dr. Daina, in speaking of Dr. Whitmore, termed him as "One of the Most Interesting Students in America." It is possible that Dr Whitmore will address some of the classes in chemistry during the day. The regular meeting of the Kansas City section of the American Chemical Society tomorrow evening at 8 in Kansas City brings Dr Whitmore, west as he is to be the principal speaker at the meeting. He will talk on "Some Harms Reviews Article William F. Harms, gr, reviewed an article, "The Relation of the Station Entomologist to his Environment," at the regular meeting of the Entomology club yesterday afternoon. Committees were appointed and plans were made for an initiation party to be held in the near future. Kansas — Fair tonight and Wednesday; not much change in temperature. --of many North American forms in birds and reptiles, as well as mammals. NUMBER 112 Cermak Improves Miami, Feb. 28—(UP) -Mayor Antoz J. Cermak of Chicago, has taken a definite turn for the better, physicians announced today. Chicago Mayor Takes Definite Turn for Better Miami, Fla. Feb. 28—(UP)-Hope for success in Mayor Anton J. Cermak's battle to live rested heavily today on special oxygen apparatus ordered from the company, a device which permits the use of a nasal tube for administering oxygen arrived by airplane this morning. A special oxygen room was ordered by Mayor Anton J. Cermak Jr., son-in-law of the mayor, said the oxygen room had been ordered sent here because Cermak was chafed at the close confinement of the oxygen tent now in use. The larger room was full, and no other effect he said. It is expected tomorrow. Dyche Collection Sent to Eastern Scientist Biological Bureau Members Will Study Yucatan Mammals At the request of Drs. E. A. Goldman and E. W. Nelson, members of the Bureau of Biological survey in the United States Department of Agriculture, a large part of the collection of Yucatan mammals housed in Dyche museum was today shipped to them in Washington, D.C. Nelson and Goldman are now preparing a book on the mammals of the Yucatán, providing assistance from the material sent them today. The Yucatan collection in Dyche museum, ranging from monkeys to bats, is composed for the most part of Such requests for loan material, not only to the government, but to museums throughout the country and to individual students as well, forms a large part of the work carried on by the stuff of Dyche Museum. The collections here are such that the institution is recognized as the foremost campus museum in the United States, and the information that investigators have obtained from studies of the collection has proven valuable in working out the limits and variations of many North American forms in birds Kansas to Debate Tonight Negative Team Will Meet Texas on War Debt Question The question for the debate this evening between the Texas University team and the University of Kansas team is, "Resolved, that we should cancel the games and prepareations." The debate will be held in Fraser Theater at 8:30 on this evening. The members of the Kansas team taking the negative side are Charles Hacker, c'33, and Clement Hall, 174. The team is also responsible for the affirmative of the question. The judges for the debate will be: Mar McLaughlin, delegate debate of Liberty Memorial High School; General Browne, delegate debate of R. B. Stevens, county attorney. After the debate the Texas debaters will go to a tournament at the University of Texas. The Texas team is considered as the greatest competition for the K.U. debaters. Play Given by German Club One-Act Farce Is Directed by Dr. E. F. Engel The Deutsch Verein, or German club, presented a one-force play last night entitled. "Ein Muer Ersatzian" was part of an audience of seventen hundred persons. The play was directed by Dr. E. F. Engel. He was assisted in the handling of stage settings by Miss Irmia Fried. He supervised, all of the German department. The cast was: Wilhelm, Charles W. Dreher, *c*36; Yacup, Ralph Stutzman, gr; Gerrude, Miss Irma Friedrich; and Louise, Irma Bloedt, *c*47. Miss Lovejoy Lesher, gr., sang "Zwei Hertzen in Driveltal Tag" prior to the opening of the play, accompanied on the piano by Margaret McNown, fa. 35. Chairs Taken From Auditorium Wednesday evening two upholstered chairs were taken from the Auditorium and no trace of them has been found. It is thought that they were taken as a prank of some fraternity men going through the ordeal of prison, and if such is the case there is some hope that they will be returned. POLICE SEARCH FOR ROBBER BOETTCHER HELPED CONVIC Denver, Feb. 28 – (UP) — Tommy Denner, fugitive bank robber, today became the objective of a extensive police search for the kidnapper of Charles Boettcher II, young Denver millionaire who was kidnapped two weeks ago. Coleman was convicted of robbing the Stockyard banks in here which Chauce Danner was, he was heavily interested. The elder Boettcher helped bring about his conviction, and he has since escaped from the state penitentiary at Canyon City. 'Happy Landings' Given Successful Performance Crafton Is Author, Director and Actor in Revue for Legion Songs and laughs. Comedy and farce, and more comedy. A little bit of everything, and all of it amusing and humorous, and all of its songs," a two-aact written by Allen Crafton, which was presented here for the first time last night at the Lawrence Memorial High School under the direction of Stephen Libert Post of the American Legion. if H. Hitchens, where it was first presented in 1928, were among the entertainment of the American soldiers. Although much of its humor and satire is that of the A. E. F. in France in 1918, it had lost none of its first presentation since the war. The revue does not try to be pretenious. Its purpose is amusement and entertainment in any way that will be accepted. That purpose is accomplished well. - Credit Is Dive Crafton Professor Crafton must so the credit, the appraisal and the revue, but also for its excellent direction and a capable performance in many widely-diversified roles. In addition to several character parts, he handled a good share of the solo work of his colleagues. To say that any other member of the company was outstanding above the others, however, would be doing an injustice. Each man who appeared made a real contribution to the success of the production, and the audience appreciated the work of all of them. But there are a few names that simply must be mentioned. George Callahan and James Patterson, comedy stars of the play "Maid in Hollywood," convinced those who heard them last night that they could create as much hilarity as Italian street sweepers as they did with their movie "movie capital." Professor F. H. Guild gave a slight of hand demonstration that brought stage gaps from his audience behind the footlights and real gaps from the crowd in the auditorium. The male quartet was excellent. C. C. Carl, as a decidedly overbearing M. P. in France, let himself in for disgrace. He also faced fatness in the finale back in New York. All Do Act Well And so it was with all the rest. Each had his part to offer, and the result was an evening of entertainment that was as pleasing to last night's music as it must have been to the much-harrassed A. E. F. 18 years ago in France. the personnel of the company; George Andell, George Beal, Phil Dean, Earnest Boyen, George Calhoun, Denie Carlos, Allan Crafton, Kieth Davis, Lloyd Durv, F. H. Guild, James Harper, Coulhough, William Ingle, Will Jobs, Je, Dr Kernel, J. Albert Kerr, Jack Dowler, Martin Barker, John Sullivan, Sam Moyer, Rolla Knuckles, Arch Oliver, James Patterson, Gilmore Orlean, Joe Rice, Maurice Riverview, V. W. Roy, Charles Scanlon, Russell Seacant, Everett Stewart, Everett II, and Farrel Straum. GEOLOGY GRADUATES DOING RESEARCH FOR M. A. DEGRE Wallace E. Lumb of Wakefield and Harold H. Hawkins of Kansas City, Mo., graduate students in the department of geology, are doing research under the direction of Dr. R. C. Moore, head of the State Geological survey. Their work consists of mapping out crops and describing formations which are created from the seas, these, which is part of the work required by the department of geology. Waffle Supper Planned The Freshman commission of Y. W. C. A. will give a waffle wafer at its meeting tomorrow afternoon at $30. Barge, Barges, C$ is in charge of the meeting. Tau Sigma Recital to Feature Men in Indian Dances Joe Dunkel to Do 'Dagger Dance'; Eagle Will Interpret African Voodoo Act OTHERS TO APPEAR An outstanding feature of the Tau Sigma dancing recital to be given March 8 in the University auditorium, is the appearance of several men students in a series of interpretive Indian dances. They have dared to venture forth and defy the tauts of fellow students in order to demonstrate their aesthetic abilities. This special group of popular dances is being introduced to show the origin of jazz. They are distinctly mascine in character, and with their Indian background are very colorful. The first is a Pawnee dance of welcome, which with gourd rattles and tomtoms, has been performed for years in this dance are: Kerneth Kell, *c*35; Wallace Sullivan, *174*. Jack Penfold, *c*35; and Eugene Hibbs, *c*34. One number of this group will be an African Voodoo dance by Darold Eagle, *c$5*, in which he gives an interpretation of the painted and plumed medicine man in the midst of his wizard witchery. Eagle has had previous experience in dances of this sort. He has studied dancing for several years, and has gained the ability to His dance will be accompanied by Byron Mason, *c*uncel, and a colored chorus of 12 voices, rendering the chanting music of the African peoples. A very unimused舞,女Dagger Dance, from the Indian opera, "Natoma," will be given by Joe Dunkel, c36, in which he portrays the weak son of the Indian family who kills himself after dancing with the dagger and working himself into a freeze. This show is popularized by Ted Shaw, well known dance who appeared on the University Concert course last year. Attend St. Louis Meeting Hungerford and Beamer Leave Today for Plant Board Conference Dr. H. P. Hungerford, head of the entomology department, and Dr. R. H. Beamer, also of the entomology department, left this afternoon for St. Louis, where they will attend the meeting of the Central States Plant Board, of which Dr. Hungerford is president. They will also remain in St. Louis for the informal meeting of the Central States Entomologist society. The Central States Plant Board is composed of the state entomologists and investigators of 13 of the central states. A portion of tomorrow's meeting will be devoted to the discussion of apiary culture, and the remainder to quarantine and inspection service discussion. The Central States Entomologist Society are of equal interest to the entomologists as a discussion of the various results of research, which have not as yet appeared in print, will be held. Police Investigate Disappearance of Organizer of Two Banks Detroit, Feb. 28 - (UP) Detroit police disclosed today that they were making a "quilt investigation" into the theft of a $100,000 banknote, general secretary to Henry Ford. The disappearance of the Ford official active in the organization of two investigations centered at 2 a.m. on the day of the suspect Frank Farkas, head of the special investigation bureau of Detroit police, said Liebok was in his small coupe All Detroit police and all posts of the Michigan state police were immediately supplied with descriptions of the missing man and his machine. Liebold Resigns Post Dearborn, Mich. Feb. 28. (UP)—Ernest G. Liebold received his resignation as director of the Guardian National bank of Dearborn in a letter received by bank officials. They revealed today the letter postmarked Pontiac, Mich., was mailed Monday afternoon. Glee Club to Edwardsville The Men's glee club and quartet will present a concert at Edwardville, Friday, March 10. Professor Gelfand,头领 of the violin department, will accompany the glee club, and will present several solos. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 28. 1927 Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS University Daily Kansan Editor-In-Chief ... PAUL V. MINEY Editor-in-Chief Associate Freelance Alfred Streetsbrook Harvard Turbair Managing Editor SINNY KROGS Composer Margaret Green Pierce Editor Margaret Greens Pierce Editor Arnold Kreemers Music Director Made Brown Escher Editor Made Brown Alanu Editor Devon Smith Admiral MGR. MARAETTE INCH ADMINISTRATOR ADVERTISING MGR...MARGARET INCH District Manager...J Gallinari Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of California at Santa Barbara, on the Press of the Department of Journalism. Robert Whitman **Margaret Jeeves** Jonathan Kronen **Billy Milligan** Ridley Krom **Bill Milligan** Matthew L. Lawrence **Alpine Brookshaw** Jae McKinnon Arnold Kretterman Arnold Smith Subscription price, $1.00 per year, payroll in advances. Single charge, be each. Entered as second-class matter September 17, 1916, at the office at Lawrence, Kansas. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1933 BORROWED ENJOYMENT Why buy something when it is so easy to borrow it. That seems to be the general student opinion with regard to the Memorial Union membership cards. A check of the patrons of any mid-week varsity would probably reveal that more than half of them had been admitted with borrowed cards. It would seem that following the requirement that women present cards that the sale of membership certificates would rise or that the number of women attending the dances fall, but neither has happened. Fewer cards were sold this semester than ever before but the number attending the dances is no smaller. The requirement that University women present cards for admittance has given rise to a new racket, that of the ticket-renting industry. A ticket costs a dollar, and the amount to be derived from renting it each week amounts to about $1.50. The original investor has made a profit of fifty cents and has the use of the Union card for everything but the dances. Since John (Peppel) Martin has followed in the footsteps of Jin Bausheu and taken up radio crowning, we suggest that Babe Ruth, Max Schnellmeth, Alex Fitzgerald and Max Madison Square Garden for a nice game of ring-ing the-rosely. A NEW CLINIC There is no doubt that the would-be assassin of President-elect Roosevelt is psychopathic. His statements throughout the trial proceedings have given proof of that fact. The pity of the thing is that his aberrations were not diagnosed and treated long before they led him to violence. If a man is sick in body, he goes to a doctor, but if he is sick in mind, there is no place for him to turn. Psychological not yet have a generally recognized science. Society has not admitted the need for mental treatment as well as physical. On the campus of the University, we have had cases of minds out of step, some of which have been fatal to their possessors. Our student hospital administers efficient physical treatment, but as yet little has been done for the relief of mental sufferings. It remains to be seen what great shock will be required to awaken sentiment strong enough to secure the establishment of a mental clinic for students. Raymond H. Wheeler, professor of psychology, thus voices his opinion on the subject: "The establishment of a mental clinic under the direction of a competent psychiatrist would be extremely valuable to the students of the University." THAT BOOING QUESTION AGAIN T. L.K., writing in the Concordia Blade-Empire, says that in his opinion Dr. Allen has "made a bid for unpopularity," by starting his campaign against booing at Big Six basketball games; and that the move is destined to turn away from the gates many cash customers who believe that along with their admission price goes the right to fill the gymnasium with vocal rostests at any fancied wrong to he home town boys." T. L.K. might be right. It is quite possible that a few confirmed prize fight fans would not enjoy a basketball game if they were refused the pleasure of hiding the players and the referee, and were forced to derive their entertainment merely from the game itself. And although these booers often make themselves conspicuous, and unpleasant, it is true that they pay good money into the athletic treasury and help keep the department on its feet financially. But the campaign was launched not merely as a measure for promoting better sportmanship at Big Six basketball contests, but to save players and officials from the merciless razing to which they have been subjected several times this year. When booing is carried to such an extent that players become rattled and cannot do their best; and when it causes officials to become so muddled that they cannot see straight, then it is time to take steps against it even if it does cost the athletic treasure the financial support of a few hecklers. And that fact has been recognized. WHY MACHINE POLITICS SUCCEEDS Political scientists, magazine writers, and cartoonists have long deplored the existence of machine politics in the large cities, blaming this monster for each of the many faults of government and politics in operation. They have pictured the machine politician as a shrew, overbearing and essentially dishonest character whose sole purpose is to defeat the will of the people, whatever that may be. The fact is that the machine politician is stricty a product of his environment. He very naturally takes advantage of opportunities that are presented to him. The fault is not if his if they are opportunities for graft and corruption. If the voters could become sufficiently interested in government to make their voice heard as it was intended they should be heard, machine politics would disappear with astonishing suddenness. This indifferent attitude of the people is basically responsible for poor government and dishonest politics. No better example of the existence of this spirit of irresponsibility in government can be found than the action of three hundred legally-qualified voters in Omaha who last week signed a petition endorsing the would-be assassin of Franklin D. Roosevelt for mayor. Obviously these voters were not familiar with the situation. They had no idea who Guissepe Zangara was. They certainly could not know whether or not he was qualified to serve as may of Omaha. Yet they were willing to give their personal endorsement to his candidacy without even trying to find out anything about him. On just such a spirit of indifference are political machines built. QUIPS from other QUILLS --winning all my money at cars. grees I would have been a dumbbell all my life if I hadn't got sore at Side light on current conditions from a want ad in the Winfield Courier: "Lost-Hight-hair fur glove, between the back and front pads" "DUMP-"J. Huffa in Ottawa Herald. A highbrow is a person who feels stoned when he discovers ordinary people have as much sense as he has—klahoma Daily. Scientists have discovered a way of making chewing tobacco which tastes like liqueur. Now men won't have to "lark for a drink — Texas State Lass-O." Some wag asked a Kansaas man if he traveled in Europe last year to satisfy his thirst for knowledge. "No," he said, "just my thirst." Kinley Graphic. Tears on your pillow will never wash out stains on your character.—Daily Texan. Some people are wondering whether three per cent beer will be the same kind of a flop three cent postage resulted in -Mheperson Republic. King Carol's lady friend, Mugla Lupea died her hair, going out of the red into the black, and now if the rest were her leadership - Hutchinson. News. Another thing that lightens the gloom is the reflection that jazz was a product of prosperity—Oklahoma Daily. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXX Tuesday, Feb. 28, 1832 No. 112 Notice due at Chancellor's Office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication days and 11:30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issue. A. S. M. E. Regurgit A.S.M.E. meeting March 2, at 7:30. Special speaker from Kansas City will talk on "Diesel Engines." Come hear this and other interesting topics. (A.M.E. Church) BOTANY CLUB: There will be a meeting of the Botany club tonight at the home of Dr. Mix 1134 Louisiana street, at 7:30 o'clock. Prof. Kert, of the Physics department will speak. All members please be present. DONALD J. OBEE, President. CHEMICAL ENGINEERS A meeting of the Kansas Association of Chemical Engineers will be hold at 7:30 Thursday evening, March 2, in room 101 Chemistry building. Dr. F. B. Daina will speak on "The Origin and Development of Chemical Symbols." All members and those desiring membership are invited. Refreshments will be served. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: Initiation will be held Thursday evening at 8 o'clock in room 320 west Administration building. All actives are requested to be present. The regular meeting will be held at 4:30 Wednesday in room 32, Administration building. JESSIE PICKELL, President. DELTA PHI DELTA: The Freshman Commission of Y.W.C.A. will have a waffle supper at Honley house on Wednesday evening at 5:30. All fresh girls are invited. Reservations should be made by Wednesday noon. BETTY COX, President. MAYOR OF HONLEY CITY. The Inter-Racial Group of the Y.W.C.A. will meet at Henley house at 8 o'clock on Thursday evening. DORRICE SNYDER, DORIS ROLLINS, Chairmen. KAPPA PHI: FRESHMAN COMMISSION OF Y. W. C. A: MARGORIE NELSON, President. FRESHMAN COMMISSION OF X. W. C. A. There will be supper meeting of Kappa Php from 5 to 7:30 at 19Tennessee Tuesday, Feb. 28, EWELVEN WORLDEN, Punishment堂 will the guest speaker Le Corcle Francaise se reunit mercedré a quatre heures et demi, sale 309 Fraser hall. Tous ces qu'il parent français sont invités. LE CERCLE FRANCAIS: SCHOLARSHIPS: Applications from men and women students for scholarships to be held in 1933-34 will be received in room 310 Fraser hall on Monday, Wednesday and Friday, March 1, 3, 6, 8, and 19 from 11:30 to 12, and on Tuesday and Thursday, March 2, 7, 9 to 10, 11 or appointment may be made by telephone. MARY SHRUM, Secretaire. THETA EPSILON: E. GALLOO, Chairman Theta Epsilon meeting will be held at 1124 Mississippi street this evening at 7 o'clock. All members are expected to be present. THELMA KRATOCHVIL, President. W.S.G.A. Council meeting will be hold at 7 o'clock tonight in the Memorial Union building. HELEN HEASTON, President. The May Day Mystery Y. M. C. A. CABINET: There will be a joint meeting of the Y.M.C.A. Cabinet and the Advisory board on Wednesday, March 4, at 4:38 in room 10 of the Memorial Union building. Octavus Roy Cohen Copyright by Octavus Roy Cohen. By SYNOPSIS CHAPTER 1 — Anointette Petto Petto, a former university of Marlana, resigned after her tenure to ivy工工, seventeen-year-old ending with bitter绰绞。the ending with bitter绰绞。the ending with bitter绰绞。the ending with bitter绰绞。 not another, another student. long Thayer's year. not another, another student. long Thayer's year. not another, another student. long Thayer's year. a date" with him. Thayer and Vernon CHAPTER III.—Larry determines to start Thayne, and end his association with the group that he will be his husband. She does not, whiting him room at a fraternity house, Max Verveer drives and goes to his room. Tony ends up with his mother, who never leaves the house almost immediately after excitement. he has a bundle, carefully tied, apparently clothing to be worn in his dressing room. **CHAPTER V. T—The Married bank is locked in with the money after being shot and apparently badly wounded, Jimmie Pike, his eldest son, was abseos, and good natured, comes to investigate the robbery, Handley-Pike, Pike, and his brother Max. Versey was driving the car when Max Van Wester **GRAFTER IV**, IW—WATCH him appear to frighten him. The prisoners will see the watchman. He will then give him a choice of four favors: first, treat his jailer; second, find the dammer and blow it; third, deliver a police chief, takes charge of the prison; fourth, takes charge of the prison. CHAPTER VI - Thayer, Fiksela Hinvey, has been systematically robbed games, and Vernon, apparently, has been systematically taken away. Hinvey to take charge of the murder both the murder and another Toby Hinvey are under arrest as Thayer murder is under arrest. CHAFTER VI—Havney interrogates the suspect, who has been in the day of the murder. Weich is vague in his testimony. Thayer was alive when he left him, and he was arrested by the police he is being seemingly endowing to. He is blinded by a firm conviction being that he committed the resulting series of bombings more frequently than the resulting series of bombings more CHAPTER VI:-At the some of the scene of the attack, the Tuxer man who found Thuyer's murder, the夹击者 who found Thuyer's murder, with whisky for forbidden Thuyer's and CHAPTER IX.—To Begain the kite discovery, Mr. Washburn had been discovery that Hobart had been attention to kite Welch to that whale teached, convince the Maryland detective communit. He whites Ivy, and appur- nance his commission. He whites part Ivy, and appurances part Ivy that part Ivy. Vernon admits he can be considered a satisfactor in his possession, but of the weapon in his possession, but of CHAPTER X—Hannah discovery that she was missing from Twin Falls by Faye, is missing from Twin Falls by Tony Peyton no less she is Thyraeus Welch has not told the truth about the response that Thyraeus was alive when she fell him, and that Welch did "I haven't anything to say, Mr. Han vey." Max rose and tried to look dim- fied. He succeeded only in appearing somewhat ludicrous and entirely pitiful. Harvey gazed at the gray walls of he fall and nodded as though having enched a startling conclusion. CHAPTER XI "Well, what do you know about that? I haven't asked you anything, have I?" "I don't know what you mean." "Shhh! Sure you do." "Listen to me, Son: answer me one question." "I believe our next move, John, is to have a talky-talk with Mister Maxvell Vernon. Vernon's eyes closed. He pulled himself together with a visible effort. "No." "Did you kill Pat Thayer?" "Then I think you better talk to me plain and honest. Of course, if you did kill him, the best thing you can do is not mouth shunt. What say you?" "Nothing. I'm not going to talk." "I didn't row with anybody." Vernon was stonly silent. "Good Lord! Has it taken you all this time to think of that?" "Duh-huh. My brain was never strong on sneezed." Max was trembling. Boykish, he was strangling to keep actual tears from his eyes. "You're trying to trap me," she said. "I can't say anything. Not安然 at all!" "No! Not even Pat Thaver?" "That's up to you. Son, But suppose I don't know. They've paired between you and Thayer in the fraternity house day before yesterday somewhere about oneclock in the morning." 'Aw, Son! You know dog-gone good and well you went to Pat Thyler's room. Now why don't ygt tell us what happened?' Jim shoo his big head. "I hate to see you fighting me, Son, when I'm trying to help—" "Like l--l you are! You're trying to mix me up in fad Thayer's murder." "I'm trying to get the truth. Does that mix you up?" "I didn't get his room," crie room hard. I went to the room when I came back and then I left the house, I never saw Thayer for a moment all the time I was in there. "In the fraternity house? Nothing happened." "Just before you went to the fern ternity house, you and Thuyen had a big row on the campus, didn't you? "Who saw so?" Roagan was earnest. "Quit kiddle", Jim. Why did you leave, this palooza for the last? "Several people. And also there nothing more question that you were pretty sore at him. Now I ask you this: What?" "No. but—" "Because I wanted to hear what everybody else had to say. From what I could tell, it was a great deal and handsome, and I wanted to form some idea about what was truth and "I had reason enough. I thought he was my friend. I've been injured with him for two years. He's been Back into the brilliance of the war den's office, and thence down the dimly lighted corridor on which were the rooms used for those prisoners who had been held in the ordinary cells than the ordinary cells. The turkey admitted them to a room identical with the ones occupied by Tony Peyton and Larry Welch. They stood in the doorway and Hanney regarded them through sleep, huffed clench. "Things been happening pretty fast, aln't they, Son?" Vernon was seated on his cot. He had dotted coat and tie, and his shirt was open at chest that he wore a pair of black pants rounded off with his chubby face wore an expression of belligerence. His whole manner—even before a word was spoken—was Jim seated himself and smiled loudly at the prisoner. He felt rather sorry for the boy, fat, good-natured, easy-going... and now suddenly enmoraled tragically who he couldn't understand. Jim's voice came soothingly. "Sensible enough. Let's go." Vernon looked up sharply. "What things?" THE DANISH PRISONER. "Like H—I You Are! You're Try- ing to Mix Me Up in Pat Thayer's Murder." him over something else." "As you say, Vernon. But when this other thing happened—you getting sore—what then?" "Stauling your girl, for instance"? Max looked up sharply, and became curious. "And really rather not talk about the angle of it, Mr. Haneway," he said gently. "I started thinking—for the first time, I mean to suspect that it wasn't all just me. Had been nice to me so long as I had money; but the minute I went back he lost interest in me and started growing up faster. And I couldn't make me sore. And it struck me that it was queer he always won you, because he stupid enough, but I waked up all at once." "And you go about as mad as you were wore in your life. You went to Chayer's room in the fraternity house—" "I did not! I told you before I never went near his room." "So you did. I thought maybe you'd remembered that you were mistaken. Anyway, you were in the house at the same time he was. After awhile you came over to her and bumble under your arm, didn't you? What was in that bundle, Vernon?" "Sure." Reagan started to rise, but Max Vernon stopped him. "A—n suit of clothes. The one I said I changed, I was taking it to the Marland Tailoring company for alteration and cleaning." Max was nervous; his polly hands were twisted together and his eyes rose helplessly around the little room. "You didn't take them?" "N-n-no." "Good. Now we're clearing up parts of the mystery." Jim turned to Heather. "I'll just inform John. John, just 'phone that company and make sure they have the suit, will." The boy's eyes were round with fear and heals of perspiration stood out on his forehead. "Never mind," he said heartily. "The clothes are not there." "Where are they?" "I-I don't know, I guess I—I— lost them." "You sure are an unfriendly young man," murmured Jim. "Losing a good suit of clothes that way. Well, anyway. You don't have anything on up to Steel City, didn't you?" Vernon hesitated. Then he nodded "Yes." Max's cheeks were pasty. "Yes. Alone." "I had it. . . . I got it from Thayer. He owed it to me." "I have plenty of money." "But you just said a minute age that Thayer laid off because you were broke. How could you be broke and also have plenty of money?" "And when you got them yu traded in your car on a new one, didn't you? And paid the difference of twelve dollars for cash. Where did you get the money?" "He gave it to me. He owed it." "When did he give it to you, Veron? When you went to his room?" "I see," Jim bumed approval. "I saw you with her, and Thursey were really friends, after all. He honoured you the two humbler dollars just like it was nothing." "I told you I didn't go to his room." "I see. I mess he sent me to you by phone.", "And they wouldn't mind that, though. But there is one thing I want to know: How did it happen that there wasn't any floor rug in the trader when you got to Steel City." Again that hunted, haunted light in Max's eyes. "I don't know anything about any floor rug." "Wasn't there one in your old car?" "I don't know." "Gee! You sure are a forgiving guy. Now what about that knife Mr. Reagan showed you an hour or so ago? That is yours, isn't it?" "Where did you get it?" "In Sicily. I've traveled a lot and I've always collected queer weapons." "Did you have it in your hand at all day before yesterday?" "You knew it wasn't on your wall when you always but it didn't go?" "I know that's what Mr. Reagan said." "Do you know it is the very knife with which Thayer was killed?" "No! How was I to notice that one of the things was gone? And I didn't kill Pt Tather, Mr. Hanavoy, I swept I didn't." Harvey spoke softly, "Admitting that, Vernon: Why did you get mixed up in the robbery of the Martian National bank?" Max stood rigid for a moment, then sank down on the cot. He buried his face in his hands. "I didn't have any answers." He turned to the other man. Mr. Hanvey, who indeed I hadn't. (To be continued tomorrow) mysterious invention with unheardof powers is stolen and leads to an exciting chase half-way across the continent. You'll enjoy the story. COMING SOON THE BLACK BOX OF SILENCE WATCH FOR IT TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1933 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE THREE ANN VICKERS by SINCLAIR LEWIS For sale and for rent at The Book Nook 1021 Mass. Tel. 666 Mat. and Eve.-15c VARSITY HURRY: Last Times Tonight MORAN and MACK in "HYPNOTIZED" WED. - THURS. - FRI. Exotic Love Amid Terrife Thrills and Drama! Dramas! "NAGANA' With the Glamorous— TALA BIRELL and MELVIN DOUGLAS EXTRA Torechy's Busy Day Terry Toon COMING SOON "The Black Box of Silence" Watch for It Always Remest Dependable Prices 28c to 7. After 7, 23c PATTE WHERE BIG PICTURES PLAY NOW! BETTER COME EARLY The Miracle Show of 1935 14 Stars! 50 Featured Players! 200 Dazzling Girls "42 ND STREET" 4 Sensations¹ Song Hits Also Novelty-Cartoon-News "42ND STREET" Big Weekend Special "EMPLOYEE'S ENTRANCE" Here Sunday "WHAT! NO BEER" Hill Society Pi Lambda Theta Meeting Followed by Tea CHESS Pi Lambda, honorary educational organization, held its annual open meeting this afternoon in the auditorium of the Central Administration building, and hosted a luncheon of educational System in the Light of Present Economic Developments." Tea was served in the W. S. G. A. room. The tea table was decorated by a silver basket of red roses, surrounded by candles. Miss Mary Grant and Miss Alice Winston poured. Betty Harper was in charge and was assisted by Ruth Kenney. Margaret Beniclid, Altona and Mary Elizabeth Byerly of Humboldt. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Initiates Pledges Sigma Alpha Epsilon held formal initiation Sunday afternoon for the following: Gordon Gray, c.35; Arthur Voss, c.35; Hollar Stoeltenberg, c.35; and Jack Heeder, c.66. The initiation begins by a dinner given for the initiates. The active chapter is going to Kan- sas City, Mo. next Sunday to initiate Earle G. Wallingford, c 36, who is con- firmed his home due to illness. Kanna Phi To Have Special Speaker The engagement is announced of Margaret Elizabeth Root of Kansas City, Mo., to Melville Claude Fisher also of Kansas City. Both are former members of the University. The marshal for the Episcopal church in Kansas City, on Sunday afternoon, March 12 in the presence of the immediate family. The University Women's club will have its regular meeting at Myers hall on Thursday, March 2, at 3. Professor H. H. Lane will talk on "Choosing a Grandfather." Tea will be served by Mrs. R. A. Schwager and committee. The guests of the afternoons are to be the housemothers of the University. Kappa Php, Methodist church sorcerer, will meet at the home of Evelyn Armstrong, edf33, 917 Tennessee; will meet by a dinner from 8:30 to 10 o'clock, followed by a dinner. Mrs. Dan Brumwit of Kansas City, Mo., who is an honorary member, will speak. Mrs. Armstrong, the Advocate of the Central Christian Adventist. Chi Omega held formal initiation services Friday night for Virginia Brengle, c; 83; Vienna Marquis, fa; 363 Diane Carmine, c; 366; Martha Baylis, c; 35; Chrystabelle Bella, f; encl; Elwell Wells, c;朗; Lucy Elizabeth, c;琳 Katherine Boehannon, fa; 360 Woody, c;244 The formal initiation dinner was Sunday noon. Decorations were pink rises. H. Merle Smith, of Kansas City, Mo, and Morton Troug, a member of the Beta Theta Pi chapter at the University of Missouri, were Sunday guests of Beta Theta Pi. Walt Brook, a former student of the University was the guest at the chapter house Sunday and Monday. The name of Mary Wheeler, c38, was inadvertently omitted from the list of initiates of Alpha Gamma Delta which appeared in the Kansan last night. The initiation took place Saturday night. The Immaculata club, an organization of Catholie young women, will entertain with a bingo party and chill in St. John's Catholic hall of St. John's Catholic church. Miss Louise Mendelson, a student at Park college, was the guest of Ruth A. Brandt, e'36, at Corbin hall over the weekend. Twenty-five words or less. 1 in fourths. 5 in sixteens. Large adds are want. AIDS ARE ACCE COMPANIED BY CASH. Want Ads LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusively 1025 Mass. MBALS: Student rate $3 per week, also meal tickets 10% discount, Lunches, 25c; dinner, 35c; Sunday dinner, 35c. Ye Tavern, 1403 Tenn. TRUNK KEYS, door keys, car keys, Good locker padlocks, night latches. door closers repaired. Trewery & Rutter. 623 Vermont St. Phone 1-800-743-9200 HAVE YOUR application photographs made at Moore Studio. 719 Mass. (upstairs-exclusive). Phone 964.-125 KU Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes addressed the Tuesday Study club of Topica this afternoon on "Poetry." The club met at the home of M. E. W. Carson. Clair Williamson, 28 of Wilmington, was married recently to Helen Harrier Johnson, also of Wichita and a graduate of Friends university there. Delta Zeta entertained as weekend guests Miss Eden Whtenley, province director of Delta Zeta, Erna Wallace and Josephine Wells of Arkansas City. Kappa Beta, the Christian Church sorority, will hold a meeting tonight at Myers hall at 6:30. The pledges have charge of the program. The Alpha Gamma Delta Mother club will hold a meeting at the chapter house Wednesday afternoon. Joan Childers of Kansas City spent Monday as a guest at the Alpha Delta Pi house. Smith Center. —(UP)—When Nila Clarkenbuek, 82, recently got a letter from Charlie Clarkenbuek, 72, of Portland, Ore, it was the first communication that had passed between the two brothers since 1876. In that year Charlie, youngest of 13 children, left Iowa and headed west. During the years since then, all of the family hit Charlie and Nels have died. News From Home Hiawatha—(UIP)—March is the divorce month in Brown county, the court clerk's records for 1932 show. Most of the year's divorce proceedings were filed in that month while non were brought in the marriage month of June, October, or November. Jamesetown. — (UP) — Unless heavy rain falls in the early spring, Sportsman's lake and the state lake five miles northwest of here may be more marsh land. The vast amount of water that spread over the two lakes after the heavy rains last fall has all but disappeared. Networkw — (UP) — C. D. Lueck's bunter-farmer, has had all kicks of experience with animals, including bulls and bears. But his experience did not save him when first an angry cow and then an crushful peaceful ram attacked him. Lueck's knee was dislocated. El Dorado,—(UP) The big wide world holds allure for the Misses Frances Francher and Ruth Teter. They left here in an automobile bound on a tour that will take them through Europe, the Middle East, and the Orient, India, and the South Seas. Fairview — (UP) — George Honick, high school junior, is this year's winner of the Rock Island railroad's $100 scholarship award. The奖是 made each year for outstanding work in agriculture, leadership and character. Mayeta, (UP) - Clyde M. Blair, assistant of Haskell Institute, Lawrence, has been named agent for the Potawatomi and Kickapoo tribes here. About 800 Indians live on the Pottawatomie reservation. Sabetta—(UP)—Mrs. Nick Koehler called at the hospital here to visit her father, who was ill. During the visit she was stricken with appendicitis. She was operated on in the hospital that night. Sabetha. —(UP) —A sacred lily of Egypt, owned by Lavinie Klein, is one of only three which Sabetha flower fancier know of in this territory. The other two are known by women in Kansas City, Mo., and Toronto, Kan. Abilene—(UP)—Lions clubs of Kansas will hold their annual convention here June 4, 5, and 6. SANDWICH BLUE MILL 1009 Mass. OUR PRICES HAVE NOT BEEN RAISED! Haircut, 25c --- Shave, 20c The Stadium Barber Shop FRANK VAUGHAN. Prop. Phone 310 $ 1 0 3 3^{*} \mathrm{M s s}. $ Headquarters 847 Mass. St. Subscribe for THE KANSAS CITY STAR PHONE 17 H. L. NEVIN Distributor 13 papers - 15c per week P. E. H. G. A. S. KNOW SOMEBODY Who's Sick? Who's Having a Birthday? Who's Going to a Party? Who's Being Initiated? Send Flowers from WARD'S "Flowers of Distinction" Phone 621 GIRL DISAPPEARS IN THIN AIR ILLUSION: The Oriental girl reclines on a sheet of plate glass supported by two shawls. The magician waves a white sheet in front of the pretty princess, who looks alarmed. Prestol she has disappeared in thin air... EXPLANATION: *Disappearing* *acts are among the most popular in the whole room, the most unusual. Do they disappear into wings, dropped through traipseps, hidden by mirrors, but this "disappearance" is a bit more complicated. When the magician holds up the sheet the little disk disappears completely—into the convent. KEPF FRESH IN THE WELDED HUMIDOR PACK CAMEL TURNING QUOTENETIC LIQUID CIGAREttes CHOICE QUALITY CAMEL copyright, 1933, R. J. Hornolda Tobacco Company CAMELS IT'S FUN TO BE FOOLED ... IT'S MORE FUN TO KNOW There is also a trick of cigarette advertising, whereby a few magic words are used to create the illusion of "Coolness." EXPLANATION: Coolness is determined by the speed of burning. Fresh cigarettes, retaining their full moisture, burn more slowly... smoke cooler. Parched, dry cigarettes burn fast. They taste hot. This makes the method of wrapping very important. Improperly wrapped cigarettes begin to dry out as soon as packed. Camels are cooler because they come in the famous Humidor Pack of welded, three-ply, MOISTURE-PROOF cello boxes, and because they contain better tabacens. A cigarette that is fresh, full of natural moisture, and blended from choice, ripe I tobacco tastes cooler man one that is harsh and aerid. For coolness, choose a fresh cigarette, made from costil tobacco. It is a fact, well known by leaf tobacco experts, that Camelot made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE than any other popular brand. Try Camels ...give your taste a chance to sense the difference. You'll appreciate it! NO TRICKS ..JUST COSTLIER TOBACCOS IN A MATCHLESS BLEND PAGE FOUR TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1933 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS JAYHAWK JABS By SID KROSS The race for high scoring honors in the Big Six has taken on interesting proportions as the end of the season draws near. Johnson now has a four win and two loss, both having played the same number of games. If Johnson maintains his present average in his final Big Six game against Oklahoma, Wagner will have to score 15 points in his final game to win. Johnson will be able to win the winning scores. Beck of Oklahoma also has an outside possibility with 72 points in eight games but he will have to score 28 points in the next game to equal Johnson's present averages. Oklahoma captain, which netted him 24 points, anything is possible. The coming of NAAU. basketball tournament in Kansas City may mean that Johnson will play against some of the best college centers in this territory all of whom are being grabbed by teams who want to make a showing in the Big Ten. He added to the Stage Liner's five of Kansas City. Dalton of Kansas State is booked for the Kansas City Life team, Schmidt of Pittsburg will play with the Hutchinson Renes. And Wagner of Missouri may play, although, at the present time it looks as if he will stay in Kansas City until his eligibility for baseball next spring. An interesting sideline on Johnson's anemesisation to the Kansas City team is the fact that the Stage Liners will have to play three games in two days. Bill's final game of the Big Six season comes on Monday, and according to the rules by which the tournament officials abide, every entrant must have played three regularly scheduled games with his team to compete. This means that the Stage Liners will have to play two games on Monday and one game on the other day. Almost the same situation exists in Schmidt's case at Hutchinson. The forecasting which I tried the other day has simmered down to the point where even I can understand it. If Kansas defeats Oklahoma Friday, and if Utah wins, they must nexus their three consecutive Big Six title. If Oklahoma wins its last two games, the Sooners will be the Big Six title holders. The only chance for a tie is by winning Tuesday or Friday night and lose to Nebraska the following night. Simple, isn't it. A word in recognition of Carl Bern's work Saturday night is not out of place at this time. Bern entered the game for the last 10 minutes, and although he did not make any backups, he did serve as steadying influence on a Jawyher team that was trying almost too hard to win a game and remain in the Big Six race. It speaks well of this sophomore's ability that he can enter a game with such finesse. Bern has steadied their play. It can be summed up in the statement that it makes the outlook for next year's five look that much better. Did You Know That: Rub Thompson, former star Jay hawkeyar forward, is playing independent basketball with the Butter Krust team in Topeka and in the first seven games made 84 points for a 14-point victory. The Knicks will be topping Thompson's former team mate and now coach at the St. John's military academy, is to play with the Hutchinson Renos in the national tournament . . . Halo, former Kansas center, is playing that position with Kansas City Life, the team for which LeVeon Baggie is playing against. He is playing with the Sparks five of Kansas City . . . Harold Schmidt, Pittsburgh center, is becoming the most widely herded man in Missouri Valley basketball because he has scored nearly 100 points in four years of college competition. He will probably be named on the nHL-American team, a new addition to the roster. His rivalry have attained . . . If Missouri defeat Kansas State this week it will have duplicated its last year record of defeating every team on its home court, Nebraska away from home, and losing the rest of its games away from home. Coach Gus Edwards said he would say "I told you so" about his early season prediction that Kansas would repeat in Big Six conference basketball race. --position five teams would have entered the championship playoff with Tennessee club, Phi Delt, Beta, Sigma Nu, and D. U. This means however that a playoff must take place between Beta and Phi Delt to determine the winner of that division and which team will enter the final playoff. The game will be played on Friday from 10 o'clock in other games played last evening the Phi Chi team with only four men forced the Theta Tau's to play an overtime period, losing only by one point, 23 to 22; Rowlands won from S. A. M. 48 to 11; Tennessee club defeated K. E. K. 5 to 12; and Kappa Sigma 'B' entered the决赛 of the 'B' division by winning by one point in the championship of the 'B' division will be determined the evening of March 7 between Phi Gam 'B' and Kannia Sigma 'B.' Men's Intramurals ------- New Blackman Chameau ------position five teams would have entered the championship playoff with Tennessee club, Phi Delt, Beta, Sigma Nu, and D. U. This means however that a playoff must take place between Beta and Phi Delt to determine the winner of that division and which team will enter the final playoff. The game will be played on Friday from 10 o'clock in other games played last evening the Phi Chi team with only four men forced the Theta Tau's to play an overtime period, losing only by one point, 23 to 22; Rowlands won from S. A. M. 48 to 11; Tennessee club defeated K. E. K. 5 to 12; and Kappa Sigma 'B' entered the决赛 of the 'B' division by winning by one point in the championship of the 'B' division will be determined the evening of March 7 between Phi Gam 'B' and Kannia Sigma 'B.' Sigma Nu Division Champ S. A. E. knocked D. U. out of a tie for the division lead in intramural basketball last evening and as a result Sigma Nu won the division championship. The score was 17 to 14. Had Sigma Nu and D. U. tied for the top Two games are scheduled for this evening. Phi Gam will play Sigma Chi and Phi Mu Alpha will play against A, K, Pai, both games begin at 10 The box scores of last night's games Kappa Sigma 'B - 29 FG FT Kiel, f 1 0 Newman, f 0 4 Steeper, f 0 4 Grimes, f 1 0 Rankin, c 5 0 Shaffer, g 1 0 Lindley, g 0 0 Bell, g 0 0 Starr, g 2 1 Totals J. fowkes V--20 FG FT 1 Mettjock, g 4 1 Dicker, j 4 1 Dicker, k 4 2 Wampler, c 2 2 McKenny, c 0 0 Douglas, g 1 0 Clark, k 1 0 Halls, g 1 0 Totals ... 8 4 Reform Branch Theta Tau-23 FG F7 Eillet, f 0 0 Johnson, f 0 0 Heter, f 4 1 Whitten, f 3 0 Brussels, g 4 0 Benz, g 0 0 Totals ... 11 H Pulli Chi-22 ... FG 1 TW Way f ... FG 1 Kay, f ... 3 0 Baton, k ... 4 0 Swanny, k ... 0 1 Totals ... 26 Tennessee Club—S2 FG FT Rohver, f 5 5 Allen, f 11 10 Boumen, c 7 1 Cape, c 1 0 Sipress, g 1 0 Bradford, f 1 0 Griffin, f 1 0 Hryland, g 0 0 10am 26 Kappa, Kappa—12 FG FT Mabera, f 12 FT Johanning, 1 3 Barlett, f 0 0 Anderson, f 1 0 Van Tilberg, g 0 0 Omer, g 1 1 Rowlands, -48 FG FT 1 Lindsay, f 4 0 Shobe, f 5 0 Scott, c 8 0 Popewell, g 1 1 Laub, g 4 0 Larahan, g 1 0 Sigma Alpha Mu-11 FG FT 1 Brick, f 2 0 Jacobstein, f 2 0 Gartner, e 0 1 Kross, g 0 1 Fenold, g 1 0 Sigma Alpha Epsilon—17 FG FT Frosh Basketball Team to Play Regular Game university of Kansas basketball freshmen players will bring the season of practice to a close Friday night with a full preliminary game prior to the Kansas-Oklahoma Big Six championship fray, it was announced today by Frosty Cox, freshman coach. The game will start at 6:15 on the auditorium bench, and tickets to the varsity game will admit to the freshman game as well. Twelve outstanding freshman players have been picked from the yearling squad by Coach Cox and divided into two teams. Among these two players are some who are destined to be future varsity material, and some even next season will be working their way toward Big Six stardom. This season the variance will lose Bill Johnson, center, and Elmer Schaake, guard, through graduation, and while several good potential regulars are present in this season's substitutes, it is certain that several of the freshmen of this year will make the grade next season. The freshmen have scrimmaged all season against the variability, and several first year men show exceptional traintis. **Team A** — Forwards, Max Lamm, Parens; Baroy Bottilourt, Newton; and Ray Ebling, Lindsburg; center, Gordon Shaffer, Russell; guards, John Peterson, Winfield; and Francis Kappelman, Richmond. earlings to' Demonstrate Ability for Next Year's Service The two freshman teams to meet in the game Friday night; F Team B — Forwards, Jack Silverwood, Ellsworth; Jim Cushing, Connor Hearn; David Mackey, City, Mi. guards, Frank Allack, Arthion; and Arlill Burns, Mackeeville. Law Students Reverted to Childhood Days in Full Force * Today—Spring IS Here 3 Stollenberg, f 4 3 4 Bond, f 1 0 5 Dorman, f 0 0 6 MeKono, c 0 0 7 Irensmith, g 1 0 8 Bjrnter, g 1 0 9 Voss, c 0 0 THE LOVE OF GOD Totals 7 3 Delta Upson-14 FG FT Noble, f 4 0 Gibson, f 4 0 Kister, f 0 Butler, f 0 Lars, c 2 Jorgenson, g 1 0 Childs, g 0 Gallaway, g 0 Totals Referee—Smay. - The standings of the teams to date Division I— W L P. Beta 9 1 1.00 Beta 9 1 1.00 Rowlands 7 2 7.78 Kappa Sigma 7 3 1.00 A T O. 6 3 6.67 S P E. 6 4 4.44 D T D. 6 3 3.33 D T D. 1 1 1.11 Jayhawk 1 1 1.11 Acacia 1 1 1.00 Division II W L P. Sigma Nu 9 1 1.00 D T D. 9 1 1.00 Kayhawk 7 2 7.78 Sigma Chi 6 3 6.67 Phi Gai 6 3 6.67 5.00 Chi Delta Sigma 5 5 5.00 Phi Pa 5 5 4.44 4.00 Triangle 2 7 1.00 Ki A K. 0 1 1.00 Division III— W L P. Tennessee Club 9 1 1.00 Kappa Sigma 7 3 1.00 A T O. 6 3 6.67 S P E. 6 4 4.44 D T D. 6 3 3.33 D T D. 1 1 1.11 Jayhawk 1 1 1.11 Acacia 1 1 1.00 Division II W L P. Sigma Nu 9 1 1.00 D T D. 9 1 1.00 Kayhawk 7 2 7.78 Sigma Chi 6 3 6.67 Phi Gai 6 3 6.67 5.00 Chi Delta Sigma 5 5 5.00 Phi Pa 5 5 4.44 4.00 Triangle 2 7 1.00 Ki A K. 0 1 1.00 Division III— W L P. Tennessee Club 9 1 1.00 Kappa Sigma 7 3 1.00 A T O. 6 3 6.67 S P E. 6 4 4.44 D T D. 6 3 3.33 D T D. 1 1 1.11 Jayhawk 1 1 1.11 Acacia 1 1 1.00 A. K Psi 6 1 855 Theta Tux 4 3 571 Alpha Chi Omega 4 3 500 Ph Chi 3 5 726 K E K I 3 5 63 Alakurana 2 7 222 Alpha J 1 7 990 Alpha Ch Sigma 0 6 000 Intramural Wrestling Begins Drawings for intramural wrestling have been made. The first matches were conducted this afternoon. 121-pound class: Kelley, Phi Gim, Amondom, Cupa giga. 121-pound class: Kelley, Phi Gim, Teta Thau, vs. Noland, Sigma Chi Gim, Metafit, Metsell, Phi Poi, Rowe- Delta Chi, vs. Seller, D. T. D; Funk- Kappa, Apples, Wilson, Theta Tau, Kappa. Inframural Wrestling Begins The pairings: 129-pound class; Pyle, Delta Chi, Chi; by jones; S. P. E. by; Dickson, Phi Gam; Jusson, Theta Tau, Larabee, Kappa Sig., by; Larabee, Kappa Sig., by; Mitchell, Sigma Chi, vs. Kelsey, Delta Chi; Garden, Kappa Sig., vs. Pellus, Phi Gam; Kappa Sig., by; Murphy, Delta Chi, by; Chambers, Phi Dhi, vs. Walkin, Acacia; Cayot, Phi Dhi, vs. Greer, Phi Gam; by; Elliot, Thai, by; Brewer, Kappa Sig., vs. by. 138-pound class; Benz, Theta Tau, v; by Steve Krause; Pike, Chicago, v; by Pierce; Rickenbacker, Brian, v; by Joanes Delta Chi; Cham, Phi Gam, v; by Vince Langer; Lindsey, Kappa Sig, v; by Hazen, Acacia, v; by Dumfarno, Beta, Kappa Sig, v; by A. Feldman, Beta, chi, vs. Peterson, Delta Chi; Alexander, Kappa Sig, v; by Barteles, Phi Gam, v; by Patton, Fulton, v; by McDonald, Sigma Chi, v; by Jackson, Triangle, Reissel, Delta Chi, v; by McVey 148-pound class: Cheney, Triangle, vs. Horn, Beta; Brown, Phi, Gam; vs. Crimson, Phi, Gam; vs. Sherwood, Acacia; Stanley, Phi, Gam; vs. Sherwood, Acacia; Stanley, Phi, Gam; vs. Keyway, Bartli, Phi, bay; byuny, Delta Chi, vs; byre- t, Delta Chi, vs; Makinan, Acacia; Huiti, Delta Chi vs; McCoy, Phi, Deltis, vs; bely, Angle, vs; Makinan, Acacia; Huiti, Delta Chi vs; McCoy, Phi, Deltis, vs; bely, Angle, vs; Sullivan, Phi, Gam; vs. Pennington, Delta Chi; Alexander, Koppi Sig., vs, Dawns, Champlin, Koppi Sig., vs, Dawns, Champlin, 188-pound class: Youngstrom, Theta Tau, by Field. Theta, by vs; bye, Baehack, by Field. Theta, by vs; hawk, by Huirab, Triangle, Reed, Sigma Chi, vs; Clay, Kappa Sig; Epp Hauy, by Huirab, Triangle, Reed, Hauy, D. T. D.; Dwyer, Theta, by vs; by Manning, Theta Tau, vs; bye, Triangle, by vs; Farney, Acacia, by Vead, D. T. D.; Morgan, Beta, vs; Hauley, Phi Delt, vs; Sourk, Delta Theta, by vs; Harford, by Safari, S. P. E., vs; bye 188-pound class; Lempeter, Sigma Mitchell, Delta Chi. Fd; unattached Mitchell, Delta Chi. Fd; unattached by bye; Poppen, Delta Chi, by bye; wight-weight class; Della Pi, T. D.; Da, Phi; Delltor; Forie, vs. Neumith, Phi; Gi; Phi; Dr.; Della Pi, vs. Neumith, Theta, Teta, vs. Knipe, Phi, Delt 188-pound class: Jacobbajah, Sigma Chi vs. Bierse, Hussey II, Whitney II, by Sharp; B Brown; Phi Gam, vs. bella, Kappa Chi vs. Hesse, Warner II, Nichols, Kappa Chi vs. Bierse, Warner Delta,chi vs. Nichols, Berk; Kirah, Phi Gam, vs. Burple, Muryph; Kappa Chi vs. Burple, Murphy, Kappa Si vs. Durand, Phi Pai, Lapham, Sigma Chi, vi. E Morris, Triangle, vi. Asher, Kappa Si vs. Miller, Baev; Eans, Gam Si vs. Lumb, Acacia, vi. VENZKE'S RECORD ATTEMPT ENZKE'S RECORD ATTEMPT OPPOSED BY MEET COUNCIL Philadelphia, Feb. 28—Opposition of the executive board of the inter-collegiate A.A.A.A. at Philadelphia today caused the cancellation of Gene Venzie's attempt at the three-quarter-mark in the forthcoming indoor inter-collegiate championships at New York. Inasmuch as Venzke is a first-year man, and a title holder it means he would not compete in any inter-collegiate competition. "The tryouts for the Big Six indoor track meet, scheduled at Columbia, March 11, will be held Saturday when the men's and women's golf teams will Coach Cill Hargiss said yesterday. "The meet with Haskell served its purpose; it enabled me to get an estimate of the strength of the men who participated in the strength of the freshmen is not known, but a large squad of the first year men have been reporting daily to practice TRYOUTS FOR BIG SIX MEET WILL BE HELD THIS SATURDAY Send the Daily Kansan home. CALL 1300 Boxing Training Started by Entrants in Tourney CALL.1300 --at the More men are urged to enter for this instruction and several fraternities are known to be planning for teams in the tournament. All desiring to enter may do so, Ramy explained, and there will be a amount of time required for the training. Instruction to Be Given Under Direction of Bill Ramey CALL 1300 CALL 1300 Official training for boxing candidates for the University of Kansas championships got underway yesterday afternoon at 101 Robinson gymnasium, with Bill Raney, widely known Hill amateur boxer, instructing 15 entrants in the requirements for the pre-tournament work. Ramey will be available daily from 4:30 to 6 p.m. to instruct candidates in boxing and no candidate will be allowed in the actual tournament late this month unless given Ramey's approval to a physical fitness. Women's Intramurals The 15 men who entered yesterday and their weights: M. R. Smith, 135 pounds; Bearen Rusick, 148 pounds; Charles Rohrer, 170 pounds; C. M. Bromell, 135 pounds; C. L. McVey, 135 pounds; D. G. Holcoble, 150 pounds; G. Menza, 135 pounds; E. W. Eberhosew, 135 pounds; C. H. Hinkele, 148 pounds; J. K. Tilford, 159 pounds; Otman Shopder, 150 pounds; Charles Trekey, 125 pounds; Ned Nolan, 158 pounds; Preston Clark, 138 pounds; Pastor Echevaz, 125 pounds. The weight divisions usual for box- ing tournaments were answered yes, 125 pounds, featherweight; 127 to 135, lightweight; 136 to 147 weetweight; 148 to 160 middleweight; 161 to 175, lightweight heavy; more than 175 Alpha Delta Pi ... 280½ Alpha Delta Mu ... 256½ Alpha Omicron Delta ... 254½ Chi Gamma ... 204½ Chi Ophiote ... 206½ Kappa Kappa Gamma ... 203½ Kappa Xi Gamma ... 174 Xi Alpha Delta ... 144 Theta Phi Alpha ... 140\ Zeta Zeta ... 115\ Kappa Alpha Theta ... 110 I. W. W. Workin's 477 T. N. T. 290 Independents 101 Coronel Hall 101 Cornell Hall 144 --at the The first swimming meet of the women' intramural tournament will be this afternoon at 4:30 in Robinson gymnasium. Eleven teams are entered: Alpha Gamma Delta, Alpha Omicron Pi, Chi Omega, Alpha Theta Kappa, Kappa Gamm, Beta Phi Beta, Sigma Kappa, T. N. T. I. W., Indecent. The second meeting is scheduled for next Tuesday. According to the present intramural total scores, the Alpha Delta Pi's are leading the sorority group with 280° points, and the I. W. W.'s are leading the independent group with 474 points. The total scoring rates the teams as Ham Salad Sandwich Kappa Sigma Receives Award The Kappa Sigma fraternity was presented with a scholarship plaque last Sunday by Cecil Dean, of Wichita. Beginning last year Mr. Dean plans to give the plaque every year to the Kappa Sigma chapter in district 14 with the assistance of alumni and faculty members the year. The Kappa Sigma chapter here is the first to receive the plaque. Mr. Dean is affiliated with Kappa Sigma and is a graduate of Oklahoma A. and M. College. Union Fountain Sub Basement, Memorial Union 10c New Low Prices Firestone CALL 1300 OLDFIELD TYPE 4.50x21 ... 85.62 4.75x19 ... 86.46 00x19 When Bought in Pairs CARS WASHED — 50c CARTER SERVICE CALL 1300 CALL 1300 CALL 1300 CALL 1300 Sooners Defeat Neighborly Five Norman, Okla., Feb. 27. *The University of Oklahoma, second in Big Six standing, turned back the Oklahoma Agnies by a score of 43 to 23 last night, in the final home game of the season.* CALL 1300 COMING SOON "The Black Box of Silence" CALL 1300 Watch for It With the Advent of Lent OUR SHOE REPAIRING IS THE BEST Give us a trial — We know you'll come back. ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP 1017 Mass. 11 W. 9th CAFETERIA Fish Salads Each Day Hot Cross Buns each Friday Fish will be offered each Wednesday and Friday MADE FOR YOU Try it yourself. Your next suit can be tailored to your measure for whatever price you choose. You pay no more. Keep That in Mind, than you pay for Thomas'. Richard's or Harry's suit. SCHULZ the TAILOR 917 Mass. School Supplies Large Canvas Notebook $100 with paper and dividers free. Leather Note Books Note Papers Fountain Pens Ink Slide Rules Drawing Pencils Coe's Drug Stores Phones 521 - 516 411 W. 14th DICKINSON Hit After Hit Work After Work WHERE STUDENTS GET TOGETHER Shows Continuous NOW - TOMORROW Shows 3-5-7-9 CECIL B. DEMILLE'S SUPER SPECIAL SPECTACLE! THE SIGN OF THE CROSS Elissa Landi - Fredric March Elissa Lundi - Fredric March Positively Will Not Run Longer Than Wednesday Night! Producers Demand Until 6.00, 10:25c After 6.90, 10:40c THUR-FRI-SAT— Barbara Stanwick in "LADIES THEY TALK ABOUT" "STATE FAR" Starts Sunday!