First Morning Edition of The University Daily Kansan Greets You! UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
13
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
86
2.
VOLUME XXXII
8
NUMBER 85
--situation. As a result of this move the judiciary committee was faced. One of the biggest issues facing the committee is the formulation of a make information about the different sororities available to all interested students, and at the same time to make available to the organizations full information about the entire unorganized body, especially as to their desire if asked, to join a sorority.
--situation. As a result of this move the judiciary committee was faced. One of the biggest issues facing the committee is the formulation of a make information about the different sororities available to all interested students, and at the same time to make available to the organizations full information about the entire unorganized body, especially as to their desire if asked, to join a sorority.
on the SHIN
By JOE HOLLOWAY, c'35
On Enrolling . . . a Senior Praises the Campus . . . Bagby Has a New Admirer . . . Horace Had His Pitcher Took . . . Thesea and Thosea
It is with great amusement that we gaze at the enroller-uppers as they go about their various duties which with the aid of advisers, Zeus, and a few other important people will land them back in school again so they'll have some new courses to gripe about. In years to come, everyone will greatly miss Merrill Bradley, the perennial hunter for freshman courses.
We hope to find quite a number of little things like the following from profs who are good enough to help a starving columnist along. From a senior's final paper comes: "The University of Kansas has a repitation for having a very beautiful campus as compared with other campuses in the United States, but are we going to live on that repituation and let our campus graduate decorate?" Then too, she sat in the Union drinking coke and tearing her hair after a final, replied that she had spent about an hour writing pages and pages on the wrong question.
Just before vacation, Mary Lou Baghy at the Theta house received a surprise in the form of a letter from a small town in Ohio. The correspondent who sees was an adder admirant who had seen Mary Louis's pictures in the local paper as honorary colonel of our army and just couldn't resist writing and telling her how swell she looked, etc. Incidentally, he added that he had quite a number of "writing acquaintances."
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5. 1002
♦ ♦ ♦
"Twas with great and fiendish glee that we chanced upon a group of the three-for-a-dime pictures in a book belonging to Hectic Horace Hedges and did Horace look a dear!
We found out how Hark Miller who has been called at various times Red Blackburn's Sawed-Off Soloist, trains his Crossbish voice. In fact, perhaps it should be called a liquid voice since he walked into a store downtown the other night carrying a selter bottle in his arms like a new-born babe. Bet he had lots of fun squirting it hither and yon.
One of the boys at the Union foundation told us a good one the other day . . . and does it speak for the intellectual coed. The gal in question—practically a college senior—was sitting with her date in the Blue Miin. The girl came a lad, paid, and started playing. She says the gal's guier, "There goes one of the Summerfield scholars." Says the guier's gel, "MiGawd, that must be a big family!"
We've been looking for a little this and that about Lil "Diamond-Quality" Sands and we were reminded of a little incident of last year. Lil was in a sociology class of about fifty studios and when her name was called in the first class, up she jumps on the back row and in a meek voice screams "Present." Says the proof: "Well, you won't be hard to remember!"
Theaea and Theses: We hear of Elizabeth Shearer of Jayhawk and Arizona state pen fame who went to Columbia for the holidays, went to the Theta and Phi Delt parties, and stayed at the Pi Phi house. Just a little touch of Pan Hel... sounds funny to hear great big bold university students having a relapse in college and wounding "if I passed." ... glad that Bill Ramsay will be back in school. Powell Aubrey refuses to think it's funny because Nancy Calhoun is in safety her home town nursing a case of mescales all her own
Baldwin Man Injured in Wreck
Baldwin Man Injured in Wreck Bert V. Sutton of Baldwin received severe cuts in the face at 8:35 last night when his motorcar accident with a truck at Eightfall and Massachusetts street caused his companion, whose death was not obtained, suffered slight injuries. Sutton was taken to the Lawrence Memorial hospital.
To Hold Tryouts
Tryouts for the W.S.G.A. musical comedy will be held in the Memorial Union ballroom, Wednesday at 3 p.m.
Cast for "Yankee Crusader" Selected By Allen Crafton
Next Kansas Players Production to Portray Life in Kansas Territory in '50's
"Yankee Crusade" a play of early Kansas, to be presented by the Kansas players at Fraser theater the evenings before the final week of rehearsals.
When the curtain rises on the play next Monday evening the audience will be taken back into the atmosphere of the '50s, to the days when stunck New Englanders, Carolinians and pioneering Hoosiers, pro-slavery Southerners and "biled shirt" eastern abolitionists" engaged in the physical and spiritual struggle who went into the making of the free state of Kansas.
While the spirit of those times mark the play, it was not written as an attempt at a factual portrayal of specific incidents or characters. The men and women who play the roles, play them as represented by the Kansas Territory, rather than as particular outstanding men and women in the state's history.
Proft. Allen Crafton, who wrote the play, designed the scenery, and is directing the production, plays the part of a "Red Leap." Prof. Robert Calderwood portrays the character of a gentleman from Boston, a man sent out by the Emigrant Aid Society. Mrs. Craffton appears as a Hoosier woman who came to Kansas with her husband who "they drew blood in their hand." Allen carries the part of a young woman from South Carolina. The remainder of the cast of 26 characters is made up of University students and theater assistants.
The complete cast as announced by Professor Crafton is as follows:
The complete cast as announced by Professor is as follows:
William Pabor, from Massachusetts
Robert Calderwood
Amy Pabor, from Maryland
Bernie Brooks
Dan Riley, a Hoosier
George Spelvin
Carrie Riley, his wife
Jessica Crafton
Judge Cooper, from Indiana
Leon King
Hugh Moore, a settler
Farrell Strawn
Ada Warley, from South Carolina
Jamaell Allen
Rev. Innes Stephens, a Yankee
Millard Laing
Sarah Stephens, his wife
Mary Jane Roby
Stin Bauer, a German settler
Campbell
Minnie Bauer, his daughter
Jane Carey Plummer
Waddy Ranson, a "Red Lawn"
Allen Crafton
Charles Gardette, an Abolitionist from Ohio
William Inge
Elisepose, George Butler, Gardette's Men
Robert Gard, Donald Dixon
Sam Judy, a Yankee
Sam Kimble
Martin Banes, a merchant
William Fleeson
Western Arney, a "Border Ruffian"
Leader
Burt Hammers
Oliver Waters, "Toby" Turner, Caleb Callett, Arney's men
Frank Danion
William B Jones, Mary Jenkins
Colonel Bowles, a Missouri Lawyer
Norbert Anschuche
Governor Gaffney, governor of the Territory
Charles Pinkin
Roswell Gravel John Dwight, Jesse Crosby, Free State
Marshall Havens
Men Virgil Bergman, John Stratton
UNIVERSITY ALUMNI TO HOLD MEETING AFTER GAME TONIGHT
Charles Pipkin
Alumni of the university will hold meeting following the Kansas-Washburn basketball game tonight. The team, which is part of the Tea Room at 930 Kansas Avenue.
The Kansas team, coaches, probably Governor Landon, and many alumni will be present. Imprompt talks will be given by various alumni. There is no admission charge; you pay for what is required. You also attend the name are invited.
To Give Physical Examinations Watkins Memorial hospital will complete the physical examinations required of all new students today. Very few rooms in the hospital are occupied at the present time.
Last Night's Scores
Iowa State 33, Oklahoma 22
Missouri 23, Nebraska 21
Grimmel 24, Oklahoma A. & M. Z
Chisholm 26, Michigan 26
Mich. State 36, Western Reserve 17
Kansas Into Lead
Cyclones Defeat Sooners by 33-22 Score
STANDING OF THE TEAMS
STANDING OF THE
Kansas 5 1 832 264 163
Iowa State 4 1 800 139 163
Okahanna 5 2 714 257 230
Kansas State 5 3 754 257 280
Nebraska 1 3 250 125 135
Missouri 2 3 200 268 325
The Iowa State Cyclones narrowed lahoma a 33-22 defeat last night to break the tie between the Sooners and the Jayhawkers. The victory of the top position in the Big Six, and moved Oklahoma to third place.
Iowa State meets Kansas this Saturday in Lawrence and will have a chance at first place by downing the Kansans.
Missouri defeated Nebraska by a score of 23 to 21. The box score follows:
Missouri G F 17 0
Bearf F 1 1 0
Stromf. 1 0 1
Hindn's c. 0 1
Powelg. 1 2 2
Tmps ind f. 1 2
Missouri 23
Nebraska 21
9 5 7
Nebraksi 1 4 FT
Whileref c 2 0
Leurofx w 1 2
Widmanc a 1 0
Wlquist s 1 0
Parsong s 1 0
Halef f 0 0
Sorensen 0 0
Summary Missed free throws: Beer 2, Powell 1, Henderston 1. Reference Dr. E C. Jones, Kansas State; Umpire John Wulf, Kansas
Reorganization Plans Of CSEP Are Under Way
7 7
Shake-up in Work Projects May Close Library at 9 o'Clock
Nothing definite has been reached as to what will be the changes in the personnel of the CSEP for the spring semester, although Miss Mary C. Olsen, executive secretary of the CSEP office, and assistants are engaged in checking grades of former employees in applications of position when employing them. The people who will be known as soon as this work is completed. A tentative list of workers whose grades were slightly below the 1.3 required grade average are on probation. This list is composed mainly of freshmen and new students. Miss Olson said this was to give these students more than a semester so that they could ad-
A Federal Inspector To Lawrence
A definite shake-up in work projects is to be made. A possible effect of the change in CSEP will be the closing of the library at 9 o'clock. Library closing hours were changed to 10 o'clock this fall only after CSEP help had been added. C. M. Baker, director of the library, said yesterday that the library will continue to remain open until 10 o'clock until the end of the month and its inspector will be in Lawrence the end of the month to investigate the set-up of the present CSEP program at the University.
The restrictive principles recently laid down in Washington prohibit certain types of work now under way under authority of the earlier broad policy of the government. These principles definitely preclude regularly maintained routine jobs such as clerical work, general utility assistance, equipment repair, and the like, regardless of the fact that this work man not be provided for *j*
Continued on page four
New Enrolling Plan Proves Successful, Says Dean Lawson
Simplicity and Abolishing of Long Lines Features of Present Arrangement
The main features of the new enrollment plan, simplicity and the abolishing of long lines, were described last night by Dean Paul B. Lawson, dean of Colleges of Liberal Arts, an working factiority in the first day's enrolment.
Under the new arrangement, said Dean Lawson, major cards have been abolished, so that now the student merely fills out his registration blank and presents it to his adviser, then to the chairman of his class group.
G. W. Smith, professor of mathematics, chairman of the enrollment reorganization committee, said the new floor plan drew favorable comment from students and teachers.
Student guides, prominently ribboned, offer help to the new student or individual baffled by the simplicity of the new plan.
Students Like New Plan
"Quite satisfactory" was the comment of the deen when asked how the first day's work had gone. He said no students had to wait in lines for anything like the time they did under the former system and put the maximum delay in line at half an hour.
The 300 or more students who took advantage of the pre-employment plan are directed to the business office for their fees record. Dean Lawson said they could proceed then to pay their tuition and incidentals as if they had just come from Robinson gymnasium. Late enrollment will follow the usual schedule Saturday morning, Feb. 9. The late enrollment费 is $2.50.
Only a few courses were reported closed when all students filed out last evening. Dean Lawson estimated the number at not more than a dozen sections.
No Check on Number Enrolled
The College office has no check on the number of students who enrolled yesterday. One of the guides placed the number at about 1000, and added that it seemed "like a million." Late last night the first tabulations were to be made, according to Dean Lawson.
Psychological examinations will be given all new students at 2:30 p.m. this Friday, Feb. 8, in Fraser theater, second floor of Fraser Hall, where all full students entering the University for the first time, except those taking graduate work.
The schedule for enrollment today:
8:30-10:00 J.K.L
10:30-11:50 A.J.C-
11:50-1:50 E.F.M.X
3:40-4:50 D.N.R,U
PSYCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATIONS WILL BE HELD NEXT FRIDAY
Psychological examinations will be given to all new students, except graduate students, on Friday, Feb 8, at 2:30 o'clock in Fraser Theater.
All those who are to take the examination are urged to be on time. Those who miss the examination will be notified of their failure in not taking it and will be expected to report at an appointed hour to take it.
Plans for the organization of rules governing sororities on the University campus are now being prepared by a judicialry committee appointed by Dean Agnes Husband at the request of women students at the University.
Sororities Face Change To Equalize Membership
When several sororities announced this fall that they were in serious danger of being closed down, a meeting of representatives from each women's organization and an adviser of each group, met with Dean Husband discuss the
WHERE are there several houses on the Hill too crowded for comfort, other houses are not filled. The committee is attempting to work out a quota system,
whereby the number of members belonging to each group will be equalized. The committee is tundying quota systems that have been successful on other campuses. The Women's Pan Hellenic Council has suggested two possible ways whereby membership may be equalized. To allow no organogram, a pre-campus to have a large number of women students until every group has that number; to allow no group to take more pledges than its house can accommodate.
The committee expects to be able to offer a preliminary plan in a few weeks. Misa Helen Wagstaff, head of Kappa Alpha Theta, is head of the group. Other members are Miss Olive Torgesen, national officer of Alpha Xi Delta, who is acting as housemother for the chapter this year. Cox, Chi Omega; Ruth Pyte, Alpha Omieron Pi; and Mary Hassia, Alpha Chi Omega.
The judiciary committee has been interviewing different women students in an effort to get all points of view on the campus.
JAYHAWKS TO MEET WASHBURN TONIGHT
Kansas Cage Squad to Play Ichabods in Last Non-Conference Game of Season; Wellhausen May See Action at Center With Wells Still Suffering From Recent Illness
Dr. Forrest C. Allen takes his Jayhawker basketeers to Topka this afternoon for a non-conference engagement with Washburn there tonight. Coach Allen, after viewing the Ichabods' encounter with the Grimm basketball squad, predicted a Kansas triumph. Washburn is at present low in the Missouri Valley conference standings.
Prof. W. W. Davis Sends Resignation to Lindley
The entire squad will make the trip to Topeka and many will probably see action. Ebling, forward, Kappelman, guard, and Gray, at the other guard position, will be sure starters, according to Dr. Allen last night. Wells will probably start at center but due to his
Professor of History Has Been on Leave for Past Year
Chancellor E. H. Lindley announced today that William Watson Davis, professor of American history at the University, has resigned his position. Professor Davis has been on leave the past year administering the estate of his father in Alabama.
will occupy most of his time and it will not be possible for him to return to the University. Chancellor Lindley had asked if it would be possible for him to return the first semester of each year, but he could not arrange it.
He has found that business interests
Professor Davis came to the University of Kansas as assistant professor of history in 1910, became associate professor in 1914 and has held his present position since 1920. He received from the University of Missouri an Institute of his M.S. and his M.S. in 1940. He was granted his M.A. from Columbia in 1906 and his Ph.D. in 1913.
Glenn and Venzke to Relays
Bonthron May Come To Kansas Annual Spring Track Classic
Curningham and Venzke and perhaps Bonthron will be run at the Kansas Relays.
Announcement of the coming of these foremost American milers was made at the meeting of the Kansas Relays Club last night at a dinner meeting at the Eldridge, Cunningham and Venken ran an invitation mile at a distance and winning in 4,127, a new Relays record, and making the fastest mile ever run in Kansas.
Dr. Forrest C. Allen, director of athletics, and Adrian Lindsay, football coach, were speakers. Dr. Allen describing in detail some of the fine points of basketball play, and Coach Lindsay speaking on "Prospects." Dr. Allen also explained some of the technicalities of the basketball rules.
The Relays club re-elected its officers for the coming year, as follows: President, Glew Charlton; vice president, W. G. Hutson; secretary, A. E.
Dr. Allen suggested that the score book, or at least the reporters' note-book should have some place to score "assists," so as to give .grip-credit to the player who, while not doing any scoring, actually contributes heavily to the score team by feeding the score to the player who is open for a shot at the basket.
Coach Lindsay said he had more material in sight now than he did at this time last year, but pointed out some of the problems facing the coaching stuff in shaping the football team for next fall.
CLOSING HOURS
Tuesday, Feb. 5, 10:30
Peggy Sherwood,
Press, W.S.G.A.
Negro Students To Hold Dance
An all-Negro University Nervous Varsity will be held in the Memorial Union ballroom on Saturday from 9 to 12 p.m. through the courtesy of the Activity Ticket committee and the Union operation committee who have dominated the course for the occasion. The entire Union Fountain in the sub-basement will be available for those attending the party.
recent illness, Al Wlthhausen, big 6 foot 7 inch sophomore, will see some service. The other forward berth has not yet been definitely filled but Ray Noble, who has been hampered by a leg sprained in practice, may be the starter. Milton Allen also has been on the sick list with a cold, but will be in the game.
The ineligibility of Fred Harris for varsity competition this semester was the only loss brought about by scholastic failure this year. Harris is a 3-sport athlete with letters in football and track. Passing work this semester in all his subjects will render him eligible for football again next fall.
Kansas has met Washburn on the court 17 times and out of that number has claimed 15 victories. Both Washburn victories came by 1-point margins, 41-10 in 1913 and 26-25 in 1929. The last meeting was 'in' the season of 1934 when the Allenmen emerged victors at 31 to 22.
Wilmer Shaffer, who has been out with a severe case of bronchitis most of the season, has re-entered school for the second semester but is still under medical attention due to the infection. He will not be eligible for practice until he completes of first semester subjects and has taken final examinations.
Coach Allen plans a strong offensive against the Ichabods and will inaugurate some new plays. Washburn, he believes, lacks the power to check his men as illustrated by the showing of Coach Holm's men in their conference.
Gen. Wilder Metcalf Dies
Noted Citizen and Soldier Graduate of University Law School
Brigadier General Wilder S. Metcalf, 197, outstanding as citizen and soldier during the 47 years of his residence in Lawrence, died in the Veterans hospital at Leavenworth, Feb. 2, following an illness of several weeks. Funeral services were held yesterday at Plymouth Congregational church.
Born Sept. 10, 1855 at Milo, Me;
Wilder Stevens Metcalfe grew up in Ohio and received the degree of bachelor of arts from Oberlin college at Oberlin, O. in 1878. He came to Lawrence in 1887 and later entered the law school here, graduating in 1897. He was engaged in many financial and civic as well as military and entertainment duties of the founders of the Liberty Life Insurance company and served as vice president of the Lawrence National bank.
General Metcalf was breveted a brigadier general by President McKinley for "gallant and meritorious services" in the Philippine insurrection of 1898-99. During the World War, he was until 1918 brigadier general in charge of training recruits at Camp Beauregard, La. Because of his advanced age, he received his honorable discharge in that year.
General Metcalf married Miss Mary Eliza Crosier of Ohio, in 1878. She died in 1914. He married the late Mrs. Alice Bullmeil of Lawrence in 1915.
He was a Congregationalist, a Mason and a member of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity.
SAMUEL SEATON, FORMER UNIVERSITY STUDENT, DIES
Samuel L. Seaton, student in the University from 1880 to 1883, died last Tuesday in Kansas City, Mo. He has been active in law and newspaper circles since he left school. At the time of his death he was associated with Bert Rogers of Olathe in publishing the Olathe Mirror.
Mr. Seaton was one of the charter members of the local chapter of Phi Gamma Delta. Members of the fraternity who served in the last week in Olaite last Thursday,
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1935
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Editor-in-Chief ... JOSEPH DOCTOR
... Editors ...
John Mackinnon Charles Brown
Staff
Campus Editor Harry Valentin
Make Up Editors | George Moore,
Herbert McRory
Sports Editor Robert Patt
News Editor Eleanor Wry
New News Fanny Frzy
Society Editor Shirley Jones
Joseph Press John Schoen
Alumni Editor Ruth Stoian
Kansan Board Members
Business Manager F. Quentin Brown
Ast, Business Manager Eldon Carter
Lena Wyntz Irish Olson
Bryce Haven Loren Miller Rutherford
Wiley McCaila John Markham
Carolina Harper P. Quinn
William H. Joseph Doctor
Telenhones
Published Tuesday, Wednesday. The public library in suburb Soline has accepted visitors during school hours and also a special event during the graduation of the University of Kansen from Subscription hire price, per year. $2.00 in cash may be used for any kind of purchase. Reserved as second class matter, September 7, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kane.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1935
CONGRATULATIONS, SORORITIES!
In your recent movement to improve your organizations through reorganization of activity in securing members you have put yourselves definitely in line with movements to improve student social welfare as a whole. You have shown yourselves not adverse to suggestions for improvement. You have replied to the dismal deans who have maintained that your organizations were not aiming at benefiting campuses as a whole, but only select groups of individuals pledged to regard themselves as the last word in campus society. Your endeavor to include all women students who wish to belong to a sorority, your desire to distribute members among the sororities so that each may exist in order to uphold the whole system, are steps that will show cynics that your beliefs in your organizations are justified.
To Helen Wagstaff, Dean Husband, and all those leaders who are behind this movement, we extend our heartiest congratulations.
From Patrick Henry: "I do not know what course others may take, but as for me give me Entomology 159. The Evolution of the Insect Wing."
Bruce Barton was recently asked by a college editor what he thought of the red scares on college campuses. He replied, "I think it is a lot of bull."
"If you can't lick' em, jine 'em,' said a prominent politician.
GRACEFUL RETREAT
The diplomats of France and England followed a very similar policy when they graciously acknowledged Hitler's right to arm his country by voting for a revision of the Versailles Treaty. They could not keep him from arming Germany, and it was to their advantage to join him in the assertion that Germany had a right to arm.
It gave them a chance to intimidate any who would play the role of invader in either of the two countries by announcing casually that each would literally fly to the other's rescue in case of invasion. It very definitely points out that the old balance of power policy is still uppermost in European diplomatic circles.
France did not accede to revision of that part of the treaty which calls for demilitarization of the Rhine. She is content to have that part of the treaty free to cause trouble. It means that she can use it as an excuse to "be there fustest with the mostest men" when and if Germany shows warlike intentions.
In a Cornell time survey, it was discovered that the average student slept about twice as much as he studied. Well, remarks a student editor, that gives about 20 minutes for a night's rest, and it takes 19 to get to sleep.
TO DR. E. M. HOPKINS,
TEACHER AND
EXPERIMENTER
A lifelong career of teaching and educational experimentation that goes back to 1878 will be interrupted this semester by the illness necessitating the grant of a leave of absence to Dr. E. M. Hopkins.
A man whose accomplishments and contributions in his field of study have been so outstanding for so long deserves the tribute and respect of the University he has served since November of 1889.
The more listing of organizations and movements, in various endeavors from football to the American College Quill Club, that Dr. Hopkins founded and still assists, fills two typewritten pages. Nor does this indicate the extent and length of his influence with thousands of students and the larger group benefitted by his innovations.
"It has all been done in the day's work," commented Dr. Hopkins some years ago when asked of his multiform activities and interests. Always an experimenter, one to grasp a practical way to effect what appears altogether impractical, Dr. Hopkins is unquestionably the member of the University department of English known and recognized nationally for his contributions.
Dr. Hopkins has been instrumental in the first steps of many ideas that put the University in the vanguard of educational advancement. In 1900 he was the joint founder of the Quill Club, basic idea for the national Quill organizations; he gave Rhadamanthi its name and assisted at the christening. He was the practical-minded one of the group that first worked for a department of journalism, and was the first instructor of a journalism course here; in 1905 he reorganized the Kansas and for the first time in its history made it a representative college paper in connection with journalism.
The spirit and temperament of the man are caught in his own words: "Almost without exception these are things that I have
We Are Now Serving Regular Meals
Inquire about the Special Meal Plan
in the UNION BUILDING
CAFETERIA
at the
MIDWEEK DANCE
The regular mid-week dance will be held Wednesday night at 7 o'clock in the Memorial Union hallroom. All students must present their identification cards.
BILL COCHRANE, Manager.
Vol. XXXII
CIGARETTES---15c
OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
Candy Bars Pop Corn
been asked to do at one time or another because nobody else was available at the time, or nobody else wanted to do them, and I was interested enough to try. Once initiated, others were ready to take charge, and all or practically all continue as established institutions. But a single motive and ideal underlies them all, and dominates my present activities, which are greater rather than less than ever; and that, in a word, is to advance and ultimately reorganize
**READING FOR HONORS IN ENGLISH:** Students wish to begin or to continue the course. Reading for Honors in English, will please consult the 211 Fleser, between 10 and 12 or between 2 and 4, Tuesday, Feb. 5. Transcripts should be brought without fail.
J. M. BURNHAM, Chairman of Committee.
MIDWEEK DANCE:
SANTA FE TRAIL SYSTEM
TASTE IT TO
CHICAGO
LOVE IT
FAKE IT
SAVE
MILES LOST HOURS
Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 11 a.m on regular afternoon publication days and 11. 12 a.m. on Saturday issue.
Here's direct, FAST bus service to the Great Lakes and beyond. You need a modern bus and save money every mile—be sure you travel SANTA MARIA.
SHORTEST ROUTE
VARSITY
© LOW WINTER FAKES
DENVER $8.75
ALBUQUERQUE 12.80
OSGARGELES 24.00
KANSA CITY .80
TULSA 4.00
DALLAS 7.55
(The Daily Kansan)
For the progress you have made and on your venture to a morning paper.
We
Congratulate
You
No. 85
May success crown your efforts.
SFT-105
Santa Fe Trail System
Tuesday, Feb. 5, 1935
And to the student body we invite you to use our store to your success and economy the coming semester.
ANNEX
Lawrence Bus Terminal
(Back of Weathers)
111 West Ninth St.
Phone 82
Adolph F. Ochse
Printing and Party Store
944 Mass.
Phone 288
SANTAFETRAIL SYSTEM
.
the teaching of English, or prepare the way for reorganization."
EVERYBODY EATS
at the
BLUE MILL
1009 Mass.
A
Smart fashions in
DRESSES
$9.90
Many Novelty Fabrics
One and two-piece styles, with lots of color and fabric combinations that are entirely new and different!
PENNEY'S
ACCEPTED
AMERICAN MEMORIAL ASSN.
Committee on Law
Ask for----
VITAMIN D MILK
Helps develop strong bones and sound teeth.
LAWRENCE SANITARY MILK
and ICE CREAM CO.
Phone 696 - 697 202 W. 6th St.
Bow and arrow
Books for Your Valentine
(Thursday, Feb. 14)
We Suggest:---
Teasdale—Love Songs
Poems of Ernest Dowson
Hilton—Lost Horizon
Woollcott—While Rome Burns
The Rubaiyat
Come in next time you are down town and let us help you
1021 Mass.
THE BOOK NOOK
BRING YOUR
USED TEXT BOOKS
Tel. 666
W.S.G.A. Book Exchange
Room 6
Basement Union Building
to the
Everything
IN UNIVERSITY SUPPLIES
Zipper Books
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Slide Rules
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Fountain Pens
Typewriters
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Medical Equipment
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Buy your paper by the pound at
CARTER'S STATIONERY
Opposite the New GRANADA Theatre
1025 Mass.
Phone 1051
School Supply Specials
Let Us Serve You — Open 'til Midnight
MARTHA WASHINGTON Valentine Candies
Valentine Candies
NOTE PAPERS All Sizes
NOTE BOOKS
Zippers, $2.50 up
Canvas, 50c - $1.00
ENGINEERING SETS
We have some cheap used sets.
STATIONERY
48 sheets - 48 envelopes, 39c
PARKER LIFETIME PENS Deep Cut Price
1347 Mass.
Phone 521
LAUNDRY BAG FILLERS 25c
35c Palmelive Shaving Cream 23c
35c Prep 17c
50c Pepsodent Tooth Paste 33c
50c Dr. West Tooth Paste, 2 - 25c
Coe's Drug Stores
We Deliver
411 W. 14th Phone 516
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1935
PAGE THREE
K
Hill Society
Call K.U. 25 Before 1230 p.m.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Sigma Chi Freshman Party
The Sigma Chi freshman entertained the upperclassmen with their annual dinner dance Saturday night at the Country Club, Kansas City, Mo.
Chaperons were Mrs. T. S. Stover,
Mr. and Mrs. Todd Woodbury, Mr.
and Mrs.' "Packy" McFarland. White roses
were used for table decorations.
Dance music was furnished by Jack
Wendover and his orchestra.
Alumni who attended were Mr. and Mrs. Ned Embry, Abner Bourne, William Bailey all of the Kansas City, Mo., Henry Quigley of St. Marys; Connie Miller, Harry Miller, and Edward Haren all of Kansas City, Kan.
MRS. Margaret C. Harrison recently announced the marriage of her daughter, Peggy, to Robert S. Fulton, Jr., a graduate student at Rock place Aug. 13, 1934 in Sedalia, Md.
Harrison-Fulton Marriage
the bride was a member of the freshman class at the University of Kansas this year. The bridegroom obtained his A.B. degree in 1833 and the following years he went on to graduate. He is a member of the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity.
The couple will make their home at Pittsburg, where the groom operates the Fulton Coal company.
Gustafson-Bennett Marriage
Miss Margaret Gustafson of Lav rence, and James Lawton Bennett, Kansas City, Mo., were married her recently.
Mrs. Bennett is a graduate of the University from which she holds an M.A. degree in French.
Mr. Bennett received his A.B. and M.A. degrees from the University and is a member of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. At present, he is teaching in Southwest High School, Kansas City, Mo.
The marriage of Ida Mae Richards to Verne R. Hall, of Kansas City, Kan. took place recently.
Richards-Hall Marriage
The bride attended the University for one year, Mr. Hall received his degree in industrial engineering from the University last spring. He is a member of Tau Beta Pi fraternity and was active in R.O.T.C. while in school.
Mr. and Mrs. Hall will make their home in Kansas City where Mr. Hall is employed in the engineering department of the Armour Packing Company.
Kinnev-Callahan Marriage
Prof. and Mrs. E. D. Kinney recently announced the marriage of their daughter, Dorothy, to James M. Callahan, of Boston, Mass. The bride and bridegroom are both graduates of the University.
Mrs. Callahan is a member of Gamma Phi Beta and Ms. Callahan is a memb
her.
14
The couple will make their home in Boston where Mr. Callahan is associated with the Copley-Fliza hotel.
miss Camilla Jaybe Walalce, of Ness City, and Clarence A. Ermi, of Dighton, were recently married.
KU
Wallace-Erni Wedding
The bride has been attending Kansas State college at Manhattan. The groom, a former resident of Lawrence, is a graduate of the University. The couple will make their home at Dighton.
Schaake-Heck Marriage
Miss Frieda Schaake and Mr. Arthur A. Heck both of Lawrence were married here recently. Both are graduates of Lawrence Memorial High school and former students at the University,
High-Walters Marriage
Miss Frances Imogene High, of Lawrence, was married recently to Alvin E. Walters, of Lincoln, Neb.
The bride attended the University for three years and is a member of Alpha Delta Pi sorority. The bride-groom was graduated from the School of Business at the University. He is a member of Aacacia fraternity.
The couple will make their home in Lincoln where Mr. Walters is in business.
☆ ☆ ☆
Phi Gamma Delta held its annual Pig Dinner Thursday at the Bellrieve hotel, Kansas City, Mo. Prof. and Mrs. D. J. Teviotale and Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Teviotale and chapmans. Bad Coleman's orchestra furnished the music for dancing.
☆ ☆ ☆
"The White Ewe," a short play by George Ade, will be a feature of the Finance Tea to be given by the University Women's club Thursday afternoon at Myers hall. The play is under the direction of Mrs. J. A.Mrs. Mrs. G. W. Bradshaw will give a group of piano numbers.
Chancellor E. H. Lindley entertained the members of the Old and New club at dinner Saturday night at his home. Prof. Guido Beck was a guest. The professor of the evening Dr. Lindsay gave a review of "The Great Plains" by Webb.
☆ ☆ ☆
Louis Kuhn and his orchestra furnished the music for the mid-year varsity held last night at the Memorial Union building.
☆ ☆
Miss Dorothy Foster, c'34, was a guest at the Kappa Alpha Theta house 'etween semesters.
The first mid-week varsity of the
The Entertainment Spot of K.U.
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Note Change in Prices
DAVID COPPERFIELD
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--second semester will be held tomorrow from 7 to 8 o'clock in the Memorial Union building.
PHONE K.U.66
CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR Man and wife or girls. One room kitchenette. Also sleeping room with kitchen privilege. Nicely furnished. Well located for hill or town. Phone 1131-J. 1319 Vermont. —86
Seventy-five Students Change to Bell Memorial
Mrs. William W. Briant of Valencila,
Pa., arrived last night to visit her
daughter, Mrs. Alfred M. Lee. Mrs.
Briant will be in Lawrence about a
month.
FOR Rent: One large room with sleep-in for porch or two or three boys. Single beds, also double room. 1416 Tennessee. Phone 1555.
ATTRACTIVE ROOM and board for girl in private home. Close to campus. 1735 Illinois. Phone 2418R. -88
☆ ☆ ☆
BOYS Large first floor room with lavatory, and outside entrance, nice room, second floor. Single beds. Base-mount room, shower. Excellent board. Living room, grand piano, radio. 1408 Tennessee. Phone 1703
ROOMS For Boys=Light, comfortable,
south rooms, two wardrobes, close
to town and school, five dollars each
1108 Kentucky, Phone 24188
GIRLS—Large furnished room with small private kitchen. Modern home. No other roomers. Two girls $1.25 each per week. Conveniently located. 1611 New Hampshire. -86
Seventy-five students in the School of Medicine were named Saturday in the list of promotions to the second half of the second year of medicine, and we go to Kansas City, Ky., to attend their training at Bell Memorial Hospital.
BOYS: Room in desirable home, twin beds, sleeping bed privileges if preferred, exceptionally well balanced meals served if desired. Two blocks from University, 1607 Tennessee Terrace. -92
Twenty-five words or less: one insertion, 25c; three insertions, 50c; six insertions, 75c; contract rates, not more than 23 words, $2 per month flat. Payable in advance and accepted subject to approval at the Kansan Business Office.
GIRLS—Attractive rooms with or without board. 1316 Ohio. Phone 547. -86
PHONE K.U. 66
Joseph Ward Dorsey, Raphael Carleidle
John Ward Dorsey, Robert Glisson,
Robert Addison, Colin Robb
Medics Finishing First Half of Second Year Are Promoted
LAUNDRY WANTED - Shiria 10c each,
still collars if desired, ladies colored
uniforms 10c. Call for and delivered.
Phone 2175R. -86
Promoted
The group was named following the individual's completion of the required work at the University. Certain scholastic standards must be met before the students may enroll at the Kansas City hospital. Four women are included in
The University of Illinois Interferenc-
tory Council ruled this week that the practice of breaking pledges for the purpose of raising house averages will no longer be permitted, according to the Daily Illini. J. 9 was set as the final date on the schedule, which might be broken by 8 houses. None of these men may be repledged until next semester.
Richard S. Allen, George Leevoy Ashram Richard Edwin Badridge, Charles Ed Basham, James Joseph Basham Allen Benousey, Walter Baker Allen Benousey, Bowen J., Arville Wayne Bradford, Virgil E. Brown, Ralph E. Bula, George Edward Burket, John Floyd-Campbell, R. Wendell Ceflall, Ross Dale Dickson, Dennis Basil
Mr. Will Townsley of Great Bend, father of William Lawrence Townsley, c'37, died Jan. 31. The funeral services were held Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Mr. Townsley was publisher of the Great Bend Tribute, and frequently visited the University.
2.
Ban Pledge Breaking
The following students were named for promotion at a meeting of the University School of Medicine faculty held Saturday morning;
Cloeyer Albert Newman, Eric L. Nye, Stephen L. Odersig, Paul Fearson, Joe R. Meyer, Rachel Melvin, Vilis Rabe, Leland Price Randles, Lindes Ritz, David Lyle Roberstein, Martha S. Saunders, Martha M. Schapslowky, Robert Oliver Sherwood, Charles theodore Sills, Archival Archbishop Smuley, Robert Edward Clifford, Edward Toolow, Clifford VanPel, Ernest Thayer Wayne Wayne Orrin Wallace, Carl August Wattenberg, Ben Crawford, Cornelius Cornelius Wikelen, William Moody Wilson, Jr., Robert Griesa Young.
ert. C. Gribble, Jefferson D. Griffith,
Verna May Hardin, Carl William Hard-
ing. Elenor Henderson, Wayne Berish
Henderson, Homer Hebbert, P. Johnson,
Thomas Maxwell Johnson, Richard
Carl James,
Theodore Reid Jones, Earle Lorine Lawson, Letter George Howard Lewis, John Morgan Lyons, James Tilden Cameron, Cameroon, J.J. Laimburger, J.J. Laimburger, Ralf Samuel Franck, Frederick Wm. Matassarin, Frank Cluxton Melone, Earl Edwins Mountjoy, Aruh Ruth Montgomery, Louis Morris Morley, James Whittier May.
Father of Student Dies
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ANSWERING THE CHALLENGE OF A SWIFTER AGE
PAGE FOUR
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1935
Cunningham Wins Wanamaker Mile Third Time in Row
Kansan Overcomes Ven zke's Spurt and Leaves Princetonian Thirty Yards in Rear
Glenn Cunningham ran away from Bill Bonnhill in the Wanamaker mike Saturday night and fought off a last yard spring with Gene Venzke to win by six yards in 4 minutes and 11 seconds. A capacity crowd of 16,000 packed Madison Square Garden to watch Cunningham win over his arch rivals.
Bouthnure made his initial indoor start for the year. He clung to the Kansas flyer's heels for nearly ten laps but felt badly in the last lap. Venzie overtook the Princeton star on the next to the last lap and forged ahead of Glenn at the bell lap. In a dozen digging stries the Princeton team steadily took the lead and finished some six yards ahead of the Pennsylvania man.
Cunningham's time was 2.6 seconds over his own world indoor mark of 4.084 set at the Garden last winter. The race was Cunningham's most decisive over his Princeton win but the two were racemates both having won three races攀登 in a year's time.
Saturday night's victory is the third consecutive one for Cunningham. In 1933 he won the Wanamaker mile in 4:13, and in 1935 he won the 4:12L, and this year made it 4:11 flat.
Next Saturday Cunningham will appear again in the Hunter Mile in Boston, where he won the event last year in 4:18.4.
The Baxter. Mile again in Madison Square Garden, Feb. 16, is another event which Cunningham won in 1933 in 4143. Last year, in this race, he was second to Bonthon, who won it in 414 flat.
March 15, Cunningham will run the Columbian mile, in New York, where last year he set the world's indoor resort record. 4.84. He won this race in 1633 in 4:12.
Intramurals To Start Monday
Intramurals To Start Monday
Intramural athletics will be resumed
Monday, Feb. 11, E. R. Elbel, manager of intramural athletics, announced yesterday.
Basketball and swimming duals will be continued along with the hand-ball tournament, and volleyball and wrestling will be inaugurated. The new schedules will be published this week.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Teams May Tour Europe
Basketball teams from the United States contemplating European tours must first get permission from the A.A.U. according to information sent to Dr F.C. Allen, director of athletics, from R. William Jones, secretary of the international Basketball Federation at Rome, Italy, Mr. Jones' letter advised Dr. Allen that the A.A.U. had just recently been admitted to the federation.
Aggies Win Twice From Tigers
Kansas State won two games from the Missouri basketball squad Friday and Saturday nights at Manhattan. In the first game of the series, the Aguies won by a score of 32 to 29. In the second game, the Kentucky squad won by a score of 27-20.
"Sooners Learn Emphatically They're Poor Basketball Players," said an eight-column streamer in the Hutchinson Herald the morning after Kansas's recent 50-to-23 defeat of Oklahoma. "Okahama Gets Sweet Revenge," the streamer famously wrote losing Oklahoma's nearly 38-to-64 victory next night.
Sooners Roth Rad and Good
Change Announcement Deadline All announcements which are to go into the Chancellor's bulletin must be turned into the Chancellor's office by 3 p.m. on week days and 11:30 on Saturdays. This change was made necessary because of the change in the time that the Kansan is printed.
Change Announcement Deadline
Graduate Magazine Out
The January, 1935, issue of the Graduate Magazine was issued last week. In this issue there is a picture section which contains pictures of some of the builders, companies, interesting personalities, the W.S.G.A., and the Men's Student Council.
Students Return With Measles
Two more students have entered Watkins Memorial hospital with the meaules since returning from mid-year vacations. Seemingly the epidemic has spread throughout the state. Doctors on the hospital staff have suggested a review of their care order to prevent their associates and themselves taking the disease.
The cabinet of the W.W.C.A. will hold a supper meeting Thursday, beginning at 4:30 o'clock. Miss Stella Scurlock, regional secretary, will attend.
Prof. William L. Burdick, acting dean of the School of Law, will speak before the Runcie Club of St. Joseph today. The subject of his talk is "Russia."
PHILLIPS IS NEW INSTRUCTOR IN PHYSIOLOGY DEPARTMENT
John G. Phillips will be a new instructor in the department of physiology for this semester. He came here from a private college that has been teaching in the high school.
Mr. Phillips received his A.B. from the University of Oklahoma in 1930, and his M.S. in 1933. He served as an instructor of physiology at the University of Oklahoma during the summers of 1933 and 1934.
Mr. and Mrs. Phillips are living at 1531 Kentucky street.
Wrestlers Win First Meet in Several Years
Kansas Matten Score Four Falls and One Decision From Nebraska
Scoreing four falls and a decision, the University wrestling team defeated the University of Nebraska grapplers in Lincoln, Feb. 2, in a dual Big Six conference match that Kansas matten won in several years. The results are as follows:
118-pound—Bratton, Kansas, won by fall over Swanson, Nebraska. Time: 4:18.
126-pound—McDougal, Kansas, won by decision over Smiley, Nebraska.
135-pound—Childs, Kansas, won by fall over Schwieger, Nebraska. Time:
7:38
145-pound—Hill, Nebraska, won
decision over Douglas, Kansas. Time:
158-pound -Noland, Kansas, won by
over Severson, Nebraska. Time:
6:29
185-pound-Flaslan, Nebraska, won
decision over Hodgson, Kansas Tum
t
175-pound—Funken, Nebraska, won by decision over Tilford, Kansas. Time: 16.
Heavyweight—Moore, Kansas, won by fall over De Brown, Nebraska. Time: 7:28.
Alumni To Play Freshmen
A basketball game, later this month, between Kansas alumni and Coach Forrest Cox's freshman squad, was announced at the meeting of the Relays club last evening by Coach Adrian Lindsey. He said some of the freshmen had been showing great promise, and added that his team has been such players as Bill Johnson, Lee Page, Ernest Vanck, Ernest Casin, Forrest Cox, and Rub Thomson.
Simpson To Assist Faurot
Don Faurot, the newly appointed head coach at the University of Missouri, has chosen Chancey G. Simpson, who was his assistant football coach at Kirkville Teachers college, for the position of assistant football coach at Missouri.
Kansas State was defeated by St. Benedicts last night at Atchison in a boxing meet.
St. Benedict Wins
jects until suitable new jobs can be found unless the present work is approved. "We hope to have the new in operation by Mar. 1, Miss Olsen said.
Reorganization Plans Of CSEP Are Under Way
(Continued from **Page 1**)
The current budget of the University Critical work, for example, will be permitted in lieu of a specific project, surveys, or research, approved in advance by the local committee.
New Plan in Operation Mar. 1 It will be necessary that some departments continue their present work pro-
(Continued from Page 1)
The process of changing workers from their present jobs to the new ones in case they are working on a project that is no longer permissible under the new set-up will be evolutionary. Of the 420 students who have agreed to jets approximately 310 are employed on the campus, 100 are off the campus and ten are at Rosedale.
FISCHER'S
Wish the Daily Kansan Success in its Change of Time and Policy.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
NUMBER 86
VOLUME XXXII
--on the SHIN
BY JOE HOLLOWAY, c'35
Yes, they had their parties ...
Nesmith works his way up ...
What, a Minister's daughter'
.. At the Varsity
Every vacation; perhaps its 'between semesters, at Xmas, during the summer, or any time—what difference do it make anyway, as soon as we come back to classes we need must hear of the "swell party" we had in the cit during vacation. It must be a big body party, because not, they still have their swell party and we have to hear about them. S far the most dwelled-up things about the mid-year parties are that the Ph Gams had four floors at the Bellerive and that several fellows crashed their party simply because the member couldn't tell who was there and who wasn't anyhow. The Sigma Chi party is supposed to be by the martyrs up until 8 o'clock the next morning and other racy things. As an unasked favor to the entire student body we hereby take it upon ourselves to inform the partying lodges that the other students on the Hill, as they have always done, are trying their best to bear up the strain of not belonging to the class, but their disappointment shows on the surface that all d-- tired of hearing for your parties!
Athletes have always seemed to us to be the kind of men who wouldn't want to let themselves become involved in any scandal but friend Dean Nesmith worked just the other way Monday—in fact he even tried to call attention to himself, the dirty thing. Marie Forbes was moving a trunk into the Theta house, that is, she wanted the trunk to be in the house, and what should Dean do but pick the little thing (the trunk) up in his arms and carry it home. He did so by herself. Where that scandal part comes in is that Dean is one of the few fellows who has ever been so fortunate as to be on the third floor of the Theta house, and just between us friends, no one heard him yell a warning to the girls when he started up. And athletes are supposed to train!
We heard something the other day that simply made our blood turn cold and wonder what old poor world is coming to, oh dear, ode, ode, dearie, depose the. The night of the recent expose of the W.S.G.A. it told that Margaret eJmings, rose at the dinner table of Corinbell and said something like, "I don't see why in hell the Kansan can't do something nice instead of those dirty things." Now of course we hated to say anything about this and perhaps it's not the lily-white truth, but after all, Mrs Schubert, you know Margaret is a minister's daughter!
We hear from Lloyd Metzler, who is helping the unfortunate to enroll, that yesterday all of the Brown's who came to his door after being asked if their parents had been abused. Mchitabel, etc. invariably answered "Yes." Lloyd likes riddles anyway.
At the Varsity: Yes, we took a chance upon being made for life and not being able to graduate from the mill and hied himself to the rat-race last night and what do you think was the first thing we saw? . . . no less than Jim Donahue let him do the dancing all his own in which he wears himself out trying to choke his partner with his left hand . . . the method is called! %*% **
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1935
by the way did you see the prison shirt Bill Mackie had on at the dance?
... poor Tod Haines always has her troubles at the dances in the Union ... she has a habit of taking a coke or three with dessert, other fellow takes with kids and kid do you know that little Toddy just simply can't ever tell when intermissions are and has to run back to the dance with the wrong fellow nearly every time . . . we might recommend to the management that in the lobby every night of a dance they place a little placard announcing whether Lawrence Penner will be at the dance or not . . . if he is, he will buy boots and a red light . . . yes, Chary Smith was there pouring woo to them as would listen.
Parking Regulation Into Effect
Parking regulations will go into effect tomorrow morning according to George Snyder, "the campus cop." People must park only in the respective zones for which they have tags. All cars will be checked starting tomorrow morning.
Enrollment Closes Day Earlier Than In Previous Years
Recitations Start Today Changes in Schedule Must Be Made Saturday
University authorities broke a tradition this semester with their enrollment scheme. For many years the enrollment has always finished on Wednesday with classes starting on Thursday. This season she classes starting work a day earlier.
With the close of regular enrollment, members of the College faculty expressed themselves as emphatically in favor of the simplified form of procedure. Guy W. Smith, professor of mathematics and chairman of the enrollment reorganization committee said, "I think we should have a dozen persons, faculty members and students alike, remarked about the improvement."
Students this semester did not have to bother with major cards. They simply had to fill out registration blanks and present them to their advisers and to the chairmen of the class groups. Students should use a phone number, Miss Vivie Leav, to the den
Late Enrollment
Late enrollment will be held in Robinson gymnasium Saturday morning Feb. 9, from 8:30 to 11:30 clock, only College students who are enrolling for the first time, those who are enrolling late, and students wishing to make changes in their enrollees will enter at the east door. Advanced standing students and transfers will enter at the north door.
of the College, said, "I think the new plan a distinct improvement. There weren't nearly as many closed class this year, especially on the first day. In regard to late enrollment Saturday, I would like to emphasize the fact that I will take classes in an omingh. It will be too late Saturday afternoon."
Late enrollment will be held from 9:30 to 11:30 Saturday morning in Robinson gym. Late enrollers will be fined $2.50 as a penalty for tardiness. Juniors and Seniors who merely have to change one or two classes may then go directly to the office desk where the office staff has figured out the fees for prompt payment.
Psychological examinations will be given to all new students at 2.30 p.m., Friday, Feb. 8 in Fraser theater, second floor of Frasier Hall. These examinations require a passing grade from lecturing the University for the first time, except those taking graduate work.
Sidelights
One man student approached the desk and asked the assistant giving out grades if he would look up a class for him. He explained that he had attended some sociology class three times a week all semester, getting a C out of the course, and wondered if the instructor would look up the name of the course for him.
One of the women working as a guide walked around the floor two or three times with for him and the students hunting for his adviser. It was only 9 o'clock on the first day and the guide hadn't learned for sure just where everyone was located. Finally the student became disgusted and told her to go sit down as he was sure he knew more about it than she did.
A sweet young thing timidly approached Dean Lawson and asked if it would be all right with him for her to join them, or she wished to go on a Southern cruise.
"Id like to have an adviser," requested a man student of his guide as he entered the enrollment room, "and I don't mind. I would like to have a man."
A new male student entered the room and looked about bewildered so one of the guides walked up to him and said, "What's your major?" The enroler looked he said, "Well, I'm not sure." After a few minutes more delibera-ly lit and brightly, "But I'm going to maul."
One coed on being asked if she had an adviser replied, "Oh lands, what are they?"
Mr. G. W. Smith came in the door (Continued on Page Three)
CSEP check checks for work done during January will be ready for distribution at the CSEP office Thursday and Friday afternoon between the hours of 1.30 o'clock and 5 o'clock.
CSEP Checks Ready Tomorrow
To Speak Tonight
1
Powers Hapgood prominent labor leader and author who will lecture before church assembly.
Powers Hapgood to Give Third L. I. D. Lecture Labor Leader Will Talk at Unitarian Church Tonight
Powers Hapgood, labor leader and writer, will speak on "The March of Labor" at 8:15 tonight at the Unitarian Church in the third lecture of a series sponsored by the League for Industrial Democracy.
Mr. Haggood has been active in the labor movement for many years. In 1983 he was in charge of the general textile strike in Massachusetts for the United Textile Workers of America. At that time he was involved in opposition to an injunction.
After his graduation from Harvard in 1921, Mr. Happgood spent two years organizing the coal fields for the United Mine Workers. He worked in mines here and in South Wales, Germany, France, and the Soviet Union.
Mr. Hoapoo is a frequent contributor to "The New Leader" and "The Nation." He has written one book, "In-Non Union Mines," published in 1922 by the Bureau of Industrial Research. He is on the national executive committee of the National Security and is a member of the International Federation of Technical Engineers.
Nominate Hob Nail Queens
Engincers Eliminate 12 Out of 15 ir
Contest
Katheyn Ann Cassidy, cunl. Gamma Phi Beta, J霄 Caut, c15, Alpha Chima Omega, and Isabel W. Perry, c37, Pi Beta Phi, were selected yesterday from a group of 15 by the engineers in a baillet vote. A final baillet will be taken on Feb. 15 to pick the Queen for the Engineers who will be presented at the Hob Hall Hop, Feb. 16, in the Memorial Union building.
Fifteen women students on the campus were chosen by ballot by the engineers as candidates several weeks ago. Engineering students during their enrollment voted on their favorites. Pictures of the candidates were posted on the bulletin board of the Engineering building.
Isabel Perry was one of the Sophomore Beauty Queen last year. She was also selected as the most "inoculating" she of the campus for 1934.
The Men's Student Council will meet tonight at 8:15 in the Union building, Gunnar Mykland, c35, president, announced yesterday.
Other than routine business, there will be talks on the present enrollment system of the University given by student guides who worked on the enrollment floor. The system will be discussed and possible alterations suggested.
ENROLLMENT METHODS TO BE DISCUSSED AT M.S.C. MEETING
The intramural Carnival to be held Mar. 8 will also be discussed.
*Senior Employee in Washington*
Margaret May Mollot, A. B.34 is now employed in the public relations office of the treasury department at Wash-
ington University and in Lawrence. All press releases, from the treasury department go through that office. Most of her time is devoted to scanning of newspapers for items of interest to various departments of the treasury, and sending the clippings to the proper departments. She is a member of Alpha Xi Delta.
Mellot Employed in Washington
Tickets for Play on Reserve
Reservations for the "Yankee Crusade," the University dramatic production which will be given Feb. 12, 13, and 14, may be made in Green hall from Friday to Thursday, Feb. 14 between the hours of 9 and 4, every day except Saturday;
Alumni of Many Cities Celebrate Kansas Day
KANSAS DEFEATS ICHABODS 33-27
General Johnson Speaks to Three Hundred in New York
Kansas Day meetings were held in many cities throughout the country on Jan. 29. At New York City 300 Kansans were present, of which 75 were alumni of the university. General Hugh S. Johnson, former administrator of the Recovery Act, was the principal. His topic was "What I Think of It."
Wichita reported 125 present. Prof. John Ise was the main speaker. H. W. Laffer was elected president of the alumni club. Arrangements are being made to have a large alumna celebrate the event at that time they will have the hand come.
Dr. W. L. Burdick was the speaker at the meeting which was held at Oklahoma City. One hundred and nine people were present.
Chicago held a dinner meeting at the Fred Harvey Restaurant. One hundred and ten people attended and heard Prof. Ollin Tolmil talk. St. Louis reported 55 former Kansans in their dinner party, E. E. Carlson c25 was elected president and Mrs. Eldon Haley, f27 was elected secretary. University graduates combined with the Kansas State College graduates at Philadelphia to celebrate. Their dinner was held on Feb. 2.
Seattle, Wash. held its tenth annual meeting of University graduates on Jan. 29. Fourteen people attended the meeting at Fort Worth, Texas. Kent Dunkelberg, c$24 was elected president and Dr. Jeffrey Cearl, c$24 was elected secretary.
Meetings were also held in Portland Ore; Boulder, Colo.; Salt Lake City Utah; and Akron, Ohio.
Jensen to Go to Oklahoma
Economics Professor Will Assist in Tax Survey for Gov. Marland
Prof. J. P. Jensen, of the Economics department, has been granted a short leave of absence in order that he may assist in a state-wide tax survey which is being undertaken by the Booking Institute of Oklahoma as one of the many groups that have volunteered land. Professor Jenesse will be absent only during the month of February.
The Kansas professor is very highly recognized in this field. His headquarters for the survey will be Oklahoma City. Professor Jenner's position will be critically comprehensive and will accurately study and errorless judgment.
During February, Professor Jensen's classes will be in charge of others in the Economics department. E. B Dade, associate professor of economics, will take the public finance class, and Dean Stockton will have the 9:20 introduction to economics class. L. D Jennings, an associate professor of economics, will charge the of the 11:30 class in elementary principles of economics until the return of Professor Jensen.
KFKU to Outline Programs
KFUU will issue shortly a handbook of materials for radio study. This is the first time any station has offered supplementary material with any of its训员.
Handbooks Are Innovation in Radio Station Service to Listeners
The handbook contains an outline of programs, giving the day of the week and the time of presentation. It has an outline of a series of six talks on "Health" to be given by Dr. Florence B. Sherston startling Feb. 6 and to continue or six weeks. It also tells of a series of lectures on Spanish for two weeks at 2:30 p.m. by Clarence Christman, instructor in Spanish. They will begin next week.
This book will be sent to all high school superintendents and principals, to other radio stations, and to anyone who wants to program regularly and wishes to have one.
Peggy Anne Landon III
Peggy Anne Landon, c38, daughter of Governor Landon, is quarantined at the home of Mrs. Landon's mother, Mrs. S. Cobb in Topeka, suffering from an ear infection. She was traCTed the disease in Topeka. She will not be back in school for several days.
The first meeting of the Entomology Club this semester will be Monday afternoon at 4:30, Melvin Griffith, president, announced today. Jose Hidalgo Jr., a graduate student has been asked to conduct a survey about his research on "Genus Aedes."
Army Officer Says Communists Are Backing Peace Movements
Lieut. Col. Frederick E. Whitten in a talk before the Club Presidents in Wansas City, Mo., Monday charged that the movement to do away with compulsory military training in the colleges was started by the Communists.
He stated that the peace movement had spread over the United States with such speed that it is evident that a well organized group had received orders to spread this propaganda and have obeyed.
The revolutionary radicals have been using sincere pacifists and church workers as their dupes in an effort to do away with all military training and naval construction, he said. While all this has been going on Russia has built its army into one of the most powerful in the world.
The Skovayk-Mcdonald bill making military training compulsory for all able-bodied male students in the freshman and sophomore classes at Kansas State University, is sentate Monday by a vote of 21 to 16. The bill was then sent to the house.
Water Works Convention To Meet Here Feb. 20-22
President of American Association Will Be Main Speaker
Preliminary plans for the eleventh annual school of instruction at the University for the Kansas Water and Sewage Works Association, Feb. 20, 21, and 22, were announced recently by Prof. Earnest Bower, secretary of the association, and head of the water and sewage laboratory at the University.
Harry E. Jordan, president of the American Waterworks association, and superintendent of the waterworks system of Indianapolis, Id., will be the principal speech speaker in the public watersworks improvements in the public works programs.
Prof. Robert Warner of the University has prepared a report on his work last summer in using electrical methods for locating underground water supplies for the Kansas Emergency Relief Committee. Another report on the mapping of water-bearing formations of Kansas geology will be given by Prof. K. K. Landes, assistant state geologist.
Members of the University faculty will talk on technical subjects. The last afternoon of the "school" will be devoted to problems of municipal swimming pools. Herbert Alpain, swimming instructor at the University, will speak on recreational phases of swimming, and Albert Martin, attorney for the League of Kansas Municipalities, will discuss the legal responsibilities of cities as to municipal swimming pools.
J. E. White, water and light superintendent at Herington, is president of the Kansas association, which is affiliated with both the American Waterwork Association and the Federation of Seware Works.
About 340 cities of Kansas have municipal water supplies and less than 100 have sewage treating plants.
Kansas Alumni Will Elect
Strickler, Retiring President, Appoint Committee to Select Nomines
The pending election of officers of the University alumni association was announced yesterday by Fred Ellsworth Kannas alumni secretary. T. J. Strickler and Wayne McCoy, president and vice-president, are retiring after one year of service. Charles Isaie of Coffeeville and Miss Grace Wilkie of Wichita members of the directors board, are retiring after five years of service.
Strickler, president, has appointed two committees to select nominees for the vacant offices. Members of one committee are Frank E. Tyler, Kansas City, Mo.; Mrs. Dolph Sinnett, Lawrence; and George H. Alborn, F. C. "Mike" Lynch, Lakeus City, Mo; Mrs. Arthur Weaver, Lawrence, and Dr. Milton Miller, Topeka, compose the other committee.
Sandellius To Kansas City
W. E. Sandellius, associate professor of political science, will be one of the speakers at a women's conference featuring the "Cause and Cure of War," in Kansas City, Mo., this morning. Professor Sandellius will speak at a morning symposium in Kansas City, M. Hotton, of the nava recruiting station in Kansas City, Mo. and Dr. Bruce R. Trimble, University of Kansas City.
DR. ALLEN USES NINE JAYHAWKS IN TOPEKA GAME
Most Stupid Teamwork in History of Coaching Kansas, Phog Asserts After Contest
SCORE AT HALF, 15-14
Ebling Is High Scorer With 12 Points; Bethel Is Second With 10
Immediately after the game "Phog" Allen said with disgust, "It was the most stupid teamwork I have seen in all my years at Kansas."
Toppea, Feb. 5. — Kansas defeated the Washburn iabchobbs tonight, 33 to 27, as Kansas showed what Dr. F. C. Allen called the most stupidly played game he had seen in years.
Washburn took the lead early in the game as the result of Bethel's three field goals only to lose it Kansas picked up. The Ichabods were in the lead several other times during the remainder of the game by a slight margin.
The Jayhawks stressed their offensive play and as a result were weak on their defensive. The Washburn men played well for several shots during the game.
The fools of the Washburn team aided Kansas in winning, giving them **9** of their threes.
Near the end of the game Fee, Wash- burn forward, completed two beautiful long shots in an effort to put his team in the lead.
Botel was the outstanding player,
making five field goals during the game.
Elbling made twelve points but was not
the outstanding player that Botel was.
Dr. Allen started Ebling and Allen at forwards, Wells at center, and Kappleman and Gruy at guards. However, he use all nine of his first string men during the game in an effort to find a connection that would work well on the floor.
Kansas was leading at the half by a one-point margin, the score being 15
A crowd of 2,000 people, many University students among them, saw the
Kansas G FT I F MFT TPts
Ebling f 6 0 1 0 12
Noble, f 6 1 3 0 3
Falcon, f 2 3 3 0 7
Oyler, f 0 0 0 0
Wells, c 1 0 1 2 2
cisman, c 0 0 0 0
Kapperman, g 0 2 3 1 2
Rogers, g 0 1 0 0 1
Gray, g 2 2 0 1 6
Washburn G FT F MFT TPte
Fee, f 3 2 0 3 8
Bethel, f 5 0 0 1 10
Bethel, 1 1 1 1 2
Ditterson, c 0 1 0 1 2
Roskan, c 0 1 1 1 2
Henry, g 1 0 1 1 4
Mill, g 0 0 1 0 1
Enrich, g 1 0 1 3 2
11 5 4 15 27
KEY-FG, field goal; ft, free throw; mibd, mixed free throw; tp, total points.
Official: E. C. Quigley, St. Marys.
WASHBURN TO CELEBRATE SEVENTIETH ANNIVERSARY
Topcka, Kan. Feb. 5—Today will mark the seventh anniversary of Washburn college and the beginning of the college's third decade on a sound financial basis.
Plans for the birthday celebration include an address in chapel by Judge George T. McDermott, a half-day vacation for students, and a mixer for the entire student body. Judge McDermott's talk, which will be given at the student conventation in the morning, will be on "Peace and Pacific." All classes following the chapel will be dismissed.
Calvert To Join K.E.R.C. at Topeka
According to Dean Stockton, Staunton Calvert, who has been an assistant instructor in statistics and accounting in the School of Business during the past semester, has been appointed to the post of statistician with the Kansas Emergency Relief committee at Topela. He began work last Monday. His resignation has not been passed upon by the Board of Regens.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1935
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Editor-in-Chief ... JOSEPH DOCTOR
... Editor
Staff
Campus Editor Harry Valentine
(Gorge Moore)
Herbert McCormick
Supervisor Robert Patt
Sunday Editor Eleanor Winnerton
Nancy Editor Shirley Jones
Society Editor Shirley Jones
Editor John Rath Stoland
Alumni Editor Ruth Stoland
Business Manager ___ F. Quentin Brown
Asst. Business Manager ___ Ellen Carter
Telephones
Lena Wynn *Ilyson Olson*
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Laren McCalla *Rutherford Hayes*
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Joseph Harper
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Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday and Sunday morings except during
school hours by students in the department of
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the Press of the Department of Journalism.
Subscription price, per year. $20.00 cash in
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ach. as described as second class matter, September
7, 1919, at the post office at Lawrence, Ksns.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1935
DO WE HEAR A COMPLAINT?
Since no proper machinery exists here for the recognition and presentation of student grievances, the Kansan has suggested the creation of a board of students who would sit regularly to hear the run of legitimate student complaints.
Men's and women's governing bodies and the leaders of them have made no statement, as yet, to indicate that they have heard the plan. But perhaps they do not regard it as a matter for action for them, because after all the only benefit derived from the idea would accrue to the University and its students.
In suggesting the creation of a board of students to hear complaints and report them to the Administration authorities, we feel it is about time to recognize in practice what is so frequently repeated in class: that University students are old enough to have ideas of their own, and to act on them.
THE GOVERNMENT LEARNS HOW TO BUILD HOUSES
A gossip is one who talks to you about others; a bore is one who talks about himself; a brilliant conversationalist is one who talks to you about yourself—Atlantic Journal.
Early in the Roosevelt administration a plan was brought forward to assist jobless family men by providing each with a small house and a yard big enough for a few vegetables. The families were to be settled in communities near government-subsidized factories in which the men could work, not steadily perhaps, but enough to provide a little cash once in a while.
It sounded like one of the best of the New Dealers' ideas. Instead of handing an unemployed man ten dollars so that he and his family could keep themselves alive for another thirty days, during which time they would have nothing to do but sit around and wait for the thirty days to end so that they could collect another ten dollars, the new plan would give them something they could call a home, with a little security, and, most important, something to do.
Sixty-one Subsistence Homestead projects were started at various places over the country. The one at Reedsville, Pa., was given the most publicity because it was receiving the personal attention of Mrs. Roosevelt, who has been intensely interested in the whole project. Last week reports of the progress and cost of the work there were printed, and the information they contained was summed up in the statement of Charles E. Pychon, general manager of Subsistence Homesteads, to the effect that after more than a year of delay and indecision, fifty houses are finally occupied and the government stands to lose half a million dollars because of "experimentation" and "errors in judgment."
Twenty-five families of unem-
On Your Mark!
On Your Mark!
Shore
STARTING THE SPRING OF '35
played miners were moved into Reedsville on Nov. 7, 1933, and lodged about the town until their homes could be made ready. Fifty ready-cut four-room houses were ordered. They were supposed to cost $960 each, and were to be ready for occupancy by Thanksgiving. The materials did not arrive, however, until Dec. 6, and the houses were not finished until June, 1934, and then only after each had been built, torn down, and rebuilt, for reasons which have not been explained. Secretary Ickes estimates that each house has cost the government $4,880, which estimate, observers say, is conservative. Figures in the newspaper reports of this project have not been denied by government officials, and can be assumed to be correct.
Mrs. Roosevelt justifies the financial loss on the grounds that lessons learned at Reedsville will be valuable in future projects. That gives reason for hope that some efficiency may be introduced into the Subsistence Homestead idea, and that the projects will continue, if the public, which may fail to understand why the government can not take advantage of the knowledge already collected on how to build houses instead of using the trial and error method, does not refuse to permit the projects to go on.
The Senate Slaps A Face
*baily Oldham*
Daily Oklaboman
Once again the ghost of George Washington has appeared on the senate floor. The senate, bawering of entangling alliances, voted down the proposal to join the World court. Four men by altering their vote could have changed the outcome. But Mr. Obama has sponsored arbitration has also rejected the tool of arbitration.
The history of man is a long series of readjustments which have unified him in larger units of co-operation. Tribes came from the union of families—cities from the union of tribes—states from the union of cities. Each union has developed its own language and at the same time made bigger ones possible. But in each union, co-operation resulted in a civilization better able to meet the needs of men.
To make a more concrete example: The United States under the Articles of Confederation were weak. The quarrels between states did little to further the cause of men. When India and Pakistan individual rights under the Constitution a more efficient nation was created. Some states lost power and others gained but the gain of the whole more than equaled the loss of the few.
The nation then formed new refuses to be welded to the rest of the world as New York hesitated to adopt the Constitution because she had more power than the majority of the states. The state has floundered under the Constitution. Why would the United States flourish under the world court? If the future can be read in history, 'the senate slipped the face of destiny.'
COMMENTS
By the Editor
MORE ABOUT REDS
From all sides come comments on campus Reds. Kansas Citizens are told that Reds are behind the anti-military movements on the campus. Maybe Reds are also behind the members of the Kansas legislature who voted "no" on the question of compulsory military training at Kansas State. If they are, they had almost enough strength to deflect the measure.
College editors are still ridiculing Hearest and his accusations that colleges are pink. An editorial in Cornell's paper deems it an insult that their school was not included in Hearest's list of Red schools, saying that other universities will believe Cornell does not welcome freedom of discussion.
HONOR SOCIETY
Frenchmen have discovered that there are approximately 175,000 wearers of the Legion of Honor ribbon. France's great award for service to the country. Ideals have been forsaken by making the award political pork. Something, no doubt, like a student honor society.
Subscribe for
Enrollment is over once more, and with it the worries that beset students and professors alike. The new system, no doubt, has lessened, but fewer pre-semester work will do away with the errone made by students in selecting courses.
ENROLLMENT BLUES
Headquarters Rickerd-Stowits
Fred Turner, dean of at Illinois, says of the federal aid project for students in his university a brief list which has been offered to colleges and universities has been the most
ILLINOIS DEAN SPEAKS
Inquire about the Special Meal Plan
THE KANSAS CITY STAR
at the CAFETERIA
We Are Now Serving Regular Meals
in the UNION BUILDING
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17
OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
H. L. Nevin Distributor
13 papers - 15c per week
Vol. XXXII
Vo. 86
Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1935
Notices due at Channeller's Office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication day
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION:
The Christian Science Organization will have a meeting this afternoon at 4:30 in Room D, Myers hall. MAURINE JESSEE, Treasurer.
MIDWEEK DANCE:
The regular mid-week dance will be held this evening at 7 o'clock in the Memorial Union ballroom. All students must present their identification cards. BILL COCHRANE, Manager.
UNIVERSITY WOMEN'S CLUB TEA:
The finance tea of the University Women's Club will be held at Myers hall on Thursday afternoon at 3 o'clock.
ROCK CHALKLETS Conducted by R.J.B.
MRS. J. J. WHEELER, Corresponding Secretary.
worth while and best administered of all the different plans for help." Our own Chancellor should take this as a fine compliment, coming from deep appreciation on the part of a fellow educator, it was Chancellor Lindley, you remember, who was largely responsible for the CSEP.
PICKING A QUEEN
Max Factor, Hollywood make-up-expert, lost no time in choosing a sophomore beauty queen from the photographs sent to him by the Jayhawker Magazine. The editors were started by the quick service. Max Factor has, of course, only been working most of his life trying to fool the camera with his cosmetic applications. He no doubt realized that it would not be impossible to fool him. It was probably but the work of a moment to have a stenographer mark one photo and moll it back to gladden some girlish heart.
We fear that it is going to take more than a barrel of spinach to give Popeye out of the Sea Hag's clutches this time.
In Germany all hail Reichfuehrer Hitler. In this country the cry is for "fuerch rich."
We learn that Charles "Pretty Boy" Floyd kept a record of his "kills" by notching his watch. He probably meant he just be a few blots on the face of time.
"Nazi War Plants Roar."—Headline. And just to keep up the rhyme scheme we ask: "What for?"
U. S.S.R. means United States of Soviet Russia, United States Senate Restaurant and also might mean United States of Sad Republicans.
Since the Kansan has become a morning publication the editorial desk has posted a sign: "Today is yesterday and tomorrow is today from now on." Someone something like one of Gustave Trostle's remarks. Or a logic problem.
The CSEP workers who lose their jobs because they failed to make the required 13 grade point average will probably think CSEP means: "Couldn't Satisfy Every Professor."
A scholarly student said something about Charles (Handsome Adolescent) Floyd the other day. We shook our hands with George of George (Infant Counterance) Nelson.
We'll bet that the official announcement of Spring will gladden the heart of every fan dancer.
The semester is over but the worries linger on.
"An optimist," says Dean Ingo, "is a man who would buy from a Jew and sell to a Scot, and expect to make a profit."
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1935
over
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
K
位
Hill Society
Call K.U. 25 Before 1230 p.m
Wives of Engineers Entertain
About thirty members of the Wives of K.U. Engineers entertained at bridge Monday night at the home of Mrs. C, M. Young. A dessert course was served at 7 o'clock at quartet tables adorned with flowers. The cakes and candies tiled with red cellophane bows.
Mrs. L. C. Gordon and Mrs. Ralph Tait won the prizes for high score. Mrs E. H. Lindsey was a guest. The chair, Mrs D. Kinney, was committee Mrs E. D. Kinney.
Smart-Norton Marriage
University Women Hold Finance Tea
Miss Lovie Jane Smith and Mr. Wil liam C. Norton were married Saturday Feb. 2, in St. John's Episcopal church in Wichip.
Mrs. Norton attended Northwestern University at Chicago, and is a graduate of Wichita University. She is a member of Sorosia, social sorority at Wichita, and of Pi Beta Phi at Northwestern. Mr. Norton is a senior at University, and is a member of Deltr Tau Delta social fraternity, and Pi Alpha Delta fraternity.
Many Women Hold Finance Test
The University Women's Club finance
tea will be held tomorrow afternoon at
Myers hall. A committee with Mrs. J.
Amy Hall, a committee with needles,
contributions to the fund for the in-
nistence of scholarships.
Mvers-Youngstrom Marriage
M, and Mrs. Alvin Earl Myers of Kansas City, Mo., announce the marriage of their daughter, Glenna Lucille "30," to Karl Arden Youngstrom, "30." The wedding took place Dec. 2, 1933, at Akron, Iowa.
"The White Ewe," a short play by George Dade, will be given. The play has been directed by Mrs. A. J. Mix.
Mrs. Youngstrom is a dietician at Bethany hospital in Kansas City, and will continue with her work until next spring. She is an obstetrician in the department of anatomy.
Col. and Mrs. W. C. Koenig will entertain with a buffet supper tonight at o'clock.
The guests will be Mr. and Mrs George March, Prof. and Mrs E. C Buehler, Prof. and Mrs D. Scribaum, Prof. and F. D Wikham, and Lieut. and Mrs W. I. Brady.
18
The sponsors of Kappa Beta soroity are entertaining the pledges and activities at a 6 o'clock dinner tonight at the home of Mrs. S. W. Slaughter.
Sigma Alpha Episcopal announces the pledging of Curtis Patterson, Kansas City; Robert Marshall, Hutchinson; and Williamine H. St, Joseph, Mo.
10
Phi Delta Theta announces the pledging of Charles Nicholas, Merrill Alloway, Therman Kepner and Charles Stough.
☆ ☆ ☆
Tom Trigg and C. L. Berneicing, both of Trenton, Mo., were guests between semesters at the Phi Gamma Delta house.
Guests at the Kappa Sigma house are
Charles Sturge of Rosseala and Kenneth
McKenzie of Bakersfield.
Wallace Lumb of Manhattan was a
guest between semesters at the Acacia
☆ ☆ ☆
Alpha Tau Omega announces the pledging of Joe Cochran of Hoisington, and Luke Chapin of Medicine Lodge.
☆ ☆ ☆
Sigma Kappa will entertain rushees with a party at the chapter house tonight.
☆ ☆ ☆
Jennna Mau announces the pledging of Carroll Mickey, 308 East Sixty-Eighth street, Kansas City, Mo.
Kappa Kappa Gamma announces the pledging of Olive Adele Kriedel of Vighita.
☆ ☆ ☆
Jewell Potts of Halstead has returned to school this semester.
☆ ☆ ☆
Delta Sigma Lambda announces the pledging of Al Oleson of Belle Plaine.
--and asked a group of guides seatec
talking where he could find the seni-
lor adviser. All sprung up to help him
get back from the situation and relaxed
He was the senior adviser!
Herb Michaelus of Atlanta, Ga., is a guest at the Pi Kappa Alpha house.
Acacia announces the pledging of George Mann of Herington.
Phi Kappa Psi announces the pledging of Eddie Johnson.
Enrollment Closes Day Earlier Than Last Year
One guide had a pretty trying time of it. First she asked a coed who her adviser was and receiving no answer, she then asked her what she was majoring in; no answer; so in despair she asked he what she was interested in. The answer finally came, "Frankly, I don't know."
ROOM AND BOARD for boys. Large,
comfortable rooms and excellent
meals at a reasonable price. Conven-
tionally located. Phone 1313M -at-
-88
(Continued from Page 1)
A quick tempered young fellow became thoroughlyygusted with his guide because she couldn't find what he was looking for. Why on earth she didn't use her head.
Prof. C. O. Johnson, of Washington State College, Pullman, Wash., stopped in Lawrence yesterday to visit friends and also to secure information regarding former Senator Borah's student days here.
Professor Johnson was the guest of Prof. T. E. Atkinson. At present Professor Johnson is writing a biography of Borah, and for this reason he desired information about Borah's stay in the University. He is a member of the Poor State College department at Washington State College of Government in the United States," a text book used in the School of Law here.
PROFESSOR STUDIES STUDENT LIFE OF BORAH AT KANSA
PHONE K.U.66
The Kappa Sigma fraternity will move into the house formerly occupied by the Alpha Xi Delta sorority in the next few weeks. Work has already begun onearing down the Kappa Sigma house which was burned last February.
Professor Johnson will leave today for Washington, D.C.
Kappa Sigmas to Move Soor
FOR Man and wife or girls. One room kittenheme. Also sleeping room with kitchen privilege. Nicely furnished. Well located for hill or town. Phone 1131.J- 1319 Vermont. —86
CLASSIFIED ADS
--of sociology, left yesterday for Washington, D.C. where he will work in the Urban research division of the FERA. He has been granted an indelible leave
LOST: Black bullhead containing currency, activity book and papers. Liberal reward for return. Call F. Loncar, 1075M. -88
PHONE K.U.66
GIRLS — Large furnished room with small private kitchen. Modern home. No other rooms. Two girls $125 each. Not currently located. 811 New Hampshire.
--of sociology, left yesterday for Washington, D.C. where he will work in the Urban research division of the FERA. He has been granted an indelible leave
GIRLS: Board and room. Phone 2649.
1536 Tennessee Street - -88
ATTRACTIVE ROOM and board for girl in private home. Close to campus. 1735 Illinois. Phone 2418R. -86
GIRLS - Attractive rooms with or without board. 1218 Ohio. Phone 547. - 88
--of sociology, left yesterday for Washington, D.C. where he will work in the Urban research division of the FERA. He has been granted an indelible leave
--of sociology, left yesterday for Washington, D.C. where he will work in the Urban research division of the FERA. He has been granted an indelible leave
BOYS; Nice rooms with or without
sleeping porch, $5.00 and $6.00 per
month. 912 Alabama. Phone 1887J. -86
BOYS Large first floor room with lavatory, and outside entrance, nice room, second floor. Single beds. Basement room, shower. Excellent board. Living room, grand piano, radio. 1408 Tennessee. Phone 1703 ... 188
BOYS:建 in desirable home, twin beds, sleeping porch privileges if preferred, exceptionally well balanced meals served if desired. Two blocks from University. 1607 Tennessee Terrace-82
FOR Rent: large room with sleep-in porch for two or three boys. Single beds, also double room. 1416 Tennessee, Phone 1555.
Twenty-two words or less: one insertion, 25c; three insertions, 50c; six insertions, 55c; contract rates, not more than 25 words, $2 per month flat. Payable in advance and accepted subject to approval at the Kansan Business Office.
ROOFS For Boys-Light, comfortable,
south rooms, two wardrobes, close
to town and school, five dollars each
double. 1108 Kentucky, phone 24188
--of sociology, left yesterday for Washington, D.C. where he will work in the Urban research division of the FERA. He has been granted an indelible leave
LAUNDRY WANTED - Shirts 10c each,
still collars if desired, ladies colored
uniforms 10c. Call for and delivered.
Phone 2175R. -86
Mary Woolley Will Speak After Banquet at Muchlbach Hotel
Chancellor Lindley will attend the regional conference for the Causes and Cure of War in Kansas City, Mo., tonight. He will be a dinner guest at the Hotel Muehlbach, and he will in introduce Mary Woolley, president of Mount Holyoke, at a mass meeting there later in the evening. Miss Woolley's speech will be the main feature of the mass meeting.
Miss Mooley is one of the outstanding peace workers in America today. She has helped promote international cooperation in the Orient and in Europe since the World War. Ex-President Hoover made her a member of the Peace Corps after she was sent to time-tuned to hold the job after President Roosevelt was elected.
The Kansas City peace meeting has seen in session since Monday. Members drawn from five states have discussed n all their phrases the international community has heard in numerous nations. League of Nations, which may ause or prevent wars.
Work of French Caricaturists Now On Display
The lithographs of Daumier and Gavarni are on display at the Spooner-Thayer art museum now where they will remain until the end of this week. Daumier and Gavarni were the outstanding French caricaturists of the first half of the 19th century, and have illustrated the books of all the best French writers of his time.
Orchestra Open For Members
The Spooner-Thayer museum will display some of the oils and watercolors of Karl Mattert, professor of drawing and painting, during the rest of February. Mr. Mattert has won many prizes in the Middlewest in the last few years for his fine work. He took first prize for both oils and watercolors at a contest in Kansas City last December.
Henry Varmum Poor will exhibit oils, watercolors, and pottery at Spooner-Thayer during the month of March. Mr. Poor is a Kansan who has become one of the outstanding figures in American art. He has painted wall-murals on buildings of which the Radio City Music Hall is the latest and best example.
Lindlev to Peace Meeting DR. SMITH TO WORK IN URBAN RESEARCH DIVISION OF FERES
The University symphony orchestra is open for new members, Prof. Karl Kuersteiner announced yesterday. They will hold their first rehearsal of the new semester Thursday evening in the auditorium. Professor Kuersteiner would take up contemporary American works and some Russian music.
A banquet for the Memorial Union Operating committee will be held in the cafeteria at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow, in recognition of the services of the committee members. At the same time plans for future completion of the Union building will be presented and discussed. Chancellor Lindley and a few faculty members will be guests of the operating committee.
An Outstanding Value
Hits the Spot
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Sub-Basement Memorial Union
Dr Mapheus Smith, of the department of sociology, left yesterday for Wash-
Dr. Smith's place is in filed by Frank Alexander, formerly an instructor at Vanderbilt University at Nashville, and at Wake Forest university, national sociology and rural' sociology
---
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2.30 p.m. Studies of Living Things,
Dr. Ernest E. Bavles.
2:45 p.m. "What is health: Can Everyone Be Well?" Dr. Florence B Shench
6:00 p.m. Elementary German Lesson
Prof. E. F. Enkel.
6:15 p.m. The Art of Teaching, Dr
Ernest E. Bavles.
Thursday, Feb. 7
2. 30 p.m. Program arranged by Dr Bert A. Nash.
2.45 p.m. Elementary French Lesson
Mr. W. E. Cornell.
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6:00 p.m. 127th Athletic Interview arranged by Prof. Edwin R. Elbel.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1935
TO HOLD INDOOR CINDER MEET
Kansas and Aggies Will Hold Practice Track Meet Friday
Coaches to Arrange Program of 12 Events Giving New Men Experience
In order to give the new truck material a practical workout, Coaches Bill Hargis and Ward Haylett of Kansas State are arranging an indoor track meet to be held under the University stadium Friday afternoon. A program of 12 events has been arranged, including dashes of 60 and 440 yards; two burdle races at the 60-yard distance; the half mile, mile, and two-mile runs, mile relay, pole vault, shot put, and high and broad jumps.
This will be the first time for Kansas-Kansas State indoor meets to have the 60-yard distances. When first the two schools met, in 1914, the short dashes were at 20 yards and later raised to 50. Such indoor meets have been held in 1914, 1915, 1916, 1919, 1921, and 1930. Kansas has won five of the six meets.
A few of the veterans have been practicing regularly with the track team, including Elwyn Dees, who holds the Big Six outdoor shotgun record, and Richard Sklar, who is out for the shot, as is Harry Kanzatar, a new candidate.
Bob Schroeder, Themo Graves and John Nunov are out again for the season.
New material in the half and quarter includes Gordon Guise, Wade Green, John Fitzbush, and Paul McCaskill. Coutter Cunningham is giving some prospect of emulating his namesake in the mile.
Two-milers include Charles Bekert, Robert Thorpe, and W. Carpenter. Other candidates include Dale Shannon, high jump; Ray Reed, broad jump; Reed and Frank Neal, hurdles; Charles Pits, broad jump.
Rail Noble and Gordon Gray, pole vaulters, are with the basketball team at present, and Bob White has not been out this spring.
The meet records:
**tech**
50*yard low hdls. 45, Stickle, Kan. 1930.
50*yard low hdls. 60, Mize, Kan.
*50-yard high hdls—07.9, Nichols, Kan.
1930
440-yd. run—354.0, O'Leary, Kan. 1916
880-yd. run—350.0, Redckey, Kan. 1916
Two-mile run—100.0, Grady, Kan. 1916
Mile Relay—318.0, Kan. 1915
Kan. Relay—318.0, Kan. 1915
Kan., 1916.
Bellevue, 1917. 12 ft. 4 in. Tetrahedron, Kan.
1921.
High Jump—5 ft. 1-4 in. Treweeke
1932.
1930.
*60-yard distance substituted for 50-
yard this year.
Methods of Billiard Play Will Be Demonstrated
Champion Will Give Exhibition at Union Building Tomorrow
Charles C. Peterson, holder of numbered world's records in billiards, will demonstrate his method of play to students and faculty members in the Reecreation room of the Memorial Union. There is no charge for the exhibition.
Much of the time for the show will be devoted to an instructive talk by the champion on the fundamentals of the game. There will be illustrations of his execution of many of his fancy shots throughout the talk.
Sports fans throughout the country know Peterson as "Pete." He has been credited with being one of the first to promote intercollegiate billiards. Under his guiding hand the first intercollegiate tourney was held in 1931, the University of Wisconsin winning it. The 1934 contest was won by Michigan State. With the 1935 tourney scheduled for March, it is not known yet where it will be held. The National Basketball Association of Alabama, the National Association of College Unions are backing the tour of Peterson, who is appearing before the students of Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Indiana, Purdue, Ohio State, Yale, Pennsylvania, Brown, Harvard, Michigan, Notre Dame, and numerous other Universities.
Billiard experts never have been successful in executing Peterson's "dollar-shot" his personal invention. In this he splits a piece of billiard chalk in two, supports a silver dollar with these two pieces of chalk, and drops the dollar back on the billiard table, the dollar returns, and it manically rests itself between the two pieces of chalk, which are approximately $ \frac{1}{2} $ inch apart. No billiard expert has ever approached Peterson's record of acquiring 100 points in 28 seconds. Another of his records was getting 50 points on an average of 100 points in 47 seconds. Peterson holds too many records even to begin to enumerate them in this article.
RUBBER BALL IS CHARM
TO IOWA STATE CYCLONES
Ames, Iowa. Feb. 5.-While loafing in Columbia before the game last Saturday night, the Cyclone squad purchased a small red, white, and blue rubber ball to use for a good luck charm to break the Missouri home floor jinx. The Iowa Staters won by a nine-point margin, and now the ball is a regular part of their equipment.
--stock went up almost one hundred per cent in the East Saturday night when he turned in one of the greatest efforts of his career to finish just a few yards behind Cunningham and well ahead of Bontonh in the Wana-maker mile. This Cunningham-Venken rivalry may become more popular this spring than the feed between Bontonh and the former Kansas star of last year.
Ebling Into Second Place
Groves Leads With 70 Points Scored in Seven Games
Groves of Kansas State now leads the Big Six scorers with 7 points guarded in seven games, but Ebling of Kansas with 6 points guarded with 6 points made in six games.
Wegner of Iowa State has the next highest average, 10.8 with 54 points made in five games.
With the season practically half over, 68 different players have entered Big Ski games, with players who have figured it out, with points ranging down to a single free throw.
Following are the leading figures:
Stroves, c, KSC Games G FT TP
Kru, kU KU 10 26 14 59
Jorgenson, g, Mo 10 26 14 15
Browning, g, Okla. 10 26 14 15
Wells, c, KU 6 18 19 8
Wells, kU 5 18 19 8
Powell, g, Mo. 9 22 17 51
Stoner, g, KSC 8 16 19 49
Freeland, f, KSC 8 16 19 48
Emmeley, n, KSU 7 12 19 72
Okla. 7 18 8 44
Cowen, f, IS 5 16 11 43
Fleming, f, IS. 5 17 5 39
Bear, b, FEB. 15 14 50
Beer, b, FEB. 4 12 11 55
Games G FT TP
WOMEN'S SWIMMING MEETS TO BE HELD FEB. 13 AND 14
The women trying out for the intramural swimming meets have been divided into two groups: one group to meet on Feb. 13, and the other on Feb 14. The winners of these preliminary at the final which is 'o be held Feb. 20.
Open hours for practice are: Tuesday
2:30-4:30; Wednesday and Friday: 3:30
and Saturday: 10-12.
The CSEP office was busy yesterday continuing their check-up of grades, applications and receiving student inquiries. Miss Mary C. Olsen, secretary of the CSEP office, said nothing definite as to the final outcome of the checking had been reached.
Continue CSEP Check-Up
Eighteen Men Chosen Members of Rifle Team
Six Week Telegraphic Meets Will Be Held Starting February 11
A men's rile队 team selected by Lieutenant Brady, Sergeant Engle and Edgar Leigh, captain of the team, was announced yesterday and the 18 members will start six week telegraphic matches Feb. 11.
The team was picked from all those who started firing last December. The roster is as follows: Edgar Leigh (Capt.), Don Smith, Don Bryan, Bernhart Like, Chevey S. White, Wayne Sellon, Chester Crain, Carl H. Helman, Charles Ward, John Miller, James Traw, B. W. F. Humfrey, Jim Looney, Martin Denlinger, G. W. Traw, Hugh Wire, Harold Brown, C. B. Starks.
All members of the men's and women's rifle teams are requested to report to the rifle range Thursday and Friday of this week to sign the new schedule. Firing of the matches begins Monday, Feb. 11.
SPORT SHOTS Allen Merriam, c'36
Back in a leading position in the Big Six basketball struggle, Phog Allen's counters face a real test Saturday night when the second place Cyclones from Iowa State invade Lawrence for a game which will establish the Jayhawkers in first place or set them back in a second place. The Sooners had been expected to put up a heated battle for the conference bunting, but their second defeat at Ames Monday night puts them out of the race unless both Kansas and Iowa State drop another conference game.
Wrestling, long the forgoned sport on Mount Oread, appears to be coming back this winter. After furnishing some stiff competition for the crack Kansas Angie team last semester, Coach Bill Cochran's grapplers went up to Lincoln Saturday night to take a one-sided duel meet from Nebraska. Incidentally, it was the first team vice-president of several years. Led by George Nolan, Big Six champion at 145 pounds, and Tinny Moore, 250-pound bevyweight, the Jayhawkers may pull a dark horse trick or two this season.
It looks like a rosy year for the Kansas Relays with Venzke and Cunningham already signed up for the feature mile run and Bonthron a possible entrant for the event. Venzke
and such n turn of events wouldn't hurt the Relays attendance in the least.
Ellen Brown of the Pittsburgh Teachers College and Kansas City A.C. is now maintaining the prowess of Kansas runners in intercollegiate competition. Brown ran the annual Seton Hall College games half-mile special Monday night, in Newark, N. J., in 1,58.8 feet.
ang Cunningham's mark of last year which was 1.57A.
"Cunningham missed his own indoor record of 408.4 by a safe enough margin, but a race such as this made the clocking relatively unimportant," writes Arthur J. Daley, sports editor of the New York Times. "It could not have been more thrilling had it been run in 4 minutes flat."
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V
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXII
on the SHIN
By JOE HOLLOWAY, c'35
The Pi Phi's Go Child Care . . .
Benny's New Childhood . . .
Sleeper Knits a Couple . . . A
Whole Chorus of Comedians
E. C. Quigley, a man whose striped shirts are a familiar sight to us all at the basketball games, told a good story on Paul Harrington at a banquet Tuesday night after the game at Washburn. It seems that in time past at one game, Mr. Quigley used it necessary to call a foul on Pocchie and, after each foul called, the referee would ask, "Do you understand?" After the third foul was called and the referee again asked his question Pocchi replied, "No, I don't understand, but I'm getting used to you."
+ + +
We really wouldn't want you to make anything of this, but we hear that Betty Lay McFearn and 10 other Pillars went in the class in clark care. Tsk, tsk.
Believe it or Not. Haines is mad and I am glad . . . tra la.
And speaking of Haines reminds us that one Werry Wiley Mackie reports that once upon a time when Ben B. the People's Chere, was a bit down on the world, said Benny solemnly stated that he was tired of everything but his "ickle bickle baby durt." Oh for good sake, weake hop he was kidding
Now that about 75 of the medics have been transferred to Kansas City, that city will have a little trouble among the local bootleggers methinks.
We ran into a new prof, today who really seems to be a regular guy . . . why we think so . . . because he smiles all through his lecture and uses a stub of a pencil with the eraser chewed completely off.
'Tis said that boys will be boys and we suppose that the same ding applies to the gels but this situation is practically reversed. What we mean is this; we didn't breez so much when Tence Burmins announced that she was knitting a muffler for Jack Sleeper and showed some to us, but my dews if you know what we meant to me, we saw the other day so she wouldn't wear herself out, and does Jackie ever knit or knit (nm)
NUMBER 88
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1935
Well, we took a little trip to the Union ballroom yesterday to put the double-O on the tryouts for the W.S.G. A musical atroctory, or was it comedy, which will hit us soon—and what do you think? We found at least the best reason of them all for going musical comedies of the W.S.G.A. type. Of course, this reason would necessitate putting the tryouts on the activity ticket if you wanted it to remix success but did not want what price she paid! Here's the dope: Continue to have the tryouts in the Union where there's plenty of room and, just as our enrollment schedule does, appoint a certain day for groups of students whose names begin with Z to attend—that way overcrowding is avoided. Have them bring along their Union cards, etc. and put plenty of chairs around the ballroom. Then—when little Josie Dunkel calls for the chorus tryouts, crane your necks, unbutton your shirt cover, and say "yeah, you need to feel好 of what?" Well of the girls trying to do the simple step Josie shows them. Then later, you can go to the comedy itself (although it won't be half so funny as the tryouts) and think how surprised you'll be at the progress the chorus has made!
Tryouts for speaking parts in the W.S.G.A. musical comedy " Hold That Line" will be held tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock instead of this afternoon as previously announced. No tryouts will be held this afternoon, according to Betty Tholen, member of the W.S.G.A.
Students trying out for singing parts in the musical comedy are requested to bring songs to sing with them. Students who tried out Wednesday afternoon are requested to return on Friday.
TRYOUTS FOR SPEAKING PARTS IN MUSICAL COMEDY CHANGED
CSEP pay checks for work done during January will be ready for distribution at the CSEP office Thursday and Friday afternoon between the hours of 1:30 o'clock and 5 o'clock.
University Students Would Carry Arms In Defensive War
Votes on Whether Country Should Enter League of Nations Are Equally Divided
In the recent, country-wide Literary Digest poll of college students on seven questions relating to war and peace, University of Kansas students showed that they are not to be stamped into either a militaristic or a pacifistic attitude. Their votes were largely indicative of the sentiment of the rest of the country. Approximately 1150 Kansas students cast ballots, which were so worded as to admit of little evasion of the issues. On the general question as to whether the United States could remain out of another Great War, 769 students cast affirmative ballots and 360 students believed it impossible. Eight ninety-eight percent believed they take up arms if their country was invaded by an aggressor, while 211 students were conscientious objectors. There was a complete reversal of opinion when 808 students declared they would not assist in the invasion of a foreign country and 211 signified their willingness to do so.
Practically all students agreed that the government should assume the job of munitions and armament manufacturer, the vote in this case being 1078 to 52. Most of them doubted the ability of a program of naval and air preparedness to keep America out of war, the vote being just as unacceptable in favor of government control and operation of all industries during war time, 947 to 177.
Probably the most discussed question was left unsolved, 698 students believing that the United States should enter the League of Nations and 418 advising the country to remain out of foreign entailments.
Below are the national figures on the vote. They run about the same as the University vote.
Government control of armament and munitions?
91,166 0,380
Attack into entrance into League of Nations?
32,404 32,329
Can the United States keep out of another war?
2 to 1
Would you take up arms in the war?
4,054 19,650
Would you bear arms in the invasion of another country
11,783 52,350
Universal conscription of wealth in war time?
29,593 11,960
Efficacy of a program of naval
Ratcliffe in Return Lecture
S. K. Ratcliffe, English journalist and interpreter of current world affairs, will give the first lecture of the series for this semester, Feb. 21. His topic has not yet been announced, but he will speak on some important current event.
English Journalist Will Speak on Campus, Feb. 21
Mr. George O. Foster, registrar of the University, yesterday announced a change in the granting of student loan funds to Low C will not be granted the loan.
Debate Team Meets Stanford
The University debate team met the Stanford University team Tuesday night in a non-decision debate at the St. Mary's Academy in Leavenworth. The subject was "Israel" Kan-tertse, an insidious side. The Stanford team composed of Fred Bold, Andrew Bright, and J. M. McFarland, is touring the country in a series of debates. They are spending a quarter of the school year on the tour. The debate with Kansas, however, was unscheduled. Charles Hackler and Logan Lane argued for Kansas.
For five years, Mr. Ratcliffe was editor of the Statenman in Calcutta, India. In that capacity he came into contact with chief makers of Indian nationalism.
There are 75 applicants for the loan fund this year. Last year, there were only 40. The loan fund is to help students with their school tutee school, and unless they do not make the average required now, it would be useless to grant them the loan.
Mr. Racitliffe in his 30 years' journalistic career has been associated with the London Daily News, the Nation, and the Observer. At present he is a member of the editorial staff of the New Statesman.
Debate Team Meets Stanford
This is Mr. Ratticelle's eighteenth consecutive winter of lecturing in Canada and the United States. Three years ago he lectured at the University.
CHANGE MADE IN STUDENT LOAN FUND REQUIREMENT
Alumni Gather in Topeka
Coaches and Graduates Speak After Kansas-Washburn Game
The alumni meeting which was held in the Green Parrot tea room in Topeka following the Kauas-Washurban game was attended by about 75 persons among those present; the memorial service of the football team, coach, hummi, and a few students.
Marion Beauty, '31, president of the Topeka alumni association, was in charge of the informal meeting. The following persons gave short talks: Fewloss Ellsworth, alumni secretary; Dr.F.C. Allen, director of athletics; Mike Getto, assistant coach; Ad Lindsay, head football coach; E.C. Quigley, referee; Ray Pierson, '23, Senator A. O.Daley of Troy; F.C. M.ike '23, "11, of Kansas City, Mo. Senior Sen- tor Wahle Thirte, 10, of Tepeka; and Dr.M. L. Bisholl, assistant surgeon for the Santa Fe railroad.
Five Nominees Chosen For Journalism Award
Four Women and One Mar to Receive Sigma Delta
Four women and one man were announced today as nominees to receive the 1925 Scholarship Award of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity, by Prof. John J. Kistler of the department of journalism, and adviser for the local chapter of Sigma Delta Chi. Those named are: Julia L. Markham, Parsons; Loreen Miller, Lawrence; Carolyn B. Harper, Lawrence; Joseph C. Campbell, Bronson; and Iris Olson, Kansas City, Kan.
Chi Honor
The award, which has been made annually since 1929, represents the highest ten percent of the seniors in journalism at each university and college in the United States where there is a chapter of Sigma Delta Chi. Election is made by the National scholar-afforded solely in the basis of scholarship.
Last year the award went to four men: Marion Beaty, Armbold Kretzmann, Maurice S. Rice, and Lawrence Sterling. Mr. Rice was also elected to Phi Beta Kappa.
Reserve Officers Hear Coe
Military Objective Not to Attack Civilian Property, Lieutenant Says
"Attack on civilian property or person is faulty, tactically speaking, is not a true military objective." Thus did Lieut. E. H. Coe, ass. professor of the department of military science "debuted" popular concepts of civil war in time of war in link to the debate Officers Association last evening.
The bugaboo of chemical warfare is a remainder of the World War hysteria plus the product of highly imaginative scare writers who for worthy or other purposes may want to prejudice public opinion against the use of chemicals, Lieutenant Coe said. In event of attack by hostile forces using chemicals, "gas discipline" is all that is necessary to protect civilian or military groups from serious damage by these agents, he said.
Efficiency of plans for protecting cities and valuable areas from attack by air were cited in a report of a tactical mission. A Knox given by Col. Dismore Alter.
Glee Club to Sing at Chanute
Glee Club to Sing in Chanture
Alumni at Chanture are arranging to give the Glee Club a free concert when they are there. The concert will be given in the Memorial Hall. The alumni will pay all of the expenses of the Glee Club.
Decision on Gold Will Cause Action By U.S. Congress
Governing Body Must Prevent Situation From Becoming Worse, Says Howey
Labor Leader Goes to Jail Rather Than Pay $75 Fine
"If the Supreme Court of the United States does not uphold the present gold clause made under the Gold Reserve Act of 1934, Congress will find a satisfactory lophile in order to protect the debtor.
"This is the opinion of Professor R. S. Howey, of the department of economics of the University in an interview yesterday as to what effect the decision would have on local interests. "No matter which way the decision goes, Congress will have to act to prevent things from happening." Professor Howey pointed out.
Powers Hapgood, last night's LLD. speaker, described the general textile strike to a Kanser reporter, as a victory for labor in that it caused 250,000 men to join unions, and also raised wages in some localities. Mr. Hapgood was in charge of the strike for the United Textile Workers in central Massachusetts.
"We sent from 5 to 50 men in cars
"The legal angle of the thing," he stated, "is that the Supreme Court may uphold the gold clause in the Government debts and will not in private debts. In that case private firms cannot be sued and the government cannot be sued without its own authority." No matter what the Supreme court decides there will have to be found a way of keeping the present status."
Gold Content Changed
"In many bonds," Professor Howey continued, "there is a clause which states that they be repaid in 'gold of present weight and fineness.' Up until March, 1933, all United States Government bonds had been payable under this clause. Not only Government bonds, but also many private bonds with government category. So if the Government compelled these contracts to be fullfilled all obligations would have to be met in old gold dollars."
He went on to discuss the press... status of the dollar. "Before the Gold Reserve Act which was passed the latter part of February, 1934, the dollar contained 25.8 grains of gold and the metal was used as currency. Under that act the dollar contains 15.21 grains of gold and an ounce of gold is worth $35.00."
Debt Might Be Raised
"If the Supreme Court decides to make these payable," he went on, "or contracts collective, it would mean, enforcing the debtors, all who insisted, bonds, and the government itself, would have an impossible burden. The total national indebtedness at present is greater or at least as much as the amount goods in the country. If enforced, the Gold Act would increase the debt until it became considerably in excess of our goods. That would mean a most unfair imposition on the debtors."
"It would be unfair," Mr. Howey explained, "because when the money was borrowed it was used to purchase a certain amount of goods, and if the borrowers were forced to sell them, the money at a lower price level, they would have to pay back in larger quantity dollar for debt dollar. It would merely add injury to injury. One of the greatest obstacles in the way of recovery is our fixed debt problem and we need to pay more money would increase our burden."
"If it were possible to enforce the payment of contracts and debts in old dollars the government would have to take immediate action to prevent such a catastrophe," Professor Howey declared. "One of the major obstacles to legal sitation to be in possession of gold so if the Supreme Court decided you did have to pay in
"When we started," he said, "only 10 per cent of the textile mill workers in Massachusetts were organized, and at the end of the strike, more than 75 per cent belonged to unions. We went to mills before the strike, and although workers were afraid to join unions because against them, they promised to quit work if flying squadrons picketed the mills.
(Continued on Page Three)
to the plants. When these were met by police, who threatened to fire on them, the squadrons called the bluff and broke through to picket the mill. Only in places were the police impartial during the strike.
"Another fellow and myself were arrested on a charge of intimidating 500 men. In a band of 30 we had picked this plant, protected by police with guns and tear-gas, and by us we were given the payment of paying the man for prosecuting costs or spending 10 days in jail. We went to jail."
The reason for the strike's breakdown Mr. Hapgood gave as failure of all workers to come out consistently. The great increase in casualties during the strike will make success for any future strike, inevitable, he thinks.
Debate Coach
Debate Team to Make Four Out-of-Town Trips
1
Prof. E. C. Buehler, debate coach has scheduled four trips to foreign territory for his debate team. The first trip will be made to Drake university, Feb. 21.
First Forensic Conduct to Be Against Drake on February 21
Four trips to foreign territory are being scheduled for the debate squad within the next few weeks, according to Prof. E. C. Buehler, director of forensic, in addition to several local events.
The first trip this semester will be to Iowa, where the squad will compete with Drake university, Feb. 21, and with Iowa State, Feb. 22. Following that, the team will participate in Mar. 1 at Iowa University, when 20 schools will compete.
The third trip will include a debate Mar. 6 with Nebraska, and another with the University of South Dakota, Mar. 8. The squad will go to Austin, Texas late in March to compete with Texas University.
Local events already scheduled include the freshman-sophora oratory contest Feb. 26, and the junior-senior oratory contest Mar. 7. Kansas will host to Missouri Valley schools for the oratory-extremepersonal speaking contest and debate tournament Mar. 21, 22, and 23, and a debate with the University of Southern California is planned here early in April.
Men's Council To Investigate Ways of Improving System
Enrollment Plans Discussed
An immediate and thorough investigation of the systems of enrollment at the University and of other schools, notably Stanford University, with intent to simplify the existing conditions here, was discussed at the semi-monthly meeting of the Men's Student Council in the Union Building last night.
in the university building. The enrollment employed here last semester is superior to those of previous years, much can be done toward its further simplification and betterment, Gunnar Mykland, c35, president of the council, the chief difficulty with existing conditions as seen by the council is the delay caused by the necessity of obtaining the consent of the several advisers, chairmen, and deans before appointment. It is suggested that a plan similar to the system under which complete responsibility for selection of courses, filling of groups, and arrangement of hours is left to the student, combined with our present plan in which the major responsibility for enrollment of the students is in the hands of the students, would furnish a better-working arrangement and would be advisable to eliminate certain prerequisite courses which the council does not entirely necessary so as to allow a greater freedom in the selection of courses. The student upon entering the University would be assigned an adviser for his entire college career. It would be compulsory to consult with the adviser at least twice a year to him in the process of enrollment the student would have his schedule ready and would enroll in a much shorter time.
A committee composed of Norbert Anschuetz, c'36, chairman; William Beck 'aulc, John Darrah, T'35, William Hazen, T'37, and Lloyd Mertz, b'37, has been appointed to discuss the changes with the University Senate.
Elect Two New Jay Janes
Y. W.C.A. Group To Meet Friday There will be a meeting of the Social and Economic Discussion Group of the Y.W.C.A., Friday, at 4:30 at Henley House.
Elect Two New Jay Janes
Ruth Bordner, c36, replacing Patricia O'Donnell, p14, Pi and Pi, and Caroline Bruce, c37, replacing Carolina Bliss, c38, Pi Beta Phi, were elected members of the Jay Janes at a meeting held yesterday afternoon.
Organized Labor Lifts Depression Says LID Speaker
Hapgood Thinks Consumers
Must Be Paid Ample
to Buy Goods
They Make
"Organized labor is one of the main factorsFactors in helping to get us out of the depression today," said Powers Happold, labor leader and third speaker in the League of Workers. "At least we are speaking on "The March of Labor."
"The organized labor movement is the chief factor which is tending to increase the consumer's income of 45 billion dollars to a point where it may purchase the 90 billion dollars' worth of goods produced in the United States yearly," Mr. Happood told his audience. "The labor union fights this uner-consumption in fighting for higher vages."
The speaker believes that sooner or later labor will realize that the capitalist profit system, having reached a point where it cannot expand further, can never pay labor enough to purchase its produce, for profits would be eliminated. Heretofore capitalist profits have been invested in business, but this is no longer possible. These profits are now kept from the consumers' hands, according to Mr. Hapgood.
"There is no solution for the depression under capitalism," Mr. Happgood explained. "When labor realizes the ingrained discrepancy in the capitalist system between production and consumption, caused by profits, labor will work for socialism." On this depends the working man's future, he thinks.
The necessity for the labor union as a means of increasing purchasing power was sketched briefly, and figures were given illustrating the huge increases in the number of organized workers during the depression. One factor that contributed to this need be organized now belong to American Federation of Labor unions.
Mr. Hipgood then criticised the NRA.
He said that maximum hours too often become minimum hours under the codes, and minimum wages tend to be the highest paid. "Section 7a is not being enforced. Although fines and imprisonment are provided for intimidating union members, no employers are in jail and only a few have been fired. Meanwhile workers are jailed for breaking injunctions in court or 'Custing'. The Episcopal church was Harrison of the Episcopal church was in charge of the meeting. Newman Jeffries, '32, an organizer for the Amalgamated Clothing Workers, introduced the speaker. Before the talk Nicholas Gerron, fa'35, violinist, played the mantle of Lalo's "Spanish Symphony."
Reid Addresses Chemists
Department Is Host to Kansas City
Chemical Society Members
The department of chemistry was host last night to the Kansas City section of the American Chemical Society, Dr. E. W. Reid spoke on the subject, "Recent Developments in Aliphatic Organic Chemistry." Although a young man, Dr. Reid is a fellow of the Mellon Institute and is in charge of the laboratory of the Carbide and Carbon Chemical corporation.
His company is manufacturing chemist to nearly every American industry, from cosmetics to fruit growing. His talk dealt with new discoveries and new uses of compounds of ethylene, a complicated substance which assumes inumerable forms at the will of the war effort. It also makes those of a solvent, fumigant, refrigerant, and emulsifying agent. It is also used in medicine as a carrier in ointments.
The meeting, held in the chemistry building, was attended by about 125 persons. It was preceded by a dinner at the University Club at which members of the Kansas City section obtained the members of the Kansas City section. Dr. Wildish and Mr. Rice of the Kansas City Junior College faculty, Dr. Brown, head of the chemistry department of Kansas City University, and several members of the faculty were present. An open forum was held after the meeting.
Elected to Committee
Prof. Bert A. Nash, Mrs. C. D. Clark and Mrs. Dismore Alter were elected directors of Lawrence community service committee at a meeting held Tuesday afternoon in the assembly room of the Chamber of Commerce. Nahua Nahe was elected for a two-year term and Mrs. Alter for a one-year term.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1935
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
EDITOR-IN-CHIEP ... JOSEPH DOCTOR
MANAGING EDITOR CAROLYN HARPER
Julia Markham Charles Brown
Associate Editors
Julia Markham Charles Brown
Campus Editor Harry Valentin.
Make up Editors { George Moore,
Herbert Moore }
Sports Editor Robert Patt
News Editor Eleanor Wimmer
News Editor Katherine
Society Editor Shirley Jones
Architecture Editor
Alumni Editor Ruth Stoian
Business Manager F. Quentin Brown
Ast, Business Manager Elton Carter
Lewn Wattn
Manny Walker
Loren Miller
Wesley McCalla
Fionn Fawrand
William Hilibard
Iris Olson
Matt Hunt
Rutherford Hayes
Joseph Markham
F. Quinn
Joseph Docto
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KU-66
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Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday and Sunday mornings except during
school holidays by students in the department
of journalism. For additional information,
the Press of the Department of Journalism.
Subscription price, per year. $3.00 cash in advance, $2.25 on payments. Single copie, be
paid.
Rostered as second class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1935
A THREAT OF COMMUNISM
A friend of ours tells about the neighbor in Kansas City, Mo., who had several thousand rounds of 30-30 cartridges stored in his basement against the day of wrath pictured by so many friends of our country. Nothing might dissuade this person that The Revolution isn't coming in ten years.
The same keen prevision has worked to the public good in the case of a most conspicuous public servant, William R. Hearst, and the organs of his opinion. For years now, and always at the top of his voice, Mr. Hearst has performed that extremely valuable function of seeing so graphically what his inferiors in judgment cannot understand.
Colleges and universities in the locality of Mr. Hearst's papers have been particularly fortunate in having pointed out to them the existence of a menace from radicals—and in many cases a menace few had noticed till Mr. Hearst observed the insidious thing in plain sight. After pointing out the evil and showing the remedy, extermination follows and to the good of the community..
Our problem here, though unobserved either by Mr. Hearst personally or by one of his papers, grows more serious daily. We are swamped by a subversive movement, in groups and departments all over the place, that would substitute private initiative and control in the matter of dating. So many schools now, and so many athletic events, even the R.O.T.C., and some say the fraternities, have subscribed to a policy, that carried to its extreme, would spell the entrance of the most insidious doctrines of Communism in the heretofore private matter of dating.
Private queens, we are told, may be all right, depending considerably on the quality and size of the queen. But this affair of queens for the Relays, or queens for the so-and-so ball, must stop. If we are to remain in the good American tradition, hallowed by the use of our ancestors, we must call in Mr. Hearst and stamp out this practice of communizing our queens.
Freddy Frosh Says—
Joe College is always glad when enrollment paying fees time comes around. He can always set the fees up plenty high, send word home, then keep the balance and bill it to "over-headwork."
A BEGINNING
College students, says Albert Edward Wigam, are developing a deeper and safer patriotism than the old "emotionalized bosh and tommyrot." Based on careful study of the nation's needs and duties and an "intelligent ideal of our national destiny", the new patriotism is replacing the old "our-country-right-or-wrong" attitude.
It is to be expected that colleges would lead in the development of a more intelligent patriotism since a great part of the old patriotism was ignorance. It might also be
expected that the old "100 per cent Americanism" would become less boisterous after fifteen years of peace when people, thinking of constructive rather than destructive work, could look back and pass sane judgment on the things they did during the bust of 1918.
So it might be well to suggest, though we hate to throw cold water on such encouragement as Mr. Wiggam has given, that the present attitude is nothing to get jubilant over—yet. It is a fine start and the tendency is in the right direction but there is not much reason to believe that anything more than a start has been made.
If war were threatening America today, war posters, such as may be seen in the Liberty Memorial at Kansas City, with their startling portrayal of exaggerated emotions, which would be funny if there were not so much blood in their history, probably would still appeal to intelligent college students. News reel shots of battleships cutting into waves to the acre company of "Anchors Aweigh," or the stirring pageentry of military parades, could probably dissolve in a few months enough of what little intelligence has been gained to send the boys "Over There" again.
The point is not that intelligent patriotism is impossible, but simply that there is a great deal of work and thinking to be done before it is accomplished. College students must study, think, and argue until they reach a complete understanding of the true destiny of their nation among other nations, and of the insanity of war.
COMMENTS
IN THE MAIL
-By the Editor
It is interesting to note the amount of correspondence that reaches our desk. Yesterday it was a pamphlet from the Intercollegiate League for Industries, which filled naturally with replies to, and handpapers of Heura's Red campaign.
Today it is more literature on the peace poll from the Associated College Editors and the Literary Digest. They are planning to extend the poll to newspaper editors, bankers, educators, and legislators, asking the same questions that were asked of college students.
How much support, publicity, or denouncement should we give to these things? If you ignore them we stand open to accusations of indifference. If we publicize you bring down torrents of abuse from conservatives if we give sympathy to Socialists, and condemnations of unfairness from the Socialists if we refuse to agree with them. If we think the peace poll is pointless, we must stand ready to be 'condemned as a militarist.'
At any rate, we like to get the literature. Besides making us feel important, it gives us lots of good ideas for the tuff to work on.
BEST NEWS THIS WEEK
In our perusal of the daily papers we are always alert for items that add to the general cheer of the day. We discovered yesterday that Admiral Byrd is coming back from the South Pole. We are glad that the admiral is coming back to the comparative safety and comfort of civilization. We shall be somewhat interested in the magazine articles by members of his expedition. But most of all we shall be glad to be rid of a radio program that we could not hear even though we were interested in it.
It is not pleasant to take orders from ficeurs, to stand at attention, and to lean a rifle. Whatever pump and cerenony there is to parading around in uniforms is dwarfed by the ache of irred feet.
Compulsory military training will continue at Kansas State, decided the legislature, and pacifist will continue to hawel. It has always struck us that it is better to fight alone than to militarily is the quickest way in the world to disguise a young man with war and its trappings. Anyone who has marched two hours in a hot sun or against a biting winter wind with a wristband knows that war is not all heroes.
VICTORY FOR MILITARISTS
Just before the close of every semester there is an epidemic of book stealing. Students who have gone the whole term leaving their texts lying on the floor and in their warts about their business are sent to ind them missing someday.
THE BOOK THIEVES
There is no doubt that a few persons on the campus make a regular "racket"
OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
The finance ten of the University Women's Club will be held at Myera hall on Tuesday afternoon at 3 o'clock.
Notices due at Chancellor's office at 3 p.m., preceding regular publication days
and 11.30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday lunches.
A. S.M.E. will meet this evening at 7:30 o'clock in 210 Marvin Hall. Prof. R. W. Holey, of the psychology department, will speak on "How Business Design Impacts Human Behavior."
Vol. XXXII Thursday, February, 7, 1935 No. 88
on Friday afternoon to Mrs. J. J. WHEELER, Corresponding Secretary.
AS M.F.
Report at 6.20 and 6.40 for basketball games on Feb. 9 and 11.
HERBERT G. ALLPHIN.
Checks for work done during January will be available at the CSEP office Thursday and Friday afternoons from 1.30 to 5.00 o'clock.
CSEP CHECKS:
BASKETBALL STILEMEN AND USHERS:
EL ATENEO:
Habra una session ordinaria de el Ateneo el jueves 7 de Febrero a las cuatro
moda de la tarde en la sala 131, el edificio de administración.
UNION OPERATING COMMITTEE:
The banquet for the Union Operating Committee originally scheduled for Thursday, Feb. 7, has been postponed until Thursday, Feb. 14, at 6:30 in the Union cafeteria.
NEWMAN CLUB:
y mejecito de la actividad en CARLOS ALBERTO PATTERSON, Presidente.
UNION OPERATING COMMITTEE.
The Newman Club will hold its first meeting of the semester this evening at 8 o'clock in the basement of St. John's Church. All Catholic men are invited to attend. T. C. LAWRENCE, Secretary.
When other boys were playing 'round
And doing aerobatics
BILL COCHRANE, Secretary.
UNIVERSITY WOMEN'S CLUB TEA.
The finance tea of the University Women's Club will be held at Myers Hah
Y. W.C.A.:
An important meeting of the Y.M.C.A. Cabinet will be held at 4:30 this afternoon in room 10 of the Memorial Union building.
There will be a meeting of the social and economic discussion group a Henley house, Friday at 4:30. BEULAH HJELM. ANAKATON.
How about having a Varsity Friday night? After missing several of them, I feel the need for some strenuous exercise.
H. E. MILLER, Secretary.
He never missed a day of school Nor was he ever late;
Henley house, fray at 4:00.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION
Editor Daily Kansan:
The Christian Science Organization will have a meeting this afternoon at 4:30 in Room D. Myers hall.
MAURINE JESSEE, Treasurer. NOTE:
out of stealing books and selling them. Naturally, the best way to avoid this is not to leave your books lying around unwatched. But in case you do have a book stolen, notify the Exchange and the book stores immediately, giving a full description of the volume. We are covered in this manner. You not only get your book back, but you aid in breaking up this malpractice.
He'd read and write with all his might
He'd work to heat the band.
The regular mid-week dance will be held this evening at 7 o'clock in the Memorial Union ballroom. All students must present their identification and pass to the DJ.
Ballad of Marmaduke O'Tato
MRS. J. J. WHEELER, Corresponding Secretary. X.M.C.A. CABINET.
A model of manly manhood Was Marmaduke O'Tate; He had ambition to become A college erudite.
Of all the other little boys, The first he'd always rate.
At last arrived for Marmaduke The day to enter college;
His A-B-C, when but a tot,
He know from A to Z;
He took his trunk and packed his books And went in quest of knowledge.
He could add, divide, subtract,
When he was only three.
At last there came the hoped-for day;
Our hero was elated!
They gave him his diploma.
And he was graduated.
Nor was he ever late; Of all the other little boys
When other boys were playing games
He sat with in pen in hand;
I think it would also be just ducky if Mr. Cochrane would sponsor some dancing contests. Let the containing couplesstruit their stuff before the crowd and be judged by the crowd. The parents will be Varsity, jiggers at another, and walters at another. Of course, no University student know how to walk, but you
He sat with pencil in his hand. And figured out quadraties.
WILFRED McCLAIN, Vice-President.
When other 'studes' were getting stewed
and stirring their "layers."
His teachers spoke of him with awe.
Though they could not understand,
Here too our hero, fair and young
Was always at the top;
He never went to see a show,
N dance nor nurn or bom noun.
Now Marmaduke is dressed in white-
An interne, you'd assume.
It's your mistake, dear reader—
He manipulates a broom!
For Marmaduke was never wrong—
He never made a blunder.
Campus Opinion
He sat with finger at his brow And exercised his brains.
He manipulates a broom.
—Samuel Sass.
—Samuel Sass.
might invite some of the older faculty members. R.F.
GRANADA
Note Change in Prices for DAVID COPPERFIELD
Producers Demand 25c 'til 7, then 35c
TODAY
The World's
Most Beautiful
Love Story!
CHAS. DICKENS'
DAVID
COPPERFIELD
With M-G-M Star Cast of 65 By director of "Little Women"
SATURDAY ENDS
"BIOGRAPHY OF A BACHELOR GIRL"
Sunday
Robt. Montgomery
Ann Harding
Always a Bargain Show
PATEE 10c - 15c
MYRNA LOY
MAX BAER
PRIMO CARNERA
JACK DEMPSEY
NOW! ENDS FRIDAY
"The Prize Fighter and the Lady"
See the battle of the century with Myrna Loy as the love interest. Max and Myrna are great in the clinics.
You'll get a terrible wallop from this different love story.
It Has Everything
Give the girl friend a break. She will go for this he-man romance in a big way.
Saguaro cactus
SACRAMENTO CITY
The Telephone "can take it!"
And it is. For Western Electric—manufacturing unit of the Bell System—sees to it that telephones, switchboards and cable are prepared for life anywhere. Through long experience and rigorous testing, telephone engineers have learned how to
Your telephone must work 24 hours a day. It must be immune to icy blasts of the frozen north—dry burning heat of the desert—heavy, humid atmosphere of swamp lands.
make apparatus which is not adversely affected by the whims of climate.
Through pioneering and producing such improved apparatus,Western Electric contributes to the year round reliability of your Bell Telephone service.
Why not telephone from one flight each week? Bargain rates offer 8.00 PM. We've seen their choices if your tickets are up.
BELL TELEPHONE
UNION FOUNTAIN
BANQUET DE CENTRO DE ESTUDIO
INFORMATIVO DE LAS CIUDADES
ALBUFEZ, MAYORA DE LA COMUNIDAD
DE ALBUFEZ
10c
SYSTEM
Delicious
Southern Style Chili
Learn to Dance----
Special Attention Given
TOMMY HILFIGER
Special Attention Given Beginners
Advanced Dancers-Private Lennons
NOW for the SPRING PARTIES
MARION RICE
DANCE STUDIO
N. Y. Cleaners Bldg., $ 924 \frac{1}{2} $ Mass
Don't Abuse Them.
Drop in and let's repair your shoes while you wait.
Perhaps Your Soles Do Have a Soul.
Don't Abuse Them.
Electric Shoe Shop
1017 Mass. W.E.Whestone, Prop. Phone 686
THE KANSAS CITY STAR
Subscribe for
PHONE
Headquarters Rickerd-Stowits
H. L. Nevin Distributor
17
13 papers - 15c per week
UNIVERSITY SUPPLIES
Note Books
Zipper Books
Note Book Fillers
Slide Rules
Fountain Pens
Typewriters
Drawing Paper
Medical Equipment
Artists Supplies
Drawing Instruments
Buy your paper by the pound at
CARTER'S STATIONERY
Opposite the New GRANADA Theatre
1025 Mass.
Phone 1051
4
THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 7. 1935
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Hill Society
Attend Kansas City Concert
A large group from Lawrence were in Kansas City Tueady night to hear the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra with Nathan Milstein, violinist, as soloist. Among those who made the trip were: Prof. and Mrs. C. A. Preyer, Prof. and Mrs. Karl Kuersteiner, Prof. Waldemar Gelcht, Miss Agnes Husband, Miss Irene Peabody, Miss Ruth Oreutt, Prof. Freore Moreau, Dean and D. M. Sawthout, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Houston, Wanda Harper, Corinne Dick, fa34; Joseph Dey, c'enc'; Frances Stanley, fa'uncl; Louis Coghil, Elizabeth Hill, George Troville, fa34; Mildred Cook, gr; and Margaret Love, fa'uncl.
Finance Tea
The University Women's Club will entertain with a "finance ten" at Myers Bank on Monday, April 18.
☆ ☆ ☆
The program will include the play "White Ewe" by George Ade under the direction of Mrs. A. J. Mix, and a group of piano numbers by Mrs. G. W. Bradshaw, Mrs. F. A. Russell is chairman of Mrs. R. W. Carr has Twente in charge of the decorations; Mrs. C. M. Baker of refreshments, and Mrs. R. M. Davis of the tea table.
The table decorations are sweet peas snappdragons, and yellow candles. The guests were Mr. M., Mrs. George March Prof. and Ms. E. C. Buchler, Prof. and J. D. Stranathan, Capt. and Mrs. F. Kocham, and Lieut. and Mrs. W. Brady.
☆ ☆ . ☆
Westminster hall announces the engagement of Henrietta Bates, fa'35, to Herman Schuster of Salina.
Dr. O. O. Stoland and his daughter Ruth, c36, left this morning for a few days visit in Sioux City, Iowa.
Dorothy Foster, 34, who has been a guest at the Kappa Alpha Theta house for the past few days, returned to her home in Bartlesville, Okaid, yesterday.
Delta Chi announces the pledging of Robert Harriman of Kansas City, Mo.; Roy Crawford of Topeka; and William McClure of Kansas City, Kan.
The bridge group of the K.U. Dames will meet at the home of Mrs. Marshall Mayberry, 1735 Massachusetts street, this afternoon at 2:30 o'clock.
Arthur Inman of Joplin, Mo. is a guest at the Kappa Sigma bourse.
Florisbach Lebrecht, c36, has left for a two-weeks trip to New Orleans and Old Mexico.
Miss Marjorie Harbaugh of Wellington was a dinner guest at the Gamma Phi Beta house Tuesday night.
Phi Gamma Delta announces the pledging of C. L. Berringer of Trenton,
☆ ☆ ☆
Col. and Mrs. W. C. Koenig entertained with a buffet supper last evening at their home.
Attends Kansas City Meeting
Attends Kansas City Meeting Mrs. Charlotte Walker, secretary of the Y.W.C.A., was in Kansas City yoyoing at the Cure and Cure of War."
CAST OF "DAVID COPPERFIELD"
Brilliance of more than four hundred years and more of theatrical distinction is focused in one picture, "David Copperfield," now showing at the Granada
The sixty-five stars and featured players who have major roles represent more than four centuries of continuous success on the stage and screen.
W. C. Fleds, who plays the part of the immortal Wilkins Micawber, Esq., "always expecting something to turn up," has been a headliner in vaudeville and a star on the legitimate stage at the screen for more than forty years.
Lionel Barrymore, playing grizzled old Dan Peggist is a product of generations of distinguished theatrical folk. His work is paralleled in motion picture history is:
Micewber W. C. Fields
Dan Peggoty Lionel Barrymore
Dorn Maurice Mauney
Madge Evans
Aunt Betsey Edna May Oliver
Mr.Wickley Lewis Stone
David, the firm Franklin Lawton
Child
Fredie Bartholomew
Mrs. Copperhead Elizbeth Allan
Uriah Heep
Mr. Murdstone Basil Rathbone
Cuckett Elsa Lancaster
Joseph Jewett Nurse Peggy Jessica
Mr. Dick Lenox Pawle
Violet Kimble-Cooper
Mrs. Gummidge Una O'Connor
Ham John Buckler
Hurricane Willie
Limiter Ivan Simpson
Barkis Herbert Mundin
Little Em'ly, the Child
Agnes, the child
Fay Chaldecott
Marilyn Knowlesn
Little Emily' by the
Florine McKinney
Dr. Chillip
Harry Boresew
Michael Koehler
The Vicar
Hugh Walpole
To Complete Tournament
Group Winners in Women's Basketball Contest to Meet in Finals
The basketball tournament is to be completed next week. It is now up to the semifinals, each group having found a winner.
In group 1 it is Corbin hall; group 2, Sigma Kappa; group 3, Pi Beta Fhi; group 4, I.W. W.
The schedule for completing the tournament is as follows:
Tuesday, Feb. 12
Sigma Kappa vs. Pi Beta Phi.
Thursday, Feb. 14
Corbin hall vs. the winner of the Sigma Kappa-Pi Beta Phi game.
Tuesday, Feb. 19
I. W.W. vs. the winner of the organized groups.
Sound Films to Be Shown
Scientific Pictures to Be Used at Teachers Meeting
In connection with a meeting of the Kansas Association of Physical Science Teachers to be held in Topaek on Saturday, Feb. 9, there will be a showing of sound films in the auditorium of the Topka high school, at 130 p.m. The films are to be furnished by the Bureau of Visual Instruction at the University and by the University of Chicago Press.
The titles of the films, which are smaller than the standard theater size, are "The Molecular Theory of Matter," "Energy and Its Transformation," "Sound Waves and Their Source," "Sound Waves and Accoutries," and "The Strict Chair."
A cordial invitation is extended to the public to attend this presentation of motion pictures.
To Broadcast College News
WIBW, the Capper publication broadcasting station in Topeka, is innovating a broadcast of college news at 10 p.m. tonight. Kansas, Washburn, and Kansas State news will be given on this weekly program.
Reads Paper Before Authors
Once Conservative, Now Liberal
Reads Paper Before Authors
Bernice White Scott, f19, read 19 articles as medicalians, and Musical Organizations in Kansas" at the annual meeting of the
Pediment of new supreme court building.
Pediment of new supreme court building.
EQUAL JUSTICE UNDER LAW
Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes.
Kansas Authors' Club in Topeka, Jan. 30. In connection with her talk she presented a program of several compositions by several musicians.
Eyes of the nation have turned once more toward the supreme court, now deliberating the constitutionality if many laws affecting the NRA, and currently, the validity of the congressional act abrogating the gold clauses. At its head is Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes, whose liberal views is counted upon to give the Roosevelt measures a favorable nod.
EDUCATION FACULTY TO MEET IN TOPEKA FEBRUARY 8 AND 9
A meeting of the council of administration of the Kansas State Teachers Association will be held in Topeka, Feb. 8.
and 9. All the members of the faculty of the School of Education will attend. The University will have a display in the department of history of the Topeka High School in connection with the meeting.
The speakers from the University are Dr. Raymond Schweiger, Miss Rosemary Ketcham, Dr.H.P.Cady,and Miss Ruth Hoover.
Gold Decision Will Cause Action by U.S. Congress
'gold of the present weight and fineness' it would be impossible to get hold of any gold'.
Gold Not Used in Business
(Continued from Page 1)
Gold Not OK
Gold, as Professor Howey explained, has not been used in business transactions for many years and the idea of it causing a furore is a carry-over of another period.
"It seems impossible that the bond holders would be allowed to collect more than face value of their bonds in terms of legal tender. If Congress went back to the old dollar there would probably be a slight deflation within the country that will certainly affect exchange and we have left. But they won't decide that way, as it would discourage exports, "he asserted.
"Local people, those who hold bonds with the gold clause in them, will be affected," Professor Hewey said. "It would affect everybody to a certain degree in that it would retard recovery. Whichever way the Supreme court decides it will be good to have it over with and out of the way."
Stock Will Probably Rise
Professor Howey declared that in any event, whether the decision poses one way or the other, that price of stocks may be higher than the cost to maintain that congress will take action to
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protect the debtor and that it will work out eventually all right.
The Supreme Court will make an announcement as to their decision either Feb. 11 or 18.
ANDERSON'S ORGAN PROGRAM
POSTPONED TO LATER DATE
The organ veepers program scheduled to be given by Prof. Laurel Everettite Anderson Sunday afternoon has been postponed to a later date because of the basketball games on Saturday and Monday evenings.
The program planned by Mr. Anderson was an all-Bach program commemorating the 250th anniversary of the program will be given in the future.
SPECIAL For Today
Swiss Steak
Liver and Bacon
Chicken and Dumpling
Pecan Pie
at the
CAFETERIA
TO RELIEVE
FATIGUE...
TOBACCO EXPERTS
ALL SAY:
made from
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TOBACCO EXPERTS ALL SAY:
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WITH A CAMEL!
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JOIN THE NEW
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Copyright, 1935
B. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company
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THURSDAY
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8:00 P.M. C.S.T.
1:50 P.M. M.S.T.
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OVER COAST-TO-COAST WABC-COLUMBIA NETWORK
R
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CAMEL'S COSTLIER TOBACCOS
NEVER GET ON YOUR NERVES!
PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 7. 1935
KANSAS TO COLLAPSE SATURDAY, SAYS ALLEN
Conference Lead Will Be at Stake Here on Saturday
Iowa State, Fresh Fron Victory Over Oklahoma, to Meet Leading Jayhawkers
The destruction of the Jayhawker basketball squad is to take place Saturday night in the University Auditorium as the Iowa State quintet will down the Kansans by 10 points, according to an opinion expressed yesterday by Dr. Forrest C. Allen, of the Kansas Abugglig exhibition of court play by the Allenmen against Washburn in Topeka on Tuesday night.
The Cyclones that come to deal the death blow are the ones that have already won 4 out of 5 games, the one loss being to Nebraska by 1 point. Monday they dropped Oklahoma from a first place tie position to third place, while they took charge of second place. If Coach McNamara wins the Super Bowl will march into first place and reduce Kansas to a tie with the Sooners for second.
Attempt to Bolster Up Unworthies
The depressed Dr. Allen is trying to bolster up his Kansas unworthies in strenuous work-outs yesterday and today, but he feels certain that the lack of spark and interest in his 1935 crew will deprive him of another Big Sig title. "I am not satisfied with any of the boy workouts," he said. "And they are playing either offense or defense, and most of all, I do not like their mental attitude."
"You cannot have a winning ball team without a natural aggressiveness, and the Jayhawkers this year lack that quality which has been instrumental in the past championship years," feels Dr. Allen. One reason, he explains, is the relative inexperience of teams compared to the seasoned veterans on the other title-seeking squads. Oklahoma, for instance, has four senior regulars.
New Play to Be Worked Out
Kansas will attempt to workout some new combinations and plays in an effort to secure their present leadership. Al Wlhausen is being seasoned for the center position, to relieve Wells from the grind of 40 minutes a game. A ball handler, and figures in quite a ball handler, and figures in quite a successful Jayhawk plays.
High scorers for Iowa State include Waldo Wegner, 6 foot 4 inch center, and Jack Cowan, forward, both lettermen. Wegner has scored 12 points in each of the last three games he has participated in, with six goals against Kansas State and five goals and a pair of free throws against Missouri and Oklahoma. Cowan built half of his total in his first two games.
Nebraska To Play Indiana
Nebraska '05 Peter Indiana
The Nebraska athletics will meet the University of Indiana in Indianapolis in 1936 and 1937, according to an announcement made by the University of Nebraska athletic department. Dana X. Bible, athletic director, made the arrangements with Coach Bo McMillan, head coach at Kansas State College.
K.U.-AMES, SATURDAY NITE
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Glenn Named Second Outstanding Athlete At Millrose Games
Glenn Cunningham, former Kansas miler, was given second place in a vote by sports writers to determine the outstanding athlete of the Mellrose track and field games in Madison Square Garden Saturday night.
Charles Hornbostel was unanimously chosen for first place. The former co-captain of the Indiana University track and field new world record in the 600-run race.
Third place went to Keith Brown who won the pole vault with a jump of 14.4m.
All three will receive special prizes and have their names engraved on the Rodman Wanamaker International Trophy.
Hargiss Names Entries In Track Meet Friday
Kansas Will Meet Aggies in First Indoor Meet of Season
Jayhawk track fans will be given a glimpse of this year's track team Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Although the meet, which will find Kansas facing Kansas State, is primarily for the purpose of giving the new material a practical workout it will also serve to shatt the longing of rabid track fans.
Following is a tentative list of the Kansas entries with the events in the order they will be run, according to Coeil Bill Hargiss:
60-Yard Dash—Trotter, Pitts, MacCaskill
Mile Run—Coulter Cunningham, Fitzgibbons, Gulse
gibbons, Guise
60-Yard Hard Hurdies — Pitts, Reed,
138
440-Yard. Dash—MacCaskill, McNown,
Koy.
60-Yard Low Hurdles-Pitts, Reed, No2
-2-Mile Run-Bekeart, Thorpe, Carpenter
880-Yard Dash--Shroeder, Graves
Mile Relay--McCaskill, McNown, Fitz
gibbons, Shroeder, Graves
Pole, Kauf-Ardrey
High Jump—Shannon, Neal
Bot Put—Dees, Kanatzer
Broad Jump—Pitts, Neal
Champion Billiard Player To Give Exhibition Today
Charles Peterson Will Display Fancy Shots at Union at 3:30
Charles C. Peterson, national billiards authority and fancy shot champion, will lecture and give an exhibition before the students of the University this afternoon in the recreation room of the Memorial Union building at 3:30.
Peterson is a student of the game. The efficiency he has reached and the confidence he has in his ability is expresse in his statement, "Show me a shot I can make."
CHARLES C. PETERSON
The exhibition this afternoon is one of 50 that Peterson is making on his tour under the sponsorship of the National Association of College Universities, for the purpose of starting the students correctly in the fundamentals of billiards.
Doing the unusual and the difficult is only part of Peterson's work. With a pilot, newspapermasters and newsreel photographers in attendance he played an excellent game of billiards in an airplane doing 125 miles per hour. Also he balanced one billiard ball on top at this speed, as well as making 100 points in 47 games. The skill shown in the table when the skirt was tilted at a 32 degree angle.
There will be no admission charge a this afternoon's exhibition.
To Plan Intramural Program
The Women's Intramural Board will hold a meeting this afternoon at 4:30 to plan a program for next semester
To Plan Intramural Program
The basketball free throw, the ping pong tournament and the swimming meets will be decided upon.
The Kansas swimming team has its first meet of the season next Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. with Kansas State at Manhattan.
First Meet of Season to Be at Manhattan Tuesday
Swimmers to Meet Aggies
The Jayhawkers face a severe handicap in having no divers, which makes necessary a forfeit in this event. Although Kansas defeated the Aggies twice last year in dual meets Coach Alphin is doubtful of a win this time. Kansas State has a strong team with Creed, dash man, especially good.
"I don't know exactly what I have. I'll know better after I see the boys perform at that meet." Coach Alphin prospects for a good team.
The swimming mentor was quite enthused over the fact that all the men on the squad made their grades and are eligible. He declared that it was the first time this had happened in as long as he could remember.
Milers Meet in Baxter Race
Cunningham, Bonthron, and Venkate to Feature Event
Glenn Cunningham, Bill Bonthron, Gene Venzel, the three leading mile runners in the nation, will meet in the Baxter mile, feature of the annual New York A.C. meet at Madison Square Garden, Feb 16.
Last year in the Baxter mile, the first meeting of Cunningham and Bonton, the latter won by inches. They have now met six times with honors even.
The Kansas miler's entry was received yesterday.
These three runners in the past three years have shared honors in the Baxter mile. Of the three, Venkze, who chased Cunningham to a new record in the Wanamaker mile last Saturday, has the best time. In 1932 he ran his greatest race climbing off the mile in 4:10, then an indoor record. Cunningham was the winner in 1933 in 4:14.3. Last year Bonnont won in 4:14.
SPORT SHOTS
Charley Hornbostell, the iron man of middle distance runners, has become the fair haired lad with the eastern track followers by his noble performances at the Milrose games in Goatam Saturday night. New York sport writers, after a few days of reflection, have decided that Gene Venkze deserves as much credit for running a nice second against Cunningham in the Wannamaker mile as the former Jay-Arnold's second in new meet record time. That's the situation in a nutshell, and the eastern scribes now point out the bespectacled Hoosier sensation as the main drawing card of the indoor track season.
Valuable points will be lost to a good cause when Bill Hargis' track team opens its indoor season Friday afternoon with a practice meet against Kansas State in the indoor training quarries under Memorial Stadium. Three sure point winners are quite busy in the current campaign for Big Six basketball honors and won't be available until after the court schedule is concluded. Gordon Gray and Ray Nobile, both flirt with the 13 foot mark in them.
pole vault, and Noble holds the national interscholastic vault record at slightly over 13 feet, 4 inches. Al Wellhausen cleared 6 feet with ease in the high jump last spring.
Scholastic deficiency struck a blow at Jayhawker tennis prospect also. J. C. Gross, a junior from Fort Scott, who has been counted on by Art Voss, tennis captain and coach, to fill the No. 4 position on the varsity this spring, failed to make the grades and has left school. This leaves Voss, who holds the Big Six singles title, Kenneth Kell, and Delmar Curry, all letterman from Topka with a second place. The fourth position on the squid will be wide open, and a lively battle is expected among several likely candidates. Dual meets with Kansas State, Washburn College, and possibly some other schools will be scheduled for the racketeters this spring in addition to the Big Six tournament.
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Chesterfield
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On the
SUNDAY WEDNESDAY SATURDAY
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KOSTELANET ORCHESTRA AND CHORUS
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$ \textcircled{1} $ 1935, LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO Co.
Just what is meant by cross-blending tobaccos . . . and how does it make a cigarette milder and taste better.
Well, in blending you take two or more tobaccos and mix them together-a rather simple process. But cross-blending goes a step further . . .
IN making Chesterfields we take Bright tobacco from Virginia, the Carolinas, Georgia and Florida. We take Burley tobacco from Kentucky and Tennessee, and tobacco from Southern Maryland.
Then in addition to these homegrown tobaccos we take tobacco grown in Turkey and Greece.
We balance these mild, ripe homegrown tobaccos with the right amounts and the right kinds of
aromatic Turkish.
Then, instead of just mixing the tobaccos together, we blend and cross-blend them so that all the different flavors go together into one full flavor—the Chesterfield taste that so many smokers like.
Cross-blending tobacco as it
Cross-blending tobacco as it is done in Chesterfields gives the cigarette a pleasing taste and aroma—they're mild and yet They Satisfy.
11
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NUMBER 89
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXII
for
--production is far below par now. The second aim is to utilize synthetic products inofar as possible as substi-
tes for those they cannot create them-
selves. Hitler contemplates using a huge scale barter system to obtain these materials from other countries.
on the SHIN
Bv JOE HOLLOWAY, c'35
On how to call Barbie. . . Maybe Dean has an ext. . . . What price Sauterne. . . Shearer may sue Glenn.
We have heard for years—yes for years and years—about how hard artists, writers, etc. are to approach, have conference with and all that. Some of the Hollywood stars haven't their phone numbers in the book you know—just plain hard to get to. To get to the point, we've found just such a case here on our own dear campus—the she's an artist too, wrote the Musical Comedie in fact. Barbie Bramwell has her own private phone number in the student directory and anyone wishing to call the needs must be a stutterer from way back. The number: 4N4NN4M44295. To say the least, that's a neat little discourager.
Gene Lloyd reports that Peggy Wilcox is just a plain old meadly because she asked those mongots in charge of the musical comedy troubles to please have the boys get off of the stage while she brought her mayday-maybe she was bragging though.
W'd hate to have Marie Forbes think that we're really concentration an attack on her but this is too good to keep back. Wednesday night La Forbes was walking down Indiana street from the mid-week with Dean "third-story" Nesmith Now we'll admit that when you give the matter a little thought between the Them Hotel and between the Cottage and the Phi Pi house but that the two were walking toward the Phi Si house anyway. Suddenly Forbes turned to Dean and exclaimed, "Oh Dean, I did the illest thing, I left my toothbrush at home!"
These son and daughter stories of studying every night while away at the U certainly receive a set-back at the first of every semester. For every ten students in the library during final week you'll have an awful time finding
We were overjoyed to perceive last night that perhaps collegiate drinkers are getting away from the nail driven in a bottle of Pale type of imbibing. The proof was just a shade too up-town for us and bore a close look someone trying to look at a little but nevertheless looked pretty good to look in question sitting in the Cottage drinking a glass of Saatner—even if he was using a cocktail glass.
Saw a funny sight yesterday morning. A little pup was running about shivering in the ice weather and we tried to get him into the building to get warmed a little. He was a trifle frightened and wouldn't come up the steps but sat down at the bottom and waggled his tail—he was just about half an inch on the ground, not sitting down and not standing up, striking a happy medium between tiring his legs and freezing his-well.
We're afraid that Shearer's boy friend at Arizona School TII Go Straight from Now On is a bit fickle—he's written and asked for a picture of Glen Con.
We were glad to see in yesterday's Kansan that Julia Markham was one of the group nominated to receive the Sigma Delta Chi award for journalistic scholarship—but just as a little inside do we want to tell you that it wasn't because of those type-written stories she writes in the newsroom and that start out with "Dear Dean" that got her the nomination.
Enrollment Changes Not Assessed
Miss Vesta Lear, assistant to the Dean of the College, stated that juniors and seniors who enrolled early need not obtain their original enrollment cards at the College office, but can go directly to the business office to pay their fees. All changes of enrollment, as far as possible, should be made Saturday morning between 9:30 and 11:30 in Robinson gymnasium. No fees for changes will be assessed until after Feb. 15.
Band to Wichita
The Alumni Club of Wichita is planning a series of concerts by the University Band at the high schools and a free band concert at the Forum, in Wichita. The alumni club has offered to bear all the expenses for the band as is in the alumni alumni and friends are invited to attend the big gathering at the Forum, and the alumni organization hopes to have several University officials present.
Frazier Completes One Diarama to Be Placed in Museum
Decorations for Interior
of Dyche Will Cost
Nearly $47.000
When Done
One of a group of diaramas which will leap prehistoric animals in their natural settings, has been completed by "Poco" Frazier, former middle distance runner and graduate of the University in 1929. The diaramas were made possible through an anonymous gift of $1500 to the University.
The diaramas, which will be placed in the basement of Dyche Museum, are figures of animals moulded from clay-like rock, and painted in natural colors in appropriate settings and set behind them. The animals are painting the backgrounds for the scenes.
Decorations for the interior will amount to about $74,000. It is hoped that the State legislature will appropriate enough money at this session to complete the building according to the original plans.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8. 1935
One of the diaramas, which has been completed but not yet on exhibition, represents a sabor tooth tiger crouched on an overhanging ledge of rock, ready to spring upon a group of miniature camels below. The animals are one small size. The complete work is 7 feet long and three and one-half feet high.
Several new plans including a new device used in the department of entomology to keep the light out of the ashes will be installed to protect the larvares. Dr. H. B. Hungerford, head f the department of entomology, desi this curial arrangement after rearning from an art museum in London.
Approximately fifty drawings of animals which thrived in Kansas during the early historic period have been completed by artists working under the
The plans are being carried forward so that the diaramas and pictures may be placed in the museum when it is entirely renovated. The curators plan to have the building indirectly lightened so that there will be no shadows to destroy the effect of the settings. Regardless of the hour of the day the museum is visited, the exhibits will appear constantly in the same light.
CSEP Grades Are Checked
More Than 50 Fail To Maintain Govern ment Average
Of the 429 students employed last semester through the CSEP, 50 or 69 failed to make the required grade average for re-employment this semester, according to Raymond Nichols of whom 87 attended the University last semester, were available to fill the vacancies left by those students who failed to meet scholastic requirements. Formerly the required average was a bit lower, but an average of 63.1% was needed, the requirement for the past semester.
As the result of a new ruling from CSEP national headquarters, no routine work may be done by these student workers. This will stop the employment of CSEP workers to do typing, rake leaves or repair laboratory equipment. Through the use of this help, the library has been able to stay open until 10 o'clock. It is believed that the new ruling may prevent this use of CSEP workers though official word has not been received from headquarters yet.
The Memorial hospital cafeteria has been forced to raise the price of its plate dinners from 25 to 29 cents and from 30 to 24 cents owing to the mounting food
CAFETERIA FORCED TO RAISE PRICE OF DINNERS 4 CENTS
CSEP students on the co-operative meal plan are also affected by this change. They will now pay $2.75 instead of $2.50 for 17 meals. So far this semester, 68 students have taken advantage of the co-operative meal plan. This number is expected to become much larger as the term gets under way. Last semester 140 students took part in this plan.
NEXT ISSUE SUNDAY
The next issue of the University Daily Kansan will come out Sunday morning. The paper will contain the results of the Kansas-Iowa State, Kansas State-Missouri State and Iowa State basketball games, and the Baxter Mile race in which Glenn Cunningham is entered.
German Living Standard Decreasing, Says Terrell
The United States is heading toward an economic uph贱 similar to that in Germany now, Mr. Harry Turtel, secretary of the National Peace Organization, told a class in economies yesterday. He spoke in the place of Prof. John Lee, who was unable to meet the class. "America can not meet to spend money lavishly on projects which are not self-liquidating," he said.
Mr. Terrrell has recently spent five months in Germany, and the subject of his discussion was "The Economies of Hitler." Germany has endured 15 years of depression, and Hitler, in his two years in power, is likely to be able to do so. Mr. Terrrell believes it will result in a steadily decreasing standard of living.
The Reichfuchscher's recovery program comprises three main objectives, Mr. Terrell said. The first is to meet the problem of self-sufficiency by establishing a favorable trade balance with other countries and to estimate carefully the needed production in every line of industry and to force adher-
MSC Completes Stunt Night Plans for March 8, Says Curry
Intramural Carnival Promises Good Program
Possibly the biggest 25 cents' worth of entertainment ever furnished the students here can be had Friday night Mar. 8, the date set for the Intramural Carnival and Stunt Night, at the Auitorium and the Memorial Union build. Dolmar Curry, c36, general manager, the carnival, announced yesterday.
For the admission the student will be furnished for a 24-page illustrated program, will be admitted to the intramural contests and stunts at the Auditorium, and later in the evening, to the intramural舞 dance at Memorial Union ballroom.
The tournaments, consisting of the finals of the intramural boxing, fencing, wrestling, and basketball contests, will be diversified with five-to-ten-minute stunts furnished by various organizations on the hill, and will be -inclued with the presentation of trophies and sweaters to the winners and to the individual winner of the 1933-34 intramural contests. John Morrison, b'35.
It is probable that the German Band, so highly pleasing to basketball crowds earlier in the season, will be on hand to furnish color to the contests.
Invitations have been sent to representatives of the intramural departments of the various schools in the Big Six, Kansas Conference, Missouri Valley Conference, and non-conference schools in the Missouri Valley. It is hoped that intramural carnivals will be offered as a yearly feature in other schools.
The carnival is being sponsored by the Men's Student Council in connection with the intramural department under the president of physical education,
Spring enrolment in the department of bacteriology is the largest in its history. Prof. N. P. Sherwood, head of the department, said yesterday.
ENROLLMENT IN BACTERIOLOGY LARGER THAN IN PAST YEARS
Enrollment totaled 237 students, 65 more than last spring and 27 more than the number who took courses in bacteriology in 1933.
Increased interest in the science was believed caused by the unlimited opportunity offered in that field at the present time as contrasted with the limited chances of obtaining recognition in other occupations.
Grades To Be Issued Feb. 11-17
Grades will not be given out at any of the offices until Feb. 11. At that time the grades will be issued in the following manner: Feb. 11, A to G, Feb. 12, H to M, Feb. 13, N to S, Feb. 14, T to Z. On Feb. 16 and 17 grades will be issued to those students who were unable to come at the scheduled time.
The psychological examination for all new students, except graduate students, will be held today. Feb. 8. The examination starts promptly at 2:30 p.m. and later comes cannot be admitted. Registration and enrollment of all new students is contingent upon this examination.
Psychological Exams Today
Grades To Be Issued Feb. 11-17
Indoor Track Meet Tomorrow
Indoor Track Meet Tomorrow
The indoor track team will meet Kansas State tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock under the east stadium. This is a revival of the pre-season meet. There will be a program of 12 events.
The third is to institute a program of reclamation of waste products and salvage which will materially lessen the impact of this process, even if the warping mode of whale oil.
Hilter maintains himself in power by an absolute dictatorship over every avenue of public intelligence and by a system of surptuary rule which controls all thought and action in Germany. Mr. Terryell asserted. Every group and class in Germany felt that their salvation lay in the hands of the dictator. He believes that a Messiah complex has been built up around the man.
Mr. Terrell disapproved of the restrictions placed before those seeking an education. Only a very limited number of men are allowed to enter universities and practically all women are required to attend secondary school in order to keep them out of competition with heads of families.
M. Terrell is in the middle west to help promote a conference at Baldwin of students from Missouri, Kansas and Oklahoma, interested in the whole field of international relations. E. R. Wilson of the Friends Service Committee, Paul Harris of the Youth Movement for World Recovery, and John Ise of the University faculty will be among those attending the conference.
Tryouts to Be Held Today
Chorus Selected For Musical Comedy "Hold That Line"
Trotts for speaking parts in the W.S.G.A. musical comedy will be held today in the ballroom of the Memorial Union building starting at 3 o'clock sharp. Students who did not try out for singing parts or specialties last Wednesday are asked to try out today, and are requested to bring their own music.
The following girls have been selected for the chorus: Bette Wasson, c'38, Mary Fressen Martin, c'unel, Betty Ruth Smith, fa 'uncl, Betty Eidson, c'38, Catherine Conklin, c'unel, Lucille Borthen, c'38, Emily Vroman, c'unel, Martha Nuzman, c'unel, Olive Adkrele Brundel, c'unel, Jan Carrington, c'88, Catherine Dunkel, c'88, Jane Camplett, c'unel, Anne Forneman, c'unel, Valeska Powell, fa 38, and Annette Lawrence c'37.
Rehearsals for the chorus start today and all of the above mentioned girls are to bring practice costumes to the ballroom at 3 o'clock.
FORMER HEAD COACH HERE
FORMER HEAD OF
VISITS UNIVERSITY FRIEND
George "Potys" Clark, head football coach at the University from 1921 to 1925, was in Lawrence yesterday visiting friends. Clark, present coach of the Detroit Lions in the national professional league, has been in Oklahoma City, where his fullback, Ace Gutowski, has been offered a coaching job.
Six Kansas Students Pass Bar
Six applicants from the University of Kansas School of Law for admittance to the bar were recommended by the state board of bar examinations in Tupelo, Walden Baker, Fred Lin-Couner, Charles Leater Hoover, Wesley K. Kennedy, Kurt Reisen, and James Warren Wallace were among the 45 successful applicants. The oath of office was administered in the supreme court chambers at 10 a'clock yesterday morning.
Ad Lindsey, present grid coach, completed his football career in 1916 when Clark was assistant coach.
Kouene Students Pass Bar
Hungerford To Address Meeting Prof. H. B. Hungerford of the entomology department will speak on the origin, the past history, and the distinguished alumni of the Entomology club at its regular meeting at 4 p.m. Monday, Melvin Griffith, president of the club, announced yesterday.
AUTHORIZED PARTIES
University Group of the Christian Church, Church, 8-11
AUTHORIZED PARTIES
Friday
Congregational Fireside Forum, Parish House, 8-12
Negro Students' Association, Memorial Union building, 12
Alpha Gamma Delta, House, 12
Negro Students Association, Baccalaureo Negro Union Delta, House, 12 Alpha Gamma Delta, House, 12 AGNES HUSBAND, Chm, for the Joint Committee on Student Affairs.
YOUNG JAYHAWKERS TO START AMES TILT
Fencing Tourney in March
Open Intramural Contests Will Be Held Next Month
Announcement that an open intramural fencing tournament will be conducted the first week of March was made by Ed Elbel, manager of intramural athletics, yesterday afternoon. "This is merely keeping abreast with the increasing popularity of fencing in this country," stated Elbel.
The finals will be one of the features of the Intramural Carnival, Mar. 8. Anyone who did not represent the University in the dual meet with the University of Missouri will be eligible to compete. Foils will be used instead of sabers. A trophy will be awarded to the winner.
Aero Club Will Outline Activities for Semester
Membership Is Confined to Students in School of Engineering
The new Aero club will meet in the mechanical laboratory of the Engineering building Feb 12 at 7:30 pm for the purpose of electing officers and members. The club is a senior member. Membership in the club will be restricted to engineering students.
Meetings will consist largely of discussion of technical aeronautical papers which will be submitted by the students from time to time during the semester. It is believed that officers will have no difficulty in obtaining flyers and speakers because of the club's proximity to Kansas City.
Members will participate in group research (on navigation problems. Glider research will be one of the main activities.
The aeronautics department has much equipment which the students can use in experiments. An exact replication of an NPL balance at the National Physical Laboratory in London has been made in the Fowler shops. This copy has been calibrated in a University laboratory. Tests have proved this balance to be very accurate, in fact, it has been judged the most accurate one in this section of the United States.
Among the airplane engines which the aerospace department owns are several Liberty engines, made famous during the World War, Kinner, and Pratt and Whitney (Hornet) engines. The Aero club plans to spend many hours of research on these various makes of engines. Groups of students will take them apart, and then reassemble them. It is hoped that members also will be able to make test runs with the engines.
The club will have available a five foot wind tunnel, located beneath the west stadium, a glider, and an army training airplane.
The University of Minnesota is sponsoring a movement at present with many other universities to persuade the government to waive the restrictions on university and college aircraft. Under the present restrictions university students can not fly aircraft equipment. The new movement, backed by the Big Ten school, would enable engineering students to employ their equipment as well as to more fully solve research flying problems.
In the meeting next Tuesday the balANCE will be shown and inspected. All other equipment also will be inspected by the members.
MABEL ELLIOT TO ADDRESS FIRST MEETING OF NEW GROU
A new Y.W.C.A. group will hold its first meeting at 4:30 in Herley house. The social and economic problems of the day will be discussed, Beulah Hielm, c35, has been chosen chairman of the group.
Miss Mabel Elliot of the department of sociology will speak on "The Significant Economic Problems of the Day." Anyone interested is invited to attend.
About 1100 Students Pay Fees
About 1100 Students Pay Fees
"Approximately 1100 students have paid their fees to date," said Karl Klooz, the bursar, last month. "It is nine more than had paid at the same time last year." In order to avoid the penalty of 50 cents a day, the fees should be paid by Feb. 13. If they are not paid by Feb. 19, the student will be dropped from the University.
Lindley to Topeka
Chancellor E. H. Lindley attended a meeting of the Schoolmasters' Club in Topeka last night.
Dr. Allen Believes Change May Stop Iowa State Attack
Conference Title Will Be at Stake in Cyclone-Kansas Game Tomorow Night
Probably starting lineup:
Kansas Iowa State
Rogers or Edling f
Allen f
Noble f
Cole f
Rogers or
Kappelman g
Gross g
Officials: E. C, Quigley, St. Mary;
Ed. Hess, City Mo.
Following this idea, Allen has been et for one forward position, and either togers or Ebling will take the other.
round Jayhawk blood will go into the game for Kansas Saturday as the Jayhawk baskets defend their big Six lead against the Iowa State Cyclones. To inject a little aggressiveness into his crew, Dr. Allen proposes to start with a line-up of squid members who have shown a lively interest in their play, which seems to appear most in the vommer players.
ROGERS
If Rogers does not play forward, he will be inserted into a guard position. Gray, who has been the spark of the team thus far, will play a back position. Noble will take center duties. Wells will not start but probably will for Falker or noble for Noble, and either Klingar or Koneel.
man will be displaced by Rogers in the initial line-up.
Coach Allen believes that this shake-up is the only possibility to check the Iowa State boys who have claimed four victories in five conference starts, including the 32-23 defeat handed to Oklahoma last week. Coach Menzel's aggregation has shown strong scoring power recently, especially in Wegner and Cowan, and this, combined with their fast break on the rebound, will be the great trouble in Saturday's contest.
Engineers Are on Program
Meeting of State Society to Be in Topeka Feb.12 and 13
Half a dozen members of the faculty or graduates of the University of Kansas will participate in the program of the Kansas Engineering Society at its convention in Topica Feb. 12 and 13. D. C. Jackson, head of the department of electrical engineering at the University, and vice president of the society, will preside, because of the illness of the president.
The afternoon of Feb. 12, V. M. Smith, instructor of machine construction, and Professor Jackson will speak on "A.C. versus D. C. Welding." Following this, Prof. E. D. Bay of the mechanical and industrial engineering department, will talk on "Industrial Development in Kansas."
Prof. F. A. Russell of the civil engineering department will speak on "Material Charches on Relief Projects."
The "Activities of P.W.A. in Kansas" will be discussed by R. E. Lawrence, who was formerly assistant professor of civil engineering, but who has been on leave of absence since the full of 32 with the state P.W.A.
On Feb. 13, Prof. A. H. Sluss of mechanical and industrial engineering will talk on the "Ventilation of Commercial Garages." This will be followed in the afternoon by a talk on "The County Enforcement Program," by G. M. March of Topka program," by G. M. March of Topka who is a graduate of the Kansas School of Engineering, class of 115.
MAY OBTAIN ACTIVITY BOOKS BY PRESENTING FEE RECEIPT
Students who paid their fees prior to yesterday noon, may receive activity books by presenting the fee receipt cards at the business office. The identification card is void unless stamped on the reverse side by the business office at the event. Students must be seated fees. The first event on the activity ticket is a play by Prof. Allen Crafton, "Yankee Crusade," written around historical events in Kansas.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 193
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF ... JOSEPH DOCTOR
| United States | United Kingdom | Australia | Canada | Spain |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
MANAGING EDITOR ... CAROLYN HARPER
Campus Editor...SAR
Makeup Editors...{ George Moore,
| Herbert Moore }
Sports Editor
Sunday Editor
Sunday Eyes
Society Editor
Exchange Editor
Alumni Press
Harry Valentine
Bernard Moore,
| Herbert Moore }
Robert Patt:
Eleanor Winder
Shirley Jones
Shirley Jones
Ruth Stolland
Ruth Stolland
Business Manager F. Quentin Brown
Aust. Business Manager Elton Carter
Lena Wwatt Eric Irison
William Decker Michael Rockley
Ruthenberg Ruthenberg
Wesley McCalla Julia Marshman
Carole Harner K. Goulden
William Harner Joseph Doctor
Business Office
K- U. 60
Night Trips, Business Office
3701K
Night Trips, Business Office
Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday and Sunday mornings on campus.
Visit the department's website at
Journalism of the University of Kansas from
the Press of the Department of Journalism.
Subscription price, per year is $12.95,
RMI plus a single copy, in each.
Contact us on phone or mail. September
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1935
Entered as second class matter, September
17, 1910, at the post office of Lawrence, Kan.
NO EAR FOR DRUMS
The University of Kansas was right in step in the peace time poll on war. But that vote does not imply that the students would not also fall in line with soldiers marching of the rhythmic beat of blatant drums behind an unfurled flag.
The American people, orators to the contrary, are easily led, witness Townsend; they are submissive, witness some city political machines; they are lethargic, witness Huey; they are slow to review their past acts, witness Tom Mooney; they are easily swayed, witness Hearst.
Two men (William Randolph Hearst and Joseph Pulitzer) were instrumental in bringing on the Spanish-American war, according to many tracts that have been written reviewing their activities through the New York Journal and the New York World, respectively. One industry, the munitions makers, were prime movers in the last great conflict.
With these facts in mind, Kansans have voted during a period of pacifism by a favorable balot of 769 to 360 that the United States could keep out of another great war. While the drums are silent, they have no ear for drums.
For an interesting group of facial expressions, look around you next time you enroll.
WHERE YOUR ACTIVITY FEE GOES
Payment of fees has again raised the activity ticket problem in the minds of thrifty students. For those who are curious to know what their money is being spent for, we present the following itemized statement.
The $2.75 payment that is being required of students this semester is divided specifically as follows: $1.75 to the enterprise committee, 25c to athletics, 35 cents to the support of student self government, 95 cents to the support of the union building, and 15 cents to a reserve fund. The $6.00 that was expended by students for last semester was divided as follows: $3.25 to athletics, $1.15 to the enterprise unit, $1.05 to the support of the Union building, 40 cents to the support of the student self-governing associations, and 15 cents to the reserve fund. The money placed in the reserve fund is used for the support of social activities, parties, and contributions toward the band fund.
"FREEDOM OF THOUGHT"
We have been told that the trouble with the country today is that there are too many laws on the statute books and that we should have fewer laws to facilitate enforcement. California has gone against this traditional difficulty and provided the exception so often necessary to prove the rule.
Red scares have inspired our law makers to strenuous efforts in an attempt to stamp out the "communicatic menace." The palm goes
OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
Notices from Channellee's Office at 9 a.m. precede regular publication days
OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
BASKETBALL SUMMER AND CHRISTS:
Report at 6:20 and 6:40 for basketball games on Feb. 9 and 11.
HERBERT G. ALLPHIN.
BASKETBALL STILEMEN AND USHIBE
Vol. XXXII
Friday, Feb. 8, 1935
Notice due Janice Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m., preceding regular publication days and
11:20 a.m. Saturday, for Sunday lunches.
ENGINEER BOOK EXCHANGE:
The Book Exchange will be open 8:30 to 12:00 and 1:30 to 3:00 on Friday
Monday and Tuesday, Feb. 8, 11, 12. Bring in your books. We can sell them.
PRESTON COLE, Manager.
MEN'S GLEE CLUB:
MEN'S GLEE CLUB
Meet at Lawrence Memorial High School at 10:10 a.m. today.
WALTER LAPIHAM, President.
MEN'S PANHELLENIC COU CIL;
MILAN
There will be the Pan Hellenic Council Sunday, Feb. 10, at
a.m. in room 5, Memorial Union building:
BOB WILLIAMS], President.
PHI CHI DELTA:
Phi Chi Delta will meet at 5:30 on Tuesday, Feb. 12, at Westminster hall.
FLORENCE DILL
By the Editor
to California for formulating what would be a fool proof law if properly enforced. A man may be convicted there for circulating or permitting to circulate, or even thinking about circulating, the works of Lenin, Karl Marx's Communist Manifesto, or any works advocating the overthrow of the government by violence.
Under this provision, according to the Daily Californian student publication at the University of California, every employee, student, and professor at that school is liable to conviction. The Communist Manifesto is used in political science classes at the University.
As a result of the Red scare mind reading has at last been formally recognized. Juries are declared to be as competent as the fortune teller and the Indian Swami. Law has invaded a field heretofore vigorously prosecuted by the judiciary as a fraud.
O. U. ON THE PAN
The only valuable function of this law and its only chance of rendering justice is the possibility that it gives for the conviction of its framers.
Although this law would seem to violate the constitutional provision of freedom of speech and of the press, it would probably be a very wise move to advocate a constitutional amendment providing for freedom of thought. This is one right which the framers of our constitution apparently overlooked.
COMMENTS
Up jumped a senator in Oklahoma's legislature to accuse the state university of being run for millionaires and snobs. Said he, "They charge for football basketball and baseball no matter if a student never has the time to attend these games before a student even can enroll."
He pointed out that "there was nothing but snobbery and abuse for the poor boys and girls." We will wager that we have seen a poorly wordized list of out that statement.
"They use these fees to take care of the fat boys who play football," said the senator. It seems to us that we read an article by an Oklahoma coach
At any rate, the senate instructed a committee to fix a maximum amount of fees, which probably was worth oil statements made by the angry senator.
to the effect that O.U. athletes were practically starving, while schools on the Pacific Coast fed their athletes on the fat of the land.
Among the many good movements that have come to the campus, one of the best is the Intramural Carnival as projected by the M.S.C. with the cooperation of the athletic department. It will be a great show, given at a nominal cost, and containing every sort of entertainment that a man, or even a woman, could possibly desire for a quarter.
INTRAMURAL CARNIVAL
It will bring athletics right into the student body, and everyone should go and cheer on his particular friend who will appear in the matches. To the backers of the movement, due praise.
WE WERE TOLD THAT THIS IS SO
A young woman who, evidently
spends a great deal of time browsing
around Sponge-Thayer tells us that
STARFISH
VALENTINES
Sweathoirts
Friends
Mothers
Fathers
Sisters
Brothers
For
February 14th
VIRGINIA MAY'S
'A CARGO OF GIFTS'
IN HOTEL ELDRIDGE
Valentine Heart Boxes
CANDY
make your selection now.
MILK CHEESE
WEEK-END SPECIALS
That real, savings for you.
50c Pepsentol Tooth Paste ... 37c
Large Listerine ... 59c
35c Bayer Aspirin ... 19c
75c Fitch's Shampoos and 25c Hair Oil ... 69
$1.10 Coty Face Powder, now ... 75c
$1.00 Russian Mineral Oil ... 59c
$1.00 New Enders Speed Razor, 35c blades ... 35c
50c Cleansing Tissue (500 sheets) ... 37c
$1.50 Petrolagar ... 87c
25c Phillips Milk of Magnesia Tooth Paste
and Water Glass; both ___ 25c
That mean real savings for you.
"Handy for Students'
Rankin's Drug Store
1101 Mass.
Phone 678
most visitors go right through the long room on the second floor where paintings are exhibited to the small room that contains the colonial furniture. Many never even so much as glance at the paintings, she says.
To those who know art, this seems deplorable. To us who can appreciate only that art that is called to our attention by someone who knows about it, this is one of the Colonial furniture is more interesting to most people than the paintings.
DON'T BE FRIGHTENED
If the instructors in your new courses used many large words and ponderous phrases in the first lecture, do not be too aloed. It is probably just their way of discouraging the ones who will not work.
SPECIAL for FRIDAY
Tuna Fish with Noodles
Beef Pot Roast
You will enjoy our food
at the
CAFETERIA
CORSAGES
Call
72
FLOWER SHOP
ALLISON
VALENTINE
Flowers
Call
72
Spring
has arrived in our Suit Department: You'll be interested particularly
in our Window Pane Checks gray or brown in Gable sport models
$25 - $30
Two pairs of trousers
Woolf Brothers 1023 Mass.
Sizes 32 to 44
Weaver's
10. 32. 46. 59. 73. 87. 99.
EXQUISITE
Satin Dasche and Silk Crepe "Bryn Mawr" SLIPS...
$2.98
.
Glorious SHAPED LACES all around the bottoms
FRIDAY - SATURDAY
A sale just made for college girls who love and wear fine lingerie, for this is an array of really gorgeous slips. It costs almost twice as much to put laces on in shaped designs . . . yet every slip in this stupendous sale has shaped lace bottoms. It takes twice as much costly labor to put laces on in this way, yet here they are way below their normal prices.
SATIN DASCHE—the queen of washable satins . . . it actually improves with laundered. Pure-dye satin, remember.
"BRYN MAWR"—of Crepe Gartiere, the silk with an enviable reputation for beauty and durability. This is the only 4-gore alternating bias slip patented by the U. S. Government. It won't sag, shrink, or twist.
FIRST FLOOR
白
FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 8. 1935
PAGE THREA
Penguin
19
Hill Society
Call K.U. 25 Before 1230 p.m
Finance Tea At Myers Hall
The finance tea of the University Women's Club was held yesterday afternoon at Myers Hall.
The decorations carried out a patriotic theme with flags, and miniatures of M. Vt. Montero, the Lincoln Memorial, and the Lincoln Log Cabin. Mrs. G. W. Stratton in colonial costume and Mrs. C. S. Nelson in Civil War costume poured at a tea table set with brass service and red candlesticks.
Mrs. G. W. Bradshaw played a group of piano numbers. "The White Ewe," a short play by George Ade, was presented by Mrs. A. J. Miss with Mrs. P. T. Stockton, Mrs. J. K. Juster, and N. Carman as the leading characters.
Contributions to the scholarship fund may be sent by those who were unable to be present to Mrs. J. N. Carman, M.D., or to Mrs. G. A. Knight, 800 Michigan.
☆ ☆ ☆
Attend Kansas City Luncheon
Mrs. Joseph B. Hubbard, national president of Alpha Delta Pi, visited in Kansas City, Mo., during the mid-session vacation en route to her home in Cambridge, Mass. She had just attended a state convention of the Colorado chapters of the sorority in Denver and Boulder, Colo.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
The following members of the local chapter of Alpha Delta Pi attended lurcheon given in her honor; Wilm Tulu, Lena Wyatt, Syara Lou Hamilton, Eleonien Baird, Maxine Ripley, Kathryn Springer, and Eris Olson.
"an autumn of Kappa Beta, Christian church service, entertained the pledges and activities with a dinner Wednesday at the home of the Rev. and Mrs. Sid Slaughter, Miss Mary Laroon, an religious Activities of Girls in Sweden."
Kappa Beta Dinner
The hostesses were Mrs. Shaughter,
Miss Elizabeth Megular, Miss Helen
Miss Elizabeth Megular, Miss Helen
Miss Elizabeth Megular, Miss Williams and Mrs.
Harry Dunkeler.
Rezac-Haney Marriage
Miss Nell Rezue and Mr. Paul D Haney were married Saturday Feb. 2 in Kansas City, Mo.
Miss Rizeza is a graduate of the class of 1932. At present Mr. Haney is an assistant chemist in the water laboratories and graduated from the University in 1933.
They are living at the Brady Apartments in Lawrence.
☆ ☆ ☆
An all niger student varsity will be held in the Memorial Union building tomorrow night from 9 until 12. The dance is being given by the Activity Ticket committee with the cooperation of the Union Operation committee. Harlan Lennard and his Kansas City Rockets will play.
CLASSIFIED
Phone K.U. 66 ADS Phone K.U. 66
LOST: Black billfold containing currency, activity book and papers. Liberal reward for return. Call F. Loncar, 1075M. -90
An old fashioned dance with pop corn and taffy for refreshments will be the entertainment at the Congressional Fireside Forum which will be given tonight at the Parish house from 8 until 12. Miss Sarah Cheland and the Rev. and Mrs. J. F. King will be the chaperons.
BOYS: Room in desirable home, twin beds, sleeping bed privilleges if preferred, exceptionally well balanced meals served if desired. Two blocks from University. 1607 Tennessee Terrace. -94
Ku
BOYS: Large room on second, single or double, three exposures. Only quiet people to occupy the rooms. Very reasonable. 1408 Tennessee. Phone 1763.
FOR Rent; One large room with sleep-
in porch for two or three boys.
Single beds, also double room. 1416
Tennessee, Phone 1555. -89
ROOFS For Boys-Light, comfortable,
south rooms, two wardrobes, close
to town and school, five dollars each
dollars. 1108 Kentucky, phone 2418W
GIRLS: Nicely furnished room for rent to one or two girls. No other rooms.
206 W. 13th. Phone 2540M. -91
GIRLS: Board and room. Phone 26491
1536 Tennessee street. -90
WANTED Immediately, Girl to Wash for Room and Board. Two Blocks from Hill. Definite Daytime Hours. Piano or Mrs. Charles. Charles is 103 Louisiana.
The members of Xappa Beta, Christian Church sorority, will be hostesses at the Christian Church mixer which is being held at the church on Friday evening from 8 to 11 o'clock. All new and returning Christian Church pcders are invited.
☆ ☆ ☆
Mr. Stuart Dupuy lct for Birmingham, Ala., Wednesday afternoon after a three months' visit at the Delta Zeta house.
☆ ☆ ☆
Dinner guests at the Gamma Phi Beta house last night were June Thompson, eunel, and Carolyn Latty, c38.
☆ ☆ ☆
Miss Mary Jenkinson was a luncheon guest at the Pi Beta Phi house yesterday.
Marjorie Harbaugh, c38, was a luncheon guest yesterday at the Gamma Phi Beta house.
Diner guests at the Sigma Nu house last night were Emily Vroman, c'unel, and Joan Jankovic, c'38.
☆ ☆ ☆
Mr. Frank Leidig of Newton was a luncheon guest at the Pi Kappa Alpha house yesterday.
Dinner guests at the Pi Bata Phi house last night were Marbel Hotschkiss and Marierie Harbouch.
Phi Beta Pi announces the pledging of Herbert Songer, m'39, of Lincoln Kun.
Barbara Isbell, 33, is a guest at the Alpha Delta Pi house.
Phi Gamma Delta announces the pledging of Carlton Dickinson, c'uncl.
Town Freshmen Rank High
Survey Reveals Memorial Students Exceed Scholarship Averages
Students entering the University in the fall of 33 from Lawrence Liberty Memorial high school made a higher grade average during their first year than the average of the freshman class and the averages of the entire undergraduate body. The Lawrence group was made up of various groups on the campus was made by Neal M. Wherry, principal of the high school.
Though some exceptions were found, it was discovered that scholarship in high school and college are closely correlated. Students who were in the upper brackets in high school marks, point group in their freshman year,
Averages of the Memorial high freshman man and other freshman groups in grade points per credit must have a total of at least 90. Men: 39; Fine Arts freshman, 126;
ADD Town Fresman--Holdover Gal 3
Of the 96 who entered as freshmen in
1933, 82 returned as sophomores this
year, and 74 of the High School 1934
class are now freshmen on the Hill.
This total of 155 freshmen and sophomore
indicates a total of about 300
Lawrence graduates in the University.
Thus nearly two-thirds of the 790
students registered as from Douglas
county are temporary residents of
Lawrence.
medicine freshmen, 1.01; Engineering
reshmen, 93; Pharmacy freshmen, 29;
all undergraduates, 1.26
KFKU
2:30 p.m. Music Appreciation period
"Arthur W. Foote," by Dr. Charles
Skilton, professor of organ.
Friday, Feb. 8
6:00 p.m. Elementary German Lesson by Prof. E. F. Engel.
6:15 p.m. Musical program arranged by Waldemar Geltch, professor of violin.
CCC Camp To Give Dance At Union
The Civilian Conservation Corps from camp 2734 near Lawrence, will give an invitation dance in the Memorial Union ballroom tonight from 9 to 12. Louis Kulm and his band will furnish the music.
---
Men's Intramuscular
Men's Intramurals
The schedule for the week of Feb. 11-16:
Monday, Feb. 11, 5:30; Wakaurus wa-
rocky Chalk; Rock M.A.; SkaM vs Pike 9:00,
Delta Chi vs Phi Deltu DLT "B." "B" vs
wakey 'P'. Pike Deltu DLT "B." "B" vs
wakey 'P'. P.A.D, V Pike Beta P.
Tuesday, Feb. 12, 5:30, Independents vs Collegians; Theta Tuo vs A.Kel 10.00, A.TO. vs Sigma Nur; Sigma Kiu vs Chia Siur "B."
Wednesday, Feb. 13, 6:00; Rock Chalk "C" vs Sigma Na "M"; Rock Chalk "B" vs Beta "B"; 'F', 6:00; Campus Raiders vs Hawk; Phi Chi vs S.P.E. 10:00, DU. vs Kappa SIG; Douglas Club vs Jay-hawk.
Thursday, Feb 14, 5:30, K.E.K. vs Acacia; S.A.E. vs Phi Psi. 10:00, Coes vs Ramblers; Triangle vs Beta Pi Beta. Saturday, Feb 18, 8:00, S.A.E "P" vs Chi Gam; D.T.D. "E" vs Kiang, Phi Gam vs D.T.D.; Tramps vs Wankauras; 10:00, KiPa Vs Kappa Psi; Beta vs Phi Delt; 11:00, D.U. vs Kappa Sig "B"; Phi Delt "B" vs Jayhawk "B"; 12:00, Independents vs Jayhawk; Delta Chi vs Kappa Sig.
Have Yau An Adequate DICTIONARY?
Let us help you select the one that will best fit your needs.
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass. Tel. 666
The Gibbs Clothing Co.
"WHERE CASH BUYS MORE"
811 Mass. St.
Get Under a New Hat
If you are beginning to tire of the old "bonnet" step under one of these new spring styles they're all new styles that are fresh and color colors as well as the fresh new spring colors.
New Arrivals in SPRING STYLES
$2.95
THE TROUSER
Alterations Free
Corduroy
Trousers
Others $1.95 to $3.95
NEW SPRING TIES 65c
$ 2 98
You'll see several new shades in these corduroys that you didn't see in the fall lines. Gen uine Lynshire thickset corduroy made up by Lee.
WOOL SLACKS
$3.95
Tiny Moore May Not Wrestle
Here's a good variety of slacks and trousers in all shades and patterns. Some of them are extra trousers from suits; some of them are new spring trousers in in and look them over.
Others $2.95 to $4.45
Tiny Moore May Not Wrestle James Cox, wrestling coach, announced last night that Clyde "Tiny Moore," C37, may not wrestle in the meet with Nebrauskas, Feb. 15, as he has been unable to practice following an operation on his ear. John Hampton, a letter man of last year's squad, is back in school this semester and will wrestle in the 118-pound class.
Crafton to Independence
Proft. Allen Crafton of the department of dramatics, has accepted an invitation to speak before a dinner to be given in Independence, April 4 or 5. The oceans are an all-college gathering, to which all alumni from Kansas colleges are invited.
W. S. Johnson Improving
W. S. Johnson, professor of English, who has been confined to his home since Tuesday with influenza, was reported to be improving last night. He will be able to meet his classes Monday morning.
Various departments in the University are sending displays to be used at the council of administration meeting at Topkape, Friday and Saturday. Among them are the College of Education division, the School of Education, and the Alumni office.
Displays Are Sent To Topeka
Home Economic Professors III Miss Elizabeth Sprague and Miss Kathryn Tissue, professors in the department of home economics, have been absent from school the past few days because of illness.
Horr Confined To Home By Illness
Dr. W. H. Horn, assistant professor of botany, has been absent from his classes the last two days because of illness. He is expected back soon.
Searlock Addresses Cabinet
The Y.W.C.A. cabinet held a yesterday at 5:30 at Henley house.
Miss Stella Searlock, regional secretary, was the speaker.
Typewriters For Rent By the Week, Month or Semester
Portables sold on easy monthly payments.
See us for your repair work and supplies.
Lawrence
Spring HATS
Typewriter Exchange
737 Mass. Phone 548
S
CINEMAS
Featuring-
Featuring-
HATS by THREE
FAMOUS MAKERS
DOBBS - KNAPP FELT - BERG
THE NINETEEN MONTHS AGO
Three of the best known hat names in America are represented in our great selection of spring hats. Every smart color, every new color—every smart style, every new style is here in all sizes and proportions. This is the one store in Lawrence where you can be sure of getting the proper fit in the hat that you want!
at $5
Others from $3.50 to $7.00
Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUT FITTERS
School Supply Specials
Let Us Serve You — Open 'til Midnight
MARTHA WASHINGTON Valentine Candies
NOTE PAPERS All Sizes
NOTE BOOKS
Zippers, $2.75 up
Canvas, 50c - $1.00
ENGINEERING SETS
Bargain Pricos on Our Entire Stock
Entire Stock
TYPEWRITER SHEETS 45c a Ream
PARKER LIFETIME PENS Deep Cut Price
LAUNDRY BAG FILLERS 25c
25c
35c Palmelive Shaving Cream 23c
35c Prep 13c
50c Peepedon Tooth Paste 33c
50c Dr, West Tooth Paste, 2- 25c
Coe's Drug Stores
1347 Mass.
Phone 531
We Deliver
411 W. 14th Phone 516
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FOUR
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1935
Jayhawkers Are Next to Youngest Squad in Big Six
Figures Show That Kansas Has Semester Average of 3.5; Oklahoma Has 4.2
by Robert G. Patt, c'35
Constant reference being made by sport editors to the University basketball squad as "the most seasoned team in the Big Six," or "Phog Allen's veterans," has caused the Jayhawker monitor to explain that he is really working with the youngest crop of the contender and the standpoint of expert experience. An investigation of eligibility lists backs Dr. Allen in his contentions.
The mistakes are also made that Kansas lost only one man from the regular team of last year, and reference to Dick Wells as the "giant Kansas center." Wells is 6 ft. 2 inches, the shortest center in the conference. Dr. Allen is also grieved over the loss of two sparks from last year's title-winning squad, Paul Harrington and Ernest Vanek.
The following tabulations, figured from the eligibility lists exchanged among the Big Six schools to include the present semester, prove Oklahoma to be the oldest team in the nation. These two are Kansas's particular competition this year.
The Oklahoma semesters of experience average is 4.2; Iowa State's is 4; Nebraska, 371; Missouri, 37; Kansas State, 36; and Kansas 35. Oklahoma has 4 regular seniors and Iowa State has 2 seniors and 3 juniors.
The rosters of the three title contenders with the number of semesters played are as follows:
Oklahoma
Iowa State
Connelley 1
Warren 1
Cobb 1
Browning 1
Hays 1
Tyler 1
Timo 1
Nelson 1
Gunning 1
Cowen 4
Fleming 6
Holmes 4
Wegner 5
Schafforth 6
Cowan 4
Hood 4
PENO STATE
11
COWEN
-FORWARD-
HOOD - GUARD
HOLMES
-GUARD-
WEGNER-CENTER
Av. Sem. Pl'd. 4.2
Cyclone's Starting Quintet to Oppose Jayhawkers
Av. Sem Pl'd 4.0
Fancy Shot Artist Thrills Students With Exhibition Here
Kirby beat the 60-yard event record of 31 seconds flat by making it in 30.4 seconds. In the 100-yard event, he lowered the record time of 59.5 to 56 seconds flat. Blanche of Kauai State won the 2:50-second event and established a 2:50-second over 2:524.
Large Crowd Witnesses Billiard Demonstration
In a dual swimming meet held Wednesday at Washburn college, with Kansas State, Aggie swimmers carried away total point honors, although Guy Kirby, Washburn dash man, broke two swim records and lost the total. The score was 46 to 37.
Charles "Pete" Peterson, the fancy billiard shot artist, provided a large crowd of University students with thrills or perhaps plain envoy when he gave an exhibition of billiard playing yesterday afternoon in the basement of the Memorial Union building.
Aggie Swimmers Win Meet
Washburn Dash Man Breaks Two Poel Records in Dual
"I have been playing this game for over forty years," he said, "and I am just now realizing an ambition of mine. This ambition has been to go before the students of the various universities and instruct them in the fundamentals of billard and at the same time get them to organize teams and players to compete in tournaments. My present trip will take me to most of the universities in the Middle West and East. I also will give an exhibition before an audience at the Waldorf-Astoria hotel in New York City.
After taking an early 10-point lead, Kansas State remained ahead, although Washburn took five individual firsts against two for Kansas State.
Kansas
The National Association of College Unions is sponsoring the trip of Mr. Peterson. The Perpetual Youth Club, which was founded by him at St. Louis ten years ago, has now grown until there are clubs over the entire East. Before one can become a member of one of these clubs, he must reach the age of 70.
"Everywhere I go, there seems to be a renewed interest in the game," he said. "At the University of Minnesota some members of the faculty became so interested in watching a tournament at the school that they missed their classes."
In former years Mr. Peterson has acted as referee in the National Billiard tournaments, but now he spends his time going around giving exhibitions and teaching men, boys and women how to play the game.
FLEMMING FORWARD
FLEMMING
-FORWARD
Ebling
Noble
Allen
Wellnauw
Wellnauw
Kappelman
Rogers
Gray
Oyler
Oyler
Av. Sem. Pf d 3.5
To Play Nebraska Saturday
Oklahoma Meets First Opponent on Home Court in Four Weeks
Returning to play its first home games in more than four weeks, the Oklahoma basketball team meets Nebraska Saturday night and Iowa State on Monday for two Big Six conference conflicts. Nebraska being the only team to win over Iowa State so far, the Oklahomaans are attempting to reorganize their most髓 after the 21 to 14 victory over Ames last month in order to stage a come-back by beating the Cornhuskers Saturday.
In spite of their defeat by Iowa State, the Sooners are still very much in the conference race. Iowa State plays Kansas twice and Oklahoma once yet, and defeats in two of these three games would practically eliminate the Cyclones
from the race, since either Kansas or Oklahoma, playing 16 conference games to Iowa State's 10, could lose four games and still win the championship. A victory over Nebraska would materially aid the Sooners' hopes for success in their second game with Iowa State Monday.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
NUMBER 90
VOLUME XXXII
--things, that the. The lad, probably an admirer, was last seen making it south along Ohio street. Oh, my. the lout!
on the SHIN
Bv JOE HOLLOWAY, c'35
What a Big Help Some Profs Are
... Poor Bruno ... Found,
A Woman Who Can Play Real
Piano ... Can You Take It?
A good example of the humaneness of college instructors just came around. One lad in the medicine school has a four-hour lab Thursday; he's working his way through school by playing with a dance band and probably not having any too much ready cash left over, and thinking that his fees are there in the case those in the week or so after classes start, arranged, through a little engineering and luck of having a weekend to play some jobs in, to have the necessary money for his fees. Can't you imagine how swell he might think the world in general is when he went to the lab Thursday and the prof. so, who had not yet paid their fees away and worked on their work. We'd like anyone could figure that out and have a total that would help a student get his education.
Over here in the newsroom we've a neat bit of bold-face headline work from the Pittsburgh Sun which reads, "State Hammers at Bruno's Tale." Little Richolstain saw everyone else laughing at it but we fear that she went to Sioux City with Papa Stoland, still in the dark as to what's so funny about it.
The local Sigma Chi boys have been chosen this year as well as last to decide who shall be the beauty queen at Hays College. The idea has been forwarded that perhaps the reason for the choice is that the chapter is so large and therefore there are jobs that more boys who've graduated a hard time finding a job on our own campus and they should be able to get the job done all right.
Just a little illustration showing the not yet initiated reporter starting to work. Managing Editor Harper asked Betty Shirky Quantum if she would like to cover a beat for the paper and Mrs. Q." Oh you have to go outside to get a story? I thought you just had to sit up here and write something."
There's some talent on this campus which has in all probability gone unnoticed to a great extent. We heard some awful good jazz music the other day being played for the musical comedy aspirants and when we say jazz we don't mean the lapses into that many popular music that once in our rooms. This was really Diane, Dike and the gal in question is Anna Marie Tompkins-in-initially her brother is a trumpet man with Jimmie Lunceford.
Here's a good one from a friend in Chicago—reminds us of that good old Schultz diction. The lady from Chicago has a maid who is Swedish—in fact she has a martirically Sweden itself. One day, the lady was out and a friend called, leaving a message to have the former call her as soon as she returned. The message "Miz Golman goldup size zunzu kurin galerup non more howlite skimole galerup." The translation: "Mrs Coleman called up. As says as you come in call her up. No matter how late it's going to be, call her up."
No matter if the yarns put forth in thishy business fail to draw a laff now and then, any time you want a list of who can take it and who can't, just let us know.
Comes the news of a recent dance at Ye Corbin and how one Jennings, nee Jennings, was invited to the lush tones of the music by a lad of a certain description.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1935
"Do you care to dance?" he said conciingly, but not quite enticingly. Madame surveyed the scene, noticed that one was talking to her, behatthed herself of the situation and its manifold complications; at lst she berailed herself, "I am not distracted," with the answer 4 degrees upper lift, or someone rather like it.
Siler To Address Botany Club
The Botany Club will hold its regular meeting Tuesday, at 7:30. Ms. Margaret Siler will talk on "Reent Work on Cytology of Liverworts."
To Initiate New Members
To Initiate New Members
The invitation for new members of the Snow Zoology Club will be held in 6 p.m. Tuesday. The program as yet is incomplete.
Great Conductors To Attend Band Festival, May 9-11
Goldman, Busch, and Clarke Among Personalities to Be Here for First Annual Affair
The great bandmasters of the world and 50 bands are being brought to Lawrence for the First National Band Festival. May 9, 10, and 11, sponsored by the University Band, Russell, L. Wiley conductor of the Band and general director of the National Band Festival announced yesterday.
Several artist demonstrations are being planned during the Festival. Herbert Clarke, Dr. Goldman, and others will appear on the program.
The musicians who will be guest conductors and official judges at the Festival are: Edwin Franco Goldman, conductor of the Goldman Band in New York City; Carl Busch, American composer, Kansas City, Mo.; Herbert L. Clarke, conductor of the Municipal Band of Long Beach; Harold Bachman, conductor of the Bachman "Million Dollar Band" of Chicago; William F. Ludwig, president of Ludwig and Ludwig Drum Manufacturers of Chicago; Dewey O. Wiley, conductor of the Texas Technology Band of Lubbock; Earl D. Irons, conductor of the North Texas Agricultural College Band of Arlington; and D. M. Swarthout, Dean of the School of Fine Arts of the University.
A special feature of the Festival will be a select 700-piece brass band concert in the University auditorium, Saturday, May 11, at 8:20 p.m. This band will be directed by Edwin Franco Goldman, Herbert L. Clarke, and Harold Bachman. Saturday afternoon there will be a marching contest for all bands and Drum and Bugle Corps in the University Stadium.
Kansas City Orchestra Will Play Here Feb. 20
The Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra under the leadership of Karl Kreuer comes to the University, Feb. 29, as the third number of the University Concert Course, Dean D. M. Swarthout and Mr. Kreauer have selected a program which is full of melody and dramatic orchestral effects. The Fifth Symphony from Tchaikovsky will be the major offering of the evening.
Philharmonic Group Next Offering on Concert Course
Dean Swarthout has also arranged to have the orchestra play a matinee concert of popular numbers for the school children of Lawrence. This program will feature such numbers as the "Bumblebee" (Skyy-kırsilko) and the Bumblebee Sailor's Dance" (Gilere), and the overture by Nicolai to "The Merry Winds of Windex."
Course
The last concert such as this was offered the children of the Lawrence Schools by the Minnesota Orchestra in 1929.
This prize, valued at about $300, is offered in connection with the course on Legal Bibliography conducted by Professor Davis, and is awarded to students finding the law applicable to a list of a hundred questions prepared by the company-
General admission tickets will be sold at the door for those outside the schools desiring to hear the concert. Single admissions for the evening concerts are now on sale. A number of inquiries have come from around the state asking that seats be reserved for the concert.
John Herlocker Wins Prize
Prof. Robert M. Davis of the School of Law announced recently that John A. Herlicker, 137, is the winner of the Set of Corpus Juris offered annually by the American Law Book company of New York.
To Lecture on Bibble Collection
Dr. H. K. Ehrigh, Dean of Baker University, will lecture on "Valuables 120 Miles from Here," at the Westminster庙 this evening at 7:30. He refers to Bishop William Quayle's collection of Bibles at Baldwin. This collection was originally owned by Robert Brownning and Robert Louis Stevenson. It contains some of the earliest Hebrew scrolls 500 feet long. The lecture will be illustrated with stereoptic slides.
rilliph Frick, Jr., 137, was a close second in the competition and Walter Steier, 137, ranked third.
Law Student Makes High Score in Book Company Questionnaire
To Lecture on Bible Collection
Sooners in Win
Norman, Okla., Feb. 9- (UP)—The University of Oklahoma tonight climbed back into second place in the Big Six conference by trimming Nebraska. 38-32.
Oklahoma Takes Nebraska By Score of 38-32
The game was featured by a brilliant last minute rally by Nebraska to tie the score, but Oklahoma managed to shore away as the game ended.
G GFT F
Cinnley, j
Warren, f ...1 0 1
Cobb, b ...1 0 1
Hays, f ...1 0 1
Coleman, m ...1 0 1
Br'wn g'g ...4 2 2
Br'n w g'g ...4 2 2
Remy, g ...0 0 0
Tone, g ...0 0 0
Oklahoma 38
G F 3T1
Whitk'kerf g 1 1
Leacob' l 1 1
Bakerf l 1 1
Halef h 2 1
Widenc nc 2 1
Parons g 2 2
Wlistqug i 2 2
Totals 14-10-12
Officials: John Old, Kansas; Skimmer
Miller, Iowa.
Totals 14.10.12
Nebraska 32
MISSOURI FOURTH IN BIG SIX
Totals ..12 8 15
Henderson Leads Tigers to Defeat Kansas State at Columbia
Columbia, Meb., Feb. 9—UP) (The University of Missouri tonight defeats Kansas State Collegio, 34-20, and assures fourth place in the Big Sixt game.
Missouri led 17-12 at half time
Carmin Henderson, 6 f. 6, d. 4, n. sophomore forward, lead the Missouri pace, and was high score of the game with 11 points.
The box score:
Missouri 34
G F T 2
Thmps'n.f F 0 2
H'dn's'n.f 5 1 3
Beer, f 1 3
Stron, c 3 3
Powell, f 3 0
Powell, f 3 1
Jrg'sn,ng 1 2 1
schaper, g 1 2 1
G FT F
Gilpin,f...2 0 3
Thrbh.f...2 2 5
Knof.f...2 1 6
Growk.c...2 0 3
Stoner,g...0 0 0
Railsk,bg...1 1 1
Totals 14 6 9
Kansas State
Totals ...7 611
Officials: Parke eCarrall, Kansas City Journal-Post; Reeves Peters, Warren-sburg.
Set Record in Enrollment
R.O.T.C. Department Has 265 Men in Two Corps
A new high for second semester was set in the R.O.T.C. department this semester with 265 men enrolled. One hundred five of these are in the Army, and another 400 in the military division. This enrollment exceeds the enrollment of last semester by one.
Six students with advanced standing have transferred from the Colorado School of Mines, Oklahoma and New Mexico in order to enroll here. Only ten men taking R.O.T.C. last semester and who are in school this semester have dropped their courses in military science, while several men have returned to the department after being out of the University for some time.
In the advance course of Coast Artillery 47 men are taking work, a record enrollment for that department. The Engineer unit expects to graduate the largest number in its history next June. Leut. E. H. Coe, assistant professor of Military Science, said of the large number of men in the R.O.W.T. this semester, "Personally, I feel I am to contribute to a more serious attitude on the part of the students as to the meaning and the purpose of an education."
Graduate to Give Sermons
Dr. Frank Herrnomo Sr.,upt. of the Pacific Japanese Mission, Berkeley Calif., will speak at the Sunday morning and evening services of the First Methodist Church. In the morning, "Reality in Religion" will be his subject, "Mother America and Her Oriental Children" will be the evertning session.
Fine Arts Professors Recognized
Dr. Smith is a graduate of the University. Since 1926, he has been in charge of the Pacific Japanese Mission under the Home Mission Board of the Methodist Episcopal Church. His territory includes the western half of the United States. Prior to 1926, Dr. Smith and his family served as missionaries in Japan and Korea for approximately twenty years. His daughter, Miss Elise Smith, a University graduate, is located in Seoul, Korea, as a missionary.
Dr. Smith Will Speak at First Methodis Church Sunday
Foreign recognition for their work in the field of music was extended recently to Dean D. M. Swarthout and Professor Charles S. Skilton of the School of Fine Arts, The "Town and Country Review," a biographical sketches of the faculty members in the "Overseas Section" of their January issue.
Curtain Will Rise On Crafton's Play Tomorrow Evening
JAYHAWKERS TOPPLE FOE WITH SURPRISE VICTORY
Early Kansas Play Will Be Given Four Successive Nights in Fraser Theater
The curtain rises tomorrow night for the first time on "Yankee Crusade," a play of early Kansas written by her great-grandfather, who邀 'our successive nights in Fraser theater
Students are rapidly mawkin reservations of the better seats for the latter three days of the performance and town people are urged to attend the opening performance. A section of seats has been given to the night's performance, and many pioneer families are making reservations. A courtesy ticket at half price is being sold to Old Settlers for tomorrow's presentation. Tickets may be reserved by calling KU 174. The play begins each night at 8 o'clock. Although the majority of players in "Janee Crumble" are amused by the cast, the cast who have had professional or semi-professional experience on the stage.
King Formerly on Radio
Leon King, a student who plays the part of Judge Cooper, was a protege of the late Arthur Middleton. In the fall of 1925, Mr. Middleton, then one of America's outstanding baritones, heard Mr. King sing in Topoka. He became interested in him and offered to teach him if he would go to Chicago. Mr. King did so, made his home with Mr. Middleton, and studied at Bush Conservatory, while Middleton was on concert tours, Mr. King coached his younger pupils. Later Mr. King accepted an engagement on Radio Keith Orpheic circuit and on Radio Keith Orpheic circuit. He also did some radio work. At one time he did vaudeville work with Dara Early, who was comedienne in Eddie Cantor's production of "Kid Boots." At present Mr. King assists as voice coach of the Glee Club and is first tenor in the University male quartet.
Miss Laura Allen, a graduate of the University who lives in Kansas City, Mo., played with the Town Hall Players of Kansas City this season, and was with the Culver Theater of Culver, Ind. the past summer, carries one of the leading feminine roles in "Yankee Couple."
Laurel Allen in Cast
In the field of playwriting, "Yankee Crusade" is, in itself, a piece of pioneering. While several novelists have drawn from the sources of early events in Kansas, the stage has seen practically nothing of the drama of border days in Kansas Territory. A number of Lawrence pioneers who have read the written by Professor Crafton believe that the presentation of Yankee Crusade" will make him a valued impression! He likens the fites on the people who see it, as well as re-create scenes and events which are familiar, either through personal experience, or from first-hand hearing of the story by Kansas pioneers.
Hobnail Hop Next Saturday
The Hobnail Hop, an annual party sponsored by the University engineers, will be held Saturday, Feb. 16, at the Memorial Union building. At that time the engineers' queen will be introduced. An 18-piece orchestra, combining Bill Phipps and Red Blackburn's orchestras, will play. A special feature will be a two-piano arrangement, played by Bud Fink, e37; and Eldon Schönke, fa38. Kateryn Rann Cassidy, c1u, Gauch Phi Beta; Jerry Gaust, c1u, Chip Omega and Isabelle W. Fery, c3r, ChIP Betaphi are the candidates for the Hob-
Engineers' Queen Will Be Introduced at Annual Party
To Hold Sports Contests
to find space
William Cochrane, manager of the Memorial United School, planning to have several sports contests during the coming semester. A Fling Pong tournament has been suggested by frequenters of the recreation room. It is definitely known that in March an Interscholastic telegraph billiards tourney will be attempted; however no definite date has been fixed yet. Announcements of other contests will be made in the near future by Cochrane.
Renewed Enthusiasm Gives Kansas Team New Life as They Down Iowa State With 35-18 Score, Retaining Big Six Lead; Ebling Is High Scorer
The University of Kansas Jayhawkers last night pulled a surprise 35-18 victory over the Iowa State Cyclones on hold to first place honors in the Big Six race. Coach Allen's crew snapped out of its slump to give an exhibition of fine ball handling of the old championship style.
By Robert Patt, c' 25, Kansas Sports Editor
Enrollment in Spring Term Shows Increase
Students Will Be Dropped From School if Fees Unpaid, Feb. 19
With enrollment completed late yesterday it was announced by Miss Veta Lear, secretary to the dean, that there are 283 more students enrolled in the spring semester. This semester than there were in the spring semester last year.
The determined Kansans started out at the first of the game and held a safe margin over Coach Menze's all of the way. Ray Ebbing, forward, led the Hawkeyw attack with 8 field goals and 1 free
These figures were given out after the late enrollment in Robinson gymnasium yesterday. In addition to the new students who enrolled yesterday there were many old students who enrolled and 'hangs were made in courses.
Eighty-seven students enrolled in the College who had not yet entered school this semester. Besides the newly enrolled students there were 322 who made changes in their college courses. All of this re-arranging took considerable time, and many of the desired classes were found to be closed. A fine of $2.50 is assessed students making late enrollment.
Miss Lea says there are 169 students in the College who were not enrolled in that division last fall. Of course, these figures are only relative, because there will probably be more changes later on, and some of the students will probably fail to pay their fees and will be dropped from classes.
No charges were made for changes in enrollment, but a fee will be assessed after Feb. 15. Juniors and seniors who enrolled early need not obtain their enrollment cards in order to pay fees, but may go directly to the college. Fees paid by Feb. 15, and if they are not paid by Feb. 19, the student will be dropped from the University. According to the burster, many students have already paid their fees.
WSGA Tryouts Successful
Bergman and Dunkle Will Post Tentative Cast List Tomorrow
Tryouts for the W.S.G.A. musical comedy which have been conducted for the past few days were very successful, and he was also the director, and Joke Dunkel, dance director.
"So many persons tried out for the speaking parts that there was no trouble in selecting a cast," said Mr. Bergman. A tentative cast of speaking, singing, and speciality numbers will be posted on the bulletin board outside the speech and dramatic arts office in Green Hall. Monday morning at 9:30, stating where and when the dinner to those whose name is on the list. All those to court out are requested to look on the board before 1:20 o'clock tomorrow.
Hereafter all call notices will be issued through the Daily Kansan.
In speaking of the dance tryouts, Dunkel said that he believed the chorus he was to work with was far superior to any he had previously had experience with on the Hill. The list of names for the tentative chorus is as follows:
Emily Vroman, c'uncl; Bette Wasson, c'38; Mary Frances Martin, c'38; Catherine Conklin, c'uncl; Betty Ruth Smith, f'aucl; Lucille Bottom, c'38; Betty Lemon, c'38; Martha Nuzman, c'37; Janet Carrington, c'38; Darlene Valdez Powell, f'arc; Carine Krebblai, f'arc; and Olive Adela Krebblai, fa'38
The chorus is to be in practice costumes ready to start work at 3:30 Monday in the Union ballroom. They will be late afternoon thereafter and further notice soon.
Westminster Cabinet to Meet
The Westminster cabinet will meet tomorrow to discuss the possible improvement of future meetings and to begin the consideration of new cabinet members.
loss. Milton Allen, also forward, was run-uper in total points, contributing 2 baskets and 3 good free tosses. Wegner, leading scorer for the Ames men, was good for two goals and a like number of free points, and was responsible for 3 of the team's 11 fouls.
12
Dick Wells, Kansas center, who Dr. Allen had previously announced would not start played 35 minutes to offer 3 points but failed in 5 out of 6 trips to the free-throw line. The Kansas mentor had proposed to start a line-up of younger players in
search of lost aggressiveness, but Friday's practice proved to him that his usual string had shown improvement and their success would form an asset in the game against Kanae's principle title contender, Kappelman, guard also on
2 baskets and a free throw, and showed some good floor play.
Allen made both tries good on Holmes' foul, and contributions by Eb-
Allen furnished the spirit for Kassas as he shot in for the first bucket, which neither Wegner nor Flemming could match with their free toses be- for Ebling brought it up to 4-0. Wegner made Ames's mistake. Flemming called time out as Wells and Ebing brought the score to 8-1 inside of 5 minutes.
Allen
link and Wells for Kansas, and Hood, Wegner, and Fleming for Iowa State brought the intermission to 16 to 10, Kansas.
Ebling opened up in his old form in
the second half making two long shots among his four in that period. Ebling and Kappelman combined to push the totals to 25 to 14 in only 9 minutes. Wegner featured in the final minutes of effort to boat the Iowa State charge.
Couch Allen pulled Wells, Allen, and Ebing from the line-up before the fina-ble, but depended largely on the smooth handling of only five men the
Approximately five hundred scouts attended the game as a feature of Boy Scout night and helped to swell the crowd.
Box score:
Kansas
Totals 14 7 8 10 35 200.
| KINESIS | G FFT MFT FFT TP MP |
| :--- | :--- |
| Ehling, f | 1 8 1 1 2 7 19. |
| Allen, f | 2 3 1 1 2 7 38. |
| Allen, f | 2 3 1 1 2 7 38. |
| Roessner, f | 1 0 1 2 7 40. |
| Wells, c | 1 1 5 2 3 34.5 |
| Noble, c | 1 0 0 0 2 35.5 |
| Gray, g | 1 0 1 1 40.0 |
| Kapelman, g | 2 0 1 2 5 40.0 |
| | G | FT MT | MF | PF | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Cowen, f | 3 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 65 |
| Fleming, f | 1 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 40 |
| Wegner, c | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 40 |
| Cotter, g | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 40 |
| Holmes, g | 0 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 18 |
| Hood, g | 0 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 27 |
| Cown, g | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 14 |
| Shafforth, g | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 2. |
G FT MT FP TF MP
G 0 2 0 65
Flemning, f 1 2 2 1 40
Wegner, c 1 2 3 4 40
Cotter, g 1 2 3 4 40
Holmes, g 0 1 0 2 18
Hood, g 0 1 0 2 27
Cown, g 0 0 0 0 14
Shafforth, g 0 0 1 0 2.
Totals 6 6 6 11 18 200
F. K. G. O'Neill, Grace May
Reference; E. C. Quigley, St. Marys,
umpire, Ed Hess, Kansas City,
Jay Jones Sponsor Picture Show
The Joy James are sponsors a sale of kickers for "Biography of a Bachelor Girl," with Ann Harding and Robert Joy, at the Grumman theater starting today, and continuing through Tuesday.
Randall Morton, Indian student at the University, and member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity, left yesterday for Tulsa, Oka, where he will serve as a witness in the Kenhammer murder trial. He was subpoenaed by the state.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1935
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
LAWRENCE, KANASN
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF ... JOSEPH DOCTOR
Julia Markham Charles Brown
STATE CAROLIN HARBER
MANAGING EDITOR ... Staff
Campus Editor SENE
Makeup Editors Harry Valentine
Makeup Artists | George Moore,
| Herbert Moore
Sports Editor Robert Patt
New Editor Robert Patt
New Editor Eleonore
Dunny Fry
Society Editor Danny Fry
Exchange Editor Shirley Jones
Admire Editor Robin Przyc
Roth Stoland
Business Manager F. Quentin Brown
Aus. Business Manager Ellen Carter
Lena Wautz Irls Orcan
William Wecker Leroy
Jayne Holmes Rutherford Hayes
Wolley McCalla Jolin Markham
Carlina Harper F. Quinn Brown
David Clarke
Business Office KD. 66
Night Connections Business Office 270181
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Subscription price, per year, $2.00 cash in
advance, $2.25 on payments. Single copies, 5c
Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday and Saturday, 2015, by the
publication office of the University of Kansas
from the U.S. Embassy in Washington, D.C.
Entered as second class matter, September 17, 1920, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan.
KANSAS PRESS
ASSOCIATION
1935
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1935
THE TWELVE FATES
Many, many years ago the Greeks believed that three goddesses sat somewhere in the depth of the earth spinning the lives of all mankind. In the yarn went everything that was to happen to individuals—birth, marriage, sadness, joy, and finally, when one of the grim figures cut the thread, death.
Richard Bruno Hauptmann's Fates are not three, but twelve. They are not all women, nor are they gods or goddesses. They are simply twelve citizens of the country Hauptmann entered illegally. But they do hold the thread of Hauptmann's life in their charge as surely as the ancient Greeks believed their Fates held every life in their power.
And like the Three Fates, the
workings of the Hauptmann jury are unpredictable. No one can tell what Hauptmann's fate will be. That jury may cut the thread of life by the simple declaration of "guilty." It may change the whole substance of the yarn by declaring guilt, but recommending lenency. Or it may allow the thread to continue unaltered by declaring the prisoner "not guilty."
But whatever the verdict of these twelve persons may be, let it be final. They alone should have an unbiased attitude toward the whole proceedings of Hauptmann's life. It is they who should have the most knowledge of what they will do with the life they control. Let us who are not immune to influences that might work toward error of judgment abide in our own minds by the decision of that jury.
A BREAK FOR LADIES
Ladies, remember that suit skirt that was so provokingly narrow that you couldn't take a deep-breathed step in it? Well, let it worry you no more! No longer need we mince along our way hampered by narrow hemlines.
Let us all join hands, dance, and be happy, for Paris has decreed full skirts for the coming season.
Do you realize just what this new fashion will mean to us? It means that we shall be able to climb the Hill in half as many steps as we have been made to take in our present mode of dress. It means that we can attain to new grace, because the old jerky manner of walking can be abandoned now that we shall have room to step out. And it also means that the danger of looking fat will be lessened when the slim ones can scarcely be detected from those of us who are no longer so streamlined, because we shall all be more puffs of fluffy, ruffy, fringy, swishey femininity.
A pipe is a charming companion. You wouldn't let any other one stick around with such a smell—McPherson Republic.
OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
provides we will be present on postponement day
and 11:30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issues.
Sunday, Feb. 10, 1935
BOTANY CLUB:
DER DEUTSCHE VEREIN:
FLORENE BRISCOE, President.
There will be an important business meeting next Tuesday evening, followed by a talk by Mrs. Margaret Syler on "Recent Work on the Cytology of Escherichia coli."
ENGINEER BOOK EXCHANGE:
Der Deutsche Vercin versammt sich Montagen 11. Febuar im Zimmer
313 Fraser Hall.
NEWTON ARNOLD, Sekretär.
FRESHMAN COMMISSION:
The book exchange will be open from 8:30 to 12:00 and 1:30 to 3:00 on Monday and Tuesday, Feb 11 and 12. We need Analytic, Chemistry, Descriptive Geometry, and Physics textbooks.
PRESTON A. COLE, Manager.
The Freshman Commission will meet Monday at 4:30 at Henley House Miss Stella Scurlock, regional secretary, will speak.
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB:
The International Relations Club will hold its regular dinner meeting at the cafeteria dining room at 6 p.m. F12. 10. Open forum discussion on the "Triangle Conflict in Asia," led by John Bekker, will begin at 6:30 p.m. All interested are invited. **FREDENIC PARKES, Program Chairman**
MATHEMATICS CLUB:
The Mathematics Club will meet Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. in room 213 Administration building. Everett Willie will talk to "Coordinate Systems." Everyone invited. All who have had or are taking Calculus are eligible for membership in the club. MARLOW SHOLANDER, President.
MEN'S PANHELLENIC COUNCIL:
There will be a meeting of the Pan Hellenic Council this morning at 11 o'clock in room 5 of the Memorial Union building.
PEACE ACTION MEETING:
BOB WILLIAMS. President.
The University of Kansas Peace Action Committee will hold its first meeting of the semester on Tuesday at 4:30 in the Book Exchange room, Memorial Union building. Everyone interested is invited to attend. New students are cordially welcome.
Phi Chi Delta will meet at 5:30 on Tuesday, Feb. 12, at Westminster hall.
FLORENCE DILL
ELIZABETH CASWELL, ALFRED C. AMES, Executive Secretaries.
All members are urged to be present at a very important meeting Tuesday at 4:30 in Marvin hall. Committee chairmen expected to report.
PHI CHI DELTA;
There will be a regular meeting of the Advanced Standing Commission of the Y.W.C. Tuesday, Feb. 12, at 4:30. Miss Larson will speak.
STEEL KEY:
FIRST SEMESTER GRADES:
ADVANCED `STANDING COMMISSION:
VIRGINIA HARDESTY.
FIRST SEMESTER GRADES:
Grades for the fall semester may be obtained from the Registrar's Office.
Feb. 11-16, according to the following schedule for student names:
Monday, Feb. 11—A to G inclusive
Tuesday, Feb. 12—H to M inclusive
Wednesday, Feb. 13—N to S inclusive
Thursday, Feb. 14—T to Z inclusive
Friday, Feb. 15 and
Saturday, Feb. 16—Those unable to come at the scheduled time.
FRESHMEN MEN;
unable to come at the scheduled time GEORGE O. FOSTER, Registrar.
There will be six freshmen chosen for the Kansas Relays Student Committee. Your applications, in writing, stating all qualifications, must be turned in to room 105 Robinson gymnasium before Feb. 20. BAGHTIER, SORGIN. MS. Business, Kansas Relays Committee.
FRED BACHELOR, Senior Manager, Kansas Relays Committee.
Shore
"OFFICER SNYDER HAS A NIGHTMARE"
CAMPUS OPINION
Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the University Daily Kaman. Articles over 300 words in length are not published on any subject are invited.
Editor Daily Kansan:
In response to a query by R. F. I can only say that Mr. Metter, Muscal dance manager, deemed it inadvisable to have a Varsity dance Friday night. Your suggestion concerning the sponsorship of the organization is appreciated. I would appreciate your coming in and giving me more specific details.
Should you still feel the need for some "strenuous exercise" you can look forward to the Quack Club tryouts next Wednesday at eight o'clock after dance and舞 dance at Hop Saturday night-Bill Cochrane, manager.
Dinosaur
Conducted by R. J.B.
ROCK ---
CHALKLETS
We sympathize with the Engineer who happened to have several drawing instruments in his hip pocket when he slipped down into the ivy pavement the other day.
Who will be the first co-ed to have the honor of opening the stockingless season? Of course we realize it will stockets yet, but we were just wondering.
The Men's Student Council is figuring on altering the enrollment, or something. Might we suggest that they just eliminate enrollment entirely?
One of the nice things about these "bi-wing" coats the kids are wearing is that no one has yet discovered just when they need pressing.
Funniest statement of the year: Boys, I'm dropping everything and going after a 2.5 average—The Oklahoma Daily.
If familiarity breeds contempt, what about a five hour course? —J.M.
By the way, besides raising Cain all the time, Louisiana does raise a little sugar cane.
SHAKESPEARE said something one time about all the world being a stage and all the people being the players. That
may have held true in the Bard's day, but nowday there are entirely too many who prefer to stand in the wings and prompt.
A few weeks ago the Russian government recommended a more frequent use of raisons, and now close on the heels of that comes the announcement that Tuxedos are being worn in Russia. Our guess is that they have been worn all of the time, but were not wearing once the popularization of the razer.
A Corner On Books By Mary Jule Shipman
--at the
Current Best Sellers:
The 40 Days of Musa Dagh
The 40 Days of Musa Dogh
Franz Werful
Franz Werful
Heaven's My Destination
Thornton Wilder
Cindy B. McClinton
James Hilton
White Rome Burns
Alexander Woollcott
Wine From These Grapes ... Eileen S. Millar
Edna St. V. Minny Experiment in Autobiography
Experiment in Autobiography ...
H. G. Wells
PLOWING ON SUNDAY, by Sterling
An excessively plain-written story of homely farm life—none of its psychological aspects, simply the bare facts and the emotions pertaining to them. Stanley and Sarah, his wife, getting along in years. Early Ann, who might have been his daughter, and Peter, his son.
The author, literary editor of the Chicago Daily News, has written even his sketchtype descriptions in an accessible way that is both informative and rather good reading - it skims the
EVERYBODY EATS
BLUE MILL
Worn Soles, Rundown Heals—Tired, Sore Feet.
Why suffer when it is so easy and economical to phone
and have those old shoes made new?
1009 Mass.
ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP
ELECTRIC SHOP SHOP
1017 Mass. W.E. Whetehle. Prop. Phone 686
PARKING
surface and occasionally plows under surprisingly.
ENTIRELY SURROUNDED, 1
THE DARK ISLAND, by V. Sackville West: (Doublesav Doran)
To go into the plot won't interest you; it isn't strong enough. It's highly amusing. Little Nell will be terrifying not big sister Sue or brother Brien.
FOR 15 YEARS
Our Station Has Been Headquarters for Students and Faculty FOR COMPLETE SERVICE DRIVE IN
CARTER SERVICE
ENTIRELY SURGHOUND, BY Charles Breckett (Cherald A. Kroop). A very wittery, very risque, this tale of an island house party. Situationa, the character is skilled and handled subject matter which would have been crude and raw. The humor never falls, though at times you fear it—the characters are evidently caricatures of the authors' acquaintance, as the dedication suggests.
GOOD YEAR
It's fascinating, horrific. You see each step before you but are gripped in the spell of the dark island and the lives of its innates.
We have Sheila at sixteen, a beautiful immature woman with her first faint love and her adoration for Storm, the dark and mysterious island near her summer home. At twenty-six she marries its owner, her love for her environment killed outrageously, along with her love for him. At thirty-seven, surrounded by her children and her one wife still at Storm. At forty-six, murder and revenge, taking its theme from the island itself.
I don't believe you'll be able to leave it alone till you finish it.
Join the Meal Plan
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1935
PAGE THREE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
8
Knifel
}
Hill Society
Call K.U. 23 Before 1230 p.m.
Mayerberg To Speak
Rabbi Samuel S. Mayerberg of Kansas City, Mo., will be the featured speaker at the annual dinner of the American Association of University Women which will be given Tuesday evening at the Kaiser Cancer Center hosted by Mayerberg will speak on "Communism and Fascism versus Democracy."
Mrs. Carl I. Winsor of Wichita, state president of the A.U.W., will also be guest and will tell of the activities in Kansas and of the state organization.
Reservations are to be made with Mrs Adrian Lindsey, chairman of the socia committee, by Monday noon.
Large Crowd
Attends C.C.C. Dance
About 150 couples attended the dances, given at the Memorial Union building Friday night by the CCC camp company. The company furnished the music for dancing.
Leut. and Mrs. J. W. Lansing were chaperons. Other guests included Lieut. Alkman, Lieut. C. J. Colbert, Capt. H. S. Howes, Supt. F. O. Miller, Kenneth Bankin educated students in the University and Mrs. George Heckrid, Mr. and Mrs. Freed Jackie, Lieut. and Mrs. William I. Brady, and Sgt. and Mrs. William Kollender of Lawrence.
Entertains With Tea
Dean Husband
Dean Agnes Husband will entertain with a tea this afternoon between the hours of 3:30 and 5:00 o'clock, the Women's Council of W.S.G.A. and a small number of men on the Hill. About forty-four invitations have been issued.
Valentine decorations in red and whit will be used. Gretchen Creeman, c'38 Gertrude Field, *c'ucl*, and Irene Conley, gr will assist in serving. Additional guests will be Miss Irene Peabody and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Werner.
☆ ☆ ☆
Delta Chi
Holds Initiation
Delta Chi held its annual founders day banquet Friday at the chapter house.
After the banquet the following pledges were initiated: Francis Longon c'37, Carl D. Davis, c'38, Newton K Hoverstock, c'38, John P. Hamshaw c'unel, Lyle O. Amberg, c'37, and Walter Wagner, c'38.
2
Alpha Gamma Delta Valentine Party
Alpha Gamma Delta entertained with a dance at the chapter house from nine to eleven.
The valentine theme was carried out in the decorations of red and white. Bill Phipps and his orchestra furnished the music for dancing.
hours of training.
The chaperons were Mrs. Nell Hop
kins, and Mrs. J. N. Gilbert.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Woodward of Topeka gave the name Marilyn to the daughter who was born to them Jan. 25. Mrs. Woodward was Miss Mary Evelyn Hogue and was graduated from the University of Woodward is a son of Mrs. Chester Woodward, formerly of Lawrence. He was graduate from the University in 1931.
New officers elected recently by the Kappa Phi cabinet are: President, Beu-lain Pinoe, c37; vice president, Rosemary Smith, d'edu; secretary, Marie
Ku
Krehbiel, C37; treasurer, Martha Tillmann, c37; corresponding secretary, Elizabeth Aldeside, cuneal
Dinner guests at the Sigma Kappa house this noon will be Miss Ruth Lichen, Miss Married Rich, both of Lawrence, and Betty Neff, 34, of Spartina.
Henry Quigley of St. Marys, Bill Burbull of Hutchinson, and Bob Wheatgift of Independence were dinner guests at the Sigma Chi house last night.
Mr. and Mrs. H, E. H. Homm and daughter, Helen, and Rose Lee Comrade were dinner guests at the Delta Zeat house last night.
☆ ☆ ☆
Dinner guests at the Alpha Delta h
house this noon will be John Lips, b.
358 Sherwick m., 36 Jey Winnakerm
c³4, and Donald Leach c³8.
☆ ☆ ☆
Kappa Phi Methodist church sorority,
is having a tea this afternoon from 3:30
until 5 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Edwin
F, Price.
Phi Chi, professional medical fraternity, announces the pledging of the following men: John K. Terry, cureal, AIM; Robert C. Hooker, nurse in uncle and Ewald Wakeman, c36.
☆ ☆ ☆
☆ ☆ ☆
Gamma Phi Beta announces the pledging of Marjorie Harburgh, c33, of Wellington, and Carolyn Latty, c33, of Portland, Maine.
Week-end guests at the Phi Gamma Delta house were Jack White and Richard Claybaugh of Kansas City, Mo.
Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Nickel of Topeki were guests at the Sigma Phi Epsilon house yesterday.
ROOM AND BOARD for one boy who desires to earn part of his living expenses. 1337 Kentucky. -98
☆ ☆ ☆
The University House Mothers association will have a luncheon tomorrow at 1 o'clock at the Colonial Tea Room.
Delta Zeta announces the pledging o Virginia Lou Yankee of Arkansas City.
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Steiger of Topeka were dinner guests at the Phi Gamma Delin house last night.
Miss Evelyn Spines of Wichita is a week-end guest at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house.
Janice Poole, '33, was a guest at the Gamma Phi Beta house Friday night.
Sigma Phi Epsilon announces the ledging of Elton J. Nickel, c38.
Louie Kuhn's orchestra will play for the regular Mid-Week Varsity Feb. 12
HOPKINS SHORT STORY QUILL PRIZE TO BE AWARDED SOON
All manuscripts for the Edwin M. Hopkins Quill prize must be submitted by midnight Feb. 15 in order to be considered for the $30 award. This prize is named to honor Dr. Edwin M. Hopkins of the university, and his work may be submitted by an undergraduate in any American college or university.
The Edwin M. Hopkins Quill prize is offered every two years, alternating with the Ted Olion prize for poetry.
BOYS: Large room on second, single or double, three exposures. Only quiet people to occupy the rooms. Very reasonable. 1408 Tennessee. Phone 7163.
CLASSIFIED ADS
PHONE K.U.66
LOST: Black billfold containing currency, book activity and papers. Liberal reward for return. Call F. Loncar, 1075M. -90
LOST: Kappa key, probably in Robin-
son gymnasium. Name Dori De Lano
on base of pin. Call 718. Reward. - 90
PHONE
K.U. 66
REWARD- for basketball shoes taken from locker during vacation. No questions asked. Phone 2424M. David Page .00
BOYS: Room in desirable home, twin beds, sleeping ceiling privilges if preferred, exceptionally well balanced meals served if desired. Two blocks from University. 1607 Tennessee Terrace. -94
Twenty-five words or less: one insertion, 25c; three insertions, 50c; six insertions, 75c; contract rates, not more than 25 words, $2 per month flat. Payable in advance and accepted subject to approval at the Kansas Business Office.
ROOMMATE wanted in nicely furnished apartment, $8.00 for one or $6.00 each for two. Conveniently located to Hill or home. Phone 1313J. 1319 Vermont. —36
WANTED Immediately. Girl to work for Room and Board. Two Blocks from Hill. Definite Daytime Hours. Phone 2067. Mrs. Charles Oehrle, 1653 ousiana. -92
GIRLS: Nicely furnished room for rent to one or two girls. No other roomers. 206 W.13h. Phone 2549M. -91
WANTED Immediately, Girl to Wash for Room and Board. Two Blocks from Hill. Define Daytime Hours. Mrs. Charles Odhrde. 123 Louisiana.
ROOM AND BOARD for boys. Large, comfortable rooms and excellent meals at a reasonable price. Conveniently located. Phone 131LM at 1135 Ohio. -95
--the elegance of the occasion is exceeded only by the tastes of the individual. Footwear by Johansen, the foundation of poise and grace, is radiant. In appearance, a footwear that matches your style love for smartness by choosing this modish footwear to equal the complimenting styles of fashion.
GIRLS: Board and room. Phone 2849.
1536 Tennessee street. -90
Ottawa High School Wins First in Debate Contest
Atchison Places Second Lawrence Third in Forensic Meet
Ottawa High School placed first, Atherton High School second, and Lawrence High School third in the second district high school Debating League contest held in Fresner hall yesterday. The defense battled the faculty and the debate squad.
The various towns represented here yesterday were: Argentine, Atchison, Garnett, Humboldt, Lawrence, Osowatson, Ottawa, Paola, Ward, Wyandotte, Blue Mound, De Soto, Greley, Scranton, Welda, and West Mineral.
The various district winners in the state of Kansas will be speakers at the debate content sponsored by the University on March 1 and 2.
The debate question for all league-bates in 1334-35 is: "Resolved: That the federal government should adopt the policy of equalizing educational opportunity throughout the nation by means of annual grants to the several states for the public elementary and secondary education."
Hill Fashion Notes By Patricia Lock, c37
The coming note in shoes seems to be buckskin, in rich tones of beige with white buckskin a favorite for resort wear and later in the spring. Navy blue and white kid appears frequently and is very striking for spectator sports. Brown and white are always a safe bet, and gummed gray with a matte finish may provide the latest models for shoes do not combine either two colors or two fabrics.
"Moment Supreme," a perfume fairly new to the market, is one you will want to try. Its delicate richness is indeed enchanting to the olfactory nerve. If your latest flame is wavering, give him a whiff of Cisir's "Surrender" and he will come around quickly. other favorites are Corday's "Toujours Mol", Lanvin's "My Sin," and the much-used "Shallpin."
"If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?" What with straw hats and print dresses pushing the second snow, it would appear that winter never comes at all to the world of women's fashion. But even today we are aray seen on all our better seeds.
But in spite of chilly winds and threatening skies, spring styles are creeping in, bringing a promise of fairer days to come. Shop windows display dresses, wallpapers, prints and Betty Good is buying her spring wardrobes, of which more later.
The recent antites of the weather man brought out a motley array of clothing on the coats of Mount Peace. Raincoats were in the ascendency, with an occasional cap brightening the ice landscape. One especially successful color scheme was a light red wool dress worn under a rain cap of cadet blue. Considering the weather, there were surprisingly few nashes being worn.
Random notes: Dean Huambat is always charmingly dressed. Jo Hellins, Pi Phi, locks smart in that new gray suit with the bi-swing back. Mable Edwards, Alpha Gam, was wearing a turquoise blue turtle-neck sweater at enrollment Saturday. Speaking of turquoise sweaters, Alice Holdsworth has a twin set with a gray suit with quite that certain air. Kathleen Myers, A.D.Pi was recently in navy blue crepe, rose-accented—a color scheme well worth watching. And those navy blue hose, my dears, are all the rage.
At the Churches
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Holloway Hall. Nineteenth and Massachusetts streets—10 a.m., Sunday School; 11 a.m., three talks on the history of the church.
Immanuel Lutheran Church, Tenth and Kentucky streets—10 a.m., Sunday School and Bible Class; I am the Divine service, subject, "I Am the bread of Life," $3.00 per Fellowship lunch; 6 p.m. open forum discussion.
First Baptist Church, Eighth and Kentucky:- 9:45 a.m., the Church school; 10:50 a.m., Morning worship. Sermon, "The Touch of the Divine." 6 p.m., Social hour and snake for young people. Dean of students. Young people meeting. Larry Leigh, president, Election of officers.
United Brotherh, Seventeenth and Vermont:-9:45 a.m., Sunday school; 11 a.m., Morning worship, sermon, "The Beginning of the Gospel," Lincoln Day service at 7 p.m.
Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont street - 8:45 a.m. Church school; 11 a.m., Morning worship, sermon, "Mana Other Religion." The first of a series of four sermons on "Christianity and the Conflict of World Forces." 3 p.m., Sigma Eta Chi tees; 6 p.m.
High school society, topic, "The Church and Race Relations." *p.* 175. p. Fireside John. Dr. E. E Bayles will speak on "Johnmyr, His Life and Works."
First Methodist Church, 949 Vermont streets, 8-45 a.m., Sunday school; 10:50 a.m., Sunday service. Dr. Frank Smith, superintendent of the Pacific Japanese Mission will speak on "Reality in Religion." Evening speech, Mother Amorie and her mother-in-law fellowship hour with fun and refreshments at 5:30 p.m. Wesley Foundation League presents something different at 6:30 p.m. A cooperative discussion, "Youth Takes a Look at Religion and What's Ahead."
First Presbyterian Church, 901 Vermont-9:45 am, Sunday school, with two classes for University students. 11 a.m., Sunday school. Subject: "The Christian and the Other Half." Special music by the choir. Evening service 7:30 p.m. at Westminster Hall, 1231 Oread, for University students.
Second Church of Christ, Scientist,
Viedemann Bldg, 835°12'15" Massachusetts
treet-9.45 a.m., Sunday school; 11
m., Sunday service. Subject "Spirit"
'estimated meeting every Wednesday
vening at 8 o'clock.
Trinity Episcopal Church, Teeth and Vermont streets.-Rev. Carter H. Harrison, Rector. Prof. H. C. Taylor, Organist and Choir director. Fifth Sunday after Epiphany. 8 a.m., Holy Communion; 9:45 a.m., Church school; 11 a.m., Morning prayer and sermon.
First Christian Church—0:45 a.m.
Church school; 10:45 a.m. Morning
worship; sermon, "Given Man-Find
lunae"; 5:45 p.m. student fellowship
luncheon; 6:45 p.m. student forum.
Unitarian Church, Twelfth and Vermont streets: 9-45 a.m., Sunday school; 10 a.m., discussion group, "Racial Attitude" by Dowdal Davis; 11 a.m. Church service, sermon. 6 p.m., "A Foreigner Looks at America" by S.Matsumoto.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1935
AGGIES WIN CINDER MEET
Wildcats Establish Three New Marks In Indoor Victory
Kansas Shows Strength in Field Events Although Track Material Is Weak
Breaking three records and setting time in three events which previously had not been included in the Kansas-Kansas State indoor meet, Kansas State easily defeated the University of Kansas yesterday afternoon in their annual meet under the Stadium. The score was 68% to 35%.
Running the 440-yard dash in 53.3,
Nixon established a new dual meet record.
O'Leary of Kansas has held
the record since 1916 with the time of
44 seconds.
O'Riley lowered the 880-yard run time nine-tenth of a second. His time was 2:00.1 while Roddy of Kansas has held the record since 1916 with 2:01.0.
Kappenburger Scores 15 Points
Knoppenberger, who set new records last year in the triangular meet in the 120-yard high hurdles and the 220-yard low hurdles set the time in three new events, the 60-yard dash, 60-yard high hurdles and the 60-yard low hurdles. In the 60-yard high hurdle he came within three-tenths of a see-end of the Six Six indoor record which includes events for a total of fifteen points and was the leading point-maker of the Kansas State team.
While Kansas State was breaking three records the best Kansas could do was break one and set the time in a new event.
Dees boosted the shot put record at 47 feet, $7 \frac{1}{2}$ inches. Sundefur in 1921 put the shot 44 feet $7 \frac{1}{2}$ inches. In a new event, the broad jump, Pitts, established the distance of 22 feet $1 \frac{1}{2}$ inches.
Aggie Man Iniured
Perhaps another new meet record could have been set HAD 1924, Kansas State miler, not waited for the other two entries from the Aggie school. As O'Riley came around the last curve he held a commanding lead and to make a three way tie he paused momentarily. His time was 4:347 while the present record made by Miller of Kansas State in 1920 is 4:337. Several spectators who saw the race believe that O'Riley passed long enough that if he had keep his pace, he would have tied the record at least.
The summary:
One minor casualty occurred during the meet. Myron Brooks of the Aggies, on the first turn of the 404-yard dash, injured his knee. Brooks, unaccustomed to the sharp curves in the Stadium wall, against the cement wall on the turn.
The officials were: Referee, Ad Lindsay; Starter, Clyde Dcoferm; Timers, Professor Servis, Forrest C. Cox, and K. K. Landis.
Harris
Kansas-Kansas State Dual Track meet.
60-yard vard—Won by Knapperbender, Kansas State; second, Jerasen, Kansas State; third, Pitts, Kansas Time, 6.6 sec. (Meet record, new distance.)
31st, McCaddell, Kansas State; second, MacCaddell, Kansas third, McKennan, Kansas Time, 53.3 New Meet record, previous record, 54 New meet record, set by O'Leary, Kansas in 1916.
880-yard run—Won by O'Brelly,
Kansas State; second, Dill, Kansas
State; third, Graves, Kansas. Time
2:00.1. New meet record.
Mile run—Won by O'Reilly. Wheelock and Redfield, Kansas State in 4:347.
Two-mile run—Won by Wheeloc
Robinson and McColm, Kansas State
in 9:54. New meet record. Previous
record, both flat, set by Grady
in 1996.
Mile relay- Won by Kansas (Mac-
Caskill, McNown, Graves, Shroeder) in
3:30.6
60-yard high hurdles — Won by Knapbier, Kansas State; second, Steele, Kansas State; third, Reed, Kansas; sec. flat. (Meet record; new distance.)
60-yard low hurdles—Won by Krupnberger, Kansas State; second, Reed, Kansas; third Kirk, Kansas State; Time 34.15; first, Texas Tech; Shot put—Won by Dex, Kansas; second, Bell, Kansas State third, Kantar, Kansas. Bost distance 47. ft, recorded in new record. Previous reeled at 11. ft, in set by Sandefur, Kansas, to 1921).
Broad jump—Won by Pitta, Kansas,
22 ft 11½ in; second, Hemphill, Kansas
State; third, Edwards, Kansas State
(Meet record new event)
High jump-Won by Shannon, Kansas, 5 ft. 11 in; second, Roehmann Kansas State; third, Harris, Kansas State.
Pole vault—Ayers, Kansas State, and McDonald, Kansas, tied for first at 11 ft. 3 in.; Hemphill, Kansas State and Kerry, Kansas, tied for third at 10 ft. 8 in.
STANDINGS OF THE TEAMS
Team Won Lost Pct. Pet. TPs. Ots.
Kansas 6 2 1.857 269 184
Oklahoma 6 2 1.750 375 176
Iowa State 6 2 1.657 369 182
Kansas State 3 7 1.428 301 182
Michigan 4 8 1.333 346 178
Nebraska 4 8 1.200 347 178
RUUNNING First Half KU IS Allen KU
24 Ebling 18
24 Ebling 19
1 Wegner 20
Wells 22
Ebling 26
E holmes 27
9 Allen 24
10 Allen 25
12 Ebling 27
13 Cowen 24
13 Hood 29
7 Cownen 31
8 Wegner 32
15 Ebling 35
16 Wells 35
10 Flemming
Pepy Professors
Paddle Pill Puffingly
To Gain Prestige
The intermissions of the basketball games, which formerly were designated breathing spells for the audience, are rivaling the main show in entertainment value. They run the gamut of minor sports and the audience is momentarily expecting an ice hockey or punkin ball game.
At last night's game Dr. R. C. Moore and Dr. Bert Nash demonstrated some trick shots in a game which was won by Dr. Nash, 21-10. Then came Professor Taylor and Professor Stranathan of the department of physics, who had the crowd alternately cheering or laughing at a well played game which Dr. Stranathan won with some nicely executed smashes.
In celebration of the anniversary of the founding of the Boy Scout movement, 425 Boy Scouts filed onto the ground to promote pride union, vowed the Scout Outcid.
First Rifle Match This Week
Telegraphic Contest Will Be Against Seven Universities
Edgar Leigh. c'77, men's rifle team captain, announced yesterday the schedule of teams the University organization will meet in the first telegraphic contests of the year. This series will start tomorrow and end Feb. 16.
The first series will be against these teams: Georgetown University, Washington, DC; North Dakota Agricultural College, Fargo N. D; Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh, Pa; University of Washington, Seattle, Washington; Virginia Military Institute, Lexington, Va.; University of Georgia, Athens, Ga.; Washington University, St. Louis, Mo.
LINDLEYS WILL BE GUESTS
AT UNION COMMITTEE BANQUET
Dr. and Mrs. Lindley and other faculty members have been invited to be honorary guests at the banquet of the Memorial Union operating committee at the University Catefera Feb. 14 at 6:30 p.m. During the meeting announcement of plans for the completion of the interior of the building will be made.
Plans for the improvement of the Memorial Union include various improvements of the sub-basement and third floor, which were recommended in a recent report of a CSEP worker. The main purpose of the banquet is the recognition of the services of Union employees.
Bachelor Relays Chairmar
Senio; Will Be Assisted by Committee of 12 Underclassmen
Fred Bachelor of Belleville, who has been a member of the Kansas Relays Student committee for the past three years, has been selected as senior member of the thirteenth annual Kansas Relies, which are to be run here April 25.
Assisting Bachelor will be a group of two juniors, four sophomores, and six freshmen. Applications for the freshman positions are to be made to E. R Elbel, intramural manager, 105 Robinson, before Feb. 20.
The junior members are Joseph Payne, Kansas City, Kan., and Dana Durand, Junction City.
Sophomore members are Dwight Bridges and Arnold Gilbert, both of Lawrence, Stanley Marietta of Salina, and T. D. Williamson of Tulsa, Okla.
To Hold Peace Conference
College Institute of International Relations to Meet at Baldwin
Between 50 and 60 University student and members of the faculty from colleges in Missouri and Kansas are planning to attend a Collegiate Institute of International Relations to be held at Baldwin, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, April 5 to 7, Roy McCullough, secretary of the Y.M.C.A., announced yesterday.
Clark Eckleberger of Chicago, member of the League of Nations Association, and Paul Harris of Washington, D.C., member of the National Council for Prevention of War, will be among the speakers.
The institute has as its objective the establishment of the program and matriculation.
Mrs. Elizabeth Watkins has been given the Dorsey-Liberty American Legion Post metal for 1934 at the most distinguished citizen of Lawrence. The award is an annual event, offered by the Legion to the citizen of Lawrence who is a member of the service. The selection was made by a special committee of Lawrence citizens.
MRS. WATKINS NAMED CITY'S MOST DISTINGUISHED CITIZEN
Mrs. Watkins has been a generous, friend to the University and the city of Lawrence. Among her outstanding gifts are the Watkins Memorial hospital, the Watkins Memorial hospice hospital, Elizabeth Watkins' homes home and the city hall building.
Templin Will Address Alumni
Prof. Olm Templin will speak at the alumni meeting March 2 at Detroit. It is likely that a tour will be arranged in his name. Students from Ohio, Columbia, Ohio, Indianapolis, Ind, Urbana, Ill, and St. Louis, Mo.
Ryan Recital Postponed
The senior recital of Tom Ryan, pianist, which had been scheduled for next Tuesday evening, Feb. 12, has been postponed. Ryan fell on the ice pavement a week ago and sprained a finger. The new recital date will be announced in the near future.
Tau Sigma to Present Program
Tau Sigma to Present Program
Tau Sigma will present a program at a banquet which the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce is giving in honor of the American Legion Drum and Bugle Corps next week. Ruth Pyle, Joe Dunkel, and Valeska Powell will dance.
Glee Club Gives Concert The University Men's Glee Club, under direction of Prof. Howard Taylor, graduate high School Friday morning.
New Records
"I'm Just a Little Boy Blue"
"New Deal in Love" Dorsey Bros.
"Hyde Park"
"Ain't Misbehavin'
"Throwin' Stones at the Sun"
"My Heart's in the Right Place" ... Freddy Mattin
"Haunting Me"
"So Red the Rose"
Duke Ellington
Bell's Music Store
Hal Kemp
Jayhawkers Meet Cellar Place Team Tomorrow Evening
Kansas Plays Cornhuskers Who Are Fesh from Defeat by Sooner Cage Squad
The probable starting lineup:
Hopes for another victorious year received a definite uplift last night and Kansas has the dope in her favor tomorrow night.
Kansas and Nebraska will meet for the first time this year on the court here tomorrow. While Nebraska is at the bottom of the league at the present time they have been a jinx to the Jayhawks in many Kansas upsets.
produce starting line
**Kansas**
Elding f
Allen f
Wells c
Kappelman g
Gray g
**Pos.**
f
f
f
g
g
g
Whitaker
Leasecox
Widman
Parsons
Wahlqihts
Nebraska has won only one conference game this year while they have lost four, their last defeat being handed to them last night by Oklahoma when the Sooners won by a score of 32 to 38. This narrow margin goes to show that Nebraska still has a good team regardless of their many losses.
The Cornhuskers have had better luck with their non-conference games, having won four and lost four. They defeated Minnesota, North Dakota, St. Louis and Denver. They dropped encounters with Wyoming, Iowa University, Oklahoma State, Kansas has won three of its four non-conference games having lost to and defeated Kansas State and winning from Emporia Teachers and Washburn.
When approached after the game last night, "Phon" Allan stated that he couldn't be sure of anything Monday night. He said that his first string man had shown better spirit in Friday's practice and this caused him to change his starting lineup back to the veteran men. Before the Iowa State game he displayed much disguis with the performance of his men.
DVII
Since the formation of the Big Six in
HANNA for RADIO
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PHONE
303
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1929 Kansas has defeated Nebraska eight times and lost four times. The scores of these games aggregate 384 for Kansas and 329 for the Huskers. In 1932 Kansas trampled Nebraska under a 51 to 19 score. Since 1902 Kansas has defeated Nebraska 39 times and Nebraska has won 26 times.
If Kansas loses tomorrow night and Oklahoma defeats Iowa State the Jayhawker team would drop into second place and Oklahoma would take the lead. However, if Kansas wins they would remain in the lead regardless of the outcome of the Oklahoma-Iowa State game.
The women's intramural swimming meets have been changed from Feb. 13-14 to Feb. 20-21 by the women's intramural managers.
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10. A car is moving with a constant speed of 45 km/h. It crosses a road that is at the same level as the car and has a width of 60 m. The average height of the car is 180 cm. If the road is made of concrete, find the coefficient of static friction between the road and the car.
ANN HARDING
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The Kansas Players
"YANKEE CRUSADE"
PRESENT
A Play of Early Kansas By ALLEN CRAFTON
Ot all the states but three will live in story:
Old Massachusetts with her Plymouth Rock
And Old Virginia with her noble stock.
And Sunny Kansas with her woes and glory:
These three will live in song and oratory.
While all the others with their idle claims
Will only be remembered as mere names."
Fraser Theatre
February 11, 12, 13, 14 8:20 p.m.
Activity Tickets Admit Single Admission 50c
Reserved Seats at Green Hall Phone K.U.17
Special Seats Reserved for Old Settlers Monday Night at 25c
?
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
大
K
VOLUME XXXII
2.
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
NUMBER 91
on the SHIN
By JOE HOLLOWAY, e'35
Fire in the Theta Ice-House . Beta Plus Cop Equals Wham'. Tubbs Makes Discovery . Milk in a Speakeasy
Well, here comes the story you've been hearing on the campus for the last few days—the Theta's had a fire Thursday, or rather Friday morning, promptly at 4:45—that's the time milk gets there and the girls with late-dates also. The furnace exploded because it was mad at the girls and upy you little daisy we have a fire. Betty Williams smelled the smoke and woke Mrs.K who called the fire department (only one milk man after all) sent a few of the milkmen made by the member while lotering on the first five o'clock. "You know, I've always dreamed about fires in these pajamas,"-Marty Davis. They were fannels, kids. "Now let's be calm and think of what we prizes most and take it out with us."-Shirley Kroh and Tance Burrows (they took Bob's Phi Psi pin and Jack's Phi Gam pin!) Lil Sands said "O.K." and was practically ready to go back to sleep. Betty's a bit of a heroine now and guess how they plan to repay her? They're going to SING to her!
Correction Plitz; there are eleven Pih Fli's besides Betty Lou in the child class one more makes a differ-ence you know.
Speaking of the Theta house and the fire reminds us of a new plan of Rex "Prof. Wottissamgischnzucker" Woods. All of the furniture in the house had to be cleaned after the fire and the poor chumps put up a chair for waiting hours at the Theta house waiting for their dates to come down stairs had no place to sit. Rex suggests that a couple of the boy get together and make a bunch of one-legged wooden stools and rent them to the lads as they come in the door. A special feature of the stools are straps—most assuredly must be straps and buckles—the fellows can simply strap them on and move from place to place.
--preparation, to be snatched from the lyre of the Scottish plowman obscurity, raised to supreme command God, alone, and as surely as these man at a supreme moment, and were raised by God, inspired of intrusted with the destiny of a God was Abraham Lincoln, and a nation. Where did Shakespeare thousand years hence no story, no treasure, no trouble, will he
Some of the Beta froth had a pretty bad time the other night. The club was having its Health Week ceremonies (remember when men at K.U. were men and they called it Hell Week?) and a group of the pledges were sent to the local jink yard to pick up a few trivial little things "the night venerated" and the usual "hall or T灯" by the boys and called the cops. The ladds were transferred to the station and questioned one at a time—but two of them told different stories. The second to be questioned was pleasantly surprised to find a bull at each side of him and to be the recipient of several lusty blows in the face while the beaters assured him in their best taking-tea-waiting, but with a well some kind of a lerer Marvous, these modern methods of术
Bill Cochrane reports that from now on the stages at mid-week races will be limited to 200—thereby almost giving the band enough room to play in and the dancers—well, they don't dance like they did in Mother's day anyway.
A good story is told by Dunne Tubes at the Sigma Chi house. Once upon a time in the far reaches of that noble section of country known as Western Kansas, Dunne chanced upon a place which the locals in the know used for the purchase of hard likker drinks. Dunne however, being a good boy and all that, asked the waitress for a "four hundred buzzed" drink when she returned to the table, "I'm but we all out of buzz." Reminds us of the fellow who went in the restaurant and ordered a "Dull thud on toast," Back came the waitress with the city directory and hitting him on the head, said also, "Here's your dull thud but we haven't any toast." My, such funny stories we do hear.
We chaned upon a fine story in the Daily Texan last week. It seems that the members of Tau Delta Phi out that where they have panhandles adopted a dorg and named him "Dammit Scram." The clipping continues, Imagine what happens in the dog's brain when someone holds out a very desirable bone and calls, "Here, Dammit Scram."
Foster Ill With Flu
George O. Foster, registrar, will confined to his home for a few days. I has the flu.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1935
Cornhusker Game Cuts Attendance At Drama Opener
"Yankee Crusade," Writter by Crafton, Starts Run in Fraser Theater
A large attendance at the Kansas-Nebraska game last night cut the crowd at the opening performance of "Yankee Crusade," which opened last night in Fraser theater for a run of four consecutive nights. The play, which was written by Prof. Allen Crawford, depicts a boy named Kane, who is placed based particularly on the problem of Kansas being admitted to the Union as a Free State.
Last night a section of seats was reserved for Old Settlers and many pioneer families made reservations for seats. The play is almost a one-man product, as Allen Crafton, professor of dramatics, directed it, designed the sets, and acts in the show himself. Mrs. Crafton portrays the part of a typical pioneer woman who stays in the Territory even after her Dan dies.
Bill Inge plays the part of Gardette, diverting a bit from his usual comedy role. Bernetna Brooks is Amy Pabor, wife of William Papar, a northerner who lives in a town that includes a part of a very young and giddy woman. This depicts her versatility, as in the previous play she characterized an old woman over 50 years of age.
"Yankee Crusade" does not attempt to portray the individual characters of the early settlers, but it does emphasize the types of the early pioneers that in many ways are a common human dramatic story of a group of people who found themselves in Kansas Territory in the fifties; second to give emphasis to the motivating ideas and policies of the period; and third, to present, not historical figures, but certain characters possessing qualities aids of some of the well known pioneers.
Farrell Strawn plays the part of Hugh Moore, a young man who comes to Kansas because it is supposed to be a land of promise. At first he is discouraged and wishes to return but stays on when he becomes inspired by the courage of him.
The action is presented in the prologue which takes place in a shelter by the trail, and in seven episodes which open up in "The Abitin" and finally ends in "The Street."
Although a Kansas Players production, it introduced many new students to the audience, because of the large number of players taking part in the performance.
Hazelle D. Taylor, 33, has recently been appointed the acting county case supervisor in Jackson County.
Iowa State Wins
Iowa State defeated Oklahoma last night by a score of 50 to 44, a five minute play-off deciding the game as they were a tie at the end of the regular time.
Oklahoma Defeated 50-44
After Tie Game
As the game closed, the score stood at 40 to 40. During the five minute play-off Iowa State made ten points to Oklahoma's four.
The game put Iowa State in second place with five won and two lost, while Oklahoma moves down into third place with six won and one lost. Iowa State's "State-
C'mn'l'pY G F 4F
Cmn'l'pY G F 4F
Warrenf 2 1 10
Hayas 1 1 0
Hayas 1 1 0
Colbh 4 1 0
Nelsong. 4 1 2
Bfwngw 5 4 3
Tylerg. 4 1 2
G FtT
Cowen l 1
Fintm'g f 4
And m'n f 1 0
O cwm f 6 0
Cowang i 1 0
Cowang g 1 0
fth g h 0
Totals ..20 10 17
Nationalism in America To Be Discussed by Yard
Totals ..16 12 11
Religious Director Will Give Fourth L.I.D. Talk Tomorrow
Dr. James M. Yard, former director of religious activities at Northwestern University, will deliver the fourth League for Industrial Democracy lecture at the Unitarian church at 8:35 p.m. tomorrow. He will conern "Nationalism in America."
Dr. Yard has written for the New Republic, Christian Century, and Asia magazines. For 15 years he taught in a Chinese Government school, and during his stay in China he was editor of a newspaper in Shanghai.
Tomorrow
In dealing with nationalism he has had intimate experience with National Nazism. He has an extensive knowledge of nationalism because of his work for the German victims of nationalism. Dr. Yard is secretary of the Chicago committee for the upholding of human rights against Nazism.
Dr. Yard will take tomorrow in Ottawa,
at 4 p.m. at the First Baptist Church.
CHARLES F. SCOTT TO SPEAK
Iola Editor May Be Added to L. I. D Lecture Series
Charles F. Scott, editor of the Iola Register, will probably be an additional speaker for the League of Industrial Democracy lecture series, according to the Rev. Charles Engvall, a guarantor of the series. The executive committee of guarantors is considering other possible speakers for the course.
To the board of trustees of the Unitarian church, the committee of guarantors has sent a vote of thanks for the work done in the church in which to hold the lectures.
Abraham Lincoln
LINCOLN. THE INSPIRATION
All changes in enrollment should be made this week as far as possible. In order to settle the classes, and to eliminate late changes, a fee of $2 will be charged after Friday. Feb. 15, according to the College office.
BORN 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 name or fame, or seeming
“Vas You Der Sharlie?” Entertains Basketball Audience
Students Must Change Enrollment This Week
Students who wish to make changes this week should go first to the College office, and make appointments to see their class advisers, through whom the changes will be made. The chairman of advisers of the different classes are: for seniors, Prof. Guy W. Smith; for juniors, Prof. H. C. Thurman; for sophomores, Prof. Else NeuenSchwander; for freshman men, Prof. C. J. Posey; and for freshman women, Prof. Florence Black.
Before going to the College office, pre-medians should see Prof. F, B Dainas, or Prof. R, Q. Brewster, and law students should see Prof. C, G. Crowford.
University athletics took the court by between halves of the Kansas-Nebraska basketball game last night in a program of varied entertainment headlined by Elywn Dees' put exhibition. The Big Six champion and scholastic recog
Two Dollar Fee Charged for Changes Made After Friday
holder with the 12-pound shot tossed the iren ball on a mat over 45 feet away on four consecutive attempts.
CITY OF TORONTO
Clyde Coffman and Theno Graves convulsed the audience with a novel game called "Vas You Der Sharliez" consisting of a blinding flailed feud during which the officials were as well swafted as the participants. A jousting tilt between Warren McDougal and John Humpon with Dean Nesmith and Milo Clawson as mounts was included on the program as well as a rooster fighting bout between Delos Douglas and George Noland.
Those who wish to change next week are requested to apply at the College office. They must have a good reason, and a new change will be made at this time.
Members of the band, orchestraas, and glee clubs, if they have not already enrolled, should do so immediately even if they expect no credit for the work. If we wait until after Friday, they also will have to pay a $2 fee.
Graduates Awarded Scholarship Kenneth Midkiff,'33, and Earl Amos, University, in St. Louis. They were the University, have been awarded the scholarship to attend the special honors university, in St. Louis. They were selected from the Kansas Relief Committee organization.
replica of birthplace.
get his music? Whose hand smote filled with greater wonder than
Graduate Awarded Scholarship
LINCOLN MEMORIAL AT WASHINGTON, D.C.
that which tells of his life and death. If Lincoln were not inspired of God, then there is no such thing on earth as a special providence or the interposition of divine power of men.
THE BRAIN IS WIRED TO THE CHEMISTRY
—Henry Watterson
JAYHAWKERS TAKE HARD-FOUGHT GAME
Kansas Squad Wins Contest From Nebraska, 32-21, in Last Game on Home Court for Season; Gray Leads Attack, Sinking Seven Out of Eight Tries for Basket
In an exhibition of hard and fast basketball, the University of Kansas Jayhawkers brought their home schedule to a brilliant finish in taking Nebraska, 32 to 21. The glory for the victory goes to Gordon Gray who made 7 field goals in his last appearance on the court in Lawrence.
The Nebraskan went into the game full of fight, which put them in the lead until well in the first period. Kansas came up but Nebraska held to claim the intermission advantage, 12 to 11.
The game was the last home appearance due to a schedule which makes all the home games to be played at the first of the season, how-
Position of Publisher Added to Kansan Staff
Work Will Correlate Business Editorial and News Sections
Following its plan to improve the University Daily Kansan, the Kansan Board, governing organization of the paper, voted yesterday afternoon to unite the various departments of the paper under a single student head. The new office created is to be known as the publisher.
The duties to be delegated to the new publisher are those of formulating policy, carrying on long time campaigns and reaching out between the frequent changes on the staff.
A panel of five names from whom the publisher will be chosen was presented by the faculty of the department of journalism. The list contains the following: Joe Doctor, c35, present editor-in-chief of the Kansas; Carolyn Harper, c35, present managing editor; Wesley MCalla, c35, former editor-in-chief; Harlan Kelley, c35, former editor; Lena Wyatt, c35, former managing editor. Election of the first publisher is scheduled to take place next Monday afternoon.
As present constituted, the staff of the Kansan is divided into three distinct departments, the news, the editorial, and the business departments, each headed by a student elected by the Kansan Board. The editor-in-chief and managing editor have the first power to have office for a period of one-half semester; each has acted independently of the other in matters of policy.
Election of these various department heads will not be changed, except that each will now be subordinate to the publisher, who will hold office for a full semester with privilege of re-election for a second term.
The creation of the new position will fill a long felt want on the part of the Kansan, members of the Board believe. It will eliminate the jagged edges of inconsistent and loosely constructed policy that has frequently been criticized by students of the University.
The qualifications placed for election to the new position are that he must be a student of the University and be named on a panel of names, with a minimum of five, to be presented by the faculty of the department of journalism. Ultimate election rests with the student members of the Kansan Board.
The plan for the publisher was deprecated last semester, but it remains under consideration.
Larson To Speak on Sweden
Larson To Speak on Swetch "Student Life in Sweden" will be the subject discussed by Miss Mary Larson of the department of zoology at the meeting of the Advanced Standing Commission of Y.W.C.A. this afternoon. The meeting will be held at Henley House at 4:30.
Gist Unable To Meet Classes
Prof. Neil P. Gist was unable to meet his classes yesterday because of being confined to his home with a cold.
Late Basketball Scores
Late Basketball Scores
New York U. 27, Brooklyn 25.
Kentucky 25, Alabama 16.
Grunnel 31, Oklahoma A & M 23.
Drake 45, Tulsa 26.
Purdus 35, Temple 34.
Wisconsin 26, Chicago 24.
Ohio State 41, Northwestern 29.
Indiana 34, Iowa 30.
Minnesota 29, Michigan 26.
Professor Hopkins to Hospital
Prof. E. M. Hopkins, on leave this
semeeter because of illness, went to Kansas
City yesterday to enter Trinity Lutheran hospital. He expects to be there
ten days to two weeks.
ting the road engagements to be filled the next three weeks. This means that the audience saw Goron Gray, guard, and Dick Wells, center, in their last exhibitions here. Gray, who has been the spark on the offense through the season, shot a dead eye for the basket, making 7 good baskets out of 8 tries, all long ones. Wells scored eight minutes in the Nebaska game but his work in the post position early in the season was a Kansas asset.
Nebraska used a full squad in the futile endeavors, as Coach Brown substituted freely in the final minutes. The Cornhushers drove in hard and
JEWEL WILSON
GRAY
and two free throws.
move in mind and pulled some offspring to save him, to evade a weakened Kansas defense. Hale, short flashy forward, figured in several of the early plays, and Sorenson, center who got the tip off Wells, led the scoring for Nebraska in the pivot position, to topping
Noble put Wells ahead, as he went in for Welles and pushed in 2 points, but Widman and Whitaker broke through with field goal contributions to
Parens dropped in a free tosse to open fireworks after Mitl Allen's first of 3 fouls, and Wahlquist and Sorenson followed with haskets. As Kansas was not able to work in for any set plays, Gray took long shots to cut down the lead and dropped in three consonant runs on another by Eibling and a free point awarded to Sorenson on Allen's mistake had the teams standing at 8-8.
lend at the half, 1211.
An exasperated Dr. Allen went to the dressing room with his lads, and sent them back into the game with more fire, which sent them into the lead by growing margins. Gray started off with another spectacular arched
throw was the only attempt he failed to make good for the remainder of the game.
Whitaker rank two more baskets to tie the score again at the five minute mark in the second period. Gray came through again to break it up and Kannan was able to stop Allen and Ebling teamed with Gray to complete the Kansas total.
The win puts Kansas well in the lead of the conference with 7 wins matched against the 1 loss to Oklahoma. Iowa State's win over the Sooners at Northern Illinois has put Iowa State now holding the second position and Oklahoma third.
Kansas, however, faces n difficult schedule of road games that will probably renew the title struggle.
Nebraska 21 G FT MFT FP TP MPJ
Lencox, f G FT MFT FP TP MPJ
Hale, f G FT MFT FP TP MPJ
Hale, f G FT MFT FP TP MPJ
Wahlquist, g-1 F 2 1 4 3 8 40
Wahlquist, g-1 F 2 1 4 3 8 40
Parsons, g F 3 0 2 1 3 40
Whitaker, f F 3 0 2 1 3 40
Widman, g F 0 1 2 2 20
Baker, f F 0 0 0 0 3.5
Kansas 32
Ebling, f G FT MFT PF TP MPJ
Allen, f 2 4 1 8 40.
Wells, c 1 2 1 3 4 27.5
Gray, g 7 1 1 1 4 1
Kingman, g 0 1 0 1 14 4
Nohle, s 2 0 1 1 3 36.
Rogers, f 0 0 0 0 0 12.5
Oyler, f 0 0 0 0 0 1.
Totals 12 8 4 8 32 200.9
total score: 565
TABLE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
G. field, d. field, t. field, f. field, m.
free tree (hive), t. total points, mp, mute
tree (hive), t. total points, mp, mute
.
PAGE TWO
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1035
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Payer of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
EDITOR-4N-CHIEF ... JOSEPH DOCTOR
Julia Markham Charles Brown
MANAGING EDITOR CAROLYN HARPER
Campus Editor Harry Valentine
Make-up Editors | George Moore,
| Herbert Moore
Sports Editor Robert Patt
Sunday Editor Eleanor Jerry
Wednesday Editor Joseph Fry
Society Editor Shirley Jones
Exchange Editor Joseph Fry
Education Editor Joseph Fry
Business Manager...F. Quentin Brown
Ant. Business Manager...Ellen Carter
Kansan Board Members
Lena Wwatt Irie Olson
Wacker Loren Milk Rutherford
Loren Milk Rutherford
Woley McCalla Julia Markham
Carolyn Harper F. Quentin Brown
Carolyn Harper
Business Office K.U. 46
News Room K.U. 25
Night Connections, Business Office 707K
Night Connection, News Room 270K
Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday and Saturday by students in the department
school buildings by students in the department
school buildings. Visit the Press of the Department of Journalism,
advance, $2.25 on payments, single copies, &
Entered as second class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan.
KANSAS PRESS
ASSOCIATION
1935
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1935
ARE OUR HONOR SOCIETIES
WORTH WHILE?
An honor society should be t a campus what service clubs are to a city. Owl and Sachem are to the University what the Chamber of Commerce and the Rotary club are to Lawrence. By the activity of its service clubs the city of Lawrence, or any other city, is known for its degree of aggressive public spiritedness and general progressiveness. These clubs are the main springs of municipal activity, the originators of public trends and opinions, the regulators of local policies. The strength of these clubs is the measuring stick for the strength of the town
How do our honor societies measure up to their responsibilities? Have they formulated any desirable programs? Have they backed any worthy movements? Have they, in general, been as representative of the University as they should be?
By a look at the expenditures in the 1933-34 treasurer's report we find that Owl's major expenditure is listed at $124.68 for keys. Besides the Jayhawker space expenditures and other run-of-the-college payments, we find the other two expenditures that loom largest in their output are for banquets, ($29.15) and for cigars ($2.35). From this it is apparent that Owl is useful only to its members, who do not necessarily represent anything but the foremost politicians of the campus, not the actual founders of movements in campus life.
To say that they have shirked their duties is to say that they are not worthy of the name they bear, that of "honor society." They have not anything that should warrant their existence as such a society.
We have on our campus a Union building as yet uncompleted. So far as Owl and Sachem are concerned it is perfection itself. At least they have offered no plan, nor willingness, to solve its problem.
This is only an example of what campus problems should demand the attention of honor societies. There are many more, if Owl and Sachem would care to investigate.
Again we ask, "Are the honor societies fulfilling their duties to the campus?" If their major activities consist of wearing keys, holding banquets, and smoking cigars, there is serious doubt that they are.
With the coming of warm weather will come the passing of the revolving doors from Snow hall and the Chemistry building. Every time we get through one of those blamed things we have to stop and congratulate ourselves on not being ground to bits.
A glance at the genealogies of some of Europe's royal families will convince anyone that there haven't been any wars in Europe for centuries just family quarrels.
OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
Vol. XXXII Tuesday, Feb. 12, 1935 No. 81
EASTERN SCHOOL
Vol. XXXII
Notice due at Caesellor's office at 8 a.m., preceding regular publication days
at 11:39 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issues.
ROTANV CLUB:
There will be an important business meeting next Tuesday evening, followed by a talk by Mrs. Margaret Syler on "Recent Work on the Cytology of Liverworts." Every member please be present.
FLORENE BRISCOE, President.
FIRST SEMESTER GRADES:
Grades for the fall semester may be obtained from the Registrar's Office Feb. 11-16, according to the following schedule for student names:
Tuesday, Feb. 12—H to M inclusive
Wednesday, Feb. 13—N to S inclusive
Thursday, Feb. 14—T to Z inclusive
Friday, Feb. 15 and
Saturday, Feb. 16—Those unable to come at the scheduled time.
GEORGE O. FOSTER, Registrar
FRESHMEN MEN:
There will be six freshmen chosen for the Kansas Relays Student Committee. Your applications, in writing, stating all qualifications, must be turned in to room 165 Robinson gymnasium before Feb. 28.
WRITING ROUTE 04-0104-Sunnyvale, CA
FRED BACHELOR, Senior Manager, Kansas Relays Committee.
FRESHMAN Y.M.C.A. COUNCIL:
There will be a regular meeting of the Freshman Council this evening at 2 p.m. in room 10, Memorial Union building. All freshmen are cordially invited to attend.
PHILIP RAUP, President
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB:
The International Relations Club will hold its regular dinner meeting at the cafeteria dining room at 6 p.m. Feb. 12. Open forum discussion on the "Triangle Conflict in Asia," led by John Bekker, will begin at 6:30 p.m. All interested are invited.
FREDERIC PARKES, Program Chairman.
Le Carcère Francais se reunite mercredi a quatre heures et demie dans la salle 306 Fraser hall. Tous ceux qui parient français sont invités.
LE CERCLE FRANCAIS:
MATHEMATICS CLUB:
FLAVIA HAY, Secretaire.
The Mathematics Club will meet Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. in room 213 Administration building. Everett Emery will title to "Coordinate Systems." Everyone invited. All who have had or are taking Calculus are eligible for membership in the club. MARLOW SHOLANDER, President.
MID-WEEK DANCE:
BILL COCHRANE. Manager.
The regular mid-week dance will be held Wednesday night at 7 o'clock in the Memorial Union ballroom. All students must present their identification cards Due to the large number of stags attending the mid-week dances, the number will be limited to 200 this Wednesday night.
NEWCOMERS' CLUB:
A party will be held for members and their husbands at the University Club Thursday, Feb. 14, at 8:30 pm. Those who cannot attend, please call Mrs. Alfred M. Lee. MRS. E. R. LATTY, Secretary.
PHI CHI DELTA:
Phi Chi Delta will meet at 5:20 on Tuesday, Feb. 12 at Westminster ball.
*FLORENCE-DHU.*
SOCIOLOGY CLUB:
TAU SIGMA:
There will be a meeting tomorrow at 4:30 p.m. room 298 Everyone interested is welcome. HENRY BAKER, President.
W. S. G. A;
120. You will be a meeting tonight at 8 o'clock. Personas who have custum-
res are requested to return them at this time.
RUTH PYLE, President.
The regular meeting will be held in room 5. Memorial Union building, tonight at 7 o'clock.
PEGGY SHERWOOD.
MANY KANSANS HAVE PROFITED BY CECIL RHODES LAST WISH
Winners of Oxford Scholarships Favor Education as Life Work; Also Have Entered Law, Government, Business, Literature and Engineering
By Robert G. Patt
"You know what my ideas are; see that you carry them out. If you don't I'll come back and worry you."
With this simple comment, Cecil Rhodes closed his last will. Written in terse, common phrases, it has suffaced to send more than a thousand scholars to Oxford since the death of that British internationalist and statesman in 1902. Thirty-two American students each year and representatives of every British territory and Germany are granted the opportunity.
Ray Miller recently won a Rhodes scholarship for 1953 and will go to England next fall as the ninth graduate of the University of Kansas to gain this honor. Under the present system each state annually selects candidates for the national plan allowed by states scholarships each year.
Kansas has sent 20 Rhodes scholars to Oxford, 11 of whom came from other schools in the state or were residents of this state matriculated at other universities. H. T. Cunningham, of Wichita, a rhodes scholar last year, went to Yale. He took advantage of the provision which allows scholars to apply either in the state of residence or in the state where they are at the time studying. W. D. P. Carey, of Hutchinson, Cornell University, became a rhodes scholar in the same campus. The University of Kansas nine scholarships, Baker University's three, Washburn university's two, The College of Emporia's two, Southwestern's one, and Bethany's one make up the total of twenty.
The first scholarships were offered in 1904; Earl W. Murray fortunately gained one of these for the University. He later returned to teach Latin here. G. E. Putnam, a graduate of 1908 who also attended Yale, went next from Oread to Oxford; he returned to KU. as a professor of economics. C. A. Castle, University of Kansas Rhodes scholar for 1914, entered government consular service. L. R. Miller of 1916 became a journalist abroad. E. S.
Mason, of 1019, and Ralph M. Hower, of 1025, both travelled from K.U. to Oxford to professorships at Harvard. Brewster Morgan received in 1827 the last University appointment prior to that of Ray Miller this year.
An investigation in 1927 by the trustees of the Rhodes Scholarships Fund revealed that educational work later claims a majority of the Rhodes scholars, leading other fields in the following proportions: education, 452, law, 334, business and industry, 178, medicine, 109, government service, 88, ministry and social work, 45, literary and journalism, 38, mining and engineering, 33, farming, 23, forestry, 15, and army and naval service, 25. Rhodes men favor law as a course of study at Oxford as 434, up to 1927, enrolled in law, 187 studied history, and 162 followed the natural sciences.
Conviviality and love of talk have formed many clubs at Oxford. The debating societies dominate social life, and groups of various interests satisfy most students interests. All Americans belong to the American Club.
Prof. W. E. Sandelius of the political science department, a Rhodes scholar from Idaho, tells of the diverse activity in any of the twenty-seven colleges which make up Oxford University. One may follow a purely scholastic, or athletic, literary, artistic, political, or musical path through college. Athletics form an important phase of Oxonian life, much the same as on American campuses. Rowing is the classic sport, football is the most popular Oxford-Cambridge regatta as the high season of the year. The school also holds competition in Rugby football, track and field, cricket, field hockey, tennis, golf, swimming, boxing, lacrosse, and fencing. The proficient athlete is awarded a "blue," an insignia in the color of Oxford, taking the place of the American "letter."
COMMENTS
"If can be seen," says Professor Sandelius, "that Ray Mayer's life abroad will not be dull. The annuity offered by the Rhodes scholarship is sufficient to include a great deal of extracurricular activity and travel in England."
BEAUTY AND BRAINS
Miss Maria Leonard, dean of women at Illinois, breaks into print with a statement that the time-honored saying, "Beautiful but dumb," is definitely out in the new era of college education. She points out that several beauties hold responsible campus offices in several universities.
Reassuring as this may be, a little thought brings out the pessimistic observation that not all homely women are smart.
LONG TO LEGISLATURE
In an endeavor to find out how the other half lives, we suspect, the Kansas legislature would invite the swearing senator from Louisiana to speak before them. The staid Kansas Capitol will hear for the first time in many years the thundering tones of an orator who rules by his power of personality. If he comes to Topeka, it would be well worth your while to hear him.
SIGNS OF SPRING ACTIVITY
In about two months the campus will be littered with handbills advocating the focus of sundry candidates for sundry campus political jobs. W.S.C.A. voters do not go in for handbills, which is so much to their credit. But we hear through certain channels that the girls are already "combining."
CAMPUS OPINION
Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the University Daily Raman. Articles over 200 words in length are invited to submit their contributions on any subject are invited.
Editor Daily Kansan:
Here I am at last doing the thing I swore I never would do—writing to you about the doors recently constructed to keep the north wind from whipping in the entrance to Snow hall. Whoever designed the new swinging door has probably satisfied himself that he has met one of the requirements and kept the wind out but at the same time, he has done more. The job was so thorough that he has concurred to keep students out as well as we have. So if you go down there between classes and watch the battle to get in and out, I guess later the designer will attach some dingues onto the axis of the door and get steam enough to generate electricity for the building. But until this plan is worked out, I will have to consider the door a failure. C.D.B.
ROCK CHALKLETS Conducted by R.J.B.
Nestest Alibi of the Week: A student who was caught looking at a neighbor's paper during a test calmly replied: "I was only trying to see if he needed any help."
For Schiller Shore's cartoon of George Snyder, the campus constable, decked out in one of those new-fangled Atlantic City police uniforms we raise to his attention. If he would be done full justice in the event he should wear one of those uniforms.
Please, Mrs. Dionne, do not come to Kansas! Any lady that drinks ten bottles of pop and caps off that accomplishment with champagne, would not be a "fit person" to give talks on "Motherhood" since our beer bill met with such opposition—Bertha Shore in Augusta Gazette.
If You Are Planning a Group Meeting
PLEASE notify us the day before.
Call 2100
THE CAFETERIA
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45
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1935
6
PAGE THRE
K
Hill Society
Call K.U. 25 Before 1230 p.m
Nu Sigma Nu
celebrates Twenty-fifth Anniversary
Nu Sigma Nu, professional medical
fraternity, celebrated its twenty-fifth
anniversary last Friday. A banquet
was held at the Shrine Temple in Kansas
City at 6:30 p.m.
Initiation services were held following the banquet for the following men: Royle Klinkenberk, *m'undl*; Vernon Wiksten, *m'37*; James Marr, *m'37*; Richard Jones, *m'37*; and Benjamin Brunner, *m'37*.
Among those who attended were Dr. Parke Woodard, professor of physiology and Dr. Hinshaw, interne at the Watkins Memorial hospital, members of the local chapter of Nu Sigma a medical hospital in Kansas City, alumni from Kansas City, and alumni from surrounding towns.
☆ ☆
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Alpha Xi Delta held initiation services Sunday afternoon for the following women Virginia Hardesty, c37; Hope Lane, c38; and Roberta Milley,
Alpha Xi Delta Holds Initiations
A buffer supper was served after the services at 5:30. Out-of-town guests at the supper were Mrs. Marguerite Walker, from Kansas City, Kan; Miss Helen Trant, Perry; Miss Mildred Curry, Miss Virginia Compton, Miss Genevieve Harriet, and Mrs. Margaret Rose, all of Kansas City, Mo.
☆ ☆ ☆
Guests at the Phi Delt house this weekend were Mr. C. Mize and Mr. J. A. Mize, both of Atchison; Louis Seruets, Lydian Lyman, and Bob McNaughten, all of Hutchison; Joe Mon, John Bridenthal, Bo Baeer, and James Gray, all of Kansas City; Henry C. W. Mortford of McPherson, Kenneth Booke and Robert Booke, both of Madison.
Guests at the Kappa Sigma house Sunday for dinner were: Helen Finley, cunel; Meigle Meigs and Dorothy Anne Brown, both of Kansas City, Mo. Emma Glen Hughes, Ruth Bhowne, Neale Nickels, Glen Brown, Fletcher Helton, Clarence Rogers, Bob Sehoria and Homer Cain, all of Arkansas City. Darl Kennell of Topeka; and Josephine Grant of Iola.
Krucoff-Sills Wedding
Miss Rose Kruczoff, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Kruczoff, of Washington, D.C., and Stephens Sills, also of Washington, D.C., attended 49th at the home of the bride's parents.
The groom formerly attended the University, where he was known as Stephen Silverman. He is now an executive in the elevator construction and insurance business in the capital. Mr. Silva left for a wedding trip in Florida.
Plague Doctor
Theta Epsilon, Baptist church sorority will meet this evening at 1124 Mississippi street to discuss plans for the national convention which will be held at Ames, Iowa on April 6 and 7. Plans will also be made for the initiation service to be held next Sunday.
Dinner guests at the Delta Tau house
Sunday were Nancy Newly, c37, Marilyn Nuzman, c'urnel, Marie Stevens, c'unel, and Eleanor Troup c'unel.
Weekend guests at the Kappa Sigma house were Nole Nichols, Glen Brown, Fletcher Hilton, Chance Rodgers and Bob Schoaria, all of Arkansas City.
The Alpha Xi Delta corporation elected the following officers at a meeting held Sunday afternoon at the chamber house; president, Josephine Edmonds, of Lawrence; treasurer, Mrs. Marguerite Walker of Kansas City Ma; members of the board: Mildred Curry of Kansas City, Mo., Florene Dill of Lawrence, and Nola Stark o Topela.
The Housemother's Association gav a lunchroom yesterday noon at the Colonial Tea-room. The table was decored with spring flowers and yellow candles. Contract bridge was played after the lunchroom and light refreshments were served later in the afternoon.
The Signa Kappa Mother's club will meet Thursday at the home of Mrs. C. E Decker, 705 Tennessee street, St. Louis. Mrs. Roberts and Mrs. Roberts house as hostesses.
The Newcomer's Club will hold a Valentine's Day party at the University Club, Feb. 14. It will be given for the husbands, Chancellor and Mrs. Lindley will be guests of the club.
☆ ☆ ☆
The Alpha Gamma Delta Mother's club will meet tomorrow afternoon at the chapter house.
Mr. Lee Liley of Yokima, Washington, is spending the week visiting at the home of his niece, Mrs. Alfred M. Lee, 1731 Indiana street.
The alumni chapter of Gamma Ph Beta will meet at the home of Mrs E. R. Latty at 7:30 tonight.
☆ ☆ ☆
Beta Theta Pi held formal initiation Sunday morning for William Wilson坐, c23, of Salina.
Dinner guests at the Gamma Phi Beta house Sunday were Elizabeth Post, 33 of Topeka; Thurman Kepern, e'uncl; Quentin Nelson, of Sioux City, Iowa; and John Chandler, of Chicago.
PHONE K.U.66
☆ ☆ ☆
Sunday dinner guests of Beta Theta Pi were Mr. and Mrs. George Seitz and Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Simpson, all of Salina.
☆ ☆ ☆
The weekly W.S.G.A. tea will be held in the Central Administration lunch tomorrow afternoon between the hours of 3 and 5 o'clock. Hostesses will be the W.Y.C.A. cabinet and W.S.G.A. council.
Cuests at the Triangle house this weekend were Louis Farber of Kansas City, Ivan Shull of Oka洛萨, and Nelson Epsilon of Awatontime.
Weekend guests at the Gamma Phi Beta house were Lucille Libel, '34, and Elizabeth Post, '35, of Topeka.
CLASSIFIED ADS
--from learner during vacation. No questions asked. Phone 2424M. Page David Page
FOUND: Keuffel & Esser beginner'
slide rule. Call at Kansan office.
ROOM AND BOARD for one boy who desires to earn part of his living expenses. 1337 Kentucky. -93
PHONE K.U.66
TAXI
Phone 12 - 987
HUNSINGER'S
920-22 Mass.
LOST: Kappa key, probably in Robin-
nson gymnasium. Name Doris Dela-
on base of pin. Call 718. Reward. -93
REWARD:
BOYS: Room in desirable home, twin beds, sleeping bedroom privileges if preferred, exceptionally well balanced meals served if desired. Two blocks from University. 1697 Tennessee Terrace. -84
BOYS: Large room on second, single or double, three exposures. Only quiet people to occupy the rooms. Very reasonable. 1408 Tennessee. Phone 7163.
ROOMMATE wanted in nicely
nursed apartment, $8.00 for one or $6.00
each for two. Conveniently located to
home. Phone 1131J. 1319 Veget-
ment.
WANTED Immediately, Girl to work for Room and Board. Two Blocks from Hill. Definite Daytime Hours. Ms. Charlene O尔德尔, 109 Louisiana.
ROOM AND BOARD for boys. Large comfortable rooms and excellent meals at a reasonable price. Conveniently located. Phone 1311M at 1135 Ohio. -95
GIRLS: Nicely furnished room for rent to one or two girls. No other rooms.
208 W. 13th. Phone 2540M. -91-
Evelyn Little, c 37, left Sunday f
month's cruise through the We
Indies and a trip to South America.
OFFICE SUPPLIES
LOOSE LEAF FILLERS
GREETING CARDS
Twenty-five words or less: one insertion, 25c three insertions, 50c; six insertions, 75c; contract rates, not more than 25 words, $2 per month flat. Accepted subject to approval at the Kansan Business Office.
KEELER'S BOOK STORE
Dinner guests at the Sigma Chi house Sunday were Miss Veta Lear, and Dr. and Mrs. William Newman.
--ver, University of Colorado, and the university of Kansas. The University of Oklahoma chapter was host to the convention.
Dinner guests at the Alpha Tau Omega house were Virgil Crook, c'uncel, and Helen Calhoun. c'37.
☆ ☆ ☆
Alex Izzard, '33, was a weekend guest at the Alpha Kappa Psi house.
Triangle announces the pledging of Ted Sanford, e'36, of Kansas City, Mo.
Miss Elizabeth Dunkel, assistant professor of physical education will attend be "Ballet Russe" to be given in Kansas City Saturday evening.
Men's Pan-Hellenic Council Takes Up Issue in Monthly Meeting
Scholarship Is Discussed
The promotion of better scholarship among the 17 fraternities, members of the Men's Pan-Hellenic Council, was the principal discussion at the monthly meeting of the council in the Memorial Union building Sunday.
"On the basis of scholarship, the council was able to recommend only three out of ten pledges for initiation to their respective fraternities," Robert Williams, e35, president of the council, stated. Under the regulations of the council a student must curate at least 12 hours of work, make less than 12 grade points, and make not more than five days of D during his first semester at the University, to be qualified for initiation into the fraternity he has pledged. The Men's Pan-Hellenic Council cup, given annually to the fraternity with the highest scholastic average for the preceding year, was presented by Mr. Betts. The Betas had a scholastic average of 1.55 last year. Phil Delta Theta was runner-up with an average of 1.51.
Gamma Delta Organizes
Local Lutheran Group Joins National Student Association
The local chapter of the Lutheran Student Walder League became the University chapter of Gamma Delta, the National Association of Lutheran students, at the business meeting held Sunday evening. The national constitution was adopted and the local constitution was revised.
New officers, elected at the same meeting, are: President, Wilma Soeken, c37; vice president, Carl Grooter, 135; secretary, Dorothy Janke, c38; and treasurer, Estaline Preusch, fa. 36. **Delta Gamma meets every Sunday evening in the Parish house at 818 Kentucky street.** Lunch is served at 5:30 and the open forum begins at 6 o'clock. The Rev. W. W. Stoopeppelworth, pastor of the Immuned Lutheran church, is the adviser.
Aero Club Meets Tonight
Organization of New Club for Engineers to be Discussed
to be Discussed
A meeting of the Aero Club will be held tonight at 7:30 in the mechanical laboratory of Marvin hall for the purpose of organization.
Plans for the coming semester will be outlined to the engineers. All available equipment for study purposes will be exhibited and inspected. It is hoped that during the semester a study can be made of navigation problems of the present year, and that members who are interested in a similar study of problems of glider flying.
A great deal of the equipment of the aeronautic department will be at the disposal of the club. An exact copy of an N.P.L. Balance at the National Physical Laboratory in London has been calibrated in a University engineering laboratory. The aeronautic department would pay $5,000 for such a balance in the world market. It has been found to be extremely accurate.
Many different types of airplane engines, such as Liberty, Pratt, and Whitney (Hornet), and Kinner are at the immediate disposal of the Aero club. A glider, a five-foot wind tunnel, and a helicopter are available for the use of club members.
Only students in the Engineering school will be admitted to the organization.
Will Honor Mrs. Watkins
University Students To Present Enter tainment at Banquet
Representing Green Inn, the University chapter of Phi Delta Phi, legal fraternity. A, Glenwood Gilland, I'35, attended the province convention of the fraternity held last week in Oklahoma City, Okla.
Gilliland Local Representative at Phi Delta Phi Convention
Mrs. Elizabeth Watkins will be honored at the annual American Legion Founders Day banquet to be given Feb. 21 in the Masonic Temple. On this occasion, she will receive the Distinguished Award given by Dorsay-Liberty Post No. 14 to a distinguished citizen for outstanding service to her community. Frank E. Sullivan will receive the Past Department Commanders medal. The meal will be served by the ladies of the Eastern Star but the meat will be prepared barbeque style under the direction of Sgt. William Kollender who has gained somewhat of a reputation in 'the role of a barbecue chef.
Miss Rosemary Ketcham, professor of design, Miss Maude Ellsworth, instructor of design, and Miss Otta Schof, art supervisor of Oread Training School, attended a meeting of the Kansas Art Supervisors at Toppea Saturday, March 28. At that meeting those present. The meeting next year will be held in Wichita.
To Hold Initiation Dinner
Laurence W. DeMuth, national secretary-treasurer of the fraternity, was the guest of honor throughout the convention. One of the features of the banquet Friday was the initiation as honorary members of Mr. Justice Ocborn and Mr. Justice Welsh, both of the Oklahoma supreme court.
Attend Art Supervisors Meeting
An initiation club will be given by the Zoology Club at 6 pm. tonight at Snow hall, H. E. Peterka, president of the club announced today.
The origin and past history of the club will be discussed at the dinner.
A A P G. to Hold Convention
Delegates represented six chapters of the fraternity located at the University of Texas, University of Nebraska, University of Oklahoma, University of Den
A meeting of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists will be held in Wichita March 21, 22, 23. The A.A.P.G., which is national in scope, is considered the largest organization of its kind in the world. Dr. R. C. Moore, head of the geological department, will represent the University at the meeting. The last session held in Wichita was in 1925.
Attends Province Meeting
Noon Forum Cancelled
The Noon Forum of the YMCA, in which Newman Jeffries, prominent labor leader, was to speak Wednesday, has been cancelled. Mr. Jeffries will be unable to be in town.
The meeting of the House President's Council scheduled for 4:30 today in the women's lounge of the Administration building has been postponed indefinitely. Marjorie Hudson, c'35, announced last night.
Meeting Postponed
Students May Get Grades
Students whose names begin with the letters H to M inclusive may call for their grades at the College office today; tomorrow, N to S, inclusive; and Friday, T to Z, inclusive.
Elliott Speaks To Pre-Medics
Miss Mabel Elliott, assistant professors in sociology, spoke on "Why a Doctor Must Be a Sociologist" to the pre-medic women at a pitot supper given by the "hat in Snow hill yesterday evening."
Alunina of 1883 Dies
Funeral services were held yesterday in Kansas City, Kan., for Mrs. Mary McQuiston Bogle, who died Friday at Bethey hospital after a prolonged illness. Mrs. Bogle was a graduate of 1883, and had lived in Kansas City for 35 years. Interment was at Pittsburg.
Quack Club will have a business and swimming meeting tomorrow night at 8:15. Both pledge groups will report and receive the same time. Officers will be elected.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 12, 1935
Intramural Cage Games Get Into Swing Again
Rook Chalks, Phi Delts and Tramps Win in Opening Encounters
Intramural basketball teams swung into action again last night following the three-week intermission caused by finals and vacation. Only four of the six scheduled matches were played last night as neither the P.A.B.L. team or Beta's showed up for their tilt and the Alpha Mu's forfeited to Kappa Psi.
The Rock Chalk Cafe aggregation advanced in Division I as it marked up its sixth win over the Wakarasus. Schuurman led the attack which was contributed to by all five players to smother the opponents, 48-18.
The Phi Delta, champions of 1943, took an easy match from the last place Delta
The Trumps "B" 'f' team held its supremacy in Division IV, winning from the Delta Upsilon alternates. 31-20.
The box scores are
FG FT FP
Haltzapk
Crawford
Spalabury
Harriman
McCarroll
Longan
McCarroll
totals ... 4 3 3
Delhi Unison P 20
Delta FG FT GF PT
Cline 4 0 1 0
Cook 0 3 1 0
Hughes 0 4 3 0
Cook 0 0 2
Rock Chalk 48
Total ...8 4 8
Phi Delta 27
rG FF P
Sehiru 3
Statler 4
Tater 0
Merrimr 3
Merrimr 0
Covey 4
Covey 0
FG FT
McClure ... 7 0
Von Cle've 2 0
Trotter ... 1 2
Brown ... 1 1
Roberts ... 1 0
Totals ...12 3 2
Tramps B 31
FGFTT
Dicker 1 4
Britton 0 1
Lindsey 0 0
Smith 1 1
Metzler 2 0
Totals ...23 2 2
Total ...14 3
Wakarusa 18
E Johnson 1 0 0
G. Johnson 1 0 0
Day 1 0 0
Cornik 1 0 0
Utermailn 2 0 0
Totals ...9 0 3
Confer on Proposed Ward
Russell Discusses Bell Memorial Addition With Kansas City Doctors
Prof. F. A. Russell, professor of civil engineering, was in Kansas City Sunday conferring with Dr. F. C. Neff and with Dean H. S. Wahl about the proposed children's ward of Bell Memorial hospital. Several weeks ago these men made an extended tour of the east, inspecting hospitals and children's clinics to get ideas for the proposed addition, made possible by a gift of $80,000 to the University. The hospital suspected inspected a hospital in Indianapolis, two hospitals in Cincinnati, the hospitals at the Universities of Rochester and Michigan, Michiel Reise hospital of Chicago, and the Cock County hospital in Chicago.
The ideas obtained on this trip are not, of course, all practical for Bell Memorial's new annex but many extremely useful inventions were noted. The conference Sunday was spent in discussing the practicability of the new ideas suggested by the tour of inspection.
Relations Club To Meet
Jeffery Speaks to Students
International Relations Club will have its regular dinner meeting in the cafeteria dining room at 6 o'clock tonight. A discussion of the "Triangle Conflict in Asia," led by John Bekker, gr, will begin at 6:30. H. B. Chubb, assistant professor of political science, is faculty adviser of the group.
Mathematics Club to Meet
The Mathematics Club will hold a meeting this afternoon at 4:30 in room 213 Administration building. Everett Emery will speak on the Coordinate Systems. Refreshments will be served after the meeting.
Jersey Speaks to *students*
Jersey, Jeffrey, 32, organizer for the Annaline University Workshops and also for the Socialist party, spoke before the elements of sociology class yesterday morning on the values of sociological training.
Botany Club To Meet Tonight
Mrs. Margaret Siler will speak on the "Recent Work on Cytology of Liverworts" at the Botany club meeting at New York University. Election of new officers to the club will follow Mrs. Siles's lecture.
To Show Slides of Lincoln
F. H. Hodder, professor of history, will show slides of his collection of Lincoln's portraits at 1:30 afternoon in room 112 of Administration building. All persons interested are invited.
Dr. K. A. Siler, instructor of physiology is confined to his home with flu
KFKU
2.30 p.m. Elementary Spanish lesson,
Mr. Clarence Christman, instructor in
Spanish.
Tuesday, Feb. 12
2:45 p.m. The American Novel, Mr. Kenneth Rockwell.
8:00 p.m. Athletic Scrapbook, 101st edition, Prof. E. R. Elbel.
THE RUNNING SCORE
First Half 16 Whitaker
KU Neb Gray
1 Parsons 14
3 Quentin 18 Gray
Gray Ebling
5 Sorensen 17 Parsons
7 Sorenson 18 Sorenson
8 Sorenson 20 Allen
6 Ebling 21 Allen
8 Grey 24 Ebling
10 Wailan 25 Ebling
Wells 19 Parsons
12 Whitaker Noble
Second Half 27 Sorenson
KU Neb Gray
3 Kappelman 32 Ebling
Standings of the Big Six Teams
Standings of the Big Six Teams
W 7 1 8
Kansas 7 1 8
Iowa State 7 2 7
Okahama 6 7 4
Kan State 7 6 2
Nebraska 4 5 8
87 201 295 205
229 319 211 314
329 318 295 314
346 318 295 314
346 318 295 314
346 318 295 314
William Field, c36, Joe Wendell Barker, c36, and Dr. P. B. Lawson were appointed to the committee for the selection of new members by Melvin Griffith, president of the Entomology club at the meeting of the club held last night at Show Hall, 72 West 51st Street, Hungerford, past history of the club and told anecdotes of famous men and women who were formerly members of the club.
Arranges Banquet Program
Music and Tap Dancing Will Entertain Drum and Bugle Corps
Miss Elizabeth Dunkel, assistant professor of physical education and J. Craig, c'35, have arranged the program for the banquet given in the Crystal Room of the Hotel Eldridge tonight by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce in honor of the Drum and Bugle Corps of the American Legion.
The program will consist of: Song, University Quartet; Military Tap Dance, Joe Pyle; Buck and Wing Tap Dance, Joe Dunkel; Vocal Soil, Leon King; Soft She Dance, Barbara Goll, Ruth Pyle; Joe Dunkel; Vocal Soil, Jane Lewis; Tap Dance, Valeska Powell; Song, Alpha Omicron Pli Trio; Sof She Dance, Barbara Goll, Joe Dunkel; Song, Quartet.
W A A. Will Re Represented
Always a Bargain Show
The W.A.A. of the University will be represented by several delegates at the South Central Section of the Athletic Federation of College Women convention which will be held at Kansas State Teachers College, Emporia, Feb. 18-19-22-21. This is the first convention of this kind to be held in the middle west. The program promises to be an interesting one with many prominent speakers listed, among whom are, Mrs. William White, and Mrs. Marguerite Schwartz, National Secretary of A.F.C. W., Marian Fisher, ed.35, is scheduled to give a short discussion during the convention on "Mixed Recreation Programs."
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The Screen's Finest Musical Triumph! Critics proclaim it greater than "One Night of Love."
He lived for music until he fell in love
Varsity Swimming Team To Open Season Tonight
UNFINISHED SYMPHONY"
The Varsity swimming team will leave for Manhattan at 2:30 this afternoon where it will meet the Kansas StateTeam. The first meet of the season will be the first meet of the season.
"The
the dual meet are as follows:
400 yd. relay-Nichols, Miller
Thorne, Tripp; 150 yd.烘
Jennings, Kester; 150 yd.flash-Tripp
Jennings, Kester; 200 yd. breast stroke-
Raport, Elias; 150 yd. back stroke-
400 yd. swim-Nichols, Miller; 220 yd.
swim-Nichols, Kester; Medley Rohy
-Jennings, Raport, La Shelle
"I don't know what to expect, as the Kansas Aggie team defeated the Wash-team team 48 to 37 in a dual meet last week; but my boys are all in shape and I am asking them to fight," was the reply coach Alphin made last night in answer to questions concerning the outcome of the meet. In spite of the fact that William Kester, c'37, a 150-yd. back-stroke and 220 dash man, has been unable to practice for the last three days because of sinus trouble, Coach Allphin plans on using him in these two events.
Alphin's Tank Men to Meet Kansas State at Manhattan
The entries representing Kansas in the following
"Like my love, this symphony shall remain forever unfinished."
Franz Schubert
Prof. W. S. Johnson of the department of English will return to school today following his brief absence because of illness
Engineers Meet in Topeka
Cartoon - Oddity - News
Professor Jackson Presides at Annual Meeting of Kansas Society
D. C. Jackson, head of the department of electrical engineering at Kansas University, will be the presiding officer during the annual meeting of the Kansas Engineering Society in Topeka today and tomorrow.
Johnson to Return Today
This afternoon V. M. Smith, instructor of machine construction, and Prof. D. C. Jackson will present a lecture on "A. versus D. Welding". Prof. E. H. Docherty,机械工程师, engineering will speak on "Industrial Development in Kansas."
The final talk of the day will be given by R. E. Lawrence, formerly assistant professor of civil engineering, who has been on leave of absence since the fall of 2015.
Prof. A. H. Stuss, of the department of mechanical and industrial engineering, will lecture tomorrow morning besi-
15th December "Ventilation of Commercial Garages."
The society's annual banquet will be at the Hotel Jayhawk at 6:30 tonight. Headquarters for the convention will be Convention Hall and the Hotel Jayhawk
Non - Conference Summary
Kansas Has Played Four Extra Games This Season
Kansas has played four non-conference basketball games this season, two with Kansas State and one each with the Emuora Teachers and Washburn. Grist did not play in any of the non-conference games; Holmer only in 1 game; Wellhausen, Shaffer, Lutton in 2 games; Allen, Gray, and Oyler in 3.
Names of players who participated and total non-conference box score results
Summary Box of Kansas Non-Conference Season
G **FT MT ET**
Alben 2 0 0 6 9
Ebling 12 8 2 6 32
Gray 6 2 1 2 14
Kappelman 6 9 5 9 14
Lutton 0 0 0 0 0
Police 4 3 9 5 14
Oyler 2 0 0 4 14
Rogers 2 2 0 1 6
Shaffer 2 0 0 0 4
Wollinson 0 0 0 0 0
Wells 4 5 6 8 13
Holmer 1 1 1 1 1
Totals 43 34 18 39 120
Opp. Totals 41 22 15 48 104
CYCLONES TO PLAY 18 GAMES IN SPRING BASEBALL SEASON
Ames, Iowa, Feb. 11—A full schedule of 18 games for the Iowa State 1953 baseball team was announced here by the Vencen Veenkel, Cyclone athletic director.
Eight of the games on the schedule, which opens April 6 and continues until May 25, will be played with teams within the state, Simpson, Upper Iowa and Iowa State Teachers, and the remainder with Big Six opponents. Nebraska and Missouri will each be played in two games here and two
games there, while Iowa State will
play at Wichita in two games at
Manhattan only.
Tau Sigma to Meet
The first meeting of Tau Sigma honorary dancing sclerosis, for the new semester will be held tonight in Robinson gymnasium. The following new members who took part in the dance recital given in connection with the University Symphony Orchestra conference, Edil, Carl Hunter, ed3, Martha Nuzman, c3, Betty Lemon, c3, and Valda Kelson Powell, c3.
--ing 'em but just wait until they find out that his real name isn't Dempsey, but Glennon.
Women's Intramurals
Pi Beta Phi will meet Sigma Kappa in basketball tonight at 9 o'clock. The winner of this game will play Corbin hall Thursday night at 9 o'clock to determine who will play the I.W. team Tuesday, Feb. 19, in the finals.
Miss Ruth Hoover, sponsor on the women's intramural managers, has announced that all managers must have the names of all their entries for the ping pong doubles and singles, basketball free throws, and swimming meet into the women's intramural office by 4:30 today.
Jack Dempsev Boxes at Missouri
Missouri has produced a boxer named Jack Dempsey who fights at 135 pounds. He appeared against Kansas State at Manhattan last night. He may heats 'em instead of fighting 'em but just wait until they find out that his real name isn't Dempsey, but Glennon.
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Will Give Commencement Address
Dr. Forrest C. Allen, director of athletics, has accepted an invitation from the Cherryville high school to give the commencement address there this spring. The exercises will be held May 28.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
NUMBER 92
VOLUME XXXII
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LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1935
on the SHIN
BY JOE HOLLOWAY, c'35
Not Politics. Give a Beauty Contest . . . Just Give Him a Life-saver . . . That's What They Get for Bathing . . . On Paying Fees
Every now and then we need must hear about the nasty politics on our campus; how the elections are fixed, the combines combined, the undercover "co-operation" etc. It now appears that even the contests for beauty queens are fixed—that is, as far as those rough, tough engineer boys are concerned. From a very good source comes the rumour that Miss Catherine Cassidy is to be queen of the Hob Nail Hop, or whatever that lady's official title may be. The aforementioned queenie is really not supposed to be chosen until Friday night but after all, what difference does it make if she is passing thought on the舞会? we hear (and see) that the舞会 is to be quite some something—some 13 pieces (musicians to you) and a feature of Buddy ("K. O." Frank and Bashooke banging on the two pianes. Buddy and Bus will be plent; good— our only regret is that they can' use Anna Marie Tompkins too.
Under the curtain at the Union: "Don't know why, but he does smell so Much strong tobacco smoke. Even in the coffee we were down there on the lounge."
And we thought girls hated to call their felts—we hear that at the Hammonds club there is a guy named Doe Smith whose gel asks for him on the phone by inquiring the whereabouts of her "honey."
From the other; "Mmmm, good." The soup, big fellow, the soup—least we hope so!
Glad we don't have so many house restrictions as the gals do—one sorority put up a sign: "Singing of naughty girls" and "Not authorized." The girls rebelled though.
Some master criminal has been making a run into the Kappa house now and then during dinner and stealing the pumps which the girls leave in the cloak room while they eat. Nice place, K.U.
Charles Brown hath said: "It is a wise man who once gave to this poor world that the difference between a bell and an alarm clock you can't see a button on a spider."
Observation of fee paying etc. . . .
A good rule to follow is never to try to give the school your money at 2:30 in the afternoon . . . every other else will be there, the three worn out money-taker-inmers may heaven an ink bottle at you if things go wrong, and last but not least you'll have to stand for about an hour. There's a last-minute rush for activity books by those whose checks come from Dad in time to payfe immediately—Raymond Nichols just up and forget to have the activity books printed, the office had to have their own desk, the table the place is full of them (money) and now the studies are getting in everyone's hair returning their dums for the real thing. Next time will someone please remind the Nichols? We saw a notebook lying on the table in the hall
A representative of the W. T. Grant company will interview seniors of the School of Business, in room 114 Administration building on Monday, Feb. 18.
—had the owner's name on it in letter, about three inches high accompanied by a great number of things as Jaywha, Yoe Man, Booon, Rock Chalk, Tailless Ya-Ya, Bee to, To all who turns the movie-type collegiate hasn't been entirely exterminated yet—we must hope for the best. Ankled in to the college office and very politely asked Miss Lear if she could give any dirt on the Dean. A dean could make a mistake you know, and "Dirt on the Dean" sounds pretty good anyway, said Jaywha. "To all who say they like me," Says we, "A quiet living公寓, chl?" Says she兄 Two, "Well, anything but that." Might we remark such stuff.
The company operates a chain of variety stores. All students who are offered positions with it will enter trainer for store managerships.
BUSINESS SCHOOL SENIORS TO BE INTERVIEWED MONDAY
All these eligible students who are interested should call at the office of the dean of the School of Business to obtain a place on the interview schedule.
Acting of Crafton Outstanding Part Of Pioneer Drama
"Yankee Crusade" Portrays Character Types Seen During Early Kansas Days
By Lena K. Wyatt, c'35
To Allen and Jessica Crafton go the honors of the opening performance of Mr. Crafton's new play "Yankee Creek" at the Walt Disney World resort, where she settled Kansas in the fifte-
The lovable old rascal, Waddy Ramson, played by Mr. Crafton, a typical kit of human flotsam inevitably drawn to a new land—as real as if the crude, rugged he represents again existed. In the thickened speech of the old drunkard, in the slouch of his body, and in his amusing craftiness, Mr Crafton makes for an upset with the passing of the frontier. It is Waddy who provides humorous relief from the dramatic action of the play.
Mrs. Crafton a Loyal Pioneer
Jessica Crafton, as Carrie Riley, became the pioneer woman who has rightfully won a place in history. With little background, possessed only of common sense, loyalty, and hard work, Jessica brought to the hard, uncertain life of the people.
Why she came to Kansas, she did not know. "It was a new land, and we just come, that was all." But once there, she loved the territory and stunnely remained to carry on after her husband's death. It would be impossible to extract Mrs. Crafton from the character. She belongs in the setting.
Within the territory of Kansas during the fifties, lay the settlement of the national slavery question. The courageous northern settlers who had come within its borders took up the abolition of slavery as a cause, and wowed that this new land should be established as a "free" state.
Prologue Explains Situation
Prologue Explains Solution
The prologue introduces the situation through the conversation of Waddy; Judge Cooper, political aspirant, as played by Leen King; Gardette, fictional character who is a lawyer William Pabar, leader of the community and his wife, acted by Robert Calderwood and Bernie Brooks; and Houston Moore, young man attracted to the new territory, played by Farrel Strawn. Aad Warley, a southern bride, played by Laurel Allen is introduced when she seeks aid when her husband dies while they are traveling.
The first insight into the life of the community comes in the first episode in Dan Riley's aibn. It is bitter winter and the topic foremost in the minds of the settlers gathered there is still abolition. The first bloodhed takes place when Dan Riley is killed by pro-slavery maneuvers.
Carrie Riley takes over the village hotel after her husband's death and shelters the southern girl.
Provisions Stopped Starving Settlers
The Missourians try to starve the settlers out by stopping provisions and the circumstances of the community become dire. Garrett collects a large band of men and vows he will use arms to drive out the pro-slavery government. Pelose and others of the community encourage peaceful victory through polls.
Pabor is arrested by the pro-slavery government and young Houston Moore is made colonel to carry on in his place.
Calderwood's Characterization Good Robert Calderwood, as Will Pabor, gives an excellent characteristic of the shrewed New England leader of the comedy genre. He keeps with the conventionality of his background and also with the personality of a man who has the courage to visualize a new government. The role of his wife does not interfere Bernin Brookes the opportunity which she had in "Douglas," but her ability to adapt herself to so part of display her versatility.
The village is attacked and successfully defends itself, driving back the ruffians.
The settlers are successful in having Kanaas admitted to the Union as a "free" state, and the community leaders are honored by the new government. A love plot between the southern girl and the woman provides a pleasant romantic interest.
William Fugel as Charlie Gardette displays an over-earnestness in the prologue and the first episode, but becomes convincing as the rabid abolitionist in *The Tale of Titus* (2017), a deep voice fin him well for the part of the good-natured, politically ambitious
(Continued on page 4)
Macon Crashes
San Francisco, Feb. 12—Unofficial reports tonight said an explosion on the U. s. Diligence Macon to itre up. The U. S. Pam.sylvania is reported in midst of the wreckage, and it is also reported 81 have been rescued.
Dirigible Goes Down 12 Miles off West Coast With Crew of 90
San Francisco, Feb. 12.—The United State Dirigible Macon, with crowd of 90 men, crashed into the Pacific ocean at south of Juneau, Alaska, and 12 miles offshore.
At a late hour tonight the U.S.S. Tennessee was in the midst of the wreckage picking up survivors.
The Macon was participating in the maneuvers of the Pacific fleet.
Nearly every great airship that has been built since the war has crashed. In 1921, the R-38, built for the United States Navy by Great Britain, broke in two over the river Humber. It was followed by the crashes of the Roma, built by Italy for the United States, and the American non-airship, G.C. in 1922.
The Maeon, a sister ship of the Akmon which crashed in 1933, was built in that year. It was 785 feet long and used a 6,500,000 cubic feet of helium. Its frame was a lattice web made of duralium and had a dead weight of 221,000 pounds. The eight engines, four of which were on each side, developed 4,490 horse power. It had a maximum cruising speed of 84 miles per hour and could travel 10,580 miles without stopping.
Lt. Commander Herbert V. Wiley, skipper of the Macon, was one of the three survivors of the Akron disaster of April 4, 1933.
In 1925, the Shenanado perished over Caldwell, Ohio. With the crash of the R-101, a British ship in 1930, that country dismantled the R-100 and discontinued the building of all rigid airship.
The last major airship catastrophe in the United States was the crash of the Akron off the New Jersey coast.
Oread Teams Play Saturday
Oreand Training School basketball team will play the Oread alumni in Robinson gymnasium at 7:30 Saturday night. The Oreand Training Team school has been strengthened this semester by three new members. Admission to the game is 15 and 25 cents. The public is invited.
The Mathematics Club, which met yesterday afternoon, was the host of E. W. Emery, who gave a discussion on coordinate systems of equations.
Delegates to NSFA Convention Spend $20.91 More Than $250 Alloted in Council Budget
The council's share of the Union building burglary insurance was $1. One- half of SW files and guides was 15.71 typewriter rental, $5.40; office supplies and printing, $6.60; cheer-leader out-fits, $2.32; phone, $7.96; Jawhayke glasses, $7.57; postage, $6.40; and handline charms, $20.
M.S.C. SPENDS $89 ON KEYS
The budget, which according to Gunnar Mylkland, c35, president, has not been revised for several years, allows $250 for convention expenses. The delegates to the N. S. F. A. meeting spent $291.91 more than the allotted amount. One-half the dues for membership in the corporation accounted to $40.2%
The report included $50 spent on the Parent's Day banquet; $33.90 for the Installation banquet; and $12.50 for the programs and invitations. Expenses for refreshments were $9,20, and $13 was spent for flowers.
Advertising expenses amounted to $21.40 and $13.60 was spent for the pubi-
cle.
The council contributed $87.12 to the student directory, and $100 to the K Book. For the distribution of the directories, $18 was given.
The financial report of the Men's Student Council for the year 1933-34, turned in at the business office by Lloyd Metzler, treasurer, shows that $89 was spent on council membership keys last year. The number of these钥匙 were listed at $1,827.19. The group's source of revenue is a percentage of the student activity ticket.
The expenses incurred in carrying on elections amounted to $3.03, and travel in connection with the activity ticket was $2.26.
EXTRA FEES TO BE ASSESSED
Only 2.178 students have paid their enrollment fees, according to the latest tabulation from the Bursar's office, leaving more than 1000 students to pay.
Today is the last day for the payment of fees without a penalty. If fees are not paid at this time a penalty of 50 cents or a day is assessed the student. After Tuesday, Feb.19, the enrollment of all students will not be paid their fees will be cancelled.
Professors to Convention
Education Association Will Hold Meetings in Kansas City
Other professors have been invited to participate in the discussion groups. Friday, Feb. 15, Dr. Florence Sherbon, professor of home economics, will assist in the discussion "The Nursery School Age" and Dr. Johnise, professor of economics, on "Building a New Education for a New America." Saturday, Feb. 16, E. E Bayles, assistant professor of education, on "A New Education for the discussion on "A New Education for a New America," Dean Paul B. Lawson in "New Trends in College Standards," and Bert A. Nash, associate professor of education, in "Teaching for Realistic Living." Chancellor E. H. Lindley is a member of the general committee and Dr. Flor-
Included among the speakers at the regional conference of the Progressive Education Association at the Hotel Press in Kansas City, Mo., Feb. 15-16 are several faculty members from the University.
Friday afternoon, Dr. Raymond H. Wheeler, professor of psychology, will speak on "Parent-School Relationships" and Dr. J. F. Brown, associate professor of psychology, will lead a discussion on "Building a New Education for a New America." Saturday morning, E. B. Steufer, dean of the Graduate School, will lead the discussion, "New Trends in College Standards."
Chancellor E. H. Lindsley is a member of the general committee and Dr. Florence Sherborn, a member of the executive committee of the conference.
PLANS FOR UNION COMPLETION TO BE DISCUSSED TOMORROW
A banquet in recognition of the services of the members of the Union Operating Committee will be held Thursday at 7 p.m. at the University Building, Chancellor Lindley and several faculty members have been invited to be the guests of the committee.
Plans for the completion of the Union building will be presented to the committee for their approval.
The Intramural Carnival two-hour dance will become one of the University "name" dances by the decision of the Carnival committee yesterday, to call the dance the I-M Shuffle. The dance will follow a program of sports and stunts with the award of trophies in the auditorium. Admission is included in the Carnival ticket which will go on sale in the near future for 25 cents.
To Call Dance "I-M Shuffle"
A "nakie" film about cod-liver肝 will be the feature of the weekly colliery of the School of Pharmacy, to be held Thursday at 11 o'clock.
PHARMACY SCHOOL TO SEE PICTURE ABOUT COD-LIVER OIL
Dr. D. H. Spencer, associate professor of pharmacy, who is in charge, said that the meetings are for the purpose of education. This one will present a speaker, and the "talke" will illustrate the preparation of cod-liver oil, from catching the fish through the whole process of obtaining the oil.
Grades Available from Registrar
Upljob company, a pharmaceutical house, is furnishing the film and equipment.
Students grades are now available at the registrar's office. The names that begin with T to Z may obtain their grades tomorrow. All those who are unable to obtain their grades at the scheduled time may get them Saturday morning.
Hoover Addresses Convention
Hower Row.
Miss Ruth Hover, assistant professor of physical education, Mary Bess Doty, ed33, Thelma Humphrey, ed33, and Carol Hunter, ed33, attended the Physical Education convention held in Topeka Saturday. Miss Hover gave a brief meeting before the paper on "Hockey."
New Election System Passes
Women's Council Claims Combines Will Be Ineffective; Ballots Will Be Marked With Three Choices; To Hold Mass Meeting Monday Afternoon for Open Discussion
L. I. D. Speaker
A system of voting which is claimed to render ineffective any attempts at combines was voted in last night by the W. S. G. A. The system, which has been under discussion for some time, was put through on a unanimous vote of the council.
SANDERS
Dr James M. Yard, former director of religious activities at Northwestern University and co-chair of the Committee at the Unitarian Church at 8:15 p.m. on the subject of "Nationalism in American"
FRESHMAN Y.M.C.A. COUNCIL DISCUSSES GROWING SOCIALISM
The plan is similar to the Hare system of proportional voting used by the M. S. C. The women mark their ballots according to their first, second and third choices. If the candidate who receives the largest number of votes does not attain a majority, the votes of the candidate with the smallest number are redistributed according to the second choice which has been indicated on them. This pro-
The Council is composed of 25 members of the freshman class and meets every week to discuss problems pertinent to the young people of the country, Philip Raup, c38, is president of the council.
"The growing enthusiasm toward Socialism on the part of the students in American universities proves that the young people of America realize that there is no future for them under our present capitalistic system," said John Piercey, c88, when speaking before the United States before a group of the Friendly M. A.C. Council in the Memorial Union building last night.
Spanish Lessons Over Radio
Clarence Chrisman, Instructor, Will Broadcast Over KFKU Feb. 12
A course in elementary Spanish with supplementary material will be presented by Clarence Christman, instructor in the Spanish department, over KFKU began yesterday at 2:30 o'clock and will continue every Tuesday and Thursday throughout the spring semester. The lessons will include some informal talks about Spanish-American countries, particularly Mexico where a number of international conventions are to be held this summer.
One purpose of this course is to give travelers to the conferences in Mexico a better understanding of the country and its people. In this connection, the Bureau of General Information of the extension division has prepared special collection of material on Mexico which is available through the e-mail service.
The bureau of visual instruction is offering glass slides and motion pictures in order to give the traveler a picture of the Spanish speaking countries.
R. G. Mahieu To Speaks
Dr. B. A. Nash to Speak Tomorrow
Phi Delta Kappa, professional educational fraternity, will hold its regular meeting tomorrow evening. Dr. B. A. Nash will speak on the "Mental Hygiene Society of Kansas."
R. G. Mahle, associate professor of romance languages, who has just returned from Paris after a leave of absence for the first semester, will meet at the meeting of Le Cerule Francis at 4:30 in room 309 in Fruer hall.
*cess is continued until one of the candidates has a majority. As the outcome can in no way be predicted, the council believes that this method will be successful in doing away with combines.
A mass meeting of all women will be held Monday afternoon at 4:30 at which time anyone may offer suggestions for council action and criticisms will be received. At the same meeting a petition system for nominating of officers in the spring elections will be explained, and the treasurer's report will be given.
The petition system, which will probably be used, would require the candidate to file a petition with the signatures of 10 or 15 women, eligible to vote, for a candidate. The candidate is running, a few days before the election, accompanied by a small fee to cover expenses for the election tea. This system would eliminate any conflict with the administration which might result if the old method was not used for voting for which the women would have to be excused from classes were continued.
The council discussed plans for the Intramural Carnival to be held March 8 in cooperation with the MSC, and a committee was appointed to work through the organized houses and the House President's Association consisting of Ann Kell, c'35, Dorothy Lewis, c'36, and Winnifred Koenig, c'6.
Suggestions for a plan whereby upper classmen as well as second semester seniors might enroll before the actual starting of the semester were considered and a committee consisting of Betty Tholen, f37, Ann Kell, c25, and one of the council members to be elected this spring was appointed to draw up plans pertaining to the project to present to the administration.
BOUGHTON ONLY APPLICANT TO TAKE PHARMACY EXAM
Prof. Lloyd Boughton of the School of Pharmacy last week took the examination for registered pharmacist given by the Kansas State Board of Pharmacy. Mr. Boughton went from a cant from this state, Mrs. Boughton made the trip to Wichita with him.
TELLS of Swedish Campuses
Complete physical examination. Physical examination of the patients matriculated in the university this semester was conducted, according to Dr. Ralph J. Camouse, of Walkins Memorial hospital, where examinations are conducted. Seventy-two men and 21 women were examined, in addition to four students already enrolled in the University. The examinations included a test for tubercular infection.
The democracy found on Swedish campuses proved to be an interesting point in Miss Mary Larson's discussion of "Student Life in Sweden," at a meeting of the Advanced Standing Commission of the Y.W.C.A. yesterday afternoon, Miss Larson, the head of the school and their school life. She also discussed the Swedish educational system. Lorine Lynd, fa'36, opened the meeting with a piano solo.
Rotary Heads To Plan Meeting
Hollis House
Lily St. Sheehan '22, and Dr. James Wheeler, '23, will arrive Wednesday to confer with Guy V. Keeler of the University Extension Division to make plans for the District Frost conference to be held in Newton, May 6 and 7. Mr. Wheeler is chairman of the conference while Dr. Wheeler is chairman of the entertainment.
Visit Home Economics Department
Visit Home Economics Department
Miss Catherine Tucker, president of the Kansas Home Economics association,
and Miss Rose Cologne and Miss Hazel Thompson, both of the State Board for Vocational Education, visited the department of home economies during the weekend.
1
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1935
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF JOSEPH DOCTOR
Associate Editors
Julia Markham Charles Brown
MANAGING EDITOR CAROLYN HARPER
Campus Editor Harry Volentine
Makeup Editors Carmen Hoyer
Mover Heyer
Sports Editor Robert Patte
Smacky Editor Eleanor Walters
Nail Editor Danny Fry
Society Editor Shirley Jones
Editor John Jory Joseph Irwin
Alumni Editor Roth Stolau
Business Manager ... P. Quentin Brown
Aust. Business Manager ... Elton Carter
Kansan Board Members
Lena Waua
William Decker
Wesley McCalla
Wesley McCalla
Carolyn Harper
Harper and Harper
Mix Leon
Mic Monkey
Ruthenberg
Jula Markham
P. Quintanilla Brown
Telephones
Business Office K. U. 68
Office & Business Office
Night Connections, Business Office 20123
Night Connections, Business Office
Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday and Saturday.
Relocated school holidays by students in the department
of Education. Released on Friday to the
Fremont of the Department of Journalism.
Advance $3.25 on payments. Single copies, be
paid in cash.
Entered as second class matter, September 18, 1390, at the post office at Lawton, Kansas.
WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 13, 1935
YOUTH ON WAR
At almost the same time that the University of Kansas and other colleges and universities in the United States were sounding the alarm that youth, who fightss the wars, disapproves greatly of war, and war preparation, the Kansas legislature was passing a bill telling the students at the agricultural college in Manhattan that they must take compulsory military training.
If the feelings of the students in colleges in the United States are of sufficient worth to be taken seriously, it may be assumed that a change of attitude is taking place—almost between generations—youth votes against war and middle age votes for compulsory training. It may be that youth will change its attitude when it passes the age of fighting and reaches the age of law-making.
It is an unusual thing when vigorous and naturally aggressive youth takes a stand against war. The proverbial youth of our ancestors enjoyed a good fight. They still tell about their conquests. But present day youth is a pacifist, proud of his stand. A new patriotism is being born. The Golden Rule may, perhaps, at last be tried, when youth is handed the reigns of the country, but then youth will not be youth any more; it will have become middle age, and its thought will be changed somewhat. Then it may believe in preparedness as strongly as it now does in pacifism. Youth only fights and suggests. When a man becomes old enough to have the intelligence to decide matters of the importance of war, he is no longer young enough to fight.
BOGEYMAN OR SUPERMAN9
A youngster from the pine woods of Winn parish, Louisiana, talked about his ambition to become governor. He was uneducated, rough, direct; parents and friends laughed at him, because he was in his early twenties, and of course every boy has his grandiose ideas.
At thirty, this young man was recognized as one of the best lawyers in Louisiana, and of course the youthful boast and the ambition to be governor of Louisiana were fulfilled in 1928 by the election of Huey Long to the first executive position in his own state.
The past few months have seen the public reaction to him change; journals of opinion that laughed at him now concede, at least, that aspects of his career other than the laughable must be considered. In short, he is rapidly becoming a much talked of person outside the immediate locality of his "Share Our Wealth" program. Those who can no longer satisfy themselves with disregarding him are wondering just what one ought to think of him.
The cleavage of opinion about
him is well exemplified by two articles in the current New Republic, one by Gerald L. K. Smith, his ministerial disciple, and the other by Hodding Carter, "an independent critic."
Smith is convinced, and states plainly his belief, that Huey is a superman capable of doing "as much in one day as any ten men I know." He sketches the cultural, political, and economic condition of Louisiana before Long's advent, but does not show categorically what improvements can be credited to Huey. Smith closes his review of Long-in-Louisiana with the statement, "His greatest recommendation is that we who know him best, love him most."
Carter, whether aware of the fact that Smith's article would appear with his, spends most of his space proving that the Reverend Mr. Smith "is probably the most talented rabble rouser in the South." Long in the White House? "A postoperative belly-laugh," he thinks, but wisely adds that stranger political disasters could befall a tragically ignorant people groping for surety. What if the Roosevelt administration fails in its major purposes?
Bogeyman or superman, Huey Long is a figure in national affairs, the spearhead of a social movement that cannot be disregarded.
We suppose that since the movie David Copperfield has appeared, all the rhetoric students will be choosing the book by Dickens for their term book reports this semester.
COMMENTS
-By the Editor
WOULD HONOR DR. NAISMITH
Here is an idea that has somehow escaped the attention of the campus, and it remained for the Douglas County Republican to point it out. Here is a reprint of a paragraph from the editorial page of that paper:
"Who is more entitled to a badge for distinguished service than Dr. James Naismith, the inventor of basketball?" He gave to the world a sport that has captured the enthusiasm of thousands of boys and girls who play the game. Spectators who are fascinated by the thrills of a highly competitive sport flock to the games by the tens of thousands. When the players wear awarded a service medal to the citizen who has brought the most enjoyment and clean fun to every one, Dr. Naismith's name will be right near the top of the list."
Now that Dr. Naismith's game has been adopted by the Olympic committee, and now that it is played by more than 50 foreign countries, who can deny Dr. Naismith's right to such a medal? Do we hear a second to this idea?
KANSAS STATE SHOWS SPIRIT
In keeping with the general movement in all colleges, Kansas State has accused its fraternities and sororites of playing politics among themselves until the student government has become a breeze. From the looks of statistics presented in the Kansas State Collegian, it would appear that barbs have no chance to obtain a position on the governing body.
It would seem that the time has come for some fraternity on their campus to put a real feather in the chapter cap by declaring itself out to elect student officers, regardless of affiliations or nonaffiliations. Such a policy would get that fraternity no end of desirable publicity on the campus.
This question was asked in a military arts class in Syracuse University. The lieutenant in charge asked the question to see if his class were thinking. Of course, foilish questions beget foolish answers, and the replies came back like that. They take an alcohol drink from the bottle. "I'd shoot it." "I'd jump aboard."
HOW WELL DO STUDENTS THINK?
"What would you do if you were on duty and as battlefield suddenly came down the parade ground to you?"
HOW WELL DO STUDENTS THINK?
This type of question is old in the army. Only one in the class of 48 persons answered correctly with, "Td report to the corporal of the guards."
We have in our possession several letters which were supposed to appear in our Campus Opinion column, but could not be printed because of the fact that we do not know the identity of the writer. It is our policy not to print any letter not vouched for by some responsible person. The name of the writer need not appear in the column, and no other persons than the editorial staff of the Kansas need know the identity of the writer. Please sign the letters that you expect to have printed.
SIGN YOUR CAMPUS OPINIONS
Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m. receiving regular publication days
12:30 a.m.-11:30 p.m. for Sunday issues.
OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1935
There will be a meeting of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers Thursday, evening at 7:30 in Marvin hall auditorium. Prof. W. R. Maddox, of the department of political science, will speak. All members of the electrical department are invited to attend. T. D. WILLIAMSON, Secretary.
A. I.E. E:
No: 92
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION:
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION:
The Christian Science organization will meet at 4:30 this afternoon in room
Myers hall.
MAURINE JESSEE, Treasurer.
FIRST SEMESTER GRADES;
Grades for the fall semester may be obtained from the Registrar's Office Feb. 11-16, according to the following schedule for student names:
Wednesday, Feb. 15—N to S midweek
Thursday, Feb. 14—T to Z inclusive
Friday, Feb. 15 and
Friday, Feb. 16—Those unable to come at the scheduled time.
Saturday, Feb. 16—GEORGE O. FOSTER, Registrar.
MID-WEEK DANCE:
The regular mid-week dance will be held this evening at 7 o'clock in the Memorial Union ballroom. All students must present their identification cards. Due to the large number of stags attending the mid-week dances, the number will be limited to 200 this evening.
BILL COCHRANE, Manager.
NEWCOMERS' CLUB:
A party will be held for members and their hattes at the University Club Thursday, Feb. 14, at 8:30 p.m. Those who cannot attend, please call Mrs. Alfred M. Lee. MRS. E R. LATTY, Secretary.
PH DELTA KAPPA.
Fbi Delta Kappa will meet Thursday, Feb. 14, at 7:30 p.m. in room 115
Fraser hall. Dr. Bert Nash will speak. GARLAND DOWNUM, Secretary.
PHADAMANTH
PHI DELTA KAPPA:
There will be a meeting of Rhadamanthi in the Green room on Sunday Feb. 17, at 4 o'clock. Bring a poem. NORMAN JACOBSHAGEN, President.
A. A.
An important meeting will be held at 4:50 this afternoon in Robinson gymnasium to make plans for the rest of the semester, and to select delegates to be regional convention to be held the 18, 19, 20 and 21 of this month. All members are urged to be present. THELMIA HUMPHEY, President.
Conducted by R.J.B.
ROCK CHALKLETS
The Kansas state legislature may invite Huey Long to speak before them on Feb. 22. We suggest that they wait until around the middle of March and let the Kingfish come in with the rest of the wind.
"Moment Supreme," a perfume fairly now to the market, is one you will want to try. Its delicate richness is inviting. It offers an alluring veneer—Hill Fashion Notes.
Just pleasin' to the schnozzle to us.
A Lawrence, Kan., man was awarded the silver trophy and the championship blue ribbon at the seed corn show held in connection with Kansas State College's farm and home week. A more advanced school of schools must exist or there was a KU. alumnums ass'ing judge—Bill Nickle in Liberal News.
Boys and Young Ladies of 50 Years Ago From The University Courier of Feb.13,1885
The remains of the Athletic Association were resuscitated last Friday. The treasurer reported the rather minus financial condition of the organization, and a committee was appointed to investigate as to where the money had gone which was raised last spring. The report will be awaited with interest.
The University ball will be the event of the season. The time is set for Friday, February 20th, at Fraser Hall. Very neat and well-lit. Will doubles be extra recherche.
Prof. Sterling murks an unexcused absence the same as a failure; thereby rendering the practice of promenading during a relaxation session less attractive.
The coasting on the Hill last week was excellent, and the younger students enjoyed themselves immensely.
Chapel attendance is required but once a week. Why are not some steps taken to enforce the Friday morning regulation?
The library was very cold all this week; too cold to permit much work in that department.
Cheapest place to buy text books and stationery is at Field & Co's., University Bookstore, 99 Massachusetts St.
"You are not like autumn." she sighed, as the persistent lover sat out the hours.
The different fraternities here in the order of their founding are represented as follows: Beta Theta Pi, thirteen members; Phi Kappa Pi, alchemist; Phi Gamma Delta, eighteen; Phil Delta Theta, thirteen; Chi Sigma, nine.
The Oread political pot begins to bubble; merely the wind coming to the surface.
"Why, my dearest?" he inquired, with a fond and foolish expression. "Because autumn leaves, but you never do."
There were only four Freshman boys at school last Friday. The others remained at home to wash up for the "Dance."
Learn to Dance---to Kansas City LIMIT 10 DAYS
NOW for the SPRING PARTIES
TROJAN MUSICIAN
Special Attention Given Business
Advanced Dances—Private Lessons
DANCE STUDIO
N. Y. Cleaners Bldg., 924 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass.
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1935
PAGE THREE
K
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Hill Society
Call K.U. 25 Before 1230 p.m.
Theta Sigma Phi Entertains at Valentine Party
Theta Sigma Phi, national journalism sorority, will entertain Delta Delta Chi, national journalism fraternity, and faculty members in the department of journalism with a buffer supper this evening at the home of Prof. and Mrs. J. J. Kistler. The entertainment, which will follow, is Valentine themes, is to cover the local chapter of the journalism fraternity in recognition of the national prominence which it attained at the 1934 convention at Green Castle, Ind.
The local group of the fraternity at the national caucus was awarded first prize for its professional activities program for 1833-34 and also, fifth place among 41 schools in a general chapter efficiency contest.
Miss Iris Olson, president of the local chapter of Theta Sigma Phi, will welcome the guests.
☆ ☆ ☆
The K.U. Dames will entertain guests with a Valentine party at the home of Mrs. R. P. Stringham, 1019 Alabama, this evening at 7:30. The Medies wives, with Mrs. Walter Whitfa as chairman, have planned the program, Myron Messheinen is chairman of the refreshment committee, and Mrs. Jack Cuadra will appear as Dr. Val N. Tyne, heart specialist.
☆ ☆ ☆
☆ ☆ ☆
The Acacia fraternity has elected the following officers: Venerable dean, Richard Firris, c38; senior dean, Edward Willeford, c35; junior dean, Howard Randles, b'undel; secretary, Forest Chapman, c36; and treasurer, Raymond Tripp, c37.
Ku
Kappa Alpha Theta entertained its alumnae at tea yesterday afternoon in honor of Miss L. Pearl Green of Ithaca, N.Y. Tallman resins and frores were used on the table tea with silver service. Mrs. P. H. Klinkenbauer poured.
☆ ☆ ☆
The W.S.G.A. council and the Y.W.C.A. cabinet are giving a tea for the University women this afternoon from 3 until 5 o'clock in the Women's Lounge of the Administration building. New women are especially invited.
Chi Omega announces the engagement of Frances Funk, c37 to Edward Penchard, e33. Mr. Penchard is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
The Co-op Club is having a joint meeting with Kansas City Feb. 28 Lieut. Col. W. C. Koenig will talk on National Defense.
Alpha Kappa Psi, professional commerce fraternity, announces the pledging of Ray Reed, c'35, and David Graham, c'35.
☆ ☆ ☆
Weekend guests at the Alpha Gamma Delta house included: Mary Wheeler
Virginia, Tulsa, Mildred Sawin, all o Kansas City, Mo.
☆ ☆
Triangle fraternity entertained guests with a dance last night from 7 to 8 o'clock.
☆ ☆ ☆
Tom Trigg, c'unet, and John Robeson, e'38, were luncheon guests at the Beta Theta Pt house yesterday noon.
Mrs. Purd B. Wright was a luncheon guest at the Kappa Alpha Theta house yesterday noon.
Dinner guests at the Delta Chi house Monday night were Mr. and Mrs. John Byreade of Leavenworth.
Mrs. George Callahan was a luncheon guest at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house yesterday.
Gene Erwin of Kansas City was luncheon guest at the Acacia house yesterday noon.
Delta Tou Delta will entertain with an hour dance at the chapter house tomorrow night from 7 until 8 o'clock.
Lunchmen guests at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house yesterday noon were Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Ewers of Caney.
Obit Dickson of Ottawa was a dinner guest Monday evening at the Pi Beta Phi house.
Betty Neff of Spring Hill was a guest of the Sigma Kappa house Monday night.
☆ ☆ ☆
Dorothy Harbaugh, c'38, was a dinner guest Sunday at Watkins hall.
Mrs. Carl Winsor of Wichita is a guest at the Alpha Chi Omega house
SOUR OWL TO APPEAR FEB. 20 WITH SEVERAL INNOVATIONS
Sour Owl fans will be treated to a number of innovations and new features in the next issue of that magazine, which will appear Feb. 29. Extensive changes intended to increase the publication's popularity on the campus will show up in the coming number. Despite the recent emphasis on general structure throughout, the issue will contain the usual amount of gossip. Several good stories of fiction in addition to the ordinary number of "Hill Stories" will comprise much of the issue.
Book by Sheron Receives Award Dr. Florence Brown Sheron's recent book, "The Child," published last September by McGraw-Hill, has just been given honorable mention in the annual Parents Magazine Medal Award for 1934 This book has been widely accepted as a textbook in higher education and is now going into its second printing. Dr. Sheron is a member of the faculty in the department of home economics.
--for
Immediately after his appointment as Chancellor in 1933 he began his reign of terror. Today persons are sentenced to one year in prison for merely listening to a foreign broadcast on their radio. You might think that it is hard for the government to watch 50,000,000 people; he can, your next duty will report you to the government for breaking this rule. They do this because they want "Der Fuherer" to think that they are behind him.
PHONE K.U. 66
"There are no newspapers, clubs or associations of any kind in Germany today except those that are controlled by the government. Life if the people is under his control."
CLASSIFIED ADS
--for
"After the war, the German people were not politically-minded. They had to struggle with a feeling of nationalism," he said. It was not until after 1930 that the Fascist movement began to gain ground. By that time the economic depression struck Germany, and this fact, coupled with the fact that Hitler gained control of 120 seats in the Reichstag meant that he had gained control of the country. At the last election he received 43 percent of all the votes cast. His majorities are all received by terrorism.
PHONE K.U.66
LOST AND FOUND
BOYS: Room in desirable home, twin beds, sleeping privacy privileges if preferred, exceptionally well balanced meals served if desired. Two blocks from University. 1607 Tennessee Terrace. -94
LOST: Kappa key, probably in Robin-
son gymnasium. Name Doris De Lano
on base of pin. Call 718. Reward. -93
FOUND: Kauffel & Esser beginner's slide rule. Call at Kansan office.
ROOMMATE wanted in nicely furnished apartment, $8.00 for one or $1.50 each for two. Conveniently located on home. Phone 1319, 1318 - ~96 mont.
CLEANERS
BOYS: Large room on second, single or double, three exposures. Only quiet people to occupy the rooms. Very reasonable. 1408 Tennessee. Phone 7163.
REWARD: for basketball shoes taken from locker during vacation. No questions asked. Phone 2424M. David Page
ROOMS FOR RENT
14th & Tenn.
Mr. Seegar was editor of a German newspaper and a member of the German parliament until he was arrested by Hitler in 1933 for being a member of the opposing political party. At the end of three months he was able to escape and come to the United States, where he is country for four months learning before clubs, organizations of various kinds, and university students.
Gerhard Seegan, a former prisoner in a German Concentration camp, and an exile from Germany today, gave a lecture before Rabbi Mayerberg's religion classes yesterday afternoon on the Hitler regime.
Phone
WANTED Immediately, Girl to work for Room and Board. Two Blocks from Hill. Define Daytime Hours. Mrs. Claudia Ghazarola, 022-804-1034 Louisiana.
TAXI
We Call and Deliver
BOARD AND ROOM
ROOM AND BOARD for boys. Large, comfortable rooms and excellent meals at a reasonable price. Conveniently located. Phone 1311M at 1135 Horseville. -95
MISCELLANEOUS
There is a law which any person can custody by any whomever, without any cause, trial, or the right to have legal counsel, and to be put in prison. Any Nazi official or member of the Storm Troops can make arrests. I was arrested in March, 1933, even though I was supposed to be immune from arrest since I was a member of Parliament, and was cast into jail without cause. I have had men die in my arms in the concentration camp after they had been beaten so badly. Others are shot. It is by this means of terrorism that Hitler is able to hold his power. "There is one strange fact in Ger-
Phone
9 MY YOUR SERVICE
HELP WANTED
Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S - 920-22 Mass.
ROOM AND BOARD for one boy who desires to earn part of his living expenses. 1337 Kentucky. -95
TAXI
Former German Tells Students of Hitler's Reign of Terrorism
9
"There is one strange fact in Germany. Before Hitler took power, many people were against democracy, but now that they have seen what he is doing, they have learned to appreciate it.
OFFICE SUPPLIES
LOOSE LEAF FILLERS
GREETING CARDS
"There are three main reasons why Hitler regime will not last in Germany.
Twenty-five words or less: one insertion, 25c three insertions, 50c six insertions, 75c; contract rates, not more than 25 words, $2 per month flat. Accepted subject to approval at the Kansas Business Office.
BOOKS WALL PAPER PICTURE FRAMING
KEELER'S BOOK STORE
Admit 45 Lawyers to Bar
Sixteen Kansas Students Among Those Passing Examination.
The first of these is the moral incentive. You all can remember what happened on the night of June 30 when he started his attack upon his enemies. More than 1000 citizens were murdered in six nights. The second reason is economic. Before he took office he promised the people better living conditions and higher wages, but in this he has failed and the people are leaving his ranks. The last reason is a new war. Today he is arming the country as fast as he can, in preparation for a war, but if he is overthrown before this can happen, the people will be saved.
"Why has he been so against the Jews? One reason is that he was brought up in a district that was always anti-Semitic. Another reason is that he didn't have any ties to Germans by dint of hard work than most of the Germans, and this they have resented."
Thomas Bancroft Frost, former student,
'34; Clayton Flood, former student,
'33; Kurt Riesen, '33; Joseph Claire Stevens, former student, '33;
Gilbert Giles, former student, '33;
Elsei former student, '26; Paul Case Ailey, '129; Ford Elwin Harbaugh, former student, '32; Guy Woldon Baker, former student, '32.
ENGINEERS PLAN BROADCASTS AND SCHOOL "HALL OF FAME
Forty-five applicants have recently been admitted to the Kansas Bar and have taken the oath of office. The new lawyers, as recommended by the state board of Bar Examiners, include both graduates from the School of Law of the University, and former students who completed their work elsewhere. The complete list of those identified with Kansas University follows: Fred W. Johnson, 734 James Walsh, 1232 Jesse W. Kennedy, former student, '34; Mason John Mahin, former student, '33; Phillip Orvid Shrick, former student, '27; Charles Lester Hoover, former student, '34; Joseph O. Parker, T31.
Mattern Work on Display
Prof. Karl Mattern of the department of drawing and painting is exhibiting 25 of his paintings in Spooner-Thayer museum.
Read the Kansan Want Ads
Twenty-Five Drawings and Painting Are Exhibited at Spooner-Thayer
At a meeting held last night plans were made by Steel Key, honorary engineering society, for a "Hall of Fame." Department heads of the School of Engineering will submit names of prominent graduates to be voted upon by the members. Pictures of those selected and information concerning their work will be put on permanent record. Steel Key also will sponsor a series of broadcasts over station KFKU. Speeches by members and by heads of departments will be given in order to acquaint the people with the work accomplished by the School of Engineering.
Two of them received first prize from the Kansas City Society of Artists in November 1934. One of these is an oil painting entitled "The Sermon on the Mount" and the other is done in water colors and is called "Snow in the City." In all, there are 9 water colors and 16 oils. Several are local scenes, including one of the Jayhawk Plunge. Six of the paintings are of flowers and these are especially pleasing and delicate.
Newman Club Innovates Plan
Gives Recital in St. Joseph
The exhibition will remain in the museum for the rest of February.
Gives Recital in St. Joseph
Laurel Everett Anderson, as
professor of organ, was the sole
Monday evening at the Temple Music
Theo Mr. Mo. Mr. Anderson's
recital included numbers from Cesar
Frank, Bonnet, Brahms, and Bach. The
Westminster Presbyterian church was
filled to capacity for the recital.
At the last meeting of the Newman Club, Catholic organization, the members decided to invite all the Catholic students of the University to its future meetings. If this policy proves a success at the next meeting on Thursday, Feb. 21, it will be adopted permanently.
To Complete C S E P Shifts
Raymond Nichols, secretary to the Chancellor, and Miss Mary Olson, executive secretary of the CSEP, hope to have the reorganization of the CSEP completed by the end of the month so that all workers can be shifted from the
New Restrictions on Certain Types of Work Make Changes Necessary
The government announced restrictions on some types of work that are now permitted, and this necessitated the shifting of the jobs.
All students, who formerly had CSEP jobs, and made their grades last semester, have jobs now, and many new students also have work under the CSEP.
German Club Practices Conversation Members of the German Club played games and practiced conversation at the meeting yesterday afternoon. Election of officers was postponed until the next meeting. Miss A. L. Corbin, professor of German, conducted the meeting.
PRICES SMASHED ON AUTO GLASS
Doors $2.00
Windshields $3.00
CALL 954
RADIATOR REPAIR
AUTO WRECKING CO.
712 E. 9th St.
JAYHAWKER
A Play by Sinclair Lewis and Lloyd Lewis
Publication date, Feb. 15
$2.00
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass. Tel. 666
Reserve your copies now at
Prolits
Come to Those Who Wisely Advertise.
Use DAILY KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS
"We're Saying---- SCRAM" to 100 Suits, Topcoats, Obercoats.
Men's SUITS
Were $35.00
now
In worsteds, tweeds, cashmeres and flannels. Included are many light colors suitable for spring wear
Were $30.00 now
$17.50
$15.00
Were $25.00 now
We have just completed our annual inventory and find that we have 100 Suits, Topcoats and Obercoats that we do not want anymore. They are what is known in the retail business as "short lots." Early in the season we had a complete run of sizes in each of the many different models, weaves and patterns which our large stock contained. Naturally at the end of the season we find ourselves with only one or two sizes of a kind. Of course we have all sizes from regulars to shorts, slims and stouts but not every size in every style. This is a golden opportunity to buy a quality garment at a ridiculously low price.
$12.50
Topcoats & Obercoats
Both light and dark colors in half belt and belt all around models.
Were $35.00 now
$17.50
Were $30.00
now
$15.00
Were $25.00 now
$12.00
Were $20.00 now
$10.00
They go on Sale Tomorrow Morning at HALF-PRICE.
The Sale You've Been Waiting For---Come Early!
Ober's HEAD-TO-FOOT OUT-FITTERS
No Charge for Alterations
PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13. 1935
Jayhawkers Face Remaining Games Away From Home
Recent Indifferent Play by Cage Men Causes Much Worry to Dr. Allen
With seven victories and one defeat on the home court to their credit, the Jayhawkers take to the road for their remaining eight games. They head first for Lincoln where they take on the Cornhuskers whom they defeated 32 to 21 here Monday night. The standings of the teams now are in Kansas favor but the dilly-dally brand of ball that caused Dr. Alen many new gray hairs may cause him further dismay away from home.
Kansas principal trouble now is Iowa State that holds second place with seven victories and two defeats. The Jayhawkers have eight games, to play, while the Cyclones have only three, all to be played on home soil. That means good majority of their engagements to hold chances somewhat even to those of the Iowans. Iowa State, like Nebraska, plays only 10 games this season due to a well-filled non-conference schedule, while Kansas, Kansas Oklahoma, and Missouri make 16 appearances within the conference.
The Jayhawk team that will stand up under the driving attack of Nebraska Friday will go to Ames Monday night for a decisive match with Coach Menzel's crew. Then follows a series of double hitters with Kansas State
10138
Dr. Allen fears that the team will continue its inconsistent approach, even though he has been his principal
Missouri, and Oklahoma. All the teams will be gunning for the win. The succession of games will keep a tense strain over the team
DRAFFLELL grief. "They play splendid game like they did against Iowa State, they they get cocky and lose interest so that Nebraska comes along with a slashing, drive attack and knocked them off their high paddestals, he declared. "It was only Nebraska's breakdown in the middle of the second half that gave the game to Kansas."
Dr. Allen is further afraid of the effect of foreign audiences on his team. The loss of support of a home crowd and the lack of morale that accompany a team on its home court will doubtless be a difficult bindsure to overcome, especially considering some of the lusty, sometimes defamatory audiences to be found at some of the other schools He complimented the Lawrence crowd as an intelligent, appreciative one.
O'LEARY, PROTEGE OF ALLEN,
EXPLAINS COACH'S SUCCESS
O'Leary, who also played basketball at Lawrence high school, is now a newspaperman in Kansas City, Mo. He married M.D., and Mrs. R. D. O'Leary of Lawrence.
Ted O'Leary, former star basketball player under Dr. Allen and later coach of basketball for two years at George Washington University, Washington, D.C., has written a series of three articles explaining the basketball methods of Dr. F. C. Allen, University coach whose teams have won 21 championship titles. The articles, which were written for the Associated Press, give O'Leary's idea of the secret of Dr. Allen's success as a basketball coach.
BOOK-BINDING AND HANDICRAFT CLASSES ATTEND EXHIBITION
Adanced classes of book-binding and handcrafter attended an exhibition of historic Persian art and handcrafter at Lynn's Book Store, Kansas City. More recently, the exhibition is composed of rare pieces of art which were sent by some of the oldest families and leading members of the city be shown at the Progress of Centuries.
Dr. Ali Kuli Khan, D.N., internationally known scholar and lecturer on Persian art and culture, spoke in the evening, Miss Rosemary Ketcham and Miss Mary Margaret Parry accompanied the students.
Enter Women's Telegraphic Meet
At present there are four entries in the women's rifle team telegraphic meet; Wadburh College, Emporia Teachers' University, Akita University, and Kanass University.
The meet is held at each school during the month of March. All reports have to be in by April 1. Last year the meet was won by the University.
Attend Paola Meeting
Lieut. Col. W. C. Koenig, Sergent William Kollender, E. G. Stith and Prof. J. W. Twente attended a district meet-event Legionaries at Paola Monday evening.
BIG SIX HIGH SCORERS
Name G. Gl. G.F. T. Pt
Ebling, f, Kan 8 32 71 91
Jorgenson, g, Mo 12 32 21 85
Growes, c, K.S.C. 12 31 21 85
Growes, c, K.S.C. 12 31 21 85
Wegner, c, I.S.C. 7 33 13 20
Connelley, o, F 10 12 19 72
Connelley, o, F 10 12 19 72
Wells, c, K.U. 8 19 21 59
Freeland, f, K.S.C. 8 19 21 59
Freeland, f, K.S.C. 8 19 21 59
Steven, g, K.S.C. 10 28 18 55
Fleming, f, I.S.C. 10 28 18 54
Cowen, f, I.S.C. 7 20 11 61
Nebr, b, Webb. 19 14 15 41
Gray, g, K.U. 19 14 15 41
Henderson, f, M.U. 5 18 4 40
Bear, f, M.U. 15 18 4 35
Bear, f, M.U. 15 18 4 35
Allen, f, K.U. 8 13 7 23
Thornburgh, K.K.S. 8 13 7 32
Aggies Defeat Kansas In Initial Tank Meet
Nichols Is High Scoreer for Jayhawkers in Manhattan Contest
Manhattan, Feb. 12.—(Special)—The Kansas State swimming team tonight defeated the University of Kansas swimmer, by a score of 48 to 35. Nichols was high point man for Kansas, and Creed for Kansas State.
The 400-yd. relay was won by Kansas the time was 4:28.3.
In the 20-yd. breast stroke Blanche of Kansas State took first. Combs of Kansas State, second, and Report of Kansas third. Blanche's time was 2.941.
Jennings of Kansas won the 150-yd back stroke with Steele of Kansas State second, and Kester of Kansas, third Time was 2.08.
The 440-yd. swim was won by Nichols in 6:05. Miller of Kansas was second, and Laffen of Kansas State, third. Creed took first in the 100-yd. dash with Baumgartner of Kansas State, second, and Tripp, third. Creed's time was 60.6. There were no Kansas entries in the diving events.
Crewed won the 220-yd. dash in 2:48. Kester was second and Nichols third. The medley relay was won by Kansas State.
ALEXANDER FILLS VACANCY DURING ABSENCE OF SMITH
Prof. Frank D. Alexander is the visiting assistant professor in sociology during the absence of Prof. Mapheus J. Smith.
Mr. Alexander has held a teaching fellowship at Vanderbilt University at Nashville, Tenn., for the past two years. He formerly taught at the Peabody Teachers College at Nashville. While teaching at these institutions, he is a prominent member of the American Psychological Society. He also has been doing research work in rural sociology.
Men's Intramurals
--missing—pups are for sale—
All entries for the Mine's Intramural volleyball tournament must be turned to Elbebet in Robinson Gynon. The fee is 30e for each team.
Volley ball is a new sport in the men's intramural program. It will be conducted in dual team competition form, such as swimming and wrestling have been managed. Six men will compose each team. These teams will be scheduled for play as soon as basketball nears the end of its play.
The swimming meet between the Phi Gamma Delta and Beta Theta Pi scheduled last night at 8 o'clock was postponed until Saturday. It will be run off at a preliminary meeting to the Kansas-Kansas team on Saturday, February 2; 3:00 Saturday in Robinson Gymnasium.
There are two intramural dual swim meets scheduled at 5:15 o'clock to day. They are: (1) Coes vs. Sigma Chi; (2) Phi Dhi vs. Sig Ep.
East court: 6 o'clock; Rock Chalk "Ri" vs. Beta "B"; 9 o'clock; Chi Phi vs. Sigma Phi Epilation; 10 o'clock; Douglas Club vs. Jayhawks.
West court: 6 o'clock; Rock Chalk "C"
vs. Sigma Nu "B"; 9 o'clock; Campus
Raiders vs. Hawks; 10 o'clock; Delta
Upsilon vs. Kappa Sigma.
Today's basketball schedule:
Strange Facts
Are Printed in the Daily Kansan Classified Ad Section.
Help is wanted—frat pins are
bargains are offered.
You cannot afford to miss these "strange facts."
Pi Phi's Defeat Sigma Kappa's in Cage Game
Brice Is Outstanding Player on Winning Team, Scoring 11 Points
Pi Beta Phi advanced to the seminals last night by defeating Sigma Kappa with a score of 23-5. Sigma Kappa made the first score in the first minutes of play with Sharp'e the brow. Kiene made the first basket for Pi Phi's and from then on the Pi Phi's lead the lead.
Bruce, Pl Phi guard, was the out-
standing player of the match and also
led in the scoring with a total of 11
points.
Tomorrow the Pi Phi's will meet Corbin hall at 9 o'clock to determine who will meet I.W.W. in the final match.
G FTP
Bruce . 5 1 0
Bruce . 1 0 1
The 'h'n'tn' 2 0
Perry . 0 0
Newman . 0 0
S'th'rland . 0 0
The box score for the game:
1. Phi 33.
2. Sigma-Koeru.
Postpone Swimming Meets
Women's Intramural Managers Decide to Hold Contests Feb. 20-21
11 1 1
G FTT
Daniels .. 2 0
Edwards .. 0 0
Robinson .. 0 0
Pandit .. 0 0
Pandit .. 0 0
Johnston .. 0 0
2 1 2
Because the women's intramural basketball has continued on into the second semester, it was decided at a meeting of the women intramural managers recently to change the dates for the intramural swimming meet from Feb. 13-14 to Feb. 20-21. Half of the teams will swim on the former date and the latter half on the second date. The winners and runner-ups of each date will meet on Feb. 27 to decide the championship.
Basketball free-throws will begin Feb. 25. Each organization may enter as many as six women. Each contest will be given 60 trials. They will be in three groups of 20 each. The 10 highest will throw for the championship.
Miss Ruth Hoover, sponsor for the intramural managers, announced that the pool will be open for practice on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at 3:30. Tuesday from 2:30-5:30, and on Saturdays from 10-12.
Ping Pong matches will begin today. In the doubles each organization may enter as mary as three pairs. The girls can join the robin fashion. The same women may be entered for both the singles and the doubles or different women may play.
Move Into Home Economics' House
Anna Welch, c. 55, Betty Hattwick,
c. 58, Caitlin Cbin, c. 36, students
in the department have moved into the home management
house for a six-weeks stay as a problem
in home management.
Move Into Home Economics House
Eastwood Painting in Exhibition
the Exhibition
Raymond James Institute professor of drawing and painting, is represented by his oil painting, "Wind-swept," in the one hundred thirtieth Annual Exhibition of the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts.
Ham, Beef, or Pork on Bun
Rotate Practice Teachers
Physical Education Majors To Instruct Different Classes This Semester
UNION FOUNTAIN
10c
Sub-Basement Memorial Union
Herbert G. Alphin, instructor of physical education and supervisor of the physical education practice teachers of Oread Training School, said last night that the practice teachers under his supervision have been rotated as far as teaching duties are concerned. For the next nine weeks the following are assigned to coaching: basketball, Elwyn Dess, ed35; and Milo Clawson, ed35; gym classes, Richard Wells, ed35; advanced swimming class, Warren Plasman, ed35; and physical education class, Gordon Gray, ed35. These students receive actual teaching experience to prepare them for coaching positions later.
--which he requests leave of absence to get married.
The boys' advanced swimming classes of Oread Training School have started preparations for a water pageant and water carnival which is to be held early in May jointly with the girls' advanced swimming classes.
The boys' basketball team of Oread Training School have two more games scheduled and later will enter the elimination round. The game held in Baldwin during March 7, 8 and 9.
Crafton Is Outstanding In Early Pioneer Drama
(Continued from Page 1)
Judge Cooper, but at times he lacked firmness expected of the character.
In the character of Housetou Moore, Strawn is not as well cast as he was in "Double Door." He is better as the young man who comes to Kansas without responsibilities and who throws his loyalty with the group, him is as he is the colonel.
The part of Ada Worley affords Lauren Allen little opportunity to display any exceptional dramatic ability. She is costumed, dressed and provides attractive love interest.
Among the minor characters James Jambel and Stin Bauer, and Sam Kimle an Sam Judy do outstanding work. In particular, he does well with Karibelle. Kimble carries off the scene in the
Are You Eating 3 Meals Each Day?
You need this amount of good food to keep well.
We Are Serving 17 MEALS for $2.75
The food is balanced and there is a variety to insure health.
Try eating here.
CAFETERIA
Virgil Bergman as Dan Riley, a big, kind-hearted pioneer, gives a realistic characterization.
The cast is large and works together remarkably well in group scenes. The play is somewhat lengthy, and were it not for the dramatic action in the last two episodes, might lose the attention of the audience.
In endeavoring to have his characters represent the spirit of the time, Mr. Crafton has over-emphasized the representative traits in some of them, according to our modern connotation of life as it was in the earlier days in this state. Gardette appears to be overdrawn. It may be, however, that personalities were much more marked in pioneer days than is comprehensible to us now.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Always a Bargain Show
PATEE 10c - 15c
ENDS TONITE!
Dick Powell - Ginger Rogers
'20 MILLION SWEETHEARTS'
4 Mills Bros. - P.O. Brien
Thursday - Friday
Jean Harlow - Wallace Berry
Maria Dressler - Lee Tracy
Lionel Barrymore
"DINNED AT 9"
Saturday—Double Show 2 Big Features
THE ENTERTAINMENT SPOT OF K. U.
All Shows 25c
NOW! ENDS THURSDAY ALL Shows 25c
A MUSICAL TRIUMPH!
Critics Proclaim it Greater Than "One Night of Love"
At 3-7-9
GRANADA
"The Unfinished Symphony"
Music by the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra and the Chorus of the Vienna State Opera
HEAR — MARTA EGGERTH
The New Screen Sensation
Singing Subbert's Famous Love Songs
FRIDAY - SATURDAY — "LITTLE MEN"
She will be here SUNDAY — The Girl Who Has Wowed the world . The Princess of Personality Herself,
FOR GREATER
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● SAFETY
RIDE THE
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SAILINA
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Schedule of The Streamlines
Travel in a completely air-conditioned train, without a care, at less cost than driving your owncar. Meals and light lunchscerved at all hours. The STREAMLINER offers modern travel at its best for only 2 a mile—less for round trips.
7:00 A.M. Lv. Salina . A: 370 P.M.
7:00 A.M. Lv. Albenea . A: 365 P.M.
7:28 A.M. Lv. Manhattan . A: 365 P.M.
8:28 A.M. Lv. Manhattan . A: 622 P.M.
9:18 A.M. Waukee . A: 622 P.M.
9:18 A.M. Waukee . A: 612 P.M.
9:48 A.M. La Vawreuse . A: 452 P.M.
9:48 A.M. La Vawreuse . A: 452 P.M.
Kanapolis City, KS . Lv. 400 P.M.
* Flagship
CAUTION!—The Streamline run at high speed on schedule shown above. Perена crossing Union Pacific tracks should take extra precaution before passing over.
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PUBLIC SCREAMING
THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS,
MR. VAN PIPLE — DELIVERED
IN YOUR MOST PLEASING
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SILENCE
YOU!
FOUR SCORE AND SEVEN YEARS AGO
OUR FATHERS BROUGHT FORTH ON THIS
CONTINENTAL NEW NATION
CONCEIVED IN
ETC. ETC.
AND THAT GOVERNMENT OF THE PEOPLE,
BY THE PEOPLE, FOR THE PEOPLE,
SHALL NOT PERISH
FROM THE EARTH. BRAVO!
SPEAKING OF TOBACCO
THE SMOKING TOBACCO THAT
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
on the SHIN
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1935
speakers Aren't Human . . . Just a Small One on Hapgood . . . Dougherty Turms Sign Painter . . . Solitude.
BY JOE HOLLOWAY, c'35
We had a speaker from the Chicago Board of Trade in marketing yesterday. About three other economics classes came in to hear him also and after a while there was standing room only. Prof. Holtzelwax introduced the gentleman and then stated that there would be no further announcements and that after the speaker had concluded we were free to leave. Man, what applause followed — for the speaker?—and then what did he do but talk the whole hour? As the crowd was leaving and doing its best not to be mastached in the revolving doors which some few smart collegians always have to push as hard as they can, an instructor in the science department was heard to remark, "Well, the first show must be out"
+ + +
My dears, we saw the cunningest sport jacket on a fellow yesterday. I had vertical crimson and blue stripes and was absolutely too, too divine.
Dear readers a quest is ended—in fact we are planning to shout "Eureka" upsy and downy the campus. We ran onto a story in a Topeka paper right after Christmas holidays about a K man from the Hill who had a little trouble in that village (Topeka) New Year's Day. It seems that the fellow borrowed a car from a friend, drove off, looked at a store, drove on the horse, and went inside. When he came out later, he discovered that he had a flat tire. He backed up the car, changed the tire, and then found that he replaced the flat tire on the wheel. Swearing and sweating, he changed it again—and did the same thing! Finally, he changed it for the third time, got it right that time, and then stood up to discover that a problem was patched. That trouble was what that he had changed someone else's tire for him! The victor in this great battle of brawn over machinery, ladies and one or two gentlemen, was none other than friend Happgood.
It has been estimated that if all the patrons of the KU, boarding clubs were to be placed end to end, they would still reach.
A big bug of the Theta lodge is visiting the local girls a couple of days this week—in fact one of the girls solemnly stated that she "is a nucleus of Theta." We think that's carrying things a bit too far but skip it. Two of us, who were roommates in use, make several signs such as "Self-Praise is Half-Scalandal." "Do Unto Others as You Would Have Them do Until You," etc. to give the lady the idea that they always had them tacked on the wall so they'd never go astray. One of the better ones though read, "Don't forget to pull down the shades like you did last week" and "Side of the house. We bear also that the meals at the club have improved 100% during the last day or so.
Bill Bracke seems pretty well resigned to his fate of being a freshman in the musical comedy, when he's a graduate student on the IHL. What a
We hear that the men's glee club has a jazz music section made up of eight fellows who play some musical instrument. The other day the boys were doing a little rehearsing of "Solitude" which they intend to play, sing or something on a program in the near future. Prof. Taylor, freshly back from hearing Duke Ellington do the tunes right, tore his hair and pronounced the lad's efforts as "awful." Back comes trunk Hawk Miller with, "Well you should have heard Duke the first time he rehearsed it." Was you der hen?
Dr. Pacek Woodward will speak on "Present-Day Trends in Research in Physiology" at the regular meeting of Phi Sigma, honorary biology society tonight in room 20. Assemble today, A.B. Leonard president, sale building.
Saw a couple of fine ones in the library yesterday evening: An Alpha Delta Pi pledge carrying her pooch and paddle, and Bud Hanna in an embarrassing fix—George Robertson had just fastened a combination lock on Buddy's britches and Bud hadn't the combination.
Dr. Charles Kraus Awarded Willard Gibbs ACS Medal
professor Is Second Uni
versity Man to Win
Honor in Last
Five Years
in the last five years two University graduates have been awarded the Willard Gibbs Medal of the American Chemical Society, one of the highest honors given to chemists in America. In 1331 Dr. E. C. Franklin, 88, was given the Medal and recently Dr. D. R. Koch, a former at Brown University, was given the award in recognition of his research in the theory of solutions.
Since his graduation from the University in 1888, Dr. Kraus has devoted his life to research in pure science and is credited with adding much to the knowledge of reactions in liquid ammonia.
"Substituting ammonia for the common solvent water," the announcement of the award said, "DE Kraus has been able to arrive at conclusions which better understand the behavior of chemical substances in any solutions."
He made important demonstrations in electrolysis, and his work on the conductivity of hydrogen chloride in water "is regarded as classical." When tetrachyleal lead in gasoline was found to prevent engine knock, Dr. Kraus solved
PETER E. ROSS
Dr. E. C. Franklin, alumnus who recently dedicated his book, "Nitrogen System of Compounds," to Dr. H. P. Moore of chemistry at the University.
the method for quantity production,
and within three months he evolved
the process which is still used. In addition,
he is credited with much work leading to the discovery of pyrex glass
and has written a book on the subject.
"Properties of Electrical Conducting System."
In 1924 Dr. Kraus received the Nichols medal for the most original chemical research of the year.
Dr. Kraus, who formerly lived in Hays, has been a teacher or research worker at Johns Hopkins, the University of California, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Clark University and Brown since his graduation.
Dr. E. C. Franklin, professor emeritus of Leland Stanford university, recently dedicated his book, "Nitrogen System of Compounds," to Dr. H. P. Cady, professor of chemistry at the University Dr. Franklin was a student under Dr Cady and graduated from Kansas in 1892.
Dedicates Book To Cady
Personnel. Director Here
M. L. Frederic, personnel director of the General Electric company, Schenectady, N.Y., was on the campus yesterday interviewing seniors and graduate students in the School of Business. He interviewed about 30 students who are majoring in accounting, finance, and statistics.
M. L. Frederic of General Electric Inter views Students
Mr. Frederick stated that, owing to the large number of schools which he must cover in his interviews, not more than two of the students could be placed. His territory extends over the eastern half of the United States, the westernmost point being Kansas State, at Manhattan.
Hauptmann Is Guilty
To Discuss Race Problem
A report on the replies received from a questionnaire over the subject of racial feeling which was distributed among students and in Kansas City, Mo., a short time ago will be given by L. Wray Cheate, c'36, at the weekly meeting of the Y.M.C.A. cabin in Memorial Union at 4:30 today.
Trenchard Imposes Sentence Immediately; Death Penalty Set For March 18
After 11 hours and 14 minutes of deliberation, eight men and four women declared Bruno Richard Hauptmann guilty of murder in the first degree. Judge Thomas W. Trenchard immediately sentenced Hauptmann to go to the electric chair in the week of March 18 at Trenton, N. J.
After ringing the bell telling the outside world that they had reached a verdict, the jury filed into the courtroom with their sister message. The judge asked them if they had reached a verdict. They answered, "We have." They were then asked who should read the verdict. They answered "The foreman." The judge then asked the jury to find each other. Foreman Walton was instructed to read the verdict, "Guilty as charged."
Defense attorney Rolley asked that the jury be polled. The judge asked each juryman to stand up and render a verdict in turn, answered "Gullity as charged."
Gravity is changing.
Before the verdict was given, Hauptmann and his wife came into the jury
Men's Glee Club to Start Extended Tour Monday
room pale and showing the strain they had gone through during the deliberation of the jury. Houptmann had evidently been told of the reports outcried by the jurors in the conterrion. These reports stated that the first vote of the jury was 10 to 2 for
In an extended trip that will carry them to 13 Kansas towns, the Men's Glee Club of the University will begin its annual concert tour next Monday. The trip is to be made in a large passenger bus and is scheduled to leave here at 8 o'clock in the morning.
Musical Group Will Present 13 Concerts in Southeastern Kansas
The schedule of towns to be visited on Monday are: Ottawa, Garnett, and Chanute. Tuesday: Humboldt and Pleasanton. Wednesday: InDEPENDENCE, Coffeyville, and Sedan. Thursday: Cedar Rapids. Friday: Hutchinson and Newton. They are to return to Lawrence Saturday morning.
Walter Lapham, b35, president of the organization announces that in conjunction with the publicity department of the University, a pamphlet has been prepared containing the program, pictorial scenes of the University, and interesting information about the various departments.
1937
The program is to consist of the following numbers: "Crossing the Bar," (James); "Be Strong," (Bruno Ham) "Arabian Moon," (solo by Leon King, b.psp., (Godard-Smith); "Morning," (Speaks); "Its All Wores Out a Toultrin for De Lawd," (Mongrel Yank," (Dawson); "Gain of Mone" (solo by Keith Davis, fa'38) (piano by Keith Davis), (Gampphlil Tong); "Tong of the C CowPunchers," (J. Julius Baird); "The Alma Mater" (a solo tenor by Kenola Fa'38; and a piano solo by Tom Ryan, fa'35. A short skit will be given during the program by members of the Glee Club entitled "Celebration Nonsense."
Officers of the Glee Club are: Prof. H. C. Taylor, director; Walter Acel Lapham, b35, president; Maurice Cater, fa35, business manager; Leslie Reed, c37, publicity manager; Neal Haggard, e36, librarian; J. T. Craig, c'uncl; and Tom Ryan, fa35, accompanist.
Announce Law Honor Roll
Twelve Students on List Announced by Acting Dean Yesterday
The honor roll of the School of Law for the first semester of this year was announced yesterday by William L. Burdick, acting dean. Twelve students achieved this distinction, first five year students, three second year students, and four third year students. The students for the honor roll are graded that average better than a "B."
The first year honor students are Roy H. Johman, Fred B. Malc, Dale W. Maxwell, Robert A. Schroeder, and Lawrence R. Smith. Those for the second year are: Darken Anderson, Raymond H. Carr, and Jack Klein. Those for the third year are N. Nylah, John H. Lahnman, Thomas D. Mustard, and Merle L. Teagarden.
Send Carnival Invitations
Schools in Neighboring States to Be Guests at Annual Event
Invitations to the first annual intramural Carnival, scheduled for March 8 were sent to 28 colleges and universities, Oklahoma, and Kansas yesterday.
Representatives from these institutions will be guests of honor at the Carnival. A special committee from the W.A.A. and the Women's Intraural department will welcome the students from these schools.
Representatives from both the Men's and Women's Intramural departments were included in the invitation.
Chinese War Lord Builds Road For His Motorcycle
Invitations were mailed to the following universities and colleges: Kansas State, University of Oklahoma, University of Nebraska, University of Missouri, Iowa State, Grinnell, Creighton Washington University, Duke University.
Tulsa University, Washburn, Oklahoma A and M, Ottawa, McPherson Babcey, Kansas Weahleyan, College of Education Southwestern Teachers Southern University.
NUMBER 93
Wichita University, Emporia Teachers,
Fort Hays Teachers, St. Borbesed,
Friends University, Haskell, Sterling
College, and Rockhurst.
By James Lawrence, c. 17
James Yard, L. I. D. speaker, taught at a Chinese missionary school near the China border and was editor of The Christian School. He is an authority on China, after living through several local wars. He even speaks Chinese, which is quite an accomplishment.
Mr. Yard is also a road builder, along with his other activities. In an interview granted last night he said that indirectly he was the cause of the only road building inner China has seen in recent years. It was for Chiang Kai something or other himself hasn't been too effective with his pavements.
The first motorcycle ever seen west of Hankow was Mr. Yard's. He took it with him (in pieces, for there wasn't much he could run it on) to Chengtu, the home of the West China Union school. In, and around that city he
found that he could hardly ride his machine in the narrow streets without bowing over pedestrians and landing himself in an excuse for a gate, Roads outside the town were like plowed fields. So when Mr. Yard left Chengtu he gave the machin to a museum.
The cycle stayed in a building with replicas of heathen Gods gods and ancient vases, the sole reminder of the Occident in all inner China, excepting the schools. One day the local was lord of that period, discovered its existence and decided to become up-to-date. He soon found that it was either suicide or homicide to ride the machine on existing roads, so he built 10 miles of good pavement on which nothing was seen but him and his motorcycle. That act started a fad in China now en
conviction. Three hours later it was said that the vote was 11 to 1.
That act started a fad in Chim
known as road construction, and not
quite a few wheelbarrows may be see
plying the pavements.
the death of Bruno Richard Hauptmann will be the culmination of the kidnapping of baby Lindbergh the night of March 1, 1932.
Hauptmair was arrested last September when nearly $15,000 of the kidnapping money was found in his possession. His trial dragged through 32
The trial was Attorney General Willemz in his spectacular summation of the government's case, flaying unmercifulness. The defendant brought to testify for Hauptmann.
During the trial a mass of evidence was presented by the state charging that Hauptmann conceived the crime, wrote the ransom notes, climbed the ladder to the nursery, stole the baby and killed him before leaving the estate. They also showed that Hauptmann had in his possession nearly 15-000 of the ransom money when he was arrested.
Eight of the foremost handwriting experts in the country attributed to Hauptmann's hand the writing of the ransom note. The state also proved
A Cappella Choir to Sing At All-Musical Vespers
(Continued on Page Three)
First Concert Appearance of 58 Voice Group to Be Sunday
The Westminster A Cappella choir of 83 voices, directed by Dean D. M. Swartwhatch, will make its first concert appearance of the year at the 6th All-Musical Vespers, Sunday afternoon at the University of Virginia in a group of Four Russian anthems.
The choir is to sing soon with the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra as well as in several important concerts of the year.
An item of unusual interest will be the first performance of a recently composed "Nocturne" for flute and string quartet by Arthur Foote, the composer. The flute part will be played by Miss Mildred Hunt of Topika.
Jan Chipupson, new member of the piano faculty, will assist Professors Gelch, Kuersteiner, and Sewardboth with the first movement of the Mozart piano quartet in E flat. Miss Ruth Campbell, New York Company of the String Quartet.
Miss Irene Peabody will sing a Goundia ardo with organ, piano and violin accompaniment. The program will be opened with the Religious March by the French composer and organist, Guilmut.
This vesper is the third in the series for the year. Similar programs were given in November and December.
Elect Jackson President
Professor Chosen Head of Engineering Society at Topeka Meeting
At the twenty-seventh annual convention of the Kansas Engineering Society in Topka, yesterday, D. C. Jackson, of the department of electrical engineering, was elected president; M. A. Wilson of Salina, vice president; and E. R. Darling of Kansas State college secretary-treasurer.
Prof. A. H. Slus, professor of mechanical and industrial engineering, presented an extensive survey on the ventilation of commercial garages, and of the ventilation necessary to eliminate noise from office areas. George March, e10, gave a brief talk on the problems of the county engineer, especially in relief work.
Resolutions commemorating deceased members of the society were passed mentioning among others, Prof. H. A. Rice.
Hargiss Visits Ill Father
In connection with the Engineering society meeting, the Kansas section of the American Society of Civil Engineers held a lunchmeeting at which F. A. Russell, professor of civil engineering, was elected vice president, and Fred Eps, 04, was re-elected secretary.
Student's Mother Seriously Ill
Student's Mother Sister
Marc. Frank Rowland, mother of Mar-
rick and Elizabeth, ill attem-
ple all at the Lawrence Memorial Hospital. She underwent major operation yesterday.
Hargins Visits III Father
W. H. W. trach, track coach, is in Pittsburg, where he was called several days ago by the serious illness of his father.
Increase in Naval Budget Will Cause War, Asserts Yard
Need of Big Business for Nationalism Will Bring Serious Results, Says Talker
The need of big business for nationalism will be resolved in a foreign war, probably with Japan, the fourth audience in the LLD. lecture series was told last night by James Yard, father, mission activities at Northwestern University. Mr. Yard spoke on "Nationalism in America."
"The increasing naval budget with plans for ships with great cruising radius, the mechanization of the army, the building of Hawaiian and Alaskan air bases, and the militarization of the CCC boys are all evidence for such a war," the speaker said. Roosevelt, he stated, claimed there was no danger of war, and then approved an increase in the naval budget of almost 65 percent, as well as the 90 million dollar grant for the air force.
Mr. Yard proposed the repeal of the law excluding Asiatics from this country, as well as reinforcement of the freedom of the seas, the open door trade policy, and the naval program, in order to safeguard the peace of the Pacific. The money thus being used for a self-liquidating public works system, "Such action," he said, "is real patriotism."
Mr. Yard defined nationalism as an exaggerated idea of the importance of one's own nation. It arises from economic problems and results in forms of Fascism or Communism, and has no other solution.
"Nationalism as it has developed today is an effort on the part of big business to solve economic problems. The economic system has broken down and the government has as yet no constructive plan to revive the system." Mr. Yard etched the Heart and Hamilton J. Fish efforts to censor college newspapers and faculties as proof of his concession that nationalism is a virtue. In a speech at the Liberty League, the Crusaders, and pronouncements of the American Legion at last fall's convention in Miami as throttling the Bill of Rights.
The official statement of the American Legion Mr. Yord quoted, in part: "Besides enemies from foreign shores, there are traitors in America—teaching children that it is a disgrace to bear arms. If they continue—they must take the consequences. An American chairman is being asked to be a member of the Legion in every congressional district and county. These will act as observers."
Mr. Yard was introduced by L. H. Houston of Lawrence. Yesterday afternoon he spoke at Ottawa, following a luncheon given for him by Prof. Mabel A. Elliott of the department of sociology.
Nash Forms Hygiene Group
State Society Plans Education on Conditions of Mental Disorder
Prof. Bert Nash, president of the States Mental Hygiene society, went to Pittsburg last night to organize a hygiene unit in Crawford county.
The State Mental Hygiene society is establishing local county organizations for the purpose of developing a more adequate educational program with respect to conditions that promote delinquency by mental disorders and mental deficiency. The state society is interested in the progress of state welfare work and is using this means of developer interest.
Professor Nash has already established local units in Sidgwick county. He will organize a unit in Shawnee county next Thursday evening, Feb. 21.
DEAN STOCKTON ANNOUNCES
BUSINESS SCHOOL INCREASE Dean Frank T. Sixton, of the School of Business, announced yesterday that the present enrollment in the School of Business is larger than ever before. The present enrollment shows the opening semester of last year, and is a slight over the fall semester.
The commencement program this spring will contain the names of about 90 students who will have completed their work in this school.
Mass Meeting No. Monday
Mass Meeting Not Monday
A mass meeting of all women under the auspices of W.S.G.A. will not be held Monday afternoon at 4:30 as announced yesterday morning. Rather, a committee meeting will be held at that time to formulate plans for the meeting which will be held at some future date.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1935
University Daily Kansan
THE Official Student Paper of
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF JOSEPH DOCTOR
Associate Editors
Julia Markham Charles Brown
MANAGING EDITOR ... CAROLYN HARPER
--gave in. After 15 minutes of it,
screeching four policemen and a news
paper photographer rushed into the
house yelling, "Where is she? We'll
teach you guys to beat a woman."
Discovering the clarinet player, however,
they departed without doing anything,
and left unsettled the question,
which is the greater offense, to beat a
woman or play a clarinet?
MANAGING EDITOR ...
Campus Editor Harry Valentine
Campus Editor (General)
(Harvard) Harry Valentine
Storia Editor Ronnie Patt
Storia Editor (General)
(Syracuse) Ronnie Patt
Sweet Emily Dean
Dan Fry
James McFarlane
Editorial Honor Josephine
Josephine
Business Manager... F. Quentin Brown
Aaas, Business, Mer.. Elton Carter
Lena Wyatt Iris Olson
William Mann Moxley
Loren Miller Ratherford
Lorraine Miller
Wesley McCalla Jubilee
Fuinion Markham
John Winters F. K.
William Bilard Joseph Doctor
Business Office K.U. 60
News Room K.U. 25
Night Connections, Business Office 2701K
Night Connection, News Room 2701K
Publicized Tuesdays, Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday and Saturday. Students attend school buildings by students in the department of Journalism. The President of the Press at the Department of Journalism.
Subscription price, new year, $40.00 cash in
the Depository for savings. See www.djsp.com
Entered as second class matter, September
17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan.
WINEAS PRESS
1935
ASSOCIATION
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1935
NEGROES IN ATHLETICS
The Big Six is losing some of the best athletes in its territory as the result of the rules which prevent Negroes from entering athletics.
Of course there are two schools in the Big Six in states that still have the old feeling toward Negroes. But even these schools could get along all right if Negroes were allowed to enter individual sports such as track, and tennis.
The situation that exists could be looked upon from two angles. At the present time, in most of the Big Six schools, the Negroes attend school just as others do. They should have the right to enter sports just as the whites do. And, from the selfish viewpoint, the schools are losing some excellent athletes. Many Negroes go to bigger schools in the north and receive jobs just as the good athlete does in the Big Six.
If the rules were changed it would have to be handled very delicately and diplomatically. The Negroes probably would be placed in many embarrassing positions in the more southern states. However, as people became used to the situation, things would iron themselves out. In the end it might even result in Negroes being allowed to enter all sports just as they do farther north.
IT FLOATS!
The good "Spirit of Democarcy" has been seen on our campus lately. And who do you suppose discovered her? The professors? No! The men? No! It was the women who found here, and it was the women who picked her up and brought her in, hoping she would like our University and stay.
There has been some discussion as to what sort of entertainment "Spirit" would like. She is a shy little creature and feels a bit awed by so large an institution, she says. She has attended several sorority teas given in her honor, however, and the women all like her. Even at large社会的 evidence of her gentle but effective influence over us can be seen.
Dean Husband has appointed a sort of reception committee to look after "Spirit" and see that her visit is made pleasant. Further plans for her stay have not been made public as yet.
It is rumored, however, that she may like Kansas so much that she will want to enroll here and go on with her studies. Wouldn't be stars in the crowns of the women?
QUALITY VS. QUANTITY
Congressmen continue to worry over the fact that our standing army ranks seventeenth in size among the armies of the world. In drafting a bill for army enlargement, one congressman advanced the statement that the United
States army is even smaller than that of Greece.
A consideration which has been overlooked, however, is that although the United States army ranks seventeenth in size, it is first in cost. Our country has well-lodged, well-fed, and well-clothed men in its ranks. European countries, on the other hand, having obtained their men through conscription for the most part, have a low standard of living for their soldiers.
In the last disarmament conference an attempt was made to reduce armies by budget rather than by men. The United States delegation objected at once, and rightly. Slashing our army through cost would make it small indeed, and leave other nations singularly unaffected. Europeans would lower their soldiers' standard of living a little more, while the size would remain practically the same. Our own army would suffer losses in morale that would severely hamper its efficiency.
Fraternities Are Not Dying Indiana Daily Student
"Are fraternities dying?" asks the Daily Maroon of the University of Chicago in a recent editorial, and then proceeds to answer its own question by declaring that "fraternities are not going to die out, either at the University of Chicago or elsewhere. The system is too firmly rooted in the general college system. They are and will continue to make readmissions, but under one form or another they will continue to play an important part in the life of the undergraduate, and through their organizations form a strong student and alumni group that will be a pillar of strength for the university."
The Daily Maroon is correct in making such an assertion. The backbone of concentrated student action on the Indiana University campus is found in the fraternities when campus problems arise. Furthermore it probably would be ascertained, upon investigation, that a considerable number of students are involved in these problems by fraternities and sororities, which carry their rushing to high school graduates in all parts of the state during the summer vacation.
A JEWELER'S PARADISE
Treasurer's reports are revealing documents. A look at those from various student organization shows that a considerable amount of money is spent each year on "brass." Medals in recognition of the achievement of the degree, and in many cases this business of spending money on badges has been carried too far. Economy is another thing that should start at home, and it seems as if some of the organizations that have been hampered in their activities because of lack of funds could remedy the situation in college by investing more money in the matter of self-sglorification.
HONORS TO ALLEN CRAFTON
When communities throughout Kansas start planning Kansas Day celebrations, home-talent dramatic productions, and school dramatic programs, it would be well for the backers to look at Mr. Crafton's "Yankee Crusade" as the center piece of such a program. As a play it would stand some brushing up and rewriting in certain places, but as a dramatic interpretation of the spirit of Kansas from the "Fifteen" to this dry; as a good moving vehicle for a variety of community projects to the building of a state, "Yankee Crusade" is genuinely effective.
Back at Columbia University some stickers for research went out into the street and questioned casual passers-by to as their opinions of college students. We do not know the exact nature of the questions, nor do we know how many persons were interviewed, but the researchers came back with the statement that five out of six of the persons questioned thought that college students were just lazy, good-for-nothing, n'er-do-wells.
RESEARCH REVEALS AN UGLY TRUTH
That is a sad state of affairs, if it is true. It is not uncommon for the student to be accused in this manner by his parents, or even by his instructors, but when the man in the street picture him the students with an unfavorable impression. Is it the sophisticated, patronizing air the student has for those who have not had the advantages of college education? Is it the tales of fast life, inattentiveness toward others, or excessive talk and similar stories that are responsible for this?
Then again they may be simply the old green-cedar monster of jealousy, reared up at the sight of seeing someone happy, as most college students seem to be.
On Other Hills
An Ohio State student felt an irresistible urge to play a clarinet, and
OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
A. I. E. E.:
There will be a meeting of the American Institute of Electrical Engineer Thursday evening at 7:50 in Marvin hall auditorium. Prof. W. R. Maddox, or the department of political science, will speak. All members of the electrical Department are invited to attend. T. D. WILLIAMSON, Secretary.
Thursday, Feb. 14, 1935
Notley don at Champion's Office at 2 p.m., preceding regular publication days,
and 11 a.m. and 11:30 p.m. for Sunday lectures.
Vol. XXXII
A. S. C. E.
There will be a meeting of the chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers in room 210 Marvin hall this evening at 7:30. Election and Freshman Induction will be the main topics of business. Refreshments will be served. All civil engineers are invited. BOB WILLIAMS, Vice President.
Jobs and Small
Loans Are Needed to Pay
Various Expenses
FIRST SEMESTER GRADES:
Grade for the fall semester may be obtained from the Registrar's office according to the following schedule for student names:
Friday, Feb. 15 and
Saturday, Feb. 16—Those unable to come at the scheduled tim
GEORGE O. FOSTER, Registrar.
Jobs and small loans are needed by boys unable to pay various expenses the second semester, the Employment Bureau announced yesterday. Several students have money for fees and for school meals, but no money for room rent. Others lack board money, and cannot continue in school unless some provision is made.
The Inter-Hospital group of the V.W.C.A. will meet this evening at Hoehouse house from 7 to 8 o'clock on Saturday, April 13th. ANA MAYER TEMPLEMKIN, MARTHA PETERSON
INTER-RACIAL GROUP OF Y. W. C. A.:
ANNA MARIE TOMPKINS, MARTHA PETERSON.
Phi Delta Kappa will meet Thursday, Feb. 14, at 7:30 p.m. in room 115.
Fraser hall, Dr. Bert Nash will speak. GARLAND DOWNUM, Secretary.
DHI DESTA KAPPA:
QUILL CLUB:
Jeanne Vizetelty Cochrane, six years old, of New York, has a vocabulary of 10,000 words. That's all right for a six-year-old, but just imagine what happens if she continues to increase until she is some poor devil's mother-in-law.
There will be a meeting of Bishanmudi in the Green room on Sunday Feb. 17, at 4 o'clock. Bring a poem. NORMAN JACOBSHAGEN, President.
RHADAMANTHI:
From a prominent university comes the news of an incaribated professor's weaving arrival home in the wye, small hours of the morning. Entering the house, he encountered the goldfish bowl which made a resource for the boy. His better half yelled down from the second floor, "What was that?"
The professor angrily voiced a bitter answer, "TII teach those darn goldfial to snap at me." -Michigan Daily.
The General Loan Fund Committee has exhausted practically all of its available funds and says that anyone supplying work or small loans would enable in few more to continue in line with might otherwise have to drop out.
Anyone knowing of available jobs or small loans, please call the Employment Bureau.
Javhawkers Flown
Edward Penchard, b'33, is employed by the Goodyear Rubber Company, at Kansas City, Mo.
Lyle Gibbon, b. 29, has recently been promoted to the position of commercial manager for the Southwestern Bell Telephone Company at Ottawa.
Paul Kingman, b35, has gone to work for the Beatrice Creamery Company at Topeka.
All Shows 25c
GRANADA
Ends Tonite
A Musical Triumph
"THE UNFINISHED
SYMPHONY"
Shows 3-7-9
All Shows 25c
"Who Pays the Income Tax?" is the title of a brief article by David J. Tevioti, associate professor of transportation, in "Progress," the official publication of the Kansas Chamber of Commerce.
Friday - Saturday
LITTLE MEN
LOUIS JAMES ACKPTY
THIRD EDITION
RAFLEM AND BARN
MISS ORDERLYWORK
THE BOOK THAT HELPED THE MEN TO LOVE IT
NEW YORK, NY 10026
Miss Evelyn De Graw, a senior in the design and public school art department, has been appointed assistant to Miss Gladys Bates, supervisor of art in the Wichita high schools.
Plus—Edgar Kennedy Riot Cartoon in Colors - News
The Princess of Personality Herself. The Girl Who Has Wowed the World. She Has Everything and Can Do Everything.
Keep All Dates Open
SUNDAY
She's a Dozen Stars in One
We are told about the Kansas football player who want into a downtown clothing store and asked to see some of the spring airs with "wingshack" code.
ROCK CHALKLETS Conducted by R.J.B.
Yesterday we met a girl who says she's still keeping a New Year's resolution.
Overheard: "Oh you know him, he's the one that always tap dances when he dances."
Somewhere in Snow hall there is a rooster. Either he must be crazy or he has no conception of time, for he crowns any time during the day.
If Atlantic City dresses its police in new proposed abbreviated uniforms we suppose they'll be referred to as the Dimpled-Knives" squad.
A prominent exemplary declares there is room in Heaven for 32,000 souls. And all hard, bleacher seats, we fear—*Paul Jones in Lyons News*.
We have shaken hands with persons who leave our palms in the same condition as do street car strapes after a long ride. Doe Hartley is KC mayor City Star.
We are of the opinion that the United States Navy should stay out of the air and stick to their boats.
It is the mark of the very young
critic to regard praise as a symptom
of weakness.-George Jean Nathan.
How to keep awake in class:
1. Sit by a female who drops books.
2. Give the little woman beside you a stick of gum.
3. Hold a penel tightly in your hand when you start to relax, drop the pencil.
4. Sleep nights.
4. Sleep nights.
—University of Chicago Daily Maroon
Read the Kansan Want Ads.
Fresh Silex Coffee
It has that tentalizing aroma
Get it at the
UNION FOUNTAIN
Sub-Basement Memorial Union
ALWAYS A BARGAIN SHOW
PATEE 10e - 15e
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FRIDAY
One of the Greatest Pictures the World Has Ever Known.
JEAN HARLOW
MARIE DRESSLER
WALLACE BERRY
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And a host of others
"DINNER AT 8"
SATURDAY Big Double Show
SPECIAL for THURSDAY
Chicken and Dumpling Liver and Bacon Swiss Steak
at the CAFETERIA
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---
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1935
PAGE THREA
MATHEW'S
DICTIONARY OF
SPEAKING
VOL. 10
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Hill Society
Scheble-Meschke Marriage
The marriage of Miss Janet Schele to Mr. Addison Meschie, both of Hutchinson, took place at the home of the bride's parents in Hutchinson.
Mr. Meschek is a former student of the University and a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma. Mr. Meschek, a graduate of the University, is a member of Alpha Tau Omega.
Phi Kappa Pai held formal initiation last night at the chapter house for the following pledges: Linton Bagley, curnel Nd Bramwell, curnel; Merrill Bradley, curnel; Oliver Gilland, curnel; Russ Hodge, curnel; Fred King, curnel; Stuart Landau, curnel; Keania, curnel; Jr. curnel; Chester Siles, curnel and George Parker.
☆ ☆ ☆
Inter-racial Commission of W.W.C.A. will have a social meeting at Helenay House tonight at 7:30. Ethel Love will play a piano song, Martha Perlman, c. 37, Christian Graves, c. uncle, and deephine Buster, c. uncle, will have charges of stunts and games. Anna Marie Thomplains and the机组 are co-chairmen of the group.
☆ ☆ ☆
Wesley Foundation will entertain with a mixer to be given in the First Methodist Church morning evening from 8 to 11. All students, Wesley Foundation and Harold Wampler are making the arrangements.
A Valentine party will be given at Westminster hall Friday night for friends and members. Those who are on the committee in charge are Fred Mauer cured; Mary Frances Butter, Bold; Edgar Kendall, k凳; Eugene Comb, cured.
☆ ☆ ☆
Dinner guests at the Gamma Phi Beta house tonight will be Prof. and Miss H. E. O. Whitford, c37; Isabel Tailow, c37; Jane Case, fa7; and Miss Vela Leen
☆ ☆ ☆
Miss Pearl L. Green, municipal secretary of Kappa Alpha Theta, who has been a guest of the loch council for the last year, says she gave today for her hams in Ibaha, N.Y.
Dinner guests at the Pii Gham Dolle house tonight will be the Katherine Cusaney, c'end; Aurin Bushmoyer, c'80; Dario Martin, faunt; aenc; and Martin Witthers, c'84.
H. W. Stubbs of Ulysses, and Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Shearof Johnson, were guests of Rachel Shelar, £37, at the Alpha Omicron Pi house Tuesday.
Miss Olive Torgesson, national officer of Alpha Xi Delta, who is acting as housemother for the local chapter, left Wesley's a week's stay in Minneapolis, Minn.
Thelma Humphrey, ed35, Mary Bess Doty, and Carol Horner, ed35, attended a luncheon at the Delta Gamma sorority house in Topeka yesterday.
Jim Terry, c34, and Richard Wallf were guests at the Sigma Nu house last weekend.
W
Mr. and Mrs. R. I. Roby of Kansas City, Mo., were dinner guests at the Gamma Phi Beta house last night.
Representatives Will Attend Athletic Federafives Meeting in Emporia
At the regular meeting held yesterday afternoon the W.A.A. selected Thelma Humphrey, ed33, and Ruth Learner, c37, as its representatives to the south central section of Athletic Federation c. College Women which will be hold at Samplorpa College in Memphis, Missouri. M12. Mrs Ruth Hoover, assistant professor of physical education, and several members of W.A.A. will attend the session held Feb. 19.
HELEN BOWMAN IS ELECTED
Select W. A.A. Delegates
HELEN BOWMAN IS ELECTED PRESIDENT OF QUACK CLUB
Mary Irwin, ed36, was elected treasurer of W.A.A. Mary Bess Doty, ed35, and Loize Montgomery, ed36 were selected as manager and assistant manager of the annual "Phydov" which the W.A.A. played at high schools throughout the state. The playday is scheduled this year for April 27.
It was decided to hold semester
Quack Club try-outs Saturday, Feb.
23 at 10 a.m.
PHONE K.U.66
WOMEN'S SWIMMING MEET
At the regular meeting of the Quack Club held last night Helen Bowman, ed35, was elected president to fill the vacancy left by Mary Virginia Smith. Miss Smith received her degree in education at the college where she is now an educational physical education instructor in the secondary school in Coffeyville.
TO BE WEDDING FEB. 20 AND 21
Thursday these groups will swim Pi Beta Phi, W.I., Cornell Hall, Gamma Phi Beta, Alpha Delta Pi, and Chi Omega. The winners and runners-up for each night will meet Feb. 27 to decide the winners.
Small Crowds at "Yankee Crusade"
Prof. Robert Calderwood, assistant professor of speech and dramatic art, reports that the attendance at the play "Yankee Crusade" was very small Monday and Tuesday nights. The reason was that students had not yet paid their fees, and had not received new activity books. The sale of the tickets has improved and a large crowd is expected to attend tonight, according to Professor Calderwood.
TAXI
Organizations entering women in the women's intramural swimming meet to be held Feb. 20 and 21 have been divided into two groups. The first group, which will swim Wednesday, Feb. 20, will include the Kappa Kappa Gamma, T.N.T, Alpha Chi Omega, Sigma Kappa, Watkins Hall and Kappa Alpa Theta.
Geology Majors To Meet
Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S — 920-22 Mass.
All students majoring in mining, metallurgy, or geology, are urged to be present for a meeting tonight at 7:30 in the men's lounge of the Union building. During the meeting, plans will be drawn up to reorganize the department into a new plan of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers.
--hi Chi's Are Snowed Under by West Hill's Team
TAXI
CLASSIFIED ADS
CLEANERS
BOYS: Bed in desirable home, two beds, sleeping on privileges if preferred, exceptionally well balanced meals served if desired. Two blocks from University. 1907 Tennessee Terrace. -94
ROOMS FOR RENT
--hi Chi's Are Snowed Under by West Hill's Team
BOYS: Large room on second, single or double, three exposures. Only quiet people to occupy the rooms. Very reasonable. 1408 Tennessee. Phone 7163.
ROOOMMATE wanted in nicely fur-
nished apartment, $8.00 for one or $0.50
each for two. Conventionally located to
Hill or home. Phone 1131J. 1319 Verm.
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9 MYDURSERVICE 9
PHONE K.U.66
14th & Tenn. Phone
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We Call and Deliver
9
LOST AND FOUND
FOUND: Keuffel & Esser beginner's slide rule. Call at Kansan office.
Twenty-five words or less: one insertion, 25c three insertions, 39c; six insertions, 75c; contract rates, not more than 25 words, $2 per month flat. Accepted subject to approval at the Kaunas Business Office.
ROOM AND BOARD for one boy who desires to earn part of his living expenses. 137 Kentucky. -93
REWARD: for basketball shoes taken from locker during vacation. No questions asked. Phone 2424M. David Page. .com
LOST. Kappa key, probably in Robinson gymnasium. Numer Dore De Lano on base of pin. Call 718. Reward. -93
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--hi Chi's Are Snowed Under by West Hill's Team
MISCELLANEOUS
KEELER'S BOOK STORE
BOOKS
WALL PAPER
PICTURE FRAMING
Sig Eps Win Game, 72 to 3
Shooting Stars
Delta Upsilon 17, Kappa Sig 24
Douglas Club 10, Jayhawks 39
The Phi Chi's also ran, but not so but anyone could see their dust as the sigma Phi Epsilon cagers trumped them in a 72-3 walkaway last night. The Sig Eps ran up the largest score in intramural basketball this year. Shanks' twelve baskets, Thomas's ten, and Ewing's nine kept the hoops busy.
Midnight Scores
Tuesday night saw the Theta Tau I engineer a win over Alpha Kappa Pai. It was the first loss for the commerce fraternity which holds the Division II lead. The Independents of Division I had a tough fight before they collided with over the Collegians, 20-18, on the top position. Scores best night:
The Campus Raiders went a long way before relinquishing to the Hawks at 44-35. It was Shrader's 12 baskets that made the Hawk victory.
Campus Raid' r. 35
G F T F
Cearn 5 0 1
Gae 2 1 1
Maier 5 1 0
Smith 3 0 0
Ogren 1 1 0
16 3 2
Hawks 44
Thomas 0 0 1
Terry 0 0 1
Dunbam 0 1 2
"ooper" 1 0 2
Referee: Burkhead
hi Chi 3
Referce: Hauck
Rocky Chalk B 28
G FTFF
Lawrence w 1
Kindu k 2
Huls r 2
Huis s 4
Stapleton o 1
Allen.G. l 1
22 0
G FT 6
Bruder 12 0 0
Borgen 4 0 0
Linley -2 0 0
Lindsey -3 0 0
Melroy -1 0 0
1 1 7
S. P. E. 72
8 7 3
G FTT
Ewing 12
Shares 12
Thomas 10
Geary 1
Miller 1
Kuchs 1
Kuchs 1
G FT1
Morgan . 0 0
Kenyon . 0 3
Bowls . 0 3
Baft field . 0 0
Green . 0 0
Robinson . 1 0
Orr . 0
Referee: Al McClure
Beta B 16
CINCER HALF CINCER G FTF
Nelson 2 0 1
Ryan 2 0 1
Martin 2 0 1
Linley 0 0 1
Annamra y 0 0 1
Roaldtier 0 0 1
Smirl 2 1 1
B 17
R 4 0 G FTE
Reeder 4 0 0
Townsid 0 0
Payne 1 0 0
Pfeiffer 3 0 0
Allen 0 0
Reference: Earl Hoff.
Theta Tau 33
A. K. Psi "
G FPT 6
Willey 4 0 1
Stout 4 0 1
Cole 3 2 1
Lamm 1 2 1
Lamm 2 1
15 3 6
81
G FFT
Constable 0
Stable 1
Antrum 1
L'anglir m³ 1
Laws 1
Lawns 1
Smith 1
Referee: Burkhead
**Hammers' brothers Wits sub**
A verdict in favor of Burt and James Hammers was presented in a suit to recover allegedly owed board and room bills, was returned in the district court here Tuesday. Mrs. Matilda Maddux, the plaintiff, alleged that the defendants owed her $35 on room and board bills and personal notes.
Hammers Brothers Win Suit
0 2 7
More than a thousand students in the University have not paid their fees yet, according to the bursar. Yesterday was the last day that students who had not paid their fees could attend classes without having a penalty assessed. From now until Feb. 20 a fine of 50 cents a day will be imposed, and after that time, any student who has not paid his fees will be dropped from classes.
Many Have Not Paid Fees
2:45 p.m. Elementary French lesson, Mr.
W. K. Cornell, instructor in Romance
language
KFKU
30 p.m. Elementary Spanish lesson, Mr.
Clarence Chrisman, instructor in
Spanish
--that the kidnapping ladder was not only linked to Haxtmann through plaine mark found on the rungs and unrolled by a man, part of the floor of his bronze box in the Bronx house.
6:00 p.m. 128th Athletic interview, arranged by Prof. E. R. Elbel.
Thursday, Feb. 14
Jury Finds Hauptmann
Guilty of Murder Charge
Allen Treats Basketball Squad
Doctor F. C. Allen, director of athletics and basketball coach, treated his basketball team and their dates to a picture show at the Granada Tuesday night. This treat was the result of a promise which Doctor Allen made to the squand before the game last Monday.
Basketball This Weekend
Zoology Club Initiates
Allen Treats Basketball Squad
Basketball This Week.
Feb. 9—Iowa State vs. Kansas at Law-
wre, Nebraska.
Feb. 10—Missouri at Columbia; Nebraska at
Oklahoma at Norman, (36-24); 33-23).
Feb. 11—Iowa State vs. Missouri at
Lawrence, (21-24); 25-24).
The following persons were initiated into the Snow Zoology Club Tuesday evening; John Coleman, c³7, Dale Cunch, c³7, Ada Maxine Dainenker, Karner Gomer, c³7, Delphia Louk, c³7, Alice Reece, c³4, Otto Timer, and Robert
Prof. W. J. Baumgartner, professor of zoology, spoke to the club on the subject "Former Zoology."
(Continued from page 1)
Col. Lindbergh identified Haupt-mann's voice as the voice of the man who collected the $50,000 ransom in St Raymond's cemetery, Dr. John F. Condon identified Hauptmann as the "John" he talked to in Woodhill cemetery before the ransom payment and also at its payment.
Other state witnesses also linked Hauptmann either with the kidnapping or the ransom money.
Edward J. Reilly, chief defense counsel, contended that all the evidence purporting to connect Hauptmann with the actual crime of burglary, as the indictment charged, with the abduction and murder of a woman in his collection, was not only circumstantial but that it was of the filimest nature and did not warrant a conviction.
Forney Receives Promotion
Kenneth Forney, '31, was promoted recently from the post of civil engineer on the Fort Peck project to the mechanical engineering department in Cincinnati, Ohio. His father was formerly a member of the University teaching staff.
Women's Intramurals
---
Women's Intentures
Miss Ruth Hoover, sponsor of womens intramurals, has announced the pairings for ping pong singles. The doubles arrangement will be announced today, and play will begin Monday. Each organization may enter three pair in the doubles and there will be definite time assignments for each match. Most of the games will be scheduled on Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday. Ping pong singles have been divided into four divisions. No definite time has been scheduled for these matches, but play should begin immediately. All pairings in the games should be filled out Feb. 22. Equipment may be checked out in the basement of the gym on the women's side. The pairings
Division I
Hunter, L.W. W., vs. Bye, Frick, Corkain H. vs. Bye, Owelsey, I. vs. Surr, V. vs. Dermack, I. vs. Surr, O'Donnell, A. D. Pijt, Hoffman A. Pi Phi, Boehm, Alpha Chi, Fisher, Thein v. Overall, Gamma Phi, Delano Kappa v. Overall, Gamma Phi, Delano P. Olson, A. D. Pijt, Daniels, Signa K. v. Mitchell, Alpha TNT, Barke, Ind. v. Nordlund, Kappa, Johnt, Chi Omega v. Markham, A. O. Pi; Barber, Gamma Phi v. Lincott, Theia; Ganti, Alpha Chi v. Theia, Wyckham v. Byer, Wyckham, Walkins H. v. Byer
Pyle, A. O, P i. By vs. Bye; Krebbel,
Kappa v. As by; Bye; Hatch, Sigma K. v.
Byes; J. Cheng, M. Sternberg, Phi;
Johns, Chi. Omega K. v. Colburn,
Theta; Stanley, Walking H. v. Daniel,
A. D. P i. Weber; Alpha Gamma v.
Pantle, Sigma K. v. Pantele, Sigma K.
Pantle, Sigma K.; Surblerain, FI pih
vs. Stockwell, Ind.: Edwards, Alpha
Gamma D. v. Kayinsyng; Karpkin, Kua-
tien, Korbin, Wasserman, Troup, Chi Omega v. Wasn, Alpha
Chi; Cleverman, A. O. P i. By vs.
Chevlen, Corbin H. v. Bye; Nelson,
Walker H. v. Bye; Teuan, A. Theta
v. Bye.
Ripley, A. D. Pt, by: Bye; Wildin, Alpha Gamma D. v. Bye; Butler, Alpha Chi v. Bye; Scoggins, Ind. v. Stubba, Sigma K. Sholander, Watkins H. v. by: Bye; Timmerman, Doria Mikkelsen, Chi Omega; Doria Kappa v. Bison, I.W. Fawett, Theta v. Cassidy, Gamma Phi; Sharpe Sigma K. v. Banus, Gammachi Ei; Hartman, Gammachi Ei; Haskinson, I.W. v. Jeanning, Alpha Gamma D; Young Ind. v. Newman, Pi
DON'T FORGET Friday Night Is Free Shrimp Night at 9th & N. H. Gross Cafe
Save money!
Division 4
Phi; Smith, Theta vs. Bye; Fay, Kappa Newcomer, Corbin H. vs. Bye.
By Telling Your Story in the
DAILY KANSAN Classified Section
Burd, A. D. Pl vs. Bye; Busey, A.
Borsma, G. Montgomery, G.
Biosse, B.; Bissou, B.; Callip,
Delta Zeta; Bruece, P. Plih vs. Lyman,
Kapuan; Jaymin, G.; Calvin, A.
Alpha Gamma D.
White, Chi Omega; Spices, Alpha Chi v. MevCy, Mamma Phi; Coo, A. O. Pi vs. Hanson, Gamma Phi; Dodge, Kappa v. Kavannah, Alpha Gamma D; Horrbaker, Alpha Chi v. Griffin, Winn bin IH; Krebsch, Alpha Chi v. Beshner, Pi v. Fiey v. Edie; L.W. v. Bye; Robinson,Sigma K. v.Bye; Parkinson, Ind. v. Bye.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1935
Baxter Mile Event To Test Strength Of Glenn's Rivals
Kansan Enters Saturday's Meet Favored to Win From Venzke and Bonthron
Glenn Cunningham, the middle West's aie macer, will enter the Baster mule classic in New York Saturday night a favorite over his arch rivals, Gene Venken of Pennsylvania and Bill Bonthron of Princeton.
The Baxter mile, feature of the New York Athletic Club meet at Madison Square Garden, will be the stage for the fourth year of rivalry between this trio of feet-footed milers. Cunningham's position as favorite in the race is evident when the record amazing record over the past 3-year indoor foot-racing period.
Within the last three years of indoor racing, there have been 11 races at 1,500 meters or a mile involving at least two of this colorful trio. Cunningham has won eight of the ten races in which he participated, leaving to win four more. J. 100-meter run and dropping a close decision to Bontonrub last season.
Another mark for Venizie was his capturing of the Hunter mile at Boston last Saturday night in 417.6 which bettered the previous record of 418.4.
According to Michael J. Foster, writing in the New York Journal, the fact that Venzie won the Hunter mile 12 yards ahead of Eric Nigro "won't prevent Glenn Cunningham from toeing the mark in the Baxter mile a distinct favorite to come through in front. Gene is the gallery gods' favorite, but Cunningham seems to be too strong for him."
In 1933 Cunningham won the Baster mile in 4:13, but last year was beaten by Bonthron, who was making his in-form start in a matter of inches. His time was 4:11.
On March 2, Cunningham will take part in the Kansas City Athletic Club meet in Kansas City in which both Venze and Bonthron are probable entries. The Columbian mike which takes place March 16 in New York City will have Cunningham as an outfit agent. Lennard Flyer set the world's indoor Eklark Flyer set the world's indoor race at 4:08.4; and in 1932 he won the race at 4:12.
Cunningham will take part in some special event during the Kauai Rales, either in a 1,500-meter or a mile run. Venke and Bonthron may participate
Swimming Team Starts Practice for Next Meet
Tank Squad Will Hold Dual Contest With Ichabods Saturday
The variety swimming team resumed practice yesterday afternoon in preparation for a dual meet with Washburn in the pool Saturday afternoon at 3 o'clock.
"I look for a tight meet, as Kansas State defeated Washburn Feb. 6, 46 to 37 and Tucson night defeated Kansas by a score of 48 to 35. Figures show the two teams to be almost equal, so I know it will be an interesting meet to watch," said Ms. Eldredge, instructor and instructor of physical education, said last night.
In the meet with Manhattan, Tuesday, two pool records were broken. Harlan Jennings, c 38, of the University broke the 129-yard backstroke record with a time of 2.508. The old record time was 2.466. The new record time was the 60-yard dash record with a time of 33.2. The old record was 34.1. Creed was high point man of the meet, winning a total of 15 points for his team. Coach Alphin said that Creed's outstanding work in winning first in three events, in winning the men's and women's 129-yard swim, defeated the Kansas team. A feat such as this is extraordinary swimming. Mr. Alphin said.
Nichols was high point man for Kanze with a total of eight points. Jennings was second with six points, while Miller and Thorne tied for third with five points each. Kaster and Trip won four points. Thorne two points, and La Shelle one point.
Continue Auditorium Work
Relief workers yesterday afternoon were continuing the extension of the basement under the auditorium. On rainy days the workers carry on this project, which will mean greater storage and easier movement in the wall that the expansion will reach as far back from the rear of the building as the steam tunnel which runs under the auditorium.
Coe's Take Swimming Dual
Druggists Win All Four Events From Sierra Chi's
Coe's swimming team remained undefeated by sinking the Sigma Chi队 last night in a dual meet by a score of 25 to 8.
The results were as follows:
Medley Relay (Back, Breast, Free):
Won by Coe's by forfeit.
100-yard Dash: Won by Heward, Coes second, Stone, Sigma Chi; third, Flood, Stone, Chi. Time: 1:97.5.
-ou-yard Back Stroke: Won by Cochrane, Cole's; second, Packard, Cole's third, Smith, Sigma Chi. Time: 344.
50-yard Dash: Won by Pussey, Coe's second, McDonald, Sigma Chi; third, Goedde, Coe's. Time: 27.4.
Officials: Allphin, Jennings, Raport and LaShelle.
Phi Delta Theta won by a forfeit from Sigma Phi Epsilon in the other scheduled meet.
Men's Intramurals
Today's basketball schedule: West court: 5:38, Kappa Eta Kappa vs. Acacia; 10 o'clock, Coes vs. Ramblers.
East court: $3.0 Sigma Alpha Epsilon
vs. Phi Kappa Psi; 10 o'clock, Triangle
vs. Phi Beta Pi.
Organize Independent Cage Team
A team of former Kansas basketball players has been organized into an independent team with Bob Curd, c3rd; manager, and has been invited to play in an independent team tournament at Springfield, Feb. 21, 22, and 23. The following make up the队: Ernest Vaneck ed;35 Paul Harrington, m;39 Bob Curd, c;36 Max Lumm, c;35 Warren Plackett, ed;35 Fred Harris, c37, and Ambrose Wolken, b35.
Gross Enrolls at Pittsburg
Organize Independent Cage Team
Today's swimming schedule: 515 o'clock; Kappa Sigma vs. Delta Tau Delta Alma Tau Gamma vs. Phi Gamma Delta
J. John C. Gros, of Fort Scott, a member of the tennis team last year, enrolled in Pittsburg Teachers College Feb. 11, Arthur Voss C., 35, tennis coach, said last night that he had been counting on Gross for high position in singles.
Light Workout for Team Prior to Nebraska Game
Wilmer Shaffer Returns to Practice; Squad Leaves Tonight
Couch Allen put his Jayawahk cage squad through a very light work-out yesterday afternoon in preparation for the encounter with Nebraska on Friday night. There was no scrimmage, the boys spending the greater part of the afternoon in a brisk floor practice and some goal shooting.
The team will leave at 9:35 tonight on the Santa Fe for Lincoln. The number that will make the trip has not yet been announced. Wilmer Shaffer
Dr. Allen went over the Nebraska formulas he laid out his tactics for me against him.
SHAFFER
who has been out
several weeks due to
severe illness returned
for practice,
and may go with
the tquad. Dave
Lutton, sophomore
guard, has been
in the hospital for a minor
illness and pro-
bably will not go along.
Dick Wells. center, is in a weakened condition, due to his attack of the flu of two weeks ago, which has taken off about 10 to 12 pounds in weight. Dr. Allen has ordered him to a complete rest from practice, and he will doubtlessly be relieved by Noble or Wellbauren in Friday's tit. The starting line-up serves as an example; they will probably name the same starters which went in against the Cornbushers here last Monday when Kansas defended them 32-21.
Psychologists Will Meet Here
The Midwest Psychological Association will hold its annual meeting at the University, May 10 and 11. Dr. John McGeech of the University of Missouri will be one of the principal speakers. Psychologists from Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota and Nebraska are expected to attend.
Dick Wells has been ordered to take a two-day complete rest from practice. It has been evident that he has never yet regained his composure following his recent illness. Not only that, but Dick has been working all season against tierers centers, which means a real fight for the tip-off. Dr. Allen believes that the tip advantage in any game is worth 8 or 10 points.
Sport Shots
Bv Robert G.Patt,e'35
Ray Ebling could count only two baskets and four free throws in the Corn-huske game, but not through any great fault of his own. Coach Brown of Nebraska covered him with Parsons, his plucky forward. Parsons held the Kansas high scorer by clever close screening as well as a voiferous vocal attack. Parsons is a football man as well and was always sure of himself.
Gordon Gray put on one of the most beautiful field goal displays we have ever seen in Monday's game. We out of eight of his high arched shots from his back position were good for nearly half of the Jordan hawks to battle avenues of 35% is a good mark to make to make who plays the entire 40 minutes.
it was Gray's last appearance before the Lawrence crowd, since he is a senior and the remaining games are all abroad. The steadiness with which he has filled his assignment in the lead-off position was the element that won the Nebraska game itself and that which has kept the team clicking this season.
Don Faurio, new head grid coach at Missouri, shows that he really intends to remake the Tiger football squad. Last week he issued warnings to 1943 veterans who had not yet reported for spring practice that their chances for making the first string next fall were not so good unless they did. He reported that about a dozen players had not appeared before last Saturday, under the misunderstanding that the early exercise was devoted only to conditioning exercises. Fauroi, however, is inaugurating some new shifts and fundamentals.
The Oklahoma wrestling team is hardy lot. Leaving Norman Wednesday, they drove 365 miles to Manhat-
tn, Kna, 358 miles to Ames, Iowa, 325 miles to Columbia, Mo. and leaving Columbia at 11 p.m. they drove 555 miles back to Norman, arriving at 2 p.m. Sunday after being all night on the road. Despite this cruel pace, sustained over 1,663 miles, the Sooners found time to vanquish Kansas State 25-5, Iowa State $28\frac{1}{2}-1\frac{1}{2}$ and Missouri 26-8.
Herman "Red" Nelson, Oklahoma's sophomore center, is a former state high school champion in the high jump and hurdles. Competing for Norman, Nelson has run the high hurdles in 14.8 seconds and high-jumped 6 feet 2 inches.
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The PI Beta Phi and Corbin Hall basketball teams will play tonight at 9 o'clock. The winner of this game will meet the I.W.W. team Tuesday night in the final game.
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their new softball game.
The "feeling of exhaustion
lock my store of energy,
storing all of the excitement
wide良处 once more"
(SIGNED) MADRID HOFF
AUTHORIZED MARKETING PROJECTS
CAMEL'S COSTLIER TOBACCOS NEVER GET ON YOUR NERVES!
14
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
NUMBER 94
VOLUME XXXII
--ties, a larger check room, a larger fountain, and the finishing of the third floor, at a cost of about $14,-000.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1835
on the SHIN
BY JOE HOLLOWAY, c'35
We Start a Campaign . . The Fine Arts Bulletin Finally Shows Some Art . . Found, a Use for Blondes . . Conglomerata
Just as a starter, we may propose a campaign against the fellow who sits behind you with his feet on the rung of your chair and wiggles and flaunches the whole hour? How exterminations might also include the profs who keep you after the whistle blows. We hear that Professors Chubb and Melvin seem to be staging a contest of this sort with each other. The report has it that Meltin is winning so far with a score of ten minutes. Some fun—for the instructor
"You may have been bred in Kentucky, but you just be a crumb up here," says Prof. C. B. Really—really he does.
Yesterday being the day of good St. Valentine, some clever felly put a few cartons on the Fine Arts bulletin board over by Green Hall. The caricatures were of some of our more censephalous personalities in their good supply of wit of a sort. The most outstanding of the cartons were of Karl Gonerer, Bill Blowers, and Joe Dunkel. Gonerer's made great play of his highly intellectual opinion of himself and Dunkel's poem accompanying the picture went something like this: "There is he sweet? There's more than one reason why he's so light on his feet." The picture showed Josie with a couple of beautiful butterfly wings.
---
Recent experiments at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology show that a blonde hair is the best material for a certain instrument which registers atmospheric humidity. We always thought there might be some use for blondes
Bill Cochrane reports that there seemed to be a much greater number of happy girls at the dance Wednesday, and that the fellows seemed a trifle surprised to find that an accurate account was really kept on the number of stages permitted to attend. An interesting fact is that Herbert Mueller, German ex-servicer who spent two years come in. With the grand old American welcome, he was turned away as per orders and will probably come earlier next week.
Those who doubt hereditary influence might be interested in the fact that the minister who interrupted the Hauptmann trial was the brother of the convict whose story is "I'm a Fugitive from a Chain Game."
Now and then we must have an absent-minded professor anecdote and here's a fair one. A certain instructor who lives on the edge of the Hill went to the grocery the other day to get some groceries (naturally) and took his auto since he intended to come home with quite a loud. He parked his car in front of the store, purchased the food, loaded it in his arms, and walked the way home.
Serry we can't pin this one on Rex Woods, but a little too good for him anyway. The other day in one of Professor Chubb's classes the class was asked, "Is a paradox?" Jim Bickett saw the light in one bright flash and came through with, "A paradox is a couple of medies."
One shocked lady reports that Devon Leeraster came to Geometry class this week with no shirt on—just his K sweater. Perhaps he thought the prof was intending to sweat a few answers out of him. (Oh boy, is that a good joke?)
A Miscellaneous and perhaps super-
fluous collection of congolenga: Mac Murphy is carrying around a two-pound
box of dice, one with the red face out who his valentine is yet
. . . walked up the Hill behind a couple last night, . . said he, "I did not get mad,". . says she "You did too get mad,". . repeat several times and you have the whole play—must have been true love forgetting to run smooth. . . we hear that the gals at Corbin had a little lesson in table etiquette the other night. . . why do people walking to and from classes on the rainiest and mud-diest of days always have to walk in a line of about five stretching clear across the sidewalk? . . . then of course they can't move to let anyone by either.
Vankee Crusade' Packs House
"Yankee Crusade" Packs House
The last performance of "Yankee
Crusade" was on June 24.
24 tickets remained at 3:30 yesterday afternoon.
Plans Are Made To Finish Union
Tentative Scheme Calls for Improvement in Men's Facilities, Enlarged Check Room and Fountain, and Completion of Third Floor to Provide More Space for Meeting Rooms
"One of the most important things that has happened on the campus in the last quarter of a century." Thus did Chancellor E. H. Lindley characterize the building of the Memorial Union, in a speech last night at a banquet of the Memorial Union operating committee.
Tentative plans for the completion of the existing wing of the building have been made by Henry Werner, men's student adviser, Bill Cochrane, manager of the Union, and Verner Smith, consulting architect, and were presented at the banquet by Lloyd Metzler, b35, and Mr. Smith. The plans included the improvement of men's facili
It is estimated that at least one half of the students at the University use the Memorial Union building every day. A recent survey by a CSEP student showed that more and more students are seeing the worth of the building, and that there is a crying need for more room.
Under the tentative plans, the check room will be moved to the east end of the main lobby, near the front door, where the telephone booth and clock now are. The check room would be placed in the second room, saving one. The men's rest room would be placed where the check stand now stands.
The space on the third floor, which has never been completed, is cut down by the high ceiling of the ballroom, but there is sufficient space there for a large general meeting room; a council room, which would be used by both the Men's Student Council, and the W.S.G.A.; the Jayhawk office; headquarters for the Y.M.C.A.; besides a few rooms for meetings.
To Move Fourth Room
Plans call for the moving of the pool room to the north side of the sub-base-ment, and moving the grill to the south side. This would make the fountain room three times larger than the present one, and do away with the untidiness of the present room, which is caused by lack of space. The manager's office, the book exchange, and an additional meeting or booth must be placed where the 'fountain now is.'
Mr. Smith estimated that the cost of these changes, would total around $14-200.00. This would include putting only temporary partitions on the third floor, but plastering the ceiling, and the sides of the wall.
The building of a steel stairway between the second and third floor, which would be absolutely necessary if the third floor was put to use, would cost about $2.100. Finishing the third floor would cost about $2.880. The building
(Continued on Page Three)
Lindley Speaks to Kiwanis
Educational Facilities Unjustly Neglected, Chancellor Says
In a speech before the weekly luncheon meeting of the Kiwanis club yesterday, Chancellor Lindley asserted that educational facilities were being uniquely neglected, to the ultimate detriment of society. The University budget has been cut 28 percent in spite of the fact that enrollment has increased by 300 students over that of last year.
He condemned the practice of leas-
ening expenses for education and said
that a dollar spent for a school was
worth more than a dollar spent on a
jail. It would be far better to keep
the youth of the country in school than
to turn them loose in a world where
the struggle for jobs is so intense,
and where some would inevitably be forced
on the dole.
He said he could match every instance of deprivation and hardship endured in the old days in order to get an education with stories taken from his own life. He said it was out of every five men students at the University is self supporting.
Triangle fire in New Hampshire
The fire department was sent to the Triangle fraternity house early day morning when someone saw sparks coming from the chimney and turned in an alarm. There was no damage done.
Triangle Turns in False Alarm
Students Will Speak to Scholars
Students Will Speak to Scholars
The Summerfield Scholar Colloquium
will be held on the evening of Feb. 22,
at the Colonial tea room. The speakers
will be Alfred Baldwin and James Law-
son.
Miss Husband to Attend Convention Next Week
Deans of Women to Meet in Atlantic City Feb. 20-23
Miss Agnes Husband, dean of women, will leave the first of next week for Atlantic City to attend the annual convention of the National Association of Doeas of Women. The convention will be held at Haddon Hall hotels, Feb. 20-23.
"Participation of Women in the Community," is to be the theme of the convention, which will include among its speakers a number of famous American women. Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt will be the honor guest and speaker at a luncheon given by the N.A.D.W. for the American Council of Guidance and Personnel Associations, Friday, Feb. 22.
At this time Miss Husband will present for citation, Dear Mary P. V. Zile of Kansas State College, in recognition 25 years of service as dean of women.
At an evening session the same day, Virginia Gildersleeve, dean of Barnard College, will speak on "A Curriculum for Today"; and Mary E. Woolley, vice president of Barnard College, will deliver a talk "The College Woman in the World Community."
Ted Shawn Coming Again
M. S. C. Moves to Bring Added Attraction Here
At a special meeting of the Men's Student Council yesterday afternoon in Memorial Union it was voted to recommend the appropriation of $275.00 to bring Ted Shaw donors here Feb 27 as an addition attraction on the student council. The W.G.A.D. is calling a meeting this weekend to visit the measure.
The $275.00 guarantee will be underwritten to the extent of $275.00 by the student activity ticket fund committee and for $100.00 by Tau Sigma. The net proceeds from the sale of tickets to those not having activity books will be used to reimburse Tau Sigma for their share of the appropriation.
The M.S.C. decided to include this program on the regular activity ticket program on the grounds that this program is not as adequate as it should be.
Two Kansas Citians, Dennis Lamas,
dancer, who is a brother of Dalion
Landers, c'38; and Jess Meeker, ac-
celerator, are members of the Shawn
troupe.
Prof. Carroll D. Clark, of the department of sociology, will give a talk Tuesday afternoon to Tan Beta Pln, engineering fraternity. The subject of his talk has not been announced.
Clark to Address Tau Beta Pi
Ratcliffe, Famous English Journalist Will Lecture Here
Thursday Night's Lecture Receives High Praise From English Writer
S. K. Rattcliffe, one of the most distinguished of English journalists, will lecture in the University Auditorium next thursday at 8:30. His subject will be "Twenty Years After." It will deal with the storm over Europe, dictatorship and the eclipse of democracy, its settlement or catastrophe.
Mr. Rutilete is on a lecture tour of the United States and Canada. This tour will mark the twenty-second of his consecutive years of lecturing in America. He has given talks in cities from coast to coast.
Mr. Ratcliffe was editor of the Mr. Stateman of Calcutta, India, one of the leading English newspapers of the Oriental for five years. He has been an editorial writer for The Daily News and The New Stateman and Nation of London, and during his recent visits to the United States he has been special correspondent with the Spectator. He broadcast a description of President Roosevelt's inauguration, March 4, 1933, for the British Isles and Western Europe.
George Bernard Shaw writes: "S. K Ratliffe is a very accomplished lecturer, and a very remarkable man, ever by the standards of America, where every man is introduced as remarkable. He is a student of public movements; and he keeps in front of them all the books he has been letting himself be caught in a groove. He knows more about most of them than they do about themselves. He has been on the track of every leader of today from the tell-tale time when only a few obscure followers expected anything from them. He remembers everything that they have seen him know, worth knowing; and not one of them can tell you anything about him, or where and how they met him. Though they know he is a journalist they give him inside information as a matter of course, just as they give it to Colonel House; and they can't tell why. As a public speaker he is involved in the audience; and the art with which he affects this is perfectly enceled."
Discuss Completion of Union Building
The lecture has been changed from 8:20 to 8:30 in order to permit those who attend the Chamber of Commerce dinner honoring Mrs. Waltkins to att
Students Present Recital
Program Includes Organ, Voice and Piano Selections
The School of Fine Arts presented student recital yesterday afternoon.
The program included: Organ: "See-
dous Sonata", Grave, Allegro, Allegrio,
Maestrose, Vivae; Mendelssohn,
Chiemas McMauris; piano: "Lotus Land"
(Civil Scot). Marguerite Jarrot; voice:
"He is Good. He is Kind"; from "Horo-
ra"; voice: "La Coraline"; from
Omarue; "Passante" (Widor). Maurine
Jessee;钢琴: "Concerto in C Major"
(from "Allegro Moderato") (Bethoven).
Clarence Erdentice, with orchestral
parts on the second piano by Miss Rufi
Orcatt; cello: "Elegie" (Scrashandae)
Jeanette Barbour; organ: "Concerto
Variations" (Bonnet), Charles Wilson.
At a meeting of the Sociology Club Tuesday afternoon in room 208 Administration building, plans of the various committees were discussed. Henry Baker, C35, president of the club, reported on the plans of the program committee Samuel Sissi, C35, reported on the question of dues.
Sociology Club Committees Report
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Tentative plans have been made for call for the improvement of men's facilitate completion of the Memorial Union large check room and fountain, Building at a cost of $14.200. The plans and the completion of third floor.
JAYHAWKERS START FOREIGN INVASIONS
Ratcliffe to Lecture
T. E. KIDDEN
S. K. Ratcliffe, former noted editor; will speak in the University auditorium next Thursday 8:30 p.m.
Mid Winter Jayhawker Appears Friday, Feb. 22
Ted O'Leary's Story on Life of Dr. "Phog" Allen A Feature
A Feature
Fred Harris, 36, editor-in-chief of the Jayahawk, announced today the appearance of the Mid-winter number on Friday. Feb. 22.
This issue will present the life story of Dr. Forrest C. Allen, director of athletics at the University, by Tech O'Leary, 32, former basketball player for Kansas and at present a reporter for the Kansas City Star. A story of the recent successful basketball season and pictures of the football lettermen will also contribute to the sports division.
one feature section will contain "Burning the Candle at Both Ends", an interesting story by Carolyn Harper, 35, portraying the events that have taken place at the University since the last issue of the Jahawker.
A section showing the new innovations in men's clothing by Ringer Larder, Jr. and a humorous story by Ray "Ping" Senate 34, help make this Jayhawker an outstanding number. Mr. Senate has written stories on college life in Vanity Fair and Esquire as well as a criterion of styles at Princeton University.
Fraternity Holds Banquet
Report of Province Convention Given by Glenwood Gilliland
Green's Imm, the University chapter of Phi Delta Phi, legal fraternity, held a banquet last night at the Colonial Tea Room, at 6:30. There were about 25 activities, pledges, and alumni present for the affair, immediately following the dinner, short talks were given by Prof. J. F. Morceau of the School of Law, Forrest A. Jackson, local attorney, and Prof. Leonard Axe of the School of Business, all of whom are members of Phi Delta Phi.
A report on the province convention of the fraternity, which was held at Oklahoma City last week, was given by the president, A. Glenwood Gilland. T35, who attended the convention as delegate of Green's Inn. Immediately following the program, a business meeting was conducted and plans were made for hosting the event in Oklahoma City. W. Burtick and Prof. R. Lattay, both of the School of Law, also members of the fraternity, were unable to be present.
Moldday Snoops to Engineers
W. R. Maddox of the department of political science, spoke before the meeting of the Kansas session of the Institute of Electrical Engineers last night in Marvin Hall. His subject was "The Basic Series of Functions of Government Concerning the 'isms.'" The meeting was followed by a general discussion of governmental problems and the application of the New Deal agencies to American life.
...
AUTHORIZED PARTIES Friday
Wesley Foundation, Church, 8-11:30
Baptist Student Organization, Church, 8-11
Iobnail Hop, Union building, 12
AGNES HUSBAND, CHM,
for the Joint Committee
on Student Affairs.
First Game Away From Home to Be Played at Lincoln
Probable Starting Line-ups
Allen Takes Nine Players to Cornhusker School Expecting Tough Battle
Problem Starting Nebraska
Kansas f
Ehling f
Allen f
Noble c
Kappelman g
Gray g
Parsons
Leeoux Hale
Sorenson Wahquiqist
Parsons
Referee: Chili Cochran, Kansas State;
umpire: Gardner, Southwestern.
The Jayhawkers invade Lincoln tonight in an attempt to repeat their performance of defeating Nebraska, in the first road engagement of Dr. Allen's men, Kansas downed Nebraska 32 to 12 in their first meeting here last Monday. The Cornhuskers showed a real fighting spirit, and this was a lesson for all Christians when Coach Brown's men have the advantage of the home court.
Coach Allen took 9 players for the encounter. Those who went last night are Ebling, Bergman, Shaffer, Allen, Oyler, Noble, Kappelman, Wells, and Gray, and Coaches Allen and Geto. The starting line-ups will probably be very strong, but Coach Allen game in Lawrence, with the exception that Nobile is challenged to jump center
T. W. H. SMITH
t in Well's place.
Wells, who has
played a stellar role
most of the season,
is under handicap
due to deafness,
dition and loss of
weight due to his
recent illness.
Wilmer Shaffer,
who has been out of
the game for
several weeks, will
make the trip, and
there is a high pro-
fability of his getting in the game for a few minutes at least. "Shuffer is valuable for his aggressiveness and ability to take the hall on the rebound, qualities which we have been lacking in the last few names," said Dr. Allen.
Rogers and Clyder were named to make the trips because they have shown a driving interest in their practice, by which the Kansas mentor measures his
Coach Harold Browne is expected to insert the same starting five which hit Kansas hard in Monday's game. Led by Screamon and Wahibhui, they set the
NEL TARR
pace for the first ten minutes of the game. They introduced a battering drive that surprised the Kansas defense with an unbelievable husker lead at the half, 12 to 11.
"Nobraka is a team
"team that is able
to pull anything",
said Dr. Allen be-
fore leaving yesterday.
"You remember."
ber they are the only team that defeated the University team last year, beating us 24 to 21. They have also defeated Iowa State this year by one point. Iowa State trails Kansas in second place as the standings indicate now, while Nebraska is in the cellar. "We'll go in fighting," was the coach's
"We'll go in fighting," was the coach's only prediction.
The team will return Saturday morning before they leave again to meet Iowa State at Ames on next Monday.
V.S.G.A. MUSICAL COMEDY CAST TO BE SELECTED SOON
Rehearsals for the W.S.G.A. musical comedy chorus, which have been going on for a week, look promising according to Joe Dunkel, dance director. Regular practices for the chorus have been held every afternoon in the Memorial Union ballroom between the hours of 3:30 and 5:00clock.
Because of the play, "Yankee Crusade," rehearsals for the comedy have been held every afternoon in Fraser theater, but beginning tonight rehearsals will be held in the evening, starting promptly at 7:29.
- The cast of the comedy is to be an-
nounced soon. The short delay is due to
the fact that it must be submitted to the
e eligibility committee for checking.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1938
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF ... JOSEPH DOCTOR
Associate Editors
Julia Markham Charles Brown
MANAGING EDITOR CAROLYN HARPER
Campus Editor Harry Valentine
Makeup Editors Gina Green
Herbert Moyer
Sports Editor Robert Patt
Sunday Editor Eleanor Watson
New York Times Dawn Fry
Society Editor Shirley Jones
Editor John Terry
Alumni Editor Ruth Stolland
Business Manager . F. Quentin Brown
Asst. Business Manager . Ellen Carter
Lena Wray
William Decker
Walter Brown
Wesley McCalla
Wesley Wilhelm
William Blinder
Mia Ilco
Alan Moores
Ruthenberg
John Markham
F. G. Collins
Jephson Docto
Business Office ... KU 1 / 8
Middle Eastern Business Office ... KU 2 / 6
Night Connections ... Business Office ...
North East Office ... Business Office
Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday and Saturday. Special event for
educational holidays by students in the department
of Human Resources.
Presented by the Press of the Department of Journalism.
Advance, $3.25 on payments. Single copies, to
administrators.
Entered as second class master, September 17, 1916, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan
WANDAS PRESS
ASSOCIATION
1935
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1935
THE CRIME OF PUBLIC OPINION
Eight men and four women, all good and true, have condemned Richard Bruno Hauptmann to death in the electric chair for the murder of the Lindbergh baby, and a big newspaper story is now in its final chapters. The death of the child of Charles Augustus Lindbergh, national hero No. 1, is about to be avenged according to the accepted justice of the land.
We do not wish to appear too critical, but we sometimes wonder if the fact that the child was the son of the national hero did not have something to do with handing down the death penalty on a purely circumstantial basis. We know that there can be no doubt that Hauptmann is guilty, because the jury said so, and the jury was composed of twelve unprejudiced men and women, who could not be swayed by public opinion. It's like seeing Bruno commit the crime to have the word of those twelve unprejudiced people.
No one can excuse the crime of murder, and no one wants to do so, but there is a question of doubt in the minds of many as to just what part Hauptmann played in the Lindbergh kidnap. Even from a prejudiced printing of testimony in many papers, there is left room for disbelief that he killed the baby.
The intervention of the press in making a juicy newspaper story of the whole affair, and picturing a cold and heartless Hauptmann, have made more acceptable the handing down of the death penalty. There are those who believe that Hauptmann was a condemned man through publicity alone, even before the jury brought out its verdict.
National heroes and public sentiment should have nothing to do with determining the brand of justice that is handed down in the courts.
Constant complaints come in about the Varsity dances. Most of them are trivial enough, but here is a suggestion that might warrant some attention. A young woman has said that a nickle's worth of ice in the fountain on Varsity nights would go a long way toward improving her evening.
LET THERE BE DIRIGIBLES!
It is unanimously agreed that the crash of the dirigible Macon was an unfortunate thing. It is also true that the cost, both in money and lives, in the crashing of other dirigibles has been considerable.
But that the dirigibles are practical and can be handled and used without misfortune is shown by the operation of the Los Angeles since it came into American hands, and by the fact that Germany operates her dirigibles with good results.
In every new method of trans
portation there has been a period when accidents occurred. During the period of improvement and perfection a great deal of money has been spent and there has often been scarcismic. But the railroad, the automobile, and the airplane have all come into popular use and have repaid in service far more than was ever spent in development.
Government experiment with dirigibles has met with some unfortunate accidents. The cost, although great, is small in proportion to the service that the dirigible will offer in return when it has come into more general use and has been improved.
There are always those people who cry out and denounce anything new. If they had been heard by the scientists we would still be living in the middle ages. The dirigible offers splendid possibilities in the field of future aviation and as it will probably play a large part in the future of the nation, experiments should not be discontinued.
During the past few days the ground in front of Watson library has been a sea of mud. The wall that runs from the Journalism building to the back of Common hall is rapidly being covered over with good Kansas loam. Perhaps we could interest some of the engineers in making a few experiments in erosion control to keep the soil of the fill-in from washing down over the walk and spoiling our Sunday shoes.
CAMPUS DUMP
A constant supply of refuse and trash is being carried to the "campus dump" along the west side of the golf course each day. Here it is burned (whatever amount of it will burn) or left to decompose in the elements and to blow away in the wind. The smoke drifts over the entire west end of the campus and lends its unwelcome odor to the beautiful surroundings of all the dwelling houses of that district.
There is no choice made as to what is burned. Everything from refuse from the medical school to trimmings from the campus shrubs goes into the smudge, each adding its own peculiar and disagreeable odor.
But, choice or no choice of materials to be burned, why burn any there? Can they not be hauled away to some other suitable spot? Must the University allot a plot of ground in such a choice location to convert into a "campus dump"? Why is it there? Why is it allowed to remain?
The most picturesque bank and foliage-covered slope on the campus and it is turned into a dump! Is that quite in tone and harmony with the rest of the hill landscapes? We ask, does that help make a beautiful campus?
COMMENTS
—By the Editor
WHAT ABOUT STUDENT GOVERNMENT?
In many major colleges the cumbersome student self-government systems have been abolished in favor of small councils which act as grievance committees and executive councils combined. They have little legislative power, and function in this capacity only on petition from students.
Yale, Syracuse, Princeton, and Chicago are among those governed in this fashion. The leaders have admitted that student councils have very little power, and such powers as they do have can be handled by a small group having the power to appoint committees for the carrying out of activity programs. One such committee is the annual council at all, only a senior class president whose business it is to see that committees are appointed to carry out student functions.
Under the smaller groups student under. aent functions with greater facility, unencumbered by the weight of political factions. The responsibility is increased in fewer persons, making for better understanding of student problems.
Cutting classes at the University of California has become a business. With the largest on-campus enrollment of any in the United States, it has extremely large classes.
CUTTING CLASSES
Inadequate Shelf Space Causes Chaos at Library
"The library must have more shelf space for his books." Charles M. Baker, director of libraries, says in his biennial report of 1832 to 1934 on the Watton Memorial Library.
without this relief it is rapidly heading into a chaotic condition that no amount of administrative skill can avert. Nowhere else on the campus is there storage space available. Books without shelves can neither be preserved nor found when wanted.
"The Watson Library stack, inadequate when built, can only hold 121,000 books. Shelving in reading rooms and makehift sticks in corridors bring the total book capacity of the building to 175,000. The branch libraries which are badly overcrowded and in need of re-credit, 73,000 volumes." The total
shaving capacity is超 28,000 volumes,
while the books on the campus total
28,700 volumes. To this overflow of
books, the library is adding an
approximately 6,000 each year.
To remedy this congestion and to take care of new purchases, Mr. Baker argues that at an early date the stack be extended 70 feet to the west, as provided for in the original plan, but with capacity with steel tacks, providing space for 210,000 vol-
It is not uncommon to have seven or eight hundred students in the lectures of sense of the more popular courses. Roll is taken by assistants from seating arrangements. When a student writes to his class, simply sends someone to sit in his place.
Recently authorities have discovered that many students were making a business of going to classes in the place of regular students. The substitute takes all the notes in short hand, types them on paper and gives them to the person enrolled in the course.
California has eight eclipse classes, and the chief offenders were indolents who loved to lie late abed. Under the home system such as California uses, a student group will pass judgment on offenders and recommend punishment.
HEARST STILL CRIES, "RED"
In New York last week a senator in the state legislature introduced a bill to refuse admission of students with Communicies views to the state schools. William Randolph Hearst gave the bill front page space in his newspaper, and a banner headline over the mast head. In carryout his determined war on Red activity Heart is taking no thought of our constitution which guarantees freedom of speech. And even if he could be students with Red tendencies from colleges, no amount of legislation can keep a man from thinking as he pleasures.
Dregon Students Petition for Coke And Coffee
On the heels of the "no-liver for college kidnief" epistle passed by the city council of Eugene appears a mysteriously hardened position that was circulated around the University of Oregon campus recently.
Below is inscribed the radical terms word for word, of the petition, as circulated:
WHEREAS, in view of the recent action by the City Fathers taken to restrict our guaranteed privileges as citizens of the United States of America, and
THEMEREFORE, LET IT BE RE-SOLVED, that we, bona fide students in the aforesaid institution, to hereby entrent and implore the body known as the City Council to continue to allow the sale of the aforesaid products, coffee (up to 3.2 per cent caffeine) and Coca-Cola between the streets of Nineteenth and Pearl, the city limits and he milrance.
to restrict and forbid the sale of these WHEREAS, action seems imminent aforeclosed products on the grounds that they promote immoral and lascivious living among students at the University of Oregon (sic).
WHEREAS, the products known as coffee and Coca-Cola contain few if any, deleterious, lewily immoral excitants to concupiscence and similar acts of debauchery, and
After many weeks of the Hauptmann trial which resulted in the newspapers being filled with columns of overly descriptive matter it will be a relief to read a long, dry political story from Washington .
ROCK CHALKLETS Conducted by R.J.B.
Add to the evils of the revolving door: Yesterday we were late to class because it took so much time to get out of Snow hall.
The other day O. O. McIntyre had a paragraph about "One Eye" Connell, the famed gate-crasher. McIntyre told about Connelly's new book in which he recalls some of his famous exploits.
report states, "I mean a person with an AB degree and at least one year of graduate training in an accredited library school. Such a trained person brings to his task a comparative knowledge of library methods." He also says that Mr. Baker says that our library compares poorly with other universities in this respect.
Next to the need of more shelf space.
Mr. Baker places the need for a trained librarian,
"By trained librarian," his
umes. The cost of such construction is estimated at $120,000.
"As soon as possible, part of the student assistant hours should be replaced by full-time staff members. Far too much staff time that should be devoted to technical work is spent on supervising untrained, ever-changing student help that works when class schedules run out."
Other things discussed in the report were the Administration of the Library, the book fund in relation to foreign exchange, overnight reserve books.
electric fans for use in summer school, the bindery repair department and the noticeable increase in inter-library loops.
Connell is now 60 years old and McIntyre wondered if the old gatecrusher was making any preparations for crashing the final gate which is supposed to be somewhat impenetrable.
In conclusion Mr. Baker states: "I desire to acknowledge the loyal support that I have received both from the regular staff and the student assistants."
According to a news item, paper underwear which may be discarded after being worn is now being offered by a manufacturer. Anyway that would mean you should have to do if you ripped them would be to paste them back together.
On Other Hills
an answer to the problem of providing student entertainment the University of Wisconsin has offered a unique solution. A student night club has been established by the University authorities.
Although, in the line of drinks, the night club boasts nothing stronger than 3.2, no other road house or night club in the vicinity has done the volume of business attributed to the University establishment. In winter evenings the night club has a floor show, lighting effects, and a master of ceremonies.
The University of Michigan lays claim to something in the way of a record as regards the age of living graduates. Dr. John P. Stoddard, of the class of 1859, will be 100 years old on February 22.
A disastrous fire at the University of Indiana destroyed the $87,000 Delta Tau
Delta house on the night of February 12. The structure housed 35 men, all of whom lost their belongings in the conflagration.
REFRESH Between Classes with
A COKE By "BARNEY" at the
UNION FOUNTAIN
Sub-Basement Memorial Union
The Interfaithity Conference at the University of Illinois has officially abolished Haitian Greek in an form of pre-immersion, and restructured the graternities at that institution.
Interschool Councilers at the University of Denver declared themselves strongly against all kinds of politics in connection with the selection of the editors for THE DENVER CLARION and Knewywhok.
The council declared that it would consider vote-trading combines as undesirable and such notions would be avoided and such indicators desist either by the editorship.
Gertrude Stein has been subject to criticism, both favorable and otherwise, as a result of her poetic attempts, but it has been left to her name solo, a medical student at the University of Iowa who studies an author of poetry to really accomplish something.
Preferring the opera to study for final examinations, the young lady
This in no way affects the scholastic standing as each of the other grades have received a boost of one honor point.
Pablo Picasso
Avenues of Fashion
wrote on her final paper in philosophy, "I do not feel like a final paper in philosophy today." She then left the class room. The professor, who had that rare bliss of a sense of humor, mailed the young lady a card the next day. "I know just how you feel," he said. "I have often felt that way myself." In addition he gave Miss Stein the highest grade in the course.
The hard working D student has at last come into his own. Under a revised system of granting grade points at the University of Oregon, the student who makes a D is given a grade point for each hour's credit.
Peeves of students against professors have long been known but it has been left to an embryo journalist at Michigan State University to question the professors regarding their pet aversions. One professor in the history department when questioned concerning his chief annoyance where in members of his class were concerned, replied, "Taking notes."
by Esquire
100% wool
The New Double-breasted Jacket Model: With the help of the Duke of Kent, and the Prince of Wales, the double-breasted jacket, that features a long rolling panel that buttons on the lower button of the double-breasted jacket is being swept along to national popularity at a greater speed than most rural models. This double-breasted jacket, with this new touch, first made its ap-
net slacks or linen beach shorts, e any of the other similar plain fabric that are used for odd trousers they brightly colored mudder prifoul puggaree belts serve a purpose and are a smart fashion.
Belts: To get that accessory touch of color with grey flan-
pearance in London's fashionable West End about a year ago. Its first public appearance on this side of the water was on the back, or we should say, the front, of Douglas Fairbanks, Sr., last July. In detail, the lower button comes up a bit higher, about level with the picket line, and necessitates the elimination of any exaggerated waistline. It calls for two deep side vents in the back, although it is equally smart with a single vent.
Ties: For the last few years each spring season has seen university men
100% Cotton
**Shoes:** The trend to both brown buckskin shoes and all-white buck鞋 demands some综合设计, while the coloring of hosiery. Particularly for the all-
---
but ties, either of
foulard or plaid wool
cashmere. This latter
fabric and pattern
seems to be set for
unusual popular-
ity this coming
spring.
white shoe, hosiery, no longer is tinted in pastel shades, but is either white with strong coloring as a decoration or plain. The shirt is worn along with the rest of one's ensemble.
down collar shirt has produced a lot of them that have no resemblance to this authentic and good-looking collar fashion other than that they have the buttons holding the collar down. For this shirt to be smart it must have that regligee appearance that comes from a collar that sits fairly high on the neck and has an added fullness between where it it joins and the buttons themselves, that give it a juanty roll between these two points.
The wide popularity of the button-
Headquarters Rickerd-Stowits
CAFETERIA
Subscribe for
50
THE KANSAS CITY STAR
(2)
PHONE 17
at the
Again we are glad to offer---neat pattern in a wide
assignment of colors. Double
sole, heel and toe to insure
long wear.
FRIDAY SPECIAL
Fillet of Haddock Tartare Sauce
13 papers-15c per week
The
The Gibbs Clothing Co.
"WHERE CASH BUYS NORE"
811 Mass. St.
25c
FANCY HOSE
Spring Oxfords In All the Stream Lined Models
$3.95
Made by Freeman
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Others $2.98 to $4.95
SILK NECKWEAR 65c
No leftovers in this group — they are all bright new spring patterns made up with resilient lining.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1935
PAGE THRE
24
K
Hill Society
Before 5 p.m. call KU, 23, between 7:30 and 9
p. m. call 2702K3.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Sigma Eta Chi Holds Initiation
Sigma Eta Chi. Congregational church sorority, will hold initiation services for 14 pledges this evening at the home of the president, Mrs. Joseph F. King, 1100 Ohio street
Following the initiation a banquet will be held in honor of the initiates. Catherine Penner, C37, president of the chapter, will be toastmistress. Mrs. King, the main speaker of the evening, will talk on "Creative Living"; Ernina Carey, c35, will give the toast for the activities, and Alice Coolbaugh counsel the audience. Ms. Walter Keeler and Margaret McNown, f36, will play piano solos.
The following plaques will be initiated:
Margaret Adams, c38, Alice Coolhaugh,
c38, Jean Fink, c38, Cuth Emerson,
Florence Marshall, c38, Helen Moore,
c38, Virginia Smith, c38, Madine Taylor,
c38, Iris McDonald, c37, Rustie Taylor,
c38, Barbara Burdick, c38, Barbara Burdick, c38, Josephine Rieder, c38, and Barbara Kirchheff, fa.
☆ ☆ ☆
Hobnail Hop
The Hobrail Hop, the annual dance sponsored by the University engineers, will be given tomorrow night in the Memorial Union building from 9 until 12 o'clock. The engineer's queen, who it is unofficially rumored, will be Katharine Ann Cassidy, will be introduced at that time.
Hobnail Hop Saturday Night
An 18-piece orchestra, combining Bill Phipp's and Red Blackburn's orchestras will play. As a special feature Bud Frink, e37, and Eldon Snoke, f38, will present a two-piano arrangement.
Miss Virginia Yates of Lawrence, and Frank J. Johnson of Kansas City, Mo., were married yesterday afternoon at the trinity of Trinity Episcopal church.
Yates-Johnson Wedding
Wilder-Stover Wedding
Miss Catherine Edna Wilder of Madison, Wis. and Rolland S. Stover of Lawrence were married Feb. 9, in Madison.
The bride is a graduate of the school of nursing at the University of Wisconsin, and the bridegroom, who is a salesman with the Klyser Motor Car company of Middleton, is a graduate of the University of Illinois and Architecture of the University
Kuui
A Valentine party for the Baptist student organization will be held tonight from 8 to 11 o'clock at the First Baptist Church, Eighth and Kentucky streets. Everyone who comes is asked to bring a valentine. Katherine Langston, c'ulc, and Harold Wampler are in charge of the party.
☆ ☆ ☆
Delta Tau Delta entertained with an hour dance last night at the chapter house. Those who attended were Mary Jane Thie, Mary Frances Martin, c'mel. Eleonor Cain, c'mel. Carloyn High, c'mel. Catherine Cain, c'mel. Carlton Daly, c'mel. c'38, Cordy Shearer, c'37, Maria Nuzman, c'mel, Mary Nicholson, ph, Laura Humphrey, c'mel
Margaret Ryan, c$6, Nancy Bonniel,
b$7, Marie Forbes, c$3, Virginia
Eagle, c'unc1, Bettie Cresger, c$7, Peggy
Spencer, c$18, Millie White, c$3, Eleonor
Troup, c'unc1, Helen Finley, c'unc1,
Olive Hare, c'Charles Gelwix, c$5,
Skiyler Craig, facal, and Mr. and Mrs
Bell Norton.
☆ ☆ ☆
Guests at the Sigma Naus house last night for dinner were Betty Sterling, fa'ucl; Sally Jane Martin, fa'ucl; Anne Hubbard, fa'ucl; Per Porter, c38; Ferne Forman, fa'ucl; Shirley Sabbery, fo 37; Langton Hattiff, fa'ucl; and Tom Wau-
☆ ☆ ☆
Bette Gayle Sims, c36, left last night for Nashville, Tenn., where she will attend the Gamma Pit Beta province three times. She will return to Lawrence Monday morning.
☆ ☆ ☆
The University Club will entertain with a dance Saturday night at 8:30 eclipse. Hosts for the occasion are Mr. and Mrs. Kirt Klouz, and Mr. and Mrs.
Dinner guests at the Beta Theta Pis
louse last night were Mr. P. A. Burtia,
and son, Sponner of Kansas City, Mo.
and son, Carlos Garden, City,
and Carlos Foerst, c37.
Margaret McCoy of Garden City, and Louise Moore, c37, were dinner guests at the Kappa Alpha Theta house last night.
Joan Jankowsky, c/38, was a luncheon guest at the Gamma Phi Beta house vesterdav noon.
Gerald Vermon, c34, was a dinner guest at the Sigma Alpha Mu house Wednesday night.
☆ ☆ ☆
Katherine Gleaser, c'35, of Abilene, is the weekend guest of Kappa Alpha Theta.
Pi Kappa Alpha entertained with a dance舞 Wednesday afternoon from 4:30 to 5:00 o'clock.
Nancy Calboun, e'uncl, and Margaret Pyle, c'37, were guests at the Phi Delta Theta house last night for dinner.
☆ ☆ ☆
Dinner guests at the Delta Tau Deltu house last night were night Shirae Craig, f'aunel; Helen Deer, c'38; and Mildred Mikkel, c'37.
Miss Dorothy Allen of Kansas City, Mo., is a guest at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house.
☆ ☆ ☆
Mrs. Smith of Wichita is visiting her daughter, Betty Ruth at the Kappa Alpha Theta house.
--night at the Alpha Kappa Psi fraternity
Gertkle Field, c37, and Martha Davis,
c38, c38 are dinner guests at the
Kappa Kappa Gamma house Inst evening.
☆ ☆ ☆
Dinner guests at the Delta Upsilon house last night were Alone Compton, *¢38, and Ann West, 'cunch.'
Delta Tau Delta announces the pledging of Robert Riederer of Rozel.
Prof. W. F. Kissick of the department of economics was a dinner guest last
PHONE K.U.66
CLASSIFIED ADS
9 AT YOUR SERVICE 9
CLEANERS
Phone 14th & Tenn. Phone
PHONE K.U.66
We Call and Deliver
BOYS: Large room on second, single or double, three exposures. Only quiet people to occupy the rooms. Very reasonable. 1403 Tennessee. Phone 7603.
ROOMMASTATE wanted in nicely
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each for two. Conveniently located to
home, Phone 1311. 1319 Voicemail.
Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S — 920-22 Mass.
LOST AND FOUND
TAXI
TAXI
ROOMS FOR RENT
FOUND: Keuffel & Esser beginner's slide rule. Call at Kansan office.
BROOM AND BOARD for Kids. If dissatisfied try our meals. You will like them. Price reasonable. Desirable location. 1155 Ohio. -103
ROOM AND BOARD for boys. Large, comfortable rooms and excellent meals at a reasonable price. Conveniently located. Phone 1311m at 1135 Ohio. -95
9
BOARD AND ROOM
Kappa Alpha Theta announces the engagement of Lovisse Levi, c'35, to Reynold Sands, 137. Mr. Sands is a member of Betsa Theta Pi.
OFFICE SUPPLIES
LOOSE LEAF FILLERS
GREETING CARDS
of the check room would average about $150, while the building of adequate men's facilities would cost $375. The building of an adequate loading dock, where deliveries may be made, and the garbage emptied, thus eliminating the use of the hallways for this purpose, would cost $750.
Twenty-five words or less: one insertion, 25c three insertions, 50c; six insertions, 75c, contract rates, not more than 25 words, $2 per month flat. Accepted subject to approval at the Kansas Business Office.
Plans for Completion Of Union Are Discussed
MISCELLANEOUS
These estimates given by Mr. Smith are only rough ones, but as accurate as possible to make. In the original plans for the building, a young north of
KEELER'S BOOK STORE
BOOKS
WALL PAPER
PICTURE FRAMING
Prof. L. D. Jeminga, assistant professor of economics, a new member of the Union operating committee, is working on ways and means of financing the proposition. He has estimated that the Union could probably support and pay off in 10 years about $3,000, and that the Union could count on a flow of income that would make the expansion possible.
The moving of the grill room and the billard room would cost about $4,576. With enlarged fountain facilities, it would probably be necessary to put in another unit about the size of the press-room for a large function; this would cost about $2,500.
(Continued From Page One)
Professor Jennings emphasized the need of a program of education, that would develop a feeling among alumni and friends of the University, that the University is not alone supported by taxes, but that there is a need for small annual contributions for our course-curricula such as the Memorial Union building.
All of these changes cannot possibly be made at once, but work will be begun in the near future on the changes. The first construction that will be undertaken will probably be the building of adequate facilities for the men.
---
Cochrane said that organizations are calling for meetings in the building more and more. Four requests came in for the use of the Men's Lounge last night, naturally, the first applicants get the room.
Change in Student Attitude
Estimates Are Only Rough
Dr. Lindley pointed out that the attitude of students has changed since the completion of the ballroom. That a prince has developed in this dance floor, and that even the students seem to dress appropriately when they come to the dances.
Discuss Social Problems
In a meeting of a committee of representative members of the various fraternities on the campus, held in the office of the Dean of Women yesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock, causes and reminds them that discussions discussed pro and con. The meeting consisted of an open discussion by the 32 representatives present.
Pi Phi's Defeat Corbin Hall
Pi Beta Phil defeated Corbin Hall in women's intramural basketball last night with a score of 29 to 19. Bruce began the scoring for the Pi Phi's in the first few minutes of play with a basket, only to be overtaken by Corbin, who carried the score to 7 to 2. At the end of the first quarter the score stood 7 to 4 in favor of Corbin. At the end of the next quarter the Pi Phi's led by a close margin. The fourth period opened with the score 16-15 in favor of the Pi Phi's. In this period the winning team made ten points to Corbin's four. The entire game was closely contested and hard fought.
Throckmorton Leads Scoring For Winning Team With Eight Points
Throckmorton, Pi Phi guard, led the scoring with the total of eight points with Baer, Corbin forward, following with seven points.
The Fl Pi's, by winning this game,
advanced to the finals and will meet
IW.W. Tuesday night at 9 o'clock in
the final game.
The box score:
G FTF
Bruce,f___ 2 0 0
Thr'm'nf f ___ 3 0 2
Kienc ___ 3 0 1
Newm ng ___ 0 1 1
S'therl ng ___ 0 1 2
G FTF
Corbin Hall
Totals ..13 0 6
Form Engineering Society
Totals ...9 1
Mining and Metallurgical Students Organize University Chapter
Students in mining and geology last night perfected organization of a University of Kansas chapter of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers, at a meeting held in the mountey of the Memorial Union
Prof. C. M. Young and Prof. E. D. Kinney explained the advantages of such an organization, and were formally named as sponsors of the chapter. George M. Fowler of Joplin Mo., a widely known geologist, was named
The next meeting of the new organization will be held Feb. 23 at 4:39 p.m.
at Haworth hall.
KFKU
6. 15 p.m., Musical program arranged by Prof. Waldemar Geltch.
6:00 p.m. Elementary German lesson,
Prof. E F Engel
2.30 p.m., Music appreciation period,
"Edward MacDowell" Prof. C. S.
Stilton
Today
6:00 p.m., Musical program arranged by H. C. Taylor, professor of piano.
Graduate Writes for Esquire
Ben Hibbs, "23," associate editor of the magazine "Country Gentleman," has recently sold a story to "Esquire" which will be published soon.
FOLLOW THE ARROW AND YOU FOLLOW THE STYLE
THE TRUMP
THE ARATAB
THE MART
ARROW MITOGA
THE TRUMP
ARROW MITOGA
The Shaped Shirt
in all models
SHORT SLEEVES
MADISON'S
THE HEMPSTEAD
Variety is the Spice of Style!
THE GORDON
Education Meeting in Kansas City
Undergraduates instinctively turn toward Arrow because Arrow has the most comprehensive array of shirts in America from point of collar styles, models, colors, patterns, fabrics, and designs. You name it—Arrow has it—and when you buy remember only Arrow shirts have Arrow collars.
Stop by at your local dealer today
Prices range from $2 to $3.50
SANFORIZED SHRUNK
ARROW SHIRTS
Students Slow in Paying Fees
People wishing to attend the Progressive Education Association meeting today and tomorrow in Kansas City, Mo. may get further information from Dr. Florence Sherborn in room 108 Fraser. Transportation arrangements can also be made with her.
Only 3.05 students have paid their fees according to the latest tabulations from the bureau's office. Although there is still a comparatively large number of students who must pay their fees, 219 more students have paid them than had paid at this time of the spring semester just year.
More Loans Can Be Made
Fund Has Helped 89 Students During Past Year
According to Karl Klooz, treasurer of the General Loan Fund Committee, "There are sufficient funds to make further loans to students who can meet the requirements." A total of $9 loans averaging $27.78 have been made to deserving students during the past school year.
Learn to Dance----
The Kanan wishes to correct the statement appearing in yesterday's issue that "The General Loan Fund Committee has exhausted practically all of its available funds." The story refers to the fund under the management of Fred Ellsworth, executive secretary of the alumni association, and Henry Werner, men's student adviser. It was to be used in from donations that were to be used in for short periods of time. The funds of this committee have been practically exhausted, and anyone supplying work or small loans would enable a few more to continue in school who might otherwise have to drop out.
Tuba player
NOW for the SPRING PARTIES
Special Attention Given Beginners
Advanced Dance-Private Lessons
MARION RICE
DANCE STUDIO
N. Y. Cleaners Bldg., 924 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass.
SPECIAL NOTICE
TYPED MACHINE
First come first served. Your old machine taken in exchange.
The price of the $45.00 Royal Portable advanced last Dec.
15th to $49.50. We purchased before the price went up, and we still have available four of these machines which we will sell at the old price of $45.00.
Lawrence Typewriter Exchange
737 Mass. St. Phone 548
WEEK-END SPECIALS THAT MEAN Real Savings
50c Prep, 17c
26 Phillin's Magnesia Dental Cream
3 for 50c
Horned Gunnies and Duck Horns
Nose Drops ___ both 57c
25c and water glass . . . 25c
50c Astor Cleansing Tissue (500 sheets) . 37c
50c Brisk Shaving Cream . . 26c
75c Fitch Shampoo and 25c Hair Oil . 67c
$1.50 Petrolagar . . . 87c
$1.25 Hallibut Liver Oil Capsules . 79c
$1.25 Forests Mayfair . 2 for 29c
$1.00 Bayer Aspirin (100) . 35c
35c Vicks Vapo Rub . 27c
35c Stearns Cough Syrup . 36c
Bromo Quinino and 50c Groves . 37c
"Handy for Students"
Rankin's Drug Store
Phone 678
1101 Mass.
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CHIEF
Ober's HEAD & FOOT COURT OUTFITTERS
PAGE FOUR
FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 15, 1935
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Amateur Athletes To Compete Here In First Carnival
Councils Set March 8 as Closed Date; Program to Conclude With I-M Shuffle
Plans for the Intramural Carnival, a five-hour program to be held the night of March 8 in the Auditorium, are nearing completion. The night of the carnival has been approved as a closed date by both the W.G.S.A. and M.S.C.
The ticket of admission will be in two parts, the smaller of which must be retained for admission to the I-M Shuffle in the Union building. The dance will be held from 10 to 12, immediately after the Carnival. Ticket smiles to the Ku Ku who will also serve in the capacity of ushers and ticket-takers.
A committee appointed by the W.A.A. will co-operate with the Ku Ku's as a promotions committee. The object of this year's Intramural Carnival is to create interest in this type of an affair and in the intramural program as a whole. If this Carnival is successful, it is planned to make it an annual affair.
The program committee appointed by the M.S.C., composed of Warren Plaskett, ed'd35, Jimmie Kelly, ed'37, John Murray, ckc, and W. Howard, served as the committee appointed by the W.S.G.A. on the program arrangements.
Besides the finals in boxing, wrestling, fencing, and basketball, the program will include numerous features such as the rollerskate hockey game, the scooter relay, and a tug-o-war. During some time on the program the winners of last fall's tournament will be honored. E.R. Elbel, supervisor of intramursals, will present Warren Morrisson, b35, last year's individual high-point winner, with a silver loving cup.
Delmar Curry, c'36, student manager of the Intramural Carnival, has selected the following committees: Promotion: Horace Hedges, c'36; Ben Barteles, c'36; and Rex Woods, c'36; ticket:贝 Hazen, c'35; Al Dodge, c'38; and Bill Brown, c'37; invitation:贝 Asher, c'38; and John Ewers, c'38.
The admission will include, besides the Carnival and dance, a 24-page programme containing an account of the 1853 Bellevue earthquake and a review of the past year's intramurals.
Men's Intramurals
The Phi Ps', with King scoring six field goals defeated the S.A.E. quintet yesterday afternoon 33 to 13. Darrham was the leading scorer for the losers.
Neither the K.E.K.'s nor the Acaal's, scheduled to play at 5:30 yesterday afternoon, appeared for their game. Arrangement played the game later
In a closely contested game, the Kappa Sigs continued their winning streak by defeating the Delta Upliers and the other late game Wednesday night.
Holding the Douglas Club to three points in the last half the Jayhawks smothered their opponents 29 to 10 in a game played late Wednesday night.
The box scores:
Phi Psi 22
G FT F
Johnson 1 0 0
King 1 0 0
Hodge 2 1 1
Crockette 3 1 1
Knoche 3 0 1
RHodge 1 0 1
Totals 16 1 4
Johannes 29
Jayhawks 39
G F TF
Shade 2 2 2
Harper 2 2 2
Braden 5 0 0
Brush 5 0 0
Rosbush 4 0 1
S. A.E.13
Totals 1833
Kanna Sig 24
G FT F
Jones 0 1 1
Darrah 2 2 0
Ewers 2 0 0
Patterson 2 0 0
Patterson 1 0 2
Bunting 0 1 0
G F T F F
Colson 4 0 0
Cooper 1 0 0
Copeman 2 2 4
Naylor 3 2 4
Kceler 0 0 2
Bonebake 2 0 0
Totals 5 3 3
Douglas Club 10 G F 27
McKale 0 1 1
Boyle 0 1 2
Oliver 1 2
Crumn 2 0 2
Dalton 1 0 0
D.U. 17 G F FT
Davis 1 Davis 1 G F FT
Russell 1 1 1
Barclay 1 1 3
Jorgensen 1 0 0
Lane 1 0 0
Lane 1 0 0
Totals 11 2 8 Totals 6 5
Midnight Score
Cocs, 24; Ramblers, 22.
Wednesday~3-530, Phi B1* vs B'Rock
Chalk 'C'; Rock Chalk 'B' vs S.A.
E. 'B'); 9:00, S.A. Pele GmH; Pam Ghe;
Ksig, Beta Pi vs A, K. Phi
Beta Pi vs A, K. Phi
Basketball Schedules
Ramblers vs Colegians; Triangle vs K. Siz.
Saturday - 8:00, S.A.E 'B' vs Trumps 'B', Phi Psi 'B' vs Coe's 'B', 9:00, Phi Giam vs D.T.D; Tvs Wakanaus. 10:00, PI KA, vs K. Psi; Betavs Phil Delt. 11:00, D.IU, vs K. Sig. 12:00, D.IU, vs K. Sig. Independents vs J. Hawk, D. Chi vs K. Sig. 1:00, PAD. vs A. K. Psi; D.T.D, 'B' vs Rock Chalk 'C'.
Monday--5-30, A.T.O. “B” vs Phi
Gam "B"; Rock Chalk hawks; 7-90,
S.A.M. s.P.E. P.; A.T.O. vs Phi PaI
8:00, Campus R. v Doug Club; Th Tau
Nose tramps; Phi Chi vs Sig Nut Coes
vs Tramps; 19:00 Phi Chi vs Ascens;
DU. vs D.T.D.
Tuesday-5,30, Coe's "B" vs J. Hawk
S.P.E. P, "S" vs Big Ch "B", 10,00
Thursday--53, 0. D.T.D. "B" vs Coes
"I," B. Jawk "B" vs Rock Chalk "C",
10.00. Cole's vs Wakara; Pi KA. vs
SPE
Friday—5:30, Tramps vs Hawks; P.A.
) vs K.E.K. 7:00, Sig Chi vs Phi Psi;
) vs D.T.D.
Saturday–9-00, Phi Pai B” vs DT. D; “B.” Rock Chalk vs Tramps B.“D. 10. ACE. ATO. vs Phi Gam; S.A.M. V. 10. ACEA. atio B.; Phi Gam 12.00, Rock Chalk vs Doug Club; S.A.E. B” vs Delt B.’ 1.00, Independents vs Campus R; Triangle vs A.K. Piat. 2:00, T thau vs Phi Cita, B vs K. Sig.
Swimmers Meet Washburn
Entries For The Dual Announced By Coach Allphin
The entries for the dual swimming neet with Washburn in the University pool Saturday at 3 o'clock were mentioned last night by coach Alphain
400-yard Relay; Tripp, Throne, Miller, Nichols; 200-yard Breast Strocher Raport, Elias; 100-yard Back Swim Jennings, Kennels; 50-yard dash; Thorne, Tripp; 100-yard Dash; Thorne, Tripp; 400-yard泳;Nichols, Miller; 220-yard泳;Kester, Nichols; Modely琅泳;Jennings, Raport, Lashelle.
Ray Tripp, a member of the squad has been laid up with an infected ear since the meet with Manhattan, Feb 12, but probably will swim Saturday.
E. R. Elbel, assistant professor in physical education, will be the referees and starter.
The student identification card will admit the students to the meet.
Gagliarlo Writes For Magazine Prof. Domenico Gagliarlo, assistant professor of economics, has written an article which was published in the last issue of the Kansas Historical Quarterly on the subject, "The Gompers-Allen Debate on the Kansas Industrial Court." This magazine, published quarterly, contains many articles historically interesting to Kansasans.
Wrestling Squad Will Meet Nebraska Tonight
Kansas Has 50 - 50 Chance to Win, According to Coach Cox
The University wrestling squad will meet the Nebraska squad in the Robinson gymnasium Friday at 7:30 p.m.
"The chances, as I see them are about 50-50," was the statement made last night by James Cox, wrestling coach. "Although we defeated Nebraska in a match at Lincoln Feb. 2 by a score of 23 to 11, we have lost two squad members since then. Myrl Braatton, who won both of his other matches by falls, is ineligible, and Frank Hodgson is out for the season with an injured shoulder. The last match with Nebraska was the first match that we have won from them in seven years, and that is said to have been an accident. To prove that it was not an accident my team will have to duplicate that first vie-
The following are the entries for Kansas as given out by Coach Cox:
118 pound class: Roberts; 126 pound class: Robbins;
Douglas; 145 pound class: Childs; 135 pound class: Captain Knoll; 165 pound class: Heavyweight; 165 pound class: Heavyweight; "Tiny" Moore.
CUNNINGHAM TO MEET ACE MILERS AGAIN TOMORROW
Glenn Cunningham, the fleet-footed Kansas mila, will race Saturday night in the famous Baxter mile at Madison Square Garden against his two arch rivals, Gene Venkiz of the University of Virginia, and Bill Boothon of Princeton.
By virtue of his previous victory earlier in the month at the Milrose meet which he won by several yards he goes into this race as the favorite. Of all of this race may be obtained Saturday night by calling the Kansas office.
M.U. Starts Track Season
The University of Missouri track team meets the Iowa State Cyclones in an indoor meet at Columbia, Saturday night. Although this will be Missouri's 1935 opener Dr. H. J. Huff, the Tiger coach,
expects his team to perform well against the Cyclones. Sid Cooley, spinner and low hurdler; Sam Tedler, pole vaulter, high hurder, and high jumper; and Bob Shark, high jumper, are all veterans and expected to gather their share of the points.
Frosty Cox, freshman basketball coach, has picked two freshman teams to play a series of games. The first game of this series was played Wednesday night when the red team defeated the green teams 20 to 13. Both teams presented a nice ball-handling quintet, but the advantage in goal shooting.
Reds Defeat Greens, 20-13, in Initial
Cox Picks Freshman Teams
Game
"Frosty" Cox sent his two freshman teams, the red and the green, against each other again last night in a game won by the Greens, 29-21. Schmidt, Holliday and Hough played well for the victors, and Swartz starred for the losers, scoring 16 of his teams 21 points. The best score.
Red G FTG
Tenny 0 0 3
Swartz 6 4 1
Stewart 0 0 1
H'vstock 1 0 0
Bidnick 0 0 0
Stewart 0 0 0
Totals ...8 5 4
Green G FFT 0
Schmidt 1 0
Crawford 4 1
Holliday 4 1
Hough 4 1
Colman 0 0
Colman 0 0
Choplin 1 0
Referee: Vanek
Totals ..13 3 6
Volleyball Tourney to Start
Fourteen Teams Entered Are Divided in Two Divisions
Boxers to Meet at Haskell
Fourteen teams have entered the intramural volley ball tournament which will begin the latter part of next week. Schedules will be sent out from the intramural office early enough that the teams will know the time that they are to play. The teams will be divided into two divisions with seven teams in each group. A double round robin schedule is to be used.
The following teams have sent their entries to Ed Elibel, director of intra-
Beta, Triangia, Kappa Sig, Phi Psi, AI,
T.O, Sig Alph, Pi K.A, Delta Chi, Phi Diff,
Campus Raiders, Delta Tau, Sig Ep,
Sigma Chi, and Phi Gam.
Iadian Team To Battle K.C.A.C. Gloemen Friday Night
The Haskell boxing team and K.C.A.C. glovemen are to meet in a return static dual at Haskell tomorrow at 7:39 p.m. The Indians battled to a 7 to 5 victory over the Blue Diamonds boys from Kansas City in a recent meet there. Nelson Emeroho, Haskell's 118-ib-gashing little fighter, defeated Johnny Estrada, Missouri Valley A.A.U. champion, three weeks ago. These clever boys will meet again in the ring this Friday right. Beebe Rich will take on Herman Jick of the Institute. Dick has won his top eleven bouts.
"There will be 36 rounds of fast good
baking, proven coach Kelley of the Lakers
to win."
The program: Flyweight: Beeber Rich, K.C.A.C., vs. Herman Dick, Haskell, Scott, K.C.A.C., vs. Nelson Emerohr, Haskell; Joey Newman, K.C.A.C., vs. Kenneth Scott, Haskell, Featherweight: Wayne Scott, Haskell, Featherweight: Wayne Scott, Leonard Rowlane, K.C.A.C., vs. Chester Ellis, Haskell; Howard Barnett, K.C.A.C., vs. Henry Smith,
Lightweight: Mike ORourke, K.C.A. C., vs. Victor Martin, Haskell, Wessel. Lightweight: Jake Holley, Henry Holleman, Haskell; Floyd Hall, K.C.A.C., vs. James Walden, Haskell; Steven Weller, vs. James Walden, Haskell. Middleweight: "Duke" Bernes, K.C.A.C., vs. Forrest Jones, Haskell. Heavyweight: Bud Childknecht, K.C.A.C., vs. Bill Palmer, Has
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The selection, buying and preparation of the right kinds of Turkish tobaccos for making Chesterfield Cigarettes is a business in itself...
Handling Turkish tobacco in the Liggett & Myers modern factory at Smyrna, Turkey.
WE have buyers in all the tobacco markets of Turkey and Greece, including Xanthi, Cavalla, Smyrna and Samsoun.
And at Smyrna Chesterfield has built the most modern tobacco plant in the Near East.
Here the spicy, aromatic Turkish leaf is sorted and graded under the eyes of our own tobacco men.
Then it is put away to age in its own climate for two years or more to make it milder and better-tasting.
When you blend and cross-blend the right kinds of aromatic Turkish tobacco with mild ripe home-grown tobaccos as we do in Chesterfield you have . . .
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On the air—
MONDAY WEDNESDAY SATURDAY
LUCEZIA LILY RICHARD
BORI PONS BONELLI
KOSTELANTE ORCHESTRA AND CHORUS
8 P.M. (c.s.T.) = COLUMBIA NETWORK
21.6.1 197
© 1935, LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO.
NUMBER 95
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXII
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1935
--engineers voted Thursday and Friday on the following candidates: Jerry Gant, c; 35, isabelle W. Perry, c; 37, and Kathery Ann Cassidy, c*. Votes were counted Friday night by a committee of engineers. The result was not announced until shortly before the intermission in the Hola Nail Hop program last night.
--engineers voted Thursday and Friday on the following candidates: Jerry Gant, c; 35, isabelle W. Perry, c; 37, and Kathery Ann Cassidy, c*. Votes were counted Friday night by a committee of engineers. The result was not announced until shortly before the intermission in the Hola Nail Hop program last night.
on the SHIN
By JOE HOLLOWAY, c'35
Oh to Be a Governor's Daughter . . . So Be It . . . the Ladies Shall Play Pool . . . Chancellor Plays Games . . . Pyle Gets Her Fees on Thursday
Good peoples—we're mad! Just plain mad you know, like in mad. For four good years we've slaved away our lift in this beehive of people trying to get away from an education; we've finally reached the point where we get a couple of hours of A now and then and even though no one seems to be any too interested about it, it makes us feel pretty good to get them. Then what do we do we glance at the K.U. column of the Journal-World and see the whole d—headline space dedicated to the Governor's daughter who not only made five hours of A but also had scarcetina. You see the whole makes us sore at heart, not because we made five hours of A, too, not because we are not the Governor's daughter and no one wants to write headlines about our A's. What terrible future can the world hold for us?
Bolt Cochrane reports several requests for a "Ladies' Night" in the Memorial Union billiard room. Don't tell us that the ladies are going to that common-Mother always told us to stay away from pool halls.
There comes a time in every man's life when he must shew on the end of the Western Union's penel, stand on this foot and that, gaze intently at everything in the office, try to get an inspiration from the clicking of the typewriter and telegraph keys, and then ask the operator, "What the hell's the best way to use just ten words in a wire to your gift?" That problem is solved with the ninth degree maths by the young fellow who sent one of our coheses the following: "I love you, I love you, I love you, Love—John."
Flash: Our Chancellor, while blind-folded successfully pinned the tail on a donkey at the Newcomer's party last week.
Some of the lads at the Phi Delt house had their ladies fair at the house for dinner last week and, trying to put on the old grand manner, had plants brought in to the girls while they were at the table. Al McClarek knew that fair Margaret Pyle cared not a farthing for plants of the potted variety and furthermore, he knew that she had been trying to stifle an awful yearning for some gold fish. Consequently, Al purchased the lady some gold fish to be brought in to her when the flowers were carried in for the others. For saftays sake, he put the little viggles in a milk bottle and in came the waiter bearing the bottled-trout on a tray. He sat them in front of Margaret and reports state most emphatically that the gel knew not whether to wind her watch or go to the variety in a lamp shade.
We hear that the Beta's voted to deposit ten smackers in a local bank, both the interest and the ten to go to the first male heir of the recent Bud Sands-Louise Eviston merger. Very, very thoughtful indeed.
If we had the inspiration of the person who plays the lead in the following drama, we'd really put some color into this bit of type. It was in a class in critical writing and the members of said class were criticizing a painting of the sea-or do the best people call em sea-scapes? Anyway, the budding critic spoke lushly of the blue tones or something of the water depicted on the canvas and stated that they made him think of music by Liebstraum. Even so my pretty, and mayap he do those glgony days remind 'tse of paintings by George Geranih, Berlin, and Tiger Rag"?
What's this we hear about Ben Givens receiving three valentines of the "love"? type in the mail, all of them signed "Baby Doll"?
Jayhawker Out Thursday
The Jayhawk will be available Thursday instead of Friday at 1:30 at the WSQA. Book Exchange in the morning, followed by Marks the editor, announced yesterday.
Nineteen Have Mosses
According to latest reports, nineteen students are sick with the measles in Watkins Memorial hospital.
Cunningham Breaks Baxter Mile Record
VENZKE TRAILS GLENN 30 YARDS AT FINISH LINE
Kansan Wins Feature Race of New York Meet; Bonthron Crosses Tape in Third Place
SETS PACE AT 4:09.8
New York, Feb. 16.—(UP) - Running a perfectly gauged race, Glenn Cunningham, of Kansas University, tonight captured the Baxter Mater, feature of the New York Athletic Club meet, outrunning a brilliant field, which two rivals, Gene Venkus of Pennsylvania, and Bill Borthon of Princeton.
Cunningham's winning time was 4:08.4, for a new record for the historic Baxter Mile. The former record was 4:10, set by Venzela in 1932. That mark was overturned when he finished which Cunningham bettered by completing the mile in 4:08.4 in 1934.
Ny, Champion of Sweden. Disappoints Crowd by Dropping Out
The rugged Kansan with the flame-scarred legs was content to trail the early pace setters in the first few laps, but when five of the eleven laps were completed, running like a machine, he entered into the lead, and won going away.
Cunningham, who has now won 4 out of 7 races scheduled against Bill Bonthron, finished a good 30 yards ahead of Venzek, who again surprised a metropolitan track crowd by beating the great Bonthron.
Eric Ny, champion of Sweden, again proved a disappointment. He set the pace for the first five laps, but ran him out, dropping into fifth place, and when the seventh lap was completed, he quit a moment later.
Harry Williamson, of North Carolina, helped Hyne set the pace in the early running, but moved back to third position at the fourth lap, and finished in fourth.
Cunningham broke his first record in the mile run when he ran it in 4:31.4 at the Kansas Relays in the Spring of 1909. At that time he was running for the Elkhart High School. He first ran in the Baxter Mile in the winter of 1933 in 4:14.3 Last year at the Baxter Mile he was nosed out by inches by Bill Bonthon of Princeton. This time his time was 4:14. A few weeks after the Baxter race he established his new world record for the mile when he ran it. He ran the best race of his career at the Princeton Invite meet last summer when he established the new world's record, in the fast time of 4:06.7
Science Book Distributed
The thirty-seventh volume of "Transactions" of the Kansas Academy of Science are being distributed by the managing editor, Prof. W. J. Buergartner of the department of zoology. The book was published by the State Printer, who has not printed the "Transactions" since 1921.
Thirty-Seventh Volume Contains Tributes to Bailey and Yates
There are 65 members of the Kansas Academy of Science in the University. The Academy meets in Lawrence this year on March 28, 29, and 30.
The volume contains tributes to Dr. E.H. S. Bailley, for 42 years professor of chemistry in the University, who died June 1, 1933, and also to Dr. J. A. Gates, who at the time of his death in 1933 was acting head of the graduate division and a member of the State Board of Education. Nine of the papers submitted were by University students on various subjects of botany, chemistry, geology, and
The University Men's Glee Club under the direction of Prof. Howard C. Taylor will give a concert this afternoon, at St. Mary's Academy in Boca Raton. The school officials will entertain the glee club with a supper and dance.
Indoor Track Meet To Missouri
Indoor Track Meet to Discuss
Columbia, Mo. Feb. 16—UIU—Missi-
diana Indoor Track Meet in State in
an indoor track meet before tonight by
a score of 59 to 45.
Wins Again
KANSAS
Baxter Mile mark topples as Curtingham leads Vennze and Bonthorn to the tape in the fast time of 4.098.
GLENN CUNNINGHAM
Philharmonic Orchestra To Play Here Wednesday
The Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra will present two concerts in the University Auditorium Wednesday, a children's program at 2:30 and a concert at 4:30. Both programs will be given preference as to seats at the afternoon program.
Kansas City Musicians Will
Give Two Concerts
During Day
Karl Krueger has arranged an attractive list of children's numbers for the afternoon concert. He plans to speak to students, explaining the work that is to be played.
The evening concert will include the dramatic Fifth Symphony from Tachikowsky, a number which receives remarkable acclaim wherever it is played.
The evening concert is included in the University concert course and the student activity tickets will admit.
Publisher Election Monday
New Board Member Will Serve for Semester
The Kansan Board, governing organization of the University Daily Kansan in a meeting tomorrow afternoon will select from a panel of five names the student who is to hold the position of Kansan Publisher.
Included in the panel are the following: Joe Doctor, c35, present editor-in-chief of the Kansan; Carolyn Harper, c35, present manager editing; Wesley McCalla, c35, former editor-in-chief Harry Valentine, c35, campus editor; Kathryn H. Burton, c35, journal editor. The faculty of the department of journalism chose the candidates.
The Publisher will be elected for a semester, and will have the privilege of being elected for a second term. Important duties of the Publisher will be the formulating of policy, the carrying on of long time campaigns, and the bridging of the gap between the frequent changes on the staff.
Dr. Guido Beck, professor of theoretical physics in the University, has returned to Lawrence from a brief between-session meeting. He left Lawrence Sunday, Feb. 3.
PHYSICS PROFESSOR RETURNS
Using as his subjects, "The Theory of Radiative贝 Decay," and "The Structure of Light Nuclei." Dr. Beck spoke to university audiences in Iowa City, Chicago, Urbana, Ill., Lafayette, Ann, And Arnor, Mich.
PHYSICS PROFESSOR RETURNS AFTER MAKING LECTURE TOU
Professors Attend Meeting
The Progressive Education Association met Friday and yesterday at the Hotel President in Kansas City, Mo. Prof. E. B. Eajay and Prof. B. A. Nash were speakers at yesterday's meeting, which was attended by Dean R. A. Schwab. Prof. F. O. Russell, Prof. F. P. OBrien and Miss Lillett. The association was attended Friday by Prof. E. R. Elkebil. Prof. F. O. Russell, and W. C. Nystrom
Professors Speak at Meeting
English Department Sees "Sequolia"
All of the members of the department of English were guests of the management of the Granada theatre, yesterday morning at 10 o'clock, to preview the new production, "Sequolia."
Kansas State Stages Come back Over Sooners
Prof. R. H. Wheeler and Prof. J. F Brown, both of the department of psychology, lectured before the Progressive Education Meeting in Kansas City yesterday.
Mannathon, Feb. 16—(UP)—Kansas State college tonight held the University of Oklahoma to five field goals and won the second of the two-game series 31 to 18. Oklahma won last night's game 24 to 22.
Frank Groves, center, was the Kansas State scoring ice, shewing baskets for 12 points, and for game honors. Captain Stoner, Kansas State guard, shot four field goals, and played a strong defensive game.
Tone was the high scorer for the Oklahoma team—with two field goals and a free throw.
Kansas State pulled away early, on goals by Groves and Railsback, and at the intermission led 12 to 9.
Fresland i G FTF
Gulpin j 1 3 1
Gulpin i 1 3 1
Thrombro'f f 0 0
Browces c, 0 4 0
Browces c, 0 4 0
Railiba k,g 1 1 2
Millsg i 1 2
Oklahoma 18
The box score:
Kansas State 31
Totals ...13 5 9
G FT
Cowjwf 0
Tonef 0
Warranf 0
Cobbf 0
Colenm 0
Colenmg 0
Brownlg w 0
Haysy 1
Remyg 0
Officials: E. C. Quigley, Parke Carroll
Totals ...5 8
Jerry Gaut Elected Hob Nail Hop Beauty Queen
Engineers Select Comely Regent to Reign at Annual Party
Jerry Gault, c'25, was elected by the engineers as the first Beauty Queen for the Hob Nail Hop. presented last night in the Memorial Union ballroom.
Miss Gutt was introduced by Cheyne White, e.g. 32's shortly before the intermission. A colonial bouquet was presented to the queen as a token of esteem. The queen was also given a miniature slide as a suitable pouwer of the occasion.
A combination of Red Blackburn's and Dick Gesser's orchestras played for the ball. Considerable amount of effort and expense was connected with enlarging the hallroom stage in order that their audience sample space for the 18-plane orchestra.
Decorations consisted of various electrical signs representing the departments of the engineering school and honorary and professional fraternities.
Several numbers were played by Bud Frink, e 37, and Eldon Schnoke, fa 36, on the two grand pianos.
This is the first year that this campus has had a Beauty queen contest sponsored by the engineers, although engineering faculty have held such contests in the past.
French Play Will Be Given
The cast for the thirty-fourth annual French play, *Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme*, by Moliere, has been selected and will be announced early next month. Prof. Amida Stanton, who will direct the play, said yesterday. Prof. Elise NeuenSchwander will have charge of the properties.
"Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme" Chosen for Thirty-fourth Annual Production
"Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme" was presented once before in 1822 at the little theater in Green hall in honor of the tercentery of Molere's birth. J Neale Carnan, now associate dean of marriage languages, had the leading role.
A different French play has been given each year since 1901 with the exception of two plays which were repeated and one that was missed during the war in 1918. Pred Eugene Gallon, a professor at Harvard, inscribed the satire at the University.
The date for the performance has not definitely been set, but it is expected that the play will be presented during the first week in April.
Teachers' Bureau Places Five
Teacher
R. E. Mackey, secretary of the Teachers' Appointment bureau, announces the placing of these former students: Lucile McIntire, 34, teacher at art at Purpose; Emma Sage, 32, French and Spanish teacher at Hutchinson; Mary Virginia Smith, 35, physical education instructor in Coffeville; Malcolm, Maurice; and Eduna Nyquist, computer and Eduna Nyquist, graduate student, teacher of history and home economics at Quemens.
JAYHAWKERS LEAVE FOR AMES TONIGHT
Musical Vespers Service Will Be This Afternoon
Forty-fifth Program to Be Under Direction of D. M. Swarthout
The School of Fine Arts will present the forty-fifth all-musical vespers at the University Auditorium at 4 clock this afternoon. This presentation will be under the direction of Prof. D. M. Howell, dean of the School of Fine Arts.
The program follows for Organ: "March Religieus" (Gullmant, G. Crass Simpson); Quartette: "Quartete No. 2 in Flat." Allegro (Mozart), Jamb Chupisseo; plano, Waldemar Geltch, violin, Kurt Schumacher; viola, viol. G. M. Swarthworth celli.
Voice: "O Ma Lyre Immortelle", from "Sappho" (Gounden), Irene Peabody, mozzo-speo, accompanied by Walden-Gelch, violin; Ruth Curtch, piano; Laurel Everett Anderson, organ; Ensemble: "Night Fiece" (Arthur Fooe); Mildred Hunt, flute; Waldemar Gelch, 1st violin; Conrad McGrew, 2nd violin; Karl Kuerstineer, viola; D. M. Swartt-bute, viola.
Quintette “Quintette”, Op. 1, Adagio; quasi andante, (Donnavi), Rout Ourtault, piano; Waldemar Geltch, 1st viol; Conrad McGrew, 2nd viol; Karl Kuersteiner, viola; Dia M. Swortht, cello; A Cappella Choir: Four Russian anthems: (a) “Agrus Dei” (Kalinikofn) (b) “Praise the Lord from Heaven” (Rakmanhoffn); (c) “The Lord's Praver” (Gretchoanfr), contralo solo
—Mary Louis Beltz; (d) "The Earth is the Night" (Nikolsky), Westminster A Cappella Choir, D. M. Swarthout director.
Elect Engineering Officers
Keith Willey to Head Group for Spring Semester
The student chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers held its freshman induction and election of officers at the university at the regular meeting, Feb. 14.
The following officers were elected:
President, Kait Wilde, c35; vice president,
Worley Kauff, e36; secretary,
Worley Kauff, e38; and treasurer, B
win Phelps, e36.
Representatives for the engineering council were also elected. The new senior representative is Bob Williams, junior representative, Duane Main, sophomore representatives, Lawrence Bigelow and Dan Elam, freshman representatives, Howard Moreland and Raymond Rogers.
Prof. G. W. Bradshaw, assistant professor of civil engineering, spoke on the aims and purposes of the American Society of Civil Engineers.
Prof. W. C. M. McNown, professor of civil engineering, suggested a tentative schedule of lectures on the Boulder Dam. These lectures will comprise the future meetings for the spring semester. Refreshments were served.
ORMER EXCHANGE SCHOLAR TO ADDRESS GERMAN CLUB
Der Deutsche Verein will have its first formal meeting of the spring semester tomorrow. The club will be addressed by Dr. Leonard O'Bryan, former German Exchange Scholar from the University who studied in Paris and Berlin where he received his doctor's degree from the University of Marburg.
Mr. O'Bryon will speak on "Travelling in Germany". He will talk on his own experiences in travel with the German people in their travulations of the German people and their lives.
DR. WILLIAM J. ENGEL SPEAKS AT KANSAS CITY MEETING
Dr. N, P. Sherwood, head of the department of bacteriology, Dr. Parke Woodard, professor of physiology, and Dr. O. D. Stoland, head of the department of physiology, attended a dinner meeting of the Kansas City Academy of Medicine at the Hotel President in Kansas City. Mo., last night.
Dr. William J. Engel, 26, of the Crane Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio, spoke on "The Influences of the Sex Harmonze on Developmental Regenerative and Degenerative Changes in the Male." Dr. Engel is the son of Prof. and Mrs. E. F. Engel.
Oread Students Entertain
Three Oreed Training School students, Mee Rappard, Margot Baker, and Betty Lou Grant, presented a tap dance between halves of the Oread basketball game last night. Mildred Lashbrook, c'37, played for the dance.
Seek Second Win Over Iowa State On Cyclone Court
Dr. Allen Expects Toughest Opposition of Season in Tomorrow's Encounter
Kansas iowa States
Ehling f Cown
Wells f Fleming
Wells f Wegnen
Kappelman g Holmes
lg Ig
Officials: Referee: E. C. Quigley, St.
Mary's; Umpire: Henry Hasbrook, Des
Moines M.Y.C.A.
Home for only two days of practice after their successful campaign to Lincoln, the Kansas baskettles leave tonight for Ames to meet the Iowa State quintet in one of the crucial games of the season. The Amesmen, who have lost only two games and now hold second place in a national opposition as a loss would probably eliminate their title chances.
coach, Dr. Forrest C. Allen, basketball coach, announced yesterday that the same nine men that went to Lincoln would make the Iowa trip, leaving on the Santa Fe tonight at 9:35. Those players are: Ebless, Wells, Alley, Gargel, Kappelman, Noble, Oyler, Shaffer, and Roers.
Wells, who will take over his old duties at center, will form the only change in the starting string from that used against Nebraska. Noble relieved Wells for the first sixteen minutes against the Cornhuskers due to Wells' weakened condition. Ray Ebling, the scoring ace, and Allen, who has been going after him all the way forward posts, Gordon Gray and Kappelman are set to check the Iowa State onloung in the guard positions.
Leading the attack for the Cyclones will be Wegner, high-scoring center, and Cowen, flashy forward. Holmes and Captain Hood will guard.
The Kansas coach looks for the toughest opposition of the season tomorrow. Coach Louis Menze's men, who Friday night lost a non-conference engagement to Drake University 45 to 42, will attempt vengeance on the Kansans who also stand in their way in the Big Six title race.
The game will be officiated by E. C. Quigley of St. Mary's College, popular referee at Lawrence University, and Henry Hasrock, of Iowa University and also athletic director for the Des Moines Y.M.C.A.
Kansas won in the first meeting of the two squads in Lawrence last Saturday 15-18, the win attributed to smooth functioning of the Kansas five. If they can repeat the performance for the Ames audience, Court Allen believes the result will be another Kansas win.
W.S.G.A Favors Ted Shawn
The W.S.G.A. voted in favor of an appropriation of $375.00 to bring the living Ted Shawn dancers here Feb. 27, at a special meeting in Memorial Union yesterday, Margaret Sherwood, c$35, president of the association announced.
Group Votes Appropriation to Bring Dancers Here Feb. 27
The $735.00 has been underwritten to the extent of $275.00 by the student activity fund committee and for $100.00 by Tau Sigma.
The program will be included on the regular activity ticket schedule. Faculty members, however, must pay the admission charge. Proceeds from the sale of tickets to those not having activity books will be used to reimburse Tau Sigma for their share of the appropriation.
Javanese Arts To Be Displayed
Javanese Arts To be bripped
An exhibition of applied arts from the islands of dava and Sumatra is for design. The exhibition is part of a large collection which belongs to Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Mitchell who have recently returned from an eight-year study of these Islands.
Allphin Appointed Chairman
Kansas. Herbert G. Alliph, instructor of physical education, has been appointed chairman of the swimming committee of the Amateur Athletic Union for the state of Kansas. Mr. Alliph will announce the members of the committee for Kansas later.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1935
University Daily Kansan
The Original Student Paper of
THE INTERNATIONAL KANSAN
LAWRENCE, KANSAN
EDITOR-IN-CHIEP JOSEPH DOCTOR
Associate Editors
Julia Markham Charles Brown
第4章 工程造价管理
SUMMER EDITORS
Campus Editor Harry Valentine
Make-up Editors | George Moore,
| Herbert Moore
Sports Editor Robert Patt
Sunday Editor Eleianor Winters
Nepal Press
Society Editor Shirley Jones
Editor Press
Annual Editor Ruth Stolland
Business Manager P. Quentin Brown
Ast. Business Manager Ellen Carter
Kansan Board Members
Leen Wyatt
Barnard University
Lenn Wytter
Barnard University
Morgan Wecker
Lorell Moss
Rutherford Hayes
Wosley McCalla
Fulton University
Julian Markham
F. Quincy University
William Binnard
Jeoper Doctor
Business Office KU. 60
Night Connections, Business Office 791K5
Night Connections, Business Office 791K5
Subscription price, per year, $2.00 cash in
advance, $2.25 on payments. Single bookie,
for $1.99.
published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
published Saturday mornings weekly;
discount to department of Journalism of the University of Kansas from
Journalism of the University of Kansas on
Subscription price, per year, $80.00 in cash
Entered as second class matter, September
17, 1916, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan
KAREAS PRESS
1935
ASSOCIATION
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1935
THE UNION BUILDING PROBLEM
The Memorial Union operating committee has laid elaborate plans toward the further completion of the Union building. They would spend $15,000 to provide much-needed enlargements and additions in order that the building may farther fulfill the purpose for which it was intended, that of providing a center for Hill social activities.
But $15,000 is a lot of money, and private contributions to extra-curricular activities are not so readily forthcoming as in the days when the stadium and the Union building were built. The problem of getting the $15,000 is not small. It would mean concentration of all the financial resources of the student government on the project over a period of years. And the sources of income from student projects are neither large nor numerous.
The operating committee has evolved a plan whereby the bill for such construction could be paid in ten years. That plan assumes the co-operation of certain organizations on the Hill in turning their incomes over to the operating committee. Whether or not the W.S.G.A. will relinquish its book exchange, and whether the dance management should be given to the operating committee, are matters for consideration.
What plans have been made for the use of the money taken in by the book exchange? Efforts on the part of the Kansan to discover this have been met by evasion. No one seems to know exactly where the money will be used. Presumably it will be used for expanding the exchange to give more complete student service in books. The book exchange has a large profit every year, and is one of the main sources of income to the student government organizations.
And the dance manager's income could be done away with. There is no reason why the director of the Union building could not perform this function in addition to his own duties.
But whatever the problem of improving the Union building involves, it will call for much cooperation from various sources, and the campus will see another reason why the student government should be concentrated in a single group composed of both men and women, instead of dividing the powers between two houses.
The operating committee has not, however, planned for the extent of co-operation it could receive. Professional, honorary, and social organizations should be called upon to contribute to the fund in case the plans go through. Every source of student power should be brought to bear to put the plan over. Secrecy and intrigue should be set aside, and the
THE W. S. G. A. TRANSFORMATIONS
$\textcircled{1}$ $\textcircled{2}$ $\textcircled{3}$ $\textcircled{4}$
"I Wonder How This Will Look?"
1—No Parties 2—Position
2—Mass Meeting 3—Secret Combines
4—The Hire System
whole matter should be brought out into the open, where all interested persons may see that whatever should be done, is done
HERE COMES THE BAND!
May 8, 9 and 10, the University will be host to fifty bands from all over the country. This is the first step in a new movement to make the University Band better known and to introduce other bands to the students of the University. The movement will culminate in a seven-thousand-mile tour by the University Band in 1936.
The opportunity of hearing so many bands is rare; to have them all together is even more rare, and a great deal of credit should go to Mr. Wiley, director of the band, for the work he has done in planning this event and in carrying it out.
A Corner On Books By Mary Jule Shipman
It is hoped that when the time arrives the students will turn out and give their whole-hearted support to the movement and do everything that they can to make the members of the bands feel welcome and at home. It will give the students a chance to hear bands under the direction of some of the best band-leaders in the country, and to show their appreciation, not only of the visiting bands, but of their own.
Current Best Sellers:
Current Best Sellers:
Heaven's My Destiny
... Thornton Wilder
The 40 Days of Musa Dagh
... Franz Werfel
Goodbye, Mr. Chips ... James Hilton
While Rome Burns
... Alexander Woolcott
Skin Deep ... M. C. Phillips
Why Not Try God ... Mary Pickford
THE LOST HORIZON, by James Hilton:
(Wm. Morrow and Co.)
When the horizon is lost, where need human knowledge and inner tranquility end? Wondering this, Glory Conway realized himself one of the kidnappers of "blue Moon," inaccessible Tibetan monastery, and accepted it in its spirit.
Not so his three companies. Not tempted by lengthened life span and shelter from storm threatening to overtake and demolish the entire world, he has long been convinced England and finally convince Sanctuary to lead him from the sanctuary.
Don't miss this lovely tale. It is treated rather as a legend, almost an H. Rider Haggard style plus an appeal to modern day rash. Maybe you'll fit well, maybe just weary, but you'll envy Conway his moments.
"It has done the wistfulness of
good hate, Mr. Chips" but it's the same
intellectual beauty of background. It
looks like the way he jingles and its
jarring notes are sharp discords.
Then—the only possible ending—nothing. What happened to them? We can only piece together a few clues.
Of course it's a best seller and a Hawthornden prize winner.
HEAVENS MY DESTINATION by
Thornton Wilder; (Harper and Bros.)
"George Brush is my name,
America my nation. Ludington's my dwelling place
his theories, gained through a Baptist college education and a long ago Evangelist meeting. His perfect mental simplicity leads him on his weary way, strewn with misunderstandings and devoid of friendships.
And Heaven's my destination might have been his slogan. An appalling clean-minded dense young salesman, well-meaning, bent on the proof of
Ludington's my dwelling place
And Heaven's my destination"
He's pathetic; he's no eager to show the world it's foolhardy. The rich man is the man who doesn't have money in his pocket to worry about. Banks are immoral; they lead one to leam toward a rainy day. Criminals should be treated with respect, based on shaming them with kindness—just a sample of his ideas.
Brush is priceless. You can't waste any sympathy on him; his religion is his all, and all's impossible. You'll hear stories among your friends for years.
The novel hasn't become an overnight best-seller simply on the author's name. Read it, though you'll stand in line to get it. It's different; and it's "the rage."
DELAY IN THE SUN, by Anthony Thorne; (Doubleday Doran.)
The effect of a two-days delay in the lazy Sunshine sunlight, caused by a revolutionist motor-bus strike. Nine trainees, smitten with nine forms of mental sunstroke, their futures changes for bettetra, by the little village of Querinda.
The underlying idea—that even a slight delay in the bustle of mere living may work miracles to our minds accustomed to hate—is certainly not original. But it's a slightly different set-up, and several of the outcomes are
OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
The faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will meet on Tuesday, Feb. 19, at 4:30 in the auditorium on the third floor of the Administration building. E. H. LINDLEY, President.
COLLEGE FACULTY:
No. 95
and 11:30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issues.
NASDAQ HIGH
Saturday for Sunday issues.
Der Deutsche Speicher versammlt sich am Mottog den 18. Februar um vier Uhr führenzm in `Zimmer 313 Fraser hall`.
DER DEUTSCHE VEREIN:
NEWTON ARNOLD, Sekretaer.
EL ATENEO:
La proxima session constitua en un concurso de musica espanola por el distinguido professor Jasmin Chapusso. El concurso de dara en el Central Administración Auditorium el jueves 21 de Febrerio, a lhas 4.30pm. El publica esta invito. CARLOS ALBERTO PATTerson, Presidente.
KAPPA PHI:
Kappa Pi will have a regular meeting Tuesday, Feb. 19, at 6:30 p.m. at the home of Dr. Prince, 1299 Tennessee street.
Graduates and former students living in Lawrence, not enrolled in the University, may obtain membership cards admitting to the mid-week dances for the spring semester, at the Memorial Union office.
MID-WEEK DANCE ADMISSION FOR GRADUATES
AND FORMER STUDENTS:
PEACE ACTION COMMITTEE:
BILL COCHRANE, Manager.
The University of Kansas Peace Action Committee will meet Monday afternoon at 4:30 in the Book Exchange room, Memorial Union building. Everyone interested is welcome.
ELIZABETH CASWELL, ALFRED C. AMES, Executive Secretaries.
RHADAMANTHI:
There will be a meeting of Rhadamanti in the Green room, today at 4 o'clock. Bring a poem. NORMAN JACOBSHAGEN, President.
ROCK CHALKLETS Conducted by R.J.B.
startlingly good. The young actor, guided and misunderstood by his mistress, with whom he parts at her utter unrecognition of his ideal, is striking. The Jewish lovers, the two girls, the old maid, the boy and his unknown father, all are good types, if obvious. Psychological steps are well done—the most interesting bits of the book are those dealing with character study.
"Maybe I Am FUSSY"
--for the rest of the year
Some people like to see everything; others, especially women and children, like everything they see.
All my shirts cost money and I loathe a poorly ironed and mussed bundle of laundry. In fact I'm so very FUSSY that I send my laundry to the--for the rest of the year
Many cute Valentines were noted on the various college boards yesterday. You just can't keep these jokers down.
INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY
It looks like there's a Mussolini in Ethiopia's wood pile.
Jack Harris, editor of the Hutchinson News, writes back from his Carribean cruise that what Kansas needs most of all is a good ocean. We fear that there will bepathy; the voters of Kansas would never permit the state to become that wet.
BUT--for the rest of the year
And turn in your subscription tomorrow.
Experience has proven to me that their cleaning methods are perfect and their prices reasonable.
Phone 432 740 Vermont
The Daily Kansan
Kansan Business Office
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Remember, Suit You! That's My Business.
SCHULZ the TAILOR 924 Mass. St.
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Clearance Sale
Slide Rules----
Polyphase Duplex with leather case and book of instructions, length eight and ten inches.
Regular price $9.35. Sale price___ $ 5.75
Leather Notebooks----
No. 6 size, two ring—regular $4.65. Sale ___ $3.50
No. 13 size, three ring—regular $4.50. Sale.. $ 3.00
Fountain Pens---
Conklin - Parker - Wahl - Carter
33 1-3% Discount
Tee Squares----
Stationary or adjustable head—24 in. and 30 in. length.
Regular $1.00 and $1.50. Sale price ___ 50c
Weis Filing Cabinets---
One and two drawer wood cabinets for 3x5,
4x6 or 5x8 cards.
Regular $2.35 to $8.50. Now___
S-U-R-E- We Deliver
1-2 Price
Rowlands
TWO BOOK STORES
Come in and browse
SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 17, 1935
PAGE THREE
K
Hill Society
Before 5 p.m. call KU, 25; between 7:30 and 9:
Delta Zeta Has Bridge Tea
Delta Zeta entertained 14 guests with a bridge tea Friday afternoon. The tea was the first of a series of monthly bridge teas to be sponsored by Delta Zeta to promote a more friendly campus spirit.
The guests were non-sorority women and representatives from the different sororites. They were Eleanor Anderson, Alpha Delta Pi; Ruth Black, Marie Forbes, Kappa Alpha Theta; Mary Helen Gray; Mabel Green, Alpha Omicron Pi; Marigold Hall; Marceline Hatch, Sigma Kappa Prairie; Helen nnings, Alpha Gamma Delta; Helen Perry, Chi Omega; Isabelle Perny, Chi Beta; Bealin Unshine, Watkins Hall; Harriet Sheldon, Gamma Phi Beta; Martha Jane Stockman, Chi Omega Georgia Whiford, Kappa Kappa Gamma
Miss Elizabeth Dunkel, assistant professor of physical education, will give a lecture on "The Comparison of Classical Ballet with Modern Forms of the Dance" tomorrow evening at the Junior A.A.U.W. meeting which will be held at the C. L. Busheng home, 1513 Cressroad.
Miss Dunkel will use musical selections illustrative of changing accompaniments in dance forms. Mr. Arthun Owen, who will assist as accompanist, will play "The Dance of Hours," (Lia Gieconde) a group of a Brainwalt's waltzes "Locust Land" (Scott) and "Modern Studies" (Bastien Helbradt).
☆ ☆ ☆
Elizabeth Dunkel To Speak At Meeting
Phi Alpha Delta Holds Initiation
Phi Alpha Delta, professional law fraternity, held initiation for nine members last night Thursday. Those initiated were: John P. Adenbock, punct, Kansas City, Cole Ashley, Henry Henry, Lewis H. Butler, Wichita.
Corrand Foster, 137, Lawrence, Jess C. Murad, 137, Leron Muller, Loren Alon Moore, 137, Mount Ida, William Muir, Iuncl, Anthony, Olin K. Petish, 155, Lawrence, and Harry, W. Royer, l'uncel, Coffeville.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Kappa Phi
☆ ☆ ☆
Kappa Phi, Methodist church sorority, will sponsor three teas this afternoon from 4 until 5, honoring new Methodist women on the Hill.
Sponsors Teas
Eleanor Slaten, c38, and Lucille Mavior, c38, will be hostages at Haskell Hall; Mrs. Earnest Boyce will be hostages at her home, 1714 Indiana street; and Virginia Heorton, c38, will be hostage at her home, 1011 Massachusetts street.
MENHULA
nbarbara Humphrey, c38, and Caroline High, c38, will be dinner guests at the Alba Tau Omega house today.
Mildred Anderson of Kansas City
Kan. and Louise Tubbs of Norton, are weekend guests at the Alpha Chi Omega house.
Kappa Alpha Theta announces the engagement of Mary Frances Hatcher, fs, and Dr. Karl Velding. Dr. Veldling is a graduate of the University of Iowa, will attend of Sigurd N. Mu. The wedding will take place March 30 in Wellington.
☆ ☆ ☆
Mrs. Halph Baldwin, Margaret Overall, fa 363, Milady Yarmey, c 383, Eugene Donhunke, c'uncel and Bufie, Buffe, c'uncel and Kim City, Mo. to attend at the Ruse Balllet.
Theta Sigma Phi honorary journalistic sorority, has set March 7 as the date for initiation. The next regular meeting will be Feb. 28, at which Lena Wyatt will give a book review.
Guets at the Delta Tau Delta house today for dinner will be Mr. and Mrs. S. G. Wiles of Mackenville, and Mr. and Mr. M. J. Molinare, of Kansas City.
☆ ☆ ☆
Guests at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house this weekend are Helen Hallan of Lehigh University, Liz Moa, Barbara Simpson and Peg Lynch both of Salina.
The Chi Omega Alumnae association will entertain at tea tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Rice Phelps, 607 Louisiana street.
☆ ☆ ☆
Professor and Mrs. E, F, Engie went to Kansas City, Mo, today to see their son, Dr. William Engle, of Cleveland, Ohio.
☆ ☆ ☆
Mrs. A. B. Chamier, and Mary Lou
hamber both of Mobery, Mo, are
weekend guests of Mrs. J. A. Hooke
t the Dell Upson house.
Pledges of Kappa Alpha Theta entertained the activities yesterday afternoon at the chapter with the annual Katsup.
Mrs. Oliver Cliffin, of Kansas City, Mo., and Mrs. Richard Hereford, of Hutchinson, were guests at the Pi Beta Phi house yesterday.
Guests at the Pi Kappa Alpha house this weekend are: Bob Reynolds of Hiawatha; J. Allen Coogan and Teed O'Leary, both of Kansas City, Mo.
Dinner guests at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house today will be Mr. and Mrs. Howard Salis and Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Patterson, of all Kansas City Mo.
Madre Brown of Wichita and Katherine De Puy of Tulsa, Oka, are guests it the Alpha Omicron Pi house this weekend.
--and John Case, m-39. Mr. Case is a member of Beta Theta Pi, and Nu Sigma Nu.
☆ ☆ ☆
Kappa Alpha Theta announces the engagement of Mary Lou Bagby, c35.
PHONE K.U.66
OFFICE SUPPLIES
LOOSE LEAF FILLERS
GREETING CARDS
PHONE K.U.66
CLASSIFIED ADS
BOOKS
WALL PAPER
PICTURE FRAMING
KEELER'S BOOK STORE
Jane Campbell, 'a'36, and Margaret Ryan, c'28, were guests for dinner at the Delta Upson house last night.
LOST AND FOUND
FOUND: Keuffel & Esser beginner's slide rule. Call at Kansan office.
Phi Alpha Delta, professional law fraternity, announces the pledging of Charles W. Riseley, *Juncl.*, of Stockton.
---
FOUND: 16 pair of ladies' gloves, 1 fur muff, 2 scarfs, 1 beeret, 2 lady's coin purses. Call at Union Building office.
ROOM AND BOARD for Boys. If dissatisfied try our meals. You will like them. Price reasonable. Desirable location. 1155 Ohio. -103
ROOM AND BOARD for boys, Large,
comfortable rooms and excellent meals
at a reasonable price. Conveniently located.
Phone 1311M at 1135 Ohio. -854
Robert Mann, and Jack Griffin of Hutchinson are weekend guests at the Alpha Tau Omega houses.
Weekend guests at the Gamma Phi Beta house are Jane Benton and Virginia Burgess both of Kansas City, Mo.
Castella Childers, c'37, spent the weekend at Carnett.
Mrs. H. E. Hamm, Kansas City, Mo., was luncheon guest at the Delta Zeta house Friday.
☆ ☆ ☆
Cancellor E. H. Lindley was in Kansas City Friday and Saturday attending the Progressive Education meetings
BOARD AND ROOM
KEYS
Beta Theta Pi announces the pledging of Thomas Trigg of Eureka.
☆ ☆ ☆
Jean McKeen, c'uncl., was a lun-
cheon guest at the Pi Beta Phi house
vestday.
BOYS: Newly decorated rooms, at reasonable rate. One block from campus. Access to sleeping porch. Phone 1127W.
Sigma Alpha Mu announces the pledging of Benjamin Brozen and Leon Dinkin, both of New York.
BOYS: Large room on second, single or double, three exposures. Only quiet people to occupy the rooms. Very reasonable. 1408 Tennessee. Phone 7103.
ROOOMMATE wanted in nicely furnished apartment, $8.00 for one or $6.00 each for two. Conveniently located to Hill or home. Phone 1131J. 1319 Vermont. —96
Ray Pruit, Emporia, is a guest at the Phi Gamma Delta house this week-end.
After a few promising spring days, winter closes in again—but lest we make a weather report of this let us haten on to more important topics.
Steve Hustin, Topeka, is a weekend guest at the Sigma Nu house.
☆ ☆ ☆
Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S — 920-22 Mass.
MISCELLANEOUS
Navy blue, of course, is good this spring—Mary Kay Dougherty, Theta, is a shining example of the smartness of navy blue. Those T-strap sandals in navy patent and fabric combinations are all the rage. Several of these have been seen around and they are really very flattering.
Virginia Hardesty, c'37, spent the weekend with her parents at Merriam.
Navy Blue's the Color . . . Mon Image . . . A Pi Phi Goes Blonde
TAXI
☆ ☆ ☆
TAXI
What They Wear By Patricia Lock, c37
CLEANERS
ROOMS FOR RENT
☆ ☆ ☆
Phone
9
MY YOUR SERVICE 9
Phone
☆ ☆ ☆
Twenty-five words or less: one insertion, 25c three insertions, 59c; six insertions, 75c, contract rates, not more than 25 words, $2 per month flat. Accepted subject to approval at the Kansan Business Office.
Navy Blue's the Color . . . Mon
Doeskine gloves now come in colors to match your ensemble—navy, red, light blue, green, lemon yellow—there is no limit to the possibilities in color schemes. You will want at least three pairs if you wear them all. Your dresses—and they are so cix-looking.
Streamline Hairdress
Continuing the navy blue motif—"Mon Image," one of the newest creations in perfume, comes in a long slender flacon with navy stripes that is charming indeed—the perfume within in subtle and pleasing.
We Call and Deliver
9
Hairdress for spring is trending toward the formal. Curls are short and numerous, in streamline effects cut close to the head. Speaking of hair styles, one of Mount Oread's most glamorous PiPhi, formerly a light brunette, recently appeared with her crowning glory turned to gold.
K E Y S
for any lock.
L night latch & padlocks in stock.
Door closers repaired.
Rutter's Repair Shop
1014 Mass. St.
Ph. 31
14th & Tenn.
Carolyn Harper, Theta, looked distinctive the other night in a smartly cut blue and green checked wool dress Mary Margaret Manary, of the Phi Pho lodge, has a black hat with the brin flared away from the face with quite a Russian air. Those off-the-face hats are flattering, especially to those who have "school girl complexion." Lillian Sands, we hear, has several new spring suits, in navy blue and green. Shrike Kroh, Thea Wine, seen in a blue taffeta outfit night. Taffeta is one of the newest fabrics of the year, and it especially smart in suits, either in combinations or in one fabric. Bette Cogor's green tunic with a collar of cloth of gold, is striking.
First Presbyterian Church, Ninth and Vermont streets, 9:45, Church school, 11. Worship service. Sermon themes "Does Our Religion Make Any Difference?" 7:20, Westminster student forum will meet at Westminster hall. Special speaker. Students are invited.
Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont street. 945, Church school. 11, Morning worship. Subject: The Grow-Up Forum. Subject: The Grow-Up forum. Herbert Mueller, the German
First Christian Church, Tenth and Kentucky streets. 9:45, Church school, 10:50, Worship, Sermon by Miss Ruth Mugrave, of Lotumbe, Africa. 7:30, Evening worship. Subject: "What is the Most Horrible of Sins."
First Evangelical Church, 1000 Connecticut street. 9:45. Sunday school. 10:45. Morning worship and sermon. 10:51. *True Blessedness.* 6:00, ELL. Subjects: "What the Sun." *What the Moon.* About Temptation and Sin.* 7:30. Evening sermon.
First Baptist Church, Eighth and Kentucky streets; 9:45, Church school. The University class will discuss: "The Essential of Good Citizenship." 10:50, Worship service. 6:30, Young people's meeting.
At the Churches
Triangle Episcopal Church, Teeth and Vermont streets. Sixth Sunday after Epiphany. 8, Holy Communion. 9:45, Church School. 11, Morning Prayer.
First Methodist Episcopal Church
Tenth and Vermont streets. 9:45, 10:50, Morning Worship.
Subject: "Mama in the Desert." 6:30, Wesley Foundation League. Subject: "Outlining a Christian Program for University Students." 7:30, Evening service.
Subject: "Wurzumwars and Newizerus."
First Church of Christ, Scientist. 1240 Massachusetts street. 10, Sunday school. 11, Sunday service. Subject: "Soul." Testimonial meetings are held every Wednesday evening at 8.
Second Church of Christ, Scientist,
Weidmann building, 83325 Massachusetts street. 8:45, Sunday school, 11.
Sunday service. Subject: "Soul."
We Open at 9:00 a.m.
Sunday Mornings
UNION FOUNTAIN Sub-Basement Memorial Union
exchange scholar, will speak on "The Educational Ideals of the New Germany by One Who Has Experienced Both the Old and the New."
Immanuel Lutheran Church, Tenth and Kentucky streets. 10, Sunday school. 11, Divine service. 6, Open forum discussion.
Trinity Lutheran Church, Thirteenth and New Hampshire. 9:45, Church school, 11, Worship service. Subject: "Forgive As We Forgive." 6:45, John Bekker, a graduate student from Russia, serves in the Russian Red Army. 7:15, Vesper-lerection service. Subject: "The Seat of the Trouble—the Cause of Simeon."
Unitarian Church, Twelfth and Vermont streets, 10. Discussion group. "The Beginnings of the Co-operative Movement." 11, Church service. 6, Promote August McGillum University student, will speak of his work with the blind.
Friends Church, Eleventh and Delaware streets, 9:45, Bible school, 11, Morning worship. Subject: "Christian Citizenship," 6:30, Christian Endeavor service, Topic: "Victory Over Temptation."
United Brethren Church, Seventeenth and Vermont streets. 9:45, Sunday school. 11, Morning worship. Theme: "The Gospel of the Sun of God." Evening service.
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SAVE with SAFETY at
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Special SUNDAY DINNERS, Drink and Dessert included, for only --- 25c "Where the student meets his friends"
Phone
708
Stutes The Best Place to Eat and Drink after All.
1031 Mass.
1
COME IN AND SEE OUR 1935 Display of
FRIGIDAIRES
Bell's Music Store
UNIVERSITY CONCERT COURSE Third Regular Concert
The Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra KARL KRUEGER, Director
University Auditorium, Wednesday Evening, February 20
8:20 o'clock
All music lovra will welcome the return to Lawrence of a great symphony orchestra concert. A program of brilliant orchestral music played by a great orchestra under a master director.
Seats Now Selling
$2.00, $1.50, and $1.00
SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS OFFICE
BOUNDNOR CURRER STORE
NOTE: At 2:30 o'clock arrangements have been made for a children's concert for the school children of Lawrence and vicinity. Adults may secure general admission tickets for this at fifty cents at the door Wednesday afternoon.
PAGE FOUR
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1935
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Kansas Team Wins Return Nebraska Cage Tilt, 32 to 24
Twenty Fouls Called in Lin
coln Contest; Ebling Is
High Scorer With
16 Points
The University of Kansas basketball team Friday night defeated the Nebraska Cornhuskers 32 to 24 on the Nebraska court at Lireohn. Ray Ebbing made him a make up for the Kansas total with his five field goals and six free points.
Coach Allen expressed that the game was the touchest, most bruising encounter for his crew this year, 20 foils being called. The crowd of 3,500 was unruly and booed even while Kansas were at the free throw line. The Allenmen showed calmness, how ever, making 12 out of 16 gift shots.
Coach Browne's men entered the court with the same determined fight that they showed in Lawrence last Monday, and in a few minutes made three shots equal three baskets. Noble played the first 16 minute at center. Wells replaced him as Kansas went into the lead and held the upper hand at the half. 13-10. Wells' fine post work kept the ball in Kansas possession.
Wilmer Shaffer returned to the line-up for the first time since his illness of several weeks ago. He replaced Ebling for the final three minutes. The box
Kansas 32
Bibling.g G FFT 5 6 0
Alfer.1 f 6 0
Alfer.2 f 0
Noble.c-f 0 2 1
Gray.g 0 1 1
K'p'm.ln.g 1 2 1
Shaffer.f 1 2 1
Wilde.s 2 2 2
Rogers.g 2 2 2
**Nebraska**
G FT
Leaseo f 1
Whitker f 2 1
r'senn c 1 1
Wlq'tg st-f 1
Parsong g 4
Porson g 3
Baker f 1
Win'n.c 0 2
9 6 12
Referee: Cochran, Kansas State
Gardner. Southwestern.
---
Men's Intramurals
Intramural basketball after resting Friday swung into action yesterday morning with 12 scheduled games, eight of which were played and four forfeited.
Leading off the day's play the Trumps "B" squared down the S.A.E.'s by a 55 to 29 tally. Not to be outdane by their collegues the Tramps "A" trampled the Wakurusas beneath a 55 to 8 score. There was no scoring deficiency in either of the Trump quintets. The Phi Delts and the Brewers both scored at least that ended with the Phi Delts winning 19-14.
The Jay Hawks' "B" team toppled the Phil Dit "B" by 20 to 9. Devin led the Jay Hawk scoring attack with a total of 12 points.
D. U.D. dicked out over the Phi Game in a game that was sparse in scoring. It wound up 13 to 11. The Kappa Sig "B" cages walloped the DU. "B" to the time of 33 to 4. The Kappa Sig's held their opponents to one tally in the scorecard and scored the honors for the Kappa Sigs by amusing 19 points.
In an overtime period the Independents nosed out the Jayhawk “A” hoopsters by 33 to 29. This game was probably one of the most interesting of the afternoon. The score was knotted at the end of the regular playing period 27 up and the Independents snagged two baskets to welcome冠军. Wager was outstanding and was high point man for the Independents with 16 points. He made every free throw he attempted which gave him eight points.
D. T.B. dropped a close skirmish with the Rock Chalk C* gang. Wamakenk led the Chalks with a total of 13 points. The final score was 26-19.
Phi Psi "B" "B" failed to appear for their game, KI P.A. fortecled to Kappa Pi, P.A.D. fortecled to Dai Chi, Dai Chi "B" fortecled to Kappa Sig.
The box scores:
Tramns. 55
G GFT
McGinnis 1 2 1
Hale 8 1 2
Keller 10 0 1
Morcey 0 0 1
Bercie 0 0 1
Wakarusa 8
27 1 5 Referee—Cooper.
Maturisma
G FTH
Brown 1 1 0
Day 1 1 0
M'C rmick 0 0
Unt'mn T 0 0
G F F F 1
Chambers 0 1 2
VvCleave 1 0 2
McClure 2 0 2
Roberts 4 2 3
Brown 1 0 3
Phi Delts 19
8 3 7
3 2
Referee—Vanek and Plaskett.
G FT 2 F
A.Dodge 0 1 F 1
Stoland 1 2 1
Shafere 0 1 3
Benson 3 0 0
Barbee 1 0 0
D. T.D. 13
Beta 14
G GFT
Wiles 2 2 0
Elmore 2 2 6
Olsen 0 1 0
Hedges 0 1 0
Hedges 1 1 3
Jayhawker Wrestlers Beat Nebraska With Score of $ 2 2 \frac{1}{2} $ to $ 7 \frac{1}{2} $
Rice 2 G FTF 0
Kipp 0 0 0
Tuke 0 0 0
Tuicker 2 0 0
Gurpeeny 2 0 0
Phi Gam 11
Kansas Matmen Win Meet
The Kansan matmen defeated Nebraska Friday night on the home floor, 22% to 71%. Douglas, Roberts, and Moore won falls for Kansas. Nebraska's only points were from decisions by Bennedy and Funkin and a draw by Hill.
5 4 !
Referee—Burkhead.
The summary:
118 pounds—Roberts, Kansas, won by a fall from Swanson, Nebraska.
125 pounds—McDougal, Kansas, deci-
135 pounds—Douglas, Kansas, won by fall from Green, Nebraska.
145 pounds—Draw, between Hill, Ne-
125 pounds—Douglas, Kansas, won by
sioned Smiley, Nebraska.
135 pounds—Douglas, Kansas, won by
145 pounds—Draw, between Hill, Nebraska, and Childs, Kansas.
briska, and Childs, Kansas.
155 pounds—Noland, Kansas decisioned
Sigerson, Nebraska.
165 pounds-Flasnick, Nebraska, decisioned Anneberg, Kansas.
sioned Aimeerberg, Kansas.
175 pounds—Funkin, Nebraska, won by decision from Tilford, Kansas.
Heavyweight—Moore, Kansas, won by fall from DeBrown, Nebraska.
fall from DEBROWN, NYACKA.
Leon Bauman, former wrestling
Leon Dumont, for the coach for Kansas, was the official.
Kansas Booing Not Bad Compared With Other Schools
By Ray Noble, c'37
Recently there appeared in the University Daily Kansas an article on booing at basketball games. Mr.E.C. Qiugley remarked that he was very surprised to hear so much booing at the basketball games on Mt. Oread. I whole-heartedly agree with Mr. Quigley, after witnessing a Nebraska basketball crowd I say that the University may well be proud of the way its students control their actions at the basketball games.
Yesterday at Lincoln in the Cornhuskers' field house from the time of the first foul which was called on Nebraska's team the crowd was in a constant bissing and booming mood. This crowd, estimated at 3,500, was a mixture of students and business men. Many were garmed in evening clothes. This is paradoxal. One would think that this class of society would be more cultured than to lower themselves to the depth of the wrestling and boxing fans.
Many claim that booing and hissing is one of the lowest forms of muckering. The word "booing" means rotten. What effect does this booing and hissing have on the twelve and fifteen-year-old boys who are praying that they may be basketball players some day? They believe that when the crowds boo the referee must be wrong or a robber and they add their vocal disgust.
Hissing and booing affects the local team because they believe that the referee is wrong and it gives them a perfect alibi. The visiting team is constantly under pressure on a foreign court, and this pressure exerted by a home crowd upon the visiting free thrower who has been out for some time in the sporting. The ball is out of play, consequently the home crowd should be courteous enough to be quiet.
Tramns "R" 55
Tramps G FT 17
Dicker L 0 0
Bratton 6 0 0
Brown 8 0 0
Lindsey 1 0 0
Metzler 1 0 0
27 1 2
S. A.E. "B" 20
G FTF
Marshall 0 0
Randolph 2 0
Randolph 2 0
Winters 0 0
Reeder 0 1
Allspaugh 1 1
Pruney 1 0
Pruney 3 0
Dunsel 0 2
Dunsel 1 0
Referee-Burkhead.
G FT F
Clay 0 1 0
Voor 1 0 0
Bud 1 1 0
Jones 0 0 0
Bridges 2 0 0
Widenan 0 0 0
Widenan 0 0 0
Kappa Sig "B" 33
9 2
D.U. "B" G FT F
Love 1 0 0
Love 1 0 0
G.Flint 0 0 1
G.Flint 0 0 1
B.Flint 0 0 1
Lloyd 0 0 1
Referee—Burkhead.
10 0 4
ind. 33 (overtime)
G DFFT
G DFFT
Piper 2 0 1
Glichtro 1 0 1
Wakeman 0 0 2
Wage4 0 1 2
Wage4 - 1 2
Jayhawk G' 6-1 FF 17
Hawks G' 2 FF 17
Deviln 6 0 1
Kline 6 0 1
Foy 0 1
Dickey 0 1
Referee—Plaskett
Referce—Siegle.
Big Six High Scoring Leaders (Up to Games Feb. 15)
Rock Chack C G FF'
Steele C G FF'
W'tm'km r 0 1 2
Hebron .2 1 1
Linley 0 0 3
Snaurr 0 0 3
Men's and Women's Rifle Teams Compete in Meets
G FFT
Warren 0 0 0
Wilson 0 0 0
J Haughey 0 1 0
Townsey 2 0 1
Haughy 0 1 0
Milton 0 1 0
Hasbaugh 0 1 0
2 0
12 9 5
G F T F
Rosebush 3 1 0
Shobe 4 1 3
Braden 4 1 3
Harper 1 1 3
Mason 1 1 3
Phi Delt "B"
Telegraphic Matches Held With Nine Schools in United States
4 1
jame
Pos.
School
The men's rifle team an average of 1.2 higher than the women's rifle team in the first telegraphic match of the season, this week. The men's average was 953; the women's, 941. The men's team matched against Georgetown University, Washington, D.C.; North Dakota Agriculture College, Fargo, N.D.; Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh, Pa.; University of Washington, Seattle, Washington; Indianapolis, Mo.; University of Georgia, Athens; and Washington University, St. Louis, Mo. Colleges with which the women's team competed were Maryland State College, State Park; and Indiana University, Bloomington.
Chevey White, c' 35; the only perfect score. High four of the men's team were Bryan, c' 385; Charles, c' 353; Calhoun, c' uncle, and Winton, c' 144. The four highest scores of the men's team were Beltz, f' 36, fa' 39; Thelmuth Humphy, ed '35, 97; Alice Cosandier, c' 36, 96 and Virginia Starr, ed '38, 95.
12 2 6
This week's scores are somewhat low due to the fact that the teams were not able to practice until Thursday because the building and grounds department was constructing a transformer behind the bullet stop. Sergeant Engle expects the scores to improve considerably within the next few weeks. The two teams are planning a series of shoulder-to-shoulder matches. The losing team will out of three win in the picnic in the spring for the winning cam.
G FT F
Ciles 1
Allen 0
Leon 0
Seyb 0
Douglas 3 1
Willock 3 1
Belman 2
Belman 2 0
Hedges 1 2 2
Elmar 1 2 2
The Women's intramural swimming nect which was scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday of this week has been changed to Tuesday and Thursday to avoid conflict Wednesday with the Kansas City Philharmonic Concert. The women will be attending Dinex instead of Wednesday training Kappa Kappa Gamma, T.N.T. Alpha Chi Omega, Sigma Kappa, Watkins Hall, and Kappa Alta Theta.
Referee—Casini.
Jay Hawk 29
D. T.D. "B" 19
13 3 9
Nas. No.
School School
Ebing, f. KU, 9 Games
Fowler, f. S.C. 9 Trees
Jorgensen, f. Mo. 10 Goals
Browning, f. Okla. 12 Strikes
Wager, f. Okla. 13 Strikes
Competey, f. Okla. 10 Strikes
Powell, f. M., 11 Strikes
Gill, f. M., 14 Strikes
Warren, f. Okla. 10 Strikes
Freeland, f. K.S.C. 9 Games
Free goals Throws Total Points
8 3 3
Hopkins Still Under Observation The department of English received word yesterday that Prof. E. M. Hopkins was still under observation at the Trinity Lutheran Hospital in Kansas City, Mo.
The Jayhawker swimming team defeated the Washburn team yesterday by a score of 45 to 38 in the Robinson gymnasium pool. Nichols, of the University swimming squad, was high point man, scoring ten points.
Jayhawker Swimmers Defeat Washburn Team
Three Records Fall as Kansas Wins With 45-38 Score
In the 150 yd back stroke, Jennings, of Kansas, swam the distance in the fast time of 1:54.5, the old record having been 1:56.2 made by Montgomery in 1834. A new record of 5:40.4 was by Nichols, of Kansas in the 440 yd dash. The old record of 5:57.3 was established in 1831 by Aohi of Kansas. Nichols is the present captain of the Jayhawk swimming team.
Three records were broken by the swimmers, two by Jayhawker stars. Kirby, of Washburn, established a new record of 2.36.6 in the 292 yd dash, the old record having been 2.37, made by Bowls of Washington in 1931.
The swimming squad will not be as strong as was expected for the remaining meets, as William Kester has decided to retire from the swimming field for the rest of the season because of his health. "Kester has been bothered with sinus trouble for the last ten days," Coach H. G. Alphin said, "and consequently he has decided that it is for the best interest of his health to quit swimming this season. His absence will be felt very much by the swimming team, and it means that we will have to work that much harder against the Kansas Aggies next Saturday."
The score of each of the swimmers is as follows: Thorne, 5; Miller, 5; Nichols, 10; Trip, 5; Raport, 7; Elas, 3; Jennings, 7; Kester, 3; and LaShille.
The time and position of men in the meet is as follows:
Diving—no entries by Kansas, won by Edmonston, Washburn; third, McArthur, Washburn.
meet is as follows:
100-yard dash—won by Kirby, Washburn; second, Tripp, Kansas; third, Edmonds, Washburn. Time: 2:36.6.
440-vd. Dash—won by Nichols, Kansas; Tiller, Washburn, second; and third Miller, Kansas. Time: 5:40.4.
Muller, Kansas. Time: 3:04A.
22d-yash Dasm -wired by Kirby, Washburn, second, Nichols, Kansas; third, Tiller, Washburn. Time: 2:36.
Medley Relay—won by La Shelle Kansas; second, Bennett; third, Weidling, Washburn. Time: 3:40.6.
Bennett Dawn—dash woven by Kirby, Washburn; second, Tripp, Kansas; third, Edmonon, Washburn. Time: 255.
400 relay - won by tripp, Kansas; second, Bennett, Washburn. Time 4.37.7, 150 Back Stroop, Kansaw, Jennings, fifth, Kester, Kester, third, Bennett, Belleville. Time 1.54.5
Send the Daily Kansan home
We Do Good Shoe Repairing — That's Why We Are Always Busy.
ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP
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FOR 15 YEARS
Our Station Has Been Headquarters for Students and Faculty FOR COMPLETE SERVICE DRIVE IN
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CARTER SERVICE
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I Give All the Credit to NEW YORK CLEANERS
"SEQUOIA" GETS OVATION FROM PREVIEW AUDIENCE
A lot of folks compliment me on the perfect appearance of my clothes at all times. I admit that my suits and ties look like I have my own valet, but the simple truth is that NEW YORK CLEANERS do all my cleaning and pressing.
"Sequela" (pronounced "See-que-yah") an unprecedented drama of wild animal revolt against man, was proclaimed as something totally out of the ordinary at its preview showing yearly scenes from a park it would. It will open there February 20.
According to "Time", "Sequoia" is something more than a motion picture It is based on the novel "Malibu" by Vance Joseph Hoyt and is a magnificent document that will bring out the better side of mankind... that makes the soul revolt against man's inhumanity to other creatures of the earth... that thrills the eye and mind with its beauty... that hypnotizes with its charm... that makes one marvel at its greatness in production.
Phone 75 NewYork Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPEARANCE
The story is built around the strongest friendship imaginable , a full grown mountain lion and a buck deer, who live in enemy encieses, live and love side by side.
The picture itself was two years in the making. It was filmed high up in the Sierras of Sequila National Park, where wild animals are the natural heroes and heroines of a highly dramatic world.
HANNA for RADIO
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Todd and Kelly Comedy Riot
Willie Wopper - News
"Desirable"
Tuesday - Wednesday
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This Matthews Gal Is Going to Give the Prince of Wales a Hot Race for International Popularity Honors. You Folks Who Enjoyed "42nd STREET" — "FLIRTATION WALK" — "GAY DIVORCEE" and others — Have a grand treat awaiting you in this one.
Added Gems — El Brendel Laff Spasm. Latest News. Another famous technicolor cartoon — "SUNSHINER Makeer."
A. 12. The number of sides in a polygon is equal to the number of vertices.
B. 13. The number of sides in a polygon is equal to the number of faces.
C. 14. The number of sides in a polygon is equal to the number of edges.
D. 15. The number of sides in a polygon is equal to the number of vertices.
70
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
O
VOLUME XXXII
NUMBER 96
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1935
on the SHIN
By JOE HOLLOWAY, c'35
The Hell Weeks Have Arrived . . .
Also Don't Speak to Jones
Week . . . When the Cat's Away
. . . Now Jerry Can Figure
Something Out.
There seems to be several "Education," "Hell," and various other kinds of weeks being celebrated at the different clubs this week and last. The most conspicuous methinks is that of dear old Delta Tau. The boys were muchly in evidence at the Hob Nail Hop last Saturday with the sake they bought their necks—two flights down and turn to your left effect you know. We saw Bob Allen with something tied around his collar and thought it just another quaint doodad from Esquire which looked like the devil but was very ultra-ultra, and really the last word. Calling the Gamma Phi house, one will be greeted with, "Gamma Phi Beta, 267; This is Hell Week and it isn't like Heaven." Which reminds of a course on the Greek language at Theta house, 259. Tell us when we want, and when you will arrive". Which all goes to show that the college girls are extremely clever and amusing in their educational weeks—and neither are the boys.
Overheard as the newly-blond Mary passed down the hall: "Well. I guess that now she'll get platinum by degrees." What's so surprising?
Speaking of "Weeks" of one sort and another reminds us that last week at the Pii Pai house was "Don't Speak to Jones" week. The brothers say that Bob Jones only stays in the house long enough to eat and then all he does is gripe about the meals being busy so every now and then they get tired. That's all right about his eating but how come they don't tell where he sleeps.
Fenad: A man who refuses to an accident hill of three dollars—says if it were something big he'd pay it but three dollars—no! What a chump
It hath been put around and about that when the kitty has gone AWOL the mices will gambol on the green—or words to that effect. Paul Rogers of Kappa and Sigma was to hop the train for Lincoln at 6 o'clock the other night but upon trying to do same, discovered that it wouldn't let itself be caught until nine. Back he ran to the Chi Omega house to surprise his lady fair, Mary Frances Martin, and spend a couple of blissful hours with her. He cowl hid in the great big success to make the kitty in the great white happen when she walked with the Delt with whom she'd just been dancing! Also 'sit said that Paul won't wear his pin because he's afraid he'll lose it.
We hear that Ed. "Skipper" Ash of Delta Tau is sporting a Kappa key on his vest. What a way to enjoy minor sports say we.
We could not help but admire the way in which Chevrolet White presented Jerry Gaut with the engineers token of esteem to their queen at the Hop Saturday night. Said White firmly grabs the mike in one hand and the slide rule in the other and proceeds, "This is a slide rule and we're giving it to you," or something like that—no bones about it just good old straightforward presenting. What with a few falls and an large extra crowd to step on everyone's toes, it seemed a fine party, and to say the least, we probably had some of you fooled on that queen business last week.
Heard an awful story about Gretla Garbo out in her front yard pulling grass out by the handful and throwing it on her head. When asked why she did it, she replied, "Oh, I want to be," Yes, Betty McLennan told it.
The Phi Gam's were in a bit of quandary the other night, Thursday to be exact. Several of the fellows had dates for dinner and the others, happening to see that there were place cards at each place, thought perhaps it was to be a pretty fancy affair and started jumping into their tuxedo-suit uniforms. A general hue and cry was raised from them as didn't want to dress and it was finally agreed to just let the whole thing drop. The place cards turned out to be valentines any-way.
Send the Daily Kansan home
KANSAS LEAD CUT BY AMES VICTORY
JAYHAWK TEAM MEETS SECOND LOSS OF YEAR
Ray Ebling and Dick Wells Contribute Only Field Goals of Game for University Squad
CYCLONES WIN 32 TO 20
Wegner Leads Scoring for Iowa State Basketteers With 10 Points
Standing of the teams
W 8 290 TEPS TP OP
Kansas 8 2 290 TP OP 361
Iowa State 6 2 750 361 289
Oklahoma 7 2 750 361 289
Missouri 4 3 343 361 289
State State 4 8 332 352 410
Nebraska 4 8 332 352 410
Big Six title hopes were struck with a sharp blow as the Iowa State Cyclones scattered Jayhawk feathers last night to take a crucial win over the University 32 to 20. The second place Iowans strengthened their own stock in their furious drive against the leading Jayhawkers.
The Jayhawk offense failed to function properly against the Iowa State tactics that kept the Allenmen away from the basket. Eleni, forward and high flier, was the only Kansas人 able to break through for field goals.
Wegner, Iowa State's star center, and Clowery, flashy forward, led the Celineon drive, with ten points and nine points respectively. Every one of the Amesmen challenged up at least four points each in the playoffs. The only key to the winners is to figure in the scoring.
Ebling led the field in total points, with four field goals and a like number of gift tasses.
The Amesmen set the pace from the first, leading at the half, 15 to 7. A Joyhawk rally in the second period failed as the Mets stepped away to a greater margin.
Couch Allen used all nine men whom he took with him on the trip, against the Iowa State first string that played the 'ull ferry minutes without substitution
The result means that the Kansas must show some real steam for their remaining games. The remaining schedule calls for double-headers with Kansas State, Missouri, and Oklahoma, while Kansas City, Houston, and Georgia, encounter two tail-end foes, Nebraska and Kansas State. One Kansas would less still leave the Jayhawkers in the lead, regardless of what Iowa State might do in its coming engagements. Two or more defences, however, would give the Jayhawks one opportunity to win Cy-21 combined up with two wins.
Oklahoma practically eliminated her championship hopes in her disappointment against Nebraska last night at Lincoln.
Totals 12 8 1
Kansas 20 g ft 1
Ebling, f 4 4 1
Oyler, f 0 0 0
Allen, f 0 0 2
Rogers, f 0 0 0
Wells, c 3 1 2
Gray, g 0 0 1
Shaffer, g-f 0 0 0
Kappleman, g-f 0 0 3
Noble, g 0 1 1
The box score:
The box score:
Iowa State 32 g ft
Cowen, f 3 3
Fleming, f 1 2
Wegner, e 4 2
Holmes, g 2 0
Cowan, g 2 1
7 6 1
Officials: Referee, E. C. Quigley, St. Mary; ampire, Henry Hasborr, Des Moines M.V.C.A.
William Utermohlen, c36, will be the guest speaker at the Freshman Y.M.C.A. Forum this evening at 7 o'clock in room 10 in the Memorial Union building. His topic will be "Magic Squares." The forum is composed of 25 members and meets every Tuesday evening. Philip Ruph, c38, is president.
Utermohlen To Address Forum
Bramar To Snook in Manhattan
**Banner 'to Speak in manhattan**
Dr. R. H. Beamer of the department of entomology with the Kansas State Agriculture college this evening on the subject "Modern Methods Used in Collecting Insects."
Sooners Defeated
Lincoln, Feb. 18—UP) —The Oklahoma Sooners lost to the Nebraska Cornhuskers, 24-32, thus probably eliminated Oklahoma from the Big Six title race. It was the fourth loss for the third place Sonoran. Whitaker led the Cornhusker drive with six field goals. The game was a rough one, marked with 25 fouls called against teams. Nebraska led at the half, 10-9.
Nebraska Beats O. U. With Score of 32 - 24
The box score:
Nebraska-32
71011
GFT F
Warren, f 0 1 1 Wahl'h'lut, f 0 1
Con'ly,f 4 3 0 Whilk'h', f 0 1
Nelson, c 2 0 0 Widh,g, f 0 1
Cobb, n 1 0 Widh,g, b 2 1
Browg, g 1 3 0 Parsons, g 4 1
Tone, f 0 0 Baker, f 4 1
Cobb, f 0 0 Hale, hg 0 0
Jays, c 0 0 Leavox, f 0 0
Count Korzybski Will Be Lecturer Here Friday
Will Discuss Semantics and Mental Hygiene in Auditorium
13 6 14
Count Alfred Korzbyski will lecture in central Administration auditorium, Friday, Feb. 22, on General Semantics and Mental Hygiene. He will discuss results of experiments. The lecture will begin at 3 o'clock, run for 40 minutes, with a 10-minute intermission, and then continue for 40 minutes more.
Count Korzylekji, Palish engineer, physicist and general scholar, is developing an important branch of study which he calls general semantics, being a study of language, especially with regard to its inadequacies in expressing the exact nature of the world which we live, of society, and of our
Some educators are recognizing that many of our words indicate a false absoluteness and inflexibility about things, causing the child to grow up with distorted, even socially harmful ideas about commonplace events and objects. They believe that these ideas should not actually affect them, if they do not actually cause, many emotional maladjustments, even forms of insanity.
Koryzkiy is author of "The Man-
hood of Humanity," and "Science and
Sanity," which have attracted the
attention of leading mathematicians,
biologists, psychologists, psychiatrists
and educators over the country.
The lecture will be of special interest to teachers, psychologists, psychiatrists, general physicians and anyone with a background in the problems and scientists generally.
Prof. Albert Bloch, professor of drawing and painting, will lecture this evening at 7:30 in the south gallery of Spooner-Thayer museum. His subject is the Karl Matt展 exhibit now on display there.
His work is an important aspect of a universal enlightenment in human thinking in general and his interests and his lecture are in no way involved in our contemporary political confusion. The lecturer is a member of the Washington University faculty. He followed him to this country, against his choice, where he has resided for several years, in N. Y., Washington DC, and Pasadena.
Prof. Albert Bloch to Speak
Professor Bloch is the first of a series of ten speakers who will discuss art. The course will be financed by the public school department of adult education. Miss Minnie Moooda curator of the exhibit and a professor appropriate exhibits for the lectures.
To Lecture On Exhibit at Spooner- Thayer Museum
The lecture is open to the public.
Greiner To Akron, Ohio
Laurence Greiner, '28, has been named advertising manager of the associated tire lines division of the B. F. Goodrich company, Akron, Ohio, company officials announced recently that Mr. Greiner will correspond for the Topaka Daily Capital and the Kansas City Journal-Post.
Oread Training School basketball team will play the Topka Boy's Industrial School tonight at 7:30 in Topka. Coaches from Oread and the Big Ten will accompany the Oread team.
Cast for Musical Comedy Given Out By Virgil Bergman
Choruses for Annual Production Start Practice Under Direction of Dunkle
The cost for "Hold That Line," W.S.G. A. musical costled by written by Barbara Bramwell, c'36, and Betty Ruth Smith, fa'mul', was announced yesterday by Virgil Bergman, director. Miss Bramwell wrote all but two songs in the presentation. Ms. Smith composed the other two songs, which she curried the early part of March in Fraser theater.
A chorus of ten is rehearsing daily in the Memorial Union building under the direction of Joe Dunkel. The chorus this complete costume changes.
The show is written in two acts: the first act has four scenes and the second act is one complete scene. The settings are being designed and executed by Virgil Bergman, School of Theater at Buffalo State. Who is this year's director of the musical comedy.
Paul Hammons, a football player, and Dorothy Anne Martin, as Linda, play the leads; they carry the singing part of the show. Bill Bracke as Percy, the college freshman, carries the comedy part. He specializes in impersonations.
Bernicia Brooks is playing the part of a night club hostess, and she plays opposing Brache and Charles Pipkin, in the part of Jimmy Trenn, a college
Louise Existon plays the part of Ruth while Barbara Gaul is the specialty dancer in the night club. Ruth Pyle and Ted North do a speciality in the show. The team works together for Kevin, the specialty and Jee Daniel also has a feature舞会.
Harrison and Bernhardt, the dance team that appeared in the Tau Sigma rectal last year, will do a dango.
Donald Dixon plays the father of Linda Fosdyke (Dorthy Anne Martin).
Other members of the cast are: Jack Stratton, Ruth Ester Purdy, Speakman Joella Brize, Preston Anderson, Theodore Sloan, Jane Brousius, Ripley Jean Luther, Gene Lileh, Jeffrey Griswold, Jerry Gautt, Margaret Love, Alice Denton, Mary Francis Butter, Lois Lipit, Mary Kretzinger and Anna Tomkins.
Miss Brannan wrote "Sauce for the Gender," a play that was produced here last year. It won a prize offered by the Poets of Kansas Club.
Attractive Issue
Of Sour Owl Will Appear
Wednesday Morning
The most attractive issue of the Sour Owl in recent years will make its appearance. Wednesday morning, aecordist will announce the business manager of the publication.
A new feature introduced in this issue of the Sour Owl gives caricatures of Hill personalities and short comment of their campus life. "Literary Larry" keeps abreast of the times with an illustrated quotation from Shakespeare.
Fiction in this issue illustrates fraternity life in general on the Hill and includes "Any Day Night," a short story of any fraternity meeting, "A Review of Hair Fraternities," in which various "lodges" come in for their share of criticism, and "A Tale of King Arthur and His Knights."
Numerous departures have been made from past editions, in an attempt to improve the appearance of the magazine. The cover, portraying a fraternity initiation, is executed in several shades of blue, and closely resembles covers used by Vanity Fair. On the inside changes have been made in makeup effects, typography, and appearance in general.
Survey for Proposed Underpass
Surveyors from the office of the state highway commission at Topena spent all day yesterday making surveys from the Kawai river bridge to a point north of the Union Pacific crossing, resetting lines for the proposed underpass for U.S. U-73, W-U. 40, and K-10. Construction of the underpass at this time is said to be contingent on the passage of President Roosevelt's public works appropriations
To Give Organ Recital Tonight
G. Criss Simpson, instructor of organ,
will give another concert tonight at the Grass Methodist Church, at Winfield.
This recital will be given under the aupuises of the Winfield Organ Club
Last night, Mr. Simpson gave a concert at the First Methodist Church in Lawrence.
Colonel W. C. Koerig will speak on the subject "National Defense" over station KFKU Friday from 6:05 to 8:15 p.m.
Kayhawk Club Drops Politics
Organization for Non-Fraternity Men, Which Joined With Oread Party in Election, to Devote Its Energy to Promotion of Social and Intramural Activities
Leaders of the Kayhawk Club, an organization for non-fraternity men, declared in an announcement last night that the Club was dropping its political affiliations to devote its energy to the promotion of social and intramural activities.
Miss Jennie Lee, British labor leader and former member of Parliament, who will give League for Industrial Democracy lecture tomorrow night at
L. I. D. Speaker
Jennie Lee Will Give Next League Lecture
Miss Jessie Loe of London, England, British labor leader and former member of Parliament, will give the next League for Industrial Democracy lecture tomorrow night at 7 o'clock on the Unitarian Church. The time has been advanced to 8 p.m., the audience includes the Kansas City music orchestra concert.
This announcement comes on the heels of a resolution which the organization adopted a few days ago in a closed session, attended by the active members of the Club, in which some demanded that politics should be dropped from their program. This resolution was an outgrowth of a feeling that has been had by some of the members of
Former British Parliament Member Will Speak Tomorrow
THE VILLAGE LADY
Miss Lee has come to the United States from Spain. This is her third year of lecturing under the auspices of the LLD. Her grandfather was one of the founders of the union movement and she has followed in his footsteps.
The speaker was graduated from Edinburgh University where she also received the M.A., and LLB. degrees. After teaching school for a few years, she campaigned for the Independent Labor party in Scotland. In 1929 she was elected to Parliament, the youngest member to be seated. In the next general election she was again voted to her seat.
Miss Lee has traveled widely throughout Europe in studying social conditions. In the fall of 1934 she was married to Aneurin Bevin, member of Parliament for the Labor party of Wales.
She will also speak at the moon luncon forum tomorrow at 12:30. If the afternoon she will talk at the Baptist church in Ottawa.
Lawyers to Hear Wigmorc
Famous Jurist Will Speak to Univer sity Students
Dean J. H. Wigmore, for many year dean of the Northwestern School at Law will speak to the students of the School of Law in Fraiser auditorium Friday. Feb. 22, at 11:30 a.m. Since many besides law students will doubtless wish to hear Dean Wigmore, Fraiser auditorium has been selected for the occasion instead of the main lecture room in Green hall.
He is a voluminous writer, his great work on Evidence being the standard authority of the country. Dean Wigmore's presence in Kansas City on Feb. 22 made it possible to him to arrange for a side trip to Lawrence. The University and the public in general are invited to hear him on Friday.
Dean Wigmore, one of the best known jurists in the country, is a graduate of Harvard. He was professor of American law for three years in the University of Tokyo, Japan, and has been connected with Northwestern University as professor of law and dean for more than 40 years.
the organization for some time.
Those who sponsored the resolution feel that the club can best further the social life of the non-fraternity men by centering their efforts on such activity.
Quentin Brown, president of the Kayhawk Club, made the following statement in regard to this action.
"The Kayhawk Club has felt for some time that its political activities were hindering its social and intramural program. For this reason and because many of the politically interested Kayhawks are joining a new movement on the Hill, a majority of the active members voted to adopt the
MYKLAND AND FIELD SPEAK
"their action is certainly justified in light of the odium of 'politics for politics sake alone' which has been only too characterize of the political activity of the United States, but in past few. years." -Lyman Fed, c36, member of Ondreat Party.
"I am surprised at the action of the Kayhawk Club in withdrawing from the combination with the Oreads. I hope that they will meet with the greatest success in the future in providing the non-fraternity man with some type of social position as I am stressed enough at the present time." Garny Myklar, president of the Men's Student Council,
resolution which definitely withdraws the Club from the field of political activity."
With this action by the Kayhawks, the question is raised as to what the Oreads will do in the spring election as the practice for the last four years has been for the two to join hands in backing a single ticket. The president of the Oread Party could not be reached last night for a statement. The resolution, as submitted by Wayne Pa. secretary of the Club,
The resolution, as submitted by Wayne Parcel, secretary of the Club, reads:
"In order to effect a better organization of non-fraternity men regardless of the political connections, to better promote social and intramural activities of the unorganized students, to work more effectively for the interest of the non-fraternity men in all啦, and to do away with the lack of co-operation that has developed because of political differences, be it enacted by the Kayhawk Club: That it, as an organization, shall take no active part in student politics; that it shall limit its activities in student government to recommendations to the governing bodies on the campus; that its members must take part in student activism only as a member and never as representatives of the Club; that this resolution be incorporated into the constitution in the proper manner as an amendment; and that this resolution go into effect upon acceptance."
Mueller Addresses Forum
Exchange Scholar Expresses Views on International Good Will
"The exchange of professors and students with other nations is one strong pillar in the bridge of good-will between nations" and Dr. Herbert Muster, German exchange student in this city, the Fireside Forum Sunday evening.
"Ither can not change my mind that we have to work with peaceful method's, clarify misunderstandings, and show the different types of outbook if we are to have peace and good will against the nations," the speaker remarked.
Dr. Muclier told of the educational systems in Germany as he experienced them under both the old and the new regimes. He also explained the development of the many youth movements during the World War which Hitler unified and organized into the National Youth Movement.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY,FEBRUARY 10,1935
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE KANAN
EDITOR-IN-CH1EF ... JOSEPH DOCTOR
--say that they had to study for finals. And yet those self-same people found time to go to the theater. Quite a few managed also to go to the basketball game the week before finals.
Associate Editors
Julia Markham Charles Brown
**SEHR**
Campus Editor | Harry Valentine
Make Up Editors | George Moore,
Herbert Rose
Sports Editor | Robert Patte
Sunday Editor | Eleonore Woods
Society Editor | Shirley Jones
Kachan Editor | Jorge Primavera
Athletics Editor | Ruth Stolina
Business Manager **F. Quentin Brown**
Assist, Business Manager *Ellon Carter*
Lena Watt William
Wattender Harvey
Carolyn McCalla
Gerald Horner
Carolyn Horner
Irish Olson
Milton Holley
Rutherford
Julia Markham
P. William
Joseph Doctor
Business Office K.U. 66
News Room K.U. 22
Night Connections, Business Office 701K L
Night Connection, News Room 707K L
Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
four times a week. Students in the department
school exhibit by students in the department
school. Subscription to the Press of the Department of Journalism,
advance, $2.50 on payments, single copies, $1.
$1.75 on payments.
Entered an second class matter, September
17, 1910, at the post office at Lawyers, Kane
KANSAS PRESS
ASSOCIATION
1985
TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 19. 1935
TWENTY YEARS AFTER
Who better could paint the picture of "Twenty Years After" than a man who has the honor of being one of England's most distinguished journalists?
The uprising of Europe, the eclipse of Democracy, the agitation and secret rebellion of Germany under Hitler, and many other affairs of national interest are fully understood by S. K. Rattcliffe, who will lecture here at the University Thursday evening. From every angle Mr. Rattcliffe has been able to watch the rise of the leaders of contemporary European history in his work as an English newspaper editor in India, and as an editorial writer in London.
Thursday evening Mr. Ratzleff hopes to explain his views of the European situation in an attempt to-bring a better -understanding of the other nations of the world in the minds of the students.
ANOTHER TEA PARTY?
Recently the Kansan suggested the creation of a board for student grievances whose function would be to afford a legalized channel of complaint between students and the Administration. We were not "set" on the idea, but advanced it as a possibility helpful in the appropriation of all worthwhile suggestions coming from sincerely critical students.
Since then governing bodies have met and failed to take notice of the suggestion, whether deliberately or not. We had hoped the student governors would consider the plan, discuss it, and offer some comment showing where they stood. But after all, maybe that is asking for too much; maybe the legislators were occupied with their financial reports.
In this so busy world of conventions and tees, we still think a plan can be worked out to provide for a student committee to hear student grievances. We are not preoccupied with the notion of the grievences board, just anxious to see the thing tried.
SPECTATORS, NOT SPORTS?
The charge has often bee made that Americans do not care to participate actively in sports. We are told that we are a people who like to sit up in the gallery and get our thrills second-hand while expert and courageous professional athletes (true of the University also) give a scientific exhibition of their prowess.
The recent cold weather prior to and during the final examinations rather confirmed those charges. On Potter lake during the around-zero weather, one might rightfully have expected to see gay groups of college men and women ice-skating. Instead, the little lake was deserted most of the time except for a few town boys and girls too young to be super-sophisticated.
Some students will immediately
Other students will say that we are dead game sports because the University of Kansas has one of the most extensive intramural programs in the United States. This fact merely illustrates, however, our American love of belonging to something big. Probably every student on the Hill has at some time or other spent a strenuous week pitching horseshoes for dear old Fi Loo, but how many of us get out and play some game in our spare time for the pure fun of it? Are we Kansans just spectators in the realm of sports?
COMMENTS
-By the Editor
BUSINESS IN BOOING
If the right to boat at an athletic contest were denied the spectators, many would not go to the games. Some moronic individuals take greater pleasure in adding to the discomfort of players and officials by hissing and booing than they do in watching the sport itself. Such degradation is catching, and it is not hard to turn a perfectly polite and courteous crowd into a mob of howling gallery-ites such as are seen in the fifty cent seats at prize fights.
Kansans should take precautions against building up a spirit like that of Nebraska. One of the favorable impressions Kansan always leaves with visitors is its genuine sportmanship and courtesy. The loss of this reputation would be a loss that the University could no stand.
CAMPUS ACTIVITY
Activities are practically stumblin over one another of the campus the semester. Many organizations have projects to be worked out and others are busy creating new ones. W.S.G.A. has started the ball rolling toward cleaning up the dormitories in a partial representation which they hope will eliminate the combine evil.
The Memorial Union operating committee has kept in line with the general progress by planning extensive improvements in the Union building.
Russell Wiley continues his successes of last semester by arranging a band festival on the campus that will bring famous band leaders, musicians, as
Steel Key is well up in the list of professional activities with their Engineers "Hall of Fame" and their education radio program.
Rumor has it that there will be something of a shake-up in men's politics this year, which certainly will not be out of place.
All in all there is considerably doing for a spring semester. There is no reason why students should not be able to find interest in extra-curricular activities.
NOTES ON MEASLES
The present measles plague is getting to be a nuisance. It is nothing more than an insult to collegiate dignity, being as measles are a children's disease. Perhaps there are those who will maintain the measles have now found their rightful field. At any rate, many of us are sitting around like condemned men waiting to see if they will strike us. If they strike us we will not seek to root in pest house. If they do not, then we will go on waiting just the same, keeping our affairs in order so that in case we are stricken we can go immediately to the hospital.
M
ROCK --- CHALKLETS Conducted by R.J.B.
The Haptimum jury has been offered a stage contract. It is a great idea. Let them go on the stage and let Ena Fera wrote all the advance publicity and the set just to get some more critiques from the ironical pen of Miss Fearen.
Page Mr. Hears! Down in Missouri a town has gone Red with a vengeance. All optimists must wear red ties for two days. Mr. Hears could take this opportunity to stop picking on college boys and choose someone his own size.
Those boys down at Oklahoma, (reformatory, not University) picked a nice day for their prison break
Bell Memorial Hospital is scheduled to get 80 more beds. Let's see, isn't that approximately the same number of patients beded up there at the first of the semester?
Siam's king, besides being a real
OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
Vol. AXXII Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2005 No.48
Noticees due at Cancellor's office at 3 p.m. preceding regular publication days
and 11:38 a.m. on Saturday for Sunday issues.
There will be a meeting of the Aeronautical Club this evening at 7:30 in the mechanical Laboratory. Any engineers interested in any of the branches of aeronautics are invited. GORDON GUISE, Secretary-Treasurer.
AERONAUTICAL CLUB:
No. 96
Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1935
The faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will meet this afternoon at 4:30 in the auditorium on the third floor of the Administration building
COLLEGE FACULTY:
Book exchange will be open until Wednesday noon to pay off and return
noid books. PRESTON COLE, Manager.
ENGLISH MAJORS:
ENGLISH MAJORS
Mr. S. K. Ratcliffe will speak to the English majors and others interested on "The Centenary of Charles Lamb" at 3:30 Thursday afternoon in Fraser theater.
W. S. JOHNSON.
ENGINEERING BOOK EXCHANGE:
Applications for places on the Kansas Relays Committee must be turned in to room 105 Robinson gymnasium by Wednesday, Feb. 20. Applications must be in writing and should state all qualifications.
FRESHMEN:
FRED BACHELOR, Senior Manager, Kansas Relays Committee.
Kappa Phi will have a regular meeting this evening at 6:30 at the home of
Deila 1290 Tennessee street
LE CERCLE FRANCAIS:
KAPPA PHI:
Le Cercle France se reunite mercredi a quatre heures et domine dam la salle 306 Fraser hall. Tous ceux qui parient française sont invites.
MID-WEEK DANCE:
The regular mid-week dance will be held Wednesday night at 7 o'clock in the Memorial Union ballroom. All students must present their identification cards, Graduates and former students living in Lawrence, not enrolled in the University, may obtain a dressing to the mid-week舞会 for the Memorial Union office.
Miss Jennie Lee, prominent English lecturer and politician, will speak at a noon forum in the caterra Wednesday at 12.30.
ELIZABETH ALLDERDICE, Secretary.
NOON LUNCHEON FORUM:
FLAVIA HAY, Secretaire.
NANCY CALHOUN, OTIS BRUBAKER, Chairmen.
BILL COCHRANE, Manager.
Psychological examinations for students registering late and students failing to appear at last examination will be given in room 15. Fraser hall at 9 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 23. This will be the last examination before the summer session.
A. H. TIINNEY.
THETA EPSILON;
Theta Epsilon will meet this evening at 6:45 o'clock at 1124 Mississippi street. Mrs. Don Carlos will be guest speaker. All members are expected to be present.
MARY LOUISE BELTZ, President.
W. S. G. A.;
The regular meeting of the W.S.G.A. will be held tonight at 7 o'clock in room 5, Memorial Union.
PEGGY SHERWOOD, President.
name in the news, has only 30 or 40 serv-
nants. When he travels he gaves gavage-
and roughs it with ten motor cars. At
twelve o'clock he then having
"our-and-twenty umbrellas."
Drought causes more damage than oats, says Odgen S. Jones, KERC Surviving geologist. We are glad that it is stitched, and our happiness can be still arthered if some one will settle that old fire and water" argument.
American
The Associated Press gives us the information that Manhattan boasts 150,000 of measles, which proves at least indirectly that Kansas University is much more grown up than the Agricultural college.
CAMPUS OPINION
Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the University Daily Kaman. Articles over 200 words in length may be published only on their own or in submissions on any occasion that are invite
Good things to the front may offer congratulations as to the way the new Kansan threw aside the old "be kind to the birds" attitude and got right down to bed rock and opened some serious worthwhile campaigns for the reform of campus institutions. And because we liked it . . . here comes the brick . . . we're wondering why the petering out? After picking on the poor half-dead Owls who have been in the dark all these years as to their why and wherefore, couldn't you dig into anything bigger? Having sent fire into the ranks of the already hard-air-reorganization W.S.G.A.'s, couldn't you
All in the course of one communication we would offer, if we may, a bouquet, a brick, a suggestion.
—they say at the Beau Bell—Art just plain Red and Black down on the farm —Brick Red and Black —in Higgins' American Drawing
DRAWING INKS
Editor Daily Kansan:
Inks. A great pair to draw on.
Collage give a full house that you can always bank on.
Collage give a full house that you can always bank on.
271 Nihil St. . Brooklyn, N.Y.
"Rouge
et Noire"
MEDICAL CHEMISTRY CO., LTD.
CHINA
1938
HIGGINS'
shift your aim and take in the big game?
In other words . . . and herein we suggest . . . why not pay some attention now to that venerable organization referred to as the Men's Student Council? To put it frankly—they need it, and we would like it.
To begin with, if there is to be a survey made of the work of this group it needs must be started quickly, for there looms already the approach of that always dreaded period of spring known as "the campaign-time." Campaigns in the past have been hot and bloody, to say the least, and certainly no student publication could carry on in the midst of one.
Of course, the old order passes and things may be different. No more do we have the smart political bosses of recent years. The student of politics might easily find in the history of campus politics a pair of bosses who in reality compare equally with a Vare and a Pendergast. In one of them, they had a party movement of a few years ago; the other brought his party back to power to hold it there so successfully for three years single-handed. And in
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each case, there ruled a most efficient boss. Phil Cook stood behind scenes while a Ripley, a Coleman, a Chaffee, and a younger Cook carried on the public attack. And a smart鸟 he was to beat the favorite old party so successive times a when, and smarter still to stay out of the limelight.
On the opposite war-front there appeared the names of a Bowen, a Hassig and a Sifers, and they carried on a battle that gathered up the remnants of the grand old party and put it back in power to stay for the last three years; but behind them was the fourth brother in Phil Delt bond who supplied the brains, the finesse, the drive which put it over. Of the two bosses, perhaps Phil McKnight was the more powerful because he stayed in control longer and because his wife the more numerous victories.
That there were others in the headlines during those years is true . . . there were even council presidents, a Strobel, a Denton, a Schumacher, and a Riesen. For after all those two bosses, the Phils, accepted some of the franking privileges but were too smart to take all public control. And so there's some history. Mr. Russell can draw some conclusions as to the present top-heavy set-up in men's political circles, we're most happy to have been of assistance. At least we've seen some of your fire; let's have some here.
Yours for more reform.
A Sealer.
at the
Delicious Milk Shake and Ham Salad Sandwich
UNION FOUNTAIN
Sub-Basement Memorial Union
Learn to Dance----
NOW for the SPRING PARTIES
---
TURKISH
Special Attention Given Beginners
Advanced Dances-Private Lessons
DANCE STUDIO
A Complete Lines of CANDLES
Table Decorations
Phone 621
Beautiful Spring Flowers:
snapdragons, colonial bouquets, sweet peas beautifully arranged and reasonably priced.
Ward's Flowers "Flowers of Distinction"
27
Stick figure holding a sword.
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Jessie Matthews in "Evergreen"
1935's biggest Musical Comedy Triumph. "New York critics acclaim 'The Female Fed Adastra'—Another "Gay Divorce"
Coming THURSDAY for the Week-end
It Tops Them All --- A Laff Packed Thriller of the fighting
Cones That've Never Been Tamed by Guns or Dames.
"Devil Dogs of the Air"
CAGNEY - O'BRIEN - McHUGH
5
党 小如心 心平如意
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1935
PAGE THREA
42
K
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Hill Society
Before 5 p.m, call KU. 25; between 7:30 and
8:30
Beta Theta Pi Holds Initiation
Beta Theta Pi held formal initiation services at the chapter house Sunday afternoon for the following pledges: Harold N. Sheafar, 'cunel; Emil A. Wienckee, 'c38; Mark Dodge, 'c38; Thomas B. Robinson, 'c38; John Weaver McCaslin, 'c38; Thomas S. Brownell, 'c1um; William T. Graham, 'c1um; Grant O'Connor, David Benjamin Marshall, 'c38; Frank Lee Barbee, 'c1um; Thomas G. Orr, 'c2um; Robert H. Burtin, 'c1um; James Rickenbacher Dedge, 'c38; James A. Schwartz, 'c38; Samuel Mellinger, 'cunel; Charles McCormick Crouch, 'cunel.
who attended the initiation as guests were: Dr. T. G. Err, J. A. Guthier Dr. J. B. Cowherd, Dr. David B. Robinson, Dr. G. Graham, Ed Sharpe, Nichol Mrs. H. Merle Smith, all of Kauai City, Fred Morris, Julia Hill, Herbert C. Allpinn, and Robert C. Rankin, Charles Styder of Leavenworth, and Charles Styder of Leavenworth.
Cutlip-Reuter Wedding
Miss Irene Cutilp, 29, and Mr. Kurt Reuter, a former student at the University, were married at the Delta Zeta house at 430 4th clock Saturday afternoon. The Rev. T. H. Anzman, pastor of the Church, performed the ceremony.
Stierling Cutlip, brother of the bride, gave the bride in marriage, and Stella Cutlip, sister of the bride was mired Mr. Fried Mills, 31, attended the groom.
"The Bridal Chorus" from Lohengrin, and Meredidson's "Wedding March" were played by Miss Marigold Hall of Fairmont, Neb.
Out-of-town guests at the ceremony were Mrs. Taylor Cutlip of Kusan City Mo.; Mrs. Rutter of Enterprise, and Miss Katherine Morris.
Mr. and Mrs. Reuter will make their home in Kansas City, Mo.
Alpha Xi Delta held election of officers last night for the spring semester. Those elected were: President, Nola Stark, cil; vice president, Florence Dell, c36; secretary, Roberta Millay, f3; treasurer, Hazel Riaz, c36; historian, Margaret Louis Countt, cil; and marshal, Lorne Lyrine, fa36.
☆ ☆ ☆
Sunday dinner guests at the Chi Omega house were Miss Florence Black, Miss Wealthy Babech, assistant professors of mathematics; Mrs Lou Bryant Chuck Taylor, and Ed Jewett, all of Wichita.
A regular meeting of Rhadmanthi poetry club, was held Sunday afternoon in the Green Room. The time was spent reading poetry written by some of the members. Plans were discussed to be carried out during the year.
Dinner guests at the Alpha Tau Omega house Sunday were: Skirley Jones, c38; Henk Krug, c47; Martin J. Stockmann, c18; katherine Fay, c36; Vigil Crook, c18c; Carolina High, c38; Barrie Lea, c20; Helen Callan of Leaventhower.
ku
Guesta at the Triangle house this weekend were Ed Hubbard, Topkapi Ivani Ivan Shakola, Osakaian; Billowen Macmurray, Lawrence; Kenneth Kern, Brown; Mirai Mora, Mrs. Mirai Mora, Mrs. C.B. Riboda and their daughter, Martha, all of Kansas City, Mo.
Thesis Epstein, Baptist church sora-
ry, will meet at 6:45 on tuesday at 1124
Mississippi street. Mrs. H.E. D. Caro-
nell will be the guest speaker. Mary
Louise贝茨, fax 38, president, urges all
members to be present.
Guests at the Kappa Sigma house Sunday for dinner were: Barbara Bromwell, c*38; Marjorie Wahl, c*38; Mary Francis Martin, c*38; and Jimm Hitt, c*38.
Kappa Eta Kappa, professional electrical engineering fraternity, will have a smoker for all electrical students taught at 7:30 d'clock.
Weekend guests at the Ala Tuna Omme house were Karl Telfe of Giard, Fred Shiner of Giard, Fred Shiner of Springs, Jack Griffin, both Botthe of Hutchinson.
Dinner guests at the Delta Zeta house Sunday noon were Rosa Lee Corridad and Margaret Wolfe, both of Kansas City, Mo.
Dinner guests at the Delta Chi house Sunday were; Mr. and Mrs. Pooh Fraser of Lawrence; Wallen Rice, and Doris Delan c. 37.
Guests at the Delta Tau Delta house Sunday for dinner were Mr. and Mrs, S. C. Wiles of Mackays and Alice Team, c38.
Jane Benton of Kansas City, Mo, is a guest at the Gamma Phi Beta house this week.
The Mid-Week varsity from 7 to 8 tomorrow night will again have a stag limit of 200.
Jimmie Hughes, 'C53, was a guest at the Gamma Phi Betu house Sunday for dinner.
Walter Leapham, b. 1935, was a dinner guest at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house night noon.
KEELER'S BOOK STORE
BOOKS
WALL PAPER
PICTURE FRAMING
Earl Woodworth of Corning was a guest at the Phi Delta Theta house Sunday for dinner.
Art Inman was a weekend guest at the Kappa Sigma house.
Triangle announces the pledging of Conley Stewart of Kansas City, Mo. Lunchcon guests at the Sigma Phi Epsilon house yesterday were Mrs. Hepten Shanks and Mr. J. H. Kaylor, both of Kansas City, and Mr. Donald Norris. Dodge City.
OFFICE SUPPLIES
LOOSE LEAF FILLERS
GREETING CARDS
--of Piano Will Play For Spanish Club
☆ ☆ ☆
PHONE K.U.66
Houses Russell, f134, of Great Bend, b
a guest at the Gamma PBi beta house
She has been attending S.M.U. at Dallas
Texas, on a sorority scholarship.
CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR SALE
PHONE K.U. 66
WILL SELL $40, 1935 Philco All-wave
tube Baby Grand radio for $30.
1218 Mississippi or phone 1338. -$98.
BOARD AND ROOM
ROOM AND BOARD for Boys. If dis satisfied try our meals. You will like them. Price reasonable. Desirable location. 1135 Ohio. -103
ROOMS FOR RENT
ROOMMATE wanted in nicely furnished apartment, $8.00 for one or $3.00 each for two. Conveniently located to home, Phone 113141, 113196 Venom.
BOYS: Newly decorated rooms, at reasonable rate. One block from campus Access to sleeping porch. Phone 112TW.
LOST AND FOUND
FOUND: Keuffel & Esser beginner's slide rule. Call at Kansan office.
MISCELLANEOUS
Night latch & padlocks in stock Door closers repaired.
Alpha Delta Pi announces the engagement of Iris Oslo, '25, to John Lips, l'23. Mr. Lips is a member of Pi Kappa Alpha.
Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S — 920-22 Mass.
CLEANERS
KEYS for any lock.
Rutter's Repair Shop
1014 Mass. St.
Ph. 319
TAXI
14th & Tenn
Phone 12-987
Twenty-five words or less: one insertion, 25c three insertions, 50c; six insertions, 75c, contract rates, not more than 25 words, $2 per month flat. Accepted subject to approval at the Kansan Business Office.
☆ ☆ ☆
Phone
We Call and Deliver
9
MYOURSERVICE
Mr. F, Q. Wilson of Abilene, was in Lawrence Sunday visiting his son, France Wilson e, 37.
Phi Mu Alpha announces the pledging of Max Murphy, c'35, and Dorsy Hancs. c'38.
☆ ☆ ☆
Phone
Chi Omega calls the engagement of Louise Jarbo, c'25, to Mr. M. W. Everly, b'35. Mr. Everly is a member of Sigma Nr fraternity.
9
Mrs. Ralph Baldwin, Gamma Phi Beta house mother, spent yesterday in Topeka.
Candidates for membership were selected at the meeting of the Entomology club yesterday afternoon. Invitations were issued to Robert Stephenson, c;38 Charles Amey, c;38 Alice Smith, c;38 Wilbur Barber, c;38 Dale Lindsay, c;38 Bruce Glasse, c;37 Sibyl McDonald, g; and Charles Hemphill, c;37
ENTOMOLOGY CLUB SELECTS STUDENTS FOR MEMBERSHI
Initiation services will be held at the scheduled meeting of the club next Monday. Lyman Henderson was appointed chairman of the initiation committee, and Joe Hidalgo, Jr., was named chairman of the eats committee.
Junitna Stone reviewed the "History of the Louse" a humorous article which appeared in a recent number of the Atlantic Monthly magazine.
COLLEGE CROFTER'S COMPANY
GIVEN IOR FOR INVITATIONS
The committee appointed by George A. Fry, president of the senior class, met yesterday at 2:30 in the office of Karl Klozar, burglar of the University, to receive bids on invitations. After the hearing on bids, the committee voted to accept the bid of the College Fry's company, of Kansas City, Mo.
The final redraws for indoor handball were announced by Ed Elibel, director of intramurals, yesterday.
This committee composed of Orrin Shepherd, 3 hs., Emma J. Joosewey, 2 hs., Quentin B. McCoy, and 2 hs. will meet again later to decide on the type and style of invitations.
--of Piano Will Play For Spanish Club
Men's Intramurals
The Phi Dell's lead with the number of men to reach the final round by placing 7 in the redraws out of a total of 16 men. The Kay Hawk's are second with four, and the Beta's are third with three. The other two men are representatives of Kappa Sigma and Sigma Phi Epilion.
The drawings for the final elimination indoor handball tournament are: Randall, K-Hawk vs Dickey, Phi Delt; Kenyan, Beta vs Brown, Phi Delt; Packard, K-Hawk vs Epperson, Phi Delt; Morrison, Kappa Sig vs Benton, Phi Delt; McCain, Beta vs Chambers, Phi Delt; McKinnon, Beta vs K-Hawk; Williamson, Beta vs McClure, Phi Delt; Braden, K-Hawk vs McCov, Phi Delt.
Kansas Sanitation Men To Meet Here This Week
These first round matches should be played this week. Ebbel is very anxious to complete this tournament before the arrival of Carnival which will be held March 8.
TODAY'S BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
Today's basketball schedule: West court: Coe's "B" vs. Jayhawk "B" at 5:30; Ike, Ramlers, et al., Collegeans, East court: 5:30 o'clock, S.E.P. "B", Giang Chi "B"; 10' oclock, Triangle vs. Kappa Pa. Swimming meet for today at 5:15 o'clock. Phi Gam vs. Sigma Nu.
Faculty Members to Talk at Sessions to Be Held Feb. 20, 21, 22
--of Piano Will Play For Spanish Club
The eleventh annual school of instruction for the Kansas Water and Sewage Association will be held at the University, Feb. 20, 21, 22. The session is presented under the auspices of the University School of Engineering and Architecture, the Kansas State Board of Health, and the Kansas Water Department. One of the main topics of importance at the meeting will be a speech on "Biological and Bacteriological Relationships in Water Purification and Sewage Treatment," by C. T. Butterfield, Wednesday at 1:30 p.m.
KFKU
Today
Chancellor Lindley will greet the visiting speakers and guests in a talk Thursday at 1:30 p.m. Other members of the faculty to speak are: George C. Shaad, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture; Kenneth K. Landes, professor of geology; Robert W. Warner, professor of electrical engineering; and Herbert G. Alphin, instructor in physical education.
2:45 p.m. The American Novel, Mr.
Kenneth Rockwell.
2:30 p.m. Elementary Spanish lesson,
Clarence Christman, instructor in
Spanish.
STUDENT SPEAKERS TO GIVE SERIES OF TALKS OVER C.B.S.
The National Student Federation will present over the Columbia Broadcasting System a series of talks on current social and economic problems. We will be heard from 5 to 5:15 every Wednesday after morning start. Feb. 27.
6:00 p.m. Athletic Scrapbook, 132nd edition, Prof. E. R. Elbel.
APPLICATIONS FOR FRESHMEN REPRESENTATIVES DUE NOW
The addresses will be heard as follows: "Current Affairs and Raccoon Coasts." Jonathan B. Bingham, editor of the Yale News; "Practical Political Education," Kathleen McInerny, president of the Political Association at Vassar College; "The Student Peace Movement," Francis G. Smith, Jr., president of the New York University and editor of the Daily Princetonian; "The Academic Freedom Legend." James A. Wechsel, editor of the Columbia Spectator; "Unemployment for the College Graduate," Jean Ford, editor of the Hunter College Bulletin.
All freshmen desire to be on the Kansas Relays Committee should fill out their applications now. These applications must be in the office of E. E. Ribel, manager of intramurals, not later than 5 m.m. Wednesday.
Six freshmen will be chosen from these applicants to serve on this committee. From this group of six, four will be chosen their sophomore year. The next two year men will be chosen to serve. In the senior year one man will be picked to serve as head of the committee.
Print Glee Club Folders
Seven thousand eight-page folders describing the University have been printed by the Journalism Press to be distributed as an advertisement of the University, and one of the Men's Glee Club which started on its annual spring tour yesterday.
Chiapusso to Be Presented
El Atenco, the Spanish Club, will present Prof. Jan Chijapouro of the School of Fine Arts in a concert of Spanish music, Thursday, at 4:30 p.m., in the Central Administration auditorium. The public is invited.
Prof. Jan Chiapusso won the musical prize in Paris in 1911. Among the 36 contestsants were such famous pianists as Loginska and Schramm. Several of the judges were Cortot, Harold and Pugno. He came to America in 1910.
In 1927, he returned from a successful concert tour of Europe, having played in Berlin, Paris, London, Amherst and New York. He spent time in Holland, Belgium, and Spain.
The program to be presented by Prof. Jan Chapuisse will be typical of Spanish music. It will include: Two sonatas by Soler, one matey on Matia Albéniz, one sonata by Blas Serrano, two dances by Grandados, a tango and sedugilia by de Falle, Execution, El Puerco, Tinta, Malaga by Isaen Albener.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Approve Negro Ward Fund
Senate Committee Passed $200,000 Appropriation for Bell Memorial
An appropriation of $20,000 for a new nengro ward and clinic at Bell Memorial Hospital was approved at Topeka Saturday night by the Senate ways and means committee. Dallas Knapp, chairman of the committee, said that a bill providing payment of $15,000 would authorize the spending of $75,000 in accumulated fees for the building and fixtures would be presented early this week.
The new building will house the clinic and the Negro ward and will provide much needed storage space for the medical school and hospital.
The clinic and Negro ward have, in the past, housed as many as 600 persons at one time; the hospital and clinic care for the medical needs of $5,000 persons are.
Oread Secretary Is Back
Miss Marie Gilmore, 135, has returned to her position as secretary at Oread Training School after an attack of measles.
Frank MEDICO
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PAGE FOUR
TUESDAY,FEBRUARY 19,1035
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Tramp Basketball Team
Defeats Coe Team, 37-23
Sigma Chis Defeat Sigma Nus by Score of 34 to 31
In the feature game of the evening, the Tramps proved to be far too fast for the tall Coe team and won easily by a score of 37 to 23. This game was important in determining the winner of Division I, each team having lost only one game before last night. The floor work of Pierce helped with the running, and the shooting of Jones, crack Tramps forward was superb. The Tramps are now tied with the Independents for the leadership of their division.
The Sigma Chi and Sigma Nu fraternity met in an rivalry only to have the Sigma Chi's come out as a team. In 1935, at 33, Ahlby lead scoring with 17 points.
The Theta Tau quintet remained in the championship running in Division II by defeating Kappa Eta Kappa by a score of 39 to 12. Stout was the star of the game and caged nine field goals for a total of 18 points.
The A.T.O. continued its winning streak by defeating Piki Kappa Psi by a score of 33 to 19. Clement collected 12 points for the victors. However, the A.T.O. "B" team did not follow the example of their "A" team and drove Piki Kappa Psi to "B" "B" to 13 to 43. Bicket received the scoring honors of the game making 15 points.
The Rock Chalk defeated the Hawks by a score of 31 to 23. This victory puts the Rock Chalk team near to the leaders in Division I, namely, Independents, Coe's and Tramps, who are all tied for first place, each having only one defeat. Douglas Club lost to the Campus Raiders in a game which has no bearing on the leaders of this Division, by a score of 20 to 14.
In one of the games scheduled for
7 o'clock last night,
feited to the strong
G F FF
Schumr's 7 1 G
Merriam 0 1
Wm'ker 5 0
W'merk w 2 0
Scheyh 2 0 3
Stoller 2 0 3
Rock Chalk 31
Sigma Alpha for Sig Ep team. Hewks 22
15 1 5
Schrader G F 17 F
Stevens 4 0 1
Lindley 3 0 1
Dampter 3 0 1
Henden's 0 *
Referee: Warren Plaskett
A. O. T. **F** 15
GAMES G FTF F
Bubanbush 2 1
Mudge 2 1 3
Redman 0 0 0
Davies . 0 0 0
6 1 6
Filg Gam "F" **43**
G FPT
Steiger ... 0 0
Bartedes ... 0 0
Bicket ... 7 1 0
Bicket ... 7 1 0
Chain ... 2 0
Medit.lijh 1 1 0
Buzick ... 5 2 2
Referee: Bob Cooper
19 5
Douglas Club 14
Dong G F T F
Crum 2 2 0
Shaw.J. 0 0 1
Shaw.B. 1 0 0
Dalton 3 0 0
McKale 0 0 1
**Cupus Raiders 28**
Gart G FFFT
Gee 1 1 0
Gee 1 1 0
Miaer 2 0 0
Ogron 5 0 2
Clark 0 1
6 2 2
9 2
Referee: Warren Plaskett
G FFT G
Cole 2 0
Stout 0 7
Vount 0 6
Lamm 3 1 0
Wills 0 8
Wills 1 0 1
19 1 3
Hanla 2 G FTT 1
Oner 0 0 0
Howard 0 0 0
Browning 0 1 1
Heiley 0 1 1
Crouch 1 1 1
Jebens 0 1 1
Weiser 0 0 0
Howard 0 0 0
4 4
Referee: Bob Curd
G FT F
Clement 6 0 0 King 2 0 1
Rowell 0 1 0 Coach 2 0 1
Kirby 0 1 0 Johnson 1 0 1
Kirby 0 1 0 Johnson 1 0 1
Gough 1 0 0 1 0 1
Mudge 4 0 1 Brunwell 0 1 0
Mudge 4 0 1 Brunwell 0 1 0
Karater 0 1 0 Karater 0 1 0
15 3 2
Referee: Bob Curd
Sigma Nu 31
91
G FT F
G FT F
Pusey ... 0 2 0
Peebles .. 1 0 0
Smith.C. 4 2 1
Wells 3 0 1
Sizemore 2 0 0
Garmin 0 0 1
Jones 6 G FF F
Jones 6 G FF F
McGinnis 2 0 3 F
Kelly 2 3 F
Mornish 4 0 F
Pierce 1 0 F
17 3 6
Referee: Dwight Burkhead
Sigma. Chi. 24. Corr. 33
Sigma Chi 34 Coe's 29
G F FT Burnett 1 3 1
Donelan 4 0 1 Kelley 1 3 1
Thomason 4 0 1 Kelly 8 1 1
Mattner 4 0 1 Mattner 1 0 0
Woods 2 0 1 Masser 0 0 3
Sturgion 2 0 1
Muster 2 0 1
13 5
Final Intramural Scutes
Delta Upsilon 24, Delta Tau 7.
Phi Chi 21, Acacia 32.
Intramural Swimming And Wrestling to Start
Preliminaries Will Begin Feb. 22; Lettermen Are Ineligible
Intraclutural swimming and wrestling meets will jump into the limelight Feb. 21. Swimming preliminaries will be held Thursday, at 4:30; semi-finals will be held Tuesday, at 5:30; Feb. 26 at 7:30, and finals will take place Thursday, Feb. 28.
The events are 200-yard medley relay, 500-yard breast stroke, 100-yard dash, 220-yard dash, 100-yard breast stroke, 200-yard relay, and dive.
Men who have made a varsity letter in any sport in any college or university, and members of this season's varsity swimming squad are ineligible to compete. Each organization may enter three men, and managers of organizations desiring to enter should have their application in the intramural office not later than 6 p.m. Feb. 20, according to Ed Elibel, manager.
In last year's swimming meet, Phi Gamma Delta won first place, Beta
Theta Pi was second and Triangle third. Preliminaries in the wrestling meet will start March 5 with the finals winding up the Intramurk Carnival March 8. Intramurcal volley ball starts off on regular schedule Feb. 25 with two divisions in the play. Division I is composed of the following organizations: Ki P.K.A, Phi Gam, Sigma Chi, Kappa Sig, Triangle, Phi PaI and A.T.O. Division II consists of: D.T.D, S.A.E, S.P.E, Campus R. Phi E, Delta Chi, and Beta.
Each team plays each other team in its division and the two winning teams if each division play for the championship.
Intramural volley ball rules are available at the intramural office.
Tau Beta Pi, national honorary engineering fraternity, will meet tonight at 8 o'clock in the Memorial Union building.
Women's Intramurals
Women's intramural activity will reach a peak today with most of the intramural organizations entering into some contest. At 430 today in the gym Alpha Gamma Delta will meet Alpha Omicron Pi in ping pong doubles; 720 in half of the swimming meet will take place. Tonight Kappa Kappa Gamma, T.N.T., Alpha Chi Omega, Sigma Kappa, Watkins Hall and Kappa Alpha Theta will swim. On Thursday the remainder of the organizations will meet. The winners and runners-up in each event for both nights will meet Feb. 27 to decide the champions.
At 9 o'clock, Pi Beta Phi will play I.W.W. in the final basketball game. The Pi Phi's have won the championship in the sorority group and the team has lost to a sorority group. This game will determine the intramural champions.
Besides these scheduled matches ping pong singles are continuing each day. The first rounds should be played off by Friday.
Miss Ruth Hoover, sponsor of the intramural managers, announced that the intramural managers should come to the intramural office to get their pairings for the ping pong singles and doubles.
HERE'S BIG NEWS Tuxedo Suit SALE
—Starting Tuesday, Hart Schaffner & Marx and Carlbrooke fine Tuxedo Suits, reduced to the following prices—
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2
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
+
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXII
--on the SHIN
--on the SHIN
BY JOE HOLLOWAY, c'35
Goodness Gracious Joan, Don't You Know Your Bible . . . The Sayings of Rabbi Woods . . Beware the Sour Owl . . . Hell Week Hash
"Tis well said about the young collegiate that they know not their Bible—in fact they don't seem to know one when they see it. Lady Joan must have expected it to be printed in unbridled editions or something. Prof. Crafton, a member of the Society, knew, told all members of his class to look for something in the thirteenth chapter of Rub. Away they went to look in their Bibles (or rather, ones they could borrow from here and there). Joan looked in her own small edition and was amazed to find only the four original chapters of the book of Ruth. Thereupon, she read the first volume for larger volume because "hers had only four chapters in it."
Says Rabbi Rex Woods: "It's fun to be fooled, but it's more fun to know"—what?
Miss Riht Hooover has started a women's ping pong tournament, some of the games for which will be played in the main lounge in the Union building. Bill Cochrane reports that reserved seats are now on sale in his office, a free pair of binoculars is furnished with every ticket sold, come early and avoid the rush, and are shorts the correct thing in ping pong wear?
Note: "Industry is on the up trend," says Rabbi Kissel. "Alarm clock manufacturers are doing a rousing business." Sugar is甜 and you smell Rexy.
The weather of Springiness is getting to us all as is evidenced by the following drammer. A student was drowning blissfully in his chair while the prof. held forth at great length upon the thiss' and thats' of this gla and thata. Suddenly the prof, papped a question at the heavyshader thinker and then asked, "Who said the prot." "Well, where did you start missing out, and we'll start again from there."
The hospital will be able to look forward to an increase in colds now that the fraternities have initiated a few new programs, and we are around the campus with their coats open.
Of course we know that we flatter ourselves to think that this poor column is read with everyone's breakfast before they even start trudging to class, but we'll have to take a chance on that. We wish to warm the student body that this morning's chysters by thrown up by their chysters who will try to beat everybody out of 15 good coppers and give them a Sour Owl in return. The rag is full of mastly dirty cracks about everybody and should not certainly not be purchased, much less read. Editor Blowers and management Jack and the Pea Stalk Miller worked exactly two weeks before they both been drinking root beer when they did it—so what can you expect? Buy it if you must, but remember that we warned you!
Hell Week Hash! The Chi Omega's had a little serenade yesterday morning for the Delts. The ladies parked under the lad's windows, and upon hearing that the boys would like to hear a Beta song, they gave it to them. The boys say they've heard worse singing, but just can't remember where . . . , and even if it had been good, who could enjoy it at 'o clock in the morning? "Twas with much interest that we perceived an Alpha Chip ledger perched on the porch yesterday hanging on a pan and shouting to the world that it was five minutes after she had been expected. I wonder if she said she was doing as well as could be expected? Have to check up on that . . . The Chi Omega's also entertained the Sig Alph's at lunch yesterday. . Back to the Alpha Chi's, our advice to the fellows is to ask the little girl for her own pen when she asks you to sign her paddle. . . that wood is hard as hell on pen points.
NUMBER 97
Japanese Stencils on Exhibit
Spooner-Thayer museum is exhibiting 12 examples from a collection of 200 Japanese stenkins. These stenkins, which were cut by famous Japanese designers about 1783 to 1830, are for the purpose of transferring designs to textile fabrics, usually silk. They are very easy to work on, and the design it offers by a web of threads has which been pasted between two layers of the paper, making the design.
Students Improve Scholastic Rating For First Semester
Faculty Votes to Recom mend Fall Semester Seniors for A.B.
Degrees
Improvement in student scholarship was disclosed in the report of the reinstatement committee, submitted to the College faculty at its meeting yesterday afternoon. Fewer students than usual were found failing in their work, and a better proportion of those on probation were being reinstated.
The faculty also voted to recommend for the A.B. degree 33 students who completed their work in the fall semester and authorized a course in economic zoology to be given in the coming summer session.
The report of the reinstatement committee showed that in the fall semester only 121 students failed in more than 40 per cent of their work. Of these, 75 petitioned for reinstatement, and 87 were permitted to continue, on probation.
May Study "D-Graders"
Of the 109 students on probation last semester, only 47 failed to meet probation requirements. Of the 47, 23 were re-instated, 5 chances, and 17 were not re-instated.
In this connection, Prof. J. H. Nelson, of the committee, said that being on probation served as a spur to some students and suggested that some plan might be well devised to improve the scholarship of the persistent D-grade student, thus creating "funk out," yet making little or no progress toward a degree.
Prof. W, R. Smith reported improvement in enrollment procedure under the new rules, and said further improvements will be suggested.
Referred To Committee
The matter of eligibility of students on probation to participate in extra-curricular activities was referred to the administrative committee for study and review.
The following were recommended for the A.B. degree:
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1935
Earl Beverley Amos, Topper; Katina
Lene G. Anderson, Chanute; Paul Ern
Elest Black, Olathe; Ned Brendan Ar-
veson; Ruth Elizabeth Carpenter,
Louis Mo.; Ruth Elizabeth Carpenter,
Paula; Marjorie Elizabeth Chapman
Independence, Ken; Andrew Kinglesy
Dawson, Kansas City, Mo; David Ho-
sse, Bentley Bondale; Donald J.
Lawrence, Lawrence
Francis William Felsman, Lawrence (Haskell); Chester Howard Fischer, Kansas City, Kan.; Oliver Dean Fowler, Kansas City, Kan.; Independence chr., J. Independence; Kane Dill Gooke, Lawrence; Dorothy Heiderdast, Kansas City, Mo.; G. Rex Holmes, Prescott; John Wesley Horse, Jr., Lawrence, Miss.; Joel Topeka, George Angus Leroga, Toperpa
Lauke Lukens, Atchison; Sylvia Stuart Moore, Lawrence; Betty M. Neff, Spring Hill! Hdl: Nieman, Lawrence; George Straiker Rhodys, Perry; George Straiker Rhodys, Perry; Samuel Sass, Lawrence; Claude Marshall Scott, Lawrence; John J. Strandberg, Kansas City; Mo. Reed D. Worri, Pretty Prairie; Elizabeth Ann Wells, Pretty Prairie; Ralph Wooley Welf, Jr. Kansas City, Mo.; J. Parkman Wilcox, Winfield.
Union Buildings on Display
Cochrane Exhibiting Photographs of Recreation Centers on Other Campuses
The management of the Memoria, Union building is exhibiting a number of photographs of Union buildings all over the country which belong to the Association of College Unions. Over 25 colleges and universities are members.
The pictures show both the interiors and exterior of some of the buildings. The University of Kansas is represented as well as Pennsylvania, Ohio, Cornell, and many others. The exhibit is so large that only part of it could be posted. The remainder will be shown beginning Thursday, Feb. 21.
Prof. H. B. Hungerford, chairman of the department of entomology, will give a talk on "The Applications of Entomology to Pharmacy" tomorrow at the weekly pharmacy colloquium which will be held at 11:30 in the Chemistry build-
Student Unions were started in England at Cambridge University in 1815. The first one in America was Houston University at Pennsylvania in 1806.
Hungerford To Speak
M.S.C. Meeting Postponed
Because of the concert this evening by the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra, the scheduled meeting of the Men's Student Council has been postponed until tomorrow evening at 7:30, according to Gunnar Mkland, c. 35, president.
Dancing, music, science, and drama, both professional and of the Little Theater, will be represented in the appearance of Ted Shawn and his dancers at the University on Feb. 27, in what promises to be one of the most distinguished performances of the year.
Cutting of Wood Keeps Ted Shawn Dancers Fit
If one thinks dancing is necessarily a feminine art, he should visit the Shaw training camp where the master and his pupil train with the earnestness of football players. The schedule demands that they be out of bed at 7 and at the studio
From 8 until 12 they practice the lung-
Jennie Lee, L. I. D. Speaker, Unitarian Church, 7 pm.
COMING EVENTS
Today
Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra University Auditorium, 8:20.
S. K. Ratcliff, English journalist, speak to English majors, Fraser theater, 2-30
S. K. Ratcliffe, "Twenty Years After"
University Auditorium; 8:20.
Count, Korzilyski, Lecture, "General
Semantics and Mental Hygiene",
Central Administration auditorium,
3 p.m.
Friday
Jan Chiapusso, to present Concert at Spanish Club, Central Administration auditorium, 4.30.
Kayhawk Club Change Meets With Approva
Dean J. H. Wigmore, Addresses Law students and others, Fraser theater, 11:30 a.m.
Werner Favors Action on Political Policy by Barb Group
The announcement that the Kayhawk Club, an organization for non-fraternity men, would devote its energies in the future to the promotion of social and intramural activities and drop its political affiliations met with Dan Warren. The following statement was made by the dean yesterday:
"I think the need of such a club, divorced from political activity, has been a long-felt want on the campus. The intrusion of politics has restricted its universal appeal. I believe that the ex-communist group will allow for wider faculty cooperation."
Ed. Elfeb, director of intramurals says: "I'm pleased to note that the Kayhawk Club is centerring its attention on intramural activity rather than politics. I feel that there are a great number of unaffiliated men who should be participating in intramurals, but are not, because of the lack of leadership which such an organization as the Kayhawk Club could furnish."
Concerning the proposed social activity of the club, Paul Wilbert, social chairman, stated, "In order to further the feeling of comradeship and friendliness among the non-frametrien men in the University; we hope to sponsor a fund-raising event a quiet or two that will have both a social and educational purpose."
Several members of the University Peace Action Committee are making plans to attend a district peace conference at Ottawa University next Saturday. Representatives from Ottawa, Baker, and Kansas universities and possibly Washburn and Manhattan will participate in the meetings designed to inaugurate the machinery and publicity for better international understanding.
Bob Braden, intramural manager of the club, commented on the change in policy by saying, "I can see the possibility that more men will take part in the Kayhawk intramural program of the future."
The University Peace Action Committee is composed of 17 members with Alfred C. Armes, c36, and Elizabeth Caswell, gr., as executive secretaries.
PEACE COMMITTEE MEMBERS TO ATTEND OTTAWA MEETING
Band to Play at Carnival
The University band, under the direction of Russell L. Wiley, will play during the official opening ceremonies of the first annual Intramural Carnival ditch kita in the University auditorium. The program is a special number as a part of the program. The little German band will also have part in the program.
To Play Ping Pong Doubles Todav
To Play Ping Pong Doubles Today
Alpha Chi Omega will meet Alpha Delta Pi in ping pong doubles at 4:30 today in the gym. Women entered in the ping pong singles should play off their first matches before Friday.
In their space time they perform laborious chores which have been carefully prescribed for them, as such as chopping and sawing wood, repairing roads, piling stones, constructing a dam for a pool, grading, painting, cutting grass, cleaning lawns, pruning trees, planting progs, keeping the camp clean, and attending the needs of the commissary.
taxing, muscle-mauling, spine-twisting, toucche - toughening movements which form the fundamentals of dancing mani-
pose, and of tension, relaxation, and balance.
Shawn himself is the principal artist in the troup. He will have with him Jess Meeker, a brilliant young composer pianist from Arkansas City, Kan, and Dennis Landers, of Topeka, a brother of John Landers, c'38.
The coming of Ted Shawn and his company is an added attraction on the student activity book, and was made possible through the co-operation of the men's Student Council, W.S.G.A., an Tau Sigma.
Band Leaves on Six Day Spring Tour March 1
Group to Give Concerts in 15 Towns in Kansas and Oklahoma
Concerts are scheduled for March 11 in Humboldt, Chanute and Ponce City, Okla. On March 12, the band will go to Arkansas City, Winfield and Wellington. March 13, a concert will be given in Wichita and on March 14 at Prairie, Kingman and Hutchinson. On March 15, the band will go to Minneapolis, Coronado and Chicago, where they will give the tour, the band will give concerts in Clay Center and Manhattan They will arrive in Lawrence Saturday evening. March 16 at 6 p.m.
The University Band will leave on a spring tour March 11. This is the first concert tour ever taken by the band, but the plans are to make this an annual event. The band's L. Wiley, director. Two large buses will convey the 75 men making the trip.
The following program will be featured by the band: "Finale" 4th Symphony, Tchaikowsky; "Tannhauser," Wagner: "1812 Overture," Teknawsky; "Second Hungarian Rhapsody," Overschlag; Weber, the solists are Horst Thornburg, 'cunla, trombone James Van Dyche, 'fa3 and Paul Smart,' c'38.
Templin Sets Test Dates
Committee Asks High Schools to Nominate Summerfield Scholars
Prof. Olin Templem, chairman of the Summerfield Scholarship committee, sent to every high school principal in Kansas last week a request that he nominate some of the brightest boys for our class of Summerfield scholarships.
Preliminary examinations of the candidates will be held March 23, in 10 different cities of Kansas, selected to suit the convenience of the candidates.
About 30 of those who take the preliminary examinations will be invited to come to the University April 26 and 27, for the final examinations and interviews. The successful candidates will be announced about commencement time.
Russell L. Wiley, director of the University band, will be guest conductor at a band concert of the Burlington High school band, Thursday, Feb. 21, at 8 o'clock which will feature the high band members in Burlington. The brown is the director of the band.
WILEY TO BE GUEST LEADER FOR BURLINGTON HIGH BAND
Paul Smart, c'38, cornet soloist, and Frank Thornbrough, c'unel, trombone soloist, of the K. U. band will also take part in the program.
Band To Play at Leavenworth
The University band will leave at 11:30 next Monday for Leavenworth, where it will play a series of three free concerts. The first concert will be played at the senior high school at 11:55; from there the band will go to the junior high school where it is scheduled to play at 2:45. The last concert will be played at 8:00 p.m. in the Masonic Temple.
Rand To Play at Leavenworth
Mix Appointed State Botanist
Prof. A. J. Mix of the department of botany was appointed botinist for the Kansas State Board of Agriculture for the year of 1955, according to word received from C. W. Taylor of Abilene, president of the Missouri state master送 notification of his appointment as chemist on the state board.
Conductor
A. H. SMITH
Karl Kruger, K. U. graduate and director of the教授 Orchestra *w* llimpure programs this afternoon and evening in the Auditorium.
New Election Plan Bill Read to WSGA Council
Mass Meeting of Women Students to Be Held March 11
A bill designed for the purpose of changing the election system of W.S. G.A. in accordance with the vote passed last week was read last night before the council. The bill provides for the petition system of nominations and the transfer ballot system of counting votes. It will be read again at the next meeting, Feb. 26, and published next week.
A mass meeting of all University comen will be held Monday, March I, at 4:30 in the Auditorium. An open lecture by the treasurer, the treasure's report given.
Catherine Penner, c35, was elected point system manager to succeed Patricia O'Donnell, c36, who was forced to leave school because of illness.
The date for the Coed Hop was set for April 3. The Hop is an annual coed afternoon舞 held in the Memorial Hall sponsored by W.S.G.A., and W.W.C.A.
Bloch Speaks at Museum
Professor of Drawing and Painting Talks to Large Crowd
Prof. Albert Bloch, professor of drawing and painting, discussed the Karl Mattern exhibit to a capacity audience in the south gallery of Spooner-Thayer museum last evening. Professor Bloch's lecture was the first in a series of ten lectures on art given by members of the Fine Arts faculty. He praised especially the water colors of the exhibit and said that American painters have come to realize that a good water color can be as good as a painting in oil. Professor Bloch said that "the only way to learn about pictures is to look at them," and also that "painting is not an awful mystery but great fun."
The next lecture will be presented Feb. 26 by Miss Marjorie Whitney who will speak on "pottery."
Tau Beta Pi's Hear Clark
Professor of Sociology Believes Highe Income Tax a Solution
"Even in pre-depression times, between 69 and 70 per cent of our population could not save enough out of their incomes to insure old security," said Carroll D. Clark, professor of sociology in speaking to Tau Beta Pi honorary degree recipient William J. Gleason in the men's lounge in Memorial Union building last night.
In 1929, 6,000,000 out of the total of 27,500,000 families in the United States had an annual income of less than $1,000. At the present time the number of families earning less than $1,000 has been greatly enlarged," said Professor Clark. "Under our prescriptio the Clark under our prescriptio the Clark does not earn enough to save for old age or even to furnish themselves with proper medical and dental care.
"In view of present surveys, it would seem that a good solution of our economic problem would be a distribution of wealth in such a way that the income of families earning between $800 and $1500 would be raised $1,900. This could be accomplished by exerting a higher income tax and the stabilization of employment by public works projects," Professor Clark concluded.
Board Rejects Panel
At a meeting of the Kansam Board held Monday to select a publisher for the Kansan from a list of five names previously submitted by the faculty, the panel of nominees was rejected by the board and was sent back to the faculty for the addition of three additional names.
Orchestral Group Will Present Two Programs Today
Kansas City Philharmonic Is Directed by Karl Krueger, Kansas Graduate
The Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra with a personnel of 89 musicians will arrive in Lawrence today to present two programs, one for young people in the afternoon and a concert in the evening. The orchestra has been brought here under the auspices of the University Concert Course.
Karl Krueger, director, who is a graduate of the University, received his Master of Arts degree here in 1916. Since that time, he has become a nationally known musician and now ranks as one of the country's most esteemed orchestral conductors of the country.
The young people's concert at 2:30 in the afternoon is arranged primarily for younger people, yet will be open to others desiring to attend. The evening concert will begin at 8:20 and should attract one of the largest audiences of the season. Students will be admitted on their activity tickets.
The evening concert will consist of the following: Symphony No. 5 in E minor-Andante, Allegro con anima; Andante Cantabile, alicum alemae value; Value, Finale, maestro muestre—allegro vivace, (Tsheatkovsky). Intermission. "Nocturne Scherzo" from the incident music to a "Midsummer Night's Dream," (Mendelssohn); "The Moldan," (Smetna); Scenere from the "Rustic Wedding." (Goldmark) Overture. "Tannhuser," (Wagner).
The program for the afternoon will be: Overture; "The Merry Wives of Windson"; (Nicolai); "The Sorcerer's Apprentice"; (Dukas); "Ellegie" and "Walz"; from "Sorcered for Strings"; (Techahovsky); "Hussian Sailor's Daughter"; (Red Pop), from "Glare"; "The Flight of the Bumblebee"; (Rimsky-Korsakov); Polka and Fugue, from "Schwanda, the Bagpipe Player", (Weinberger).
Ratcliffe to Discuss Lamb
Noted English Journalist to Speak to English Majors
S. K. Ratchliffe, the well-known English journalist and lecturer, will speak to all English majors in Fraser theater, Thursday afternoon, at 3:30. Mr. Ratchliffe, who is lecturing in America for his twenty-second consecutive year, will have as his subject, "The Centenary of Charles Lamb."
Mr. Ratcliffe will arrive in Kansas City sometime tomorrow morning and will come to Lawrence in the afternoon. He will be prof. R. D. O'Leary for his day here.
Prof. F, H. Hodder, of the department of history, will preside at the lecture tomorrow night. There will be time for questions after the formal talk.
The time of the lecture was changed from 8:20 to 8:30 to permit those persons attending the Chamber of Commerce Mrs. Elizabeth Wattkins, to attend.
Aero Club Elect Officers
Restrictions For Membership To Organization Are Lifted
At a meeting of the KU. Aromatic Club last night the following officers were elected: Bdrink Brink, president; Bud Lucus, vice president; and Gordon Cuisse, secretary-treasurer. Prof. E.D. Hampson, professor at the university will be the faculty advisers.
The restrictions of membership to only engineering students has been lifed, and any University student who is interested in aircraft is welcome to join. The deadline for charter membership will be next Tuesday.
Last week the club was divided into the following groups: wind tunnel, flying, design, navigation problems, and engine service. Last night Frink appointed chairmen for each division. The club has at its disposal a wind tunnel, a glider, an airplane, and six types of engines.
The club will hold regular meetings semi-monthly on Tuesday night in the Mechanical Engineering laboratory at 7:30. We will begin Saturday morning, and anyone who is interested in aircraft engines is welcome to attend.
Graduates To Address Club
Talks by Lec Horsey, gr, and Wesley Schreder, gr, will be the feature of the weekly Chemistry Club meetin' o be held tomorrow at 4300. Mr. Hars, will talk on the "Polargraph," and Mr. Schreder will speak on "Urinary Calcul." Mr. Schreder will have specimens to illustrate his talk.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1935
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
EDITOR-IN-CHIEP JOSEPH DOCTOR
MARGARET GRIFFIN CAROLYN HARPER
Campus Editor Harry Valentine
Make-up Editors | George Morey,
| Herbert Morey
Sports Editor Robert Patty
News Editor Eleanor Watt
News Editor Danny Fry
Society Editor Shirley Jones
Jaffrey Editor Jaffrey Fry
Alumni Editor Ruth Stoland
Business Manager F. Quentin Brown
Aust. Business Manager Ellert Carter
Kansas Based Members
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William Decker
Brian McCalla
Rutherford Haye
Wesley McCalla
Carolyn Harper
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William Decker
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each. As second class matter, September
17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, KS.
WATES PRESS
ASSOCIATION
1936 S.E.
42ND ST.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1935
SWAN SONG
The notice served by the Kayhawk club Monday leaves no doubt that the partnership of Oreads and Kayhawks is dissolved. What might be more nearly to the point, however, is that the Kayhawk leaders have taken their name out of the combine, but the self-same yen for politics that has kept the independent leaders going through a half dozen spring political campaigns will probably mean the beginning of new alliances, new partnerships, and new platforms.
This act is the first of the annual rumblings along the political front. New combines may rise to take the place of the old. Perhaps it will be the Oreads alone, or some entirely new combination of fraternities and independents, or independents alone, that will rise to take the place of the old Oread-Kayhawk combine. The Pachae-amches will await that verdict.
The Kayhawks have announced their purpose to withdraw from the muck of politics to raise themselves to a laudable level—social and athletic activities. Their going creates a tremor, but little more. Whether directly in politics or out of it, the independent men as represented by that organization will be around when spring election ballots are cast. Will they recognize their old alliance?
A question of more importance to most students than a mere swan song of a party is this: Will any party or group seeking power declare in favor of a really constructive program? Will anyone seek to strengthen the student activity ticket by adding more value for the money rather than to undermine it with a few minor questionable appendices such as keys and banquets for the members of the governing organization itself? Will anyone seek to create a governing board bringing both the W.S.G.A. and the M.S.C. into one council? Will any party seek to co-ordinate the activities in the Union building so that the profits may go to expanding the facilities there? Will the political parties get their fingers out of the so-called honor societies, Owi and Sachem?
The Kayhawks are now in a position to look back on their years in the political field. Are they satisfied with the improvements that they have brought to the campus? Are they depressed when they see what they might have accomplished and have not done?
WHO WON THE WAR?
Twenty years ago leading nations were at one another's throats in the greatest conflict in history, one destined to result in many major reforms supposed to prevent any recurrence of such a conflict. The Treaty of Versailles was supposed to make the world safe for Democracy, and keep the rights of small nations inviolate.
What has happened? Europe now has, not one militaristic
leader such as the Kaiser, but two Hitler and Mussolini. Imperialism, a major cause of the last war, has sprung up anew and as vicious as ever with the aggressions of Japan in China and Italy in Africa.
Heavy armaments, which made the last war possible, are again being built up by world powers The race for the largest army and navy is on. Nationalism and the old-time flag waving patriotism are rampant in Europe and Asia to an even more considerable extent than they were twenty year ago.
There is not a level head in the whole family of nations. Entangling alliances and balance of power, secret alliances and the isolation of Germany, conditions that history books tell us were major causes of the World War are as dominant as ever.
Who won the war? Certainly not the pacifists and idealists. Not the justice-motivated men who attempted to make the Treaty of Versailles a worthy document. The stage is being set and history is making ready to repeat itself. How dear a lesson must humanity learn to make it aware of the disasters of war?
Who won the war? It is begining to look as if hate and greed won it.
"HOLD THAT LINE!"
A wealth of extraordinary humor and a pot-pourri of devastating melodies make up the ultra-modern 1935 musical comedy which will be presented soon. Time-honored, cobwebbed traditions give way to this brilliant gloss of novelty and syncaped rag-time.
"Hold that Line," student-written and directed, and acted by an all-university cast, was made to the order of a college day. The play, which has a definite plot, is packed with an abundance of the most up-to-the-mark college wit and cunning. In the zenith of its merriment it is bound to send neologists and stoics chuckling and skylarking over its trail of captivating puns and downright ingenuity.
NEGRO FUND
The Kansas Senate seems to be behind the Negro $200,000 strong, which is a pretty firm financial backing. This appropriation is for a new Negro ward and clinic at Bell Memorial hospital. Dallas Knapp, chairman of the committee, said that a bill providing for a direct appropriation of $150,000 and authorizing the expenditure of $75,000 in accumulated fees for the building and fixtures would be presented early this week.
Some of our very finest physicians and surgeons as well as musicians, orators and artists are Negroes. The state of Kansas should be congratulated for recognizing the splendid ability of the colored race in appropriating this fund. And the Negro should be congratulated for his progress in the field of medicine.
Boys and Young Ladies of 50 Years Ago
One of Baldwin's best students, the son of a minister, was convicted and fined for stealing an overcoat last week. The students of the "infidel school" don't pretend to make a great fuss about religion, but they have been taught to steal nothing—except coal and kindness.
There is not a college in the United States, perhaps, in which the fraternity system has been so much misused as in K.S.U.
If you want a jolly time, go to Copee's skink rink. Take your girl to *ershallh* for oysters, the only first class place in the city.
Harvard is considering a proposition shorten her courses to three years.
From the University Courier for Feb. 20,1885.
News of the week:
Some of the Phi Psis are getting their
"Lives of seniors oft remind us We can make our lives sublime, And departing, leave behind us Debts which we will pay in time."
OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1935
DRAMATIC CLUB:
Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 3.3 p.m., preceding regular publication days
No. 97
there will be a meeting of the Dramatie Club Thursday, Feb. 21, at 8 o'clock in Green hall. A one-act play will be presented. All members are urged to BOB CUNNINGHAM.
EL ATENEO:
La proxima session consistirá en un concierto de espanol por el distinguidor professor Jan Chipapso. El concierto se dara en el Central Administration Auditorium el jueves 21 de febrero; a las 4:30 p.m. El publico esta invitado.
CARLOS ALBERTO PATTerson, Presidente.
Early in the middle of his career he will speak to the English majors and others interested on "The Centenary of Charles Lamb" at 3:30 Thursday afternoon in Fraser theater.
NEWMAN CLUB:
The Newman Club will hold its first meeting under its new policy on Thursday, Feb. 21, at 8 p.m. in the basement of St. John's Church. A new institution will be presented for approval. All Catholic men and women students are cordially invited to be there. T. C. LAWRENCE, Secretary.
Fl. Lambda Theta will hold its annual open meeting on Thursday, Feb. 21, in room 322 Administration building. At 3:30 o'clock Dr. R. H. Wheeler will speak on "Educating for Tomorrow." Following the talk, tea will be served in the Women's Lounge. RUTH BARNARD, Secretary.
PSYCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATIONS:
Psychological examinations for students registering late and students failing to appear at last examination will be given in room 15, Fraser hall at 9 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 23. This will be the last examination before the summer session.
A. H. TURNEY.
NOON LUNCHEON FORUM:
Miss Jemie Lee, prominent English lecturer and politician, will speak at a noon forum in the cafeteria Wednesday at 12:30.
NANCY CALHOUN, OTIS BRUBAKER, Chairmen.
A. S. M. E.;
The A.S.M.E. will meet Thursday, Feb. 21, at 7:30 p.m. in room 210, Marvin hall. Three student papers will be presented.
MID-WEEK DANCE:
The regular mid-week dance will be held Wednesday night at 7 o'clock in the Memorial Union ballroom. All students must present their identification cards, graduates and former students living in Lawrence not enrolled in the spring semester, to bring to the mid-week dances for the spring semester, at the Memorial Union office.
H. E. MILLER, Secretary.
hair cut. It is rumored that Beta Kappa Chi will soon have a new worshiper at her shrine. Powell says he is convinced that Beaconfield wrote his book, "Beaconfield," and are the Sigma Nu coming out. The Kansas deptys still continue to blow.
Prof. C. to student: "Been sick?" Student who has played "hookey" for a week: "Yes, somewhat." Prof. C. to student: "You never abrupt unless you are sick."
BILL COCHRANE, Manager.
ROCK CHALKLETS Conducted by R.J.B.
Amnie Carpenter was prevented from coming to school the fore part of the week by a sprained ankle — her mother's.
Two Acacia members staged an eating contest at the Jayhawk café Sunday night, each paying for all the other could eat. It was an entirely unsuccessful experiment, because after running each of the two bells well on the way to $2, one of the contestants lost all he had eaten and the other was sick because he didn't. There is still an argument as to who won the contest—S.S.
We like the way the red-headed woman cranked her model T Ford in front f the Ad building the other day. Wonder how many softies with their radio-zipped buggies could do is as casually s she did—D.F.
The Dionne quintuplets—a five-year plan gone wrong.—Clipped.
A high school girl intends to go to the state university next year. She states her object is matrimony instead of matriculation — Augusta Gazette.
Since Carolyn Harper is managing editor, one of the wifi has tagged on the bulletin board: "Harper's Bizarre, former the University Daily Kanan."
"The Constitution is gone," says Justice McReynold. Perhaps they were using the gold bloc for a paper weight.
The only big gas bag that hasn't met with disaster is Huey Long. Perhaps the Navy should engage Mr. Long.
In other words, she is looking for "steadies" instead of studies.
Wes Gordon says that of all things, the Supreme court has gone and gone Democrat.
Hiller is thinking about changing his salute from "Heil, Hiller" that blood curdling yell made famous by Stanford, "Give 'em the ax."
something funny to say about that, but we can't think of anything.
Y.M.C.A. Council Plans Trip
One of the members of the Byrd expedition got married just as soon as he landed at New Zealand. There must be
We may not have been the first to hink of it, but we will bet a lot of the olders of those old gold certificates are more valuable. That's no more gold in them that bills."
Group Will Attend International Relations Meeting April 5 to 7
Always a Bargain Show
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THURSDAY
Wm. Powell - Davis
Frank McHugh
"FASHIONS OF 1934"
This One Has Everything
PATEE 10c - 15c
Tentative arrangements were made recently by the Y.M.C.A. council for between 50 and 60 students to attend the Institute of International Relations to be held on the campus of Baker University, down over the week-end of April 5 to 7.
The theme of the meetings will be the
subject, "The New Citizenship." Prof. John Ise will be among the speakers. A partial list of the other speakers includes Clark Eichberger, League of Nations Association, New York City; Paul Harush, Youth Movement for World Recovery, Washington, D.C.; Harry Terrell, National Council for the Prevention of Child Abuse; and James Methodist Church, Topedia; and James Chubb, Boiler University.
The program will include speeches and round table discussions on such questions as "The Demands of New Technology," "The New World Situation," "Appropriate Peace Action," and "The Outlook for the Student."
Representatives from colleges and universities of the Missouri Valley are planning to attend the conference.
Ancient Coins
Of Persia on Display
At Spooner-Thayer
A collection of ancient coins and a bronze arrow-point, all collected in Persia and presented to the University last June by J. Christy Wilson, of the class of 1914, is now on exhibition at the Snooner-Thaver museum.
The arrow-point is from the region of Hamadan, Persian, known in ancient times as Ecbatana, the ancient capital of Kabul. It is of the Period 800 to 700 B.C.
There are two coins of Alexander the Great, some Parthian coins, and some late Roman ones in the exhibition.
LANDON ACCEPTS INVITATION TO ATTEND CARNIVAL HERE
Governor Alf M. Landon has accepted the invitation of Chancellor Lindley to attend the Intramural Carnival to be held here March 8. The other guests of honor will include Dr. F. C. Allen and Dr. James A, Naismith, both
of the University athletic department. Some woman chosen from among the representatives of the 28 schools to send delegates to the carnival will present the individual and organization winners with their trophies.
Make Your Own Flowers
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20. 1935
PAGE THREA
KING OF THE NATIONS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Hill Society
Before 5 p.m. call KU. 25; between 7:30 and 9
Mu Phi Epsilon Presents Program
Members of the Xi chapter of Mt Phi Epsilon, honorary music sorority will present the program for the Lawrence Music Club today at 3 o'clock at
the program, which was arranged by Miss Ruth Orcutt, is as follows: piano "Fantasia Impromptu" (Chopin), Ruth Orcutt; string trio: "Humoresque, Fantale Pieces" (Schumann), Margaret Love, violin, Corinne Dick, cello, and Emma Joe Swaney, piano; piano trio: "Zanilar Boot Song" (Grainger), Rstock Steel, Margaret McNown and Henrietta Bates.
Violin: "Serenade Melancholique" (Tschaikowh), Irma Tholen with Dorothy Enlow at the piano; vocal quartet: "To the Spirit of Music" (Stephens), Augusta Huelen Muehler, Maxine Rocha, Mary Cohen, and Dorothy Fry at the piano; piano: "Szercho in C Sharp Minor" (Chopin), Clarice Sloan.
Students of the Westminster Forum presented a religious program for the Presbyterian students at Haskell last night.
Westminster Forum
Gives Program
Louise Yeannans, c'37, was of the program. Mildred Mitchell, c'38, read the scripture; Marybeth McMain, c'1ern, uncle, several soloes and Ralph Hoke, c'1ern, gave a religious talk. Other participants included Susan Butler, c'36, Dori Thompson, c'36, Jack Space, c'38, and Francis Dill, f'4a.
☆ ☆ ☆
Promethean Club Has Waffle Supper
A waffle supper and a half hour organ recital will be given this evening from 5:30 to 7 p.m. by the Prometheus Club, student organization at the Unitarian Church in New York for people attending the Jennie Lese lecture. Everyone is invited.
Committee appointments include:
kitchen; Geneviève Bero, Dale Underwood,
Henry D. Thomas, Barbara Owen, Margaret Cleverleng; member
Allen Merriam, Alvena Breckleenroh
Roy Johnson, John Pierce; wailing Marvin and Basil Covile, Bob Steele
Edward G尔德利, Joseph Burns, Robert Manuel; arrangements: Harold White, Paul Shuler, Jean Linley.
☆ ☆ ☆
The K. U. Dames will meet tonight at the home of Mrs. Clyde Tombaugh, 709 Mississippi street. Following the business meeting at 7:30 o'clock initiation of new members will begin at 8 o'clock. The Thomas Mrs. Robert Barnhart, Mrs. James Bates, and Mrs. Charles Dots.
Miss Anna McCracken will entertain at the Colonial at 5:45 o'clock this evening with a small dinner honoring Miss Jennie Lee of London, England, who will be the speaker at the LTD. meeting at 7 o'clock at the Unitarian church.
ku
The Chi Omega alumnae met Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs. E. Rice Phelix, 607 Louisiana street. Following the business meeting tea was served. The hostesses were Mrs. Wayne McCoy, Mrs. A. L. Williamson, and Mrs. C. A. Thomas.
☆ ☆ ★
Delta Tau Delta will entertain with a buffet supper Sunday night from 6 to 10 o'clock in honor of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Norton who were married recently. Mr. Norton is a student in the School of Law at the University.
Dr. and Mrs. R. H. Wheeler will entertain their dinner bridge club this evening at the Manor, followed by cards at their home.
Robert Entiksen, '34, who has just returned from a trip to Hartford, Conn., and New York City, is a guest at the Phi Delta Theta house.
Maxine Wilhelmi, c36, was a dinner guest at the Pi Beta Phi house last night.
☆ ☆ ☆
Matt Ryan, c37, and Louis W. Forr-
m of Los Angeles were luncheon guests at the Beta Theta Pi house yes-
terday.
Ruth Magerkurth, fa37, has been lected rush captain of Kappa Kappa gamma for the coming year.
Prof. and Mrs. F. E. Kester were inner guests at the Kappa Eta Kappa ouse Monday evening.
Mrs. Frank Summers of Hutchinson is visiting her daughter, Frances, fa'un-el, at the Alpha Delta Pi house.
Marilyn Kaysing, c37, was a lun-
heon guest at the Pi Beta Phi house
earsterdy.
--at the CAFETERIA
Women's Intramurals
--at the CAFETERIA
Women's intramural ping pong doubles began Monday. The teams entered have been divided into three groups. Because each organization has its own roster, the team has been divided into three sets. Group one includes the following organizations: Alpha Gamma Delta, sigma Kappa, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Kappa Alpha Theta, and Alpha Omicron Pi. Group two includes: Alpha Delta Pi, Pi Beta Phi, Alpha Chi Omega, Delta Phi, Alpha Omega. Group three includes: T.N.T. Watkins Hall, Independents, Corbin Hall, Delta Zeta, and L.W.W.
Teams entered for each organization include: Alpha Gamma Delta (1) Mitch. Hatch, Starr Kappa (2) Widman-Starr, Sigmia Kappa (1) Sharp-Hatch, (2) Johnston - Edwards, (3) DeLaney - DeLaney, Kappa Gamma Gamma (1) DeLaney - DeLaney, Kappa Gamma Theta (1) Caird-Doigre, Kappa Alpha Theta (1) Teams-Hausel, Alpha Owensimm, Shetlar-Markham, (2) Bushey-Bouer, (3) Pfeiffer, (4) Pfeiffer, (5) Ripley-Baird, (6) Kaufman-Kunke; Pi Bei Phi (1) Hoffman-Hoffman, (2) Nolan-Bruce, Stuber-Burke, (3) Barber-Burke, (2) Bennett-Hassig
DeWesse-High; Gamma Phi Beta (1) Vrooeman-Learned; (2) Yancy-Wilson, (3) Grant-Harbaugh; Ch Omega (1) Foreman-Johntz; (2) Sterna-Hum (1) Rowland-Moll; (2) Johnson-Abts, (3) Duty-Hummy; Watkina Hall (1) Slaten-Mavity; (2) Reynolds (1) Owley-Sprine; (2) Owley-Young; (3) Irwin-Parkinson; Corbin Hall-Delta Zeta (1) Culllen-Amp; (2) Frowe-Jacobson, Griffin; I.W.W. (1) Butter-Edie; (2) Barker-Montgregory; (3) Baker-Hoskinson.
Ping Fong doubles play will be scheduled for each day this week but will only on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. Games scheduled for four days are scheduled for 4:30 must be played by 6 c'clock. These matches are scheduled to continue until next weekend.
When one organization plays another, the two number one teams play each other, the two number two teams and the two number three teams.
Organization schedules for this week are all to be played in the gym and include: Wednesday, May 21; Friday, Thursday, April 30; Chi Omega vs. Gamma Phi Beta; Friday: 3:30. IW. vs. FNT. and: 4:00. Kappa Alpha Theta vs. Kappa
Kipiip gumba.
Equipment for these games may be checked out on the women's side of the gym in the basement.
In the fourth game of a series being played by the freshmen basketball squad the Red team defeated the Green team last night 33 to 10.
RED TEAM DEFEATS GREENS IN FRESHMEN BASKETBALL
Schwartz the outstanding player of the Red team contributing 11 points to the score of that team. Tenny and Coleman each made eight points.
Red G F T F
Crawford 3 2 2
Schwartz 5 2 2
Cox 3 0 1
Craik'tuck 4 0 1
Coleman 4 0 1
Schmidt and Holiday each made four points for the Green team.
Totals ...5 0 6
Totals ..13 7 5
ENTOMOLOGY PAPER TITLES MUST BE HANDED IN TODAY
The box score:
Titles of papers to be read before the meeting of the Kansas Entomology Society on March 30 must be turned in to Dr. H. B. Hungerford today.
The society will meet in conjunction with the Kansas Academy of Science which will hold its annual meeting here at the University March 28, 29, 30. Papers on various subjects from the departments of zoology, entomology, bacteriology, and anatomy will be before one of these two groups. D. Hungerford is anxious for the University to be represented by a large number of entries.
Graduate Visits Campus
Joe Schneider, ph22, representing the Eli Lilly pharmaceutical house of Indianapolis, visited the campus recently. He arranged for a film on "Insulin" to be given before the pharmacy collage session Mr. Schneider now lives in Topela.
The statement that appeared in yesterday morning's Kansan, that Barbara Bramwell, c'36, wrote "Sauce for the Gander" is erroneous. Mrs. G. H. Bramwell wrote "Hold That Line" play. Barbara wrote "Hold That Line," the forthcoming musical.
Beg Pardon
Article by Mix Is Published
I. M.
Hired for Advice
To Hold Newspaper Contest
Pittman Potter
University Department of Journalism Will Conduct Annual Competition
Emperor Halle Scalase, emperor of Ethiopia, bishop of Utrecht, professor of Wisconsin professor, to advise his country in present crimes caused by clash with
An invitation to all journalism departments in the high schools of Kansas to participate in the 1934-35 High School Newspaper Contest will be the feature of the February issue of the Kansas High School Newspaper, to be mailed from the department of journalism within a few days. The contest, intended to discover the best examples of the various types of newspaper stories, the value of each paper's services to its school and the best report on methods of handling a business problem, will close April 1. Faculty members of the department of journalism of the University will judge 'the work of the contests.
"The Life History of Taphina Deormans," an article dealing with the diseases causing peach leaf curl, by Prof. A. J. Mix of the department of botany, was published in the January issue of Phytopathology, an international journal and the official organ of the American Phytopathology Society.
News Story; The Argentian, Kansas City. Editorial: The Argentian, Kansas City. The Blue Jay, Junction City; the North Star, Wichita; the North Lawn, High School Times, Garnet; the World, Topka. Feature Story; The Buzz, Hutchinson. Human Interest Story; The World, Topeka. Feature Story; Services to School; The Blue Jay, Junction City. Business Management. The Argentian, Kansas City.
In the contest of 1933-34, first prize winners in the various divisions of the contest were:
NEBRASKA ORGANIZATIONS
SEND APOLOGY TO DR. ALLEN
Coach F. C. Allen recently received a letter signed by members of Nebraska pep organizations and student honorary societies apologizing for the uspsportmanlike conduct of the Lincoln crowd that witnessed the Nebraska-Kansas game last Friday. Nebraska roots booed and hissed the Kansas players even when they were in the air, the free throw line was made to check the uspsportment either by officials or coaches. The student leaders explained that they were starting a serious attempt to curb disgraceful conduct at Nebraska's athletic contests.
Beg Pardon
An error was made in quoting Herbert Mueller, German exchange student, in the speech which he made to the Fireside Forum group Sunday evening. In a quotation from Mueller the name of Hitler was used where the name of Yard was used by the speaker. The misquoted statement should read as follows, "Yard could not change my mind that we have to use peaceful methods, clarify misunderstandings, and show the different types of outlooks if we are to have peace and good will between nations."
After the talk, tea will be served in the Women's Lounge in central Administration. Tea will be in charge of Miss Ruth E. Litch, assisted by Miss Kreney, grr Stuhr Stout, grr Barnward c;35; Marian Fisher, ed 35; and Josephine Lee, c' 35. The decoration will be in color scheme of red and white. Mrs. Raymond A. Schwegler and John H. Nelson will preside at the tea tables.
Pi Lambda Theta will hold its annual open meeting tomorrow afternoon at 3:30, in room 322, Administration building. All women who are taking courses in education have been invited. Dr. Raymond H. Wheeler, head of the psychology department, will speak on "Educating for Tomorrow."
Professor Beck's subject will be "The Possible Influence of Recent Developments in Theoretical Physics on Other Branches of Science."
Prof. Guido Beck, of the department of physics, will be the guest speaker a the February meeting of Sigma XI, hoor orary science society. The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the lee room, Dr. E.L. Trees announced yesterday.
Applications For Jobs Due Soon
Civil service applications for positions of associate, assistant and junior bacteriologist for the Food and Drug Administration, Department of Agriculture must be on file with the United States civil service committee at Wash. D.C., before March 14, the department of bacteriology announced today.
To Complete Psychological Exams
WHEELER WILL BE SPEAKER
AT PI LAMBDA THETA TEA
The last day on which students may take the psychological examinations will be Saturday, Feb. 23. All students who have a valid online registration in room 15, Fraser hall before 9 o'clock.
PROFESSOR BECK TO SPEAK BEFORE SIGMA XI MEETING
Dr. K. A. Siler, professor of physiology, is able to return to his classes this week after a short illness.
Siler Back in School
PRICES SMASHED ON AUTO GLASS
Doors $2.00
Windshields $3.00
CALL 954
for RADIATOR REPAIR
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C. T. Butterfield of the United States public health service, will be the guest speaker at a luncheon to be given by the Bacteriology Club and bacteriology office at the cafeteria. Anna Robin Hood, president of the club, said yesterday.
Mr. Butterfield has worked extensively in the fields of stream and sewage pollution and water purification. He will be here to attend the Kansas water and wastewater conference.
Bacteriology Club will Have Lecture at Luncheon Thursday
Those who plan to attend the luncheon are requested to make reservations today.
To Honor Ratcliffe at Luncheon
Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity, will meet in the Kansan newsroom today at 3 o'clock. Plans will be discussed for a luncheon honoring S. K. Ratcliffe, famous English journalist, who will speak in convocation tomorrow morning.
Delicious Milk Shake and Ham Salad Sandwich 20c at the
Butterfield to Speak Here
UNION FOUNTAIN
Sub-Basement Memorial Union
Watch Our 25c Special Luncheon
Hot roast beef sandwich 15c
Also our Wednesday noon Special
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
1000
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1935
Ames Has Chance To Capture Title With Kansas Loss
Places Jayhawkers in Dar gerous Position for Rest of Big Six Season
Season
Chances for a fifth consecutive Big Six basketball championship for Kansas grew decidedly slim after the Jayhawks' defeat at the hands of the Iowa State Cyclones at Ames Monday night, 32 to 20.
Iowa State has only two games to go, both to be played on the home court, while Kansas has six tough assignments on the road. The title chances seem most favorable for the Amennan. By reason of the split schedule of the Big Six this year, Iowa State, playing only a total of ten games, has to meet only the Kansas State and Nebraska teams, holding the last two places in the present standings.
Kansas has six games remaining—two each with Kansas State, Missouri, and Oklahoma, all away from home. Until last year, no one had defeated Missouri or Oklahoma, the two teams. Oklahoma team, especially at home, has a record of upsetting Kansas's hopes.
Dr. P. C. Allen, of the Kansas aggregation, attributed Monday's loss to an enraged Cyclone offense backed up with the support of the enthusiastic Ames crowd. Iowa State is the only school in the Big Six that has never enjoyed a Big Six or Missouri Valley title, and with present chances running so high a very strong spirit is backing the sound.
"Couch Merze's men took advantage of every moment of the ball game, while the Kansas players were somewhat dazed. It seemed like a different team than the one they defeated in Lawrence only a week before."
Kansas can drop one of her six remaining games, and still win the championship, even though Iowa State wins both of its remaining games. If Nebraska will repeat its victory of early season, or Kansas State can take one from Ames, Kansas will have just that much more leeway.
Winning five out of six, on foreign courts, is going to be a stiff assignment for Coach Allen's squad.
Ebling, Second, and Gray, Third in Actual Time Played
"Kap" Plays Most Minutes
A compilation of total minutes played by the 13 men who have taken part in the ten home basketball games, shows that Kappelman has been in the game 355.5 minutes of the possible 405. (One non-conference game went five minutes overtime.) The shortest time he was playing was three minutes of June 11, and he played throughout three games. Ebling was second with 333 minutes and Gray third with 342.5.
Following are the minutes of conference and non-conference play of the Kansas men, with the percentage of possible time each player was in:
In the eight conference games, Gray was the "iron man," with a total of 302.5 out of 320 possible minutes of play, or 94.7 per cent of the possible time. He played 27.5 minutes in the first Kansas State game, and 35 of the first Oklahoma game, and the full 40 minutes of all other conference games.
Conf. 197.5 non-con. P.C. 197.5 207.5 51.2
Ebling 268.0 353.0 87.1
Gray 302.5 342.0 84.5
Harris 24.5 24.5 6.0
Kappelmann 29.5 325.8 8.0
Lutten 8.5 8.5 8.3
Noble 122.0 202.0 49.8
Oyler 48.5 58.5 13.4
Rogers 53.5 71.5 17.8
Shaffer 27.5 71.5 9.2
Mhlhusen 21.5 21.0 9.3
Wolfe 245.0 330.0 81.4
Holm 245.0 330.0 81.4
Weil 245.0 330.0 81.4
1.5
Sport Shots
--in the 145 lb. class, Chids, c37, won out in the tryout over Bantz, b35, George Nolan, won c35, captain of this year's team won over Anneberg, fa 38 in the 155 lb. division. Tilford, c38, won in Jacobshagen, c35, in the 165 lb. class.
The slowest home court game getting started was with Kansas State, Jan. 26. Kansas scored a free throw in the first minute, and made its first basket when the game was four minutes old. Kansas State got its first points at 5 minutes. Kansas State, in the game of Jan. 11, had two free throws, but no basket from the field until the game was more than 16 minutes old.
In the latter part of the second Missouri game, Kansas did no scoring for more than 9 minutes, and Iowa State did in the last 7.5 minutes of its game here.
In the second Oklahoma game, neither team scored in the 4.7 minutes from min. 1 to min. 15.7. In the first five minutes from min. 20 to min. 24, the team scored, but Wells had three chances.
Students Attend Conference
Thela Humphrey, ed3, 38;卢Rlearned, c27, and Marian Fisher, ed3, left yesterday for Emporia where they will attend the Mid-West Women's Athletic Conference which is being held three Feb. 18-19 and 20. E11 Rhoeo, professor of Physical education will leave today to attend the conference.
SUBS SCORE WELL DESPIE
LACK OF TIME IN GAMES
Matching up of minutes played with number of points scored shows that some of the subs on the team have been doing as well in home games. Wellhause, for example, is near the bottom in scoring with 5 points, but since he has been in play only 21 minutes in home games he record of 238 points per minute played.
Eling, in 268 minutes of play in home games, scored 91 points, at a rate of 329 points per minute. Wells, in 245 minutes, made 59 points, or .24 a minute. Shaffer, kept from many games by illness, scored 6 points in 27.5 minutes of play, or .218 points per minute. Oyler, who has subbed in all conference games from 1 to 12 minutes, has an average of 16 points per minute.
Pi Phi's Win Intramural Basketball Tournament
Sorority Team Champion for First Time in Several Years
Pi Beta Phi defeated I.W. W., 19-17, in a closely matched game last night thereby winning the women's intramural basketball championship. This is the first time in several years that a sorority has won first place.
I. W. W. took the lead in the first few minutes of play with Edie, I.W.W. guard making three baskets in quick succession. Throckmorton, Pi Phi, forward, led the scoring for both teams with six baskets, with Edie following behind with five baskets. Perry, Pi Phi guard an outstanding game.
Until the fourth quarter the 1.W.W. team held the lead, the score at the end of the third quarter being 15 to 13. The score was tied in the last period until Throekmorton in the last minute of play made a basket.
The Independent team won the games last year.
The box score:
G FT F J.W.W.
Phi Phi
Bruce f...3 1 1
Th'k'm'n.f. 6 0 0
Offman f. 0 0 0
Kritz g.r.f. 0 0 0
Newmen f. 0 0 0
S'th're'l.Dg. 0 0 0
Perry.g. 0 0 0
G FT1
Boman.f 3 0
Edie f 5 0
Mtg'n f 0 0
Hunterg. 0 0
Hunterg. 0 0
H/w's n 0 0
9 1 2
Jayhawk 'B's' Go Into Lead
Sigma Phi Epsilon “B” Team Defeats Sigma Chi "B's"
The Jayhawk "B" basketers won their seventh straight victory and gained sole leadership of Division V by defeating Coe's "B" by the one-sided score of 27 to 13 last night. Hall Jayhawk forward, was high point mar for the game scoring 15 points. Sigma Phi Epsilon "B" defeated Sigma Chi "B" in another one-sided contest by score of 23 to 11. D. Fisher
81
Sigma Phi Epsilon "B" defeated Gima Chi B" in another one-sided contest by score of 23 to 1. D. Fisker led the scoring with five field goals.
Stensaas . 0 G F FT
Davidson . 0 0 0
Kerber . 0 0 0
Shinkle . 1 2
Way . 1 2
Way . 0 0
Terry . 0 0
Unam . 0 0
GFT
Hagan 0 0
Cauble 4 1
Willeford 2 1
Morris 0 0
Chappman 0 0
Kabler 2 0
Martin 4 1
D. T.D. 7
McMorran 2 G FF 1
McGorrant 1 I 3
Olens 1 1 3
Hedges 0 1 3
Beitch 0 0 0
Noel 0 0 0
D C
G FFT
Russel 1 0 0
Davis 1 0 0
Barcley 3 0 0
Jorgensen 4 0 0
Minter 1 0 0
16 2
Referee: Dwight Burkhead
G FT F
Biglow 0 1 0
Campbell 1 0 0
Kadley 0 0 3
Roberts 1 0 0
Dearborn 0 1 1
Jayhawks
Pardoe G FFT
Dardoe G FFT
Klune G FFT
Bull G FFT
Poy G FFT
Diekey 1 0
Dickey 1 0
Abh'mn's 1 0
Jayhawks "B" 27
614
G FT 0
Allen E 0
Edie O 0
P. Fisher 2 0 1
D. Fisher 5 0 2
Turner 0 0 0
Rasn'sem 0 0 1
Sig Chu G FTT
Watkins 0 1
Swaincahire 1 0
Wilson 1 0
Glaze 0
Norris 2 0
Gillel 2 0
Gillel 1 0
Sig En "B" 23
Referee: Bob Cooper
TODAY'S BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
Wet court: 30' 5 o'clock, Phi Pai "B"
Rock Chalk "C"; 9 'o'clock, SALE
Wet court: 10' 0 o'clock, Phil Delti
Kenna Sigma
East court: 5:30 o'clock, Rock Chalk "B" vs. S.A.E. B"; 9 o'clock, Beta vs. Sigma Chie; 10 o'clock, Phi Beta vs. A.K. Psi.
Referee: Eldon Smurr
Dr. Raymond A. Schwegler, dean to the School of Education, spoke at the Topeka High School assembly, yesterday morning.
Read Kansan Want Ads.
Spring Football Meeting Will Be Held Tomorrow
Lindsey Calls for All Men Interested in Game to Be Present
Coach Adrian Lindsey announced yesterday that the first meeting for all candidates and aspirants for next year's Jawahar football team will be held at 4:30 tomorrow afternoon in room 201, Robinson gymnasium. Varsity men, members of last season's freshman squad, and all those who have ever played the game or are interested in football are urged to be present.
"There hasn't seemed to be any interest among the fellows unless they seem sure of making the team," says Coach Lindsay. "I want 100 men out for spring football and I'm interested in anyone who thinks they know what the game is all about. There is going to be plenty of room on the squad for lots of new men and everyone interested is going to get his chance."
Coach Lindeeay is determined this year to get an early start and to lay plans for the very strenuous season that is ahead for next year's team. For this reason, the regular spring round of matches will be to stressed more than ever before.
KAT's Win Swimming Meet
Kappa's Place Second in Contest Held Last Night
Kappa Alpha Theta won first place in the women's intramural swimming meet last night with $35\frac{1}{2}$ point. Kappa Kappa Gamma was second with 27 points. T.N.T., Sigma Kappa, Alpha Chi Omega, scored third, fourth and fifth places, respectively, with 11, 10.5 and 5 points in each of the three second places will meet the two teams who win Thursday in the championship match, Thursday, Feb. 28.
Tholen, Kappa, was high score, winning fifteen points from three first places. Ingleman, Thieta, won second place with six points from Land, T.N.T., was third with 11 points.
Ingleman broke the two lengths free style record. Ingleman's time was 10 seconds. The old record of 20.8 seconds was broken by Ingleman's record was the only new one made.
Swimming Entries in Today
Winners for the matches were: Relay, first, Kappa Alpha Theta, 45 seconds (Beckner, Fawcett, Miller, Ingleman). Two, Thoken, Kappa, second, Rowland, T.N. T; third, Miller, Theta; Fourth (tie) Miller, and Lawrent, Theta (i.e., Two Lengths, Backstroke, 19 seconds, second Boehm, Alpha Chi; third, Sharp, Sigma Kappa; fourth LaRue, Kappa; Diving: first, Rowland, T. Two Lengths, Backstroke, 19 seconds, second Boehm, Alpha Chi; third, Davis, Theta; Stroke, first, Sharp, Sigma Kappa, 28.6 seconds; second, Rowland, T.N.; Crawl Form: two lengths, Theta; third, Davis, Theta;四、Miller, Theta; Three Longs Breast: first, Tholen, Kappa, 30.1 seconds; second, Rowland, T.N.; Crawl Form: two lengths, Ingleman, Theta, 37.5; second, Fawcett, Theta; third, Burkholder, Kappa; fourth LaRue, Kappa; Two Lengths side: first, Tholen, Kappa; Two Lengths side: second, Burkholder, Kappa; third, Boehm, Alpha Chi; fourth, Becker, Theta.
Elbel Announces Events For Men's Intramural Water Meet
Entries for the intramurial swimming meet are due today, according to Ed El-贝丽, director of intramurals. The entry fee is 75 cents for each team and the entries must be in the office by 6 o'clock
The preliminaries will be run off to morrow at 4:30 o'clock. The winners will meet in the semi-finals next Tuesday, May 25th. Feb. 28. Each organization may enter three men in each event. Lettermen in any sport will be ineligible to compete.
The following events will be held: 300-yard Medley Relay (50, 100, 150 free style); 50-yard Breast Stroke; 100-yard Dash (free style); 220-yard dash (free style); 50-yard Back Stroke; 50-yard Dash (free style); 100-yard Back Stroke; 200-yard Relay (each man swims 50 yards free style) and diving.
The scoring will be as follows: first, place 5 points; second, 3 points; third, 2 points.
。
The Kansas matten yesterday after a noon completed tryouts to determine the team which will face the University of Missouri Friday night at Columbia. Kansas will be represented in the 118 lb. class by Roberts, c:36; in the 128 lb. class by McDougall, c:37; in the 135 lb. class by Douglas, ed:35.
Kansas Matmen Selected
Entries For Missouri Meet At Columbia Complete Tryouts
Accused Track Coach
Jacobshagen and Anneberg will wrestle this afternoon to determine the entrant in the 175 lb. class.
HLC
Read the Kansan Want Ads.
John Jacobs, track coach at the
University of Oklahoma, Norman,
has issued a complaint against
Dick Templer, above, Stanford /
University, track coach.
He is also accused of duceing an Oklahoma star track to enter Stanford. The athlete named was Orville, Mathewa.
---
KFKU
ebrinter.
Wednesday, Feb. 20
2. 30 p.m. Studies of Living Things, "The Control of Plant and Animal Behavior," Dr. Freeman E. Bavles.
2:45 p.m. "Where Does the State Come in?" Health Talk, Dr. Florence Brown Sherbon
6:00 p.m. Mother Goose Rhymes in German, Prof. E. F. Engel.
6. 15 p.m. The Art of Teaching, "Points of View," Dr. Ernest E. Bayles.
Intramural Swimming Standings
Won Los
Acecia 0 3
P. S. E 0 3
S. A. E 1 3
Sigma Chi 2 1
Phi Delt 1 4
Kappa Sig 2 1
Triangle 1 2
Sigma N 2 2*
A. T. O. 0 3
Phi Gam 1 1
Bela 1 1
D. T. D. 1 1
Coe's 2 0
D. U. 1 1
- denotes a double forfeiture.
Companies Present Gifts
Engineering School Receives Donations From Texaco and Foxboro
Deirei George C. Shaad, of the School of Engineering, announced recently that the School of Engineering had received gifts from the Texaco Petroleum Products company and the Foxboro Manufacturing concern.
A former University student, L. K.
Spink, was responsible for the gift of
the Foxboro Manufacturing company of
Foxboro, Mass. The Dresser Manufacturing Co., Bradford, Penn, presented the department of mining and engineering various sorts of couplings, used in connecting plain end pipes. Two sets of gaskets were included in the equipment from this manufacturer. The Texas Company presented the chemical engineering department a complete new Texaco Petroleum Products college exhibit.
ARROW MITOGA SHiRTS
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Among the equipment was an orifice meter gauge, worth $200, with the necessary fittings. The instrument is designed for working pressures as high as 500 pounds, but, if subjected to hydrostatic pressure, an instand pressures of 1,000 pounds.
Roy Cross, chemist for the Kansas City Testing Laboratory, donated to the department of chemical engineering an induction electrical furnace and equipment employed in the preparation of alloys and other metallurgical slides.
Sooners To Enter KCAC Meet
Coach John Jacobs of Oklahoma plans to take a small picked squirt to the Kansas City Athletic Club indoor games which are to be held in Kansas City on March 2. This and the Big Six indoor meet are the only indoor meets in which the Sooners will engage this season, due to a shortage of finances. Oklahoma is said to be uniformly strong in the races this year and very weak in the field. Sooners will be Lochner, last fall's Big Six two-mile champion, and Ward. Big Six quarter-miler winner of last spring, ready for this spring's competition.
Bostonians
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Showing All New Spring Styles
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Friendly Shoes ___ $5.00
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXII
---
on the SHIN
By JOE HOLLOWAY, c'35
Betty Lou's Mad and We're Glad . . What, No Tree Costume . . Martin Gets in Some Early Practice . . The "Careers" Will Get You If You Don't Watch Out.
We think this should come at the head of the column today because we're so terribly, terribly sorry for something we mentioned first! It comes to these poor old ears that Betty Lou is just sick of hearing about herself and the other 11 Pi Phi's in the child care class. Really, my dear, it's been in every paper in the country and the Sour Owl, and you know that enough's enough but too much is good publicity. Therefore, we won't mention it today—we mean about Betty Lou and 11 other Pi Phi's being in the child care class.
We get ourselves asked today if we had a tree costume like Bill Blower's for snooping around and getting news. far, all we've had to do to get ours is hide behind a pipe and act like a Father confessor or something.
There comes an interesting little tale of the wooing of Dorothy Anne Martin, the gel who leads the musical comedy. We didn't hear who was pouring said woo, but we did hear that it started in the men's lounge of the Union, and, after a large crowd of spectators had gathered, the lady at the desk on the main floor had to request the lovers to move because girls weren't allowed in the men's lounge anyway. . so they moved to the main lounge
"Her eyes like limpid pools of shot beer"—thanks, Lamar.
The following tale makes us want to start at the bottom of the ladder and work up to being President of these dear delapidated United States without the aid (hindrance you mean) of the so-called college education. The dean of the School of Business to a man who was the leading manager or one of several departments of a large rubber company flunked accounting- only once when he was in school here. It just goes to show how much K. U can do for a man with ambition.
Why 'n bell do they have to overwear the furnace stickers when the weather is nice and warm like this? (Remember this was written Wednesday)
There are ways and means of cheering athletes on to further glories and then again, there are ways and means of cheering athletes on to further glories, and then there are—but that would make three times as much fun as the Kappa had at the pool the other night to help bring good old Kappa to the top of the heap. The gels: Lucille Bottom, Katie Hurd, and good old Flossie Lee. While the more athletically inclined试到 how much better than the fish they could swim, the better what others may say about the way Flossie Lee does things (what things?) she could knit faster than the others.
Jane Brosius showed the good old Bresius business methods the other day in the Union when she traded the cashier a stick of gum for one of the penny candy bars. Could she help it if she was both broke and smart?
One Wilson Williams found himself ketched the other day and we didn't say anything about pants. It seems that Williams was down at Coe's drug with his flame, Loa Hausam (if you don't know Loe, you at least know what he was doing) taking the other day when Williams was ketched by his uncle and we still didn't say anything about pants. After being duly introduced, the uncle asked Williams if he were the one who bought the gas for the auto, where-upon Wilson was much embarrassed, said neither him nor so solennely deferred the thing it is too serious to be a launder mind.
The height of something or other comes in this headline from the Atchison Globe: "Bender Leads Fight on 3.2." But they all had fun.
Pictures of Dr. R. E. Padfield, graduate from the School of Medicine at the University in 1911, appeared recently in Wichita papers as a prominent citizen and successful doctor, among other noted men of Wichita. Dr. Padfield was chairman of a committee of public spirted Wichitans who recently instigated a new department of speech at Wichita University.
Orchestra Music Thrills Big Crowd At Concert Here
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1835
Director Krueger of Kansas City Philharmonic Is Liberal With His Encores
By Lena K. Wyatt, c'35
"Do you really want an encore?"
The pleasant voice of Karl Krueger sounded through the University Auditorium, where a grown silent at the tip of his hand.
The response from the 2500 students and townpeople who filled the Auditorium last night to hear a program presented by the Kansas City Philharmonic orchestra brought color to the dignified face of the leader.
NUMBER 98
"Then you shall have it," he said Not one, but two encounters followed and the University students, supposedly that the presentation might have beer products of a "jazz mad" age wished longer.
It was not the first time that the University audience had shown an appreciation of "heavy music", but it was the first time Lawrence had had an opportunity to hear the 89 piece orchestra piece which has recently received much acclaim in the musical world.
The program opened with Tehakovsky's Symphony No. 5 catching the attention of the listeners with the strong deep tones and the contrasting gay, swinging melody of the well-loved composer, and displayed the strength in the stern figure of the leader who guided the musicians.
The familiar Nocturne-Scharzo of Mendelssohn brought immediate response from the audience. At the close of its delicate rapid movement, Mr. Krueger was called back several times. Suite from the Ballet, "O'lisear de Faur" or the Fire Bird Stirring of the preceding numbers. In the strength and color of unusual harmony the gorgeous fire bird came to life in the music. This note changed to the more subdued beautiful tones of the "Dance of the Princesses" which was in turn broken by the loud staccato "Infernal Dance of the Kastelfe" The comma in tone and its popularity with the audience was evidenced in the prolonged applause which followed its close.
It was then that Mr. Kruger spoke to his audience. He expressed his pleasure at being able to play at his own University. "I went to school here once," he said simply and those listening realized his sincerity.
In response to the request of the audience, the orchestra played as encores "The Flight of the Bumble Bee" and a waltz number.
CHILDREN'S CONCERT PLEASES
About 2000 Lawrence school children attended the Young People's Concert given by the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra yesterday in the University auditorium. All students of the fourth grade and higher were given tickets to attend. Funds for the concert were raised by candy sales, parties, and plays given by the students, and donations by the P.T.A.
About 2000 Young People Hear Phil harmonic Orchestra
The program included: Overture, "The Merry Wives of Windsor" by Nicolai; "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" by Dukas; and Elega and Waltz, from "Serenade for Strings" by Tschaikowsky; Russian Sailor's Dance, from "The Red Poppy" by Gilere; "The Flight of the Bumblebee," by Rimsky-Korsakoff; Polka and Fugue, from "Schwanda, the Bagpipe Player," by Weinberger.
Mr. Krueger made the program very informal by explaining each number to the children, giving them a chance to express their preferences.
*Tree Enrollment Report to MH*. The Men's Student Council will meet (tuesday) in the pre-enrollment committees, according to Gunnar Mylkland, president of the Council. In addition, final plans for the Intramural Carnival will be heard.
Tickets For Residual Are On Sale
Tickets for the Ted Shawn recital to be held on May 28 at 8:30 a.m. are on sale at the desk in the Memorial Union building for 75 cents.
Chiapuso To Play Spanish Music
Prof. Jan Chiapuso, of the department of music, will play selections of Spanish music Thursday afternoon at 4:30 in Central Administration building auditorium. Everyone is invited to come.
Pre-Enrollment Report to M.S.C.
Final Intramural Score Last Night Kappa Sigs 18, Phi Delts 17
Tickets For Recital Are On Sale
SHOE REPAIRER PUTS
NEW STING IN PADDLES
R. O. Burgert, local shop repairer,
devised a new method of torture
for the neophyte university students.
He has made a new type of paddle out of his best grade of sole leather. The paddle has plenty of sting and plenty of give, and is guaranteed not to wear out or break.
It is somewhat reminisful of the good old days when Pa got out the razor-strap to use on us when we misbehaved.
Preparations for War Discussed by Jennie Lee
Disarmament Conference Are Masked Balls, Says L. I. D. Speaker
Not the open armaments but the huge, unknown reserves are the result of world preparation for war. Jenie Lee, former member of the British Parliament, told the fifth LLD. lecture on "Preparations for World War."
"This generation may become either heroic or pathetic, depending upon how it meets the coming crisis. The fate of Europe and the world will probably be decided by the happenings in Germany. If Fascism remains in power, the future is bleak. Perfect war psychology and is armed to the teeth," the speaker said.
"Disarmament conferences are masked balls," Miss Lee said in stressing the fact that no one, not even the foremost diplomats, knows the extent of the armaments of the nations of the world. "Because the populations of most countries believe in peace, and in order to baffle prospective enemies, governments never release true statistics for public information."
Historical Data Publisheo
F. H. Roberts Tells of Reminiscences of Early Kansas
F. H. Roberts, publisher of the Oka-kola Independent and one of the oldest editors in the state, has contributed some valuable research to a library.
Mr. Roberts was a guest of the department at the Newspaper Roundtable meetings last fall and heard an address by Charles P. Scott, publisher of the Iola Register, in which he made references to the development of journalism in Kansas. Inspired by the address, Mr. Roberts began publishing a series of articles in his own paper entitled "Some stories," which he recorded his recollections of some of the outstanding figures in early Kansas journalism.
His gift to the department includes as set of these articles. The files of the department now contain biographies of practically all of the editors who are members of the Quarter Century Club as well as many others who have not yet been active in Kansas journalism for as much as 25 years.
Suit was fitted yesterday in Olahthe to set aside the will of the late De Forest F Piuzzek, head of the Grain Corporation of America during the World War. The University of Kansas was made chief of staff, valued at approximately $10,000.
WILL MAKING UNIVERSITY BENEFICIARY IS CONTESTED
The suit was filed by a half-brother, Joseph M. Pizckel, and a half-sister, Mrs. Joseph Gilpin. They claim that Mr. Pizckel was incompetent at the time he drew up the will, three days before he died in a hospital there in July, 1933. It was specified in the will that until certain of the stock died or were disposed of, the will could not be probated.
Dr. Roy F. Huckett, Independence physician, who was found dead in a tourist cabin near Excelior Spring early Monday morning was a student at the University for three years, graduating in 1927.
The circumstances surrounding his death are unknown and are being investigated.
KANSAS GRADUATE FOUND DEAD IN TOURIST CABIN
**Engineers' Hour 'Student Fapers**
Harry Woodson, Harold Grissee, and Ralph Wheeler all attend the presentation of Engineering and Architecture, will present papers tonight at the meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. The meeting is scheduled for 7:30 in room 210 at Marvin Hall, and is open to students who speak English and denote speakers comprises the entire program. There will also be a business session.
Engineers Hear Student Papers
Change in Buying Power of Dollar Justifies Decision
—Howey
Economist Declares Decree to Be Reasonable, as It Will Not Hurt Anyone
By Robert Busby, c'uncl
By Robert Bussel, c/o F.R. In an interview yesterday Prof. R. S. Hewey of the department of economics said that he considered the Supreme Court's "gold" decision "good and reasonable."
He pointed out that the decision was reasonable in that it hurts no one. If it had gone the other way, he declared, the effects would have been bad, necessitating immediate action on the part of congress. By this decision, the government has the power to raise prices at a future date if it so desires.
"The court held," Professor Howey said, that the creditor could demand in payment only the number of dollars which he borrowed. If the number of dollars lent had the same purchasing power as the number of dollars returned to the creditor all the justice that could be expected is done the creditor. There is no great likelihood that a debtor will chase power of the dollar will go down to the extent that the creditor would be injured.
Purchasing Power Not Reduced
"It is sometimes assumed that the reduction in gold content of the dollar automatically reduces the purchasing power of the dollar and thus deprives the creditor of a part of his income. But that by no means is the case. The devaluation of the dollar merely puts into the government's hands a tool of money, the dollar's purchasing power may be reduced. It is by no means automatic.
"It is now the policy of the government to bring about this reduction, and the reduction will naturally harm creditors to some extent and at the same time it helps the debtors. But the debtors are to be helped and the creditors injured only because in the last five years the change in the purchasing power of the dollar has had precisely the opposite effect.
"The creditor can expect," Professor Honey averred, "no more than the return of the dollars which are equally valuable with these which he lent, and yet at present the creditor's dollars are reducing their value because the need for reducing their value.
Creditors Would Profit
"Congress," Professor Hewey continue, "has the power to coin money and to regulate the value thereof, and the Supreme Court held that the private debts in which there was the gold clause demanding payment in 'gold coin of a certain weight and fineness' interfered with the power of congress thus to issue money. In the four cases before the court, the creditors had been paid for the amount of dollars than were actually honored. Had these payments have been indeed well off,
"There is somewhat of a similarity between a bondholder attempting to collect over 60% more in dollars from a railroad in the hands of receiver, and Shylock insisting on the fulfillment of his contract for a pound of flesh. Perhaps the breaking of Shylock's contract made of contracts, as a prominent senator said the other day: 'mere scrups of paper,' and perhaps the cannon by which the senator acted as an act of congress makes of contracts in this country mere scrups of paper. But in both cases certain desirable ends were obtained."
Bondholders Would Suffer
Continuing, Professor Howey declared that "it is probable that the enforcement of these classes and the preservation of the sanctity of contracts would have done the bondholders in this country even less good than the deliverance to Shylock the pound of flesh. For the payment of these impossible amounts would have wrecked a large proportion of the concerus which had sold bonds. It is better in terms of money by a going concern, than to have a doubtful claim against a bankrupt one.
"The government could have paid off," Professor Howey explained, "only by inflation, and inflation might have raised prices to the extent that the purchasing power of the creditor's money would have been reduced in a proportion larger than the increased amount which they had collected. So it is probably just as well that the creditors lost their suits."
State Meeting Draws 55
Kansas Water and Sewage Association Begins Convention in Marvin Hall
Fifty-five members of the Kansas Water and Sewage Works association had registered by 4 p.m. yesterday in the Marvin Hall courtyard yesterday morning in Marvin Hall.
Speakers yesterday were J. E. White, president of the association; Earnest Boyce and Paul J. Cerry of the state board of health; Paul Haney; Selma G. Kallis, and Cassandra Ritter of the state water laboratory; Chester A. Smith, Kansas City, Mo.; Harry J. Earley, Indianapolis; L. B. Mangum, chemist in charge of the Kansas City Kan., Robert E. Schoenfeld, field, Cincinnati; and George C. Shand, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture.
Last night association members attended the concert of the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra in the Union Chapel, where they will continue through today and Friday.
Committees for Science Meeting Are Selected
Dr. W. H. Schoewe, assistant professor of geology announced yesterday the appointment of the various committees for the state meeting of the Kansas Academy of Science, to be held here, March 28-29. Dr. Schoewe is the head of the local unit of the Academy of Science.
Appointments Made by Dr. Schoewe, Chairman of Local Unit
The entertainment committee is in charge of Ruth K. McNair, assisted by A. B. Leonard, both of the department of zoology. The membership committee is headed by Dr. Robert Taft of the Chemistry Department. Dr. R. H. Wheeler, of the department of psychology, is in charge of the arrangements for the annual dinner. The registration committee is headed by Prof. R. H. Beamer of the department of entomology.
The meeting will be held both in Snow hall and in the Engineering Building. Prof. W. C. Stevens of the department of botany is in charge of the room and equipment of Snow hall. Dean George Shaad, of the School of Engineering and Architecture, is in charge of the engineering building. Dr. Schewe is chairman of the committee of principal speakers.
Prof. W. J. Baugartner, of the department of zoology, is chairman of the committee of local papers. The Junior Kansas Academy of Science is in charge of Miss Nettie Wismer, and Miss Edith Peach.
DEBATERS TO MEET DRAKE AND IOWA STATE TEAMS
The Kansas - Iowa State debate will be held tomorrow, and the question to be "Resolved: that we should abolish the present Agriculture Administration" also NBS." The debates are Joe Iy, Cyr, and Paul Wentz. "c36."
The University debate team left last night for debates at Drake University and Iowa State College. The Kansas-Drake debate will be held today. The subject is the Unicameral System of legislature.
To Check Up on Unpaid Fees
Three thousand three hundred eighty-four students have paid their enrollment fees. This is 180 more than had paid at this same time of the spring semester of last year. According to Karl Klooz, burrow, a check is being made of all students who have enrolled, and notices will be given to them about their payment paid their fees to report to the business office to make arrangements for payment.
Debate Finals Set for March 1 and 2
Finals for the Kansas High School Debating League will be held at the University March 1 and 2. H. G. Ingham, director of the extension bureau, and secretary of the league, said that the winners of the tournaments in classes A and B in each of the districts will win first place. The first day. The winners in the round-robbins will go into elimination finals on the following morning, with the final debates in the afternoon.
Ku-Ku's to Issue Shingles
Pi Epsilon Pi, also known as the Kuku Club, is发起 a reorganization at the present time. According to Walter Lyman, president of the organization, the new plans include the issuing of membership cards, attractively decorated, to all members. The club also allows them to attend the annual Carnival although they have not decided definitely yet what their part of the performance will consist of.
English Journalist To Speak Tonight On Past 20 Years
S. K. Ratcliffe to Lecture on European Affairs; Noted for Observations
S. K. Rateliffe, who is known to Americans chiefly through his 22 lecture tours of America, and through his pungent observations as a special correspondent in America for the London Observer and the Spectator, will speak tonight in the University Auditorium on the subject, "Twenty Years After."
R. Matschloff will interpret the European debate of 20 years ago from present perspective, and will weigh the present governments of various European countries, especially those which are going to the extreme left.
In his various capacities as newspaper editor, editorial writer, special correspondent, radio lecturer and student of political and popular movements the world over. Mr. Rattelie has acquired a deep insight into human affairs and the economic reasons behind upheavals such as those taking place in Europe during World War II, which will help us know the Cold War is either the direct cause of the trouble in Europe or has shaped political action toward the ends now being accomplished.
This lecture, the first of the spring semester, is expected to be a powerful antidote to the war fever now being aroused in America by whispered propaganda from abroad. Mr. Ratcliffe, through his newspaper work, has acquired the quality of dispassionate observation and has taken his observations on the European scene can be accepted as being the mature reflections of a man trained in this field.
Mr. Ratiechie will begin his lecture at 8:20 in order to permit those who attend the dinner for Mrs. Elizabeth Wattkins to be given by the Chamber of Comms at the center. There will be time at the end of the lecture on questions from the floor.
Motion Picture Secretary Will Speak at May Convocation
Milliken Will Appear Here
Charles E. Milliken, secretary of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors Inc. of New York, will speak at an all-Halloween convocation on May 12 of his talk will be "The Motion Picture as an Art." "For years he has been a member of the National Arts Club, The National Institute of Social Sciences, and kindred organizations interested in the advance of education and culture. He was largely responsible for the development of the archives of motion pictures in the Fogar Museum of Hardcover Books, and is fairly sure he has better background from which to approach a discussion of the part the motion picture has played, and is destined to play, in the development of American art," said Wil Hays, president of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America, Inc.
This will take place during Fine Arts work
LAWRENCE MORRIS ELECTED OFFICER OF R.C.A. COMPANY
Lawrence B. Morris, graduating with the class of 14, formerly a prominent lawyer and county attorney at Junction City, has recently been elected vice president and general counsel for the R.C.A. with his company, with offices in Camden, N.J.
Mr. Morris has been employed by the R.C.A. Company, New York, for many years but just lately has received his new position. He succeeds E. L. Armand, K.U. Law 12, who became vice president and general counsel for the Keith - Allee Orphrum Corporation, New York.
Strickler Addresses Physicists
Paul M. Strickler, gr., addressed the Physica Colloquium yesterday afternoon at 3:30, using as his topic the relationship of musical intensity, frequency, and overal structure to loudness, pitch and timber. Recent interviews with Bell and phone laboratories indicate that the commonly accepted belief that pitch and frequency in sound are synonymous, does not hold in certain cases, Mr. Strickler said.
Remodel in Journalism Building
Remodel in Journalism Building
The office of L. N. Flint, chairman of the department of journalism, is now being remodeled. Reed-wearing, plastering, and other work is simultaneously by workers. Following the completion of the work in Professor Flint's office, the office of Professor Dill will be remodeled.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1935
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KAN$AS
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF ___ JOSEPH DOCTO
MANAGING EDITOR CAROLYN HARPER
Julia Markham Charles Brown
Campus Editor Staff
Makeup Editors Harry Valentine
Musketeer | George Moore,
| Herbert Moore
Sports Editor Robert Patt
Sunday Editor Elonner Patt
Sunday Fry Jean Pry
Socially Editor Shirley Jones
Exchange Editor Joyce Brown
Ruth Solain Ruth Solain
Business Manager ... F. Quentin Brown
Aaast, Business Manager ... Elton Carter
Telephones
Lena Watt **Mix Olson**
William Decker **Mtx Joe Brovey**
Hawkeye Ineyer **Rutherford**
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Joseph Doctor
Business Office K-12
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Night Transportation Business Office 70181
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Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
Bishop school and university journals
published by the department of
Journalism of the University of Journalism
Subscriptions price, $2.95 per single,
Single copies, $1.95
Entered as second class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan
KANSAS PRESS
1925
ASSOCIATION
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1935
DON'T HOLD THE POOR STUDENT!
It's a long way across the campus and lots of students have two classes in succession. Which means that to be at the second one on time they must get started from the first one as soon as the whistle blows.
No professor likes to have his students come straggling in after the class has taken up. He should, therefore, remember that there are others who feel the same way and dismiss class promptly.
But equally at fault is the professor who takes up class before the half-hour arrives. What chance has the poor student of pleasing any one if one holds him over and the next one takes up class early and demands that he be there?
A more general regard for the feelings of others would lead to a great deal more order in the class room, and if the beginning and ending of classes would be observed sharply, a much more satisfactory system would result. At least a lot of jangled nerves would be soothed.
Corbin hall is the victim of a new sort of lawbreaker whose persistent non-conformity has not been equaled on the campus in recent years. Although these culprits aim their deprepations at the women's dormitory they are actually committing a state crime by defacing state property. They scatter injurious chemicals over the floor, but they might as well carve out portions or hammer spikes around in it—it would still have to be repaired. Corbin needs a good sleuth to bring them to count and put a stop to such wilful damage.
THE "ISM" CAMPAIGN
Davis Lott, editor of Northwestern's Purple Parrot, has made what looks to be the best declaration of policy we have ever seen in a college editor's column. Lott has come out against the "isms" from conservatism to Communism.
The thing that appeals to us is his realization that no "ism" should dominate any sort of politics. When a man has liberal ideas, he is called a Communist or an atheist. If he believes in a strong standing army and a high tariff he is called a militarist or a conservationist. No one is all wrong. Upton Sinclair was condemned in California as a madman, and yet when his opponent was elected he took several of Sinclair's platform planks and incorporated them in his own.
A college editor is sought out by all the "ism" leaders as a source of free publicity. It is hard to keep from publicizing some of them; they mask as news stories that are nothing but a press agent's cleverness. By no means all college editors refrain from giving publicity
to organizations as intended by the leaders. We have seen in other college papers exactly the same material we have thrown in our waste basket printed for the consumption of readers when it was pure propaganda. Editor Lott has no doubt been angered by the repeated efforts on the part of various groups to get the use of his columns for free puffs.
No editor can keep all publicity out of his paper. But he can take up a campaign to let his readers know that he does not stand for any of the "isms." If common sense and "forthright principles" are observed, there is no reason why Editor Lott should not have 120,000,000 followers instead of the 20,000,000 he desires.
COMMENTS
By the Editor
THE ART OF SAYING NOTHING
Politicians are noted for their ability to make statements and say little. Monday night Gunnar Mykland and Lyman Field were hard put thinking up statements for the press. Long consultations brought Orator Field and sultations brought Orator Field and Scholar Mykland to making statements which were typical of politicians and which said exactly nothing. Mykland expressed surprise at the results. He might have been surprised a month ago when he first heard about it, but we hardly see how he still could be. Boss Brown had a little more time to prepare his statement, and consequently he got it off rather well. What he would no on a pinch, he do not know.
YE SOUR OWL
This new number of the Sour Ow just proves all the more the aptness of the name that publication laborers under Sour was no name for the last issue Neither our "Rock Chalklets" editor feeble as is his wit, nor Joe Holloway can get much more than a few smiles out of Brother Blowers' so-called humer magazine. However, it must be a better number than usual, for Owl experts report that they have received a few compliments for a change.
ROCK CHALKLETS Conducted by R.J.B.
New York City. the other day, reported that no major crime was recorded over a period of 24 hours. Next thing you know Gotham will be going rustic and the mendow-larks will take the city.
Seeing the Kansas Relays are going to be held during Easter vacation why not sponsor a special event—a quarter mile egg-rolling contest?
Campus Opinion
D. D.D.D.D.
Editor Daily Kansan:
Sometimes in the dim past, student government at our university died a natural death. In its place came a poetic capital of "government" in this country.
Recently a "new deal," the product of our economic depression, has turned the attention of reformers and some other social leaders to the need and incompetencies of public officials.
This campus has its share of both of these types of investigators and, according to rumor, red revolutionists as well. The other is a new institution which is not universally praised.
Now, we would like to know why this course of political affairs runs placially on. Are there none among our students who have enough spirit or even enough sense of humor to upset the calm in which our two political parties gently vie for the honor of running the Men's Student Council?
The fraternities and a small number of their non-fraternity stuoges have taken over the instrumentality of undergraduate participation in the University administration, namely the Men's Student Council. Two mutual admiration societies, better known as political parties, carry on a sort of minor Democratic-Republican feud from year to year. The incumbents control the senate and will be elected mayor, the minority party in all manner of ways, until the next election when they pass all the progress bullyboo (look at our record) stuff around and expect an intelligent student body to swallow it.
We know of no law prohibiting nonmembers of Pachacamac or Ordead-Kayhawk from running for council seats. In fact, they would have the advantage of not having to pay several dollars to their party organization for the privilege of having their names on the ballot.
We would suggest the organization of a group of students who would be willing to study methods of student learning. We would also require these students could possibly find a
Notices due at Chancellor's office at 2 p.m., preceding regular publication day
and 11:39 a.m. Saturday for Sunday Issues.
OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
The A. S. M. E will meet this evening at 7:30 in room 210, Marvin Hall. Three student papers will be presented.
--few specific flaws in the present campus government.
Thursday, Feb. 21, 1935
DRAMATIC CLUB The Dramatic Club will meet this evening at 8 o'clock in Green hall. one-act play will be presented. All members are urged to attend. BOB CUNNINGHAM.
DRAMATIC CLUB;
La proxima session consiste en un concierto de densa española por el distinguido professor Jan Chipapus. El concierto se da en el Central Administration Auditorium el jueves 21 de Febrero; a las 430 p.m. El publico esta invitado.
CARLOS ALBERTO PATTERSON, Presidente.
EL ATENEO:
H. E. MILLER, Secretary.
There will be a meeting of the Fencing Club at 4:50 a afternoon in Robinson gymnasium. It is imperative that all members he there.
Mr. S. K, Ratalife will speak to the English majors and others interested in "The Centenary of Charles Lamb" at 3:30 this afternoon in Fraser theater.
ENGLISH MAJORS:
FENCING CLUB:
GRACE A. PEARSON, Secretary-Treasurer.
No.98
LISSON, Security - Pressure
The Newman Club will hold its first meeting under its new policy this evening at 8 o'clock in the basement of St. John's Church. A new constitution will be presented for approval. All Catholic men and women students are cordially invited to be there. T. C. LAWRENCE, Secretary.
PI LAMBDA THETA:
Pi Lambda Theta will hold its annual open meeting this afternoon in room 222 Administration building. At 3:30 o'clock Dr. R. H. Wheeler will speak on "Education for Tomorrow." Following the talk, tea will be served in the Women's lounge.
RUTH BARNARD, Secretary.
PSYCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATIONS;
Psychological examinations for students registering late and students failing to appear at last examination will be given in room 15. Fraser hall at 9 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 23. This will be the last examination before the summer session.
A. H. TIUNKEY.
OUILL CLUB:
Y. M. C. A. CABINET;
The Y.M.C.A. Cabinet will meet this afternoon at 4:30 in room 10 of the Memorial Union building. WILFRED McCLAIN, Vice President.
Always a Bargain Show
Let their spokesman inform the student body of their findings and what remedies they would suggest. Then when the annual humball-passing-out begins, let the impartial organization quietly announce a list of candidates.
Perhaps a few voters would appreciate the lack of halliburton enough to cast their votes for the independents. Anyone who wants a vote for themachelms and each other.
However, the whole idea should appeal most strongly to the campus humorists. For two years, the present party politicians have worked desperately and successfully to bring the national N.S.F.A. convention to Kansas City and Lawrence. Now if an independent organization could poll a majority of the votes, the poor Pacachamias would be left out in the cold when that great
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Leslie Howard Merle Oberon
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1935
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
k
Hill Society
Before 5 p.m. call KU. 25; between 7:30 and 9:
145477202K3.
Pi Kappa Alpha Has Dinner-Dance
Fi Kappa Alpha will entertain with a formal dinner dance Saturday at the Hotel Eldridge from 7 until 12 o'clock. The tables will be arranged so as to represent a night club, and the faternity's colors, garnet and gold, will be used in the decorations. Red Blackburn will the furniture will furnish the music for dancing.
Mrs. Belle Wilmont, Mrs. Jane MacLean, and Dean and Mrs. Henry Werner will be the chaperons.
Epperson-Potucek Wedding
The marriage of Miss Vera Epperson to Mr John A Potueck, both of Wellington, took place Saturday at st. Atkinson and the Rev. Francis Maquire officiating.
Mr. Potucke attended the University and was graduated from Washburn Law School at Topkai in 1924. He is now county attorney of Summer县.
☆ ☆ ☆
After a short trip in the south, the couple will make their home in Wellington.
Dinner guests at the Sigma Nu house tonight will be: Anabel Walter, c:27 Helen Burdin, d'écuell; Borna Brooks c:55; Mildred Yaney, c:38; and Katheryn Cassidy, c'edul.
☆ ☆ ☆
☆ ☆ ☆
Alpha Phi Alfa announces the pledging of the following: Walter Moss, c'ucln James Beek, brk; Russell Redwit, c'ucln Jake Bock, c'ucln George Pierse, c'ucln; m'c88, by Gordon Pierse, c'ucln.
Guests at the Gamma Pbi Beta house yesterday for lunch were: Mrs. H. J. Dorman and Mrs. J. T. Shelden, both of Kansas City. Mc. Mary Jane Lumines c;28, Ceyl Cox, c;36; and Helen Russell, d;4 Great Bent.
☆ ☆ ☆
Corbin Hall was hostess at the weekly W.S.G.A. tea given yesterday afternoon
CLASSIFIED
Phone K.U. 66 ADS Phone K.U. 66
FOR SALE
WILL SELL $40, 1935 Philco All-wave five tube Baby Grand radio for $30.
1218 Iphone or phone in 1935. -99
BOARD AND ROOM
ROOM AND BOARD for boys. If dis-
satisfied you our meals. You will
like them. Price reasonable. Desirable
location. 1155 Ohio. -103
LOST AND FOUND
LOST: Purple fountain pen with name engraved on it. Call Noel Giat 2479.
98
FOUND: 16 pair of ladies' gloves, 1 fur
muff, 2 scarfs, 1 breet, 2 ladies' coin
purse, at Union Building Office.
KU
97
OFFICE SUPPLIES
LOOSE LEAF FILLERS
GREETING CARDS
LOST: A pair of ladies gold rimmed glasses in blue leather case. Probably lost in Watson library. Phone Mary Jane Lundsford. -199
KEELER'S BOOK STORE
BOOKS
WALL PAPER
PICTURE FRAMING
ROOMS FOR RENT
BOYS: Newly decorated rooms, at reasonable rate. One block from campus.
Access to sleeping porch. Phone 1127W.
MISCELLANEOUS
K E Y S
for any lock.
Night latch & padlocks in stock.
Door closers repaired.
Rutter's Repair Shop
1014 Mass. St.
Phi 319
TAXI
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Phone 12 - 987
HUNSINGER'S — 920-22 Mass.
CLEANERS
Phone 14th & Tenn. Phone
AT YOUR SERVICE
We Call and Deliver
9
in the women's lounge of the Central Administration building. Bed and white carnations were used on the tea table set with the brass service. Mrs. Etta Corle and Mrs. Eli Lewis poured.
☆ ☆ ☆
9
Wilda Wright and Jorry Wright, both of Lawrence, were dinner guests at the Alpha Delta Pi house hnt right.
--p.m. 12:20h Athletic interview, an-
ranged by Prof. E. R. Bélent presentation,
Mr. W. B. Wilson, President,
Kansas Conference.
M. E. T. Pyle of Clay Center is visiting her daughter, Ruth, at the Alpha Micron PI house.
John Robeson, c'38, was a guest at the Beta Theta Pi house yesterday for lunch.
Mrs. A. D. Daniels of Garnett is a guest at the Alba Delta Pi house.
Invitations have been issued for a dinner bridge to be given Friday evening at the University Club at 7 o'clock.
Sigma Chi announces the pledging of Harry O'Riley, c 38, of Syracuse.
KFKU
Today
Mr. Clarence Christman.
2:44 p.m. News Brief, Prof. W. A. Dill.
2:48 p.m. Elementary French Lesson.
Mr. W. K. Cornell.
2. 30 p.m. Elementary Spanish Lesson Mr. Clarence Chrisman.
REPORT OF WELFARE SERVICE FUT IN UNIVERSITY LIBRARY
A recent addition to the library is the report on Public Welfare Service in Kansas. This report released in December, 1934, covers the 10-year period from 1924 to 1933 inclusive. The number of clients of the public and private welfare agencies, and an itemized cost of their service to both public and private agencies, makes up the bulk of this report. Included in the report is a statement of the 18 months of service of the Kansas Emergency Relief Committee. This report was edited by Mary Smith, '19. Other alumni who helped compile the report are Bob Smith, '34, Margaret Gregs, '34, and Mary Heryford, '34.
Club Will Distance Serial Problems
Club Will Discuss Social Problems
The Social Problems Club, a newly formed organization on the campus, has tentative plans for several symposiums during the semester. The symposium subjects will include: "Americanism," "The New Deal," "Civil Liberties," and "The Civil War." The first hold will probably be that or the New Deal which will be discussed from the viewpoint of its success on the housing, labor, unemployment and utilities "fronts."
Hopkins Condition Unchanged
Prof. E. M. Hopkins is still under observation at Trinity Lutheran hospital in Kansas City, Mo. He will have to undergo an operation but the exact date is not known, according to Prof. W. S. Johnson, head of the department of English.
Hollow Condition Unchanged
Improvements to Aid Appearance of Campus
To Hold Oratorical Contests
Two oratorical contests will be held on the following dates: March 6, contest for the freshmen and sophomores, and March 12, contest for the juniors and seniors. The contests will be held in central Administration auditorium. There will be $50 in cash prizes.
To Hold Oratorical Contests
Vacancy
Walks, Trees, Shrubberies and Flowers Will Fill
The area in front of the library extending from the commons to Fraser Hall is in for many landscape improvements. These improvements consist of new walls, shrubberies, trees, and a few flowers. A new walk will be built to run west from the south entrance on the south wall and east from the walk which runs to Watson Library. A new and wider walk will run north and south along the west side of Fraser Hall.
The landscape architects Hare and Hare of Kansas City, Mo., made no provision for entrances to either of the two buildings on the north side of the Journalism building.
On both sides of the library steps large beds of shrubbery will be planted. Shrubbery will also be planted on both sides of the central walk which leads into the library where this walk joins the main one.
Roses will be planted in the small plot of ground which is left vacant by the splitting of the central walk which leads from the library and terminates when it joins the main sidewalk, according to A. Van Horebeek, the landscape gardener in charge of the work. Trees will be set out along some of the walks, also. The two kinds of trees to be set out are the Redbud, and the Beechtail Crab.
Shrubs to be planted are: Japanese barberry, Japan quince, spreading eunomyces hedge plants, fortune forsythia, benthush, regal privet, mono honey-suckle, sweet mock orange, jetbend, amur chestnut, red oak, thumper spice, thumper spices, and Chinese lilac.
Mr. Hovebeck expects the project to be completed about May 1.
Prof. Alvin C. Voran has been invited by Chancellor E. H. Lindley to present a concert on the campus with his widely known McPherson college A Capella Choir, March 29. This will be the opening date on a 12-day tour on which the choir will take in Eastern Kansas, North Carolina, Iowa, and Eastern Nebraska.
McPHERSON COLLEGE CHOIR TO PRESENT CONCERT HERE
The Kansas Academy of Science will be in session at Lawrence on the same date, and during the hour of the conference, members will will cease, to allow members to attend.
Templin to Make Speaking Tour Prof. Oli Templin of the department of philosophy will speak at the alumni meeting at Detroit, March 16. He is planning to make a speaking tour soon in the following cities: Akron, Ohio; Columbus, Ohio; Indianapolis, Ind.; Urana, Ill.; and St. Louis, Mo.
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---
PAGE FOUR
Big Six Teams Go Into Big Weekend With Five Games
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1935
Kansas and Kansas State Meet; Oklahoma vs. Tigers; Nebraska to Ames
Feb. 15-Kansas vs. Nebraska at Lincoln; Kansas State vs. Oklahoma at Manhattan; *Iowa State vs. Drake at Arizona*
Ames.
Feb. 16—Kansas State vs. Oklahoma at Manhattan.
All Big Six cage squads are tuning up for a big week-end, as five conference games are to be played this coming Friday and Saturday. Kansas lines up against Kansas State state, Missouri goes to Oklahoma for a doubleheader, and Iowa State will entertain Nebraska's Cornhuskers in Ames.
The games to be played will have no great effect on the principal title contenders, unless the Wildcats should win both games with the Jayhawkers, in which case Iowa State could go into first place by defeating Nebraska. Kansas can win one of its most engaging engagement and still win over the Cyclones.
Missouri hopes to break up a tie with the Wildcats for fourth place as they face Coach Hugh McDermott's Okahamans. Missouri looks better as the season draws to a close, greatly through the return of Henderson to the line-up. The Sooners practically eliminated themselves from title contesting in losing to Nebraska at Lincoln last week.
Out of the Big Six basketball race themselves but with victories over three of the five entrants, the Kansas State basketball team will attempt to complicate the Big Six situation in its coming encounters against the State. It is in the Wildcats' power to swing the Wildcats in favor of either school.
Iowa State should win easily over Nebraska with the advantages of their court, and the Cormuskers are in undisputed last place. At Lincoln, Coach Browne men eled a one point advantage. Both teams have only one more meeting after this one to close the conference season for them.
Rock Chalk "C's" Win 36-7
Sig Alph's Forfeit Game to Phi Gamma
Delta
Displaying a stubborn defense and an accurate eye for the basket the Rock Chall "C" team won a one-sided game from the Phi FI "B" team to 32 to 7. The second half was side only to score four points the first half and three the last period.
The Rock Chulk "B" team boosted their percentage by virtue of a forfeit from the S.A.E. "B" five.
The two games scheduled for 9 o'clock were not played. The Pig Gam's won on a forift from the Sig Algh.'s. The Beta and the Sigma Chi teams teamed to play at 9 o'clock made arrangements to play their game later.
In the other late game Tuesday night the Rumblers spurted the second half and defeated the Collegians 27 to 19. Phil Dill FEF 7. Rock Cliff 36 20
By the margin of one point the Kappa Pa's defeated the Tringle club late Tuesday night by the score of 28 to 23. Leconard scored nine points for the Kappa Pa.
G FT F
Lloyd 1 0 1
North 1 0 2
Budley 1 0 0
Budley 1 0 0
Somme 0 0 0
Locke 0 0 0
3 1 4
Referee: Hoff
17 2 3
Triangle 27
G FT F
Moll 2 0 0
Lindy 2 0 2
Ulryn 1 0 2
Wan'mk r' 1 0
Rothchild 3 0 1
Smurr 6 0 1
G FT F
Kerr 6 1 1
Laws 0 0 0
Pick 2 0 0
Pick 1 0
Colman 2 0 0
Williams 2 0 0
13 1 2
Referee: Plaskett
Ocoben G Ft F
Leonard 4 0
Robinson 2 1
Rohan 1 0
S'h r'r'g 2 0
S'h r'r'g 2 0
Ramhlers 9
Kathleen G F 0 F 1
Aldo FF 1 F 1
Jude F 1 F 1
Muhahunah 3 0 0
Murray 3 0 0
Murray 3 0 0
Kappa Psi 28
13 2 6
13 1 4
Referee: Plaskett
Calloians 19
G FT F
Roland 3 0 1
Brighton 3 0 1
Simpson 3 0 1
Wood 0 1 0
Rot'n bryn 0 0 1
91
TODAY'S INTRAMURAL GAMES
Basketball
West Court: 530 o'clock, Delta Tau "B" vs Coe's "B"; 10 o'clock, Coe's vs Wakara.
East court: 5:30 o'clock, Jayhawk "B"
vs Rock Chalk "C"; 10 o'clock, Pi K.A.
vs S.P.E.
At 5:15; Cole's vs. S.A.E; S.P.E. vs. Beta.
Reds Win Another Game
Will Play Pong Fong Doubles
Ciri Omega and Gamma BPi beta ping pong doubles teams will play their first matches at 4:30 today in the gym. Ping pong singles should be played off by to-morrow.
Greens Defeated for Third Time in Freshman Basketball Series
Will Play, Ping Pong Doubles
The Reds made it three to one in the current Freshman basketball wars with a decisive 30-16 victory over the Greens last night. The half score was
The Reds showed the most effective passing attack of the year in their victory. Swartz was high point man for the Reds with five goals and five free throws for a win. The Reds scored most effective for the Green sound with twelve points.
This victory gives the Red team a margin of two games over the Greens with two games of the series yet to be played. If the Green should succeed in winning the remaining games the Red will win in a tie, otherwise the Red will win.
The box score.
**Red 36** G PFT Green 16 G FTOT
Cox 5 2 1 Holden 0 1
Swartz 5 5 1 Schmidt .5 2
Cox 5 3 1 Haugh .5 2
Herverskirk 5 1 1 Hugh .5 2
Bidick 1 0 1 Chepkin .1 0
Landers 1 0 1
Totals 6410
Alphin To Read Paper At Omaha Herbert G. Alphin, instructor of physical education, has been asked to read a paper at the second annual convention of the central district of the American Physical Education association. The topic of the paper is: "A Study of Practices of Supervision of Practice Teachers in Physical Education in Teacher Training Institutions." The convention will be held at Omaha. Neb., from March 20 to 23.
Studies Halted in C.C.C. Camr
**Hargins to Referee Texas Belts**
H. W. "Bill" Hargins, trick coach, said yesterday that he had accepted the appointment as referee at the Texas replay, to be held at Austin on March 30.
Students Halled in C.C.C. Camp
The Spanish class in the civilian conservation corps near Lone Star, conducted by Joe Hidalgo, Jr., gr, has been temporarily discontinued due to infantile paralysis in the camp. The class met two evenings a week, and was part of the voluntary educational program organized by Kenneth Rankin, educational adviser of the corps.
Swimming Squad Meets Kansas State Saturday
The University swimming squad will meet the Kansas Aggie squad in a duel meet Saturday afternoon at 3 o'clock in the University pool.
Coach Allphin Announces Full Strength for Meet Here
William Kester, a member of the squad, will probably be forced to quit swimming this season because of sinus trouble which has recently developed. He is now under the care of a physician who will decide whether he will swim or not. If he does swim Coach Alphin said the entries would be as follows:
If Kester doesn't swim in the meet, then Nichols will swim in the 400-yard Delay and Thorne will swim in the 50-yard Dash. There is a possibility that Morris Hedden and Edward Heter will participate in the diving, Coach Alphin said.
400-yd Relay: Theron, Miller, Kester,
Tripp: 200-yd Breast stroke; Report,
Elias: 150-yd Back stroke; Jennings,
La Shellie: 50-yd Dash; Kester, Tripp:
440-yd Swim: Nichols, Miller or Jennings,
100-yd Dash: Diah;
440-yd Swim: 200-yd Swim: Nichols, Kester or Elias; Medley辰
Jennings, Report, La Shellie.
Sport Shots
--of WINTER CLOTHES
Is Now on---
--of WINTER CLOTHES
Is Now on---
Floy Lochner, Oklahoma distance runner run four fours of the Sooner outdoor track in 4:031 Monday afternoon as a time-up for the K.C.A.C. meet in Kansas City, March 2. However, Coach John Jacobs is not trying to threaten Glenn Cunningham's mute record. The slender Slouder junior, Big Six indoor two-mile champion, jogged a lap between each of his fast circuit. The experiment was to accustom Lochner to a near 61-second pace.
Kansas State's indoor track victor, over Nebraska at Lineinville was the first Wildcat victory over the Huskers in a season since 2013. Home since construction of Memorial
Kansas State track team meets Missouri on the Manhattan indoor track this Saturday night. The Purple has already taken victories from Kansas and Nebraska and is favored over Missouri. Missouri is favored in the 60-yard dash, the 880, the broad jump, and high jump. Kansas State claims the edge in hurdles the two-mile, the 440, the pole vault and the shot. The relay may decide the meet as it did for Kansas State with Nebraska last week.
Stadium. Kansas State won six out of seven track events, piling up a lead which the Cornhusers' superiority in the field could not overcome.
Dun Gunning, 6 ft. 4 in. sophomore center on the Oklahoma team, broke his elbow recently and the loss has sorely crippled the Sooners, says Coach Hugh McBermott. He may be able to play a short time against the Jayhawkers although he just took his elbow out of the cast.
Kansas State athletes boast that basketball is the only thing that the University of Kansas can win from them this year. It is true that Wildcats have team runs in football, the two-time team run, wrestling, swimming and outdoor track.
Allophil Passes 391 in ARC Tests
In the last ten years 261 senior ame
44 junior life savers of the American
Red Cross, making a total of 301, have
passed their tessas under Herbert G.
Alphin, swimming coach and instructor
at the University. At the end of school
he will have completed his tenth year
of college. He is confident that he
mates that there will be at least 40
boys who will qualify this spring which
will bring the total up to 340.
Women to Swim in Meet
The second half of the women's intramural swimming meet will be at 7:30 noon in the gym. The intramural organizations who will swim tonight are Pi Beta Phi, I.W. W., Corbin Hall, Gamma Phi Beta, Alpha Delta Pi, and Chi Omega. The two of these teams with the highest points will meet Kappa Alpha Theta and Kappa Kappa Gamma, who won Tuesday's meet with 35.5 and 37 points respectively, in the final meet Feb. 27.
Thousands Lost in Receipts When Contests Are Put on Air
Broadcasts of Football Games May Be Abolished
With the Athletic department of the University facing a possible need for extension of time in which to retire the Kansas stadium bonds and to meet the interest payments which heretofore have been paid promptly, Dr. F. C. Allen, director of athletics of the University, believes that, in the future, broadcasts of football games played here will have to be discontinued.
Commenting on this question, Dr. Alen
lead he believed that broadcasts of
games cost $1000 in lost receipts each
game.
"Of course we would like to give all our friends everything we can, including broadcasts of football games, but I don't think enough to believe in paying our bills."
Cy Sherman, sports editor of the Lincoln State, in a recent issue, complimented Iowa State and Nebraska on the satisfactory state of their athletic finances and attributed this to the fact that neither of these schools broadcast football games. It is believed that other Big Six schools, including Kansas, might profit likewise if broadcasts were dis- continued.
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Coaches Attend Banquet
Dr. Froese C. Allen, director of athletics, and Couch Adrian Lindsey attended a banquet of the American Legion in St. Joseph last night.
10:00
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四
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XXXII
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
---
on the SHIN
Dean Stockton Defines . . . Milo
Went to College . . . Found.
a friend to Man . . . The Knitting Goes On.
Heard a fine one the other day in narration and description. Some intellectual was writing a characterization of his grandmother and described her as having "a sweet face, gray hair, and glasses which she constantly misplaced." Imagine how peculiar the dear old lady must have felt every time she misplaced her face, gray hair, and elapsed.
You can tell Crosey Seymour's not in school—Bud Evans has a beard—a bit on the younger and uncultivated side, but it's a heard.
About twenty stags were turned away at the mid-week race Wednesday. Report has it that the boys did a bit of grumbling and beefing because they got there too late to be admitted. If those laddies would get the lead out of it and get a date, they'd have no choice. The wonders would be just that much better.
Well, there were two of our faires knitting at the Philharmonic!
NUMBER 99
One of the questions on a recent quiz given to the 10.30 economics class by Dean Stockton was—"Define meditation." After the papers were returned a student asked Stockton to define meditation and said that it was a violin solo played that it was a violin solo played the acts of Massonet's beautiful opera "Theatrus."
A werry, wery funny tale came from the Phil Gam house in which Milo Sloo and one of his brothers are the victims. Milo and the above brother in the bored ob'd and alb'd and whipped near dys, and were off for a trip to Kansas City one beautiful (?) day a short while ago. Nothing was heard from the voyagers until the next morning when the lodge received a telegram worked to the effect that they took the wrong road, hit Columbia instead of Kansas City, and would be home the next day.
♦ ♦ ♦
Broadcasting company WH B's question for the roving reporter to ask Kansas City people yesterday was, "Are Men More Conceited than Women?" One man answered into the mike, "Men are more conceited than women because women aren't smart enough to be conceited." Now there's a follow anyone would be proud to call "friend" and we sincerely hope that he answers a lot more of their questions.
We like to quote Kansan advertisers, now and then—just good business you know. This one really comes from Dick Wagstaff at Weidemann's though. John Herlocker and Mary Ruth Pyle were comfortably seated in the back room at Weidemann's the other day—John studying. Mary Ruth knitting, etc. Dick says he sees her and he's seen girl knit back there, and he's seen a little loving going on at various times also, but this was the first case he could remember where he saw all three going on at the same time.
Sometimes we just can't help thinking that the fellow who chooses our beauty queens must be blind in one eye and have an awful hanger make his good one a little bit cloudy.
We wonder if the reason Freddy Harris spends the whole afternoon on which the Jayhawk comes out, in the morning? If she will find him after they read it.
Matmen Go to Missouri
Kansas Wrestling Team to Meet Tiger Men Tonight
The Kansas wrestling team will leave this morning at 7:30 for Columbia, Mo., where they will meet the University of Missouri wrestling team tonight.
Kansas will be represented in the 118-12b, class by Roberts, 128-12b, class by McDougall, 135-12b, class by Douglas, 145-12b, class by Childs, 155-12b, class by Captain Amberg, 168-12b, Captain Kinger, 183-12b, class by Tilford, and in the heavy-weight by "Tiny" Moore.
"Tony" Moore will meet the defender of the Big Six championship, Fender. This should be a good match. "From preceding scores it looks like the men go either way." Coach James Cox said last night.
Jayhawkers Face Two Kansas State Games This Week
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1935
Team Leaves Today With Intent to Annex Victories Over Wildeats Cage Squad
Kansas f
Ebling f
Allen f
Wells c
Gray g
\appelman g
Kansas Stats.
Freeland
Gilpin
Grover
Stoner
Railback
Kansas State has met the University four times already this year, twice in unofficial exhibition games using suggested changes in the game. The Manhattan team has won only one of the test games, and neither of the conference games. The last time the teams met, Kansas State outscored the Jayhawks from the field, but the Oreadmen won by free throw line.
The entire squad of fourteen will make the trip, leaving at 1:30 aternoon. The Manhattan trip each year is given to all members as somewhat of a reward for their efforts for the season.
Referee: E. C. Quigley, St Mary's "Chill" Cochran, Kansas State.
The Jayhawk basketball men move to Manhattan for a two-day's visit with Kansas State, meeting their hosts on the court both Friday and Saturday nights. Dr. F. C. Allen intends to annex two victories over the Wildcats in his drive toward a fifth consecutive Big Six title.
Out of the Big Six basketball race themselves, the Kansas State basketball team intends to complicate the title situation, starting with Kansas and perhaps ending with Iowa. The two teams will face each other, the two with Kansas, one with the Cyclones and one with Nebraska. Last weekend, they split with Oklahoma.
Toddy Haines, Kappa Alpha Theta,
was chosen beauty queen of the Sophom-
more class by Max Factor, Hollywood
beauty specialist. The next four are:
Louise Moore, Pt Beta Phi; Betty Lon-
McFarland, Pi Beta Phi; Helen Allen,
Delta Zeta; Mary Frances Martin, Chi
Omega. The pictures appeared in the
mid-semester number of the Jayhawker
Magazine, which came out yesterday.
Other beauties are as follows: Ruth De Wees, Alpha Chi Omega; Marilyn Kaysing, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Betty Ruth Smith, Alpha Kappa Theta; Florence Lee Kehl, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Ruth Ester Purdy, Chi Omega; Emily Vroman, Gamma Phi Beta; Marian Pyle, Pi Beta; Jane Grey, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Nadine Ingleman, Kappa Alpha Theta.
Sophomore Beauties Named Toddy Haines Heads List Selected by Max Factor
Joe Doctor, '25, editor-in-chief of the University Daily Kansan, was chosen from a panel of five names as publisher at a meeting of the Kanan Board year-
The plans for publisher were defeated last semester but were carried after a motion of reconsideration. The creation of the new position will fill a long-felt want on the part of the Kansan. The work of the publisher will be to correlate business, editorial and news sections and will eliminate the jagged edges of inconsistent and loosely constructed policy that has from time to time been imposed by students of the University. The publisher's term will be for one semester.
Ted O'Leary, '32, who was one of Dr. Allen's most outstanding pupils, has written an article about his former coach. Ted won All-Big Six and All-American forward berths in 1832; he worked with Dr. Alison for three years. He played basketball team and later coached basketball for two years at George Washington University. He is now working as a sports reporter on the Kansas City Star.
Ping Senate, '34, has a very humorous article in the Jahayhawker on bundling entitled "Under Cover." He is one of the campus' favorite humorists of the last few years. Brad Thompson, an employee of the Capper Engraving Co., and editor of the KAW, annual magazine of Washburn College last year, illustrated Fiona's story with some exceptional air-brush drawings.
Doctor Elected Publisher
Julia Markham, c$5, was elected to
acuteency until mid-semetra as editor-in-
charge.
Julia Markham Chosen Editor-in-Chief To Fill Vacancy
McDermott to Speak Here
Judge to Lecture at All-University Convocation March 13
Judge George T. McDermott of the D. S. Circuit Court, 19th Judicial District, a native Jayhawker, will speak on University-university conversation on March 13.
Admitted to the bar in 1910 he rose, becoming judge in the U. S. District Court of Kansas in 1928, from where he went on to his present position in May 1929. From 1915-1917 he served in the army as a First Lieutenant in World War II. He is a member of American Legion and American Bar Associations.
Judge McDermott was born in Winfield and was graduated from Southwestern College in 1905. He is the recipient of degrees from the University of Pittsburgh and a fellow of Jurisdictions in 1909. In 1929 he made an LLD, by Washburn.
Judge McDermott's topic is unannounced.
Famous Jurist to Speak On Campus This Morning
J. H. Wigmore Will Lecture in Fraser Theater at 11:30
Dean J. H. Wigmore, for many years dean of the Northwestern School of Law, will speak to the law students and to any members of the University who wish to attend today in Fraser theater at 11:30 a.m.
at 11:30
Dean Wigmore is a well-known figure in the United States and one of the best known jurists in the country. He is a graduate of Harvard, and for three years was a professor of American law in the University of Tokyo, Japan. For the past 40 years he has been connected with the university as professor of law and dean.
He is a voluminous writer, his great work on Evidence bring the standard authority of the country. Dean Wigmore's presence in Kansas City, Mo., today made it possible for him to arrange a side trio to Lawrence.
Gist to Receive Ph.D. Degree
Proof. Noel P. Gist, associate professor of Sociology, will receive his Ph.D. degree from Northwestern University this June. Professor Gist received his Master's degree from the University of Kansas in 1929 and his Bachelor's degree from Kansas State Teachers College of Emporia in 1923.
Early Enrollment For All Students Suggested by MSC
Committee of Men's Coun cil Will Confer With Faculty Group on New Plan
Acting on the assumption that a thorough and systematic change toward simplification of existing enrollment conditions is necessary, the Men's Student Council, meeting in Memorial Union last evening, drew plans for the campus to be presented for consideration to the faculty enrollment committee headed by Prof. Guy Smith.
The suggested changes were advanced by a committee under the direction of Norbert Anschutz, c 36, after an investigation and consideration of enrolling systems in other universities in the United States and Europe.
Amchecht advanced the following suggested changes as these best toward a more practical plan of enrollment. A *enrollment* for all except new students.
More Students To Enroll Early
All students who have spent at least one semester at this University will enroll near the end of the current semester in the courses which they expect to take
2 A system similar to the present en-
rollment system but on a minor scale to
provide for all new students including
first semester freshmen.
The council believes that new students should be given advice similar to that given all students at the present time because they are unfamiliar with the curricula. With advanced students already enrolled, the advisers and chairmen have more time to devote to adding the new student in his selection of courses.
3. Require consultation with adviser at least once each semester. A student not having sufficient hours for sophomore standing must have the signed approval of his adviser on the enrolling card.
George Washington's Birthday
The adviser must be consulted before pre-enrollment for his advice in the selection of courses. His advice need not be followed except in the case of those students not having enough hours for sophomore standing. The council feels
Hours Checked By Advisers
Observe good faith and justice towards all nations, cultivate peace and harmony with all.
(Continued on Page Three)
The name of American, which belongs to you, in your national capacity, must always exalt the just pride of Patriotism, more than any appellation derived from local discriminations.
It will be worthy of a free, enlightened, and, at no distant period, a great nation, to give to mankind the magnanimous and too novel example of a people always guided by an exalted justice and benevolence.—Washington's Farewell Address to the American People.
Kennamer Guilty
Jury Returns Verdict of Manslaughter
Pawnee, Okla., Feb. 22-(UP)-Phil Kenmander was convicted here tonight of first degree manlaughter for the death of John F. Gorrell, Jr., last Thanksgiving night.
The verdict carries with it a sentence of from four years to life imprisonment.
The jury took the case at 11:44 am this morning and returned at 9:16 pm tonight.
The jury, which had the power to sentence Kennerman or to leave it up to the judge, decided to do the latter. Judge Thurman S. Hurst stated that he would pronounce sentence Saturday at 2 pm.
Defense attorneys said that a formal notice of appeal would be filed immediately after the sentence was pronounced.
Korzybski to Discuss Difficulties of Language
Lecture on General Semantics to Be Given This Afternoon
The lecture by Count Alfred Korzybski in Central Administration auditorium this afternoon at 3 o'clock on the subject, "General Semantics and Mental Hygiene," will consist of a study of language and its difficulties. Having made it his life work, Count Korzybski is undoubtedly more fully prepared and is more able to speak than others in his field, according to Dr. Raymond Wheeler, head of the department of psychology.
Dr. Wheeler explained the scientist's work in the following way: "A new branch of general science in experimental science is being developed by Korylbski and others who are following his lead. This is called the science of general semantics and deals with the structure of thought as compounded with other concepts." For example, if you have a map by means of which you are guiding yourself across the country, you are lost unless the map corresponds with the country adequately. We use language just as we use maps as a guide to the nature of the world, society and ourselves. It consists of symbols, annotations and expressions expressed by the symbols corresponds to the world of reality we are lost."
Count Korbyski has been doing research work in St. Elizabeth's Hospital in Washington for two years with promising success, and various institutions of learning scattered over the country are beginning to alter their teaching models of Korbyski's suggestions, again with promising success. His work is an important feature of the universal change that is taking place in the different sciences and is now beginning to grip social science. He stresses, as do other modern writers, the unity and inter-connectedness of things on the one hand and the other on the other. He belongs to the general organicistic and relativistic movement.
DR. C. T. BUTTERFIELD SPEAKS AT BACTERIOLOGISTS' MEETING
Dr. C. T. Butterfield, bacteriologist of the United States Public Health service, and Dr. H. E. Jordan of Indianapolis, spoks at a lunchun given by the N.C. State Bob and seminar yesterday. Prof. N. P. Sherwoold presided at the luncheon.
McNown Heads Fine Arts School
Margaret McNown, fa'38, was elected president of the School of Fine Arts in the election held yesterday. Robert Cooke, fa'35, was elected vice president, and Alice Denton, fa'35, secretary-treasurer.
Quack Club Tryouts Tomorrow
Quack Club will hold tryouts tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock. Any person who has tried previously or anyone who has never tried before may come. The test will be given in strokes and dives. Any Quack Club pledge who has not passed her diving test may also attempt to do so at this time.
Midnight Basketball Scores
Coe's 38, Wakara 5.
Pi Kappa Alpha forfeited to Sigma
P. Freilog
Sunday
...
AUTHORIZED PARTIES
Saturday
Pi Kappa Alpha, Eldridge, 12
Delta Tau Delta, House, 6-10 AGNES HUSBAND,
Dean or Women,
Dictator's Power Rests on Appeal To National Unity
-Rateliffe
English Journalist Blames Treaty of Versailles for European Conditions
"The power of the modern dictator rests upon the fact that he is able to restore and intensify the sense of national unity, lost through the downfall of monarchies in the war period," S. K. Ratcliffe, English journalist, told a large audience last night. "We can scarely believe that a dictator existed when King George came to the throne in 1910 have disappeared."
"Twenty years after, we pause," Mr. Ratliffe said, "to try to weigh up the gains and the losses of the long struggle. Yet 20 years after, we see almost unimaginable results. The two most contested battles since the World War are the fulfillment of the Soviet Revolution and the progress of counter revolutions.
Dictators Date Back to Treaty
DECISIONS
The universes belief during the war period had a democracy would in the end prevail. It would have been impossible for society 20 years ago to conceive of dictatorships as we see them today. People of a generation ago could not have believed that civilization would ever develop such phenomena as we have today in Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany. The development of the dictator results in a repudiation of all democracy, he pointed out.
In dictatorships, we have thrown over all the progress made toward liberty through the nineteenth century. That fatal June 30 in Germany, when the so-called 'burge purge' took place, represents the system of the dictator, whose punishments are dealt with; they can only be crushed, Mr. Ratcliffe said.
Describes Saar Plebescite
"No one who has studied Germany since the war doubts that Nazi Germany is a product of the Versailles treaty," he said. "Europe should have been concerned with protecting itself from the ideas of Bohlevinice Russia. The country would not be软弱ishiging German strong, but the diploma missed this great opportunity."
Mr. Ratliffe was in the Saar region before the plebiscite, and relate that the Nazi won the Saarland back to Germany by two main points in their propaganda: They said that if the Saarlanders did not vote for immediate return to Germany, they would be traitors to the fatherland; and that if they voted themselves out, they would vote themselves out forever.
Europe in Favor of Peace
The League of Nations started with great idealism and human hope and faith, although two great powers, the United States and Russia, were out of sight. The League of collective responsibility is in danger of being overthrown by the refusal of a great power to recognize the responsibility of its own word. That nation is Japan."
In answering a question at the end of his lecture, Mr. Rattifile stated emphatically that he believed Europe to be predominantly in favor of peace, and that there was no danger of Russia's entering into a war with Japan.
WRITING IS IN DANGER
Latcliffe Points Out Sloppiness of Today's Literature
ized by a general sloppiness of expression, is in danger of losing the heritage of our language unless we continue to study the art of the great masters of the past, whose greatest exponent was Charles Lamb," said S. K. Rateliffe, English journalist and author in a talk yesterday to the English majors and others interested. According to the author, this exacerbated by the immense accesions we have made to non-literary influences caused by the multiplicity of new occupations and new processes of applied science.
M. Ratlczyc, who was introduced by R.D. O'Leary, professor of English, gave a review of the life of the great English writer as part of a celebration of the centenary of Lamb, who died in December, 1834.
The speaker drew a comparison between Lamb and H. G. Wells, stating that they both came from the group of care-takers and upper servants. Lamb was the son of a caretaker and a worker at London. He was fortunate enough to be educated at Christ's Hospital in London. Like many other famous men in English literature,
(Continued on Page Three)
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1935
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE. KANSAS
EDITOR IN CHIEF JOSEPH DOCTOR
Julia Markham Charles Brown
MANAGING EDITOR ... CAROLYN HARPER
Campus Editor Harry Valentine
(Joseph M. Herbert)
Sports Editor (Gerald Herbert Patel)
Sports Editor Elizabeth Martell
Non-Editor Brian Fry
Non-Editor Shane Doyle
Exchange Editor Jonaph神明
Exchange Editor Jonathan
Business Manager... F. Quentin Brown
Aust. Business Manager... Ellen Carter
Lena Watty Mr. Olson
Mary Moreau Mr. Moreau
Loreen Miller Rotherday Hewlett
Worley McCalla P. Julia Markman
Carl Harper F. Quinn
Frank Tuburn Joseph Doctor
Business Ancce...K.U. 20
New Room ... K.U. 20
Night Connections, Business Office ... 2701K 2701K
Night Connections, News Room ... 2702K
Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday and Saturday.
Provides classrooms by aircraft in the department
of Education, provides classrooms at the Press
of the Department of Journalism, provides
classes at the Department of Education,
provides classes at 12.25 on payments. Single copies,
not available.
Entered as second class master, September
17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan.
KANSAS PRESS
1925
ASSOCIATION
GREATER THAN EVER
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1935
"The Constitution is gone," says Supreme Court Justice McReynolds. Gone because the Supreme Court upheld Congress in its power to fix money standards?
What is the Constitution? Is it a document humanity must obey, or is it a document that must obey humanity? Are we to be slaves of a government, or is the government to be our obliging servant which adjusts itself to our needs? Many another nation has no written constitution to bind it to certain channels from which there can be no escape except revolution. Government is "of the people, by the people, for the people," not the masterwork of the people.
If Justice McReynolds had said, "The Supreme Court is gone," then he would have cause for long face. It is not the Constitution that we need worry about, it is the men on the Supreme Court bench. The Supreme Court measures with justice and reason the functions of our legislators. If the majority of the justices say the gold clause is all right, it must be all right. Such legislation was needed at a time when the country was at the crisis of depression. What kind of a constitution would it be that would stand in the way of the welfare of the nation?
The Constitution is not gone. It is still there, adjusting itself to the needs of the people over which it stands guard. One of the greatest criticisms of the document is its rigidity, but the recent decision has erased that. It has proven itself stronger than ever in the light of the nation's needs.
Along with the earliest robins has come the activity in the sea of mud that serves as a front yard for Watson library. Buildings and grounds department gardeners have outlined what will one day be copies of cool green shrubberry. English and journalism majors are already beginning to wonder how the plotted shrubberry beds will affect the paths beaten with so much difficulty toward various parts of the campus.
On look at the derby hats, the natty suits, and the general impeccable appearance of the members of the Kansas City Philharmonic orchestra which visited our campus, and college men begin to realize that they are not ultrafraultra in the matter of dress.
Campus Opinion
Editor Daily Kansan:
As a member of the Kayhawk Club I do not know whether pride or disappointment is uppermost when I contemplate the political career of this organization. I do know, however, that I feel a touch of sentimental regret at the passing of the old Oread-Kayhawk party. My grief is lightened by a vague belief in Carlyle's idea that "all death is a boon" from the Phoenix fire death
into the newer and better." So I have not been so badly affected by the decrease of the party as it has existed, but that I have been able to compose this lament, elegy, epitaph, or what 'have you:
Weep for our O-K's. Lo, they are no more
And weep, ye Oreads, both barbs and frat men.
Weep, civic virtues, tall men, als
Kayhawk withdraws from the political core.
Let us all mourn, for though it was a bore.
How charmingly re-echoed through our den
(The Union basement) cries long in our ken.
our ken.
"May the bad frat machine exist no more!"
The ashes rest in a lamented urn,
I do these rest, united, mourned.
Long may they rest, in merited re- pose
For Kayhawk has done much since its first breath—
Released the barb, who knew no where to turn.
And fairly wrestled with the blank-blank foes.
A new and better thing comes from this death.
this death. A. Kaybawk
A Kayhawk.
COMMENTS
—By the Editor
JENNIE LEE SAYS WAR
Jennie Lee is a famous English politician, expert in statecraft by the virtue of two elections to Parliament and a brilliant mind. If she says Europe cramming for another war, we support her, she know what she is talking about.
But as we paused today to watch Mr. Van Horebeek lay a chalk line around a future shrubberry bed, we began to wonder what "Van" thought about it. He is a Belgian, you know, he was a soldier in the army that held up the German advance for 10 days. "Van" is not given to pessimisms, and his talk is straightforward enough to sound logical. When quenched on the subject of future war, he said "No" with a positiveness that would be even such sureness as Jennie Lee's.
Van says that Europe has not forgot ten the last war—that the people realize nothing can be gained through war. As to militaristic dictators, Van believes they are doing the best they can, and that they are not half so militarized as the enemies wield on them on the last great battlefield, and as we are made to think.
Now "Van" is no statesman. His business is to see that flowers grow on Mt. Oread in spite of the inconsiderate feet of students and the swift uncertainties of Kansas weather. But the view, as the opinion of one who has no political views to sir other than his own sense of what is right.
POLITICAL RUMBLINGS
Campus opinions have come tumbling in concerning the Hill political set-up. Either the Oread organization is trying our pages for a little free pre-campaign publicity or there is considerable feeling against the present regime, for they have all been decided pro-Oread-Kayhawk. We would like to see a few letters to the editor from the Pachacamacs. Being aloft from the cries of the rabble can be carried too far. Witness the G.O.P.
PROFESSOR HOWEY AGREES WITH COURT
We do not know if Professor Howey would take the job or not, but if he had been on the Supreme Court bench the decision would have been six to three in favor of the right of Congress to legislate on the gold standard. He would be as always, guarding the recent action of the Court. "Reasonable and good."
Sometime when you have nothing else to do go over and bother Fred Ellsworth. Ask him to name a few of the alumni of our University who are out setting the world on fire in the old Horatio Alger style. You will find Mr. Ellsworth is almost bowed down by the weight of the responsibility of corresponding with famous people. You may feel you can name, has Kansas men near the top. Some of us who feel that perhaps college isn't worth it after all should feel differently an interview with the Alumni secretary.
ALUMNI TO THE FORE
The Daily Northwestern has started a drive on the "ismis" such as Communism, Nazi-ism and Facism. It's nice Kansas isn't bothered with such things, and all we have t worry about is jackrabbits.
ROCK CHALKLETS Conducted by R.J.B.
A scientist says the human body contains at least four high-grade explosives. Now we understand why some of them often—often E. K. Kelly in Topica Capital.
Dr. Tugwell believes the day will come when a considerable number of the male population will receive in-
All who have attended the Estes Conference are invited to an Estes Reunion to be held this evening at 8 o'clock at Hemley house.
OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
ESTES REUNION:
Friday, Feb. 22, 1835
Psychological examinations for students registering late and students failing to appear at last examination will be given in room 15. Fraser hall at 9 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 23. This will be the last examination before the summer session.
A. H. TURNEY.
"Spring Is In the Air"--at the
Try One of Our Stimulating GRAPE JULEPS
Quck club trouts for new Quck club pledges will be held Saturday, Feb. 22, at 10 a.m. Present Quck club pledges may pass their dives at the same time. All members must be present. HELEN BOMAN, President.
Missouri better look to its laurels in the mule business. We read in the papers that it took someone three years, four years, too, to wear out a Virginia mule.
We think it must be an excellent idea for some Kansan reporter to interview the first robin as to his ideas. The first one is another of those else has something to say about it.
Sigma Eta Chi will hold pledging services Sunday afternoon at 4:30 in the chamber room of the Conreguales church.
QUACK CLUB:
WILFRED McCLAIN.
SIGMA ETA CHI:
PSYCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATIONS:
As we see it, Comrade Hitler is turning into quite a cut-up.
CATHERINE PENNER, President
UNION FOUNTAIN
Syracuse University has a hen that is turning into a rooster. Not being a hen we hesitate to say anything, but from the rooster standpoint we could consider such an evolution very embarrassing.
SNOW ZOOLOGY CLUB:
Snow Zoology club will meet Tuesday, Feb. 26, at 6 p.m. for regular dinner. Dr. Rice, of Kansas City Junior College, will speak.
comes without working. He doesn't say anything about the women, but it will probably be the women who will pay.
Headline in. Kansas City Star—"Huey's Fate In His Nose." Wed say it should say, "Huey's Fate In His Knows."
So Ted Shawn keeps his dancers飞 by having them chop wood. Why wouldn't it be a good idea for wood-working? It would help to keep in trim for their business.
After seeing the High school students parading up the Hill to the concert we noticed the only difference between them was their shoes. They walked in a more orderly manner,
Playing three-cushion billiards and taking a date out are synonymous; they both require a system of piay.
The campus pigeons are burned up. Yesterday a robin sailed in to take up summer quarters.
Sub-Basement Memorial Union
HARRY PETERKA, President.
THE CAMPUS BARD
THE CAMPUS BAR
On such a lovely day like this, when balmy breezes softly kiss and Hug old Dyche museum—I'd like to be a bumblebee and Air fly around and see and see, everything that seem.
Or if I were a hopper grass
And didn't have to take no saws From man or beast—I'd go a hopping, hippity hop Into the land of soda pop, And there I'd feast.
But I am not a bumblebee, or hopper grass, and so I see for me, I a homo sapien, can Never join that other clan In reverely.
THERE IS A SHADE OF
3 Meals Each Day, balanced food All for 49c
Illusion Powder
Have You Thought About the Co-operative Meal Plan?
Elizabeth Arden has fourteen shades of Illusion Powder—one for every known skin tone. Each is sifted innumerable times through finest silk, absolutely preforming variegated streaks
Only $2.75 per week and on the hill
at the
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for YOU and YOU and YOU
on your face. This petal-
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youth td even a tired skin.
Stays on endlessly. Is perfec-
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lastingly. Perfect for discrimi-
nating women.
$1.75 - $3.00
Weaver's
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CITIES SERVICE GASOLINE OILS and GREASE
621-623-625 Mass.
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BULLENE-SKINNER MOTOR CO.
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New Phone — 361
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PRESENTING OUR
"Patticoat Lane"
FOOTWEAR 6.95
NEW SPRING - - -
A Few Styles $8.75
NOW—The New Petticoat Lanes! . . . New fabrics that complement Spring costumes. New lines that tell the advance mode. New details that show the trend toward more elaboration in trimming . . . and of course the quality that proves them "Petticoat Lanes."
PAMONA . . . $6.95
Sandal of Sander cloth with
parent stripping. Black, blue
or brown.
A high heel shoe.
CHARAM . $8.75
Sandor cloth two-eyelet tie:
matching trim. Black.
blue, brown, gray.
RONDINE . . $6.95
S
OMAR . . . $6.95
T
Sandor cloth three-eyelid oxford with perforated patent trim. Black, brown, blue
Patient tream vamp oxford; matching Sander cloth quarers. Black, brown, blue.
I
PEEKIN . . . . $6.95
Parent sandal; grey silk and
grey lizard inserts. Black.
blue, brown.
10
HARZFELD'S
Hilltop Shop — 12th and Oread
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1935
---
530
PAGE THREET
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
2
A
B
Hill Society
Before 5 p.m. call KU. 25, between 7:30 and 9
11:30 call ZP2KK.
Dr. Wheeler Speaks
At Pi Lambda Theta Meeting
Pi Llamada Theta held its annual open meeting for women yesterday afternoon in room 223. Administration spoke on "Education for Tomorrow."
Following the talk, tea was served in the women's lounge with Miss Ruth Lichen in charge, assisted by Ruth Kenney, Marian Fisher, Rush Stout, Ruth Barrard, and Josephine Lee. A color scheme of red and yellow was used, Mrs. Raymond A. Schwegeler and Mrs. John H. Nelson presided at the tea tables.
Count Koezwebli
Count Alfred Korzybski, scientist and scholar, whose home is now in Washington and New York, will be the guest of night. Dr. and Mrs. R. H. Wheeler who will entertain with an informal supper in his honor at 6:30 oclock. Mrs. J. P. Brown and Miss Beulah Morrison will assist.
Count Korzybski
Guest of Dr. R. H. Wheeler
Stoland-Weatherby Wedding
Dr. and Mrs. O. O. Stolland announce the marriage of their daughter Rae Evelyn, 34 to Herbert W. Weatherby, 33. The marriage took place at 6 o'clock last night at the home of the bride's parents, 1845 Learnard street.
Mrs. Weatherby is a member of Pi Beta Phi, social sorority, and Mr. Weatherby is affiliated with the Sigma Kappa fraternity at the Lawrence Building and Loan.
Count Koryzbylski, who for the past month has been making a study of new methods of education at the Barstow Institute, will lecture at the University this afternoon.
☆ ☆ ☆
☆ ☆ ☆
Initiation services were held by the K.U. Dames Wednesday evening at the home of Mrs. Clyde Tombaugh for the following: Mrs. Glen Bond, Mrs. Allen Cochran, Mrs. Charles Dills, Mrs. Robert Edgar, Mrs. Herman Ericson, Mrs. Flood Hyon, Mrs. Harlan Heas, Mrs. Gillespie, Mrs. Patricia, Mrs. Leon King, Mrs. Vinec O'Leary, Mrs. James Phillips, Mrs. John Reger, and Mrs. John Shanklin.
5
Alpha TU Omega entertained with an hour dance at the chapter house last night from 7 until 8 o'clock. The guests were Betty Williams, c37; Marie Jewish w1h, c38; Joella Brewes, c1ue, c39; Marie Lee Koehler, c3a; Maria f3c; Mary Alice Lanscott, c1el; Elengran Grant, c38; Rous McVeily, c38; and Mary Joe Bair, c37.
KU
A party for those students interested in Estes Conference work will be given at 8 o'clock this evening. Seventy-five students are expected.
Plms will be discussed for attending,
the next Estes reunion to be held at
Estes Park, Colo., from June 7 to
17, 1973.
M. , J. B. Lawrence of Council Greve; M., M. C. Campbell, Mary Ain Blakeyen both of Kansas City, Mo; and Betty Edison, c38; were luncheon guests at the Pi Beta Phi house yesterday.
BOYS: Newly decorated rooms, at reasonable rate. One block from campus.
Access to sleeping porch. Phone 1127W.
*
BOYS: Two large rooms, double or single, both have plenty of light. One has half-bath and twin beds. Recently furnished. Phone 16783. 1121 HC. -1023
☆ ☆ ☆
Caroline Brink, c36, Mary Margerett Manury, c37, Helen Black, c35, Elena Nolan, c35, and Margaret Pyle, c37 will be the weekend guests of Betty McFarland, c38, in Topeka where she will attend the Phil Delta Theta party.
ROOMS FOR RENT
Dinner guests at the Phi Gamma
Delta house last night were Mrs. S,
S. Ellott, Miss Maude Elliot, assistant
Miss Melissa Elliot, Metals, PES),
and Prof. R. S. Howey.
Mrs. E, C. M. Morgan and Mrs. Claud Reed of Clay Center, were dinner guests at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house last night.
Sigma Della Chi, national journalistic fraternity, will entertain S. K Ratelleff with a 12:30 o'clock luncheon today at the Manor.
Gene Haughey, c. 435, Allison McClure, c. 396, Thomas Van Cleave, c. 384, Les Judy, c. 283, and Jack Hudshus, c. 383, Kenneth Barker, c. 374, Theta party. Theta party in Topela Friday night.
August Ammeberg, fa'76, and Charles
Beau, c83, were dinner guests at the
Delta Sigma Lambda house Wednesday.
☆ ☆ ☆
Charlaine Armstrong, 34, and Virginia Burgess, $^2$ for of Kansas City, Mo. will be guests at the Gamma Phi house this weekend.
☆ ☆ ☆
LOST: Purple fountain pen with name
Mabel Gist engraved on it. Call Noel
Gist 24793.
-99
☆ ☆ ☆
Jane Campbell, f'36, and Margaret tyan, c'36, will spend the weekend in Iopeka were they will attend the Phi delta Theta party.
Mrs. D. L. Wheelock of Clay Center, was a guest at the Pki Kappa Psi house last night for dinner.
☆ ☆ ☆
S. K. Ratchliffe, English lecturer, is a guest at the home of Prof. and Mrs. R. D. O'Leary.
LOST: A pair of ladies gold rimmed glasses in blue leather case. Probably lost in Watson library. Phone Mary Jane Lusford, 1946. -99
Jim Mandigo, c'35, of Kansas City, Mo., is a guest at the Pi Kappa Alpha house this weekend.
Frank Sieak, e35, was a dinner guest at the Pi Kappa Alpha house last night.
Paul Lewis, 'eunl, was a dinner guest at the Delta Sigma Lambda house 'ast night.
PHONE K.U. 66
☆ ☆ ☆
FOUND: 16 pair of ladies 'gloves', 1 furm
毛uff, 2 scarfs, 1 heret, 2 ladies' coin
purse. Call at Union Building Office.
Alpha Omicron Pi announces the ledging of Berda Ames, c38, of Clafn.
BOARD AND ROOM
LOST AND FOUND
Bernie Gridley, c'38, of Wichita, is a guest at the Beta Theta Pi house.
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MYOURSERVICE
9
Phone
9
Meeting of Sanitation Men Gets Under Way
We Call and Deliver
Chancellor Lindley Greets Delegates to Convention
Cannellor E. H. Linden greeted the members of the Kansas Water and Sewage Works Association at the fourth session of the eleventh annual three-day
vention
One hundred persons had registered by 3 p.m. yesterday. Members engaged quite freely in the round table discussions, conducted by Professor Eurnest Boyce, of the water and sewage laboratory.
Harry E. Jordan, president of the American Water Works Association, talking on "The Importance of Water Supply Improvements in the Public Works Program," made the principal talk of the morning session.
The afternoon session dealt with the Kansas Water Conservation program. Sam Wilson, secretary of the State Planning Board, Topeka; Clark Jacoby, consulting engineer for the Nesho River Improvement association, Kansas City, Mt.; Odden Jones, supervising the state's Department of Forestry, Strong, secretary of the State Forestry, Fish and Game committee, were the speakers for the afternoon.
Conservation problems will be discussed at the fifth session, which begins this morning at 9 o'clock. Two University professors will present topics at this session. Robert Warner, professor of electrical engineering, will tell the group of electrical methods used at the present time for locating underground water. K. K. Landes, professor of geology, will present the "Mapping of Aquifers of Kangas."
At the annual business meeting has night the following officers of the association were elected:
President, F. W. Hoover, Coffevilley,
Vice-President; H. H. Huffman,
Toperkj, F. E. Willey, Marion; D.
H. Rupp, Toperkj A. S. Anderson,
Linden; Secretary-Treasurer, Earnest
Ford of Proceedings, Charles
D. Editor of Proceedings,
The final session will be devoted to talks on swimming pools. H. G. Alliph, University swimming coach, will open the session with a discussion of "Swimming for Lesure." C. A. Novak, manager of the Otowa municipal manager pools; A. B. Martin, a Lawrence attorney; and Ross Laybourn, director of the Swimming Department on campus, present interesting sidelights on swimming.
At the close of the round table discussion of swimming the three-day school will adjourn for another year.
Narrow W.S.G.A. Chorus to 12
The chorus for the W.S.G.A. musical comedy has been narrowed down to 12 members according to Joe Dunkel, director. Ruth Pyle, C35, is directing the chorus while Dunkel is making a tour. Club. Sports practices are being held every month between 3:30 and 5 o'clock in the Union ballroom.
Prof. H. B. Hungerford of the department of entomology will attend the meeting of the Kansas State Entomology Society that is being held today at Topeka.
Hungerford to Topeka
NOTICE
Effective Saturday, Feb. 23, the time of the Streamliner will be changed from 9:48 a.m. to 9:46 a.m.
Effective same date the Streamliner will make a round trip daily between Kansas City and Topeka on a slightly faster schedule than the present one, making the 68 miles each way in 68 minutes.
Leave Topeka 12:30 p.m.
Leave Lawrence 12:58 p.m.
Arrive Kansas City 1:38 p.m.
The new Streamline has provisional schedule so be put on to take care of the business.-Adv. 2-
Leave Kansas City ... 11:00 a.m.
Leave Lawrence ... 11:42 a.m.
Arrive Topeka ... 12:08 p.m.
East Bound
The New Schedule
(Continued from page one)
Lamb spent his professional life in the public service. He was clerk in the office of the East India Company, a peculiar occupation for one with such unusual and original literary gifts.
Dictaeor's Powers Rest On National Unity Appeal
The speaker considered that Lamb's greatest glory lies in the fact that his manner of writing appealed to persons with a kind of outlook, education, or tradition.
KFKU
Friday. Feb. 22
2. 30 p.m. Music Appreciation period, Edward MacDowell, Prof. Charles Skill-
6.00 p.m. Boy Scout News Flash
6.05 p.m. National Defense, Col. W. C.
Koenig
8:15 p.m. Musical program arranged by Prof. Karl Kuersteiner
Delegates Return from Emporia
Thelma Humphrey, ed35, Ruth Learned, c37, Marian Fisher, ed35 and Mary Grace Linscoe, c1unc, returned yesterday from Emporia where they attended the Athletic Federation of College Women's Convention. Eight states of the middle-west were represented at this convention by delegates. Miss Ruth Hoover, assistant professor of physical education, Helen Boman, ed35, and Mary Bess Doty, ed35, attended the meetings of the convention Wednesday.
Sam Elliott, University mail carrier, was unable to carry mail today because of illness.
Council Suggests Early Enrollment for Students
(Continued from page one)
that the student will benefit by his advisor's suggestions but does not deem it important. And the adviser's signature on the enrollment card.
4. Changes made in the enrollment of pre-enrollment students will be effected at the time and place with the enrollment of new students.
If the advanced student desires to change his enrollment he will do it in this way to avoid unnecessary red-tape and for economy of time.
The council voted on other measures in the form of suggestions rather than resolutions to be put before the faculty committee. They are:
1. We suggest a relaxation in the press- system of pre-requisition courses in depth.
We Serve Shrimp at all times Day or Night
Free Friday Night We will look for you.
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K. U. Students and Faculty
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During this period of high priced commodities we invite you to take advantage of our low prices for high quality food.
--committee is composed of the following members: Norbert Anchert, e c;36, William Beck, f a;uncl, J. John Darwin, 125; William Hazeen, 174; Ilya Lloyd Matel, 83.
SPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER From 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.
DeLuxe Cafe
For 16 years our cafe has been popular with K.U. faculty and students.."Ask Your Friends."
2. We suggest changes in the organization of the group system by reducing the number of groups and more fairly apportioning the subjects in the groups. This, we think, will give the student a wider range of selection of courses and eliminate to a degree closed classes. The council enrollment investigation
The plan will be presented to the faculty enrollment committee sometime within the next few weeks.
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PAGE FOUR
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1935
Lindsey Calls Out Squad for First Pre-Season Drill
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Coach Urges All Gridsterr to Prepare for Next Fall; Vacancies to Fill
Coach Ad Lindsey called out his football cohorts yesterday to announce spring practice which will start Monday, March 4. Six weeks of training before the Easter vacation has been planned to include scrimmage, new plays, and chalk talks every afternoon for five days a week. Every man that participates in the practice would make it a point to be out for this important practice urged the coach.
"I should like to see at least a hundred turn out this spring, and I can see no reason why we cannot have that number," declared Coach Lindsay. "If Missouri, a smaller school than Kansas, can afford it, then KU. has plenty of available material."
Coach Lindsay explained the eligibility rules, believing many students who were good in high school were not coming out for varsity athletics for some reason or to whether. "If a man has any doubt as to whether or not he can make the grade, he should come out and find out," said Lindsay.
"Spring practice is the time for new men to try out. If a man is staying away because he feels that he has not had enough practice for varsity play, he should come out now so that when the real grind comes along next fall he will be able to step right along with the vet training programs in the team to be filled this year, and new men have a good chance to make the squad," said the coach.
Thirty-five interested in football attended the meeting yesterday afternoon. Every man present was instructed to have two others out for the first practice.
The dressing rooms will be open from Monday to Friday at 3:30 beginning next week for players to check out their equipment. Coach Lindsey would like to get in an hour of real practice each day. Practice on cold or rainy days will consist of going over plays and skills A.M. and L.A. school begins three weeks after school starts next fall, the Notre Dame styles will be studied this spring.
The varsity football squad will take over the west stadium dressing rooms, as the east side is now occupied by track men and wrestlers. Mate Getto, line coach, and Forrest Cox, freshman coach, will assist in the pre-season training.
Those who turned out Thursday were: Samuel Erickson, Howard Smith, Ed Laub, Robert Stephenson, EnWI蒸哭攀, Pino Giangamello, Jack Guffin, Rodney Laughmiller, Clarence Winslow, David DeVittis, Eric Dougle, Douglas Deem, Gough, Guyleuth, John McCoy, Bruening, Bob Faudett, G. L Harrington, Lewis Ward, Drew McLaughlin, Lon Buzick, James Kell, F. Wardlow, Clearison Robinson, Bill Shaw, Forrest Hardace, Jack Vogel, Elmer Larson, Howard Morelane, Peterson, E. Humphrey, Edwin Phiels, Dick Fisher, Skidrik, and Fred Harris.
Jayhawkers Have Been Defeated Once by Kansas State
Swimmers to Meet Aggies
William Kester, a member of the swimming team is definitely out of swimming for the season because of sinus trouble. It is under this handicap that the Kansas swimming team will meet the Kansas Aggie team in a dual meet in the University pool Saturday at 3 o'clock. This change forces Coach Alliphn to make an adjustment in his entries.
In the meet with the Kansas Aggies at Manhattan, Feb. 12, Kansas was defeated by a score of 48 to 35
"In spite of our handicap, we believe that we can cut this score down. Last Saturday we defeated Washburn 48 to 35. Last Wednesday the Kansas Aggies defeated Washburn 50 to 34. This makes the Kansas Aggies a shade stronger than we are on paper," Coach Alphin said last night.
Mr. Aliphn expressed the wish for some divers, which would certainly give Kansas a better chance. With no divers entered in the meet, it means that Kansas has lost eight points before the meet has started.
The east entrance to the pool will be open so that women may have the opportunity of viewing the meet. Student identification cards will admit.
E. R. Elbel, assistant professor in physical education, will be the referee and starter.
Men's Intramurals
The Kappa Sig's continued their fight for the championship of their division Wednesday night by defeating Phi Delt five in a hard fought game. The score was 5-4, but neither team game did either team hold more than a two-point advantage. Morrison and
Colson caged eight and seven points, respectively, to lead the soaring for the winners. McClure was the spark of a team that won four field goals marked to his credit.
Kappa Sig 20
| Row | Column | G | FT F |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Roberts | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Chambers | 2 | 0 | 4 |
| Hasburgh | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| McClure | 4 | 1 | 0 |
| VnCleave | 0 | 1 | 0 |
G FT1
Cooper ... 2 1
Colson ... 3 1 0
Morrison ... 3 1
Naylor ... 0 0 3
Keeler ... 0 0 3
Referees: Plaskett and Vanek
Friday
8 4 6
West Court: 5:30 oclock Tramps vs Hawks; 7 o'clock, Sigma Chi vs Phi Pei.
East Court: 5:30 o'clock, P.A.D. v
K.E.K.; Delta Chi vs Delta Tau.
Saturday.
West court: 9 o'clock, Phai Psi H*
vs Delta Tau '9; B"10; o'clock ATO.
vs Phai Gam; 11 o'clock US. vs DAE.
12 o'clock, Rock Chalk vs Daughlas Club.
1 o'clock Independents vs Campau
j赛容; 2 o'clock Thetna vi Vachi Psi
East Court: 9 o'clock, Rock Chalk "B" *B* vs Tramps B" : 10 o'clock S.A.M. vs Acacia: 11 o'clock, Rock Chalk "C" vs Phi Delt B" : 12 o'clock S.A.B." vs Kappa SIG: B" : 1 o'clock, Triangle K: Psi F: SIG: 2 o'clock, Bet vs Kappa SIG
Two Ping Pong Matches Scheduled
Two ping pong matches are scheduled for today, both at the gym. At 3:30 I.W. W will play T.N.T, and at 4:30 Kappa Alpha Theta will meet Kappa Kappa Gamma.
Dr. E. H. Tayler of the department of zoology will speak at the meeting of the Bytany Club to be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the home of Dr. A. J. Mix, Florence Briscoe, president of the club, announced yesterday.
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Hargiss to Pick Entries For K.C.A.C. Track Mee
University Runners Wi Compete in Nine of Ten Events
Pi Phi and Chi Omega Win
Tryouts for the mile and two mile relay teams which will compete in the Kansas City Athletic Club track meet to be staged in Kansas City, Mo, March 2 will be held today, according to W. H. "Bill" Hargiss, head coach. In addition to the mile and two-mile relays, the following events will be held during the meet: 50-yard dash, 50-yard low hurdles, 50-yard high hurdles, 400-yard run, 800-yard run; mile run, high jump, and pole vault.
Hargiss will definitely enter men in all of the events except the two-mile relay. he will show up well in practice. he will also enter a two-mile队. The squad will not be announced until a later date. The two-mile team, if entered, will be selected from milers hanging in the half-mile run in the trovails.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Pi Beta Phi and Chi Omega placed high in the women's intramural swimming meet last night with 41.5 and 24 points respectively. I.W.W., Corbin Hall, and Gamma Phi Beta placed high with 22.5, 9, and 6 points respectively.
Victors in Swimming Meet; Finals To Be Held Thursday
Kiene, PI Phi, was high scorer with 15 points; Bomban and Hinton, both I. W. W tied for second place with 16 points; Geilig, PI Phi, was point with 8 points.
The events and their winners were: Relay; first Pi Phi (Bruce, Throckmorton, Koenig, and Klene), second Stroke; first Pi Phi (Rocky, Stroke form, first Hunter, I.W.W., second Edie, I.W.W., third, Stockman, Chi Omega, fourth, Walter, Gamma Phi; two lenghts free style: first Kiene, I.W.W., second Fees, Chi Omega, fourth, W. third Fees, Chi Omega, fourth, Lemon, Pi Phi; diving: first Boman, I.W.W., second Koenig, Pi Phi, third, Hunter, I.W.W., fourth, Rapp, unattached, third, Hedrick, Chi Omega, 27.6 seconds, second Lemon, Pi Phi, third, Hanson, Gamma Phi, fourth, Rapp, unattached; two lengths side: first Koenig, Pi Phi, second Fees
jer, Corbin Hall; crawl form: first;
Kleen, Pi Phi; second, Fees, Chi Omega,
third, Boman, I.W.W., fourth, Dick,
Dickman, II Phi; fifth, Chi Omega,
Hallock, C32, fourth, seconds,
Brown, Chi Omega, third, Porter Pi;
phi; three lengths free style first,
second, second, Dick, Hendrie,
Chi Omega, third, Dale Corbin Hall,
fourth, Sutherland, Pi Phi
The two winners of this match, Pi
Come to the DICKINSON NOW! ENDS SATURDAY
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Beta Phi and Chi Omega, will meet Kappa Alpha Theta and Kappa Kappa Gamma winners of Tuesday's meet, at 7:30 to decide the final winners.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
心
VOLUME XXXII
NUMBER 100
x
JAYHAWKS TROUNCE AGGIES IN SERIES
9
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1935
on the SHIN
BY JOE HOLLOWAY, c'35
Tut Tut Blowers, Why Not Tell the Truth . . . Daddy Morrison . . . A One-Act Play in Four Male Parts . . . Marj Has Company for the Bats.
For reasons which might be known to everyone who made the mistake of buying the magazine, we find great delight in correcting a mistake made by the Sour Owl. Gently, and with yet a decided quality of firmness, it has been brought to our knowledge that the Hill's most written about coo — we didn't say why - Peggy Anne, the Gov's daughter, has not broken her heart to Pi Bella to give her back in school in a short while. Remember, we're not saying she shouldn't break her pledge, nor are we offering any reason why she should come back to school — we're just trying to do our part in exposing the Sour Owl in its true character of tree-custards and behind the fire plug ethics.
Think how out of place all those muscles on Ted Shaw's men dancer feel when the fellows have no hair on their chests!
Saw a lovely honey scene scene Thursday—Betty Hodge and Jack Morrison lead through a little girl of some two years or so through the library. It brings back to us the realization that so many of us come to college for the wrong thing —what we what the wrong thing is—and did not happen for anything if the first place?
All this year we have made great efforts to stifle our pain, he martyrns, and disregard the antics of the Beta's and their little dog, Tray. We don't mind if the fellows think more of him than they do themselves, and naturally we enjoy seeing him cavorting about the campus in the next room or on the next chair in the library just so hell have plenty of room to sleep under the table?
The following is a little one-act play which took place at the Dickinson Thursday night. Four of the better boys from 1142 Indiana—probably one of our cousin Sol—went to the show and had to sit in the balcony. Number one put his coat on the railing in front, whereupon number two offered three doors a dive into the heads of the unsuspecting audience below: Number three thought the idea a good one but, being a plutocrat, ten cents wasn't enough dough for him, so he refused to commit the crime. While the above proposals and refusals were taking place, number one (remember, he owned the coat?) was listening in as was number four who has not come into the story yet. Well, to make this boring incident a little less boring, number four said he'd push the coat off for dime which he said he owes to him; that he did it because he had the consent of the fellow who owned the coat—if he'd split the profit.
There comes a tale of how Marli Hadson waked the other morning to the mouse of a mouse frolicking in her hair—no it wasn't Walter. It seems that she had some food on her table and the mouse was attracted by same and got derailed onto her head. Such anties Marlore!
Only yesterday we did see three fair mademoiselle seated in the Union. One was playing cards, the brazier haze; one was knitting, the sweet thing; and the last dear, dear, gal was reading—The Daily Kansani! Just think,死读, readers, the read in one day and then forgotten completely, while this noble sheet is read every day. It just shows you what the best people will do.
Men's Glee Club Well Received
The Men's Glee Club was well received at the Memorial Hall in Chanute About 2002 attended the program. In a letter written to the Kansas alumni office from the alumni at Chanute, it was said that a repetition of the concert was desired for next year.
Late Kansas Rally Defeats Wildcats Last Night, 36-30
Manhattan Leads Halftime
17-13; Ebling Scores
Fourteen Points
in Game
Standing of the Teams
GLENN SHATTERS WORLD'S MARK
| | W L | Pct | Pts | Pts |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| K. U. | 10 | 2 | 838 | 314 |
| K. U. | 10 | 2 | 777 | 363 |
| Iowa State | 8 | 2 | 777 | 403 |
| Oklahoma | 8 | 6 | 571 | 407 |
| Missouri | 8 | 5 | 571 | 414 |
| Kansas | 4 | 10 | 296 | 415 |
| Nebraska | 4 | 10 | 296 | 415 |
482
483
482
483
As a result of week-end's Big Six basketball play, the title race is narrowed down to a dual between Kansas and Iowa State. The Cyclones have only 1 more game, the Kansans, 4. If Iowa State wins over Kansas State on March 4, then Kansas can afford to drop only one of her tilts with Oklahoma and Missouri in order to hold on to the top. If Kansas State is victorious, the Jayhawkers will have a 2-game margin.
Ray Ebling, forward, led the late rally that won for the University of Kansas. He was high scorer with 14 points. Groves of Kansas State was only one point behind.
Muhntahh, Feb. 23. —(UP) The University of Kansas Jayhawks rallied in the second half of their game with Kansas State here tonight to defeat the Wilcester, 36 to 20, Kansas State led 17 to 13 at the half time.
The University established an 8 to 1 lead early in the game. Groves made three field goals and Freeland sank a free throw to tie the score. The score was tied again later at 10-all. Then Kansas State left down a barrage that netted five baskets before the Jay-bawkers scored again.
Early in the second half, the score was 25-20 in favor of Kansas State. Allen and Rogers sank two goals for Kansas, but Groves kept his team ahead, 27 to 24. The Kansers scored by Rogers. Then Ehlending dropped four goals in succession and set Kansas ahead, and on their way to victory.
The box score:
Kansas 36
Eblingh, f 6 2 1
Oyler, f 0 2 0
Kilman, f 0 0 0
Kilmanf, o 0 0 0
Welc, o 0 0 0
Bogers, o 3 1 2
Nobleg, o 3 1 2
Kansas State 30
G FT
Freeland f 3
Glipfn i 1
bombbr b 1
bombbr c 0
Stone r g 0
Stone r g 1
Ralba kg b 0
Totals 15 6 10
Totals ...12 6
Officials: Owen Cochrane, Kansas State; E. C. Quigley, St. Mary's.
KANSAS WINS FIRST GAME
Late Rally Brings Victory Over Aggies Friday Night
In the Friday night performance, the Jawhakers were pushed to the final minutes before they could forge ahead to win, 39 to 33. The score at the half was in the Wildcats' favor, 14 to 16. The Kansans took the lead shortly after the half, but lost it again. Two baskets by Gray, others by Noble and Ebbing made the winning margin in the last five minutes.
Eling and Groves, first and second in the conference total points race, tied for the match with 13 apices. Gray's accurate performance from the guard position netted five field goals. The loss score.
G FT F 0
Ebling.f . 1 6
Allen.f . 1 5
Gray.g . 1 5 0
Gray.g . 1 5 0
K p'k.ln.g . 0 2
Noble . 0 2
PFT
Gibpin 1 2 2 0
Freeidg 3 0 2 2
Gracev. 6 1 2
Raibskg 8 2 1
Stengel 1 6 2
Kansas 39
16 7 5
Referee: Cochran, Kansas State; Umpire: E. C. Quigley, St. Mary's.
14. 57
Iowa State Wins
Prof. H.E. Chandler, of the School of Education, will address the W.Y.C.A. Assembly Tuesday afternoon on "What Is Expected of a University Women." The assembly will be held in the Central Administration auditorium at 4:30. Following the program the nominating committee for new officers will be selected by the assembly. Freshman commission and advanced standing commission meetings have been postponed until next week.
CHANDLER WILL BE SPEAKER AT Y.W.C.A. MEETING TUESDAY
Team Maintains Firm Hold on Second Place
Ames, Feb. 23—(UP)—Urea State cinched its hold on second place in the Big Six basketball战团 tonight by defense, as the sapphire 12-14 in a close guarding game.
Cowen! F G FT
Cowen! f,ing! G 2 3
Wegmer! f,ing! 2 3
Wolgers! h,ing! 2 3
Hans! h,ing! 0 0
Iowa State
7 8 8
4 6 15
Officials: Johnston, Iowa; North, Highland Park.
Whinker f. 0
Baker f. 0
Baker f. 0
Walquist f. 1
Leucofx. 0
Halee f. 0
Halee f. 0
Mungwang 1 0
Mungwang 1 0
TIGER WINS FROM SOONERS
Norman, Feb. 23 - (UP) - The University of Missouri basketball squad night turned the tables on the University of Oklahoma and defeated the Sooners by a score of 41 to 37. Last night Oklaheim by the score of 45 to 24.
Oklahoma Drops Second Game of Series, 45-24
G GFT F
Thomson,f 0 F 0
Howell,f 0 F
Schaffer,f 3 F
Stromc, 3 2 1
Jorgseng,n 0 2 1
Jorgseng,n 0 0 0
Cooper,g 0 0 0
Totals ...18 5 10
GPT
Conley J 0
Haven I -0
Hayes J -0
Icome 0 1
Oo 0 1
Bion'n g-1 6
Tigerg 0 2
GPT
Officials: Referees Iowa, and John Old
Former Dean Speaks Here
Totals ... 14 9 8
Skimmer Miller of
Kansas.
Wigmore of Northwestern Advocates Scientific Crime Detection Bureau
"I want to see every state establish a scientific crime-detection bureau," said Dean J. H. Wigmore, former at dean of the School of Law at western University, in an address here Friday. In Dean Wigmore's opinion, the testimony of scientific experts is by far the most valuable in any case of law, whether civil or criminal, and should be furthered by establishing state courts.
In discussing the Hauptmann trial Dean Wigmore pointed out that Justice Trenchard was just and considerate it his treatment of witnesses, counsel, and the defendant but the courtroom should have been dealt with in stern fashion. The evidence in the trial, according to Dean Wigmore, was based upon three main points: the ransom notes, the material of the ladder, and the finding of the ransom money. The point about the evidence was merely incidental," said Mr. Wigmore.
"Some of the newspaper correspondents on the case should be given a term in jail," Dean Wigmore said in condemnation of some of the men involved in the prejudiced stories written by newspaper men conferring the case.
Prof. E. M. Hopkins, who has been under observation in Trinity Lutheran Hospital, Kansas City, Mo., for several weeks, will undergo a major operation
The address was well attended by law students, for whom it was primarily intended.
Hopkins to Undergo Operation
The World Purview
The World Purview Conducted by Prof. F. E. Melvin
TOKI GERMAN NOBLEWOMEN BE-
HEADED, . ITALY HAS CONSENT
A WAIT IN THE WRONG RAIL-
WAY INVENTION, . JAPAN THE
DANGER
(Ellis's Note—This is the first of a series of essays by Ellis, written on world events. Professor E. M. Elmshaw, an professor of history, will outline what he has learned from the events of modern history during the present period.)
In German university night a young globed beheader, dressed in the correct attire of a gentleman, lifted his mediary axe and sliced off the heads of two German noblewomen. Terrorism speaks terror? The question is pertinent when we note that the reputed ringleader in crimes against Christians has secret, Polish Captain von Soonakow, escaped the axe. We are reminded of the new German-Polish entente.
Ialy continue her showy preparations for a thrust into the territory of the pretentious ruler of Abyssinia. France and Britain stand by, aware of what is happening, and fellow-benefitaries in the diplomatic wrangle that may give Italy right to "protect" Ethiopia. She concentrates on the part in European grand politics of the week. She concentrates another army on her Austrian frontier.
Austrian Diplomats Visit Paris
At Geneva, America's Hugh Wilson proposes international agreements to
For upon Austria turn the negotiations begin recently at London to effect an eastern Locarno, Paris Socialists and Communists therefore waited in the wrong railroad station Thursday night for the "reception" they planned to give the dictators of Austrian destiny, arriving from Vienna for important conferences with Premier Flandin and Foreign Minister Laval. They took the advice of their counterpart defeated at this critical moment by a repetition of what felgu Jellou-Slavia's king.
(Continued on page 4)
MOORE AND KUERSTEINER TO ASSIST SKILTON AT VESPERS
A Leading Benefactor to the University
The seventy-ninth vesper organ recital under the direction of Prof. Charles Sanford Skilton will be presented this afternoon at four o'clock in the University Auditorium. Merit Mebriah Moore and Prof. Karl Kueisterstein will assist the Program and Program Director "Prelude to Monica" in B Minor (Bach); "Sister Monica" (Couperi); "Tocatina e Corule" (Karg-Elbert); and "Symphonic Chorale" (Karg-Eltert).
Set Out 40 Elm Trees
Mary E. Dearborn
Improvements have begun on the driveway entering the University campus from the south. Forty American elm saplings were planted yesterday and it was estimated by A. Van Horcbeck, landscape gardener in charge of work, that these 250 trees have been placed throughout the campus. Landscaping in front of Watson Library, he said, should begin the latter part of next month.
Students Read Papers
At a meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engineering in Marvin hall last night Riley Woodson, Harold J. Patterson and Danny N. School of Engineering and Architecture, read papers dealing with mechanical engineering and architecture.
Mrs. Elizabeth M. Watkins, who Thursday night was fed by the American Legion as the most useful citizen of Lawrence, has made the University of Kansas her most fortunate beneficiary.
In addition to her many scholarships, in 1926 she gave the University a residence hall for women students and in 1931 she gave a fully equipped student hospital, at a cost of $175-000.
O O O
Her gifts to the city of Lawrence include; the Lawrence Memorial Hospital, Elizabeth Watkins Nurses Home, and the City Hall building.
Cunningham Surpasses His Fondest Hope by Breaking Own Indoor World's Record in 3:50.5; Bonthron Comes in Second, After Making Gal- lant Gesture to Close Gap
New York, Feb. 23. (UP) - Glenn Cunningham, barrel-chested Kansan, greater militer the world has ever known, tonight established a new record for the 1500-meter run when he captured this feature event of the National A.A.U. meet indoor championship in 3:50.5.
Cunningham's mark was one of the half-dozen record breaking or equalling feats of a star-studded National Athletic Club meet.
GLENN CUNNINGHAM
Breaks Own Record
ANKSOK
The Kansas distance runner slashed 1.7 seconds from his own 1500 meter world's record made a year ago.
The mighty flicker from the Mid-West finished the race running away. He finished a good 30 yards ahead of his once arch rival, Bill
Koenig Announces Cadet Commissioned Officers
Thirty-five Given Appointments for Spring Semester
Lieut. Collet W. C. Koenig, professor of military science and tactics, announced yesterday the appointments of cadet commissioned R.O.T.C. officers for the spring semester. The appointments of non-comissioned officers will be announced this week.
These commissioned are:
Coast Artillery battalion commander,
Cadet Major Robert G. Braden, 'c35.
Assigned to coast artillery battalion
headquarters; Cadet Captain Fred
Beard, 'c35; Cadet Captain Charles
Willey, 'c35; Cadet 1st Lieu, Edward
Battery A. commander, Cadet Howard Miller, e35.
Assigned to Battery: A; Cadet 17 Lieut. Donl Fuller, e'uncel; Cadet 15 Lieut. Nathan Cookey, e'uncel; Cadet 23 Lieut. Alexander Csic, e'uncel; Cadet 22 Lieut. Alexander Swesa, e'uncel; Cadet 20 Lieut. Kenneth Willey, e'cels; Battery b Commander, Cadet Captain
Assigned to Battery B: Cadet 17 lieutenants, Lousi Forman, gr; James Eunclin; E35 *Cannon Starles* c;cunel; e;cunlol; Thompson Lawrence; e;cunl. *Thompson Lawrence*, e;cunl.
Engineer battalion commander, Cadet Major Robert D. McKim, 'c35.
Battalion executive, Cadet Captain
Battalion, Adjutant, Cadet William
Keller, e35
Kelaf, £5.50
Battian intelligence officer, Cadet 73
Frank Alexander, £35.50
Battalion plans and training officer Cadet 1st Lieut. George Dilott, e35
Battalion communication officer, Cadet
2nd Lgt. Bajt Elic. e38
Battalion plans and training officer,
Cadet 1st Lieut. George Dilwyn, £35.
Battalion supply officer, Cadet 2nd
Lieut. Louis Hamilton, £45.
Company C commander, Cadet Capt. Chevrey White e34; e35 in command, Cadet Capt. William Carter e35. Platton leader 1st platoon, Company C commander, Capet Capt. e35; second in command, Cadet Seid Lieut. Walter Klinkesk, e36.
Platoon leader, 2nd platoon, Company C, Cadet 1st Lieut. Ray Norris, e3; 3S, Second in command, Cadet 1st Lieut. Marvin Rausch, e3; 6R.
Company C, company commander,
Cadet Capt. Edward Tucker, e'uncl;
Second in command, Cadet 1st Lieut.
Le Moine Weiser, e'35.
Platton leader, 1st platton, Company D, Cadel 1st Lieut. Donald Smith, £36; Second in command, Cadet 2nd Lieut. Lloyd Christiansson, £35.
Platoon leader, 2nd platoon, Company D, Cadet 1st Lieut. Dale Savage, e35; Second in command, Cadet 2nd Lieut. Donald Phelps, 738.
INTEREST SHOWN IN PAPERS TO BE READ TO SCIENTIST
Titles of papers and names of participants must be mailed to the secretary of the Kansas Academy of Science before Monday to be read before the annual meeting of the academy here March 28, 29, and 30. Professor Baumgartner said.
An unusual amount of interest in papers to be read before the Kansas Academy of Science has been indicated by the large number of titles and names of scholars who are invited Dr. W J. Baumgartner, chairman of the academy committee, said yesterday.
Bontiron, of Princeton, who
second, and Gene Vonkze. Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania, fath-
nless pursuer of Cunningham.
Cunningham's mark erased his former world record of 352.2, established a year ago. In doing the 1500-meter in 350.5, Cunningham surpassed his fondest hope. He had promised to try for 3.51.
The fast pace set in the early going by Eric Nye of Sweden, rated Cunningham for the supreme effort he was to make in the final laps of the 10-lap contest. For Cunningham, the race with Cunningham and Ny leading fully 40 feet ahead of the others.
During the sixth xiph, Borthon made a gallant bid to close the gap, but it was little more than a gesture. Ny dropped back, and Cunningham made a closing spurt that netted him a new world's record.
Poetry Recital to Be Given
Fernando Wagner Will Use Works of Modern German Writers
The recital, which is given under the auspices of the department of German, is open to the public without charge.
Fernando Wagner, professor of drama art at the University of Mexico, will give a retractal of poetry and prose by Ferdinand J. Mendelsohn Thursday at 8:15, in Fraser Theater.
The program will include: "Reitjadg", Adolf von Hutzfeld; "Adieu", Jakob Haringer; "Denn Herr die gossen Staeede", Rainer Mairke Milke; "Die Harfe", Richard Dehmel; "Hifloser Liebesbrief (Prosa)", Manfred Hausmann; "Wie lange noch", Gottfried Biebresch (Prosa), Manfred Hausmann; "Ich habe eine gute Tat getan", Franz Warfel; "Ein Sommer in Gedichten, Hermann Hesse"; "Schwere Stunde (Prosa)", Thomas Mann, Em Katz; "Riech fuer eine Leien", Erwin Zieg; "Beichthe (Prosa)", Ja das Fontane; "Was ist die alte Mensell Schmokele", Wilhelm Busch; "Unter-grund Berlin", Frankze; "Zaeillzel", Christian Morgenterm; "Bruder von Liederich," Dettler von Lilienkirch.
JOINT GLEE CLUB CONCERT POSTPONED INDEFINITELY
The club returned yesterday from a successful tour into southern Kansas. Part of the towns which it visited included Ottawa, Chanute, Independence, Coffeeville, Arkansas City, Eldorado, Hutchinson, and Newton. Not only was the trip a financial success but the club was received with such enthusiasm that each town in which it appeared invited it to return again next year.
The joint concert of the University men's and women's glee clubs has been postponed indefinitely, according to H. C. Taylor, director of the men's glee club. The action was taken due to the fact that the men's club has been devoting its time to a program which it used on its annual trip the past week.
EPIDEMIC IN LEAVENWORTH POSTPONES TRIP OF BAND
The trip to Leavenworth planned by the University band for tomorrow has been postponed because of an epidemic of scarlet fever which necessitated the closing of all Leavenworth schools. The band was to play three free concerts in Leavenworth: an afternoon concert in the high school and one in junior high and an evening concert in the Masonic Temple.
Chromatic Clock To Hear Rock
Chemistry Clin to hear屁 Dr. Guido Beck, visiting professor of mathematical physics, will speak on the Chemistry Clinic, Radio Radio Chemistry, Feb. 28 at 4:30 p.m. The meeting will be held in room 201 of the Chemistry building.
Quack Club Pledges Two
As a result of the Quack Club trysts held yesterday morning, the following were pledged: Alice Boehm, c'unel, and Mary Hedrick, c'尔瑚. Barbara Koenig, e'38, passed the tests for diving and was pledged for minor quack.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 24. 1935
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
LAWRENCE, KAN$AS
EDITOR-IN-CHIEEF ... JOSEPH DOCTOR
Associate Editors
Julia Markham Charles Brown
MANAGING EDITOR CARDOLYN HARPER
Campus Editor **Harry Valentine**
Make-up Editors **Gwendolyn Covey**
Herbert Meyer
Sports Editor **Robert Patt**
Sunday Editor **Elisabeth Walters**
Dan Fry
Society Editor **Sherry Jones**
Jones Joyce
Alumni Editor **Ruth Stoland**
Business Manager ... F. Quentic, Brown
Asst. Business Manager ... Elton Carter
Lena Watt **Irish Olson**
Judy Cox **Irish Olson**
Loren Miller **Rutherford Hayes**
Wesley McCalla **Julia Markham**
Cheryl Harper **F. Quincy Joseph**
Bowen Joseph
Business Office K.U. 46
News Room K.U. 2
Night Connections, Business Office 2701KI
Night Connection, News Room 2702KI
Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday
Saturday. All other holidays by students in the department
are celebrated at the Press of the Department of Journalism.
The adresses are 125.25 on payments. Single copies,
advance, 125.25 on payments.
Entered as second class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan
KINGA PRIZE
ASSOCIATION
1936
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1935
WHY THE RELAYS
COME DURING VACATION
Those who have noticed their K-Books closely are wondering why the Kansas Relays were scheduled for the Saturday of Easter vacation, when many students will be away from the University. At first appearance it seems that the Athletic committee had no consideration for students in planning the Relays.
But be assured that the committee had no intention of playing the students false. Circumstances make it impossible that the Relays be held at any other time. They come early now, and to set them ahead a week would be to run more risk of inclement weather. Moreover, the schedules of the various schools participating forestalls an earlier date. The Relays have always been set for a week before the Drake and Penn relays, and every four years the date causes them to be run during Easter vacation, even before there was an activity ticket, and they depended a great deal on student support for financial success.
To set them ahead would be to compete with other relays and dual meets. The Drake and Penn relays are run on the next Saturday, and shortly after that the Eastern schedule starts.
The Kansas Relays depend for their success on getting outstanding athletes from all parts of the country. It has therefore been necessary that they be scheduled for the present date. It is unfortunate, but it cannot be helped without running the risk of lowering the quality of the meets.
MILD CRITICISM FOR ALL
Those who heard S. K. Ratcliffe last Thursday night received what we might call an earful. From his authoritative position as a leading lecturer and journalist he spoke as one who understands a great many things, and his lecture, delivered in his impeccable English, was most interesting and educational. We heard things about which formerly we knew little, with the advantage of having them mentally predigested by one who knows whereof he speaks.
He showed us how such things as the Hitler regime are possible. He told us how public opinion has changed since the days of our great war President, and made us pause to think of the meanings of such a change. He complimented us at times by referring to the position of our own great men in international affairs. And he rebuked us mildly in many ways.
One of the rebukes came in the afternoon when he discussed Charles Lamb before the English department. His rebuke there included his own nation, and dealt with the "danger of losing the heritage of our language unless we continue to study the masters of the past." He accused present day writing of "general sloppiness
of expression." He did it in the friendly but earnest sort of way that makes one "take it and like it.
At his lecture in the evening on "Twenty Years After" his rebuke went to our national government for shirking its duty to the world by remaining out of the World Court. It was mild in nature, but nevertheless it was a definite rebuke. He placed emphasis on the fact that England and the United States must show the way toward intelligent democracy, and away from the policies of such men as Hitler and the condition that seem to make them necessary.
His last rebuke came at a luncheon of Sigma Delta Chi on Friday, when the responsive journalists awaived words of disdom from his lips. He told them, mainly, that he could not understand why American newspaper men were constantly misquoting persons interviewed, and how the papers printed things he had never said. He has been astonished by the fact that reporters in this country never take down speeches in shorthand.
Mr. Ratchiffe is an interesting person. A criticism from him should not go unnoticed. He had no personal axe to grind, and he tried to expound no doctrines. He respected the intelligence of his audience and was in no wise overbearing. It is a great privilege to hear a man of his caliber talk on subjects of major importance, and one hopes to hear him again.
A Corner On Books By Mary Jule Shipman
Current Best Sellers:
current Best Sellers:
Heaven's My Destiny
Heaven's My Destination
Thornton Wilder
Franz Werfel
The Lost Horizon James Hilton
Whitby Rose Rome
Alexander Woollett
Skin Deep ... M. C. Phillips
The American Diplomatic Game
Darren and Brown
THE SPY PARAMOUNT, by E. Phillips
Owned by little Beverly and Co.
Openerpent, tante Drake and Coy.
Adventure on a large scale, which men will particularly like. Martin Fawnie, self-sufficient secret service man on the payroll of two countries and the confidence of five, arranges peace between the five great powers of Europe and the once-time political rival to be bia bride.
It's very timely. What with the war scares it goes about, anyone like to have the whole thing arranged safely for the next fifty years or so. It's the stuff of which Tarzans are made; sure fire blood and thunder. It moves fast. Assassins spring from corners and young girls risk compromise to save their lifes' life.
But it really is a good book. Its international background is interesting. Identify the leaders, if you can.
Just one hint, if you're the nervous type. Don't worry over Fawry. Where would our plot be, sans hero?
JAYHAWKER, by Sinclair and Lloyd
Louis. (Doubleday, Davenport, and Co.)
The figure of Ace Burdette, a combination of Jim Lane, Montgomery, and Dennis Jennison, with Francis Preston Blair's scheme for ending the Civil War, will certainly thrill the pioneer Kansas grandists and daughters, steeped in the early history of the state as most of them Ace Burdette, his rapid change of frontiers from a militia senatorial chair, his downfall—all are built on history, not of no one man.
Fred Stone and his third daughter are doing it in New York now, as a smash hit. To us, familiar figures endear it. There mention of Lawrence and a flock of little Kansas towns, bringing Kansas roots to heel. And Horace Greeley and Lincoln's by-standers we'll all sweep by or at.
"There's no such thing as a Jew. " only Jews," was David's discovery on the long pilgrimage to the Gobi desert with his kımanın, after the Nazi blood purge had led the Jews all over Europe to take flight.
He's a self-made "great man," working on the emotions of the people for office and power, held from too much confinement by Luke, his right hand man.
ROAD OF AGES, by Robert Nathan;
(Alfred A. Knopf)
How Sinclair Lewis must have loved Burdette's playing ducks and drakes with the Kansans. Scene direction is vivid—you eat it up.
All nationalities endeavor to mix as one. Different standards, means, ideals, all going into the making of a new home in the land ahead. Where will it end? How can the clashing temperaments and desires of the caravan reaches its new promised land?
There's that futility, based on the nobility of the few and startling weak-
OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
DER DEUTSCHE VEREIN:
Vol. XXXII
Sunday, Feb. 24, 1935
No.100
Der Deutsche Verein versammlt sich am Montag den 25. Februar um vier Uhr fuenzein im Zimmer 313 Fraser hall. NEWTON ARNOLD, Sekretraer.
Notice due at Chancellor's Office at 8 p.m., preceding regular publication days
and 11:35 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issues.
There will be a meeting of the Fencing club at 4:30 Tuesday, Feb. 26, in Robinson gymnasium. An amendment to the constitution was introduced at the meeting last Thursday, and will be voted on at this meeting. Come ready to work. All members please be there.
There will be a supper meeting of the Home Economics club, Tuesday, Feb 26, at 4:20. Initiation for new members will precede the wafer supper.
GRACE A. PEARSON, Secretary-Treasurer.
HOME ECONOMICS CLUB:
PEACE ACTION COMMITTEE:
The University of Kansas Peace Action Committee will meet Monday afternoon at 4:30 in the Book Exchange room, Memorial Union building. Every
ELEZABETH CASWELL, ALFRED C. AMES, Executive Secretaries.
PHIL DELTA.
Pia Chi Delin will meet at 5:30 on Tuesday, Feb. 26, at Westminster hall.
FLORENCE DILL.
Sigma Eta Chi will hold pledging services Sunday afternoon at 4:30 in the chamber room of the Congressional church.
SNOW ZOOLOGY CLUB:
**SNOE ZOLOGY CLUB**
Snow Zoology club will meet Tuesday, Feb. 26, at 6 p.m. for regular dinner.
Date: March 10; Time: 11 a.m.; Location: College Hall, callilla, youll
HARRY PETERKA, President.
HARRY PETERKA, President.
SOCILOGY MAJORS:
MisnM arian Lowe, director of the social service department at Bell Memorial Hospital, will talk to Sociology students and others interested on "The Fields of Medical Social Work and Recreational Work" on Tuesday, Feb. 26, at 4:30 in room 208 Administration building. C. D. CLARK.
Regular meeting of Steel Key will be held Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 in room 102 Marvin hall.
FORDICK II, President.
Y. W. C. A. ASSEMBLY;
Y. W. C. A. Assembly will be held Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 in central Administration auditorium. Following the program the nomination committee for new officers will be chosen.
EDNA TURRELLa President.
ROTANY CLUB:
BOTH PALCHE
The Botany club will meet Tuesday, Feb. 26, at the home of Dr Mix, 1134 Louisiana street. There will be initiation of new members. Actives are urged to be present.
FLORENE BRISCOE, President.
K. U. RADIO CLUB:
The K. U. Radio club will meet Tuesday, Feb. 28, at 4:30 p.m. in room 102 Marvin. Important matters of business regarding membership, program, and a field day will be discussed. All members are urged to be present.
FACULTY MEETING:
The college faculty will meet in a special session Wednesday afternoon at 4:30 in central Administration auditorium. CHANCELLOR LINDLEY.
FRED Q. GEMMILL, President.
MATHEMATICS CLUB:
The Mathematics club will meet Tuesday, at 4:30 p.m. in room 213 Administration building, Prof. J. F. Brown will speak on "The Mathematics of the Modern World."
messes of the others. There's a crualty, to hope, a beardement, in all their hearts. They need leaders, yet not want to lose them and another things being done.
It's really a prayer for the Jewish race. Without a friendly hand stretched out, the world seems to hold no place for them. Even their own Palestine is English ground. Where will they be a century hence? Or will this non-tolerance have worn off, as generations have fulfilled other terrific measures?
COMMENTS
-By the Editor
THE PRE-CAMPAGN PUMBLINGS
Pretty fancy, we call it. We mean, of course, the new mat Bill Cochrane has placed at the front entrance to the Union
THE PRE-CAMPAIGN RUMBLINGS
Rumors飞 fast concerning the recent political move on the part of the Kay-hawk club. The word is that the Oreaches are trying to do away with the non-fraternity angle, so that the fight may be carried into the ranks of the Pachacamac stronghold. It seems that some of the Rising Sun leaders are not so satisfied with this, because we have been giving, and the Oread bosses believe that with the stigma of being against the fraternity faction erased, there may be a chance to win over some of the disgruntled Pachacamacs.
Last year Jimie Patterson, Kanan ediator and writer of the W.S.G.A. musical comedy of 34, started a campaign for pre-enrollment. The project was very dear to his heart, but he found this. Year this the M.C.S. hopes to put over the or no support among the students. a similar program for the benefit of the student body. How much support will they receive?
PRE-ENROLLMENT
THE UNION MANAGER SCORES
building. Knowing as we do the public spirit of Mr. Cochrane, we cannot understand why he did not get one with "Welcome" printed on it in flashy red and blue letters. Bill wants every student to use the Union building, and to do that, he feels that every student must be made to want to use it.
A
Mouth Wash Users!
1 A solution that's antiseptic even diluted one half.
2 Positively cannot irritate delicate tissues
3 Gives you 16 full ounces
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Roger Babson, economist, says that economy is just around the corner again, and that it would come on around if it were not for the signs of labor and political unrest. William Green and Huey Long ought to put on false whiskers and masquerade as something besides unrest.
Anent the Supreme Court decree—silence is golden, but so is the decision.
When the Journalism department has new building, the radiators in the old building ought to be put to good use—and molds.
We support the girls who failed to be picked for first place by Max Factor in the sophomore queen contest will paying. "Well, that sure Max mead."
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SUNDAY; FEBRUARY 24, 1935
PAGE THREE
K
Hill Society
Before 5 p.m. call KU. 25; between 7:30 and 9
14:30 220072
Gamma Phi Beta Holds Initiation
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Gamma Phi Beta held formal initiation yesterday morning for the following: Liacille Kiphof of Wichita; Barbara Kirchoff, fa'38 of Lawrence; Queen Barber Chen, c'uncel, of Kansas City; Mo; Dorothy Caldwell, c'38, of Caldwell; Ruth Learned, c'37, of Kansas City; Mo; Bette Buffe, c'unk, of Kansas City, Mo; Virginia Martin, c'38, of Kansas City, Mo; Ruth Mary Wilson, c'38, of Horton; Mary Alice Gosher, of Kansas City, Mo.
Harden Warden, c38 of Jo瞒in; Marjorie Walker, fa'keln, of Eskridge; Betty Hanson, c38, 'cunel, of Iola; Rose McVey, c38, of Kansas City, Mo; Virginia Taylor, c38, of Moran, Kan; Heen Lockhart, c38, of Eskridge Katheryn Cassidy, cunel, of Kansas City; Martin Leavenworth, max Laughlin, fa'kn; of Moran; and Mary Alice Linscott, cunel, of Erie.
Alumnae members who were here for the services were: Dorothy Lee Bent, fa33, Virginia Burgher and Jane Benton of Kamas City, Paul N. Keaton of Lawrence, Paul N. K. of Lawrence, and Isabel Gilmore, a local founder, also of Lawrence.
Sigma Chi Has Initiation
An initiation banquet will be given this noon for the new members.
Sigma Chi will hold initiation services this morning for the following Warren Gille, c'38 of Kansas City, Mo. Glen Goodloe, c'45 of Kansas City, Mo. George Cochran, ph27 of City; Glen Harmon, C8 of Adhesion City; Howard Johnson, C8 of Adhesion Howard John, c'unch, of Topeka Howard Hudson, c'unch, of Ft. Scott.
William Newman, c'38, of Kansas City, Kan; Challis Hall, c'38, of Kansas City, Kan; Kiehl Swinehart, c'38, of Lawrence; Phil Thomas, c'38, of Kansas City, Mo; Andy Glue, c'1mcl of St. Joseph, Mo; Jack Richardson, c'1mcl of Ottawa, and Charles Pinkin, c'1mcl of Kansas City, Mo.
Alumni members who are here for the services are: Don Burnett of Omaha, Henry Quigley of St. Marys, Robert Price of Lydon, Kan. Chyton Richard of Thomas Freed of Topeso. Dick Kaplan and Ben Seyen of Kansas City, Mo.
☆ ☆ ☆
Pi Beta Phi will hold initiation services today for the following pledges: Carolin Flye, fa'unel, Betty Jane Campbell, c'unel, Barbara Farley, c'unel, Gertrude Field, Helen Finley, c'unel, Jean Prank, c'38, Emy Hoffman, c'unel, John Kregel, c'38, Rachel Kione, c'unel, Barain Koenig, c'38, Mary Krewling, c'77, Bette Jane Lemon, fa'38, Jean Lucs, c'38.
Pi Beta Phi Has Initiation
Ruth Marteney, c'38, Sally Jane Martin,
c'uncel, Helen Miller, c'38, Helen Moore,
c'38, Helen Nelson, c'38, Caroline Newman, c'uncel, Martha Nuzman,
c'uncel, Barbara Pendleton, c'37, Peg Porter, c'Donna Dushelner, c'uncel,
Helen Throckmorton, fa'uncel,
Wilson Wilcox, c'uncel.
Following the initiation a cookie shine will be held for all members and alumnae.
☆ ☆ ☆
ku
Alpha Delta Pi held initiation services last night for the following: Fran-
eas Summers, f. auch, of Hutchinson;
mess Margaret Sough, fa. 38, of Lawrence;
Alice Hoe, c'38 of Abhleine; Mary Lou
Lorton, c'48 of Alamosa, Colby; Bete
Kunke, c'48 of Leavenworth; Marjorie
Smith, c'48 of Washington; Katheryn
Imagme, d. church, of Coffrery;
Ripley, Ripley, c'48, of Kameya
City, Mo.
There will be an initiation banquet today at noon in honor of the new members.
☆ ☆ ☆
PHONE
K.U. 66
Triangle, engineering fraternity,
is holding initiation today for the following:
Charles Bedingfield, *euml*; John Kerr, *euml*; Ben Levy, *euml*; Leslie Laws, *euml*; M. Y. Motley, *euml*; Frank Mobley, *euml*; Gordon Miller, *euml*; Robert Kibble, *euml*; Christian Rick, *euml*; Tad Sandoff, *euml*; Henry Notberg, Jr., *euml*; Francie Lockhard, *euml*; Russell Young, *euml*; and Walton Rohde, all of Kansas City, Mo., also Oliver Starke, *euml* of Independence, Kan, and David Coleman, *euml* of Denise, Kan.
Kapaa Alpha Theta held its annual black cat tea yesterday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the chapter house. Each badaid was required to bring a black cat and to write a poem about it. Jeanette Bown, cured, won the prize for the best poem, and Toudi Haines, cured, got the prize for the prettiest
Mrs. P. H. Klinkenberg poured, and the decorations were of black and gold with daffodils on the tea table.
Kapsa Phi members who were recently rea- ted are Lola Edlin, 'c'urel, program chairman; Cramie Cromett, 'c'urel, Chaplain; Mary Ruth Thomas, 'f'auel, Helen Cunningham, 'c'urel, and Lucile Moving, 'c'38; social, media, and creative director, 'c'38; membership; Caryl Anderson, 'c'36; finance; Mary Edith Challcombe, 'c'38; publicity; Amna Grace Deisy, 'fa'38; art; and Claude Reynolds, 'fa'36, plantist
Delta Zeta will entertain this afternoon with a tea in honor of their chaperon, Miss Margaret Beyer, of Birmingham, Ala.
Those in the receiving line will be Miss Stella Cutlip, president; Mrs Margaret Beyer, the chaperon; the patronesses, Fredrick Guild, Topeker; Mrs George Beall, the Baker; and Ms. George Beall, all of Lawrence, Mrs Henry Werner will pour.
The decorations will be in George Washington motif, and about 150 guests have been invited.
Alpha Chi Omega, Sigma Phi Epsilon,
and Kappa Gaia will entertain with a tea from 7 to 7 c'clock at the Alpha Chi Omega house this afternoon in honor of Ted Shaw and company. Ted Shaw is a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon, Dennis Landers who is one of the outstanding members of the company is a brother of John Landers, a member of Kappa Sigma.
Chi Doli Chiella, Presbyterian sorority, will hold a Japanese meeting at 5:20 o'clock Tuesday at Westminster Hall. Ruth Black, ed35, is in charge. The general scene will be a Japanese garden.
☆ ☆ ☆
Miss Ruby Mae Jacobs and Mr Herb
Reed Reed were married yesterday at 4:30 at the Delta Chi house
--p. m., Evening worship. Sermon: "Henpecked Husbands and Foolish Wives."
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PICTURE FRAMING
The marriage ceremony was performed by Reverend Thomas of the Baptist Church. Mr. Reed is a graduate of the University and is a member of a number of the Delta Chi fraternity.
Dinner guess at the Acacia house Friday were Jess Anne Melone, fa 36, Marjorie Howley, 1st Ph. Lorain Smith, Curlor, Dorey Hall, c'mel, Lela Edin, c'uncl, Prof. J. J. Kisler, T. C. Rytcher, and Dr. E. L. Treece of Lawrence, and Mr. and Mrs.Hershel L. Washington of City Kansas, Mo.
Phi Alpha Delta, legal fraternity, announced the election of officers for the second semester, last Thursday night. The officers elected were: Leonard A Bizer, 135, juscience; Thomas Mustard, 36, vicejice; Ogle Ashley, 133, treasury; Henry L. Butler, 137, clerk; and Caasy A. Jones, 138, marshall.
The Home Economics Club will have a waffle supper Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock at the Home Management House. Maxine Bryant, c.35, Maude Bryant, c.26, and Jack Riley will be in charge of the meeting. There will also be initiation for new members.
Robert Braden, c.35, Kenneth Wiley, c.38, Roswell Graves, c.35, cadet officers, were guests at a military ball at the Hotel Broadway in Wichita last night. The ball was sponsored by the reserve officers of Wichita in observance of National Defense Week.
☆ ☆ ★
Alpha Omicron Ii soriority is having initiation services today for the following women: Jewell Puts, c3 of, Iola; Kahn; Alden Kizler, k2 of, Millsboro; and Maxine Earhart, c1nel, of Steele City. Neb.
☆ ☆ ☆
Mrs. M. J. Cudra was elected second vice-president of the K.U. Dames to fill the vacancy left by Mrs. John Ayers who has moved to Wichita.
The Fortnight Club met last night at the home of Prof. Carl A. Preeger, George Trevillo, fa35, gave a recital after the dinner.
☆ ☆ ☆
Mrs. W. R. Smith will entertain the Kappa Kappa Gamma Alumnae association Wednesday afternoon at 3 o'clock.
Dinner guests at the Delta Zeta house today will be Mrs. J. L. Sarten and daughter, Elizabeth, of Kansas City, Mo.
☆ ☆ ☆
M. M. L. Breidenthal, of Kansas City, was a dinner guest at the Phil Delta Thea house last Friday.
Sigma Kappa announces the pledging of Mildred Stephanson and Helen Barnes, both of Lawrence.
Mrs. Pearl W. Foncannon of Enporia was a luncheon guest at the Phil Delta Theta house Friday.
Charles McCormick, c'34, is a weekend guest at the Beta Theta Pi house.
☆ ☆ ☆
Alpha Tau Omega announces the pledging of Robert Baldredge, ph'36.
--p. m., Evening worship. Sermon: "Henpecked Husbands and Foolish Wives."
What They Wear By Patricia Lock, c'37
Mary Frances Martin, Chi O, will be well worth watching for style notes these days. Her birthday last week netted her a complete spring wardrobe, including a sweater suit, and a hat that is reported as being the cleverest of recent spring developments. You will be seeing them about soon.
Birthday Brings New Classes . . .
More Navy Blue . . . . Hair
Dresses That Stand the Wind.
Matthews to Address Noon Forum
Manary in Green
LEGAL PUBLICATIONS SURVEY MADE FOR N.E.A. COMMITTEE
Seen on campus: Bernita Brooks, Gamma Phi, in a blue-and-white-chucked coat with matching jacket in small checks, and a skirt of solid blue. . . Mary Margaret Mariani in a suit of brilliant green with beaver collar . . . Virginia Brendle, Chi Omega, wearing dark red and white clothing, and, of course, not a hair out of place, even though it was one of our windier days.
A survey of legal publications appearing in Kansas newspapers has just been completed by the department of journalism of the University. The survey was begun following the request of Mr. C. P. Helfenstein, chairman of the legal publications committee of the National Editorial Association. It will constitute a part of a larger survey, national in scope.
Hats Go Sailor
Harriette Blair, Sigma Kappa from Wichita, is starting the spring 'with a navy blue ensemble trimmed in beige, which she tops off with a jauyn straw hat in the sailor tradition. Katheryn Cassidy, Gamma Phi, who wears her coronet end up, always looks its if she had just stepped out of a handband. So does Veta Lear, of the college office, who looks especially well in black and shades of orchid and wine-red. Dorothy Lewis, W.S.G.A. council member, never lets even one blonde curl stray from its designated place.
JAMES to bob Moffett Noon Forum
B. Matthews, former secretary of the Fellowship Reconciliation Organization, has stated that he probably will be able to speak before the M.Y.C.A. Noon Forum next Wednesday in the private dining room of Memorial Union cafeteria. Otis Brubaker, c35, announced yesterday.
The work of collecting the numerous types of legal notices in newspapers in he state was done by Robert Busy, 36. A wide difference in rates for the publication of such matter was found in a survey conducted by Mr. Hefeinstein is also editor of the Suwanne Democrat, published in Live Oak, Fla.
First Baptist Church, Eighth and Kentucky streets = 9:45 a.m. Church school. The University class will discuss "The Universal Coin." 10:50 a.m. Morning worship. Subject: "The Adequacy of Jesus," 6:30 p.m. B.Y.P.U. service. Subject: "How to Achieve a Fine Christian Character Today."
Unitarian Church, Twelfth and Vermont streets—10 a.m., Discussion group. 11 a.m., Church service. Sermon: "Manhood Is Divinity" 6 p.m., Prometheus club. Discussion: "The Place of the Church in Society."
Friends Church, Eleventh and Delaware streets: 9:45 a.m. Bible school, 11 a.m. Morning worship. "The Desert Becomes a Fruited Field."
Second Church of Christ, Scientist,
Wiedemann building, 833½ Massachusetts street—9:45 a.m., Sunday school.
11 a.m., Morning worship. Subject:
"Mind."
First Christian Church, Tenth and
Kentucky streets—9:45 a.m., Church
school. 10:00 a.m., Worship. Sermon:
"How can we change the world?" cession.
6:30 p.m., Student Forum. 7:30
Immanuel Lutheran Church, Tenth and Kentucky streets—10 a.m., Sunday school, 11 a.m., Divine service. Subject: "With Jesus on the Mount of Transfiguration." 6 p.m., Informal talk by Miss Ruth Warnock, a graduate student at the University, who spent 14 years in India as a missionary.
Trinity Episcopal Church, Tenth and Vermont streets—8 am, Holy Communion, 9:45 am, Church school, 11 am, Morning prayer and sermon.
First Church of Christ, Scientist,
1240 Massachusettststreet - 10 a.m., Sunday
school. 11 a.m., Sunday service.
Subject: "Mind."
First Methodist Episcopal Church, Tenth and Vermont streets—9:45 a.m., Sunday school. 10:50 a.m., Morning worship. Subject: "The Tumbling Walls of Jericho." 6:30 p.m., Wesley Foundation. Subject: Interpretations of International Attitudes. 7:30 p.m., Evening service. Subject: "Short Beds and Narrow Covers."
First Presbyterian Church, Ninth and Vermont school: 9-145 a.m., Sunday school. 11 a.m. Morning worship. Subject: "What is Americanism?" 7:30 p.m., Westminster Student Forum. Subject: "Who Wanted to Be Church?" Prof. W. S. Baumgartner, Albert McColough, and Dr. Dinmore will lead the discussion.
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PAGE FOUR
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1935
Hargiss Will Enter Men in 10 Events At K.C.A.C.Meet
Race Between Cunningham and Hornbostel Will Be Feature of Indoor Track Program
The meet promises to have an interesting sideline in the announcement that Glen Cunningham, the famed Kansas miler, and Charles Hornbostel, world's half-mile record holder, will race a compromise 3-4 mile.
University athletes will compete in It events at the revived Kansas City Athletic Club meet at Kansas City next Saturday night according to Coach II. H
race it compromises a 3-4 time.
Only once before he the Elkhart Flyer and the Hoosier Hornbostel paced time, and that was in the half-mile at the National Intercollegiate meet at Chicago last March in which the Hoosier successfully defended his title. The time was 1:59.9.
Cunningham ran the three-quarter mile in 3.08 at Crystal Beach, Ontario, last year and in Triangular meet in Lawrence, he cut his time to 3.047
The Kansas entries at the KCAC meet:
50-yd. dash—Benson, Trotter and Neal.
50-yd. low hurdles—Neal, Reed and Pitts.
50-yd. high hurdles—Reed and Neal.
440-yd. dash—McKnown and Mac-
Gaskill.
890-yd. run—C. Cunningham, Fitz-
gibbon, K and Guise.
Mile run—C. Cunningham, Fitzgibbon,
Thorpe and Bekeert.
Pole vault-avt
Mile rite-mae Mackkill, McNown
Council
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Two-mile run--C. Cunningham, Fitzrush,
Graves, Schreeder and Guise.
Sigma Chi's Buy Ticket
Chariot Race Added to Intramural Car- nival Program
To the Sigma Chi's goes the honor of being the first organization to enroll 100 per cent of its membership in the drive for ticket sales for the first Intramural Carnival, to be held March 8. The memorial event will be attended by their entire memberships in this drive will be entitled to a five percent reduction on the price of admission.
The latest comedy attraction to be added to the program is a charity race. Particulars of this affair have not been disclosed but according to Delmar Curry, chairman of the program committee for the carnival, the participants already entered are Gunar Mykland and Lloyd Metzler. Curry said that Quentin "Boss" Brown and Lyman Field would possibly be the other entries.
To the organization receiving the greatest point total in the special events, such as the stunts, stumbs, etc., will be represented by a representative of the Men's Student Council.
Ed Elbah, intramural director, has announced that entries for special stairs and rems must be in by March 1 at 6 p.m. The list of rems is as follows: potato relay (6 men), back-curry relay (8 men), chicken relay (8 men), worm relay (8 men), goat relay (8 men).
The World Purview
(Continued from page one)
control the arms industry by publicity and licensing. Britain significantly holds on thereby threatening the whole move.
Coincidentally Secretary Hull returns to the Senate the earlier international treaty on arms-control recently ratified with a reservation regarding a non-existent Persian sovereignty of the Persian Gulf, needlessly offensive to Britain.
Danger Centers in Far East This medley of disparate events has its inner tie-ups. The pressure of affairs compresses in lines of national and international interest extending from London, Berlin, Paris, Moscow, Rome—focusing on the Far East. It is significant that the United States–satanism Domergue has warned Europe this week in almost the words of Lloyd George quoted in lecture course by Mr. Ratcliffe, that the real danger center of the world is the Far East.
Japan is most suspiciously interested in Abyssinia whose territory has the raw resources essential for her present imperial dreams. More recently, the Persian Gulf and its hinterland has come within her view. Britain would not calmly see her routes by air and water imperiled; she must maintain rapid communications with India and Australia. France would not witness Italian colonies expanding so near her north coast, and she must agree to let Italy go ahead with her plans in Ebbeia where oil, iron, and cotton promise profit.
Moscow Adds Pressure
Mossew adds pressure to the demand on Germany, not only for assurances of non-aggression by air, but the entire Brunei-British program of last week. What she fears is conflict on her western border from Poland, German ally, when she may expect battle with Japan on the other side.
Germany however is evidently trying
"Typical Relay Man"
Portrayed on Stickers
For Annual Event
Advertising stickers for the thirteenth annual Kansas Relays to be held here April 20 are ready for distribution from the athletic office. The stickers were designed and drawn by Ed Elbof, interspersed with red, are white, and blue in color.
The runner portrayed on the stickers his year is Ray Fisher, former University track star and now track coach at Paseo high school in Kansas City, Mo. Coach "Bill" Hargis characterizes Fisher as a "typical relay man." Elibel drew the figure from a photograph of Fisher finishing the 440-yard relay which broke the then existing world's record in 1925. Other members of that team were Rooney, Powers and Wong-wai.
There are about 50,000 stickers of three types to be used on letters, auto wind-shields, and suitcases.
Men's Intramurals
--to evade the demands for her participation in an East European Locarno; Hitler calls "time" and wants to make separate agreements. He apparently is trying to drive a wedge between France-England and the other supporters of their plan and so escape the threat of coercive isolation.
Many close and hard fought games marked the weekend Intramural basketball play. S.A.M. foretold to Acacia, T.D. to Delta Chi, Douglas Club to chock Chalk, Campus R to Independents and Phil Chi to Theta Tau.
The box scores for the games played Friday night, and yesterday are as follows:
Si $ \sigma $ Chi 24
G FT F 1
Reed 4 0 F 1
Thompson 3 0 0
Black 2 0 0
Sturgeon 1 0 3
Toots 2 0 1
Tools 2 0 1
Tramps 43
G FF T
Jones G 1
McGinnis 4
Kelley 6 0 0
Pearee 2 0 0
Pearce 2 0 0
G FT F
C.Hodge ... 4 0
Crockett 3 0 1
Kanatzav 2 0 1
Knoche 1 0 1
Johnson 0 0 2
Phi Psi 22
20 3 5
Referee—Kvaternik
Hawks 22
G FT F
Bacon 6 1 0
Allen 1 0 0
Helman 3 0 0
Leach 0 1 0
G.Elmore 3 1 2
Shrader .6 G FT F
Borgen .2 0
Linley .0 0
Linley .0 0
McElroy .0 0
T'frenry 0 0
Demister .2 0
Demister .2 0
Lindsey .0 0
13 2 3
A. T.O. 33
Referee-Burkhead
G FT F F
Mudge 0 1
Clement 4 1
Rosewell 2 2 2
Trombold 2 0 4
Cory 0 0 0
Kirby 0 0 0
D. U. "A" 33
Phi Psi "B" 13
14 5 7 Referee—Burkhead
Phi Gam 25
G GFT F
Flint 2 0 F 1
Davis 6 0 0
Barelay 3 1 1
J'rgenson 3 0 2
Minter 2 0 0
G FTE 5
Rice 0 FF 1
Tuke 5 0
Harwi 3 0
Dennyne 0 0
Denney 1 0
16 1 4
12 1 9
Referee—Burkhead
S. A.E. "A" 15
G FF 1 F
Darrah 0 0 1
Jones 0 0 1
Bunting 0 0 1
Hunts 0 0 1
Hutches 0 0 1
Ewers 0 0 1
Kappa S. "B" 54
G FTF
Lyon 1 1 1 0
Jones 0 1 0
Clay 10 2 0
Miller 3 0 1
Rector 2 1 1
Edmunsen 0 0 0
Bridges 0 0 0
24 6 5
Referee—Plaskett
G FFt
Winters 0
Alpaugh 1
Randolph 1, 0, 1
Patterson 0, 1, 0
Moxley 0, 0, 0
Punethot 0, 0, 0
G F G T
Kerr 0 F T
D birdfigl ' 3 4 0
B oleman . 3 0 0
Wiliams . 2 2 3
Williams . 2 2 3
Referee-Plasket
S.A.E. "B" 10
C G F T 4
Cooper 7 1 2
Colson 7 1 0
Norrison 3 0 1
Keeler 1 0 3
Keeler 1 0 3
A K Fs 11 G F 1 3
Constable 0 2 F 1 3
Smith 2 1 1
Summings 2 1 2
Laws 2 0 2
Antim 1 0 3
Referee—Plaskett
Referee-Plaskett
12 9 13
G G FF 7
McCaillan A 1 1 0
Benson 0 0 0 1
Stoland 0 0 1
A.Dodge 1 1 2
Lane 1 1 2
Murphy 1 1 2
6 410
Kappa Sig 34
15 4 9
Records Fall in Aggie Swimming Victory, 45-30
Not to be outdone in far-sighted diplomacy, the United States through Hugh Wilson at Geneva makes concrete suggestions that may revitalize the League's effort for disarmament. Simultaneously, nations dwell into the plan for peace through publication of arms import and export.
Referee Blackett 10 4 6
10 4 6
Jennings High Point Man Kester and Tripp Tie for Second
Five new pool records were made yesterday in the swimming meet between Kansas and Kansas State in Batavia. The Ageset won by a score of 45 to 38.
Jenninga was high point man for Kansas, scoring seven points. Kester, who was able to compete at the last minute, and Tripp tied for second place, scoring six points each. Other Kansas men scored as follows: Nicholas and Miller; five; Rupert; four; Thomas and Ello and La Shoel, one point each.
"I was pleased greatly with the performance of the whole Kansas squad in the Kansas State meet," Prof. H. G. Alibain said.
New records were made in the 400
yard relay, the 200 breast stroke,
the 150 yard back stroke, the 220
yard dash, and the medley relay.
The winners and time of the events are as follows:
400 yd.腰利: 4,08; 4 new record;
old record 4:21.2. Kan. 1934. Won by KU.
(Thorne, Michil, Nichols, Tripp)
200 yd. breast stroke time: 2:4.0.
old record old record 2:48.4. Won by Blinder.
Blander, Report. KU, third. Elfice, KU.
150 back stroke: 15:53; new record; old record, 15:62, made by Montgomery. Washburn, 198. Won by Jennings, K.U. second, Kester, K.U.
140. yd. dash: time, 6:14:6; Won by Miller, KU; second, Lassen, KA; third, Jennings, KU
50 yd. stroke; time 23.1; Won by Creed,
K.A.; second Kester, K.U.; third,
Thorne, KU.
Simmings, K.C.
109 yd. dash; time, 623; Won by Creed,
KA; second, Tripp, KU; third, Umber-
her, KA.
220 yd; dade: time; 2,323; new record,
old mark, 234; by Blanche, KU. 1934
Won by Creech, KA; second, Nichols,
KU. third, Kester, KU.
Medley Relay time: 22,22; new record old record, 3.35, made in 1934 by Washburn, Won by K.A. (Steele, Blanche Brud).
Diving: Kansas not entered; won by Gaume, K.A.; second, Churchill.
Women's Intramurals
The schedule for this week's ping pong doubles matches is: 4:30 Tuesday, at Union building, Independents vs Corin hall-Delta Deta, at gym, Wattkins hall vs I.W.W; 4:30 Wednesday, at Union building, Alma Omri Pi vs Kappa Alpha Theta, at gym, Sigma Kappas vs Alpha Gamma Delta; 4:30 Thursday, at Union building, Alpha Chi Omega, at Phi vs Alpha Chi Omega, at gym, Alpha Delta Pi vs Chi Omega. These games must be played between 4:30 and 6 cclock.
---
Coaches John Levi adj Gus Welch will be the Haskell Institute guest representatives at the First Intramural Carnival March 8 in the University Auditorium. Gus Welch is athletic director of the Indian Institute.
To Represent Haskell
The University post office has been notified that Persia is now known as Iran, the official name in the language of that country.
Tiger Matmen Win Again
BLUE MILL
1009 Mass.
AFTER THE SHOW
TAKE HER
TO THE
ACCEPTED
AMERICAN MUSICAL ASSN.
Committee on Drama
TO THE
The University of Missouri mattei
toused the Kansas Jayhawks to a 19-15
defeat in Columbia Friday night as two
Kansas players came through to win their matches.
Marvin Fender, Tiger captain and Big Six heavyweight champ, won a decision over "Tiny" Moore, hitherto undecided to decide the meet. In the 155-pound group, George Noland, Kanada's No. 1 in the world, and seven seconds. This was the Tiger's eighth consecutive victory over the Jayhawks.
Missourians Defeat Jayhawkers 19-15 at Columbia Friday
118 pounds—Roberts, Kan., threw
Harness, Mo, body scissors. Time; 3:30.
126 pounds—Kan., Mo, defeated Me-
Dueler. Jan’t, decision.
Summaries!
135 pounds—Bartels, Mo, the Doug-
lins, Kpa, half-peloton; time 6.
145 pounds -Hulen, Mo., defeated
hilds, Kan, decision.
145 pounds—rutten, Mo., defeated
Children, Kan., decision.
155 pounds—Noland, Kan., threw
155 pounds—Noland, Kan., threw
Grieb, Mo, half-nelson; time 5.
155 pounds, Annaburg, Kan., threw
Dotham, Mo., half-restuon; time 4:3.
175 pounds - Fergusson, Mo.; threw Tilford, Kan.; half-nelson and bar-arm; time 2:15.
Heavyweight-Fender, Mo., defecated Moore, Kan.; decision.
Cunningham Will Go To Texas
Athletic officials at the University of Texas announced recently that Glenn Bentley, a senior running back to compete in the mile race at the Texas Relays, to be held in Austin, March 30.
Let Us Put
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2. 30 p.m. Book review, Kenneth Rockwell
2:45 p.m. Elementary French lesson, W.
K. Cornell, instructor in Romance language
Mondav. Feb. 25
8:00 p.m. Provinces of Poetry, Miss Helen Rhodia Hoopes, assistant professor of English
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94
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
NUMBER 101
--the University a progressive program for student government, according to Anderson.
on the SHIN
By JOE HOLLOWAY, c'35
We Receive Our Second Letter,
But It's From Blowers . . . Ash
Will Feed His Family . . . Prof.
Taylor Tears Loose.
Oh Boy, are we happy. We had a letter from Lyman and cow we've received one from Bill Flowers—we don't mean to compare Lyman to the blower, but they both wrote letters to us in a weak moment. Here's Bills.' "Dear Joe: It seems that the Pi Phi's were highly burned up when the sacred name of Peggy Am Landon, honorable Pi Phi pledge, appeared in my column of the Sour Owl. As editor of the glimpse 'Hillony we want' want to tell me more about the Pi Owl, are sorry about the grave mistlethance made in our recent publication concerning the statement that Peggy Am Landon did not make her grades and had to quit school.
"The report given to me was not authentic and was a faire. We understand that Miss Landon did make her grades and will be back in school just as soon as she recovers from her recent illness, and will be initiated."
"Hoping this shallow statement will again bring the Pi Phi's good will back to our most humble person—Very truthful, Editor-in-chief of the Sour Owl."
Awfully nice of you to apologize. Willy, but did you hear the same rumor that we did about the Pi Phi's having some new ruling passed which now makes it much easier for the gals to make their grades? Might have had something to do with you getting your stories mixed up.
Saw so many guys running after their bats yesterday as they sailed down the camps that pretty soon it wasn't the last bit funny any more.
We hear that the boys at the Delta Tau bounce have been piping about their meals lately and finally resolved to do something constructive about it. They elected Ed Ash "Supervisor of Meals" and the other day we found him in the library poring over a book entitled "Feeding the Family."
Read a story in the paper the other day chout a fellow whose car was stalled. Another machine came up behind him and he asked the driver for a push. The other man helped him very obligingly and the motorist found later that the men he'd asked to push him was the governor of the state. Loa, if your yellow peril stalks some time and you see a very distinguished looking fellow about six feet two, with snow white hair, don't ask him to push you—its the chancellor.
We were surprised and disappointed to see that no one came through this year with the usual load of food for the convenience of the cats who attended the annual black cat tea at 1118 Indiana
Attended a luncheon for S. K. Ratcliffe Friday noon—it was quite pleasant to hear someone speak English for a change.
As usual when the glee club comes back from a trip to the wilds of western Kansas, there are some funny tales to be related. Buddy Hanna told us last night that Prof. Taylor had a little accident with his trousers—pants to you. In fact, he tore them, run away in the cold. After taking him to a neighboring town to have them mended, he came back to Lawrence without them.
"Chittyz" Winslow, ATO, got taken in a game of itty bitty Sunday night at the Gamma Phi house. His date, Cora Queen Barber, plastered his whole face with lipstick on he realized what was going on. That last statement sounds a bit thick—maybe he wanted to play awkward.
KAPPA SIGMA COMPLETES
NEGOTIATIONS FOR MOVING
Kappa Sigma, social fraternity, yesterday finished final negotiations for moving into the house formerly occupied by Alpha XI Delta sorority, locate at 1045 West Hills. They have definitely decided to move on March 8.
Since the fire Feb. 17, 1934, which destroyed the former Kappa Sigma house, at 1537 Tennessee street, the temporary residence has been at 643 Tennessee Street. The building is razed. Also bids are open for redecorating and furnishing of the new house.
Le Carre Français Not To Meet
Le Carre Français will not meet on the first day of the meeting a special meeting which has been called for members of the College faculty.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1935
Smith Is in Favor Of Many Proposed Enrolling Changes
Faculty Chairman Says Students Are Unwilling to Take Entire Responsibility
Prof. Guy Smith, chairman of the faculty enrollment committee, expresses himself as being generally in favor of the Men's Student Council program for enrollment changes if those changes could be satisfactorily worked out.
Referring to the council's major pro- promise, that there should be pre-enrollment for all students except first-seemer freshman and other new students. Professor Smith said, "I think it would be an excellent thing if it could be done but there are too many difficulties in pre-enrollment. I have taught at a degree people but it has not been entirely satifactory. The students have shown an unwillingness to take the responsibility of enrollment upon themselves.
Pre-Enrollment Not Practical
The council's plan for permitting the student to enroll early and to take the responsibility of selecting his own courses regardless of the suggestions of his adviser would be practical neither from the standpoint of the student nor the professor. I do not think that the student will accept the responsibility
"However, I must admit that if this same plan could be put on a more practical basis I would be whitethrow in favor of it. I would like nothing to do against the student responsible for his selection of courses." Professor Smith said.
Professor Smith was in accord with the other suggestions of the council. He agreed that there should be changes in the group system and that certain pre-requisite courses should be abolished.
"But," he said, "the enrollment committee is not concerned with groups or pre-requisite courses. The college faculty must make the changes necessary along those lines. They are side issues to enrollment."
To Change Alphabet System
To Change Alphabet System
"We are considering a change in the alphabet system of enrollment to avoid the uneven distribution of the number of students at each institution. Rubicon is the character of enrollment that has been characteristic of previous semesters. That may help to avoid the confusion and to allow more time for the advisors to aid individual students."
Professor Smith declared.
"One of the more serious objections to pre- enrollment for the fall semester; as I see it is the fact that few students will be sure that they are coming back and even less certain of what courses they wish to take. Furthermore, the schedule of courses may change during the summer. This would result in more confusion than we have at present." Professor Smith concluded.
Eastwood to Speak Tonight
The Men's Student Council enrollment committee composed of Norbert Ansehuez, c36, chairman; William Beck, 'aunluck', c10; John Dearn, 1938; William Hazen, 137 and Lloyd Metcalf with the faculty committee to take up the matter of changes in enrollment within the next few weeks.
The second of a series of lectures features members of the departments of design, painting, architecture, and English will be held in Spooner Theater museum tonight at 7.30 p.m. The lectures are scheduled for tonight and every Monday night location except when holidays or important activities intervene.
Lectures in Spooner-Thayer To Arouse Interest in Exhibits
Dr. J. Rice of Kansas City Junio College will speak at a dinner to be given by the Snow Zoology Club at its regular meeting tonight. H. Peterson will speak each day yesterday. The club will attend at 6 p.m. in room 201, Snow Hall.
The purpose of the lectures will be to demonstrate and re-affirm the value of Spooner Thayer museum to the students and to the townpeople, all of whom are cordially invited. According to Miss Rosemary Ketchn, principal curator on the permanent exhibit in the museum through lectures on particular collections. These, and transient exhibits, which will be lectured upon, will be assembled by Miss Minnie Moine, director of the museum. Tonight at 7:30 Raymond Eastwood of the department will talk on paintings exhibited in Spooner Thayer museum.
SCHOLARSHIP TO BE GIVEN IN ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
D. C. Jackson, professor of electrical engineering, recently received a letter from H. H. Hellen national secretary of the American Institute of Electrical Engineering, New York City, announcing that Columbia University is offering a scholarship in electrical engineering for members of each class, freshman, sophomore, junior or senior, of universities and colleges of America.
Toward the annual fees of $345 to $360 in the electrical engineering school of Columbia for the scholarship pay $300. It allows students and university students such wear.
June 1, 1935, is the closing date for the list of applications. Information regarding the scholarship may be obtained vom Professor Jackson.
Ted Shawn and Troup Dance Here Tomorrow
Ensemble of Men to Appear in University Auditorium
Ted Shaw, internationally famous creator and interpreter of dance rhythms, and his ensemble of men and women, will be seen night at the University Auditorium.
Primitive rhythms, a labor symphony, a drama dance, and folk舞ases based upon classical music themes will be presented in solo and encrease creations. Shawn himself will give five solo numbers and he will also appear with the encrease in an Indian dance, a negro spiritual, a Spanish dance and themes by Bach, Beethoven and Brahms. One of the outstanding solo舞ases presented by Shaw will be "John Brown's Body," a dance consuming 20 minutes and which required six months of planning before rehearsals could even begin. This dance should especially interest Kansas because it
Pleasure and interest in the evening's program find further corollary in recent and widespread discussion of the dance as a man's art. In ancient times and among primitive people, dancing was almost entirely done by men. In a large majority of the countries of the world today dancing is still predominantly European-American. It inhabits this country American-American civilization and here only in the last two centuries, that dancing has ever been considered feminine.
Shawn, pioneering for years to restore dancing for men to its rightful standing, has now organized and trained the first company in modern times composed entirely of men dances, and with them he presents a program essentially masculine in principle and performance.
UNIVERSITY PEACE ACTION COMMITTEE TO REORGANIZE
Activity tickets will admit students to this performance. Tickets for faculty members and township may be obtained at the Memorial Union Building.
At the suggestion of representatives of the Cause and Cure of War regional conference at Kansas City, Mo., the University Peace Action Committee is effecting a reorganization to establish a more practical organization, Elizabeth Casswell, gr, executive secretary of the committee announced yesterday.
CSEP Students
Prof. W. R. Warner will attend the dinner of the Kansas City section of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers to be given tonight at the President Hotel in Kansas City. Dean George Shad, Prof. D. C. Jackson, and R. P. Stringham of the engineering faculty will attend the meeting following a show. R. C. Norman and others among the soner engineers will also attend.
Prof. R. F. K. Gloeffer, head of the department of electrical engineering of Kansas State, will talk on "Water Power for generating Electrical Energy."
All CSEP students must call at the CSEP office this week to register class schedules, addresses, and contact information. A mation must be filed this week.
Miss Caswell appointed a committee to outline a series of discussions and to obtain speakers for the roundtable. The committee includes Crichton Miller, c.35; Jennings Jennings, c.37; Nelson Fujon, gr. Guy Owner, c.38; and Dale O'Brien, c.37.
The Pease Action Committee plans to conduct a series of roundtable discussions for the purpose of familiarizing and engaging students in working toward world peace.
Diversified Work Done by Students On CSEP Projects
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS TO GO TO KANSAS CITY MEETING
Complete Many Jobs as Result of Money Sent Here by Federal Government
Many diversified projects were completed last semester as a result of CSEP work, according to Miss Mary Olsen, SEP secretary. Twenty-five-thousand insects were mounted for the department of entomology by six students who spent 1,207 hours of them. The specimens are now ready to be组培 nto family divisions. They will then secorporated into the museum.
Growth of 59 adult cats was studied in the department of anatomy for the purpose of determining the proportion of the adult. This work was done under the direction of Dr. H. B. Latimer, professor of anatomy.
Specimens of fossils have been un-packed, cleaned, filed, and accessioned for the geological museum. Work has also been done on rocks and 60 fossil plant collections have been labeled and catalogued. One student spent the entire semester cleaning skeletons for the Mammalian museum.
Make Traffic Survey
In the journalism department students compiled a list of scores made in athletic events during the last 40 years. This information was used for a book which is virtually a history of athletic achievements of this school and other midwestern schools. One student worked on an investigation of the early history of Lawrence. This includes historical research regarding Quannil's raid. Another student spent the entire semester working on the morgue.
Two surveys, have been made in the School of Business. One is of the traffic in Lawrence and the other was for the federal power commission. These were made under the direction of Prof. Bowers, assistant professor of economics.
The compiling of interment and record cards for Oak Hill and Maple Groves cemeteries has been the job of two students. This was done under the auspices of the city clerk of Lawrence. This is something which has been waiting for a long time to be done. Lack of funds has prevented before.
Work at Spooner-Thayer
Dr. A. H. Turure, associate professor of education, has been making a study of student achievements in relation to ability. He has compiled a correlation between mental ability and achievements in certain fields and correlation between reading ability and achievements in certain fields.
Two students have assisted Miss Minnie Wood in trimming, mounting, labeling, and classifying 1,000 photographs and color prints for the Spooner-Thayer museum. In the romance language department students have been cataloged fifty-litre litter boxes and the thousand eight hundred and fifty entries have been made.
A survey of health conditions and problems in Lawrence has been made in the department of sociology. Also a project of surveying recreational conditions under underprivileged junior and senior high school students, connected with this, sewing classes, handcraft classes, and parties have been held.
Twenty-two projects have been conducted in the department of psychology and 5,000 pages of data have been obtained. Six students have been used as subjects for experiments such as the analysis of guessing types of reaction in individuals. From data gathered Dr. R. H. Wheeler, professor of psychology, has published several articles and others are being prepared In the department of mathematics a study has been made of the correlation of achievements in mathematics and in other fields with intelligent ratings of 200 alumni who majored in mathematics.
Study Cancer Cases
At Bell Memorial hospital one student has worked the entire time on cancer cases. He has classified all cancer cases and sent out up- letters on all of them. Another student has analyzed the urine and blood of children. These studies are to be used in the treatment of infections of the kidneys. Experiments have also been done on bulk-laxatives, and a review of all the electrocardiograms of the hospital have been made.
Many more interesting projects have been completed and others are still being continued. New projects have also been started this semester.
Third Party Takes Shape
Progressive Student Government League Formed by Undergraduates Desiring to Bring to Mt. Oread an Organization Which Will Guard Individual Interests
The formation of a new campus organization was announced last night by Charles B. Anderson, 136, chairman of the group, which will go under the name of Progressive Student Government League.
Legislators Will Hear Kansas-Missouri Debate
University Team to Attack Unicameral System of Government
The group asserts that the present system fails to accomplish the true purpose for which student government was created, to guard the interests of the individual student and to promote liberal thought and action. The members of the group have broken all former alliances and forgotten party lines in an effort to give the students of
The University forensic team will debate the Missouri squad before the senate and house judiciary committees tomorrow evening in Topake, on the subject "Resolved: that Kansas should adopt the unicameral system of legislation, embodying the essential features of the Nebraska plan." Representative Oscar May is chairman of the house committee and Senator Reese is chairman of the senate committee hearing this debate.
Chancellor E. H. Lindley will preside and the Men's Glee Club will sing before the debate begins.
James Moberly, c'36, of Salma and Charles Hacker, 735, will argue the negative side for Kansas. Robert Nicder will take the affirmative for Missouri.
Prof. E.C. B. Cush伯 of the department of speech and dramatic art has announced that a schedule of debates for the university squad has been arranged
Four men will participate in the Delta Sigma Rhode debate tournament at Iowa University on March 1 and 2. Representatives from about 40 colleges and universities in the United States have been invited to attend. The subject will be "The Unicameral System of Legislation." Gunnar Mykland, c'33, and Lyman Field, c'36, will take the affirmative and Logan Lane, t33, and Alonzo Dempa, t33. There will also be extemporaneous speaking and anorical contests at the meet. Lyman Field will represent the University in both those events.
A series of debates with Texas University has been scheduled for March 4 to 6 inclusive, with the subjects "Resolved: that the federal government should regulate public utilities," and "The Unicameral System of Legislature." James Molby and Charles Hackler will represent the state legislature, who will debate at Temple, Texas, on the campus of Texas University, on March 5 at Austin, Texas, before the state legislature, and on March 6 at San Antonio over the radio. Other debates have been scheduled for March 6 and 8 with Creighton University and the University of South Dakota. The debate with South Dakota University will be before an all-student convention and will be broadcast. The H. W. Wilson publishing company of New York City will present the subject "The Unicameral System of Legislature." Kansas debaters will uphold the negative.
Entomology Club Initiates
Entomology Initiation services for new members of the Entomology Club were held at Sutro Hall afternoon. Inmates were: Charles Amyx, c;38; Alice Smith, c;38; Dale Lindsay, c;37; James Bicket, c;38; and Bruce Gleisser, c;37. Lyman Henderson and Juanita Stone were in charge of the meeting and Joe Hidalgo was chairman of the refreshments committee.
Kansas Graduate Dies
Lindley Speaks In Junction City Chancellor E. H. Lindley was in Junction City last night where he spoke at a dinner meeting of the Junction City Chamber of Commerce. His topic was "Two Civilizations."
Funeral services for Gretchen Gabriel, 31, who died of streptococcus poisoning, will be held at the Methodist church at 2:30, this afternoon. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E Gabriel of Lawrence, and had been in the nurses' training school at the Bell Memorial hospital in Kilkenny City, Kan.
Anderson was elected chairman of the League at its organization meeting held the latter part of last week. He has been known as an independent, and has participated in two Campus Problems speaking contests.
T. D. Williamson, e37, was chosen vice-chairman of the group and Logan J. Lane, 136, general secretary. Williamson is a member of Bain Theta Psi, social fraternity, and is active in the engineering fraternity. He is an active worker in the Y. M.C.A. organization, and is a member of the engineering council.
Lane is affiliated with Delta Upsilon,
Campus Political Leaders Speak
"Our opponents are doing what has been expected: They are disguising themselves under a new name. The Progressive League is beyond the shadow of a double a continuation of old political parties on the Hill, just as the Kayhawk was an outgrowth of the Independent party, which in turn had its beginning in the Black Market. Different different names for this political party durerum have been used for years it is certainly an indication of what may be expected of the Progressives in the future.
"Pachacamac have always maintained their integrity by refusing to hide behind camouflage. Our 22 years of liberal student government attested to the approval which men in Kansas have placed in Pachacamac students who manage change colors as often as a chameleon, Pachacamac intend to introduce its policy of keeping faith with the men students." - Lloyd Metzler, bd,35, President of Pachacamac.
"I hope that the Progressive Party meets with success in arousing and maintaining the interest of students in student government between as well as during elections. The student government will be no better than the students it governs, and the new party will do well to impress this on its followers."—Gumar Mykland, president of the Men's Student Council.
"I am not at all surprised at the formation of such a group with the aims that they set up. K.U has needed something like this for a long time. I only hope that they do not err on the side of becoming too idealistic, for they must remember that if they are going to accomplish these aims they need a spokesperson and a devious politician. The group that does not have as its aim 'politics for politics' sake is heartening to say the least."—Lyman Field, c36, Beta Theta Pi.
"It is certainly an interesting bit of news when a Beta, a D.U., and a Kayhawk get together with two Independents to hope to learn more about this League.
"It sounds interesting, but I would rather not make a statement until I learn more about the organization."—Johnson, president of the Kayhawk Club.
social fraternity, and is also an active member of the debate squad.
Two other officers elected by the charter members of the League were Alfred C. Ames, c36, recording secretary, and Herbert Sizemore, c36, treasurer. Ames is a member of the Kayhawk Club and is best known for his article, "Does K. U. Need a Third Party?" which application in the fall number of this year's Jyohawker, Mr Sizemore is an independent non-participated student politician. He has been active this year as an intramural manager for non-fraternity teams.
Lane, in a statement last night said,
"This new organization is not a political party; it is a movement for better student government. We are going to make student government a con-
[on paper on page Three]
(Continued on Page Three)
PAGE TWO
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1935
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
University Daily Kansar
Official Students Papers of
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF ... JOSEPH DOCTOR
Julia Markham Associate Editor Charles Brown
MANAGING EDITOR CAROLYN HARPER
MANAGING EDITOR ... CAROLYN HARPER
Campus Editor Harry Valentine
Make-up Editors Goodwin Hoyer
Hover Mover
Sports Editor Robert Patt
Sunday Editor Elaine Wheeler
Dunna Fry
Society Editor Shriley Jones
Exchange Editor Jorge Rojas
Rolls-Royce
Business Manager F. Quentin Brown
Auxit, Business Manager Elton Carter
Lenn Watt Willson
William Debner
Joseph Hawen
Wesley McCalla
William Carrner
Harrison Watt
Hirsch Michael
Joseph Doehr
Business Office K.U. 64
News Room K.U. 32
Night Connections, Business Office 701K2
Night Connection, News Room 707K8
Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
Saturday and Sunday by the Department of
School education by students in the department
of Education. Published Monday by the Press
of the Department of Journalism.
Book prices: $20.00 on books; $25.25 on payments. Single copies, $15.00 on purchases.
Entered as second class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kans.,
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26. 1935
A NEW SPORT ON THE CAMPUS
When the pre-enrollment system proposed by the Men's Student Council goes into effect we can tear down old Robinson gymnasium and do away with all athletics on the campus. Students will get all the exercise they will need throughout the semester trying to get enrolled for the next term.
Figure it out for yourself. First you make a dozen trips to your adviser to find out when you can consult him. Then you can make more trips to find out at what time you can get your schedule approved by the enrollment chairman. Now all this is just preliminary training. The real season's work begins when you endeavor to find the heads of the various departments in which you intend to take courses and arrange to have them approve your enrollment. In case of doubt, and your schedule needs additional corrections, the whole process starts all over again.
As for the faculty members who will be unfortunate enough to be on the enrollment committee, they can resign their positions as instructors and take up the procedure of seeing that students are placed in the proper classes. With nearly 4,000 students endeavoring to get enrolled, and each enrollment taking up possibly a half hour of the adviser's time, we cannot see where these persons are going to find time to keep up with their heavy schedules of instruction.
But it will be great fun. After you have "pre-enrolled," you can come back before school starts just the same as before to make those final last-minute changes that have a habit of arising. Think of the fun you will have with three or four days of nothing to do but run down various authorities to aid in re-arranging your program.
No more proselyting of athletes, no more accusations of subsidization. All this will be gone when we have our new enrollment system. Athletics will be back again with the student body, and each and every one shall be a glowing picture of health brought about by the wholesome exercise of dashing about the campus in search of new courses for the next semester.
Prosperity has sure enough returned. Congress no longer meekly submitting to the President's every wish, the courts are daring to rule adversely on some of the administration's projects, politicians are no longer submissive. Mr. Hoover is making statements for the press, and the farmers have stopped complaining about low prices. From what we can remember of those dear dead days of '29, all these must be to prosperity what the robins are to spring.
Read Kansan Want Ads.
YOUTH STANDS CONDEMNED
We almost wish that Phil Kennamer had been proven insane instead of guilty of manslaughter, and then at least one of the crimes that has been lately checked up to youth could have been erased from the books.
The very fact that Phil Kenner is sane points the accusin finger at youth, and causes us to ask the trite question of our harping ancestors, "What is this younger generation coming to?"
There was a time when we tried to explain away the crimes of youth through the unusual economic situation of the past few years. There was simply no opportunity for youth. It had vim, power and the will to do, and there was no place for it to function. Opportunity was missing. There were no new worlds to conquer. If there were any opportunities, there could not possibly be much financial success, and financial success was the measuring stick set up by society.
But Kennamer had everything that money could buy. He had success to a degree. He was born with it. He was the son of a successful parent. Our reasoning broke down in Phil Kennhamer's case. Our only hope was that the jury would find the man insane and vindicate youth of the heinous crime, but the jury has seen fit to declare that the crime was manslaughter, as the evidence showed, and youth stands condemned.
COMMENTS
-By the Editor
W. S.G.A. EFFICIENCY
When Peg Sherwood read the bill for the introduction of a new voting system for the W.S.G.A. elections to the Council last Tuesday night, she asked the members to stop her if they failed to understand any of the long and complicated clauses. The first reading was completed with nary a question until a low-brow freshman inquired, "What is the name of this system?" The women looked perplexed. No one knew. They had heard of it sometime in an American government class. Anyway, they weren't supposed to know. Professor Maddux had written and exchanged notes to the same guest he call him. The meeting adjourned with the sage words of one of the members, "Well, let's not call it the same as the men's or the Kanran will say we are 'just copying the M.S.C. again.'"
"TAKE A BOW, K.U."
The Kansas City Star quotes the Pleasanton Observer-Enterprise in praise of the superior behavior of our men's glee club and we re-quote because it is evidence that there is hope *or* this "Wild, rowdy" University:
"We heard one business man say Tuesday afternoon that he had never seen a more mannerly or better behaved bunch of boys that comprised the men's glee club of Lawrence, who were with us most of the afternoon Tuesday and who rendered their program in the high school auditorium that evening. Each and every one of them conducted himself as a gentleman, and all devoid of the high-hat attitude taken by some such aggregations when they find themselves in a smaller town than they are used to."
Cunningham finds more records to break every week and more new awards to receive. He is called "king of the milers," the "the Kansas flash," and "the sturdy, barrel-chested miler," but the crowning tribute is that he is known to millions of sport fans as simply "Glen."
CUNNINGHAM'S TITLE
During the past few months I have encountered such various opinions regarding the purpose and "stuff" of the dance that I thought I might presume to send you my ideas because I can't meet every questioner in private. If, after the publication of this monograph, there are those who want to pursue the dance further, I am pleased to acknowledge them within the limits of my modest time budget.
We have been told that the Jayhawker staff is living in mortal fear that it will be the object of the next attack by the police, and would like to about it, but if they are afraid, it would not be a bad idea to find out why they are afraid.
FACULTY LETTER
GUILTY CONSCIENCE
OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
While studying and practicing the dance I have had to adjust myself to some five or six different forms in dance expression. But thers is one require which all these forms possess in common, a requisite which one who
ENGLISH Miss Myra Hull will speak on "The Traditional Folk Songs of Kansas,
Tuesday, Feb. 28, at 4:30 in room 313 Fresher."
ENGLISH LECTURE:
processes due at Cancellor's Office. 2 p.m., preceeding regular publication day,
11:30 a.m. and Saturday for Sunday issues.
There will be a meeting of the Interracial Group of the Y. W. C. A. at Henley house at 7 o'clock Thursday evening. Dr. R. H. Wheeler, of the Psychology Department, will speak. MARTHA PETERSON, ANNA MARIE TOMPKINS.
INTERBACIAL GROUP:
NELLIE BARNES, Chairman, Freshman Lectures.
Tuesday. Feb. 26, 1935
The K. U. Radio Club will meet this afternoon at 4:30 in room 102 Marvin. Important matters of business regarding membership, program, and a fold day will be discussed.
K. U. RADIO CLUB:
LE CERCLE FRANCAIS:
FRED Q. GEMMILL, President
Le Cercle Francais se reunira mercredi a quatre heures et demie dans la salle 306 Frasier hall. Tous ceux qui parlent français sont invites.
MATHEMATICS CLUB:
A meeting will be held this afternoon at 4:30 in room 213 Administration building. Prof. J. F. Brown will talk on "The Mathematics of the Psychological Field." MARLOW SHOLANDER, President.
MID-WEEK DANCE:
WEEK DANCE
The reguhr mid-week dance will be held Wednesday night at 7 o'clock in the Memorial Union hallroom. All students must present their identification cards.
BILL COCHRANE, Manager.
SOCIOLOGY CLUB AND SOCIOLOGY MAJORS:
Miss Martin Lowe, Director of the Social Service Department of Bell Memorial Hospital, will speak at 4:30 in a room afternoon 208 Administration building. The public is invited. The subject for discussion is "The Field of Medical Social Work and Recreational Work." The regular Wednesday meeting of the club will not be held.
HENRY BAKER, Program Chairman.
AU SIGMA:
Tau Stigma will meet at 8 o'clock this evening.
Tau Sigma will meet at 8 o clock this evening.
W. S. G. A. will meet tonight at 7 o'clock in room 5. Memorial Union building.
PEGGY SHERWOOD.
W; S. G. A.;
V. M. C. A. FRESHMAN COUNCIL:
1. M. C. A. Washington Council at 7 o'clock this evening in room 10 Memorial Union building. PHIL PAU, President.
Y. W. C. A. Assembly will be held this afternoon at 4:30 in central Administration auditorium. Following the program the nomination committee for new officers will be chosen. * EDNA TURRELL, President.
Y. W. C. A. ASSEMBLY:
HOUSE PRESIDENTS ASSOCIATION:
There will be a meeting of the House Presidents Association this afternoon at 4:30 in the women's lounge of the Administration building. All houses, in which three or more women students are residing, should be represented.
LITTLE SYMPHONY:
Rehearsal will be held Wednesday afternoon at 3:30 in room 304 Administration building. KARL O. KUERSTEINER, Director.
has not danced doesn't always realize, namely special physical adaptability re-inforced by hard work.
Dancing requires strength, precision, split-second timing and a degree of coordination that can be developed only through constant practice. What the seaptor sees as apparent ease, "grace," lightness, or what-have-you is the result of hours of work on body building exercises, form and shading. It is made of the same ingredients that make physical achievement possible in competitive athletic tumbling, horse-back riding, or swimming. It necessitates primarily keen kinemathetic perception plus accurate neuro-muscular coordination on the part of the performer. This aptness in the individual makes him enjoy using his body because his body is highly responsive, so it follows that persons so endowed turn to athletics and pursuits of like nature for the satisfaction of an impulse that is natural and insistent since the child's first experience of competition have been trained on the basis of competitive aggression, athletic contests have become an adulated and legitimate expression for man's interest in his physical self.
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sould like to point out the fact that as the race has progressed and raised itself beyond the necessity of spending all its time with the business of wrestling a living from nature, there has arisen a need for some further outlet of mankind in order to answer to that need. Sculptors, painters, musicians, authors, architects have long been recognized as belonging to the artist class because
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they spent their lives creating ideas and fashioning forms which gave pleasure and inspiration not only to them themselves but to other people. Each such artist was designated as a sculptor, painter, etc., according to the tools or instruments which he employed in giving shape to his ideas. So when an individual with an art impulse possesses a body of sufficient responsiveness it is normal that he should choose that body as his instrument for expression.
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in the feather costume of a bluebird or the petals of a rose.
He then becomes a dance artist.
In the light of this analysis the male dancer is just as natural and as reasonable a phenomenon as either the athlete or the artist. He is a combination. Moreover if his contribution to art is to be vital he must dance ideas that spring from male interests and attitudes. Unfortunately the decadent dance of the past century was so surrounded with coctail, deer, and the luxury-loving demand of court life that it became merely the means of allure and those men who practiced it employed the same technic as the women. It is small wonder that men recolt from the sight of a muscular male deporting himself
It is against just such nonsense as this that a few modern leaders have asserted themselves to restore male dancing to the aristocratic heritage it enjoys in many foreign countries end always enjoyed in classical Greece. Their insurgency has caused far-designed physical educators to recognize more and more the value of the art element in their field. As a result, the modern dance movement has both taught us a step forward in an educational ideal that sees in exercise something more than posture, perspiration, and peristalsis.
Elizabeth G. Dunkel.
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THE BELL SYSTEM AT A GLANCE
AMERICAN TELEPHONE & TELEGRAPH CO.
General staff services to operating companies, and operations of licensed telecom firms between and through the territories of the operating companies.
*Owned by 675,000 stockholders
WESTERN ELECTRIC COMPANY
Manufacturing, warehousing and general purchasing for Bell System.
BELL TELEPHONE LABORATORIES
Research and development work for the Bell System.
ARIDIONAL OPERATING COMPANIES:
GET WHICH GOODNESS TELEPHONE CORPORATION?
Provide telephone services and facilities within their respective territories, with the aid of stock services of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company.
How a nation-wide telephone network is organized
The Bell System is big, but its organization is not complex.
The A.T. & T. is parent company, service and research organization, and financial headquarters of the System. It owns Western Electric, which buys and manufacturers for the System at prices about a fourth below the prices of similar equipment in the competitive market. Jointly with Western, it owns Bell Laboratories, where science constantly seeks better and cheaper methods of giving you telephone service.
It owns more than 90 per cent of the voting stock of the 24 associated companies (of which the Southwestern Company is one) and it operates the long distance trunk lines linking the territories of these companies. Its staff carries on for these companies a constant search for more economical ways to give good telephone service.
Each part of the organization exists because the function it performs is essential to the job of giving good telephone service at fair cost to you.
SOUTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY
MIDDLEBURY HIGH SCHOOL
TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 26. 1935
PAGE THREE
Ku
Hill Society
Before 5 p.m. call KU. 25; between 7:30 and 9
pm. call 2023K3
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Tea in Honor of Ted Shawn
About 125 guests were present at the ten given Sunday afternoon at the Alpha Chi Omega house by the Alpha Chi Omega, Sig Phi Epilason, and the Kappa Sigma, in honor of Ted Shaw and four members of his troup: Barton Mumaw, Dennis Landers, William Howell and Fred Fearn.
Music for the afternoon was furnished by Tom Ryan, f3, piano, and Alice Denton, f3, voice. Mrs. Frances Wilson of the Sigma Phi Ephouse and Mrs. N. K. Thompson of Kappa Sigma poured. By request, Mr. Shawn gave a dance of the afternoon concerning the development of the dance and his ideals of dancing.
KU
Faculty guests present were: Chancellor and Mrs. E. H. Lindley, Dean and Mrs. D. M. Swarthout, Dean and Mrs. Henry Werner, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Crafton, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Nichols, Dr. and Mrs. Michael O'Reilly, Allen Mrs. Mary Hamilton, Miss Irene Peabody, Mr. and Mrs. Laura Anderson and Miss Elizabeth Dunkel.
Delta Tau Delta Has Buffet Supper
Delta Tau Delta entertained with a buffet supper Sunday night at the chapter house in honor of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Norton. The following guests were present: Shirley Craig, faul; Virginia Eagle, cun;UNCes Bruce C.; 36; Elanor Cain, cun;UNCes Beveram, c; 35; Marna Jane Shaffer, c; 37; Marie Stevens, c; 31; Borniloom, c; 37; Mary Nicholson, ph37;
Marjorie Hornhaker, 'c'uncl; Mary Kretsinger, 'c'unel; Carolyn Smith, 'c'36; Ann Hubbard, 'c'37; Carolyn High, 'c'38; Jane Walker, 'c'37; Virginia Taylor, 'c'38; Eleanor Troup, 'c'uncl; Mildred Mikesell, 'c'37; Laura Humphrey, 'c'37; Boorla Brice, 'c'unel; Dorothy Shearer, 'c'37; Marie Russell, 'c'37.
Alpha Kappa Psi held formal initiation services Sunday morning for the following: Ray Reed, b'35; Gene Schwartz, c'47; Edward Shen, b'36; Newell Constable, c'37; David Graham, b'33; James Adams, b'38.
Alpha Kappa Psi Initiates
Alumni members present for the services were Don Crane, 29, and Prof. D. Gulliardo. Prof. H. F. Holtzel and prof. D. Gulliardo, faculty members, were also present.
Gamma Pi Beta held its initiation banquet Sunday noon at 1 o'clock. The following alumnae were guests: Virgina Burgess, Jane benton, Nadine Bishop, Mrs. Sue Linscott, Mrs. Virginia Johnson, and Miss Mildred Kent, all of Kansas City, Mo. Mrs. Elvin Latty, Mrs. Harriet Hutton, Mrs. H. H. Hanna, and Mrs. James Anderson, all of Lawrence; Helen Kinney of Topoka; Maxine Van Pelt, '33, of Paola; and Charline Armstrong, '34, of Valley Falls, Kan.
Alpha Tan Omega held initiation services Sunday for Dean Gough, c'38; Eung Buehanan, c'38; Roy Kirby, c'uml and Clarence Winsley, c'50.
The Kappa Sigma fraternity held its annual district conclave at Baker University this week-end. The meeting was opened with a smoker Friday night at the Kappa Sigma house in Baldwin. The chapters in this district are Kansas.
Kansas State, Nebraska, Washburn, and Baker.
☆ ☆ ☆
Miss Ruth Warrock, gr, spoke to Gamma Delta, Lutheran student organization, Sunday evening on her mission work in India. She told of the three departments at the Mission, the educational, the medical, and the social services department, spent 14 years in India, and is now in this country on an eight-year furough.
Dinner guests at the Chi Omega house last night were: Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Stockman, and Mrs. Dan Webster, all of Chanute; Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Hamphetley, independence; Mrs. Radhay Foy, both of Killeen; Mrs. M. Lim Leibrich both of Kansas City, Mos. Mim Leibrich Richards, Manhattan; Phil Beaty, Sailna; and M. W. Everly, *C*35.
Guests at the Sigma Alpha Episa
weekly buffet supper Sunday night
included: Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Reeder,
Kinsley; Helen Smiley c; 38; Helen
Deer; c; 38; Ruth Hood; c; 38; Jeanne Luth-
rere; Jamel Jewel; c; 38; Jeanette
Marie; c; 38; Isabel Townley
c; 37; Dale Maxwell, 137.
Phil Mu Alpha entertained with a dinner dance at the chapter house Saturday day evening. The guests were; Isabelle Waring, c'55; Mary Bear, f'78; Jesamine Jackson, fau'1c; Harriet Harrison, c'36; Maurine Jausee, f'37; Margaret McNown, f'3a; Valorie Daveney, c'37; Dorothy Lewin, f'3a; Lois Lipijs, f'35; Lucille Bryant, c'elem; Helen Krug, c'37; and Hermina Frick, f'3a.
Dinner guests at the Alpha Tau Ongue house Sunday were Phil Bettle of Staillen, Mr. Leonard Haze of Tonganovie Ernest Gilles of Kunune City, Mo. Hererick Gilles of Kunune City, Mo. and Ms. A. L. Dennis, Duis, and Milke Kell, all of Chanute.
Delta Uplain initiated the following pledges last Saturday: Norman McCallough, c37; Warren McDugal, c37; Charles Miller, c38; Wilkers Showalter, c38; Draper Jennings, c'uncl; Robert Clark, c38; Robert Hughes, c'uncl; Norman McCallough, c38; and Ruth Herriot, c28
Week-end guests at the Kappa Sigma house were Bob Tupa, Fred Berry, Don Munell, and Verne Tuesdale, all of Lincoln, Neb. Charles Weeks and Robert Harris, both of Manhattan, and DenLanders of the Shawn Dancers.
Dinner guests at the Sigma Alpha Mu house Sunday were Mr.; Mrs. S, S. Weinstein, Miss Lillian Labich, and Miss Jean Dolberg, all of Kansas City; Mr. Roy Shapiro, all of Mr. Sid Kross, '33, both of Topka.
Hannabel Walker of St. Joseph, Mo.
and Harold Vanel, also of St. Joseph
were married at 5 o'clock Saturday
afternoon. Mrs. Vanell attended the
University last year and was a member of
the Gamma Phe Beta sorority.
Dr. and Mrs. S. N. Mallison of Augusta
da announced the engagement of their
laughter, Mary Marryt to Cecil Varner
lso of Augusta. Both young people
attended the University; Miss Mallison is
member of Alpha Chi Omega, and Mr.
deer of Delta Uplonar.
Ann West, e'uncl, and Betty Grove
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[a'38, were dinner guests at the Kappa Sigma house Sunday.
BOOKS
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PICTURE FRAMING
Sunday dinner guests at the Beta Theta Pi house were Senator and Mrs Frank Oberg of Clay Center.
Sigma Eta Chi, Congregational church sorority, announces the pledging of Luclie Willart, 'C38.
Elwood Leep of Kansas City, Mo., was a dinner guest at the Phi Kappa Psi house Sunday for dinner.
Walt Clark, c'35, of Topekn, and Dean Landis, '34, of Osawatome, were guests at the Delta Chi house this weekend.
The name of Dorothy Ann Martin fa'ucl, was unintentionally omitted from the list of Gamma Phi Beta initiates.
Sam Lux of Topeka was a guest at the Phil Gamma Delta house this weekend.
Mr. Henry Asher, local attorney, spoke to the Congregational Fireside Forum Sunday evening on "The Fight for Americanism."
Alpha Delta Pi announces the engagement of Kathryn Springer, c37, to Robert Sherwodo, m37. Mr. Sherwood is a member of Phi Chi.
Dinner guests at the Sigma Phi Epis-
en house Sunday was Mr. and Mrs.
Lybe Brown of St. Louis; W. T. Miller
of Webster Groves, Mo.; and Charles
Darville of Kansas City, Mo.
The K.U. Dames will meet this afternoon at 2:30 cclock on the home of Mrs Byron Walters, 742 Indiana Street. They will be in inspection of the Reuter Organ company.
Mrs. Henry Werner will entertain the Twentieth century club at her home this afternoon. Mrs. A. J. Mix will talk on "Literature of the '90s."
Miss Arlene Allen of Chanute is a guest this week of Elizabeth Allerdice, c'26, and Dorothy Burkholder, c'26.
Gain Intramural Honor Roll Pledging Entire Membershin
Thetas Back I.-M. Carnival
The general sale of tickets will begin the latter part of the week, and they will be available at the main desk in the Memorial Union building until the night of the Carnival, March 8. Ticket holders will be entitled to the stunts and I.-M. Shuffle as well as receiving a 24-page program.
Kappa Alpha Theta is the first sorority to become eligible for the Intramural Carnival honor roll by pledging 100 per cent of its membership last night. Many other organizations are expected to follow the leads of Sigma Chi and Kappa Alpha Theta in their support of the carnival.
The dead line for entering stunts is 6 p.m. Friday.
Botany Club To Initiate
Initiation services will be held by the Botany Club at 730 tonight for all new members. Florence Briscoe, c36, president, said yesterday. All new members and active old members are requested to be present. Prof. E. H. Taylor of the department of zoology will not be able to address the meeting as was first announced. The club will meet at 1134 Louisiana street.
The House Presidents Association will meet today at 4:30 in the Women's lounge of the Administration building. They will discuss the petition system of nomination for W.G.A. All houses in which there are three or more women students residing should be represented.
Lindley to Speak in Leavenworth
Chancellor E. H. Linden will deliver
the principal address at a reception for Brig. General Herbert J. Bres, newly appointed Fort Leavenworth commandant.
The event will take place tonight.
House Presidents To Meet
New Progressive Party Formulated by Students
Anderson declared, "For a number of years a majority of men students have been disinterested in student government and it is now considered nothing more than a joke. With the withdrawal from the field by the Kayhawk Club, an excellent opportunity exists for people who do not like the present set-up to unite in a new movement featuring anti-bunk government.
structive reality, and we solicit the interest of every male student in the University."
"With this in mind, we are founding the Progressive Student Government League to do away with undesirable practices that have been characteristic of political parties on this campus, and change student government so that it will become an active student force instead of a weak inert pretense.
One Team Appears On First Day o Men's Tournament
"A Pachacamac, an Orsed, a Kayhaw,
and two formerly independent and disinterested men believe in this
way that they strongly enough to
held the Leguage.
The first day of play in the men's intramural volleyball tournament was prolonged until today as the teams scheduled to open the tournament yesterday, with the exception of the Phi Gam's, failed to appear for their games. The Phi Gam's won game by a force of 15, while the Pt. K. A.'s nor the A.T.O.'s showed up for their game, scheduled for 5:10 yesterday afternoon.
Volley Ball Slow in Starting
(Continued from page one)
Men's Intramurals
"Any man from any group who believes in a completely new idea of men's student government may become a member of this organization."
The preamble of constitution reads, "We, the members of the Progressive Student Government League, in order to perfect our organization so that we may free Mount Oread of petty political practices; establish and maintain student government in its fullest meaning; promote a more liberal attitude embodying greater freedom in thought and action; support any movement that is vigorously progressive; guard the interests of the individual student, and aid in building a greater University of Kansas, do ordain and establish this constitution for the Progressive Student Government League."
East court: 5:30 o'clock, Beta "B" vs Sigma Chi "B"; 10 o'clock, Phi Delt vs Delta Tau.
TODAY
Basketball
West court: 5:30 o'clock, Delta Tau "B" or Sigma Nu "B"; 10 o'clock, Wakarusas or Hawks.
4:30 o'clock, Sig Alph vs Delta Chi;
Sig Ep vs Campus Raiders.
INTER-ORGANIZATION TENNIS MATCHES TO BE RESUMED
Volleyball
Two matches were played last week Delta Tau Delta, who are the defending champions, defeated the Collegians 2 to 1 and the Kayhawks defeated Sig Alpha 2 to 1. The Delta and the Kayhawks will play early next week.
The playoffs of the inter-organization fall tennis tournament, which were delayed by the early advent of cold weather, will be completed within the next two weeks. At present only four teams remain. Beta and the Pike are in semi finals; match next Sunday morning at $300 in Robinson Gymnasium.
Free Throw Contest Begins
The women's intramural basketball free throwing contest began yesterday. Each woman entered is to make 60 throws in three groups of 20 each. The first 20 should be thrown this week. The second 20 will be thrown on Friday, Tuesday, 12:30, Monday, Wednesday, 1:30, and any day at 4:30. Any entry may throw at any one of these times.
--mural basketball games have picked the ten best players in each class. Practice for these games will begin tonight at 9 o'clock. The games will begin March 5.
Women's Intramurals
OFFICIALS PICK TEN BEST WOMEN BASKETBALL PLAYERS
Results of the ping pong singles and doubles matches which have been turned into the intramural office are: Alpha Omicron i defeated Alpha Gamma Phi 3-0, Corbin Hall-Delta Zeta combine from Watkins Hall 3-0, and Alpha Delta won from Watkins Hall 3-0. Results of the ping pong singles matched to date are: Stearn, Chi Omega defeated Earring; default, Corbin, Corbin, Corbin, Hornbaker, Hornbaker, Hanson, Gamma Phi-Coe, A.O. Pt. 13-15, 21-13, Spiceer, Alpha Chi 13-15, 21-13, Spiceer, Corbin, Corbin-Cleverenger, A.O. Pt. default; Sheldon, Gamma Phi-Newcomer, Corbin, default Lynan, Kappa-Bruce, Pi Gamma Delta-Haskinsen, LW.W., default; Nolen, Pi Phi-Rapp, unattached, 12-12-11; Baird, A.D. Pi-Bushley, A.; Sigma Kappa, default; Sherpe, Sigma Kappa-Bangs, Alma Phi, 12-19, 21-19
Miss Ruth Hoover and the women who officiated at the women's intramural basketball games have picked the ten best players in each class. Practice for these games will begin tonight at 9 o'clock. The games will begin March 5.
Dunk a Doughnut and Relax at your
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The teams selected are: Seniors, F. Bruce, R. Pylie, T. Humphrey, M. Fisher, M. B. Doty, L. Pantle, L. Scogninig, L. J. Lattner, C. Mitchell, and A. Wesley; Juniors, M. Irwin, K. Teagarion, McMichaels, L. Montgomery, D. Sutherland, B. Hanson, B. Parkinson, M. Linscott, L. Sharpe, and M. F. Butter; Sophomores, M. Rowland, A. Walter, Baer, R. Kiene, C. Newman, L. Couse, D. Fink; Freshmen, H. Hoffmann, G. Johnson, D. Griffin, Franke, D. Trechell, D. Owlesy R. Baker, H. Haskinson, L. Botom, and D. Finch.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1935
Rifle Teams Will Meet In Telegraphic Contest
Men's Squad to Compete in Seven Matches This Week
The men's rifle team will meet in teleographic competition during the week ending March 2. The following teams: University of Idaho, Moscow; State University of Iowa, Iowa City; Kansas State College, Kansas City; and North Carolina LaFayette College, Easton, Pa. and John Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md.
The five highest ranking scores last week were turned in by Ross Calhoun, c'enul; Eunel Weymouth, e'35; C. Wayne Gunn, Duncan Lordke, e'67; and Edwar Leighton, e'37.
Martha Dodge, c36, captain of the women's rifle team, announces the following opponents for next week's matches: State College, Storms, Comm; University of Nebraska; and Kansas State College.
High scorers among the feminine sharphooters last week were: Margaret Hays, f'35; Martha Dodge, c'36; Mary Clementine, f'35; Gabriall, Gabbart, c'35; and Lonnie Jaroe, c'32.
Sergi, E. C. Engle has put on display a target recently fired by Mary Louise Beltz which represents a score of 99. This is the highest score turned in by a member of the women's rifle team this year and to make it, Miss Beltz firing on a 50-foot range, hit a 12-inch bull's eye 19 times in 20 shots and the other shot landed in the next ring which was just 22 inch larger radius than the bullsye.
To Play Ping Pong Matches
Two intramural ping pong double matches are scheduled for today. They are: Independents vs. Corbin Athletics; Wake Forest vs. Washington; Wake Kinsall hall vs. I.W.W. at 4:30 in the gym.
A.T.O.'s Beat D.U.'s, 18-20'
Late Rally By Losers Fails To Bring
Victory
A fighting Delta Upsition basketball team bowed to the A.T.O. quintet last night 18 to 29 in a well played game featured with an exciting finish.
With four and one-half minutes to play, Bowell of the A.T.O.'s with his team leading 18 to 14 tipped in a goal that seemed to sew up the game. For three minutes the team battled and with less than a minute remaining to play, Jorgensen made two long shots in spid fire succession to score 18 to 20. The A.T.O.'s called time with but five seconds left to play.
The winners gained possession of the ball on the tip-off and the game ended with the two teams fighting for the ball in mid-court.
A. T.O. 20
G F T F
Clement 4 1 1 0 Davis 3 0 1
Mudge 0 4 1 3 Russell 0 1 0
Bowell 2 0 1 Barclay 0 1 0
Gough 1 0 2 Jorgensen 5 0 0
Trombold 0 1 2 Minter 0 0 0
Totals ...7 6 8
Referee: Bidnick
Forfeits which have married the intramural play in the last two weeks appeared again yesterday. The S.P.E. "Bteismen won their game yesterday after a night of drinking. The Collegians scheduled to play at oclock last night forfeited to Coe's.
Midnight Basketball Scores
Phi Psi 34, Sigma Nu 24.
Kappa Sig "B" 35, Tramps "B" 13.
Kappa Kappa Gamma, Theta, Pi Phi,
and Chi Omega entries for the final
swimming meet which will be held
Thursday evening at 7:30 must be filed in
the office of the Clerk by maximum
by the office. March 27. Entry
money may be obtained at the office.
"Red" Team Wins Dinner in Six-Game Basketball Series
Freshman Squad to Dine
Winning the fourth and deciding game of a six game series between two teams of the freshmen basketball squad the Reds, by handing the Greens a 21 to 3 drubbing last night, will be given a dinner at the Hotel Eldridge.
The Green's were able to take only one of the five games played. The final game of the series will probably be played tonight.
The box score: Cream 13
G FT 2
Holliday 0 2 1
B碉midt 0 2 1
Tonyy 0 2 1
Sey 0 2 1
Barcau 0 2 0
Bidnick 1 0 0
Landers 0 2 1
Stowart 1 0 0
Choplin 0 2 1
Ha'vatrck 0 0 2
G FT 2
Holliday 0 2 1
B碉midt 0 2 1
Tonyy 0 2 1
Sey 0 2 1
Barcau 0 2 0
Bidnick 1 0 0
Landers 0 2 1
Stowart 1 0 0
Choplin 0 2 1
Ha'vatrck 0 0 2
Iowa State Swimmers Win
Totals ...4 5 8 Totals ...9 3 8
Referee: Vogel
Iowa State swimmers splashed their way to a 53 to triumph over the Washington University team Saturday. The victorious Cyclones captured six firsts, and placed two men in each individual event. Varsey, Wawerski and Kovacs won the Big Six record in the 100-yard free style, covering the distance in .567.
Men's Intramurals
Kansas State Wins Indoor Meet
Joe Kunpemberger, Wildcat hurdler,
scored 13 points as Kansas State defeated Missouri 51% to 41% Saturday.
Kansas State won all but one of the track events, while Missouri cleaned up in the field events. Several records were broken, while others were equaled.
Iowa State wrestlers defeated Nebraska 25 to 3 as the Cyclones won two falls, four decisions, and drew in the remaining two matches. Saturday, Flusnick, 165-pounder who has been undefeated this season, and Debrown earned the only points for Nebraska.
The semi-finals in the men's intrac
national swimming meet will be held to
night at 7:30 o'clock. The winners to
night at 8:30 o'clock. He will be
held Thursday at 4:30 o'clock.
--yard backstroke First Heat: Won
east backstroke Second Heat: Won
second; Stouts, Beta, third. Time: 1:29.
Second heat: Won by Cochran, Coe;
second; Bore, Bebe, Bete.
Time: 1:31.
Following is the list of men who will swim tonight in the semi-finals listed as they finished in the preliminaries last week.
50-yard dash, first heat: Pusey, Coe's, first; Stetsa, Betts, second. Time 28.4. Second heat: Softball, First, first. Time 29.1. Third heat: Golf, Phi Delt, first. Third heat: Gordon, Phi Delt, first. Keeper, Kappa Sig, second. Time 35. Fourth heat: Orr Brew, first, master. Time 36.
- **ovard breast stroke**, First heat; Cecher, Coe's, first; Morgan, Beta, second. Time 36.6. Second heat; Rice, Phi Gam, first; Dickie, Phi Dell, second. Time 36.9. Third heat; Wrigley, Phi Dell, fourth; Rick, Phi Dell. Time 40.1. Fourth heat; Bete, Beta, first; Harwil, Phi Gam, second. Time 40.4.
60-yard backstroke, First heat: R. James, Coes first; Ashley, Sigma Nu, second. Time 39.00. Second heat: Irwin, Sigma Nu, first. Chambers, Phil Dalt, second. Time 40.15. Doi first. Pussey, Coe's, second. Time 37.00. Fourth heat: Coe, Coe's, first; Cooper, Kappa Sech, second. Time 36.2.
600-yard dash. First heat; Won by Wagonger, Coe's; Henshall, Gap, second. Time: 1.944. Second heat; Won by Stotts, Byton, L King, Sig. second. Time: 1.944. Third heat; Cochran, Coe's; Townley, Phi Delt. time, second. Time: 1.944. Fourth heat; Won by Howard, Coe's; Robinson, Beta, second. Time: 1.932.
In an extra period game Piper High School defeated the Oread Training School basketball team Saturday night, with a score of 10-8. The playing time was 11 to 11.
Deadline for Intramural Participants Set at March 4
Call for Wrestling Entries
An announcement calling for the entries in the intramural wrestling tournament was made by Ed Elb, manna. He attended the intramural athletics, yesterday afternoon.
The deadline for the entries to be in the intramural office has been set for Monday, March 4. On that day the entries will weigh in for the matches which start the following afternoon at 4 o'clock. The winners in the preliminary matches will wrestle in the semi-finals Tuesday, March 7.
The weights in which three men from each organization may enter are: 121 pounds, 129 pounds, 138 pounds, 148 pounds, 158 pounds, 168 pounds, 178 pounds.
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Only those men who have a physical examination rating of "A," according to the student hospital report, may commit.
Ellsworth in Topeka
Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary, was in Topeka on business yesterday.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXII
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on the SHIN
BY JOE HOLLOWAY, c'35
The Measles Once More . . . a New Club and We Need a Costume . . . the A. T. O.'s Go Girlish . . . Just About the Pi Phi's.
This measles business is about to wear us all out but here's a pretty good one on Marvin Cox, an A.T.O. freshman. He rope up the hill the other day with one of the boys to take someone to the hospital who had the measles. Cox went on over to basketball practice, and when the brother with whom he rode returned to the house without him, he told someone that he left Cox at the hospital with the measles also. Later the torchy called up Cox, and the misinformed one told her that Marv had the measles. Sunday morning, bright and early, Cox was the recipient of a beautiful special delivery bouquet. We are told that the box contained several carnations which were just the color of the patient's face when he opened the
♣ ♣ ♣
In talking about blue sky laws of Kansas in investments class the other day, Prof. Dade remarked, "You can keep foe from losing his money at home, but you can't keep the fool at home!"
There is a rumor of a brand new anti-club formed on the Hill. Details are meager, but it seems that the club, which meets once a week, has sprung up in opposition to the senior women's honorary society. More information will be available as soon as Blowers loans us his library-table costume.
There seems to be quite a little contreversy springing up about the letter written to McBride of the Star and signed by Jimmie Ashier, a Kappa Sig from Lawrence who is now in Boston. We hear that Papa Asher has blamed another local hoofer for bringing the letter, for signing of Jim's name. Wonder if it wouldn't be better to look for someone with a reason for writing it?
We put on our rancher's costume yesterday and found out that the A.T. O.'s are going to have a Mac West churn in the intramural Carnival. The members are Bebe Moron—no we don't mean that it's Beefy Morton, Long-John Seigle, Touch-Puss Eagle, M箭vin Cox, and Joe Cochrane. Here we thought the A.T.O.'s were rough, tough men of the soil, living out there in the wilds of Fourth street, and they turn up with a bunch of chorus lassies! We knew that Egue was co-captain of the wrestling team, but we didn't think that meant he could qualify for a Mac West chorus.
Saw a couple holding bands in the Library Sunday afternoon. Thought they might start playing "playing" under the table next, but they disappointed.
Just about the Pi Phi's. Saw a ducky little sight in the library Monday. One of the newly-initiated pledges of the noble lodge screwed her face up like Lady Alice the Goon and sneaked up behind Jo Hellings who was sitting at a table a few yards away. These new pins always seem to put new blood in the poor old veins of the fresh–must if they want to carry on in dramas like that in the library . . . and continuing in the vein of library and Pi Phi—don't ever sit between two tables full of them. It's like a mixture of an Indian stopper and the various rubies made when the Kayhaws resigned from politics. Jac Lawrence is pushing the Hill's best looking auto—the blue Ford. It’s a bit of a rest from the yellow machine anyway.
NOTED AMERICAN ARCHITECT TO GIVE LECTURE THURSDAY
Mr. C. Grant LaFarge, noted American architect now lecturing for the American Institute of Architects, will give an illustrated lecture on "Architecture, the Design Process." Thursday afternoon at 4:30 in the Central Administration auditorium.
CSEP Students
The lecture will be open to the public Dr.J.M.Kellogg,professor of Architecture,will preside.
All CSEP students must call at the CSEP office this week to register class schedules, addresses, and contact information. The mation must be filed this week.
W.S.G.A. Elections Set for March 14 By Women's Group
Nomination Petitions Mus Be Signed and Filed in Dean's Office by March 11
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1935
The W.S.G.A. council at a regular meeting last night set March 14 as the date for the spring election of members to the council. A new feature of the election bill which was passed by the council several weeks ago and was read for the third time last night, is the nomination of officers through petition instead of at a mass meeting, which has been the custom in the past.
Patriot blanks may be secured at Dean Husband's office and must be returned to that place by March 11. A reply from the applicant will be posted as the patitions come in.
The new election plan designates that petitions for offices of the association shall be signed by not less than 25 nor more than 35 electors; petitions for class offices shall be signed by not less than 15 nor more than 25 electors; petitions for office of 2016 are represented shall be signed by not less than 20 nor more than 30 electors; petitions for Fine Arts representative shall be signed by not less than 10 nor more than 20 electors. The term "elector" shall include those women in each case who are qualified to vote in the election for the office for which the nomination is made. No elector shall sign more than one petition for any one office and shall be an elector. No elector shall be denied as to the petition or petitions last filed. With each signature shall be stated the place of residence.
Voter Marks Choices
By this method an elector may sign but three divisions of the petitions; those for the major offices, those for the offices of the college in which she is enrolled, and those of her particular class.
The provisions for the marking and counting of the ballots as provided in the bill are as follows. The voter, instead of marking an "X" for the candidate voted for will mark "1" after the name of her first choice, "2" for second choice, and so on. The votes are counted according to the transfer and elimination system and whenever at the end of any stage of the counting the number of ballots credited to a candidate is equal or greater than a majority of the valid ballots cast for the office, she shall be declared elected.
Cannan (signed)
Margaret S. Sherwond, CS, president of Mergers & Partners that by adopting this bill the council expected to accomplish the doing away of a mass meeting for nominations and to make it necessary for an officer to be elected by a majority rather than a plurality as has been done in the past.
It was brought out at the meeting that all women students were privileged to attend the council meetings, and any with constructive criticism to offer would be afforded an opportunity to express themselves. A woman whose please will be held March 11 at which an open forum will be carried on.
Plans were discussed for the furthering of a more democratic feling among women on the campus, and a number of tentative ideas considered.
To Debate Here Tomorrow
The Kansas team composed of Phi Bramwell, c36, and Hugh Randall, c37 will take the negative side. According to Prof. E. C. Buehler, director of forensics, this debate, the only one of its kind scheduled for this year, is unusual, for it will be decided on the basis of an audience vote.
A debate on the question, "Resolved: that Kansas should adopt the unicameral system of legislation, embodying the essential features of the Nebraska plan," is scheduled for 8 o'clock tomorrow when the University team meets the University of Missouri disaster center and the Central Administration auditorium.
University Squad To Uphold Negativ Side of Unicameral Government
On March 6 and 7, the two University representatives will debate the same question before Creighton College and the University of South Dakota. The debate at the University of South Dakota will be before an all-student convention and the speeches will be broad east and printed.
Edward C. Spencer, 27, son of Prof.
and Mrs. D. H. Spencer, visited his
parents over the weekend. Mr. Spencer is
a senior staff member at Pinnacle
company and lives in Chicago.
Graduate Visits Parents
Comments on PSGL
"As chairman of the Progressive Student Government League, I am glad to welcome six campus leaders into our movement, Oti Brushaker, Lee Judy, John Berkelley, Quentin Brown, Lyman Field, and Chevy White. It seems to me that the men's student body, only one day after the announcement of our formation, is very eager to support a movement toward student government reform. Our program has appealed to these campus leaders, two of whom were former students in the last editions of the Kansan the first point of our program will be outlined in detail. Following that will appear, day by day, the complete program for reform of student government, by point—"Charles B. Anderson.
"It has been very obvious to all of us that both of the old political parties have been stagnating. Consequently it is with great interest that I am watching the third party group in the student action and should student action in student affairs. It is a much needed movement and should attract wide support." - Ois Brubaker.
"I think, if it turns out to be a permanent party, it will be a good thing for the student body. I believe it will give the students better unity and better representation. It has great possibilities in "Lee Audy, The Delta Theta."
Goldman Delivers Final L.I.D. Lecture Tonight
NUMBER 102
Chicago Labor Lawyer Wil Speak on Worker's Situation
Situation
Albert Goldman, Chicago labor lawyer, will give the sixth and last scheduled League for Industrial Democracy lecture tonight at 7:30 in the Uitarian church. J. B. Mathews, who has been announced as the speaker, was joined by Charles Engval of the Rev. Charles Engval of the committee of guardors.
Mr. Goldman, who will speak on "The Coming Struggle for Power," has recently made a reputation for himself as an attorney for the Non-Partisan Labor Defense. For the last few months he has been in Sacramento, Calif., defending some of a group of 18 workers against criminal syndication charges that resulted in a strike in the canning industries of the Sacramento valley. He has been credited with the release of two of the defendants.
The speaker is a graduate of the University of Cincinnati and holds a degree in law from Northwestern University. He practiced law in Chicago before his retention by the Non-Partisan Labor Defense.
The lecture, being given early to allow for the Ted Shaw dancers, is the last scheduled. An extension of the course has not been decided upon, but one will probably be given again next year.
Owing to repeated inquiries, Mr. Goldman will discuss the purpose and activities of the League for Industrial Democracy. The formation of a student wing of that organization is being considered by a group on the Hill. The student L.I.D. bases its platform on protection of academic freedom.
Raymond Eastwood, associate professor of drawing and painting, lecture last night in Spooner-Thayer museum before an audience of about 75. Speaking on the permanent collection of paintings in the museum, Professor Eastwood praised its excellence and value to the University.
Mr. Goldman will also speak before a Noon Forum today in the Union cafeteria at 12.30. His subject will be "Labor and the Law."
Pointing out many individual paintings, Mr. Eastwood spoke especially of Winslow Homer's water colors and some scenes by Mr. Frazer, former head of the department of drawing and painting here. Mrs. Fraser bought one of Frazer's paintings from him outright before it was even finished.
At the conclusion of the lecture, Professor Eastwood described methods of cleaning and restoring paintings.
Fine Arts Professor Lectures at Spooner Thayer Museum
Chipapus To Northern States
Jan Chipapus, professor of music, will leave this week for a series of concerts in Minnesota and South Dakota. He will play for the Kansas State Music Teachers' Association meeting in Lindsborg next week. Mr. Chipapus will teach this summer at the Summer Music School held at Bay View, Mich., from July 15 to August 23.
Chianusso To Northern States
Non-Commissioned Officers Appointed By Lt. Col. Koenig
One Hundred and Thirteen Students Placed in Cadet, R.O.T.C.
Receptions.
Leut. Colonel W. C. Koenig, professor of military science and tactics, R.O.T.C., University of Kansas, announces the following appointments of Cadet Non-Commissioned Officers and Cadet Privates. First Class:
Coast Artillery Battalion Headquarters;
Codet Technical Sergeant; Stewart M.
Chambers.
Chairman:
Cadet Technical Sergeant; Alden P Eddon.
Battery "A", Coast Artillery Battalion;
Cadet First Sergeant, Elverson E.
Baker, Cadet Sergeants: Bruce E.
K Kenneth, K恩师 E. Ducker, David
Duke, Carl H. Helman, JR. Hec-
Love, Orin M. Robertson, JR. He-
Ross M. Robertson, William M.
Summers, John W. Zook, Jay K. Wisdom
Cadet Privates - First Class; Charles J. Bekstek, Ross L. Calboun, Hubert T. Boulanger, Robert E. Cillis, Elon L. Hiller, Walker H. Jossevel, Lewis A. Kempr, Jr. Francis M. Kennedy, John J. Miller, Wesley I. Moreland, Jr. Howard T. Robertian,
Cadet First Sergeant, Norbert I Auschwitz.
Cadet Corporalis; King P. Aitken, Earl H. Dearborn, Hearnman H. Hauck John S. Marietta, Jack W. Schrey Donald S. Voorhees, Eugene C.
Cadet Serpentine; J. James, Mrs. Dawson; R. Roberts; W. Robertson, Robert E. Richardson, Kenneth J. Silberberg, Merville Sands, John R. Malone, Robert E.
Cadet Corporals, John B. Adams
Lewis C. Blackburn, Benjamin F. Givens
Elmore D. Heter, Duane O. Main
Loren A. Moore, George M. Osgood
Cadet Privates, First Class: Elmer K. Blasdel, Bill Bryan, John E. Chandler, George M. Flint, Charles H. Havens Walton C. Ingham, Kenneth Clemens, Michael J. Reese, Reese W. Spurrier, Orman W. Wenamaker, Battie Battleion;
Company "C":
Cadet First Sergent Charles H. Bedford, Cadet State Sargent Carl W. Koch, Cadet Staff Sargent Lloyd Ayran, Cadet Staff Sargent Roger L.
Cadet Sergeants: Wilbur Clemens
Frank, Jr. Bacon, B. E. Blam,
McCoy, McY. Edy, B. Warn.
Cadet Corporals: Lawrence N. Bigge,
John T. Caleman; Berhardt J.
John L. Caleman;
Cadet Privates. First Class; William Green, Harold V. Kernsch陡, Richard F. Ludeman, Karl A. McDonald, Robert W. Sander, William F. Sager, Louis S. Shuay, Walter F. Scfield, LeLoin V. Sotav, John Robeson, Clifford L. Willis.
Company "D"
Cadet Ist Sgt. John W. Kau.
Cadet Staff Sergeants: Mack B. Lu-
reng. George W. Traw
Cedar Privates, First Class; David H Alkire; John C. Burren; Barnet J. Fausti; Marilyn Fawtzati; Murrel H. Finton; Wide Green Brandon S. Jesion; Arthur G. Latham Joseph A. Mahmahm; Clarence W. Deward Peterson; Andrew J. Serrentino
Cadet Corporals: Robert L. Browning; David M. Carle; Gordon W. Guise; Jim Looney; Claude L. Parish.
Cadet Sergeants. Lewis W. Benz Neal W. Haggard Edgar D. Leigh James C. Trawl; Lawrence E. Wood
"Story" Sponsors Contest
rizes Offered for Two Best Short Stories Submitted
Prizes will be awarded for the best short story written by a college student in a contest to be sponsored by the magazine, "Story." Any student may enter this contest. Two stories may be entered from the University of Kansas, and the preliminary selection will be handled by the department of English.
The stories must be not less than 1500 nor more than 6,000 words in length, and all entries should be given to the secretary of the English department in 201 Fraser before April 1. Any further information desired may be secured from J. E. Hankins, assistant professor of English.
Prizes of $100 and $50 will be given.
Each contestant may submit only one story.
TU: ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( )
NATIONAL RADIO PROGRAM WILL FEATURE UNIVERSITY
Kellogg's College Prom, to be broadcast over the N.B.C. network at 6:45 tomorrow evening, will be dedicated to the University. A special tribute will be paid to "Phog" Allen and Dr. James Naismith. The program features Red Nichols and his orchestra, with Ruth Etting as soloist. WREN is included in this chain.
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Will Lead Dances
ALEXANDRE MICHELLE
Ted Shaw, dancer, will present his troupe of seven athletes in the Auditorium at 8:30 p.m. this evening. Pioneers in their field, they have received favorable comments from physical educational leaders.
Bartlett and Robertson To Appear Monday Night
Famous Two Piano Tean Well Received by Former Audiences
Ethel Bartlett and Rae Robertson, internationally known artists for their work on two pianos, will present the fourth program on the University Concert Course next Monday night. Both artists have won success individually before their present triumph together. Ethel Bartlett, a native of London, has been called "one of England's most beautiful women, and one of the most优秀的 dancers has been exhibited at the Royal Academy, London, for four years. Rae Robertson received his master of arts degree from Edinburgh University.
Both artists studied under Tobias Matthey in London. Their first joint recital was an instantaneous success. Since then they have become known throughout Europe and America as artists of outstanding talent.
Evelyn Swarthout, daughter of Deen and Mrs. D. M. Swarthout, who is now studying under Mathth in London, in the highest terms of praise for their recitals.
Marion Lowe Says Doctors Are Lagging Behind Society
Social Director Lectures
Miss Marien Lowe, director of social service of the Bell Memorial hospital of Kansas City, lead an informal discussion on "Medical and Recreational Social Work" yesterday afternoon at a meeting of the Sociology club. Miss Lowe inaugurated the social service department 20 years ago and spent considerable time visiting various departments of the hospital.
"Doctor are laying behind greatly n medicine in the relation to society because medicine is not well enough organized to take care of all the marginal cases, as yet. We are, however, come to the place where we will have either state medicine or group insurance." she declared.
In the field of recreational social work, Miss Lowe gave a brief account of the history of the movement. "Today," she stated, "there are over a thousand play areas and art galleries that calls for a great many trained workers in the field."
This was the second in a series of talks sponsored by the Sociology club.
W.S.G.A. OFFICERS SPEAK AT HOUSE PRESIDENTS' MEETING
Officers of the W.S.G.A. yesterday afternoon explained to the members of the House Presidents' Association, the new procedure for nominating and electing in the forthcoming women's election. It was intended that the house presidents, in turn, would instruct their members. The several houses were also urged to support the W.S.G.A. musical comedy and the Ted Shawn dancers.
Arscott To Address Pharmacists
Arsceot To Address Pharmacist
W. L. Arsceot of Kansas City, Mo.
western sales manager for Kirk Buppis
and his pharmacy the pharmacy
colloquium tomorrow. He will discuss
the new methods of distribution which
his company is using.
Fry Appoints Cakewalk Managers George A. Fry, president of the senior class, has appointed Merle Welsh, c'35, and Clark Amada, $35, as senior cakewalk managers. Welsh and Adams in conjunction with the Varsity dance manager, Lloyd Metzler, b'35, will select a date for the cakewalk.
Ted Shawn's Male Troupe to Appear Here This Evening
Phog Allen Praises Work Done by Noted Group in Pioneer Field of Dance
Ted Shawn and his athletic troupe of seven male dancers will appear in a variety assortment of dances in the University Auditorium tonight at 8:30 p.m.
"Schools of physical education are taking advantage of the recent awakening interest in dancing for men to foster programs and classes in dance forms that are adapted to male interests and physiques," said Dr. Forrest C. Allen, director of athletics, yesterday afternoon. "Ted Shaw, pioneer in the field of dance form for men, has been manned, possessed of all the physical skills required in the athlete, precondition, strength, fluid muscles, split-second timing, and trained them to dance masculine 'hemes of labor, play, and religion.'
"Some of his critics scoff at the idea of men dancing; others do not know what to expect; but many physical educators and athletic directors feel that here is something in physical development for men that combines the appeal of an athletic exhibition with the inspiration and satisfaction of art. Certainly the contribution of Shawn's group is significant and worth seeing." The evening's program will consist of:
I. Music Dances; "Polonaise" (Edward MacDowell), Esemble of Six; VI Prelude' from the 'Well-temple' Clavichord (Bach), and 'Clavichord' No. 4 (Grunn), 'Rhapody', Op. 18, No. 4 (Hrubov), Shawm and Ensemble.
II. John Brown Sees Glory-An American, Epic-Shawn.
III. Primitive Themes, Rhythms of Labor and Play; "Japanese Rickshaw Coolies" (Ganne), Mumaw, Landers, McMackernet; "Imm" (Tina), "Osage—Pawnee Dance of Greeting" (Grunn), Ensemble of Four; "The French Sailor" (Milbau), Barton Mumaw, the Sea Lion, Willibrars w a cowboy, W11 brw m McMackernet; "Flamence" (Spanish), Shawn; "Workers' Songs of Middle Europe" (Henry B. Kearns), Vaughan's Song, c) Miller's Song, Ensemble of Four; "The Dance of the Threshed Floor" (Meeker), Shawn; "Cutting the Sugar Cane" (Leeann), umaw, Overleaves, c) Miller's Song.
IV. Religious Dances; "O Brother Sun and Sister Moon" a study of St. Francis of Assis (Reshap), St. Francis of Assis (Reshap), barmen African sculpture, Mumway; Three Negro Spirituals; "(a) Nobody Knows do Treble I’ve Saan" Shawn; (b) "Swing Low, Swing Charif" Shawn; (c) "Swing Low, Swing Charif" Shawn; and Six Men.
Treat Many Measles Cases
Dr. Canutesan Believes That Epidemic Is Easing Up
From a total of 406 students receiving treatment at Walkins Memorial hospital since Jan. 1, 162, or nearly one-third of all those admitted, have been brought to Dr. Balph L. Cunliffe, director of the University health service.
Ten sororities and 17 fraternities have had representatives among the sufferers in the present epidemic, as well as several students from Watkins and Corbin Hall. The epidemic has become constantly more intense during the past month, but Dr. Canteleton believes it is easing slightly this week. He attributes the large number of cases to the difficulty of detecting infection in its early stages, and to the fact that many students have made trips to other parts of the state between semesters and on weekends.
A glance at recent morbidity reports from the state department of health shows how meacles had spread during the last month. For the week ending Jan. 19, 476 cases of measles were reported in the state. A week later this number had increased to 732, while in two weeks, by Feb. 2, 181 had increased and 500 had been reported during the week ending Feb. 9 was 1138, and cases had increased, according to the last available report, that of the week ending Feb. 16, to 1300.
Professor Henkins Improving
Professor Hopkins Improving Word has been received by W. S. Johnson, professor of English, from the physician attending Prof. E. M. Hopkins, who is at Trinity Lutheran Hospital in Kansas City, Mo., that Professor Hopkins' condition is improving and that he will not have to undergo an operation as serious as was previously expected.
Elra Key, custodian in the general laboratory in Blake hall, has returned to work after a week's absence due to measles.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY,FEBRUARY 27,1935
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
EDITOR-IN-CHEIF ___ WESLEY GORDON
Julia Markham Charles Brown
MANAGING EDITOR CAROLYN HARPER
Campus Editor Harry Valentine
Make-up Editors (General)
Herbert Meyer
Sports Editor Robert Patt
Sunday Editor Eleanor Jones
Society Editor Shirley Johnson
Society Editor Jerry Frye
Exchange Editor Richie Stolland
Alfred Roland
Business Manager ... F. Quentin Brown
Astt. Business Manager?... Eton Carter
Leena Wyatt Dr. Iliou Macdon
Mary Macdon Mary Macdon
Lewis Miller Rutherford Hayes
Wesley McCalla Lisa Markham
Carolyn Harper F. Guillem
William Winn Joseph Docto
Business Office K.U. 66
News Room 701KL
Night Connections, Business Office 701KL
Night Connection, News Room 701KL
Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday
of April 12th
School officials by submit to the department
of Journalism of the University of Wisconsin.
Submission period, per session: 9am-5pm.
Single copy, per session. Single copies,
Entered as second class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan.
WASHINGTON
POSTS
ASSOCIATION
1934
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1935
JUST ANOTHER PARTY?
As Lloyd Metzler so aptly points out, this new body which calls itself the Progressive Student Government League is the fourth opponent the Pachacamas have had in eight years. In spite of its impressive name and ostensibly idealistic policy, if it may be said to have a policy, the fact remains that to become the campus power it hopes to become, it must defeat the Rising Sun party in the spring elections.
But is it just another political party? On the party roster appear the names of former leaders in both factions; and more impressive yet are the names of two leaders who have so far been aloof from student politics. They have pledged themselves to promote unselfishness in politics. The individual, rather than the machine, is to be the root of their party.
With these idealistic views, one cannot help but think, "They might as well give up right now and not waste time and money on a campaign they cannot win." With Hill politics running the way they have in the past, it will be necessary to form a machine motivated by the passing out of political plums after elections. To defeat the present party, the Progressives will have to offer something to draw fraternity interest, and to draw fraternity interest, they will have to put fraternity men into office to get their support. And all the high ideals in the world will not keep their party non-political if they are forced to trade offices for votes.
If there is anything that is needed on the Hill, it is a new deal in student politics. At present, representative student government is a joke. The politicians get publicity and entertainment, and the student body gets nothing. Those who hope to see some sort of change made for the better, may ask themselves if this new party is the answer. If it is, then more power to it. If it is not, then one hopes it will die before it is well started.
WHY NOT WAIT?
The activity shown by the M.S. C. concerning the changing of the enrollment scheme is commendable. It shows that it is at least alive to campus problems. As long as it just suggests that pre-enrollment be established, and does not try to take action to have such a scheme put into actual practice, let it go ahead and suggest all it likes. It may be it will some day alight on a system that will abolish all the evils of enrollment.
But at present it has suggested something that is neither popular with the students nor the faculty. To students it would mean endless confusion and worry. To the faculty it would mean many hours spent in private interview that could be better spent at something else.
Pre-enrollment for seniors and
working students is a fine thing. The reason for it is that it gives them privileges to which they are entitled, and those privileges outweigh the slight inconvenience the procedure causes the advisers. But to give pre-enrollment to all would be to rob of its advantages those who justly deserve it.
After all, it is not so difficult to enroll in the University. A couple of hours is usually sufficient to enroll most students, and the faculty is not a great deal inconvenience. We suggest that the whole matter be allowed to wait for a while, and let the enrollment committee continue to improve, as it did at the first of the present semester, the system.
HONORS AND ACTIVITIES
About this time of year junior hopefuls begin to take stock of their accomplishments in the activity field, and with bated breath await the fateful day next spring, when a select group of men and women will be chosen to carry on the traditions of the two senior honorary societies, Sachem and Mortar Board. Some will breathe easier, having compiled what they consider a long enough list of activities, while others will start a frantic search for something to add to their prestige.
It might also be well for these junior men and women to consider seriously the question of whether all the time and energy spent on activities has been worth while. Of course those who are disappointed will probably have many regrets. But for those who attain the so-called heights, the question still remains--has it been worth the penny, or has another whistle been purchased?
There is no denying the value of many of the extra-curricular activities. It would be ideal if every person in school could place himself in some line of endeavor outside of his regular school work. But to place them above all else is sheer folly.
COMMENTS
CABBAGE OR ROSE?
Our predictions were not so far wrong when we suggested some days ago that a new political party was soon to appear on the Hill. It looks like a good party in many ways, and then again it may be just a masquerade costume for them to represent the crowd. This is one time you can't tell which it is, a cabbage or a rose.
AESTHETIC
Tonight Ted Shaw will lead his muscular troupe onto the stage in one of his great performances of entirely masculine dance. Torsos will bulge with mighty knots of rhythmic muscle; Greeks will come to life and dance graceful hips, while Bali bumps the triumph of physical beauty over brute strength. Many of us will learn a little about an art we have hitherto much pretty much ignored.
PLAY ON WORDS
The American press constantly denies that it deliberately colors the news, but we have always wondered just how important the "brain trust" might have become in American political life if it had not been dubbed so ignominiously. For instance, it might have had great possibilities with the title of "Commission for the Aid and Relief of the President."
From the Daily Northwest we have clipped the full context of Dave Lois' youth movement. It made, you remember, the pages of the Kansas City Star, Dave, from his position as editor of Northwestern's humor magazine, stresses that what this country needs is a freedom from all radical policies, and he proposes to get out twenty million youths in support of his program. He says it will take the combined power of every college daily to make it work.
We have a new nomination, not for the meanest man in the world, but a very similar one, the most student in the world. What can be done about the person who, at the first meeting of the beginning Philosophy class, takes the entire course against the most automatic constant and the "cautious relationships"? To make it even worse, he kept the class ten minutes overtime.
THE MEANEST STUDENT IN THE WORLD
NEW DEAL PARTY LIFE
His program lists such idealistic subjects as the abolition of crime, the uping of politics, the establishment of a party called the New Dealers, aiming at a more equal distribution of wealth. We wonder what the various political parties have been trying to do all these years.
OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
On Thursday, Feb. 28, at 4:30 p.m. Dr. Guido Beck will speak before the Chemistry club on "Artificial Radio Activity." All who are interested are cordially invited to attend the meeting, which will be held in room 201, Chemistry building.
ELVIRA WEEKS.
Notice due at Cancellor's office at 8 a.m., preceding regular publication days and 11.30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issues.
Wednesday. Feb. 27. 1935
No.102
CHEST CLINIC.
Dr. C. F. Taylor will hold a chest clinic at Watkins Memorial Hospital on Tuesday, March 5, for University students. Those wishing to attend the clinic should report to the hospital at once for preliminary examination.
CHEMISTRY CLUB:
CHEST CLINIC:
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION:
There will be a meeting this afternoon at 4:30 in room C, Myers hall.
MAURINE JESSEE, Treasurer.
R. I. CANUTESON, M. D.
Miss Myra Hull will speak on "The Traditional Folk Songs of Kansas," Thursday, Feb. 28, at 4:30 in room 313 Fraser.
ENGLISH LECTURE:
NELLIE BARNES, Chairman, Freshman Lectures.
INTERRACIAL GROUP:
There will be a meeting of the Interracial Group of the Y. W. C. A. at Heyleen house at 7 o'clock Thursday evening. Dr. R. H. Wheeler, of the Psychology Department, will speak. MARTHA PETERSON, ANNA MARIE TOMPKINS.
Rehearal will be held this afternoon at 3:30 in room 304 Administration building.
KARL O. KUERSTEINER
The members who took the week's trip will meet at 6:30 in front of central Administration building this evening for a trip to Topeka where the club will sing before the legislature. Transportation will be furnished by the Chamber of Commerce. We will be back in time for most of the Ted Shawn program. Wear tuxedos. If unable to go, notify the undersigned.
MEN'S GLEE CLUB;
*Regular mid-week dance will be held this evening at 7 o'clock in the Memorial Union ballroom.*
**BILL COCHIRANE, Manager.**
ROCK CHALKLETS Conducted by R.J.B.
MID-WEEK DANCE:
WALTER LAPHAM, President.
Mr. Ratcliffe told the English department that the modern language is mak-
Applications for appointments to the Jayhawker News staff, the School of Business annual publication, will be accepted at Dean Stockton's office until Wednesday, March 6. Address Walter Lapham, editor. Selections will be announced in the Kansas. WALTER LAPHAM, Editor.
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS STUDENTS:
There will be a rehearsal of the Women's Glee Club today at 4:30 in Marvin auditorium.
AGNES HUSBAND, Director.
WOMEN'S GLEE CLUB:
TED SHAWN DANCE RECITAL:
Activity tickets can be accompanied by identification cards for admission to the recital. Faculty activity books do not admit. General admission, 75 cents.
Students Set Up Apparatus in Blake To Check Fluctuatios in Light Speed
The weird, blush glare of a mercury are faintly illuminates a room in the basement of Blake Hall, where two students experiment on the speed of light.
The old "die hardes" of this campus are the same type that are found so often in the archives of state and national politics. If this new movement has something constructive, it let it so prosper. If it was built on the liberal minded students of this University; if it has no program let it be branched, but I say give it a chance.
A few years ago, several California scientists, headed by A. A. Michelson, set out to determine conclusively, once and for all, the speed of light. Widely varying values had been obtained in different experiments before, but these men, believing some controllable influence to be responsible for such differences, proposed to conduct the "perfect experiment."
On a level tract in California, they built a tube, several feet in diameter, and a mile long, from which the air was removed. By measuring the time required for a flash of light to travel from one end to the other and return, which they found to be something like one ninety-three thousandths of a second, they were able to calculate the distance the flash would travel in a second. They naturally expected the value thus obtained to be constant, but for some reason, it varied as much as 10 miles per second in different tests. Micheldon died
And as for lending our papers to any campaign to clean up the nation's illusions, we wouldn't. We would do any good. But hadn't we all better clean up our student politics first?
The old political leaders of the campus are loath to give their positions which have brought them to the forefront of student life at this University. But they want to be succeeded by a newer and more progressive movement, nor is it surprising that they brand intrusion by unknown forces as an old order under a new name. Politics for politics' sake alone is prone to discredit any statement that is highly idealistic, even though its program is carried out.
Campus Opinion
From the story in yesterday's Kansan, there seems to be a new order rising up to take the place of the old and the old fighting back to hold its present prestige.
Editor Daily Kansan:
oostore the experiment was completed, and the question has never been settled definitely.
Recently two university students, James Lawson, e35, and Guy Omer Jr. e36, set up apparatus for taking a record of any fluctuations in the speed of light, using a small motion camera run by a clock works. The instrument used in the experiment is an "interferometer," an imported device made up of two quartz plates, each covered with a thin layer of platinum.
Light passing through the interferometer assumes a form somewhat similar to the annual rings seen on a tree stump, the diameter of these rings depending ultimately upon the speed with which the light travels. The film intercepts opposite sides of a particular ring, and the light is recorded as two parallel moving lengthwise of the film which moves at the rate of one inch per hour.
The apparatus is capable of detecting a change of one part in 100,000. Lawson and Oner expect to make a continuous day and night, for several months.
ing too many accessions to non-literary influences. He couldn't, by any chance, have been learning Holloway's column.
To add to the evils of Red scores
Long scores, post-depreciation politics
Long scares, post-depression politica
Try Our SPECIAL
34c
You will be satisfied
at the
CAFETERIA
rebellions, we now have Wiley Post dropping out of the air to frighten the citizenry out of its wits.
Here we find that President Rosevelt has a tradition back of his Blue Eagle organization. Back at Harvard he was a member of the Fly club.
A group of Indian girls from Haskell Institute made a tour of the Hill the other day. One of the "deeper thinkers" said that they were probably a psychology class visiting our Hill to see some of the queer specimens lodged up here.
Back at Brown University the boys are complaining because Hall Week has turned out to be just Heck Week.
If three fine days keep up, the workmen who are engaged in digging the new flower gardens over the campus will laying a side a few fish worm, tuna,
Suggestion: Sour grapes ought to be changed to Sour Owl.
PRICES SMASHED ON AUTO GLASS
Doors $2.00
Windshields $3.00
RADIATOR
REPAIR
CALL 954
AUTO WRECKING CO.
712 E. 9th St.
RIDE THE Streamliner
SAJINA
MARITAS CITY, NJ
BEGINNING FEBRUARY 23rd
CHANGES IN SCHEDULE AND ADDITIONAL SERVICE BETWEEN Topeka and Kansas City
Daily Schedule of the Streamline
Attendance February 29
1:20 A.M. L.V. Salina Ar. 8:58 P.M.
1:20 A.M. L.V. Albione Ar. 6:58 P.M.
1:20 A.M. L.V. Jamison City
In response to the great demand for additional service, We have hired a round-trip schedule, daily, between Kannas City and Topeka, as shown in complete schedule below. Travel is comfortable, comforted, without a care, at less cost than delivery, light trainings served at all hours. The STREAMLNIR elites modern travel at its best for only 2 a mile —
Daily Schedule of The Streamliner
B 2:32 A.M., Lv. Manhattan
B 10:48 A.M., Wiemgoo
B 10:30 P.M.
B 10:10 A.M., Toroña
B 10:47 A.M., León Centro
Kingston
Adda-
February
7:00 A.M. L.Valga
8:15 A.M. Allione
8:30 A.M. Manchester City
7:55 A.M. Maehattan
8:22 A.M. Maehattan
8:39 A.M. Wempeo
12:30 P.M. 9:18 A.M. Lv, Terrace
12:30 P.M. 9:42 A.M. Lv, Lawrence
* 12:30 A.M. Lv, Kansas City, Kar
8:49 A.M. Lv. Lawrence
* 10:23 A.M. Lv. Kansas City, Kans.
1:38 P.M.
10:30 A.M. Ar. Kansas City, Me.
10:12 A.M. JA. Lk. Kansas City, Ks. 4:38 P.M.
P.M. 10:12 A.M. Ar. Kansas City, Mt. 10:12 P.M.
Lk. Kansas City, Mt. 10:12 P.M.
J, 5:14 P.M.*
At, 5:14 P.M.
At, 5:14 P.M.
At, 4:42 P.M.
At, 11:42 A.M.
**Caution1:** The Streamline runner at bigs speed on schedule shown above. Persons should take extra precaution before crossing Union Pacific trails.
UNION PACIFIC
at your
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ENDS TONITE
Jean Muir - Donald Woods
"As the Earth Turns"
-Cartoon - Novelty
Always a Big Bargain Show
PATEE 10c - 15c
THURSDAY - FRIDAY
5 Big Laff Stars
HAL LEROY GUY KUBEEN
ROCHELL HUDSON
HUGH HERBERT
PATRICIA ELISI
"HAROLD TEEN"
NOW!
Saturday—Big Double Show
Ends Saturday
DICKINSON
He Crushed India With
His Flaming Sword . . .
And the Heart of the
Woman He Loved . . .
"CLIVE of INDIA"
RONALD COLMAN and LORETTA YOUNG
ALL SEATS
$ 2 5^{\mathrm{c}} $
ALL TIMES
LAWRENCE'S LEADING THEATRE
TODAY AT 3-7-9
GRANADA
End Subroutine
Producers Demand 25c 'til 7, then 35c
One Picture in 10,000. 2 Years in the Making
The Strangest Document of Man, Maid and Beast
SEQUOIA
with
Pronounced See-quo-yah
Plus—Morton Downey Song and Dance Revue
JEAN PARKER
Another Famous Technicolor Cartoon - Latest News
Coming Sunday—Rudy Vallea in "SWEET MUSIC"
第
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1935
PAGE THRE
Hill Society
Sigma Alpha Epsilon will hold its formal initiation services Saturday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock in Topeka. This will be a joint initiation of the Manhattan State and University chapters. John O. Mosby, one of the national officers, from the University of Oklahoma, will attend the services.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon To Held Initiation
The following from Kansas will be initiated: Robert Phillips, c'38; William Shaw, c'38; William K. Jones, c'uncel; Willard Winters, c'uncel; Warren Randolph, c'38; Roy Holiday, c'uncel; Robert Johnson, c'37; Paul Trees, c'38; James Quinn, c'38; John Ewers, c'38; Clifford Dunseeth, c'38; John Townsend, c'38; Junior Allspaugh, c'38; and Albert Moore, c'38.
A banquet will be given Saturday at 2 at the Karam Hotel for the newly introduced guests.
Newly elected officers of Delta Sigma Lambda are as follows: Ralph Urie, b3; p5 president; Loren Leonard, ph3; 96 vice president; George Rock Holmes, c3; 105 vice president; George R. McDowell, c1; 108 cunel social chairman and reporter; Mernol Hof, c3; 109 intra-mural manager; Harold Knierenschmid, c3; 128 sergent-at arms; and J. H. Rohr, phur¹, chaptain
W. K. Evans, supervisor of buildings and grounds at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City, was aunchoe guest at the Beta Theta Pi house yesterday. Mr. Evans is visiting the University this week.
☆ ☆ ☆
Mrs. Edith M. Martin left last night for Sopulaun, Okla., to visit her father who is seriously ill. During her absence Mrs. Edith was able on chaperon at the Chi Omega house.
☆ ☆ ☆
The Aceele Alumni association will entertain with a dinner bridge for members and their wives Friday evening at the Colonial tea room. George Anseld is chairman of the committee in charge of arrangements.
Dean and Mrs. P. B. Lawson entertained at dinner Monday evening for Supt. and Mrs. Henry Roe Cloud, Rev. and Mrs. T. H. Azmason, Mrs. Stanton Olinger, and Rev. L. S. Cooper, of Delphos.
☆ ☆ ☆
Judy Jenches, c'38; Ruth Magerkurth,
fa 37; Martha Dodge, c'36; were dinner
guests at the Pt Beta Phi house last
night.
Amandaelle High of Partridge is visiting her sister Carly, c38, at the Alba
Mary Jule Shipman, 'eunl, was a banchon guest at the Gamma Phi Beta host
☆ ☆ ☆
Chi Omega entertained Phi Kappa Psat an hour dance last night at the chapter house.
Gamma Phi Beta entertained Kappa Sigma last evening with an hour of dancing from 7 to 8 o'clock.
Delta Chi announces the pledging of James Donald Watson, c38, of Claflin.
White To Receive Honor Degree
Beloit College, Beloit, Wis., will confer an honorary degree of doctor of laws on William Allen White March 19. Mr. White has been in newspaper work for the last half a century and is famed for his condensed copy and "What's the Matter with Kansas" editorial. He was formerly a student at the University.
UNIVERSITY DAILV KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Check Engineer Graduates
Survey Shows Only 13 of 382 Alumni Are Unemployed.
A recent check upon location and employment of School of Engineering and architecture graduates of the past four years was approved in accordance as reported by Dr. Donn George C. Shaud.
X
An inquiry was made of 382 graduates of the past four years of which 339 replied. The remaining answers disclosed 221 positions permanent and 95 temporary. The character of the present work in which these graduates are engaged is reported as somewhat satisfactory. There are 270 technical occupations held. Two hundred ten answered that their present work was satisfactory whereas 89 desired a change to some other work.
These reports show there is some improvement in the employment situation with hopes for still better conditions in 'he future.'
Kappa Sig's Defeat Tramps
Phi Psi, Beta "B" and Sigma Nu "B"
Also Win
The Kappa Sig "B" team swept through the undefeated Tampa basketers, 35 to 15, to gain undisputed possession of first place in division V, yesterday. It was the eighth straight victory for the winners and they remain undefeated for this season's play. Jim Hitt was the star of the evening for the first time, seizing Boston's claiming high scoring power for the name.
Phi Psi defeated Sigma Nu in the other contest by a score of 38 to 24. Crockett, Phi Psi, and Kelly, Sigma Nu. Suhr defeated 16 points and 14 points respectively.
Beta 'B' defeated Sigma Chi 'Ch' "B" by the one-sided score of 24 to 10, and Sigma Chi 'D' by the two-sided score of 10 to 8. Bowlin Sigma, scored 11 points for his winning team.
G F G T F
Dicker 1 1 0 0
Bradton 1 1 2 2
Brown 1 2 0 0
Brown 1 0 0
Lindsey 1 0 0
Metzler 0 2 3
6 3 9
Reference: Bidnick.
Kappa Sig "B"35
G FFT
Clay 2 3
Lyon 0 0
Nactor 0 0
Jones 1 0
Birt 1 0
Hitt 1 0
Bridges 1 0
Miller 1 0
16 3
Kelly G FPT
Mettner 0 0 1
Mulkey 0 0 0
Henderzon 1 0 0
10. 4 2
Referee: Burkhead
Phi Psi 36
G FFT
King 8
Hodge 0
Judge 0
Crockett 8
Knoche 10
Johnson 0
Michal 0
Durand 0
172
Green 1 0 2
Stotts 2 0 0
Kenyon 0 0 1
Oberg 2 0 0
Bowlus 5 1 1
Albrritten 1 0 1
Battenfeld 0 0 1
G F TF
Green 1 0 2
Stotts 2 0 0
Kenyon 0 0 1
Oberg 2 0 0
Bowlus 5 1 1
Albrritten 1 0 1
Battenfeld 0 0 1
G F TF
Green 1 0 2
Stotts 2 0 0
Kenyon 0 0 1
Oberg 2 0 0
Bowlus 5 1 1
Albrritten 1 0 1
Battenfeld 0 0 1
G F TF
Green 1 0 2
Stotts 2 0 0
Kenyon 0 0 1
Oberg 2 0 0
Bowlus 5 1 1
Albrritten 1 0 1
Battenfeld 0 0 1
G F TF
Green 1 0 2
Stotts 2 0 0
Kenyon 0 0 1
Oberg 2 0 0
Bowlus 5 1 1
Albrritten 1 0 1
Battenfeld 0 0 1
G F TF
Green 1 0 2
Stotts 2 0 0
Kenyon 0 0 1
Oberg 2 0 0
Bowlus 5 1 1
Albrritten 1 0 1
Battenfeld 0 0 1
G F TF
Green 1 0 2
Stotts 2 0 0
Kenyon 0 0 1
Oberg 2 0 0
Bowlus 5 1 1
Albrritten 1 0 1
Battenfeld 0 0 1
G F TF
Green 1 0 2
Stotts 2 0 0
Kenyon 0 0 1
Oberg 2 0 0
Bowlus 5 1 1
Albretten 1 0 1
Battenfeld 0 0 1
G F TF
Green 1 0 2
Stotts 2 0 0
Kenyon 0 0 1
Oberg 2 0 0
Bowlus 5 1 1
Albretten 1 0 1
Battenfeld 0 0 1
G F TF
Green 1 0 2
Stotts 2 0 0
Kenyon 0 0 1
Oberg 2 0 0
Bowlus 5 1 1
Albretten 1 0 1
Battenfeld 0 0 1
G F TF
Green 1 0 2
Stotts 2 0 0
Kenyon 0 0 1
Oberg 2 0 0
Bowlus 5 1 1
Albretten 1 0 1
Battenfeld 0 0 1
G F TF
Green 1 0 2
Stotts 2 0 0
Kenyon 0 0 1
Oberg 2 0 0
Bowlus 5 1 1
Albretten 1 0 1
Battenfeld 0 0 1
G F TF
Green 1 0 2
Stotts 2 0 0
Kenyon 0 0 1
Oberg 2 0 0
Bowlus 5 1 1
Albretten 1 0 1
Batenfeld 0 0 1
G F TF
Green 1 0 2
Stotts 2 0 0
Kenyon 0 0 1
Oberg 2 0 0
Bowlus 5 1 1
Albretten 1 0 1
Batenfeld 0 0 1
G F TF
Green 1 0 2
Stotts 2 0 0
Kenyon 0 0 1
O B
Sigma Chii 5" G FFTT
G FFTT 0 1 0
Dieter 0 1 0
Picklin 1 0 0
Norris 1 0 0
Gille 1 0 0
Gille 1 0 0
Referee: Kvaternik.
G FT F
Douglass 1 0 1
Helman 0 1 1
Gleason 2 0 1
Gilson 1 0 1
Seyb 0 0 0
Willock 0 0 0
Sigma Nu "R" 10
Tacottler 1 G FF 1
Reeder 1 0 1
Payne 1 0 1
Pfeiffer 2 0 0
Ashton 0 0 0
Referee: Cooper.
5 0 2
Today's Intramural Games
Basketball Schedule:
West court: 9 o'clock, Ramblers vs
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Jayhawks; 10 o'clock, Sigma 'Chi v Phi Gam.
TAXI
Phone
East Court: 5:20 o'clock, A.T.O. "B"
vs. Phi Psi "B"; 10 o'clock, Rock Chalk
vs. Independents.
MISCELLANEOUS
9
Volleyball Schedule:
5:10 p.m. Kappa Gsigma vs. Phi Gam
5:10 p.m. Beta Theta Pi vs. Delta
Tau Delta.
KEYS for any lock.
Yesterday's Valley Ball Results
Delta Chi defended Sig Alph's by a score of 15-3 and 15-8.
The finals will be held Thursday,
Feb. 28, at 4:30. The order of events
for the finals:
Sig Eps defeated Campus Raiders by score of 15-10 and 15-4.
Coe's swimmers lead all of the organized houses in the swimming meet by qualifying five men in twelve heats. Dave Cochrane, Coe's, was the individual star of the evening placing first in his qualifying heats in three events.
200 yard medley relay, 50 yards breast stroke, 100 yard free style, 50 yards back stroke, 220 yard free style, diving, 100 yard back stroke, 50 yards free style, 50 yards free style, 500 yard relay, qualify in each heat for the finals.
Coe's Team Stars in Trials
Rutter's Repair Shop
1014 Mass. St. Ph. 315
An interesting exhibit, containing several reproductions of songs written by Stephen Foster, is now on display in the second floor lobby of Watson Library. These copies, which were presented by the late Mr. Watson, are the result of a successful attempt by Mr. Lilly to collect and reprint the complete list of Foster's works.
Night latch & padlocks in stock.
Door closers repaired.
Exhibit Song Reprints
OFFICE SUPPLIES
LOOSE LEAF FILLERS
GREETING CARDS
Drug Store Swimmers Lead in Intra- nural Water Meet
intrural swimming meet were:
50-vard free style: First Heat. Won by Cochrime, Coe's; second, Safford, Phi Delt; third, derv. Bets, Time: 28.2 Second Heat. Won by Pucez, Coe's second, Gordon, Phi Delt; third, Stouta,
Tom Ryan, pianist and pupil of Dean D. M. Swarthout, who will give his senior recital at the University on March 19, has been invited to give a recital at St. Marys College, Leavenworth, Sunday evening, March 10. Mr. Ryan will play a program of numbers from Bach, Beothoven, Chopin, LIST, Poulenc, Strawinky and Prokofew, Dean and Mrs. Swarthout will accompany him.
--have just come in—boo-
you can be proud to add
to your library.
50-yard streak stroke. First Heat
Phillip Porter, third. Morgan, Bain, Time
36.4. Second Heat: Won by Cochran
Dylan Phile, Dylan Phille; third
Barbeuse, Dylan Barbeuse.
30-ward back backrush: First Heat: Won
14-ward back backrush: First Heat: Won
30-ward back backrush: First Heat: Won
2. Second Heat: Won by Iwain, Sigma Nu
18-ward back backrush: Third, Chambers,
Phi Delt. Tiger, 33.6
Dramatic Club To Hold Tryouts
Tryouts for the Dramatic Club will be held at 3:30 tomorrow afternoon at Green hall. All new students at the club will all hull others who are interested and interested in trying out drama iviously are asked to be present, Bob Cummingham, c36, president, announced yesterday.
Ryan To Give Recital
100-yard free style: First Heat: Won
98-95, second Heat: Won 104-93,
third Township, DPhil. Delt. T
108.4. Second Heat: Won by Cochrane,
Coe's second, Sigma Wins; third,
Dell's fourth.
***
229-yard-free style: Won by Howard,
Coe's, second; Smith, Coe's, third; Rice,
Phi Gim. Time: 2:58. Second Heat:
Townley, Phi Delt. Time: 3:13. Townley,
Phi Delt. Time: 3:13.
Results of semi-finals of the men's intramural swimming meet were:
BOOKS
WALL PAPER
PICTURE FRAMING
KEELER'S BOOK STORE
Twenty-five words or less: one insertion, 25s three insertions, 50s; six insertions, 75s, contract rates, not more than 25 words, $2 per month flat. Accepted subject to approval at the Kansan Business Office.
Hoopes To Be Guest Speaker
Dramatic Club To Hold Trvouts
Freshmen Practice for Tilt
Miss Helen R. Hoopes, assistant professor of English, will go to Kansas City, Mo., tomorrow, to be the guest speaker at the annual spring lunch of the Browning Society, which is to be held at the Mission Hills Country Club. Her subject will be "Browning and Euripides."
Protzy Cox sent his yearling basketball squad through a stiff workout last night in preparation for the scheduled game with the alumni. Defense was stressed in the practice in order to stop the attacks of such stellar forwards as Ted O'Leary, Paul Harrington, and Tom Bishon.
Landers and Halliday Outstanding in Freshman Cage Game
The practice terminated with a scrimage between two picked teams. Landers and Hollday were outstanding scorers for their respective teams and on the basis of their performance last night seem slated to start as forwards for the freshman when they meet the alumni.
Schwartz. 2 0 0 G FFT G FFT 0 1
Holliday. 4 2 3 Schmidt. -1 G FFT 1
Tennan. 3 2 3 Landers. 4 2 3
Hov'tr'ck 0 1 2 Haugh. -1 2 3
Coleman 0 1 2 Barecus. 0 0 1
Coleman 0 1 2 Chopin. 0 1
Referee: Rogers.
7 2
Prof. E. H. Chandler, of the School of Education, addressed the assembly on "What is Expected of the University Woman." Margaret McNew, fa35, played a pince prelude, and Katherine Vickers, e'uncel, sang "Ho, Mr. Piper," by Pearl Curian. She was accompanied by Jessie Pickell, fa23.
Announce Class Contests
"There has been more enthusiasm than usual this year, especially in the junior-senior division," said Professor Buchler.
To Hold Debates Between Freshmen-Sophomares and Junior-Seniors
The fourth annual inter-class-room contests will be held during the first part of March in Central Administration auditorium, Prof. E. C. Buehl, of the department of speech, announced yesterday. The freshman-sophomore contest will be on Friday, March 6 at 8 a.m. There will be a contest on Tuesday, March 12 at 8 a.m.
Cash prizes totalling $25 will be offered in each division; a first prize of $15 and a second prize of $10.
Professor Buehler announced that the speakers in the junior-senior division will be limited to 10 minutes and that the freshman-sephomore orators are to be limited to 12 minutes. All entries must turn in the titles of their orations to Professor Buehler or to Ross Borders by 4 p.m. Friday, March 1.
The nominating committee for the Y.W.C.A. election which will be held in the Administration building next Tuesday was selected yesterday afternoon at the meeting of the Y.W.C.A. assembly, Margaret McNown, fa35, and Mildren Ingham, c35, were elected as representatives from the cabinet, and Mary Loe Becker, fa35, and Katherine Manglesdorf, c35, were elected as representatives from the membership at large.
Y.W.C.A. SELECTS COMMITTEE TO NOMINATE CANDIDATES
KFKU
The Home Economics Club held initiation yesterday afternoon for the following: Sailor Grommett, c'; uncle; Hurt Learned, c'; 371 Elinor Slaten, c'; 338 Lorees Fearbairn, c'; 373 Ada Bellou John, c'; 374 Jerry Harrison, c'; 384 Jarrett, c'; uncle; Lawson, c'; 386 Roberta Badaky, c'; 386 Martha Jane Stockman, c'; uncle; Elinoir Anderson, c'; 374 Mary Kiene, c'; Cheasley James, c'; uncle; Sally Jane Martin, c'; lois Lo Fisher, c'; 378 Ruth McCoine, c'; Maybeh MeMamis, c'; uncle; and Mary Bears Bueller,
HOME ECONOMICS CLUB HOLDS INITIATION FOR 18 PLEDGES
Today
2:30 p.m. Studies of Living Things,
The Control of Plant and Animal
Dr. David F. Barker
12:45 p.m. New Diseases; Fashions in
Illinois; Dr. Florence B. Sherbon.
6:00 p.m. "Germany, A Brief Visit",
Prof. E. F. Engel.
6:15 p.m. Musical program arranged by Miss Irene Peabody, assistant professor of voice.
The initiation was followed by a waffle supper at the home management house.
Select Summerfield Candidate
Randall Wood, senior, was selected to represent Represent Training School in the next summerfield scholarship examination, during a meeting held by the supervisors Friday. Miss Mary Pee gave us a presentation of her personal guidance of high school pupils.
To Interview Engineers
R. D. Parker, e12, manager of the central station department of the Chicago office of the General Electric commercial engineering firm to interview senior electrical engineers.
Phi Chi Delta Has Dinner Meeting
South Tahoe. At a dinner of Phi Chi Delta, Presbyterian security, at Westminster hall yesterday afternoon, Ruth Black, ed35, led the discussion on "In a Japanese Garden." The purpose was to become better acquainted with Japan, and to have discussed on the work of Kegawa there. Japanese articles decorated the room.
MIDDLE SCHOOL
SCHOOL FILMS
New Shipment of
DOLLAR BOOKS
Come in and see them the next time you are down town.
The Book Nook
1021 Mass. Tel. 666
IRELAND
Ruth Etting and her melody
PEP ON THE AIR
PEPONTHEAIR
Kellogg's COLLEGE PROM
Red Nichols and his rhythm
JOIN in the fun and frivolity. Songs. Syncopation. Thrills. Laughs. The color of the campus.
KANSAS NIGHT
Tune in every week at the same time. N.B.C. Blue Network.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28th
HONORING DR. J. L. NAISMITH Originator of Basketball
WREN-6:45 P.M.
C.S.T.
Tune in every week time, N. B. C. Blue
GERMAN CLASS
Ich nehe niel, was fell es habeuten,
Dahl sei it leauwig bin;
Ein Marchen aus alten Zeiten.
Das tomt mir --
Die Luft ist füß, und es dünnheit;
Und ruhig fliecht der Rhein;
Der Gipfel des Berges funfelt
Im Ubendjonnenhein.
Die schönte Jungfrau fiber
Dort oben wunderbar,
The goldnes Gefjede bliket.
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IN A CLASS BY ITSELF
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MELLOW AND MILD
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LARGEST SELLING
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THE NATIONAL JOY SMOKE!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FOUR
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1935
Conference Teams Rest After Strenuous Week Kansas Will Play in Four of Remaining Six Contests
The Kansas basketball squad is taking fultest advantage of its five-day rest in preparation for a final four-game campaign that will end the Big Six season next week. Dr. Forrest C. Allen, Jayhawk coach, held a very light drill Monday before he took his aggregation to Kansas City Marathon. He attended Universal Pictures and Jones Store, both A.A.U. clubs.
Tuesday's practice called for floor practice and a review of fundamentals but no scrimage. No too pleased with the performance against Kansas and that he is trying to remodel the team's form for the seasons climax.
Breaking the week-long rest will be the game between Kansas and Missouri at Columbia Friday night in the first of the final two-game series. While Kansas is having its final game with the Tigers Saturday night, Nebraska will have its closing contest with Kansas State at Lincoln. Monday night Kansas State and Iowa state will close their seasons at Ames, and Wednesday and Thursday nights Kansas and Oklahoma will bring the real wind-up.
Kansas now leads Iowa State, but can drop only one more game without falling below the Cyclones in the percentage column. The problem facing Iowa State is to win one game; Kansas must win three of the remaining four to keep the championship. A Cycle loss will give Kansas a victory over the lead teams. Following a complete tabulation of news of this season.
IS. K.U. KSC Mo Neb. Ok.
I.S. 20 20 32 32 22 42
*20
K.U. 18 14 29 21 23
*32
*32
37 27 24 *36
33 30
KSC *29 29 29 41 *38
*43
*39 20 *47
*36 24 *24
*34 18 *4
Mo. *31 39 32 31 *38
*37 36 27 31 *45
31 20 37 4
Neb. *31 32 47 *32 38
*32 32 24
Okla. *33 50 28 32
*50 26 24 32
22 24
*31 41
Tls. 283 428 417 411 248 467
Lon. 10 10 8 2 7 8
Lost 2 1 4 5 9 7 6
P.C. 778 383 59 352 271 571
(Each team's scores are listed in the table below.) **A** is the name of the opponent. Columns add for each team's total score; cross-to-left scores. Winning scores are starred.
SPORT SHOTS
By Robert Patt, c'35
Bud Browning, Oklahoma's senior basketball guard, will play with the Kansas City Stage Liner in the national A.A.U. tournament this year. Browning will score six total points rating last year and is running the same position so far this year.
Spectators at the Kansas-Kansas State swimming meet last Saturday got a thrill in seeing Harlan Jennings of Kansas on his back for a free style on his back and still come in to Taleson of Kansas State. On the fourth of the total of 26 pool-lengths
"Glenn Cunningham is the greatest miler the world has ever known." With the recent achievements of the Elkhard filter it is interesting to note the change in "tags" applied by the eastern sports writers. In the past week practically all the New York papers have printed laudations of Cunningham. Lawrence Robinson in the New York World-Telegram said, "Glenn Cunningham today is the nearest approach to running perfection in history. He is invincible."—something the Middle West has felt quite sure of for some time.
Announce Relays Referee
Ray Eibling, who holds the conference lead in total points, has surpassed his 1954 total of 124. However, that was a total for only 10 games, while his 146 so far this year has been amassed in 12 games for an average of 12.47 per game matched against 12.4 for the season of last year. He has performed his performance of last year he must make 32.4 points in his four remarkable appearances.
Coach George Edwards of Missouri and his varsity basketball stalwarts turned pale when the freshman cagers took the lead in a practice game recently. George Parish, a forward for the yearlings, scored five field goals and three free shots to give the freshmen the lead.
Don Faurot. Missouri's new grid coach, called on fraternities last week to discourage "pink teism" and inaugurate strict prohibition of drinking among football players. Fraternity leaders pledged support.
Clyde Littlefield, Coach at University of Texas, Sends Acceptance
Clyde Littelfield, head track coach at the University of Texas, Austin, will be the referee for the thirteenth annual Kansas Lawn at Lawrence, April 20.
Coach Littlefield's acceptance was announced yesterday by Dr. Forrest C Allen director of athletics at the University. Dr. Allen added that it was particularly fitting to ask Coach Littlefield, his former teammate and Relay leader, as he had been bringing Longhorn relay teams to Kansas every year of the Kansas Relays.
The Texas medley team (short medley) won the event three out of the five years it was run, and set the record at. Texas also won the mile relay in
Littlefield was a Texas athlete and for a time was football coach.
Billiard Team to Be Chosen
Squad To Represent Kansas in Intercollegiate Meet
A team of five regulars and two alternates to represent Kansas in the Intercollegiate Telegraphic Billiard Tournament, to be played March 7, will be chosen from the following list of players who have been practicing for two weeks: Joe Rohr, phil贤; Chapman, Chris; Jeff Sack, pheil; Chapman, c37; William Love, c8; Elton Carter, c37; Stanley Bernardh, e35; Doyle Shraer, c38.
Mr. Paul Deyrl of the state water laboratory will act as referee for the team. He is an amateur player of considerable experience, and has been coaching the
All interested students are invited to watch the Kansas team. The play will start at 7:30 p.m.
that make up the distance he turned over, falling behind at first but coming up in the final laps. Just before that event Jennings had swum the 150-yard back-stroke to a new pool record of 1:55.3.
Glen Dawson, Oklahoma's distance phenomenon of 1931, Saturday night reaxenaked the natural indoor national 1,000-meters title at the National A.U.A. games, being clocked at 2:30. Dawson is now running under the colors of the Club and will appear in the 880-yard race to the K.C.A.C. meet this Saturday.
Read Kansan Want Ads
Alumni Basketball Men To Play Freshmen Team
Great University Stars to Meet Yearlings in Game Here
The University All-Star basketball team, composed of some of the greatest players ever to represent the Jayhawks, will play the freshman basketball team in an exhibition game tomorrow at 7:30 in the Robinson gymnasium.
Five of the players on the alumni team were on the squad that won the 1931 Big Six championship that started the series of championships from 1931 to 1935. The members of the 1931队 are: Bill Johnson, '33, center; Ted O'Leary, '32, and Tom Bishop, '31, forward; Lee Page, '34, and Forrest Cox, '31, guards. Ernest Vanek, ed'35, and Paul Harrington, m'38, the others on the team were players on the following championship squads. Most of those players are on the Jones Store team and are in good condition. The Jones Store ended until Monday night when they lost to the Universal Picture team by a score of 18 to 22. Bill Johnson scored 13 of the 18 points made by his team.
The line-up for the freshman team is: Marvin Cox, center, James Schwartz and Sylvester Schmidt, forwards, and Haverstock and William Barcus, guards. Other players that will see action are Talon Landers, Ben Ewing, Frank Stewart, Bill Haugh, Frank Tenney, Dean Coleman, and Joe Bidickn.
"This will be a good game to give the freshman boys experience against players that are more skilled in the fundamentals of the game. They will not stand much of a chance, but it will be an interesting game because it will give the students some idea of the variability material for next year," was the statement made last night by Forrest Cox, freshman coach.
Seats will be placed in the baleen and around the floor to accommodate the public. The admission to the game will be 23 cents. Student activity tickets
Bill Hargiss, professor of physical education and track coach, will be the referee.
W. E. Cochrane, manager of the Memorial Union building, announced yesterday that the ping pong tables are ready for use. New nets, paddles and a ball chair. Paddles and balls may be checked out from the hostess at the main desk.
Ray Ebling, c36, stellar basketball ace for Kansas, and present high-point scorer of the Big Six, has an average of 12.7 points a game. His nearest rival, Goves, of Kansas State, averages 10.5 points. The following is a list of the leading players and their individual scores:
Wells Places Eighth and Gray Fourteenth in Big Six
Ebling Keeps Scoring Lead
Player Poe, School Total Pts. Po
Greece 142
Ehling, f, Kansas U 162
Wegner, e, Iowa State 193
Groves, e, Kan State 151
Browning, e, Oklahoma 111
Fowler, f, Oklahoma 111
Parsano, g, Nebraska 79
Pearson, g, Nebraska 68
Flemingm, f, Iowa State 62
Jorgenson, g, c-Missouri 68
Wells, c, Kansas 79
Kings, c, Kansas 65
Powell, g, Missouri 70
Warren, f,klahoma 71
Arroyo, f, Missouri 65
Reynolds, g, Kentucky 67
Miler Lauds His Coaches
.
Glenn Praises Hamilton and Hargiss in Radio Interview Saturday
Glenn Cunningham was interviewed Saturday night before he smashed his own world's record of 3.52.2 for the new time of 3.59.5 for the 150 meters. The interview was conducted by Eddie Donegan, a professor for the Columbia Broadcasting System.
In the interview, Glenn paid tribute to his former coaches, Bili Hargiss and Brutus Hamilton, speaking of the latter as the greatest track coach he had ever 'known. Coach Hamilton tutored Cunningham his freshman and sophomore years at the University and gave him the wonderful foundation which Bill Hargiss ally built up and polished off. Hamilton is now track coach at Stanford.
Cunningham said that the reason the mile race hold such a prominent place in the interest of the public is that that distance is great enough to require a run. The ability to accelerate enough to enable the runners to produce a great burst of speed for the finish.
When asked who was the greatest runner of all time, Cunningham unhesitatively replied Paavo Nurmi, the great Finn. Cunningham had his reason on Finn's ability to run so many distances and to hold world records for them.
Call Special Faculty Meeting
A special meeting of the College faculty has been called for this afternoon.
The meeting will start at 4:30.
Enthusiasm Running High In Spring Ball Practice
Sixteen Lettermen Out in Preparation for Fall
Sport
Sixteen lettermen from last year's team are expected to be on hand also when the spring session begins. Back-fIELD men included in this list are John Peterson, c37; Fred Harris, c37; Devon Launch, c38; Bill Decker, c36; and Bob White, c35. Mano Stukey, c37; and George Happgood, c38, both members of the Jayhawker backfield last year, are both eligible for next year's team but
"Early indications point to a wide open race for positions on next year's Jayhawk football team," Coach Adrian Lindsey declared yesterday afternoon. A great number of candidates are expected out for spring football this year and enthusiasm is running high for this early in the season. Practically all of last year's freshman squad is expected to be selected with several new men that have been reported as likely candidates but who have not been out as yet for football at the University.
are not enrolled this semester. Both are expected to be in school next fall and out for the team.
Lirmen from last year's squad are Rutherford Hayes, c'35; John Seigle, c'27; Den Nesmith, c'37; Dick Skar, c'36; Edwin Phels, c'36; Dave Lutton, c'37; Wade Green, c'37; Elmer Humphrey, c'37, and Tom McCall, c'38.
"What we hope to accomplish this spring is to create a lot more interest around the campus in football," said Couch Lindsay. "I would like to see the player get back to where they come out because they like to play the game."
FRESHMEN AND SOPHOMORES
PICKED ON RELAY COMMITTEE
The freshmen are: James Gillispie, Grant Couchard, Russell Benton, Paul Fisher, Clifford Dunseh, and George Garrison. Bill Townsley and John Park, were chosen from the sophomore class. Joshua Hammond, Daniels, events, advertising, and promotion of the Kansas Relays, will be held April 20.
Read Kansan Want Ads.
Six freshmen and two sophomores were chosen yesterday as members of the K.U. Relays Committee by the athletic department.
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© 1935, LIGGERTT & MYERS TOBACCO Co.
北向
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXII
1
on the SHIN
By JOE HOLLOWAY, c'35
The boys who put the so-opportune valentines on the Fine Arts bulletin board a few weeks ago received some fan mail this week, apparently from some one who thinks that their artistic talents might be put to some good use. The mail referred to is a letter from a young lady named Jacobs who is supposedly a student in the Continental High School in Pueblo, Colo. The letter asks the aid of the School of Expression lads in formulating a program for May Pole dance. "The lady apparently knew she addressed all as a 'School of Expression' or else she may have been told about the valentine which portrayed Josie Dunkel and his light feet.
We Have a School of Expression
... That Blowers Again ...
Kipp Inspires the Actors ...
Meat-Load Sings ... the Gals
Smoke Hods.
We hear that the boys at the Delti house are getting along very swelw under the new management of "Mother" Ash. Note (Blowers asked us) to put this in-the-wants the Delts to get some publicity.)
We've found out just exactly how the musical comedy directors instil the noble art of acting into their subjects (we posed as one of those awful seats in Fraser theater, and although we suffered, we got the story). It seems that the lady in the lead, Miss Dorothy Ann Martin, goes with a Woo迪 Woo, answers to the name of Woo迪 Woo, and to help Martin needs must inure the comedy in some woo exchanging with Paul Hammond. Well, Woody brought his light of love to rehearsal the other day and while she was rehearsing, he sat on the front row so he'd see all that went on, thereby seeing that his gel conducted herself correctly and just on the side, taking in all the comedy so perhaps he wouldn't have to buy a ticket. But to get to the place came the time between Miss Hammond and Mr. Hammond, and brother Kipp acquired in his seat and waxed muchly indignant. Consequently, Mr. Hammond poured it on all the thicker and the directors of the business have decided to present Kipp with a free ticket for every performance so the actors will be sure to do their best.
We were standing in front of Ad. yesterday and Clyde Nichols walked past us, head bent, walking slowly, a picture of strong silent meditation. He was singing to himself "Row, row, row your boat, gently down the stream." Maybe the dog's getting too much for limbs too.
Perhaps it was upon his knowledge of the evolution of man that Wesley Gordon was elected to the job of editor of the Kanzen. At least he is some of his pre-election text writing: "Go to Spooner-Thayer. It will be worth your time to see how man has advanced from crude pots and other clay devices to modern delicately-tinted test sets."
These glee club trips really must produce some interesting things in the way of—well you name it, we can't. Here's a brain (!) storm of Henry Miller.'s.
"Stop eingeep me on. I am waffle fond of you and you butter hadn't do that because you symp something in me and I panalease it." We leave it up to you to decide what that's the height of.
How these local lads think them all up, we can't figure cut but one manages to come through in nearly every class at least once a day. In Shannon's accounting class yesterday, the Prof. asked Frank Affleck just how far the work had proceeded so far. Say Franklin after an interval of oh's and ah's "Well, do you mean me or the class in general?"
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1935
The lads have given their gels presents and then again the lads haven't given their gels presents, (repeat this as many times as you like) but Fri Poole, that famous attorney from the Delt house broke his bank, has been a big supporter of his lady fair a small pipe for her birthday. She's breaking it in with Velvet. Not an ady.
Kansas State spring football practice started Feb. 26. The schedule for spring practice will include two full skirmish games. Coach Wes Fry said there would be no great changes made over last year's style of play.
Labor Must Rule America, Asserts Socialistic Lawyer
Capitalistic and Communic
istic Nations Make
Same Economic
Mistakes
"This stfire caused by the forces of production is evidenced by imperialism, or the struggle for new markets and the struggle of the workers to receive the benefits of their work," the author says. "The struggling Strugge for Flower." "Production now at a standstill is trying to break its bonds.
"The struggle for power in America is the struggle of the forces of production to free themselves from capitalist fetters," Albert Goldman, labor attorney, told an audience at the last scheduled L.I.D. lecture last night. Mr. Goldman was substituting for J. B. Matthews, who is ill.
"World economy exists as a fact, Capitalistic nations and Stalin's regime in Russia both make the same mistake in not recognizing this fact and in trying to justify their role in global economies. War is the usual result of these programs," the speaker said.
"The struggle of class is another result of the effort of the forces of production to expand. The working class or socialist movement aims to amish the lowest possible production and distribution of goods."
The speaker said that socialism was the only solution. "This will break the national bourbieres and will grant the ends of the class strife. However, labor alone cannot win. It needs not only the neutrality of the middle class but also its active support against the forces of the owning class."
Mr. Goldman characterized the present economic system as being "social production and private appropriation." "The mass of workers," he said, "is used to working together, but the fruit of the labor is appropriated by the capitalists. Labor will have to illustrate the advantages of socialism to the middle class before true production for use can be attained.
"Fascism and liberal democracy are the alternatives offered to us. Fascism represents all that Americans dislike. It demands a static society, and this is permanently impossible. Society must have an advocacy of regimes like democracy, after two years of Roosevelt, has shown itself to be in essence the insane limitations of production." Describing his work in defending laborers arrested in the strike last year in the Sacramento Valley, Mr. Goldman said that he not only had to work against the Hearst press, but also against the Communists. "Some of these arrested were too willing to do anything to get into jail. As a lawyer it was rather difficult for me to get them out," he said.
Marc罗蔼, publisher for Senator
Arthur Capper, has been added as an
extra speaker on the LLD. lecture
program, it was announced last night.
He will speak next Wednesday even-
ing at 8:15 o'clock.
PROBLEM TODAY IS LABOR
Goldman Says Students Must Study Social Topics
"Students have not yet begun to see that society has nothing in store for them," said Albert Goldman, Chicago Theo Forum today.
Harrison to Speak in Kansas City
The Rev. Carter Harrison of the Trinity Episcopal Church will be the guest speaker at 6:30 next Sunday before the Young People's Service League of the City, Mo., which is the church of St. Paul, Mo., of which Harold Coole, e35, is president. Harris has recently been appointed Lay Reader at St. Paul's, which is the largest Episcopal church in Kansas City.
Read Kansan Want Ads.
Following his address the speaker expressed his views on Communism in answer to questions and said, "Communism paralyzes the intellect of every human being in its sphere. Its danger lies not only in the seriousness of these ideas does it think for them."
Harrison to Speak in Kansas City
"Students in a university ought to study social problems in addition to required courses, and they should get some idea as to what the problems are and take a stand on them," he continued. "If students understand the social problem," he said, "they are in a position to throw themselves into the problem, and that problem today is labor." Mr. Goldman built up his arguments by explaining the recent truck drivers' strike in Minneapolis.
C. GRANT LAFARGE TO GIVE LECTURE ON ARCHITECTU
An illustrated lecture on "Architecture, the Industrial Arts and Education" will be given by C. Grant LaFarge, noted American architect, this afternoon at 4:30 in the central Administration auditorium. Mr. LaFarge is a representative of the American Institute of Architects.
Dr. J. M. Kellogg, professor of architecture, will preside at the lecture, which will be open to the public.
Albert Goldman, "Wobly organizer," jambletheater, traveler, *ex-Troxtotylla* Communist, now in the Socialist party, lawyer for the Milwaukee truck drivers in their successful artile last summer, and lately defended of Norman Mini, one of the nineteen Sacramento radiicals who is on trial under the California Criminal Syndicalial Law, finished a succulent lamb chop, and shaking his finger emphasized the need for a labor party in America.
Goldman Says Communism Kills Individualism
The country needs an amalgamation, on a minimal program, of the Socialist Party, Farm-Labor Party and other liberal and "left" groups in this country, Mr. Goldman declared. The Communist Party, regardless of Mr. Heard's fears, will never mean any difference among people who enter the Communist Party an invisible pledge saying "Lose all hope of independent thinking ye who become members." And that is bad. he stated. For a new party needs fresh ideas. Much of the trouble in Russia today, reflected in the recent Kirov assassination is due to a policy of prohibits clear, independent thinking.
By Sam Halper, c'37
"The shape of things to come? We must fight incipient Fascism. Coughlin's the main menace," Mr. Goldman asserted. "We must also fight the Communist disruptive tactics. You students must educate yourselves in Marx. And perhaps some day this country will want to change. But it doesn't, it don't want. Capitalism may force it on us. But I will not cherish illusions" he concluded. "Our American capitalist fights hard. He falsifies, he drugs red herrings in and he is ruthless. That is why we need a determined party, rooted in the revolution." How can we resist that so that we will realize its tradition and rebel against tyranny."
Kansas Debators to Meet
Faculty and Members of Debate Squad to Judge Speakers
CSEP Students
The various district winners in the state of Kansas high school debate tournament will compete for champion-1, and the team will be held March 1 and 2 in Frazier Hall.
The towns represented in the Class A division are: Topoka, Ottawa, Independence, Osage City, Clay Center, Wakeway, Kingman, Wellington, Ellison City, City of Chelsea, Pratt. Last year Topoka won the championship in this division.
UNIVERSITY DEBATE TEAM
At a meeting of the state legislature last night the University forense team debated whether the question, "Resolved: that Kanass should adopt the unicameral system of legislation, embodying the essential features of the Nebraus Plan." Kanass, upholding the negative side, was represented by James Mobly, 236, and Charles Hacker, 175. Robert Nieler and Robert Seiler argued the affirmative Missouri. It was a no-decision debate.
KANSAS LEGISLATORS HEAR
All CSEP students must call at the All CSEP office this week to register class schedules, addresses, and other information. Mation must be filed this week.
These towns competing for the Class B championship are: Valley Falls or Maple Hill, De Soto, Hamilton, Lebanon, Collium, Mullon, Canton, Haven, Grinnell, and Garfield. Mulvane and Canton tied for winners in this group last year. Members of the debate squad and facetious supporters were present. The contest for all league debates this year is "Resolved that the federal government should adopt the policy of equalizing educational opportunity throughout the nation by means of annual grants to the several states for the public, elementary and secondary education."
Senator Oscar P. May of Attichion acted as chairman. He introduced Chancellor E. H. Lindley who in turn introduced the University Glee club which sang several songs before the debate.
Ted Shawn Gives Dancing Program Of Male Vitality
Music Visualizations of MacDowell, Bach, and Brahm Classics Are Given
By Miss Elizabeth Dunkel
By Miss Elizabeth Dunkel
Ted Shaw last night gave an eloquent demonstration of his ideal for male dominance in the dance. The entire program carried a vitality, power, and infinite sweep that is impossible to achieve in women's dancing. Any disappointment at the lack of swirling costumes and dainty prettiness was in rapt interest during an evening which utilized masculine attributes to express robust themes.
Shawn's Group Perfectly Trained
The first group of music visualization from MacDowell, Bach, and Brahms was classical in its purity of movement and showed the plasticity and precision of a perfectly trained ensemble. Contrapuncta which follow Brahms' counter-motion gave a sensitive translation of harmony and melody, while the Brahms Rhapsecy which closed this group not only shared an unusual liaison between sound and movement but conveyed emotional suggestions that served to make it one of the most appealing numbers on the program.
Shawn's "John Brown" solo, created with his accompanist, Jess Mecker, demonstrated his skill as a choreographer and his knowledge of emotional and dramatic values. Centrally in this number he gave his audience something that no woman could ever
Audience Pleased With Dances
The second group was diversified, including light satire, burlesque, national, folk, and labor themes. As usual Shawn's Flamenco舞 delighted his audience. Unlike many purveyors of foreign art Shawn has studied native art at native thresholds and has succeeded not only in reproducing intricate movement patterns, but in catching the irresistible spirit which makes Spanish dancing universally appealing. Movement is the sharp staccato of beating heels and clapping hands, poise with restraint, all served to elicit enthusiastic admiration.
NUMBER 103
"The Worker's Songs of Middle Europe" and "Cutting the Sugar Cane" should be mentioned also; the first a delightful minier of European types, and the second an example of the rhythms inherent in labor movements.
Religious Themes in Program
The closing group devoted to religious themes was an inspired note on which to close such a performance. Shawn's St. Francis, the result of nine years of study and preparation, carried a message of such charity and generosity that the veneried tyre Henry Faedick once told of a friend who remarked to him, "I don't pray as you do—I pray on the piano." Through the last numbers of the evening's program those young men prayed in the dance, and to many who watched, it must have been unusually uplifting, a new door through which to enter the House of Prayer, filled with an inspiration that truly blessed an audience that had come with mixed and puzzled ideas to receive a message that proved to be new and thrilling.
Glemm's Race in News Reel
The entire race in which Glen Cunningham recently broke his own record will be shown in the newsroom at the Granda theater beginning today. This race was the 1500 meter feature of the National A.A.U. indoor track meet held in New York last Saturday.
Glenn's Race in News Reel
To Review 'Mary Peters'
Women's Swimming Finals Tonight
Pi Beta Pi, Kappa Alpha Theta,
Kappa Kappa Gamma, and Chi Omega,
the winners and runners-up of the two
competitions. Matches in swim
matches will swam tonight at 7:30
in the final meet.
Theta Sigma Phi, professional journal sorority, will meet this afternoon, at 4:30, in the sky parlor of the journalism building. Lena Wyatt, e35, will give a book review of "Mary Peters," by Mary Ellen Chase.
Huff to Referee at Drake
Harry J. "Doc" Huff, track coach at the University of Missouri, formerly Kansas track coach, has been chosen referee for the Drake relays to be held in Des Moines. Mr. Huff is the second Missouri coach to be honored by such an appointment. In 1927 C. L. Brewer served in the same capacity.
Who will observe the largest number of the earliest bloomings of different spring plants in Lawrence and vicinity? The Botany club is sponsoring the department's annual spring blooming observing contest and will award the botanist a plant that has the largest list of first spring blooms of the season.
Who Will Observe Most Spring Blossoms?
Asks Botanists
Both cultivated and wild plants will be eligible. The scientific name of plant, popular name, date discovered or introduced on a chart in the department of botany.
Wagner to Give Recital Of German Literature
Contemporary Pieces in Repertoire of Mexican Educator
Fernando Wagner, professor of dramatic art at the University of Mexico will give a recital of contemporary German poetry and prose tonight at 8:15 in Fraser theater. Mr. Wagner, who is a German, studied at the University of Berlin and has worked on the stage and in the theaters of Berlin. He came to this country in 1963 and lived in New York. He then went to Mexico City on business, and while there liked the life of the intellectual group of the city so well that he remained and became a member of the faculty of the university.
While German is Mr. Wagner's mother tongue, all of his teaching and all of the plays under his direction at the university are done in Spanish.
The recital tonight, which is under the auspices of the department of German and is open to the public without charge, will consist of poems and short stories of the leading modern German author. Mr. Wagner will give a short introduction to each piece in English before reciting it in German.
Hull to Give English Talk
Hull to Give English Talk
Instructor of English Will Speak on
Ballad Theme
Miss Myra Hull, instructor of English, will give the second of the series of talks for the freshman English classes this afternoon at 4:30 in room 313 of Fraser. The series of talks this semester are all of Ballad theme. Prof John E. Hankins will give the next subject this subject will be “Neog Polk Socials.”
Miss Hull will discuss traditional folk songs discovered in Kansas, all of which she has obtained first hand from the singers. She will trace the migrations of these ballads from England and from the Appalachian mountains to Kansas. She will have heard that women have been handed down for generations been handed down for generations, some of them not being written down until recent years.
WILL HOLD TEN-DAY COURSE FOR JOURNALISTS IN GENEVA
Malcoln Davis, director of the Geneva Research Center and chairman of the International Consultative Group, will lead the group.
There will be a ten-day training course for young English-speaking journalism students conducted from July 11 to 20 in Geneva, Switzerland, by the International Student Service. The program will also focus on a relationship with the League of Nations and the International Labor Office; a series of expositions on the more important national presses and press services; an examination of the problems and influences affecting both the newspaper as a factor in the moulding of public opinion and the individual journalist as the recorder and commentator on international affairs.
English language will be used throughout the course. Translations will be made for speeches delivered in other languages. Morning and early evenings will be taken up with sessions leaving the afternoons and nights free.
CONTEST FOR GOOD WILL DAY IS OPEN TO UNDERGRADUATE
The National Council of Teachers of English and the World Federation of Education Association have announced that they are sponsoring an essay content in celebration of Good Will Day, May 18, for undergraduates of colleges. The scholarship fund is paid off of $15 have been offered by Mrs. Zach Van Loan of Babylon, N.Y.
The subject of the essays shall be "What Can America Contribute to World Peace?" Entries should be sent to the regional director, J. Hal Connor of Northern Teachers College, DeKalb, III., by march 15. Further information may be received from the office of the department of English.
P.S.G.L. Proposes To Adopt Direct Primary Election
Would Be Inaugurated by Men's Student Council Expenses Paid by Parties
The Progressive Student Government League urges the adoption of a direct primary election as the first point of its program for constructive student government, according to Logan Lane, general secretary. In order to obtain its prime position the league must be the primary as essential.
The proposed primary would be inaugurated by the Student Council and held about two or three weeks before the general election, said Lane. The voting would be open to all male students. Also any man may file for any on party ticket. The voters will go to the polls and call for the candidates in the primary will represent their parties in the general election.
There may be objection to the holding of two elections because of the expence, Logan assured. The League advocates that the expense of the primary election be paid by the contesting political parties, as the primary serves the purpose of selecting their nominees.
"The history of student politics at the University has been conspicuous for its lack of active participation by the students in the nomination of candidates for the various political offices. Nominations in the past have been made by a small and secret party caucus of self-appointed 'big shots'. Lane continued. The student body is then forced to vote upon this selection of candidates. This system of nomination has been used exclusively by all the political parties which have herefore made their appearance on the campus.
"The Progressive Student Government League advocates the general primary election to abolish what it considers an unfair and undemocratic practice in student politics. The major objectives of the League can be attained only through a democratic process, as the official open primary election.
"Since the formation of the Progressive Student Government League, the question, "What is the program of the League?" has been frequently asked, Charles Anderson, chairman, said yesterday, "The primary aim of the League is, of course, to reform student government and give it a purpose for existence. How do we propose to do this? Our first proposal, nomination of student officers by official open primary is revolutionary in that it strikes at the very vitals of the old 'boss system.'"
MUSIC TALENT FUND AUDITION WILL BE HELD HERE FRIDAY
Contestants from a number of towns in the second district will be at the University, Friday, for the ninth annual Kansas Music Talent fund auction to be held at 1:30 o'clock in the Central Administration Auditorium with Dean D. M. Swarthout presiding. The audition is sponsored by the Kansas Federation of Women's Clubs, Mrs. Paul Hamm of Lawrence is chairman of the distribution committee, and president of the second district Federation, and Mrs. J. Abbie Cagle Hogan of Junction City, state chairman the Music Talent fund, will be present.
Those arranging for the audition will be glad to have as many University students as possible attend the contest to greet the young musicians and club members from out of town, of whom a large representation is expected.
Bookplates Exhibited in Library
An exhibition of bookplates from the Clark Memorial Bookplate Collection, the Larkwood authors, the larkwood authors and statemen, may be seen this week on the third floor of the Watson Library. A few of the best known plates are those of William Pitt, celebrated British statesman and debater; Horace Walpole, the greatest letter writer of his time; Robert Southout, poet Laureate of England in 1813, and David Garrick, the foremost actor of his day.
AUTHORIZED PARTIES
Delta Tau Delta, Lawrence Country Club, 12.
Varsity, Union building,
Pi Kappa Alpha, Eldridge, 12
Delta Tau Delta, House, 6-10
AGNES HUSBAND,
Dean of Women.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1935
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
LAWRENCE KANSAN
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF ___ WESLEY GORDON
Associate Editors
Julia Markham Charles Brown
Julia Abernham Charles Brown
MANAGING PISTOP CAROLYN HARPER
Campus Editor
Harry Valentine
Editor
| Governors House |
Harry Metcalf
Herbert Mayer
Sports Editor
Eleanor Frye
Sports Editor
Dan Frye
Sports Editor
Jonah Frye
Exchange Editor
Jonah Frye
Business Manager P. Quentin Brown
Ast, Business Manager Ellen Carter
Leon Wenttle
William Decker
Richard Hoehn
Wesley McCalla
Carolina Harper
Jimmy Rowley
Irla Olson
William Moore
Rutherford Brown
Jalan Markham
F. Quintan Brown
T. Rowe
Business Office K.U. 66
News Room K.U. 25
Night Connections, Business Office 2701K2
Night Connection, News Room 2702K2
Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Each column
encolled by students in the department
of Education is addressed to the
Frames of the Department of Journalism
and Information Science, 23.25 on payments. Single copies, to be mailed to:
National Bureau of Standards.
Entered as second class matter, September
17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kann
MARSA PARK
ASSOCIATION
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1935
NO MORE COMBINES?
Soon haveve will again reign on the Hill and in the columns of the Kansan when the women start their annual "combining" election two weeks from today.
But we should not forget to mention that there will be a lot less combining this year than before, because an entirely new system is to be used whereby the individual women will file a petition with the Dean of Women by March 11. So how could combines possibly exist any more?
Just wait and see how it is done, for if you have any kind of eyes—and maybe ears too—you won't have to put on a thinking cap to figure it out. Suppose a sorority house wants to be sure of a council member, what could stop it from asking another house to help an "individual" candidate in exchange for the same help otherwise extended?
So now all the unaffiliated women on the Hill have to do is just to attempt to get this forgotten group together, and have them be sure and vote for a certain person, and perhaps they might get one individual on the council. (And again they might not.)
What a glorious election this is going to be! No combines, no group meeting for nominations, so that the majority of the girls can have some free time to go to the Union for a "coke", and most of all, the council in the future is going to be a "council of people chosen by the women as a whole."
Headline: "Country Is Silent" concerning the amendment which the senate adopted against the President's wishes. We wonder if there's anything golden about that silence, or if it's just lack of concern on the part of the country.
IS HUEY A NATIONAL THREAT?
Maybe Huey Long is not a threat to our national set-up in 1936, but his "Share our wealth" idea will sound most interesting to our most gullible citizens. Such points as limiting poverty, limiting wealth, old age pensions, limiting the hours of work, and the care of the veterans will not go unnoticed by the patronage seeking electorate of the United States—His appeal lacks the ring of honesty.
Huey Long is a shrewd politician, and knows what to do to gain the favor of the voters. He goes through the country telling them that he can give them something.
He is better than most politicians, because he promises more. He has something for everyone, and that carries an appeal to thoughtless voters. Huey has it figured out that there is plenty of property in the United States to give every family at least $5,000, and when a man, especially a free hearted man like Huey, is willing to offer that much for votes, what chance have the old line parties left to buy votes?
Huey, besides using the Deity as more profanity, has found another use for God in his campaign for votes and speaks freely of God's laws to balance agricultural production. A shrewd man is this Huey, and it seems that he has learned that even our best citizens' votes must be obtained.
Huey is the prize demagogue His government in Louisiana is the example of everything that thinking people do not want, and still with this demonstration of failure to show himself a benefit, he continues to gain popularity by making bigger and better promises.
COMMENTS
-By the Editor
WSGA BERUKES US
We understand our column came in for quite a roaring at the meeting of the W.S.C.A. last night. It seems that things that happen in the meetings aren't for public perusal. Now we do not mean to say that any woman student cannot attend the regular meetings of their organization's council, but any review of proceedings in our column is unwelcome.
Congress, we know, has no right to har报offs of its meetings, and a whole gallery of reporters are on the lookout all the time for good, humorous copy. Be careful, girls, we would hate to have to send a whole gallery of reporters over. At any rate, today we have a bouquet for you. From what we can gather, you had a very nice meeting, and you really did things.
MEN REBUFFED
As we have said before, $5,000 is a lot of money, and it seems that the W.S.G. A. knows it. When the members of the Union operating committee suggested causally that it would be an excellent gesture of good faith if the women were given a book exchange or Book Exchange to aid in improving the Union building, the women promptly became very deaf indeed. They just couldn't hour any such suggestion at all. It just goes to show that the women aren't ready to listen to schisms without proper investigation. We know that the women aren't ready to listen to the Union property to the Exchange in return for the money, but all that did not 'in the least change the girls' attitude.
DID IT BOIL OR NOT?
So many conflicting rumors reach our cars today concerning Hill politics that we know not where to turn. Some say Pachacamac is quite worried over this situation, but others fear that the Pachacamac put really heated Tuesday night down at Sigma Chi; while others say it was a very quiet meeting and nothing happened at all. If they are as in the dark on this new party as we are, they won't know what happens if it enough to bring him itself or really to get out and campaign against it.
Boys and Young Ladies of 50 Years Ago
The grand march began promptly at 9 o'clock, and about 30 couples of K.S. U's fairest sons and daughters were soon engaged in the intricacies of the quadrille and the mazy whirl of walz and shottice. When the hour had reached its length an adjournment to Perahali's was made, where the inner man and woman were refreshed, then the couple moved forward, the grower larger and larger, the happy couples hardly noticing its progress. It was full 4 o'clock when the last "extra" and "home sweet house" concluded the great success of the University ball.
From the University Courier for February 27,1865
The east is looking to Kansas, the pioneer in freedom's cause, to build up
OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
On Thursday, Feb. 28, at 4:30 p.m. Dr. Guido Beck will speak before the Chemistry club on "Artificial Radio Activity." All who are interested are cordially invited to attend the meeting, which will be held in room 201, Chemistry building.
ELVIRA WEEKS.
VOL. AAA.B 110th Sunday, FEB. 28, 1859 NO. 1683
CHEMISTRY CLUB:
Notice due at Chaucer's office at 8 p.m., preceding regular publication days
and 11:30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issues.
Thursday. Feb. 28. 1935
Dr. C. F. Taylor will hold a chest clinic at Watkins Memorial Hospital on Tuesday, March 5, for University students. Those wishing to attend the clinic should report to the hospital at once for preliminary examination.
CHEST CLINIC:
R. I. CANUTESON, M. D
DRAMATIC CLUB TRYOUTS;
Second semester tryouts for the K. U. Dramatic club will be held this afternoon at 3:20.
BOB CUNNINGHAM, President.
FRESHMAN ENGLISH LECTURE:
Miss Myra Hall will speak on "The Traditional Folk Songs of Kansas" this afternoon at 4:30 in room 313 Fraser.
NELLIE BARNES, Chairman, Freshman Lectures.
INTERACIAL GROUP:
The Interracial Group of the Y.W.C.A. will meet at Honley house at 7 o'clock this evening. Miss Ruth Warickle will speak on her years in India.
MEN'S PAN HELLENIC COUNCIL:
There will be a meeting of the Men's Pan Hellenic Council Sunday, in room 5. Memorial Union building, at 11th Street, where will be滴
BOWLLIAMS, PARAMETER BOWLLIAMS, BOWLLIAMS
The regular meeting of Quill club will be held this evening at 8 o'clock All members and dledees are requested to attend.
QUILL CLUB:
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS STUDENTS:
CHARLES ZESKEY, President.
Applications for appointments to the Jayhawer News staff, the School of Business annual publication, will be accepted at Dean Stockton's office until Wednesday, March 6. Address Walter Lapham, editor. Selections will be announced in the Kansan. List qualifications and past experience in editorial work.
a great University in her midst. She has made a good beginning, she dare not stop. Let her then in the future pursue such a policy as will we build up the university to be an institution today may live to see it what it ought to be—he the Harvard of the West.
Bargains:
WALTER LAPHAM, Editor.
Meersa, Rushmer & Son have received an匀iment of new designs in bamboo walking sticks with bandunes and touches that are which are being added at very low prices.
Dandy, dandy dancing shoes at Boyd's
Personal:
Namie Anderson has been detained from her classes by illness, but is now recovering.
Henry Albech gave some very fine music on the flute at the concert at the Lutheran church last Sunday evening.
Minnie Murvin has withdrawn from
The Biennial Arch Council of Phi PaI gave the publication of the Shield to the chapter here. No better selection could have been made, as Kansas Alpha is well able to publish a journal which will reflect honor upon the fraternity.
It will be remembered that last year Oreda club distinguished itself in the political line. This year came the reaction, and an Oread election has been as quiet as the boom for the Athletic Association. The lion and the lamb lay down peacefully, and all was quiet and serene. But things are not always what they seem, and once more there is music in the air and blood on the moon in the third story of the south wing. So far the fight has been free from the personal bitterness of last year. Let us hope it will continue so.
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Campus Opinion
Editor Daily Kansan;
Editions 2013-2016
The common belief is that the men's politics is better and cleaner than the women's activities its combits and party activities are accomplished more openly.
This, however, is not as no sense as it seems. While the parties appear to conduct their campaigns openly, the election is really planned by a small selected group of voters who form a circle there are one or two leaders and end year who control the whole party.
I would like to see the small, select group exposed a little more. Parties organized on this basis can not be representative of the student body.
COMMUNICATIONS TO THE EDITOR
Feb. 24,1935
Dear Jayhawker,
"the greatest miler today?" I'll tell you—Cumingham. How did Bonn thoron ever defeat our Glenm? Ask a kid. He'll tell you—a fluke, a踝 foot.
Fellow Konsan, I'm a Jayhawk, my joyful Jayhawk. I sigh Alma Mater as loudly as any of you. But I will not let school loyalty completely blime me to truth. Bentron best Cunningham fairly and squarely. It is not in line with the current Boston even the great Man-of-War was not unbeatable.
Oh Jayhawkman, I'm not a traitor to my great advice. He's our Glenmurray well cheer him that he may bring even greater and broader fame to our university.
Frank MEDICO
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But we abhor a loyalty that blinds us to reason. Bonthon, too, is a great man. It is quite possible that Bonthon would have won regardless of the foot. Let's be sporting and accept it as such. You're the best of them, and Nigman's greatness in the least, and will be bigger and broader men and women for having done so.
-a Fellow Kansan.
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1935
PAGE THRE
Hill Society
Phi Delta Theta To Hold Initiation
Phi Delta Theta will hold its formal initiation services next Sunday morning at 9 o'clock in the chapter house. Roland Boynton, former attorney general of Kansas; Harry Darby, chairman of the Highway Commission; and M. L. Breedthal, prominent Kansas City Banker, are expected to attend.
The following pledges will be initiated: George Gordon, c$38; Edward Boggess, b$36; Charles Bacchier, e$7; George Robertson, c$40; Maurice L. Breedthalian, Jr., c$6; John Mecoy, c$4; Donald Philips, c$38; Edward Safford, c$4; Richard Hobson, c$4; Warren, c$39; William Weir, c$38; Russell Bell Benton, Jr., c$38; Charles Wang, c$38; Ford Dickie, c$3; and Niles Siebert, c$38.
☆ ☆ ☆
Faculty Men
Attend Debate
Faculty men and members of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce accompanied the members of the Glee Club on its trip to Topeka last night where the glee club sang at the debate between the University of Kansas and the University of Missouri which was given before the state legislature.
The following men represented the University campus; Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to the chancellor; Guek Keeler, assistant director of the extension division; Paul B. Lawson, dean of the college; Henry Werner, student's advice员; and Howard C. Taylor, professor of piano.
☆ ☆ ☆
Sigma Kappa will entertain with a buffet tonight at the chapter house. The guests will be: Isabel Perry, c; Bettle Belle Tholen, f; Marguact McNown, d; Rachel Shelar, c; Martha Widbin, b; c; Mary Frances Butler, c; E36; Eleanor Frowne, c; Ernestine Brocker, c; Geraldine Caldwell, c; Mary Lucker, d; Rosalyn Stuart, Mary Lou Becker, d; Rosalyn Stuart, c;uncult; Betty Cox, c; Florence Walter, ed35; Marybeth McMans, c; Wilma Turtle, c; 35c.
Mrs. Nelle Hopkins, house mother of Phi Kappa Psi spent yesterday in Topeka where she assisted at the tea given by wives of the supreme court justices for the wives of legislative members and state officials held in the governor's suite at the hotel Kanasa.
Dinner guests at the Sigma Phi Epis-
en house last night were Ted Shaw,
Horrius Sheldon, c'96; Helen Krug, c'37;
Wanfine, wafe5, and Betty Tohn,
fa 37
Dinner guests at the Delta Upsilon house Tuesday night were: Mr. Clarence P. Oakes of Independence; Herre P. Oakes and Mr. Lloyd Houston of Lawrence.
Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes will be the guest speaker today in Kansas
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☆ ☆ ☆
City, Mo., at the annual spring lunch of the Browning Society to be held at the Mission Hills Club club will be "Browning and Euripedes."
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
M. O. H. Williams and Virginia Lee
Williams, Kansas City, Mo., were
guests at the Kappa Alpha Theta house
for dinner Tuesday evening.
☆ ☆ ☆
Alpha Gamma Delta entertained Sigma Nu Tuesday night with an hour dance.
Charles Langdon, '28, of Manhattan is a guest at the Pi Kappa Alpha house.
--to be held on the ___ day of
___, and we individually certify that we are
qualified to serve for the office named and that
we have not been asked any other prominent
positions.
Ruth Pyle, ed35, will be a guest for dinner at the Kappa Alpha Theta house this evening.
STUDENT RECITAL WILL BE PRESENTED THIS AFTERNOON
A student recital will be held this afternoon at 3:30 in the Central Administration auditorium. The program will consist of: violin "Shawnee Indian Hunting Dance" (Skilton), Mimnaree Stough; viola "Kenji"; and the "Konju-Raki" (arranged by Dietrich), and "Mazurka" (Popper), Elaine Frunchy.
Vocal quartet "To the Spirit of Music" (Stephens), Dorothy Ann Martin, Maxine Roche, Augusta Helen Mueler, Mary Louis Beltz; violin: 'Sixto Flute' (Morgan), viola: 'Fairy Queen'; Concerto in C Minor“First Movement (Beethoven), Millard Lilard.
A BILL PROVIDING FOR NOMINATIONS BY PETITIONS AND ELECTIONS BY
CORRESPONDENTS.
**BY PETTITIONS AND ELECTIONS BY**
be it beckoned to the *Boy's* Self-Government Association of the Kuwait or Kansas; or any woman having the nomination for the office of the *Boy's* Self-Government Association of the Women's Self-Government Association shall be printed upon a board on a certificate, whenever a petition and a written acceptance of her nomination has been filed in her behalf with the Secretary of the Association of the Women's Self-Government Association shall be signed by not less than twenty-four (24) petitioners for class office签到 by not less than fifteen (15) not more than twenty (20) female Artic representatives shall be signed by not less than twelve (12
to identify the signer. The form of the nomination petition, said salsa substantivum, is
We, the understudied electors of the Women's Self-Governing Association hereby nominate
, whose residence is
for the office of
(Spare for additional signatures)
Street and No
Street and Number.
There shall be filed with the Secretary along with the notice and issued draft a written notification. The commission signed by the person notified to the following form.
Acceptance by nomination
I hereby accept the nomination for the office of ___ and agree to serve if elected.
The petition and attached acceptance of nonturnal petition shall be filed with the Secretary not more than one day after the receipt. Each petition in filed shall be accompanies for a fee at Lt. of Custody if provided by the court shall give a receipt. The费由 the required number of qualified officers shall provide. The secretary shall return the petition to the Court within six weeks. Within the regular time for the petition, the secretary will陪写 a new petition or a different petition. Section 2. HALLOTS. The full name of each diplomatic unit designated for this purpose shall be printed on the official ballets in the athephanical order of the diplomatic units under the titles of the respective office responsible as follows: one set of ballons shall come prepared as follow
Mark this hard. I try to square opposees of the name of your first choice for each office. Mark the fourth office. Mark the fifth office. A opposee of your third choice and so on. You may mark as many th
**SESSION 4. PREPARATIONS FOR COUNTING THE HALLOPS**, follow each election the committee shall designate a central figure to represent the county as an executor of the count, appoint and provide for the training of the staff, and arrange for the counting of the ballots subject to the provisions
Do not put the same figure oppose more than one name. If you spell this ballot, return it for cancellation to the officer in charge of ballets and get mother.
section 1, AUMERIMING THE DALLATLES.
In the ballots for the election shall place the bose
for the election on the ballot paper in the election commen-
tance. The ballot paper with the bose record of the
election committee committed to their behalf will be
VALID and INVALID DALLATLES. At the central counting place the bose record of the election committee committed and received the records all found
in the ballot paper which bear the All Bose hall found in the ballot house which bear the All Bose hall found in the ballot house which bear the All Bose hall found in the ballot house which bear the All Bose hall found in the ballot house which bear the All Bose hall found in the ballot house which bear the All Bose hall found in the ballot house which bear the All Bose hall found in the ballot house which bear the All Bose hall found in the ballot house which bear the All Bose hall found in the
Section 6. BILLERS FOR COUNTING THE DALLAHI. The results of the election for each office shall be determined according to the folio provided.
are found to be invalid or shall be submitted from the test. The number of user votes required in each voting plan, and the total number of valid votes required for a candidate to be held valid if it does not clearly show which candidate the voter predicts will vote for. Word, word, or other even apparently intended to identify the voter, may be used for a candidate for one or more of the offices of the voter. In order to receive the office or offices for which the candidate is expected to be returned, shall be counted according to the format of the voter. In order to be counted according to the direction preferred on it or not, no text that appears on a ballot different from the one indicated in the dittes not voted for have been stamped out. A single entry on a ballot different from the one indicated in the dittes not voted for has been added equivalent to a figure 1. If a candidate contains both heaps and one or more distinct voting planes, it shall be taken as the voter's intention so far as possible. The nomination of a positive numerical order of the lifespan for each candidate, for one vote flipped, the smallest number wanted shall be taken to fill his seat, and without regard to the future or future events.
batteries ropes
on the floor
to prevent fires
that might be caused by fire with a water bottle or a cell phone that is cared for with one vote for every other individual in the household. Others are either charged to pay an emergency service or used as a first aid kit. Mostone once considered any one candidate for any office at the time of the election.
aim to recover at the end of any stage of the counting; the number of bolted entries to be counted, the number of bolts entered for each value, the valid bolts for each case, the璧 will be determined and the election for this璧 declared delay
(31) . When all the ballets have been taken and scored to the first available choices, the ballet company has lost two ballets to her credit than the number of衍绣 required for nomination.
shall be transferred to the candidate thus destined shall be transferred, each to the candidate combining candidates for the office. A "combining candidating candidate" is any employee who does not clearly indicate any candidate which does not clearly indicate any candidate shall be not made an "exhausted" candidate.
(6) When all the ballots of the candidates thus denounced have been transferred, the one who has not denied them will be declared and all her ballots shall be seized defeated and all her votes. (7) The theorem the candidate who is then denounced must also be defeated and all her ballots similarly transferred. Thus candidates shall be denounced defeat one at a time and all their votes.
DICKINSON
NOW!
Ends Saturday
RONALD COLMAN
LORETTA YOUNG
"CLIVE
of
INDIA"
Sunday 24th J.M.A. A
Sunday R-U-M-B-A
(17). If when a candidate is to be declared decem-
ber 30, the ballot for the office, that one of the
tied candidates shall be deemed elected, just before
the last transfer of ballots, if two or more of
count also, the second shall be decided by
count only, the second shall be decided by
djust before the last transfer before that,
and the third shall be decided by
many times as may be necessary, and any the
same times as may be necessary, according to
the standing of the tied candidate
before that in the counting procedures not
always provided for. In all cases, if any of the
candidate has been transferred from the office remain, the
candidate having the largest number of ballots
for that office shall be at an end.
If each office shall be held in such form as to show, after each
thoroughly credited to each candidate, the total
credited having the largest number of ballots
found by adding the totals of all candida-
tions (18). If at any time after the first sorting of
ballots, it shall be transferred as part of the
previous voting process, for which it should have
been indicated on it, shall be made in
multiple mites found indictment that the list of
correct, so much of the settling and transferring
conditions indicated on it, shall be made in
multiple mites found indictment that the list of
correct, so much of the settling and transferring
conditions indicated on it, shall be made in
multiple mites found indictment that the list of
correct, so much of the settling and transferring
conditions indicated on it, shall be made in
multiple mites found indictment that the list of
correct, so much of the settling and transferring
conditions indicated on it, shall be marked from
one candidate to another
also can be awarded university honors, and the candidate will be one of the candidates of the director of the court shall be final upon application of the case by the election committee. **Section 8. PRESENTATION OF ATTORIES** The candidate shall be presented by the election committee for our selection. Thirdly, the candidate shall be required to teach such successful candidate at
the end of the election shall be kept separate from the election of officers. 9. FEDERAL CLASS OF OFFICERS: Nonincumbents and electors for reequipped officers shall not be conducted in accordance with the provisions of this bill so far as they may be permitted to be in full force and effect after its publication on the website.
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TUESDAY
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10:00 p.m. E.S.T. 8:00 p.m. M.S.T.
9:00 p.m. C.S.T. 7:00 p.m. P.S.T.
THURSDAY
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PAGE FOUR
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1935
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Hargiss to Enter Green Squad in K.C.A.C. Meet
Weather Hampers Workouts for Indoor Contest
Coach H. W. "Bill" Hargiss, Kansas track tutor, will run an inexperienced track squad against some serious competition in the renewed Kansas City Athletic Club indoor meet to be held in Kansas City Saturday.
College competition will be a new experience to the majority of the men making the trip; but despite this handicap, Coach Hargiss expects good time in some of the events, particularly the mile relay. The mile relay team will be picked from Schroeder, Graves, MacCaskill, McNown and Fitzgibbon.
Cold weather during the past three days has seriously hampered the proposed schedule of stiff workouts. As a result, the squad will probably not be up to par for the meet. Due to the weather, it is important that the selection of dath men and hardlers.
The only important change in the lineup announced last week is the probably withdrawal of Connet Cummins, with six mills, and his insertion in the 880.
Coach Hargis has not yet decided whether conditions warrant entrance in the two-mile relay, Cunningham, Guise, Fitzglibbon, Graves, and Schroeder are under consideration for this event, but if they do not run in the relay they will run their distances in the open 440 and 880.
Two men have been practicing for the pole-vault but they probably will not enter the K.C.A.C. meet, Hargiss said yesterday.
Weakness in the hurdles and the absence of Gray and Noble, because of basketball competition, from the pole-vault, combined with the elimination from the program of the shot-put. Dees's specialty, will seriously allow the Jay-hawker squad from rolling up any sizeable point total.
The squad will go to Kansas City Saturday morning to qualify in the preliminaries that afternoon.
TRAINING PERIOD IN ILLINOIS
WOOD LEAVES FOR TWO-WEEK
Second Lieutenant Wayne Wood, 730 of the R.O.T.C., has been detailed to the S818 Coast Artillery Division at Fort Sheehan, III, for a two-week training
Lieutenant Wood will be sent to some Civilian Conservation Camp as the officer in charge after he has finished the intensive two weeks of training that is given to all R.O.J.C. officers before they are placed in charge of one of those
Read Kansan Want Ads.
Wrestlers to Manhattan
Kansas State Has Upper Edge in Mat Meet. Says Cox
The University wrestling team will leave at noon today for Manhattan, where they will meet the Kansas Aggies in the last match of the season.
"This is sure to be a tough meet. Kansas State defeated us here in our first meet, Jan. 2, by a score of 184 to 91. Missouri defeated us by four points and defeated the Angles by one point. That makes their team a little better on paper," said James Cox, wrestling coach, last night.
The wrestlers will compete in the following order: 118-lb class, Chorus; 128-lb class, McDouglass; 135-lb class, Dougian; 145-lb class, Childf; 153-lb class, Nolland; 185-lb class, Armender; 152-lb class, Tillard; heavyweight "Tinny"
The team will go to Ames March 8 and 9 for the Big Six Conference meet.
Freshmen and Alumni Play
A. A. U. Stars Among Grids on Court Here Tonight
The Fresherman basketleaders will maze the Alumni team tonight in Robinson gymnasium at 7:30. Some of the players on the Alumni team are members of the Jones Store team in Kansas City, Mo., and are in excellent condition. Bill Johnson, former University star, with the highest following of any independent player in Kansas City, is on the lineup. "This will be the best for the baseball team," he said. Ad Lindsay in speaking of this game, Paul Harrington, all-Big Six star of last year, is also with this aggression.
The Freshman aquad has been gone through critical workouts and is like wise in good shape. This game will be a good chance to see what new material is available for the varsity team next year from the Freshmen. Smith Schwartz and Cox should show up wel for the Freshmen.
Between halves there will be a bison match between Hermann Dick from Haskell, and Ephénize, the champion of the Pacific Fleet on the West Coast. There will be three four-mile rounds. The admission is $20.
The lineups:
Freshmen Alumni
Schoutz f O'Leary
Schmitt b Bishop
Cox c Johnson
Haverstock g Harrington
Hernuth g Vanek
"Bill" Harpisi.
Ping pong double matches schedules for today are Pi Beta Phi vs Alpho Chi Omega at 4:50 at the Union building and Alpha Delta Pi vs Chi Omega of the ping pong simples should be played off by Saturday.
Two Ping Pong Matches Today
Phi Delts Win Over Delts
Second Half Rally By Losers Falls Short of Victory
In the intramural basketball game last night the Phi Dell defeated the back Delta Tau 19-10, the Hawks turned back the Wakeman's 27-17, and the Phi Pai "B" managed to squeeze out a 39-35 decision over the A.T.O. B." The game between the Phi Pai was more or less a content between Anderson and Buchanan, the former caging twenty-two points and the latter twenty-three. The Rumblers nosed the Jayhawks out 19 to 17 late in the evening.
Wakarusa 17
Hawks 27
Wakarusa G F T F H 2
Brown I G F T F H 2 Shrader G F T F H
Rowland I 3 0 0 Shrader G F T F H
McCormack I 3 0 0 McKibry G F T F H
McCormack I 3 0 0 Borgy G F T F H
Johnson I 3 0 0 Johnny G F T F H
—— — — — — — Stephen I 1 0 0
—— — — — — — Roberty I 1 0 0
7 3 1 — — — — —
Referee: Bob Reed Phi Draft 19
G FFT
Roberts 6 1
Brown 3 1
Cieure 4 1
Clauze 4 1
Van Clauze 0 1
6 7 3
Reference: Ray Woods
Deltas Tart Tart (1)
Olson G F 1F2
Ventush G 0 3
Noel N 0 3
Wilson O 0 6
Wilson W 0 6
Hedges O 1 6
4 2 7
Phi Psi "B" 39
G FTF G
Lloyd 11 0 0
Alderson 11 0 2
Bugley 0 0 2
Hurries 0 0 0
Hodge 4 1 0
Summe 0 0 0
St. Clair 0 0 1
A.T.O. "P"
R 1 0 24 C FTF
Rald 0 1 0 Drayl
Drayl 0 1 0 Drayl
Bishanham 10 3 0 Redman
Redman 0 0 2 Cury
Cury 1 0 24
19 1 6
Gamblers 19
| | G FT F |
| :--- | :--- |
| Murray | 2 1 0 |
| Angel | 2 1 0 |
| Mahmoud | 1 0 1 |
| Mishaun | 1 0 1 |
| Nelson | 1 0 1 |
| Kelly | 1 1 0 |
Jayhawks 17
| | G FT F |
| :--- | :--- |
| Braden | 4 0 0 |
| White | 0 2 1 |
| Bush | 3 1 0 |
| Campbell | 3 0 1 |
| Mason | 0 1 0 |
- - - -
- - - -
7 3 3
Today's Intramural Games
Today's Intramural Games
10 o'clock, east court, Piil Kappa Psi
vs. Delta Tau Delta, west court, Alpha
Kappa Psi vs. Kappa Eta Kappa, Volley
hails games are: Alpha Tau Omega vs.
Piil Kappa Psi at 4:30.
V. L. Gravelle's Dramatic Interludes will be presented at the University Auditorium on Thursday, March 7 at 8:30 o'clock. This production is a presentation in costume and makeup of characters from the drama of all time.
PARAMATIC PROGRAM TO BE PRESENTED IN AUDITORIUM
DRAMATIC PROGRAM TO BE
PI BETA PHI RETAINS LEAD
IN WOMEN'S INTRAMURALA
Miss Ruth Hoover, sponsor of the women's intramural teams, has announced the number of points won by each team in the intramural basketball games. Pi Beta Phi has retained its place as leader of intramural activities and has participated in many games were won in basketball. The Pi Phi's were the intramural champions.
Activity tickets and season tickets will admit to the performance, but reserved seats may be bad for 40 cents. The general admission price is 25 cents.
The Sigma Kappa's were next in basketball with 52.5 points. The other organizations and their total number of basketball points are: Alpha Delta Pi, Kappa Delta Pi, Spartan Hall, 50; Alpha Gamma Delta, 40; Kappa Gamma Gamma, 40; Kappa Alpha Theta, 30; Alpha Chi Omega, 30; and Chi Omega, 30.
ALLPHIN TO BE INTERVIEWED BY HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS
Five junior and senior high school boys will ask Herbert Alliphn, swimming coach, questions about swimming on the Athletics interview program over KFKU Thursday, at 6 p.m. (9 a.m.) in the Student Union in January to ask Dr. F. C. Allen questions on basketball. This program was so successful that the new inter-
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view was arranged by Prof. E.R. El- el, director of intramurals.
The athletic interview programs have formed themselves into a forum for the free discussion of sports questions
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Prices quoted are for those two days only and are Real Values.
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112 Hart Schaffner & Marx - Carlbrooke Wool Suits - Styles for Men and Young Men - Every Suit a Real Value 17 Hart Schaffner & Marx - Carlbrooke Topcoats and Overcoats
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214 Pair Suit Pants and Slacks ... 25% Discount
214 Leather Jackets ... 25% Discount
131 Pair Pajamas ... 25% Discount
Silk and Wool Mufflers, $1.95 values, at ... 95c
83 Silk Neckties, 65c values, 35c ... 3 for $1.00
14 Pairs Dress Gloves, values to $2.50, for ... $1.35
16 Sleeveless Sweaters, $1.95 values, for ... $1.35
Imported $1.50 Silk Neckties 95c, 2 for $1.75
19 Corduroy and Melton Jackets, $5 values, 31 ... $1.75
34 Pr. Odd Wool Trousers, sizes 31 to 42 for ... $2.95
18 Silk Neckties, $1,65c ... 2 for $1.25
38 Pr. Corduroy Pants, values to $3.95, for ... $2.15
40 Odd Soft Collars Shirts, $1.35, ... 3 for $4.00
29 Cotton Rib Union Suits ... 65c
80 Odd Soft Collars Shirts, 85c, ... 3 for $2.50
28 Pr. Flannel Pajamas, $1.50 values, for ... 95c
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34