UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 21 T Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXXIII on the SHIN By BUD EVANS. '36 A Batch of Letters—I Sez Lewis Joseph Garglione, c36, writer us that Dick Pine, the University Club's pride and joy (dishwasher de luxe and waiter pat excellence) challenges any author with the letter of a set of letters received since September. Lewis Joseph states that Pine reached the 100 mark a short time ago, and that was surely a record—or something! Such popularity certainly defied it. So, I'll submit nine—SO WHAT More Correspondence . . . Old Settler's Plein in the City . . . A Close Shave . . . No Hunger March . . . A Badge Deal. And while we're on the subject of correspondence, "might run a letter that ficole received not long ago. I know it is somewhat late to be printing said letter, but—well anyway—here 'tis; Dear Sir: (Ahem) I just read the remark in your column about the Tradi Scheow when performing before a bunch of the “locals.” As I am an smart girl, I gathered you who are interested in traditional music which was started by the Acacias. Don’t ask me how I know who it was—I just happened to be one of the unlucky individuals sitting next to them. I wonder when those boys are going to see you in school? In lieu oflege—not high school! At present, they show no indication of it. Too bad. I'm in favour of barring them from any performances in the auditorium. It’s a school complex jets back of them. Very sincerely, An Indignant Student (You guess which one.) ♦ ♦ ♦ Well-all I can my boys is this-i-di-Amanda not get the drift of this beer letter, maybe you better look this-Student" you study and get an explanation! The Sigma Chi party in Kansas City between semesters must have looked like old-home week what with Hibbard, Nazman and Gibson being taken by Sturgeon, McDifresh and Raney who was it Nazman who took Bald Pass but what that got to do with the party! WOMAN EXPERT The following headline was noted by yours truly a short time ago: ADVISES MEN ON PROPER ADVISES MEN WAV TO SAVE All I can say is-ay, what's the use? And, beides, if I were to comment on said matter it would indubitably rebeat "Null said-air and ain't a wetful?" Understand that the Hunger March that was to be held in Topkaka, has been called off. Can't help thinking that someone must have thrown old Kepmun a ball—or something. You know—there couldn't be stepped for nothing. Just before the semester vacation, started (for some of us) Betty Smith, that Kappa Miss, donned the jewelry of Marshall Wier, a Sigma Chi gent from Okhdeha. Thought she had it all the time, but wasn't just certain that she was going to have a mighty fine pair. But I can't help from feeling sorry for one or two of our local Beta's. Too bad, boys--maybe next time. MID-WEEK VARSITY DANCES ORCHESTRAS AGAIN TO PLAY NIVEA, JANESHA, DANCE At the first mid-week vanity this session tenth night students will again have an opportunity to dance with music furnished by a BHI band. As a result of a compromise reached recently by the Memorial Union Operating Committee and the Musicians Union, a mime-piece band will be organized composed of members of the three bands. The fourth out of four mid-midweek varieties. The fourth variety will be played by Preston Anderson's band. LINDBERGH CELEBRATES HIS BIRTHDAY IN ENGLAN Cariff, Wales, Feb. 4—(UP) Colonel Lindbergh was 34 years old today. He and his family remained in doors all day and then they returned to a birthday celebration Communication with Colonel Lindbergh was refused reporters. Cashier Frustrates Bandit Verda Ames. e'39, Turns in Alarm in Snite of Gun I instrad of handing over the money as commanded, Verda Ames, c39, ticket seller at the Granda剧院,played in alarm button,and an attempted robbery of the theater box-office Saturday evening when the bandia fanning down a bank alley. At about 8:45 p.m, a man, a Miss Ames as tall and dark, appeared at the other window. He held out his arm as if to be opened from outside by his coat. "Just hand over the big hills, and don't bother with the small change," he ordered. Miss Ames reached for the burglar arm. "Don't you dare push that button," the band warned, but when he saw that his command was not heeded, he fed down the street. At the driveway of the Union Bus depot, which adjoins the theater, he was met by a companion, and they disbanded. Police could find no trace of the men. Miss Ames, a freshman at the University, is a member of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. Her home is in Claflin. Semester CSEP Payroll Exceeds Previous Record Grades Are Being Checked New Applications Arrive Daily The last CSEP pay checks for time to January 12, have been given out, bringing the total CSEP payoffs for the first semester to $2948.15 for $4.140 hours of work. Of this amount, the graduates earned $2.855.65 for $2.831 hours of work. The total payroll for the first semester was $6231.23 hours of work. Only 404 students were carried last year, as compared to the 470 this year. This year was the first time that graduates were carried on the payroll, due to a new ruling of the NYA, which now controls all of the federal aid projects for students. All graduates engaged in research and tutorial work. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1936 Applications for CSEP work for second semester continue to come in, and to date about 250 have been received. This is considerably above the number received for second semester work last year. These applications are students who are not in school at the present; new applicants in school; and old applicants in school whose schools are standing which was below the minimum lot semester The CSPE office is now engaged in checking the grades of all applicants, and all three now on the payroll, for which they must have a scholastic average of 1.5. A few vacancies will be caused by students completing their school work. Others dropped out of school to accept full-time jobs, or other jobs here on the campus. Some students failed to make their scholastic average. Because of federal regulations, all students on the CSEP payroll are required to carry at least three-fourths of their school taxes in the College, but varies with the different schools. All students who have a good chance for CSEP jobs are urged to enroll. Alaska Newspaperman Dies former University Student Founder First Paper at Dawson Eugene C. Allen, 6,366, 67-year-old Alaska newspaper man, died last week in Seattle, Wash. In 1833, Allen went to Alaska with his brother, George Allen, and founded the first newspaper in Dawson. "The Klomalai Hungar" began in 1834 on the same day, they established a paper at Teller, near Nome. To new students, and students who have have outside work schedule, the CSEP committee recommends not to participate fourth of a full-time class program. Allen, who learned the printing trade in the midwinter, worked on the Wallace (Idaho) Press-Times and on a Seattle newspaper, where he lived intermittently for some time. He was recently appointed to reorganize the Seattle Press Club, and it was white-collar business. He served Vice President John Carrier and his congressional party that his death occurred. Allen's tales about his newspaper experiences in the north are related in a book by Russell Bankson, "The Rise of a Negro," which fighters against claim jumpers and a biographical outline of Allen's life. Since he retired from mining and newspaper work five years ago, he had home at Barton, Yawah Island. Senior Committees For Class Events Named by Durand Nine Groups Appointed By President To Control Commencement Activities Senior class committees to have charge of Commencement Week in the spring were announced last night as ap- portions for the commencement. Durand, president of the senior class. twenty-four seniors are appointed on nine different committees which will probably meet often later in the semester. The committee on invitations, however, will meet very soon to accept bids for enricheing the invitations. Committees for the Senior Breakfast usually held at the Union building during Commencement week, the Senior Commencement and the Class Progregy were also appointed. Alumni reception: Frank Allen chairman; Dorothy Lewis, and George Guernev. The alumni committee will have charge of the several days of program for the alumni during Commencement week. The memorial committee will be The committees as announced yesterday: week. The memorial committee will se lect a gift to be bought by the senior class and dedicated to the University. Memorial committee: Neal Hardy, chairman; Lloyd Morgan, Margaret Beast and Sol Lindenbaum. Publicity committee: Shirley Jones. Cap and gown committee: Marlow Sholander, chairman; William Gough, Norbert Anzuschte and Doreth Bangs. Invitation committee: Jack Miller, chairman; Elizabeth Harsen; Mary Louise Beltz and Deyg Bagges. Twentipeeps who can use employees in exchange for room, board or cash, please call the Wo-terhouse at once. The need is very great. Senior Cake Walk managers: Huk Meyer and Clarence Steele. Senior breakfast: Phil Bramwell chairman; Dorothy Fry and Elizabeth Ann Bish. Prices for Saturday night's performance will range from fifty cents to a dollar. This presentation is part of a nationwide attempt to revive waning interest in the theater outside of New York City. Jobs Are Needed To Give "Accent on Youth' Class prophecy: Alfred Ames. Class history: Marlow Scholander. Eihel Barrymore Colt Brings Company To Fraser Theater --- When Ethel Burrymore Cohl brings her company to Fraser theater Saturday night to play "Accent On Youth," Lawrence patrons will have their first opportunity to see the most recent member of the famous Burrymore-capped family. The play deals with the attempt of a middle-aged playwright, who loves his secretary, to prove to her that her love for him is ill-toubled. He schemes herself to kill him, thrusting her in the way of a man who is as young and attractive as she is. His tension naturally provides for much hilarity, but in the end the play-wright is overruled in spite of his selflessness, then disproving the title of the play. The Young Miss Col, daughter of Ehiel Barrymora and niece of John Barrymora, studied in Paris, and first appeared on the stage with her mother in one of the best liked plays of 1933, "Seafarer St. Mary." This play, which was picked by Barrie Munroe, New York critic, as one of the ten best of 1834, ran 250 nights in theaters. The film, Coli for her recent tour because it offers an opportunity for development of an idea entirely divorced from any appeal to class sentiment, is as common in the many plays now running in New York. Miss Colt plays the lead, that of the secretary, and the remaining parts are filled with a surprisingly high calibre of talent, played by Deyoung Dowrell, who has appeared in many New York plays, including the famous "Saturday's Child儿". John Maroney, former attorney, was part of the cast, and his appearance has appeared on the screen, and is remembered as a champion swimmer of a few years ago. Alice Cheney, one of the founders of the "Jimmy Players", was also present, will play one of the female leads. Youth Threatens President Contents of Letters Sent to Roosevelt Not Divulged New Britain, Conn., Feb. 4—(UP) Ferdinand Droz, 30 years old, was injured tonight and charged with sending升信 letters to President Roosevelt. Department of Justice Agent William A. Higgins, who made the arrest, refused to divulge the contents of the案件。Druz allegedly sent to Mr. Roosevelt. Droz was held at police headquarterns without bail and will be taken to Hartford tomorrow for arraignment in the United States courts. In Droz's home were found a rifle, several rounds of ammunition, and a bullet-proof vest. Austin Phelps Palmer, business man was sentenced to 90 days in the New York Federal House of Detention last week for sending threats to Rosevelt. Sen. Borah Tosses Hat Into Presidential Ring Liberal Republican Admits His Candidacy For Nomination Washington, D.C., Feb. 4—(UP) —Senator William E. Bench, progressive Republican, today announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination for President, and said he would commit the May 12 Ohio Presidential primary. He will stand as a liberal Republican. Borah has given informal authorization to the Borah-first Presidential movements in half a dozen states including Wisconsin, New York, Pennsylvania, and Illinois, but today's announcement is formal acknowledgment of his candidacy for the Republican nomination. Kansas Delegates for London Topeka, Feb. 4. —(UP) - Friends of Gov. Ail M. Gall today said he will not allow himself to be elected a delegate to the Republican national convention in Cleveland June 9. —First Kauai News. Baldwin and the University for the Presidential nomination nomination KANSAS ALUMNI ARE ACTIVE IN REPUBLICAN ORGANIZATION University of Kansas alumni are playing prominent parts in the activities of the Kansas Young Republican organization, according to the current issue of The Young Republican, edited by Kmeuser, 31. Henry A. Bubb, fb 20, Topkapi, and Marciae Pircite, 29, Garniere, are national committee and committeewoman, respectively. Cloyce Hamilton, fb 31, Stockton, and John Forton, 128. Hutchison, is vice-president; Columbus, state treasurer; and Robert Showden, 51 first district chairman. Thomas W. Caffey, '72, has opened a law office in Oklahoma City, according to an announcement received by the alumni club. Caffey was a member of Pu Ipailon, and for several years was chairman of the student committee on the Kansas Relays. He was keeper of "Chalky," the live toucan which was the Central America because of its recollection. The official Jayhawk. Since his graduation he has served as president of the K.U. Alumni Club at Oklahoma City. Caffey Onens Law Office Dr. F. G. Dill, former director of the Westminster Foundation and for the past 17 years Dean of the Biblite college at University, aided Sunday in Tulsa. NUMBER 87 Campus Calendar Calendar of the Week's Events Wednesday, Feb. 5 Beginning of class work in all departments. Phi Delta Chi dance, Memoria Inion, 9-12 p.m. Psychological examination for new students. Pi Kappa Alpha party, 9-12 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 8 James P. Warhasse, speaker at Student Forum, Fraser theater, 8:15 pm Friday, Feb. 7 Dr. F. G. Dill Dies in Tulsa Thursday, Feb. 6 Basketball: Kansas vs. Oklahoma at Norman. Campus Sister tea, Henley house, 3-1 m. --- Ethiel Barrymore Colt in "Accent on Youth," Fraser theater, 8:15 p.m. Between-semeaters varity. Memorial, 9-12 p.m. Alpha Gamma Delta party, 9-12 p.m Triangle party, 9-12 p.m. Co-operative Plan Will Be Explained By Dr. Warbass Forum Speaker Is Forner Member of Consumers' Advisory Board For NRA "Co-operation," a plan which is an innovation to most Americans, will be explained to the student forum gathering Thursday night by Dr. James P. Warbasse, former member of the Consumers Advisory Board of the NRA, and president of the Co-operation Group, so this far year, will be held in Priser Theater to accommodate the large crowd expected, and will begin at 8:11. Dr. Warkasse will speak on the subject, "Co-operatives, the Only Way Out for Farmers and Workers." He is in the Midwest to attend the regional agricultural association, which he addressed Monday and yesterday with Kagawa, famous Japanese missionary and labor leader. Kagawa is in America to study the plan and to embody its salient character in his social work reform work in Japan. The plan, known as "Co-operation," has been frequently confused with various depression measures and self-help techniques. Its own schemes such as communism, socialism, and the Grange, and Knights of Labor movements. While its machinery is comparatively simple, and in its simplicity lies one of its greatest assets. Idea Is Old One The idea had its inception in 1844, when labor conditions in England were at their worst, when wages were low and buying power was conserved. William King had driven an in-institutional way to alleviate the distress of the consumers, but Dr. Warbaseh has pointed out that their efforts were without small because they persisted only as long as the workers only, and not as consumers. In the city of Rochdale, 28 weavers banded together and laid the groundwork for the immense Co-operative enterprise over one-sixth of England's retail expenditures. In the basement of an old building in Tadland these weavers, the "Rochdale Pioneers", pooled their money on alf, ash, and set up a small grocery store. The original 28 soon grew to a larger number, and the one grocery store has now移驻到 a vast retail organization, with branches in nearly every country. These imitators in America, The Rochester Pioneers contemplated only a small retail store to buy in wholesale lots and sell at the market price. But today there are many producers co-operative retailers of retail, consumers co-operatives. The true co-operative, as explained by Howard Cowden, president of the Consumers Co-operative Association of North Kirkland City, Mo., embodies four essential principles. They include unlimited membership, democratic control, a limited interest paid on share capital and the patronage refund. These principles are not followed in the four principles have not been followed co-operative in nature, and Dr. Warbasse attributes their inevitable failure to this fact. Patronage Refund an Objection Patronage Refund an Objection The patronage refund is the most outstanding characteristic of the plan, and has attracted the most criticism by its simplicity and by being quite quantified with the plan. It provides that the organization shall purchase at a quantity rate and sell at the market price, and return the difference, which is considered an unearned surplus, to its owner. It also requires that all of their purchases. Many persons have attacked the co-operatives as a price cutting institution, but Dr. Warbasse declares that they sell only at the accepted market price. He freely admits the unfairness of the market man useless, and turn over or price to the consumer. Co-operatives are the accepted mode of doing retail business in England, Wales and the Scandinavian countries, but are a comparatively recent development. The number of companies brought to Minnesota and the northern states by Scandinavian settlers, and gained impetus in the lean years following the war. At the present time there are in the United States 600 consumers co-operative societies, with a mean annual investment of estimated annual business of $35,000-000, or a million dollars a day. Alumni Hear Professors Templin Speaks at Boston and Philadelphia; Hoopes at Chicago Prof. Olm Templin was principal professor at Kansas Day meetings of University of Kansas alumnaeh chab At Beacon, Jan. 29, and Philadelphia, Meetings also were held in other cities, Mercedith Robbins, 14, providing at Knoxville, Texas; Florence Bodell, 18, visiting with her sister Jean Dickiet, 20, at Los Angeles. The Boston meeting resulted in the forming of a permanent organization, with a committee in charge composed of McKinsey Warren, 15; chairman, Eliseas Lakos, 17; and Chairman, David Wilson, 21; John Pratt Whitman, f8;7u Alen A., 17; and Edmund I. Learned, 22; g.25. Era W. Palmer, '94 was tourmaster At the Philadelphia meeting. At the Baltimore meeting is courtroom, and Bob Beed, '17, gave a talk to "Kansas and the Olympians." Miss Helen Rhoda Hopes, of the English department, spoke at a Kansas Day meeting in Chicago, at which William O. Rite, 28, 128, was toastmaster. At St. Louis, an all-Kansas dinner was promoted by the KU. club, of which it is a member. A similar meeting at Denver presided over by Akton McCarthy, 112. Regular Spring Decline In Enrollment Is Seer Final Figure Will Be Near 4000; Fall Registration Near Record With the regular enrollment virtually completed, a normal spring falling off in the number of students was reported yesterday in all schools of the University. According to Raymond C. Nichols, secretary to the Chancellor, about 250 new students were expected to have registered, with the usual decline in enrollment expected to bring the total down to near the 4000 mark. A near number of 492 students last fall attended the University, and although a large group of new entries are reported, several factors continue to down an unexpected low mark. The severe weather has made roads leading into Lawrence dangerous for auto travel, and some students who plan to attend school have been as yet unable to reach the city. An unusually large number of small emails will in all probability be exposed within the next ten days. Uncertainty as to financial policies of the national administration also may have had some effect on the enrollment figures. Late Monday night the number of new students enrolling was close to the number at the same time last year, and yesterday's entries certainly brought the total near that of last year. The midterm semester enrollment was 283 students in the fall year, assuming a normal number of new students for the coming semester. Late enrollment will be held St. Day morning from 9:30 to 11:30 in Robbins gymnasium, following the usual admission procedure, will be charged all students college latent. The simplified plan of enrollment put into practice but argying worked satisfactorily this week, according to officials in charge, and all students completed their chosing of courses by yesterday afternoon, making the total time required a day shorter than in previous years. The former method of re-enrolment was no longer major cards have been abolished, and enrolles nearly fill cut their class schedule, present it to their advisers and then to their class chairmen. Exact figures on the semester enrollment will not be available until a few weeks after the deadline for paying fees, and will be released about March M. U. PREXY PURCHASES CABIN TO ESCAPE STUDENT SONGS Alumnus Dies in Wichita Kansas City, Mo. Feb. 4- (UP)—Dr. Frederick Middlushbub, president of the University of Missouri, today revealed why he bought a cabin on an isolated arm of the Lake of the Czarks. It was to get away from the song of "Sweet Adeline" which is all the rage of the Missouri campus every Saturday night. Alumnus Dies in Wichita F. B. Penest, D. of Sevany, died at a hospital after an operation. He was serving his fourth term as county attorney of Greenwood county. When he attended the University, Mr. Benest was president of his law class one year, and was named a judge of the Court and of Phi Delta Phi, law fraternity. KANSAS WINS Winning Streak Continues As Cyclones Lose 25 to 42 EBLING IS HIGH SCORER Leading Big Six Scorers Jayhawkers Lead 23 to 8 At Half As They Win Easily Livimston, Ok. G 1 TP Av. Ebung, KU 6 59 11.8 Wahlquist, Neb. 5 57 11.4 Inckey, Neb. 5 57 10.2 Groves, KS 5 51 10.2 Fleming, IS 6 59 9.83 Cowen, IS 6 59 8.5 Tittle,aker, IS 6 40 8.1 Tone,Ok. 6 40 6.67 Todd, Mk. 1 7 7 Ames, Ia., Feb. 4—(UP)—The University of Kansas basketball leaders, in the 1303 Big Six race, got sweet revenge here Tuesday night at the expense of State defenders of the 1633 conference title, by amusing the Cyclones 42-25. Displaying good form and playing close-in shots, the Jayhawkers took the lead soon after Fleming, Iowa State's star player, recovered in Kansas forward, dropped in two free throws and a field goal to give the Kansas a 4-2 lead in the first few minutes of the game. The Jayhawkers continued with their momentum throughout the rest of the free The score at the half was 28-3 Kausen, with Ebling and Fred Praile Dividing the scoring honors for the first period. Holmes, captain and guard, fought a real battle but were unable to cope with the expert ball-handling of the Jehovahs Holmes was lost to the Cyon Tuesday morning with a case of mumps. Praile played an excellent defensive game for the Jayhawks and tallied 10 points. Although closely guarded throughout the game by Flemming, Ebled led the scorsers with 14 points. Flemming played an outstanding game for the losers. Poole, Gibson and Cowen showed up well. A, U. FG FT F Eliang. f 5 4 1 Rogers. f 5 4 2 Alen. f 2 1 1 Holliday. f 1 0 0 Nokie. f 0 1 2 Shaffer. c 2 0 2 Kleppman. g 2 2 2 Prade. g 4 2 0 Cox. c 4 0 0 Holmer. g 0 2 0 Totals ... 16 10 11 **owa State** Zewen, f 3 0 1 Blahik, f 3 0 1 Fleming, f 4 5 2 Poele, c 1 2 Thomson, c 1 Anderson, g 0 0 1 Johnson, g 1 0 1 Gilson, g 0 0 1 Perkins, g 0 0 0 Browl, g 0 0 0 Kilburn, c 1 0 1 Score at half. 23-8. Missed free throws: Kansas, 3; Iowa State 7. Officials: E. C. Quigley, St. Mary's Ed Halpin, Kansas City. Announce New Programs Horr and Sherbon to Have Charge of Broadcasts A series of discussions on "Trees and Shubs" by W. H. Horr, associate professor of botany, will be broadcast over the internet at 12:30 p.m. on Tuesday 12 at 2:30 p.m. The discussions will be the third unit in a series of discussions on "Kansas, Then and Now." Another new program to begin soon will be a series of talk on "Health Through the Ages," by Dr. Florence Sherbon. Beginning with her first talk on "Infancy," Dr. Sherbon will continue through "College" and end with "Business." The next talk is age 18. The first health talk will be broadcast from KFKU Feb. 12 at 2:30 p.m. Elementary French lessons will be broadcast this semester for the fifth consecutive year by Prof. Kenneth Cornell. The French lessons will be con- tributed twice weekly on Monday and Tuesday, and will begin Feb. 6 at 2:47 p.m. Annointed as Editor Prof. E. F. Engel, who conducts German lessons over KFKU every Monday and Thursday night, has been appointed editor of the Foreign Language by Radio department of the Foreign Language Journal. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1900 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OCTOBER 20TH, 2016 OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS PUBLISHER HARRY VALENTINE ASSOCIATE EDITORS BILL GILLE ALMA PRAZER MANAGING EDITOR PEDD M. HARRIS, Jr. BUSINESS MANAGER F. QUINTIN BROWN STAFP CAMPUS EDITOR BILL DUDDEN MAKE UP EDITORS $ DON HUYA BILL DOWN $ BILL DOWN SOUNDS EDITOR LETTER CORD, JE NEWS EDITOR DONNY SMITH SOCIETY EDITOR PHILIP RIVER SUNDAY EDITOR JAMIA POLLINGHOUR KANSAN BOARD MEMBERS MARGARET BROTH HARRIET MEYER BROTH FREDDY HODDER F. QUINTON BROWN BROTH MARY RUTH STANGLAND SHIRLEY JOHNEY JUDITH HUNKEY FRIDA HENKEL, JAMES MARGARET HODDER TELEPHONES Business Office KU, 66 News Room KU, 24 Night Connection, Business Office 2701 K2 Night Connection, News Room 2702 K1 Sale and exclusive national advertising representatives NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE, Inc. Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland, Seattle Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday through Monday at the University of Kansas Press. Visit www.kansas-press.com of Jurisdiction of the University of Kansas from the Press of the University of Kansas. Subscription price, per year, $0.00 in advance, $.12 on payments. Single copies, t each. Entered an second class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas. WEDNESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 5, 1935 TAMPERING WITH THE JURY A few individuals may remember the swift punishment met out to those who attempted to tamper with the jury that heard the case of the Teapot Dome oil lesions some years ago. These remembering individuals probably also recall the indignant public feeling against the jury tamperers. But that was crude stuff. Criminal lawyers, and even prosecuting attorneys, build their court cases on the basis that members of the jury must have completely open minds—"open minds" might be read ignorant minds—when they are chosen to hear the evidence in a case and decide that case on the evidence they hear. But only the most hard-bitten cynic would even think that in the main juries are tampered with. But read the papers and today, even the cheap popular magazines. A crime is committed. Metropolitan newspaper executives prefer a sensational crime. Then is loosed a whole barrage of nonsense and piffle for the edification of the newspaper reader. The police tell all they know or imagine about how the crime was committed. The prosecuting attorney holds daily press conferences during which he tries to let slip some bit of headline gossip. The defense attorneys also tell all they know or want the public to know. The suspected criminal has his entire life dragged out for public review. Ghost writers examine the suspects life with a psychological microscope to determine whether his environment had anything to do with the crime. The findings are all spread on the front page of the papers. The case comes to trial. Can a prospective juror be found who has not had his thinking tampered with? It is said that President Roosevelt's name is not in the New Manhattan directory, but that, regardless, the Republicans are hoping to get his number—Leavenworth Times. The Colorado River is one of the driest in the country. When a traveler takes a bath in one of the hotels along its banks, he gets out of the tub without using a towel, then after a few minutes when he is thoroughly dry, he brushes himself off with a whisk broom — The Cloak Room. EDUCATION A LA SOMEONE ELSE According to a story in the University of Michigan Daily the following notice appeared on a University bulletin board: "For Sale. A set of notes covering the complete course in ---- for Five Dollars. These notes are comprehensive enough to insure a B. If they are memorized, they may bring an A." So what? Anyway, that's at the University of Michigan. It is difficult to mention specific instances of a similar situation on this campus without impugning the integrity of a majority of students whose greatest about the work they turn in to instructors. But what about those students who have their term papers written for so much a page? What about those students who turn in bug collections that cost them five cents a specimen? What about those students in composition and writing courses who turn in papers written by someone else? But what is the use? The picture gets too desrey. However, there is a lot of use in bringing up the matter. The moral is too obvious to need thumping, but how much better we would all feel if there wasn't that small minority that depends on such tactics to "get by." Sensuality and unnecessary repetition has robbed a grand old statement of its good standing in the world of letters. Possibly we do choke up in cholesteral indignation at the person who mouths the phrase, "necessity is the mother of invention," yet along comes the news from a French source to forever prove the truth of the old saw. SANCTIONS AND INVENTION Faced with the economic stress caused by the leveling of economic sanctions against them, Italians have had to face some rather bitter realities. Fascist scientists have been busy with test tubes and retort to discover substitutes for materials once imported but now difficult to get because of the loss of international trade. The magazine Vo of Paris reports that something is about to happen in the wool industry. It seems that an Italian has discovered that good wool can be made artificial from casein, a by-product of milk. The manufacturing process involves use of the same sort of equipment that is used to manufacture rayon. A hundred pounds of raw milk will, according to present information, produce about four pounds of wool. And you women who have knitted a dress know that four pounds of wool yarn is a lot of string. Maybe Massolini will not succeed in "Christianizing Ethiopia". But his scientists may make an equally great contribution to civilization by saving us from contemplating those dreary pictures of the shorn hamb. "Kansas libel laws are much more liberal in Kansas than in most other states"—From a final examination paper in Law of the Press. That would seem to be a rather natural inference. A constituent who had complained about the AAA program now demands a comprehensive substitute, it reminds me a little of the boy, who after he'd murdered his parents, sought sympathy from the Court and jury because he was an orphan—The Clock Room. Campus Opinion NOTE TO WRITERS OF CAMPUS OPINION LETTERS *“Angry over EVR will be tough and unfair to the elderly who may have been in financial trouble, even if they have not been hospitalized, except when the system of caution expires.”* A recent report from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) said that “EVR is more likely to cause long-term disability than conventional methods of care.” With this size of the Dalai Klamma a new serene breeze and with a new wind, it is a good time to all invitation to certain things and be in welcome hence. The admissible without communication to this old friend, the friendly letters will be held either at the 209 week final. Two bounded winds, incidentally, is not much more than the length of this note. Be conscious in your expressions. Don't say the same thing ever over a dozen lines. Deceptions indicate that all of them appear intentional. Editor Daily Kansas: Should the University of Kansas offer a course in marriage to young men and women students? Of course Where, then, can the University help him? It can give him in one short course an understanding of the role of the sciences and their applications. Such a course would embrace the fundamentals of the biology and psychology of sex and the economics and ethics of co-operation in marriage. The class, to be given by a professor at a university, would need to be a mixed group, using the discussion method. Other generations passed the technique of family life down from father to son and from mother to daughter. Daughter needed only to be taught the household arts, given an hour's embarrassed sex instruction the day before her marriage and she was equipped for a lifetime of marriage. The sole role was that of the provider. All this has changed. We all are required to learn to write; would-believe we even have to learn to speak. What about teaching us? OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. 23 FEBRUARY 5,1926 No.87 Notice that at Cancellation Office it at a firm, pre-selling university post-secondary and 11.99 yrs old, pre-sending university pre-sending university The teacher would be an important factor in a course of this kind. He—or she—would have to be emotionally mature and well-balanced. Dr. Florence Sheron—that grand person who has raised twin girls and who is in the Home Economics Department now teaching girls how to have healthy babies—has been working for a while, and she realizes that young men as well as young women need training to get the best out of married life. CO-ED CLUB: Co-Ed Club will meet Thursday evening, February 6, from 7 to 8:35 o'clock, in the women's Louise, Central Administration building. Miss Paya Orelup, of the Lawrence High School Home Economics department, will lead discussion on fabrics and styles. All women are welcome. ENGINEERING BOOK EXCHANGE: The Engineering Book Exchange is now open in Marvin Hall. Catherine Holmes, Manager, Co-Ed Club. MID-WEEK DANCE The first regular mid-week dance of the semester will be held tonight from 7 to 8 p.m. on Wednesday. Howard Moreland, Manager. SIGMA ETA CHI: There will be a business meeting Thursday, February 6, from 7 to 8 p.m. in the Women's League of the Memorial Union building. This is important. Please all members be present. Evangeline Clark, President. Ancient Antics 20 Years Ago By D.L.H. W.S.G.A: There will be a special meeting at 4:30 Thursday in the Council room. The Kansas Angles, (They were Agents then but collegemen now) beat Kansas last night in basketball. (This was done Doe Alien so don't worry about it. It probably won't happen again in twenty more years.) Julia Jencks, President. Headline in the Kansai reads: VEN- TILATION OF WOMEN'S BEST ROOM WRETCHED. (The dastardly deeds of these women smokers.) Professor Twinhoehl says that the people in Biblical days couldn't really have built the Tower of Babel. You see after it had it grown to a height of about 1,200 feet the weight of the structure would have crushed the foundation stones. (It is pleasant to hear after all these years when there is not a trace of Beblyahia left that we don't have to worry. Of course they had to only go about a trillion miles to get to where they started but that in nothing. It looks like the good Dard should have just let them build until they fell down. A two-inch ad in the Kansan states: UNIVERSITY GIRLS An advertisement in the paper reads: LEES COOLING INN~Reserve your room early. (Serve your love with gin, harips, and buntles, my dear!) o If you haven't been in lately drop by soon and see how much dress value and style $7.99 can buy. OVER THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Phone 511 - One friend tells another, and a friend tells it—“That’s better than any advertisement. Nanette could ever buy!” and party dresses— (Elmer, what do you mean by trump- ping on my hem? ) NANETTE We Are Open Now Fielding Yost, the "Hurry Up" Yest of And Invite You to We repair and remodel coats, furs, and party dresses. Breakfast 7:30-8:45 Lunch 11:30-1:00 Dinner 5:15-6:30 HOURS for SERVING TRY our FOODS Also serving the special meals at $2.15 per week. M THE CAFETERIA On the Hill **football** coaching fame, former Kreuzan coach wain in town to the visit other day. (Well it's nice to then give he us a thought now and then. At tent we had something to brag about when he was coaching.) NEW CLASSES SHORTHAND and TYPEWRITING For K. U. Students Lawrence Business College BLUE MILL Resolve: To "Hang-out" at the 1009 Mass. 702-4-6 Vt. Our Mechanics Are Experts-Factory Trained. We Keep Them Running Like a Watch. Call or Phone for V8 Service. HAMILTON MOTOR CO. Tel.534 It takes 25 operations to finish one Ford valve The stems of the rough valves first receive two preliminary grinding operations. Then they go through a furnace where the heads are brought to a red heat. Next, automatic fingers place them in a huge machine where a ram strikes the red-hot heads. This operation refines the grain structure in the head, straightens it, and forms the valve seat. Valves then pass through other grinding, machining and EACH Ford valve requires twenty-five separate operations from the time work starts on a rough valve until it is ready for use. That is a surprising number of operations for such a simple looking part, but typical of Ford care in manufacturing. polishing operations. Each stem is ground five times for greater accuracy and smoothness. Inspection gages keep a constant check. Other inspection equipment indicates the slightest "run out" of seat and checks stem end for squareness. Then the valves go into a constant temperature room where they are inspected for length. In spite of this care, each Ford valve is subjected to rigid final inspection. Amplifying gages check the stem for roundness within two tenthousandths of an inch. Similar gages check diameter. The Ford V-8 runs like a fine car because it is built like a fine car. No car at any price is made to finer precision limits. FORD MOTOR COMPANY Ford Schneider Bros. 622-24 Mass. Your Local Ford Dealer Phone 278 Reconditioned and Guaranteed Used Cars You Can Always Do Better at Schneiders EASY WAY TO CLOSE WINDOW AND TURN ON STEAM ON ZERO MORNING ...AND AN EASY WAY TO ENJOY A PIPE ROOSTER A SEEES SUNRISE AND BEGINS TO CROW AND FLAP HIS WINGS, BREEZE FROM WINGS STARTS BLADES ON WINDLASS REVOLVING WHICH PULLS CATCH AND ALLOWS WINDOW TO DROP SHUT. ATTACHMENT ON WINDOW - LIFT TURNS ON STEAM IN RADIATOR C. P.S. ON CLOUDY DAYS STAY IN BED BAM 10 P. A. HAS THE FLAVOR! AND I GET MORE PIPEFULS OUT OF THE BIG RED TIN LISTEN, MEN: MINISTER OF COMMERCE 2016-2020 MINISTRY OF COMMERCE GOVERNMENT OF MALAYSIA BOND DECIDE ABOUT SMOKING - TOBACCO UNTIL YOU YOURE TRIED PA. IT'S CURP CUM FOR SLOW, COOL, SMOKING. WITH MELLOW FILLER, AROUND SO SMOKEES IN THE BIG 2-0Z. ECONOMY TIN PRINGE ALBERT THE NATIONAL JOY SMOKE! THE NATIONAL JUSTICE SYSTEM WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 5.1036 PAGE THREE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS K Hill Society BEFORE 1 P.M. CALL, KJ, 21; BETWEEN 2120 AND 9 P.M. CALL, 2701(K) or 2702(K). Young-Dalton Marriage Dorothy Louise Young, Lawrence, who attended the University last year, and Loring De Witt Dalton, who attended in 32, were married Saturday at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and M. H. Young of Lawrence. ☆ ☆ ☆ Both Mr. and Mrs. Dalton attended Washburn College in Topeka where Mrs. Dalton was a member of the Alpha Phi sorority. Goodwin-Minton Wedding Misses Jean Stark, c'encel, Mary Kathryn Bornell, b'v36, and Lee Eun c'37. were bridesmaids at the wedding. Alpha Chi Sigma sorority announces the marriage of Helen Loonie Good-luck, ed. 2013, to E. C. Minton, Jr., of Philadelphia, and took place on Saturday in Howell. The University Women's Glee Club will meet Thursday afternoon at 3:00 in Myers Hall. The club's annual Finance Tea will be held at which time contributions to the scholarship fund will be made. Arrangements are in charge of Mrs. George Food and Mrs. Lawrence Woodruff. The local chapter of the American Association of University Women will hold a lunch meeting Saturday at 1:00 p.m. at the Colonial Tea Room, Mrs. John G. Stutz, International Relations Chairman, will be in charge of the program, will be in a roundtable generation of payment of the war debt. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ku The wives of professors in the School of Engineering and Architecture were entertained at bridge Monday evening at the home of Mrs George Beall, 1909 Vermont street. Mrs Earl D. Huy, Mrs. E. D. Klinny, Mrs Erich C. Young, Mrs M. D. Young, Mrs C. M. Young are happiest with horses. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Alice Irwe Cunningham, c37, of Ralo, Neb., member of the Alpha Omicron Pi sorority, has re-entered the University this semester after having been out of school last year. Her母校 is the University, is a guest at the A. O. PI house. Henrietta Bates, Salinga, who was graduated from the School of Fine Arts last semester, was married last Friday in Salem to Herman Schuster city, Elizabeth Jean Heuright, a group of violin players, played a group of violin solos. ☆ ☆ ☆ Siamka Sappa announces the pledging of Arsene Irving St. Joseph, Moe; Betty Graham, Milwaukee; Wine; Ike Kristian Crawford, Spring Hill; and Clarice Crawford, Spring Hill. ☆ ☆ ☆ The K. U. Damon will entertain with a box suit for their husbands at 6:30 this evening at the home of Mrs. C. Trianion Jones, 4245 Ohio Street. ☆ ☆ ☆ Alpha Thu Omega fraternity announces the pledging of Wheaton McNab Miller, Tangusone. Mr. Miller enrolled in the University this semester. Mrs. J. H. Kremen, bonsonet at the Phi Delta Theta fraternity house, returned yesterday from a visit in Belmont. --the pledging of Jack Vogel, e'39, and Allen Sleeper, e'39. Phi Delta Theta fraternity announces START THE NEW SEMESTER RIGHT with adequate tools. We recommend Webster's New International Dictionary, 2nd. Ed. $20.00 Funk & Wagnall's Practical Standard Dictionary, $5.00 Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, $5.50 Seddman's Medical Dictionary, $7.50 Heath's German Dictionary, $3.00 Heath's French Dictionary, $3.00 Cassell's French Dictionary, $2.50 Roget's Theraurus, $1.00 Crabb's English Synonyms, $1.00 You will be most welcome to come in to see these. THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Tel. 666 CLASSIFIED ADS ROOM FOR BOYS, Large, first floor outside entrance. Hot and cold water. Southwest rooms around room. Very desirable. 1283 Tamworth. Photos 1703. PHONE K.U. 66 ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT. To make resumes. Extra good beds, $5 and $8 per month. Also garage. Breakout if desired. Call 223-769-1234. PHONE K.U.66 BOYS: THREE ROOM apartment with sleeping bedroom. Modern. Cot and cool heat. Hot water at all times. Bison- sensible rates. Call 452-7381 or 8251. BOYS: Have you seen the good mad- men rooms at 101 Riheo Bahai? Prices reasonable. Phone 1361. -37 CLEAN WARM ROOMS - One double room, one half room, at 1222 Nissippi Miss Dukes, Phone 222 - 11 BOYS: Large that floor room accommodates 2 or 3 boys. Also booby-doo accommodates, hot and cold in room. 433 Yarmouths. Floor Plans 1210 or 2120. -8 TAXI BOYS: A very pleasant single north room, also garage. 1418 Tennessee. Phone 3355. -+9 Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S — 920-22 Mass. TAXI TAILOR One Stop Clothes Service Station SCHULZ THE TAILOR 924 Mass. TYPING MCFAAQ-3564 - reduction on any per- mium, with a午 ad. except Saturday. at 12:00 noon. See MCAQ at hair cat. 17.30 BEAUTY SHOPS, 219 Mass. Phone (233) 9419; Mass. Phone (233) 9419; Mass. GAVE YOUR term papers typed by an experienced typist. Very reasonable. Photo 60. -57 Penthouse for sale or lease (list one interior) FIRE, three bedrooms, 304 square feet. Contract terms, see below. **Contract prices**, per square foot, are based at the Penthouse Business Office (BPO). FOU'S SALE: Halizlaw's "Principles of Marketing" and a "Land Economics Test" (Mimi's mini Survey Committee) CALL Pet. 2053. -80 Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity announces the pledging of James Daniels of Kansas City. BEAUTY SHOPS --the pledging of Jack Vogel, e'39, and Allen Sleeper, e'39. BCOUN AND BOARED for boys, $20 per calendar month. Mamas served free family. 1308 Kentucky. Phone 2235R. LOST: Red Vacuumate Poker form- tain pin. Revail. Call Marjorie Erinola LLBJ, 1248 Ohio. -88 OY2B: Board and room. Excellent location. Large, family style meals. comfortable rate. 1238 Ohio. -52 Beta Theta Pi fraternity announces the pledging of Charles Lovelace, c38,f Kansas City, Mo. ROOM AND ROAD Change Orchestra Director OVS-Large delightful room with preschool the high. Excellent meals time in a day including Sunday meals, family meals, festival meals, Massachusetts, 722 The first meeting of the Little Symphony orchestra will be in the auditorium of the Administration building at 3:30 o'clock tomorrow afternoon and a study begun of the London symphony of Haydn, it was announced. MISCELLANEOUS Raymond Stuhl, an instructor in cello and a member of the University string quartet, will take over the directorship of the University Little Symphony orchestra this semester, it will perform yesterday by Karl Kerstner. ☆ ☆ ☆ Student Loans ABE WOLFSON 743 Mass. Stuhl will replace Mr. Kuesterstein, director of the K. U. Symphony orchestra, who has directed the Little Symphony orchestra since it was organized eight years ago. Mr. Stuhl recently returned from three years of study in Berlin, Germany, where he was active in musical ensembles. FOR SALE --in the University auditorium. Three major appearances of the orchestra will be given during the semester. The first will be during the March Vegeters on March 15. On March 26, an hour program will be broadcast in the afternoon as a program of the semester, the Spring Concert, will be given during Muscle Week here. Several novelties in keeping with the festivities of the week promise to make the orchestral program an attractive event. Raymond Stuhl Will Take Charge o The University Little Symphony ☆ ☆ √ The K. U. Symphony orchestra will have its first rehearsal of the new sein the University auditorium. Three major appearances of the orchestra will be given during the semester. The first will be during the March Vegeters on March 15. On March 26, an hour program will be broadcast in the afternoon as a program of the semester, the Spring Concert, will be given during Muscle Week here. Several novelties in keeping with the festivities of the week promise to make the orchestral program an attractive event. mester at 7:30 o'clock Thursday evening in the University of Michigan. The personal of the two symphony orchestras will be largely the same this semester as last, but some change will be made, according to Mr. Kiersteiner, and others interested in joining them are urged to consult Mr. Kiersteiner's mail or to apply to Fine Arts office for information concerning credits. The orchestra department has a number of instruments including violin, cellos, basses, oboes, clarinet, and harp instruments. Some players play instruments but do not have them KFKU 2. 30 p.m. Kansas Writers, Miss Myri Hull of the English Depart ment --m. W. Kremenko Cornell 6:00 p.m. Elementary German Lesson Prof. E. F. Engel. 2:45 p.m. New Notes, W. A. Dill, K. U. News Burman. February 5—Wednesday 6:00 p.m. Musical program, arranged by Laurel E. Anderson, Associate Professor of Orphan 15 p.m. March of Events, H. B. Chish, Associate Professor of Political Science, and E. N. Dawn, Assistant Professor of Journals February 5—Thursday 2:30 p.m. Spanish Lesson, Mr. Clarence Christian. 2.44 p.m. News Flashes, W. A. Dill, K. U. News Bureau. 2:47 p.m. Elementary French lesson Mr. W. Kenneth Cornell. Mr. W. Kenneth Cornell, 6:00 p.m. Elementary, German Lesson Motivational Fridays £50 p.m. Music Appreciation, Prof. Music Workshop February 6—Thursday at the UNION FOUNTAIN 6:00 p.m. Island Athletic Interview, arranged by E R. Eilel, Professor of Physical Education 8:15 p.m. Musical program arranged by Miss Irina Pebody, Assistant Professor of Voice. THE UNIVERSITY OF CHAMPAIGN Fortuary - Saturday 5:00 p.m. Musical program, presented by the University Woodwind Quintet. An invigorating stimulant. Fresh SILEX COFFEE Read the Daily Kansan want ads. Sub-Basement Memorial Union GET IT AT THE BOOKSTORE TEXTBOOKS and SUPPLIES Booksellers Row - We deliver Rowlands Two Book Stores VALUES lands The shortest month in the year brings the longest values in years. What do you need? A Sunday suit? A Monday shirt or a Tuesday suit of underwear? This is a great month for filling in and the beauty of thinking of us first is that we're offering the greatest values in years. Winter needs in stock, to piece out the season . . . or new Spring shirts, hats and neckwear if you're rushing it. CHECK with us Obe's HEAD TO POOL OUTKITTERS DURING THIS COLD WEATHER Hot Water Heaters ---- $4.95 up Prestone, Alcohol, Winter Gear, Lubrication Tire and Brake Service GOOD YEAR Carter Service Call 1300 Open All Night By Patronizing ECONOMIZE The Student Book Exchange @ SPONSORED BY W.S.G.A. O We have been buying and selling textbooks for years. K. U. students have learned to save at the Book Exchange. Room 5, Sub-Basement Open From 9 to 4 Union Building Sacrifice Sale of Life Time Pens We have permission to sell at 1,2 price all our old model Life Time Pens. We have in stock: Come in and look them over Also Zipper Note Books and K.U. Canvas Covers Coe's Drug Store No. 2 411 W.14th 27 Life Time Sheaffers 19 Parker Duofolds 22 Collink Enduras THESE WILL ALL BE SOLD The $5.00 Pens for $2.50 $7.00 Pens for $3.75 $10.00 Pens for $5.00 HALF & HALF MAKES ONE SWELL SMOKE! BROADWAY PRESS No Bite! No Bite! Will no Bite! Get chummy with your pipe. Pack it with Half & Half. Cool as a girl's: "I'm dated for Sunday." Sweet as her smile: "But I break it for you!" Fragrant, full-bodied tobacco that won't bite the tongue—in a tin that won't bite the fingers. Made by our exclusive modern process including patent No.1,770,920. Smells good. Makes your pipe welcome anywhere. Tastes good. Your password to pleasure! Not a kit of bits in the tobacco or the Tetragon Tin, which gets smaller and smaller as you use the tobacco. No bitterness as you search for a match, even the last one. HALF AND HALF The Safe Pipe-Tobacco FOR PIPE OR CIGARETTTE PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY K'ANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 5, 1936 T COTTAGE u n d e r N E W m a n g e m e n t Announces Its FORMAL OPENING E MUSIC and ENTERTAINMENT By LOUIE KUHN'S ORCHESTRA Thursday Evening February 6th--7:00 to 9:00 p.m. FREE COKES and Hilarious Merrymaking From 7:00-9:00 p.m. BAND BOX Beauty Shop PHONE 430 AT THE COTTAGE 175 & OREAD FEATURING THE NEW Thermique Heaterless PERMANENT WAVE ALSO ALL STANDARD PERMANENTS REGULAR PRICES OPERATORS HAZEL' DICK FRANCES AMBROSE HELEN DICK DAISY SHELLEY Perfect Hair Cutting and Styling 740 Vermont Modernized in Every Detail Completely Redecorated Congratulations PHONE 432 INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY The NEW COTTAGE invites you to become acquainted. Now equipped to extend you Quality plus Service. POLAND PARTY DECORATIONS A SPECIALTY LET ME HELP YOU WITH YOUR PARTY WORRIES! P H O N E 1641 DECORATED and DESIGNED by DON ALEXANDER DECORATOR We Have Hundreds of Smart Wallpapers Similar to Those Used in The Cottage Cook's Paint for Wear and Weather Lawrence Paint and Wallpaper Store Phone 1473 919 Mass. GRANADA 25c. 'till 7 - Why Pay More? THURSDAY For the Week-end! The Man Who Wrote This Story Went to Jail-- ENDS TONITE! Rafael Satinini's World-Famed Adventure Classic "CAPTAIN BLOOD" Actually the Most Exciting Picture Ever Filmed! Rather Than Betray the Source of His Secret Information. NEVER BEFORE ON THE SCREEN! Crashing drama thronging romance in the TRUBE "in" numbers "number" rackets "number" rocket From the MARTIN CUP EXCLUSIVE STORY with FRANKCHOTT TONE MADGE EVANS STUART SMITH JOSEPH CALEAIG PICTURE ALSO—Charlie Chase Panic "NURSE TO YOU" - Johnny Green's Band - News SUNDAY 5 Glorious Days NOTE- Producers Demand Mat. 25c Nite 35c The Singing Stars of "Naughty Marietta" More Glorious Than Ever Jeanette MacDonald - Nelson Eddy - "Rose Marie" Continuous Shows Sunday at 1-3-5-7-9 Come As Late A 6 p.m. for 25 c After 6 p.m. Sunday 35 c C BEST WISHES Weaver's The House of Fashion and Quality Call 636 Wholesale TOBACCOS and CANDIES Aug. J. Pierson and Son 902 Mass. Phone 1792 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1936 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS. PAGE FIVE Organized House Directory NATIONAL FRATERNITIES 355 ACACIA Brynwood Place 1252 ALPHA PHI ALPHA 1101 Miss. 837 ALPHA TAU OMEGA 1004 W. 4th 552 BETA THETA PI 1425 Tenn. 868 DELTA CHI 1245 W. Campus 1106 DELTA TAU DELTA 1111 W. 11th 2903 DELTA UPSILON 1025 W. Hills 15731 KAPPA ALPHA PSI 816 Maine 1700 KAPPA SIGMA 1045 W. Hills 957 PHI DELTA THETA 1621 Edgehill Rd. 443 PHI GAMMA DELTA 1540 La. 284 PHI KAPPA PSI 1100 Ind. 565 PI KAPPA ALPHA 1200 La. 726 SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON 1301 W. Campus 1862 SIGMA ALPHA MU 1332 La. 721 SIGMA CHI 1439 Tenn. 1277 SIGMA NU West 10th St. 1144 SIGMA PHI EPSILON 1001 W. Hills G12 TRIANGLE 1145 Ind. DORMITORIES AND CO-OPERATIVE HOUSES 860 CORBIN HALL ...420 W. 11th 1185 RICKER HALL ...745 Ohio 950 WATKINS HALL ...University Campus 804 WESTMINSTER HALL ...1221 Oread with the compliments of The NEW COTTAGE PHONE Prompt Delivery 970 Give Us a Ring NATIONAL SORORITIES 898 ALPHA CHI OMEGA...1246 Oread 290 ALPHA DELTA PI...1145 La. 3100 ALPHA GAMMA DELTA...1602 La. 2217 ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA...1701 Ohio 888 ALPHA OMICRON PI...1144 La. 731 CHI OMEGA...1345 W. Campus 698 DELTA ZETA...1043 Ind. 267 GAMMA PHI BETA...1339 W. Campus 295 KAPPA ALPHA THETA...1116 Ind. 718 KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA...Gower Place 415 PI BETA PHI...1246 Miss. 3140 SIGMA KAPPA...1625 Edgehill Rd. PROFESSIONAL FRATERNITIES MAINTAINING HUSES 389 ALPHA PCHI SIGMA (Chemistry) ... 1115 Tenn. 365 ALPHA KAPPA PSI (Com.) ... 1614 Kv. 2688 KAPPA ETA KAPPA E (Eng.) ... 1537½ Tenn. 628 NU SIGMA NU (Med.) ... 1147 Tenn. 1419 PHI ALPHA DELTA (Legal) ... 1140 La. 1018 PHI BETA PI (Med.) ... 1541 Tenn. 1902 PHI CHI (Med.) ... 1233 Oread. 1617 THETA TAU (Eng.) ... 1409 Tenn. For Good Cleaning and Pressing See DON DIXON at 12th & Oread (No. 2) Phone 75 New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPEARANCE GOOD LUCK HARRY From Stone Produce Co. Wholesale Fruit and Vegetables Country Club Beverages 304 W. 6th Phone 265 Best Wishes To The NEW COTTAGE The Best of Foods DRIVE-IN MARKET 8th & Ky. WHERE PARKING IS A PLEASURE Phone 435 Ask About the New Cities Service Ride Prover Cities Service Oil Co. Monk Guffin, Agent 7th & Vt. Phone 372 Phone 4 Fritz Co. The University Station Phone 65 JAYHAWK TAXI Ike Gruffin For HIGH QUALITY MEATS PHONE 272 Roy Lawrence's Market 906 MASS. J. R. Johnston Wholesale — Salted Nuts and Potato Chips Phone 26640 Topeka, Kan. 1243 Tyler Phone 56 Union Taxi Co. When in Kansas City Dine and Dance at the HOTEL MUEHLEBACH GRILL Tom Drake Agency Orchestras Dance Acts Entertainment Office — Room 1229 Hotel Muehlbach, Kansas City, Mo. The NEW COTTAGE is as near as Phone 9-7-0 There Is No Substitute FOR CHARLTON Insurance Agency Phone 689 DRINK YOUR DR. PEPPER AT THE NEW COTTAGE Dr. Pepper Bottling Co. 836 Vermont Phone 198 Phone 12 For TAXI Car Storage, Wrecker Service, Mechanic Service, Gas, Oils, Car Washing HUNSINGER'S Hudson - Terraplane Distributor 920-22 Mass. PHONE 696 Lawrence Sanitary Milk and Ice Cream Co. CONGRATULATIONS To The NEW COTTAGE We Wish You Success NEHI BOTTLING CO. 808 Vermont Phone 554 PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 5. 1936 Allen Will Direct Basketball Squad In Olympic Games Famous Kansas Universit Mentor Honored At Recent Committee Meeting Dr. F. C. Allen received notice Sunday of his appointment as director of the American Olympic basketball team. The head coach of the national team. The head coach of the team winning the playoff in New York, April 3, 4, and 5. The coach of the rumber-up will be named assistant team manager to team manager will be selected later. Dr. Allen is regarded as an outstanding contributor to the game and has been working for the past six years to have the game recognized as a competitive Olympics sport, an ambition that was realized this year. He is now the captain of the basketball coaches, since the retirement of Dr. Walter Mewellv of Wisconsin. Dr. Allen helped the enviable record of having won 10 conference championships in 28 years of coaching and since then, he has been one of the teams have won four championships. Besides putting out teams with winning ways, Dr. Allen has produced some coaches who have achieved no small portion of forms like themselves. Louis Menzel, head coach at Iowa State, Warren Bennett, head coach at Warrenburg, Abdulah Rupp played on the Kansas team in 1923 and is now head coach at the University of Kentucky. John Bunn, whose Stanford team is now trailing up the West coast, played at Kansas and was later freshman coach. Arthur "Dutch" Lobberis is from western Minnesota, Forest "Frosty" Cox is at the University of Colorado. Dr. Allen is the originator of the fiveman elastic classic defense system which found much favor with basketball coaches throughout the country. He has been a great student of the principles of basketball and frequently, with the help of his teammates, tries out suggested modifications under playing conditions. He has written extensively for sports periodicals, and in 1954 published his "Basketball Bible." Early in 1956 he will bring out a book based on changes in basketball that earned the latter "Basketball Incorporating Technique, Tactics, and Tales." Ever since his children were small Dr. Allen has planned to take his family on a trip to Europe, and his appraisal of the students he decided to decide to do this summer. He says lowest lowest round trip WINTER FARES Even Santa Fe The case and economy of a California or Southwest cation increases season by season. There's less time on the way, and more comfort for fewer dollars. Santa Fe U.S. Gastro Re e ease and jomy of a cornea or vacation between season time and commute sweedolls. California AND THE South West Cali $\textcircled{8}$ NOW—and all thru the winter — Arizona's famous desert invs, hotels and ranches, and Californi- nia's famous mountains that warn out doors best. So, this winter—daily Phoenix and Grand Canyon Pullmans on Grand Canyon Limited; fine springs in Arizona; Springs and all the Southwest. COMFORT in air-conditioned training; ECONOMY in lowest winter round-trip fares in Santa Fe history. RECORD LOW WINTER FARES Again SantaFe has cut its Round-trip Winter Fares—to the lowest in history. Delicious LOW COST Fred Harvey Meals. he will take one every one but Milton, who is a forward on the Jayhawk team, but that Milton will have to earn his way by playing on a winning team. Nebraska Beats Aggies Tigers and Sooners Also Win May we quote fares and help you plan your trip? Conference Teams Fight For Runner-Up Position W. W. BURNETT, Agt. Lawrenco, Kan. Phone 32 Big Six Standings Nebraska took sole possession of the runner-up position Saturday by defeating Kansas State 43 to 30 on their home court at Lincoln. The Huskers scored consistently against the Angels who hung away at the net ineffectively, and the Waltquist, Nebraska forward garnered high scoring honors with 10 points. While Kansas has remained second at the top of the Big Six backball standings and idle for more than two weeks, a lively race for second place has taken place among the rest of the conference teams. W L Pct. Kansas 5 0 1.000 Nebraska 3 2 660 Oklahoma 2 2 400 Missouri 2 4 400 Iowa State 2 4 333 Kansas State 1 4 200 Kansas State returned to Manhattan only to take another heating Monday night, this time from the Oklahoma Sooners who won a rough contest 32 to 32 and pushed the Aggies deeper to the conference cellar with four losses. With the score almost doubled on them at the half, 27-14, the Aggies Lawrence's Bargain Theatre PATEE 10c 15c ENDS TONITE All 10 c All Shows all Seats BEN LYON “FRISCO WATERFROST” Thurs. - Fri. JOAN BLONDELL GLENDA FARRELL HUGH HERBERT "WE'RE IN THE MONEY" managed to narrow the margin during the last period. Twenty-two fools were committed by both teams and by collecting 10 free throws and five field goals. Burns, K-State forward, easily won high scoring honors. The Tigers again jumped into a 3-point lead shortly after the half, soon trailed five points after an Iowa State spurt, and then led the rest of the way in after Captain Todd and Strom nested two field goals spice. Fleming, sharpening Cychoe forward, led the scoring field with 14 points. It took the tricky Missouri team to pull the "fast one" of the week, however. Still ranking from their defeat at the hands of the Warrenburg Teachers, the Tigers invaded Iowa State which was fresh from a pair of conference victories and downed Iowa State 33 to 29 Friday night. After this startling little display by Missouri, Nebraska feels none too sure of its second place as it must literally become its lair" at Columbia Saturday night. The game was nip and tuck during both periods. Missouri took an early lead in the first period but the score remained low, with Missouri knotted at 14-14 at the half. UNIVERSITY WILL NOT PLAY BASEBALL HERE THIS SPRING The University of Kansas will not participate in baseball this spring, according to a statement by Dr F, C. Ailen. Compilation of mail ballots from members of the athletic board showed them to be against taking part this year. The Big Six directors, at their Decen- me meeting, drew up a tentative sched- ule for conference baseball which in- cluded Kanaan, but the directors voted that, since baseball had not been in- cluded in the budget for the year, and since rainy weather had curdled food- it, it would not be wise to nurtificate. Also, coaching duties would have beer on the shoulders of Ad Linden, head football coach, and would have interfer with his spring football practice. Read the Daily Kansan want ads. NEW-START VARSITY Featuring and his Fourteen-Piece Orchestra SATURDAY, FEB. 8 Dates 75c Stags SPECIAL FEATURES Violin Trio - Harp - Blues Singer, Norma Walker MEMORIAL UNION BALLROOM, 9:00 - 12:00 Don't Forget Beaux Arts Ball Friday, Feb. 14 Roger Anderson RED BLACKBURN'S Orchestra Costumes - Serpentine - Hilarious Entertainment Everything IN UNIVERSITY SUPPLIES Note Books Zipper Books Note Book Fillers Slide Rules Drawing Paper Typewriters Fountain Pens 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 "Genuinely Capitativizing Play" ATKINSON, N. Y. 7TAM5 ACCENT ON YOUTH ETHEL BARRYMORE COLT Youngest Member of America's Greatest Theatrical Family A LEGITIMATE THEATRE ATTRACTION FRASER THEATRE Saturday, February 8 Admission — 50c, 75c, $1.00 Phone 174 for reservations. Tickets are now on sale at office in basement of Green Hall. THE LOVE OF THE MOTION PICTURES Here's one cigarette that writes its own advertising.. Here's on writes u. It's like this— You see I'm reading a Chesterfield advertisement and I'm smoking a Chesterfield cigarette, and all of you are smoking Chesterfields. Chesterfield CIGARETTES CHESTERFIELD Now listen—Chesteries are mild (not strong, not harsh). That's true isn't it? Then you read "and yet they satisfy, please your taste, give you what you want in a cigarette." That says it, doesn't it? Wait a minute— It says now that Chesterfields have plenty of aroma and flavor. One of you go out of the room and come back. That will tell you how pleasing the aroma is. Chesterfield writes its own advertising © 1956, LI GETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXXIII --p.m. Ethel Barrymore Colt in "Accent On" 7 p.m., chrtester, 8:15 a.m. LAWBENCE KANSAS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1936 on the SHIN By BUD EVANS, '36 Thomson Is Up to His Old Tricks Again . . . Salesman Noble . . . Ear-Muffs and Nose-Muffs. . . There's Nothing Like a Tree . . . Now Professor . . . Mae West Jenks. Glad to hear (and see) that Phi Thomason, my mute-brained friend, is back in school this semester. Seema he has wasted very little time in getting back into the swing of things. You know that old play-Thomason to Hoffman to Thomason to Deer-or something. It's an old play, I know, but personally, I thought he had given all that sort of stuff (not by choice of course), and I think he's been quite a queen of college life. I'll bet Charley Brown will be glad to耳览 your arrival, too. Gooh—what popularity! Don't forget about all those masty cracks you made due to Daisy, and remember your New Year's resolutions—Phill! Ray "Beebust" Noble, the super salesman of the campus, has the whole Kansas basketball team superstitions about chewing gum while they are on the court or playing to the team before each game, but on two occasions he forgot to bring his little bag along and in each of these games the Kansas team came close to being defeated. New they won't take responsibility; they are chewing that "superior product." Couldn't help from noticing the ear-muffs that are being worn by quite a few of the Chi Omega gals. They must be the hot stuff! Suzanne Engleman, who was a native New Yorker, she hasn't the nerve to wear them. She further says that she's truly in favor of such a device, though, and even thinks that a nose-wool wouldn't be out of the way. "I'll probably just bring something that bothers us—how do you girls hear with those ear-muffs on?" You know—youd be surprised to see the number of students interested in our great out-of-doors, the trees, flowers and staff. Why, the course in Trees and Shrubs alone boasts (2) of a good half a million students. Now there's the Dale O'Rille. Ann Haley Horton, Harry Smith, and Joseph Edmond Griswald, Chamele, and a bunch of others. It does my old heart go to see so many. For a while, I thought it was going to be the only one in the business—I don't mean the seen like! Camnus Calendar Hoard a good one on Professor Moore, of the English department. Secrets that Prof. Moore, during one of his final examinations, left the room. He was seen with his camera and then tiptoe back to within three or four feet of his classroom door. There he stood, listening intently, for a period at least fifteen minutes. He then opened his eyes, turned to face someone from down the hall, instead of from just outside the door—tricky, you know. Well, it's a good one on the professor anyway, 'cause his students knew it all the time! I tell you—they always someone ready to take the joy up. Understand that Judy Jencks is going to appear at the costume Beaux Arts Ball, as Mae West. February 14, 2016. I know she's going to O'well yes, that ought to help make an attractive affair—to say the least, so I think FIg will go and see her myself. Don't know why. I'm sure she's on siren and go as Grandma. Did ya ever hear of her? --p.m. Ethel Barrymore Colt in "Accent On" 7 p.m., chrtester, 8:15 a.m. Thursday, Feb. 6 James P. Warhase, speaker at Student Forum, Fraser theater, 8.15 p.m. Friday, Feb. 7 Psychological examination for new students. Phi Delta Chi dance, Memorial Union, 9-12 p.m. Pi Kappa Alpha party, 9-12 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 8 Basketball: Kansas vs. Oklahoma at Norman. Campus Sister tea, Henley house, 3-5 pm. Between-comestors varsity, Memorial. 9-12 p.m. Alpha Gamma Delta party, 9-12 p.m. Triangle party, 9-12 p.m. 'Naismith Week Will Be Observed Beginning Friday Kansas To Honor Founder Of Basketball at Game Between Jayhawks and K-State Hundreds of high schools and colleges throughout the nation are expected to observe "Naiamith Week" begin tomorrow night, but only Kansas University will have the privilege of personally Dr. James Naiamith, the inventor of the game of basketball. "Nasismh night" here has been reserved for Saturday night, February 15, when the Kansas Jayhawks meet Kansas State. Between halves, a special broadcast will be made from the University auditorium over WHEN in honor of Dr. Nasismh who has been numbered the K. U. faculty for years. Since its crude beginning with a couple of pearl backpacks and a soccer ball in 1891, Dr. Naismith's game has become known the world over and is now one of the major sports. It will become a part of the Olympic games for the first time in Berlin, Germany, next summer. It is to send Dr. and Mrs. Naismith to these Olympic games and to erect a memorial to him, that the national "Naismith Week" has been sponsored by the National Association of Basketball Coaches. During the week of Feb. 7 to 13 high schools and colleges have basketball games have been asked to contribute to the Titans' paid admission to the Ninthum Fund. In Kansas alone, 670 high schools have been invited to participate. In Oklahoma, 700 invitations have been sent to schools and officials of both states report a favorable response. Many schools in other states in the nation are expected to contribute to the fund. Haskell and Lawrence high school have already had their Nismith nights, the high school turning in over $18 from one gue's recipes. Funds exceeding those used to send the Naiads to Europe will be used for a memorial to the founder of basketball to be erected here, his present home, or in Springfield, Mass, where he was working as an instructor in physical education at the time he originated the game. Dr. Naimith was guest of honor Teach noon at the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce luncheon. A "Naimith Week" committee of Lawrence men, of which Dolph Simons and A. E. Westenstrom, former Jaswyn baskett hunter, are members of the of the observance he Dr. F. C. "Phog," Allen and Eld, Gileb, director of intramural athletes, are the University's representatives on the committee. ED ELBEL TO QUIZ MEMBER OF NAISMITH COMMITTEE The 163rd Athletic Interview will be given Friday night over radio station KFKU from 6:00 until 6:15, when Armin Wostemeyer will be interviewed by Ed Elbel, assistant professor of physical education. Wuestemeyer, who is on the committee for Naiamih Night, will be asked questions concerning the raising of funds for the fund and general athletic questions. Wostemeyer was a basketball star 1 the University during 1921, 22, and 23 when the University won the Missouri Valley championship twice. He was also a track man, participating in his 220-yard dash. Many part-time jobs are needed for men students. Anyone who can give work to those students will be in demand. Mr. Murray will mentain Bureau, phone KU 175. --team is on their own court, where they have been "hot" all year. The Huskies are down by 35.4 per game, with 35.4 per game, but their opponents have averaged an even 35 CURRENT NEEDLE Late enrollment for the College will be held in Robinson gymnastium Saturday, from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. MRS. F. E. PARKER Employment Needed Students wishing to make changes in their enrollment will enter at the EAST door. Late Enrollment Secretary. Students who are enrolling for the first time and those who are enrolling late will enter at the NORTH door. J. H. NELSON, Associate Dean. The Famous "Rock Chalk" Has Lived For 50 Years; Been Heard Around World The Kansas "Reck Chalk" called the most famous college yell in America has literally been heard around the world. The yell, which will be 50 years old this year, has been chanted before royalty, at their request, has sounded above the rour of battle in three wars, and its echoes have been heard across Alaska, the Philippines Islands and the diamond fields of South Africa. During the World War enlisted men were so shuffled about that regiments were made up of soldiers from all states. Finally the University of Kansas men in each American military unit they passed they would chant, "Rock Chaw-aw, Jay Haw-aw" and pause. Then from the Kansas pee in the other would come the answering "Kay U-oo." The French and Belgian soldiers were greatly impressed with this haunting novel, which dank soon became a trench cheer. The yell became so famous that Jayhawkers Far Ahead In Big Six Cage Rac The Big Six basketball race has reached the half-way mark now and Kansas still stands head and shoulders above the rest of the schools. Defensive and Offensive Records Show Allen's Team Is Best Team Is Best Every school except Oklahoma has played at least five games, and every school except Kansas has lost at least two games. The Jahwahayers are leading in both offense and defense. They have averaged 36.4 points per porter-player. Nebrake still holds second place, giving wint three games and last two, then going on to win a game from a game from the Jayhawkers, as their remaining game with the Kansas points per game, due in no small measure to the 45 points scored by Kansas against them. Oklahoma has moved into third place with two games won, two lost, and their fast-breaking offense has enabled the Sooners to average 333 points per game. Oklahoma may also be able to throw a wrench into the smoothly oiled Kansas machinery, as they have hit their winning stride after losing their first two games last week. On last week, Oklahoma made 18 of their first 23 shots at the basket. The uncertain Missouri Tigers are now in four place with two victories against three losses. The Tigers looked like they were going to win but their opening conference contest against Oklahoma resulted in a surprise victory for the Tigers. Their next three games showed the Tigers on the short end of the score, but they came from a back-to-back loss to No. 10 Steam. The Tigers have averaged 29 points to their opponents' 32. toward the ability to do every much this year. They have won two games and lost four, and have averaged 27 points per game to their opponents 34.5. The Cyclones have had a hard time getting under way this year, and the loss of eight games has helped to ruin their chances of inflicting much damage this season. So far no one seems to have any chance of nosing the Jawkawen out of the load, but the season is only half over. The lack of support between now and March 6. Kansas State is holding the cellar down, having won only one game out of five. The Wildcats have averaged 29 points per game but their opponents have averaged 16. The Wildcats have two high scorers on their team in Burns and Groves, but the team doesn't have 20 points by himself against Oklahoma, and Groves made 17 points against Iowa State. Alien Out for Political Office Donald C. Allen, 1931, of Oklahoma has announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination for state senator from this district, comprising 25% of the state's seats and practiced law in Ottawa for a year *lowering his graduation, and is now completing his second term as county attorney of Jefferson County. This is *eforce* him to act as *staffer* for the district, under the pla which is used by the two counties. returning troops brought back tales of hearing it in the midst of battles, and its fame continued to spread. Company H of the 20th Kansas infantry took the yell to the Philippines in 1898, and it became the battle cry of the soldiers there. The yell was also used during the Boxer rebellion in China. Nobility assembled at the Olympic games in Anterbury requested that a typical American college yell be given. The colleague, John A. Stets got together and chose as the most representative and impressive the Rock Chalk of the University of Kansas. E. H. S. Bailey, professor of Chemistry here until his death in 1833, originated the yell and submitted it to the University Science club which adopted it on May 21, 1880. By 1887 it was officialized as the name of the original form "Raza Ruh Jajawkh, K. U." given three times with a quick accentato accent. By a gradual series of changes the yell can to have its present form about 1905, and it has been unchanged ever since. Prof. A. R. Marsh, who was connected with the English department from 1886 to 1889, suggested that "Rock Chalk" be substituted for the "Rah, Rah", when he observed that it not only rhymed with Jayhawk but also symbolic of geological period which covers much of Kansas and which there are several outcroppings on Mount Orbue. The meaning of the term "Jayhawk" is remarkably indefinite. One version is that it suggests the hardships through which the pioneers fought and labored to make Kansas a free state. Another version is that it suggests the hardships of 40' persons who perished on their way to California gold fields during the great rush of 40'. This the version given by Lincoln Phloer in his poem, "The Dramas of Kansas". Still a third version, which is sometimes taught to Kansas soldiers to battle life along the Missouri-Kansas line were known as Jayhawks. Oxford Man Visits Campus s Touring World on Whitehead Memorial Studentship A. Wright Rhodes, Oxford student, was a visitor at the University during the mid-semester vacation. While at the University Mr. Rhodes visited some of the fraternity houses to observe the fraternity plan of self-government. He also made visits to Dean Paul B. Lawson and Dean and Mrs. Henry Warner. Rhodes left England on July 20, sailing from London. He went down through the Mediterranean Sea, the Suez Canal, across to Colombia, Ceylon, then on to Australia and New Zealand. From there he sailed to San Francisco. He also visited Hollywood in California and rested Skipley Temple. Mr. Rhodes was awarded the Whitehead traveling徒休学期 last summer. The tour fund was founded by Sir George and Lady Whitehead in memory of their two sons who were killed in the college city at Oxford. The only requirement for the Whitehead scholarship is that the recipient must be planning to enter the business world at the conclusion of his college career. Rhodes is planning to enter the cotton industry, but he will return to England. No scholarship work is required in connection with his world scholarship tour. Rhodes says that he finds Americat the most interesting and hospitali country he has visited, and is enjoying his stay thoroughly. He has been fascinated by the color and movement of cities in this country from the day he landed in San Francisco. Rhodes plans to visit Chicago, Washington, New York and possibly Philadelphia before he sailed from New York for Liverpool. He hopes to go back to America afteriversity from Kansas City again before he leaves for Chicago. ANDERSON'S BAND TO MAKE ANDERSON'S BAND TO MAKE VARSITY DEBUT SATURDAY Roger Anderson, formerly known as Preston Anderson, and his 14-piece band will be presented at the Union Music Hall in New York and the New Start Varsity. This will be the first appearance of the new all-student band which features a varied program of hot, fast rhythm and slow waltzes. A violin trio, a solo harpist, and Norma Wallace, cC2, vocal solos are special artists presenting novelty numbers. To Give Beaux Arts Ball First Costume Party Ever Held Will Be St. Valentine's Day The first Beaux Arts Ball ever presented on the campus will be held at the Union Ballroom from 9 till 12 p.m. on Valentine's Day, Feb. 14. This may also be the first real costume dance, as such, to be given. The hallroom will be decorated and arranged in a manner similar to the famous Parisian Cafe de la Palex, with its large stone sculptures of objects of art in prominence. In the northwest corner of the room will be the artist's studio in which the dancers may have free sketches made of theming by members of the art department. Bill Cochrane, Union manager, has requested that all students who attend wear appropriate costumes, representing artists, a country, or a class of persons and not give so much attention to "tacky" costumes. A prize will be given to the man girl woman wearing the best costumes, in the opinion of the judges. "Red" Blackburn and his orchestra will furnish the music and free favors and serpentines will be given the dance costumes and shoes which begin promptly at 9:05 p.m. The ball is being given under the joint sponsorship of the Varsity Dance committee and Delta Phi Dhi, honoring members purchased from Betty Winney, fa36 president of the fraternity, and any of the members or from the main desk of the Union lounge. The tickets will be sent to the ticket office. Tickets will sell for $1.00. Pekin Business Throttled By Union Strikers' Action Guard City Water Plant To Prevent Possible Dynamiting Kevin, III, Feb. 5—(UP) - Strikers throttled Kevin business life tonight and moved towards paralyzing industry "Flying squadrons" of aerospace companies gas stations and taverns. Of trouble, town-folk remained at home. Mayor W. E. Siderman posted guards about the water works for fear of dynamite. Elated at their first success, strikers begin picketing the Flaishmann Yess plan and Quaker Outs and corn crops. They expect to take them tomorrow or the next day. The "general strike" which threatened to be general for the first time since it was invoked at 8 a.m. Tuesday is in protest against police tactics at the American Distilling company. Tear gas has been used to protect workers. A system of sentinels and flying squadrons has halted all truck shipments of food and fuel. Out-of-town newspaper correspondents roamed the deserted streets trying to find someone to give them something to eat. It was impossible to get a taxi ride, a gallon of gas, a sandwich, or a haircut. The hotel owners stood at the windows of their dining rooms as the half-starved correspondents gathered for a free lunch. Store owners closed their business when they were forced under implication of violence to find a petition asking removal of Police Chief Harry Donadee. Some of them put signs in show windows saying "closed on account of Union Holiday." Mayor Schurman turned over the responsibility for requesting state troops to Sheriff Ralph Gore. The mayor who said yesterday he might consider removing Donadee said today he had no intention of doing Correspondents To Meet The K. U. News Correspondents will meet this afternoon at 3:30 in room 106 Administration, building, to reorganize the newsroom according to Phil Bramwell, chairman. Lindley Visits in Topica Chancellor E. H. Lindley spent yesterday in Topica. He gave an address at a meeting of the High Twelve club. Lindley Visits in Topeka All changes in address and telephone numbers must be in by Tuesday, the 11th, if they are to be in the Student Directory Supplement. Dave Conderman, Mgr. Will Speak Tonight IRELAND Dr. James P. Warbassc Warbasse Will Discuss 'Socialized Medicine Afternoon Additional Lecture To Be Given Tomorrow Afternoon In addition to addressing the forum gathering tonight on the subject of "Co-operatives, the Only Way Out for Farmers and Workers." Dr. James P. Warbuse will speak this afternoon at 4:30 in the auditorium of the Administration building on the subject of "Socialized Medicine." It had been expected that the afternoon meeting would be limited to medical students, but in view of the intense public interest in this subject, the meeting will be open to anyone interested. Dr. Warbake comes well qualified to speak on both subjects. He practice surgery in New York for twenty-five years and is an expert on technical treaties, as well as books such as "The Doctor and the Public," "The Conquest of Disease," and "Medical Sociology." These books are used by the medical art by the public. Dr. Warbasse, through his constant surveillance of economic developments, became interested in the co-operative movement before the war and became convinced that in this program lay the foundation for an applied co-operative principles to his plan of medical sociology, and has actively promoted courses in various colleges on this subject. He still lectures at a university recognized as an authority on surgery. But his chief interest lies in the cooperative movement, and he has served as president of the Co-operative League of America since its establishment in 1918. He was a member of the Consumers Advisory Board of the NRA, and has acted as representative for the Consumers Legos on various other bodies. Dr. Warbacek emphasizes that he does not seek the establishment of a system of state medicine and he is just one member of a public health system as are those who oppose what they term "state medicine." He would establish a better system of health protection, based on the fact that such a treatment would benefit. He believes that clinics, laboratories, and hospitals, owned and controlled by patients and prospective patients, should be established, based on the prevention of disease. No admission fee will be charged to either the afternoon or the evening meetings. Assistant Librarian Appointed Assistant Librarian Appointed Miss Ruth H. Jeremy, who holds an A.M. from the Kansas State Teachers College at Emporia, and is a graduate student in computer science, has been appointed first assistant on the main circulation desk of the University library. Mrs. DeLina Whitla continues as head of the circulation desk. MULTIPLE DIMENSIONS AUTHORIZED PARTIES Fridav. February 7 Christian Young People's Society, 11 p.m. Pi Kappa Alpha, House, 12 pm. Phi Delta Phi, Memorial Union, 12 p.m. Saturday, February 8 Varsity, Memorial Union, 12 p.m. ELIZABETH MEGUILAR, Advisor of Women, For the Joint Con- mittee on Student Alpha Gamma Delta, House 12 p.m. Enrollment Total May Set Record For Spring Term Psychological Examination For New Students Will Be Given Friday If expectations of officials in charge of enrollment this semester are fulfilled, attendance at the University of Kansas may reach a new all-time high, according to data exceeding slightly the record mark of attendance on March 1, 1951, of 4038. Although the number of students will decline from the mark of 4246 in attendance last fall because of normal reasons, the expected 300 new students may boost the spring enrollment above the 1831 figure to a record number. At this time last year there were 3970 students in the University and Raymond Nichols, secretary to the Chancellor, stated yesterday that but not over last fall" and as last year's spring enrollment of new students was 259 the expected 300 this year may result in a record number. The exact number of University students will be known in a few days, as soon as the deadline for paying fees is pact, as a few who enrolled will withdraw because of sickness, failure to pay fees, and various other reasons, indicating points to at least an approximation of the 13d high mark. Figures show that the number of students here has increased steadily since the decline in 1932 following the beginning of the college program. In 1932, enrollment numbered 3778, and since that time increasingly large numbers of students have entered school at the beginning of the spring semester to boost second semester enrollment. Students attending Liberal Arts and Sciences, for the benefit of students arriving late or wishing to change courses, will be held in Robinson gymnasium Saturday morning from 9:30 to 11:30, according to announcement from the College office. Students wishing to make changes in their enrollments will enter the gymnasium at the east door, while these enrolling for the first time or enrolling late will enter at the north door. It is emphasized that enrollment will take place only in the forefront. In the past students have sometimes had to leave, and found that they were too late. In some instances clauses that were closed during the latter part of the regular enrollment will be re-opened Saturday, because of vacancies left by students who have dropped out in the meantime. These students are urged to use this special period for changes or late enrollment, it is pointed out that any necessary changes may be made as late as next Friday, Feb. 14. After that the $2.50 fee will be charged. The psychological examinations for new students will be given Friday at 2:30 p.m. in the main Auditorium, according to Prof. A. H. Turrow, who is the principal of the students except graduate students are required to take these examinations before enrollment is considered complete. Each student taking the test will be entered into a register when filled at the Registrar's office will complete that student's enrollment. Because of the two day enrollment schedule and in order to avoid interference with the changes to be made in the enrollment on Saturday, it was necessary to give the examinations on Sunday and Thursday a hope that instructors allow students having conflicting classes to take the examination on that day. Need New Band Members Both Concert and Military Organizations Report Vacancies - Vacancies left at the end of the seseter in the concert band and the K. * U. Military band are expected to be recruited from the band. A band instrument and wants to secure membership in either of these Lands is urged to see Prof. Russell L. Wiley at - Clairinets, choes, bassoons, flutes and percussion instruments are needed most. The concert band practices in the auditorium on Monday and Thursday mornings, and also on Tuesday nights. The military band rehearses in the auditorium on Wednesday and in Marvin hall on Thursday afternoon from 4:30 to 5:30. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 6, 1936 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS PUBLISHER HARRY VALENTINE BILL GLEE ALIA FRATTER MANAGING EDITOR Fred M. HARRIS, F. BUSINESS MANAGER F. QUINTIN BROWN CAMPUS EDITOR BELLE ROOPMAN MARVEL UP EDITORS IHON HAWAII MAKE UP EDITORS DILLA ROWNEY NEWSPORTS EDITOR LOUIS COURTIN, JAMES BAUME NEWSPORTS EDITOR DIMONTE SHAW SOCCER EDITOR JAMES BEAHN SNOTCHING EDITOR JAMES BEAHN KANSAN BOARD MEMBERS BILL DECKER MARGARET BOSS RUTHFIELD HAYER HERBERT MURRAY RUTH F. QUINCENT BROWN BARRY HAWKINS RUTH SYLAND SHRISTEN JAYES ALLEN MERMAN HORNE HADLEY JOHN HADLEY IN JOHN HADLEY TELEI Business Office NX 716 Royal Hotel NX 726 Business Office NX 726 Business Office NX 726 Business Office NX 726 Business Office NX 726 Business Office NX 726 Business Office NX 726 Business Office NX 726 Business Office NX 726 Business Office NX 726 Business Office NX 726 Business Office NX 726 Business Office NX 726 Business Office NX 726 Business Office NX 726 Business Office NX 726 Business Office NX 726 Business Office NX 726 Sale and exclusive national advertising representative NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE, Inc. GADEN, NY 10541 Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland, Seattle Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday mornings except during school holidays by students in the department of Journalism of the University of Kansas from the Press of the Department of Journalism. Subscription price, per year, $1.00 cash in advance, $1.25 on payments. Single copies, lee cah. Entered as second class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas. THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 6, 1936 CO-OPERATIVE SOCIETY At a time when hairbrain plans for social betement, and crackpot schemes to uplift the proletariat can be had for nothing more than the asking, it is encouraging to come across an organization like the Consumer's Co-operative Association. Here is a group with a practical plan to help the common man; a plan that is being carefully and unostentatiously put into effect, a plan that is more than theory. For nearly a century it has been used effectively in European countries, but Americans have only recently begun to realize its value. The Consumer's Co-operative is based on the principle that no man has a right to profit unduly from the work of another. Through a system of organized groups the Co-operative returns to the consumer the profit that now goes to the middle men and the big business men. Under this system democracy still prevails, and competitive prices are not cut, but the benefits from work are more evenly and justly distributed among the people who deserve them. It is a plan to make the dollar go further—a great deal further. With fanatics shouting their "isms", reactionaries beaming the "good old days," and politicians threatening to straighten out our social system, but only threatening, it would be well for John Public to turn his attention to the Co-ops. They offer just what the old boy is looking for; an improved system of living. Vitamin H has been discovered, it is announced. One reason, perhaps, why the vitamins are not using up the alphabet any faster is because they use only one letter at a time, instead of three or four, as the New Deal has done—Kansas City Kansan. REPORT OF PROFESSOR DIGBOGGLE "I promise to make better grades next semester." "I promise to make better ---" "I promise to ---" Professor W. W. Digbogle, director of the University Bureau of Statistics Regarding Student Savings, in a recent article, discusses the number of times that a student will make this self promise in the two days immediately following the receipt of final exam cards. The Professor states that it is a simple matter to find out the number of times that each individual makes the promise and gives us the following formula to use in making the deduction: First, add to the number of hours flunked those hours in which a grade of D was received, multiply this by the average number of breaths the individual takes per minute, then this total when multiplied by two days less the number of hours spent sleeping and eating, will give the number of times an individual promises himself to make better grades. The Professor says that he is entirely in disfavor with any student who makes these promises and then fails to keep them. To enable all students to keep the promises they have made he has devided this rule—each time an individual starts to go some place or to do something other than study, if he will forget to go, and spend half the time studying that he plans to spend elsewhere, then he will be able to keep the promise that he made to himself. From the article written by the Professor, we find that he is indeed a wise and educated man, so if he will follow his findings and teachings we will be able to truthfully say "I promise to make better grades next semester." Some papers are publishing lists of eligible bachelors in their communities for the benefits of the girls during leap year. But it's not publicity that the harried males need; it's protection.—Kansas City Kansas. Our Contemporaries PROFESSIONALE PATROTS SPOUT UN-AMERICAN AMERICANISM What is Americanism? To professional patriots and politicians it is a rhetorical flag which they wrap about themselves to conceal a lack of logic and insure immunity from attack. Hysterical nationalistic organizations and pressure groups level a shaking finger at those with whom they dislike the magic term "Un-American" blast them in their tracks. If their foes are un-American, then the implication is that these nationalistic groups and individuals are truly American. Perhaps in them the essence of Americanism may be found. Americanism, then, seems to be a dedication of the past without regard for the future. It finds satisfaction in vilifying "foreign" countries, from whence the pioneers of America came a few generations ago. Americanism has a profound distrust of any "tilt" ideas, because it is an untraditional belief and management on a framework of "foreign" political theories alter the case not at all. It is this type of Americanism that often delights in forming vigilante committees and preserving the fair name of justice with a lynching or two. This amsus provincialism hardly seems a satisfactory definition of Americanism. Americanism is not the exclusive property of one group or class. It should mean not a blind pride in our country's past but a common pride in our culture. America's history tells us that our country can be a better nation, and it is the will to take part in making America a better and greater nation. If the pioneer heritage of America means anything it should be exemplified in a spirit of thoughtful, fearless action into the problems of today. That is the only kind of Americanism worth defining—and having—Minnesota Daily. DEFEATED? NOW'S THE TIME TO START FIGHTING By now many students will have learned of failure in one respect or another in the University. Perhaps you failed to make as many friends, to read as many books, to settle as many problems, or to answer as many questions, but you might you would have by February 1, 1896. Or you have had one course if not all of them to a greater or less degree. Perhaps you just feel whipped. You have decided your University education has meant nothing to you. Maybe you came here expecting too much. You were told that in these days a person must have a "university education" to go along; so you came here to let the University prepare you for life. There is one thing fairly certain. If you are one of these fellows, through the proper attitude you can make the University do more for you than for someone who has been getting along really. You can make up your mind now that you will never amount to a hill of beans unless you learn to overcome defeat. Better that education defeat should have come to you now while you are young and young men don't get that way without straining. "Before a man can achieve excellence, the gods have ordained he shall sweat." -Daily Texan. UNDERGRADUATES AND THE ACCIDENT PROBLEM Aggressive "safe-driving" campaigns are being in-studied by students of a number of American universities and colleges. The old idea of the average college boy, which painted him as a rip-roaring irresponsible, mischievous figure, was armcuffed a blonde and one hand held a flask, was doubtless much exaggerated; it but remains a statistical truth that the most dangerous drivers are those in their late teens and early twenties. If the menace of automobile accidents can be brought home to these drivers they have taken an important step in curing the problem. One of the campaigns is being conducted at Yale, where the Yale News, as distinguished an undergraduate newspaper as the country possesses, has issued a pledge for students to sign. Signers of the pledge agree to practice and to drive always at moderate speeds, never to pass on hills or curves, to stop at stop sign and not "jump" traffic light, and to be fair to all other drivers. Any driver, young, middle-aged or old, who follows these rules will be involved in a major automobile accident, due to his own ness. —University of South Dakota Volunteer. Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m., preceding regular publication days and 11:39 a.m. on Saturday for Sunday issues. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol.33 FEBRUARY 6,1936 --increase increases. The tueses caps are thought to be made up of large areas of snow and water which drain and transfer themselves through the atmosphere over the surface of Mars to the other growing vegetation to grow in their path. CO-ED CLUB: Co-Ed Club will meet Thursday evening, February 8 & from 7 to 8:35 o'clock, in the Women's Hall, 1206 W. 42nd Street, New York, NY. Grouel of, the Lawrence High School Home Economics department, will lead discussion on fabrics and styles. NEWMAN CLUB: Newman Club will meet in the Church Hall at 8 o'clock tonight. The members are reminded to bring their club dues of $2e and $5e for the subscription to "The Modern Schoolman." Catherine Holmes, Manager, Co-Ed Club. INTERACRIAL COMMISSION. The Interacritical Commission of the Y.W.C.A. will meet at Henley House this evening at 7 o'clock. Martha Peterson, Dorothy Hodge, Cochairman PSYCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATION: The psychological examination for new students will be held Friday, Feb. 7, at 2:30 p.m. in the University Auditorium. All new students should come to the tests take these tests before enrollment is considered complete. Katharine Aston, Secretary. A. H. Turney. SIGMA ETA CHI: There will be a business meeting Thursday, February 6, from 7 to 8 m in the Women's Lounge of the Memorial Union building. This is important. Please, all members be present. W. S.G.A: There will be a special meeting at 4:30 Thursday in the Council room. Evangeline Clark, President. Julia Jencks, President. Y. M.C.A. CABINET. In room Calvin will talk at the regular meeting at 430 room in room 10 at Union University. A new discovery in photography as applied to astronomy recently was credited to James Edson, who received his A.B. in astronomy at the University last spring. Edson has been doing experimental work in astronomical photography at Lowell Observatory, Flagstaff, Aziz. since last summer and has contributed to photographs of his work to Miss Lily Sonnery, secretary to Dean E. B. Stouffer. Do means the new process of photography, a composite method of super-imposing images on top of one another to a total number of as many as 30 greater clarity of planet images has been established. Photographic work on the planet Mars, which is nearest to the earth in the solar system, has presented many interesting correlations to present theories concerning the planet. A collection of the drawings and photographs done by the new process won third place in the recent meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in St. Louis. A similar collection are now being pre- sent to be sent to the next Royal Astronomical Society meeting in London. E. C. Shlaper, a brother of Dr. V. M. Shlaper, director of the Lovell Observatory, which is a privately endowed astronomy institute into astronomy, has made nineteen drawings of the planet Mars, and these drawings, showing the polar caps, areas of vegetation, atmosphere, and surface features, have provided accuracy to composite photographs which Edson has been able to secure by combining a number of negatives of the same view of Mars including those during them as a single photograph. Former Student Makes New Discovery Bringing Stars Closer to Astronomers To those not familiar with astronomy a few words of explanation are necessary for a more improved sense of appreciation of the photographs and d drawings. Astrodomains hold the belief that planet Mars is about two-thirds the size of Earth and that its whole content of water is approximately to that of Lake Erie. Polar caps seem to alternate between the north and south poles of Mars, the one cap decreasing in size as the op- Lawrence's Bargain Theatre 10c PATEE 15c Shows 3-7-9 BANK NITE TONITE NOW! ENDS Friday The Grandest Hits of the Season. JOAN BLOENDLE GLENDA FARRELL "WE'RE IN THE MONEY" CORNERBOOK MONEY" Comedy - Novelty 25c 'til 7 --- Why Pay More? NOW! GRANADA The Man Who Defied the Underground to Get the Truth About the Shocking Snake Scandal The Whole "Inside Story" ENDS SATURDAY EXCLUSIVE STORY Martin Moneyn, crack reporter, who wrote this story, went to watch a video of the release of information! But it's all new now—All TRUE—al sensation- ally thrilling—in a screen play dynamic from start to finish. FRANCHOT TONE MADGE EVANS STUART ERWIN Charlie Chase Riot Johnny Groen's Band World's Latest News Events Here SUNDAY HOURS ON SUNDAY JEANETTE MacDONALD NELSON FDDY ALSO "ROSE MARIE" Continuous Shows Sunday Producers Demand Mat. 25c Nite 35c Comedy for p.m. Sunday for p.m. Color slides, which Mr. Edson has not yet developed by means of the new composite method, have been made of Mars in its natural colors. They show a partial surface covered with blue-green vegetation, bordered by correspondingly large areas of brown desert country. Canals, which show evidence of superior engineering construction, are also visible in photography of the planet. Here is substantiation for the theory that the planet Mars is inhabited. A detailed description of the new discovery in composite photography is soon to be written and published by Mr. Edson. NEW CLASSES SHORTHAND AND TYPEWRITING For K. U. Students Lawrence Business College $4.99 Dress Clearance - Set the alarm—Don't let anything keep you from Nanette's big dreams. - The selection will please you - The saying will still work. - The selection will please you — the saving will thrill you! - Friday and Saturday only— Sales final. NANETTE OVER THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Phone 511 "Newfangled invention" makes good "Can you really talk through a wire?" people still asked when this telephone switchboard went into service back in 1831. ¢. Apparatus was crude—service limited—but the idea was right. It took hold in spite of ridicule. Today there are more than 13,000,000 telephones in the Bell System—telephone conversations average 60,000,000 daily—the service is faster and clearer than ever. ¢. Telephone growth and improvement will go on. For Bell System men and women work constantly toward one goal: enabling you to talk to anyone, anywhere, anytime. MIDLAND STATE UNIVERSITY MIDLAND SYSTEM Why not call Mother and Dad tonight? For lowest rates, call by number offer ? P.M. BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM I'm All Set Got My Supplies at The BOOK STORE R Rowlands Do You Need ? ? Design Class Supplies Notebook Work Organizers Pencils, All Brands Guaranteed Slide Rules Authorized Drawing Sets Full Cut Doctors Gowns Card and Letter Files Fountain Pens and Pencils World Almanacs Desk Calendars Laundry Cases Laundry Fillers Ream Type Paper Ream Notebook Paper Guaranteed Desk Lamps Blotter Pads and Blotters Notebooks, All Sizes Inks, All Brands and Colors Gumming Supplies Fine Stationery Reference Books Walking boy with a book and a hat. New and Used TEXT BOOKS Writing Paper Special K. U. SEAL STATIONERY 30 Sheets Crested 29c 29c 2 packs for 50c K. & E. Slide Rules and University Authorized Drawing Instruments and Supplies Leather Zipper Notebook $3.50 Rein Notebook Paper No. 13 and No. 6 (500 sheets) CAN VAS NOTEBOOKS 3 Rims 39c 50e $1.00 Reim TYPEWRITING PAPER (150 sheets) 45c On 14th 1401 Ohio MECHANICAL PENCIL Color Red and Blue 25c Send a new, novel Valentine to your One and Only. Valentines priced 5c up. Booksellers & Stainmakers Roulands 1237 Oread On the Hill TWO BOOK STORES THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6. 1938 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Hill Society Campus Sister Tea The Campus Sister committee of the Y.W.C.A. is sponsoring an informal test for all new women students at Henley on 30 March; Saturday, from 5 to 5 p.m. Members of the committee are Evan- egine Clark, c36; Culverine Penner, c36; Ethel Ford, c36; Virginia Hin- derwood, c36; Emily McCormack, Lela Edlin, c37; Jeangear Gee, gr; Bruehulm c37; Wilma Sooken, c37; Helen Barnes, c34 and Nola ☆ ☆ ☆ Alter - Asling Marriage Helen Jennette Alter and Clarene Willett Asling were married last Thursday evening at the home of Mrs. J. H. Mitchell in Topeka. Mrs. Asling is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dismare Alter, formerly of Lawrence but now of Los Angeles. Calif. Mr. Alter was until recently professor of physics and astronomy at the University, Mrs. Asling is a K. U. grad, and is a faculty member of the Alpha C泪 Omega therapy. Mr. Ailing is a graduate of the University, and is now an instructor in anatomy in the Medical School. He is a member of Phi Beta Pi, medical fraternity. Mr. and Mrs. Asling will be at home t 1339 Ohio street. Estelle Engla, Idella Campbell, c'38, and Margaret Draper, c'38, were in Salfon Friday where they were guests in Salmon Lake, Bates, Bates, fa'36, and Herman Schuster. ☆ ☆ ☆ Miss Betty Cox, 63rd of Great Bend, a member of Chi Omega sorority, has re-entered the University after having been gone for one semester. Announcement has been made of the engagement of Joy Maurine Parman, m. of Arkansas City, to Frederick Freeman, of Arkansas City. Miss Par- The following were lunch guests at the Chi Coughs house yesterday: Mrs. Della Ham and Mrs. R. J. Shaver, both of Bokhue; John B. of Russell; Jason Anderson; Jean Stevenson; Alicen Duvalle; and Mary Yatherine Rutherford. man was a pledge of Chi Omega sorority last semester. The marriage will take place May 1, at the house of the bride's parents, in the Arkansas City, Following the services the group enjoyed a theater party at the Dickinson. Delta Zeta sorality held initiation devices at the chapter house Saturay afternoon for Margaret Trout, c37, and Ruth Miller, c38. Westminster hall will hold oper house Friday night from 8 until 12 p.m New student are invited. Kenneth Fink, 34, Prof. D, C. Jackson of the School of Engineering and Architecture, and Dugald Jackson, were dinner guests Tuesday evening at the Kappa Eta Kappa fraternity house. Washington with her daughter, Frederick Hodge, who is assistant to the principal of Holton-Arms School in that city. ☆ ☆ ☆ Mrs. F. H. Hodder expects to leave Lawrence soon to make her home in ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ The Kappa Alpha Theta Alumnee club was entertained Monday evening at the home of Mrs. R. H. Waggatt, Mrs. George Nicholson of Chicago, who was a guest, told of the founding of the chapter. Miss Mildred White, e38, of Kansas City, Mo., a member of Chi Omega security, has re-entered the University having been gone for one semester. ☆ ☆ ☆ Weekend guests at the Delta Zeta sorority house were Rosalie Conrad of Barbara Hille, fa39, as a luncheon guest at the Alpha Chi Omega sorority house yesterday. Mrs. F. B. Wallace, housemother at the Delta Zeta sorority house, spent the weekend visiting in Arkansas City. the weekend at the Acacia fraternity house. ☆ ☆ ☆ M. C. H. LANDES, housemother at the Delta Tau Delta fraternity house, spent last week visiting in Liberty, Mo. Corbin hall will hold open house tonight from 7 until 8 p.m. PHONE K.U.66 Kansas City, and Elizabeth Cox, o Kansas City, Mo. CLASSIFIED ADS BOYS: THREE ROOM apartment with sleeping porch. Modern, Gas and coal heat. Hot water at all times. Reasonable rates. Call 1583 or .828R - 88 FOR INST. To nine rooms. Extra good beds. $5 and $4 per month. Also garage. Breakfast if desired. Call 22921 Read the Daily Kansas want ads. ROOMS FOR RENT ROOM FOR BOYS: Large, first floor, outside entrance. Hot and cold water. Southwest room two floors. Very desirable. 1468 Ternmore. Phone 1703. BOYS: A very pleasant single south room, also garage. 1416 Tennessee. Phone 1555. -88 --- BOYS: Large first floor room accommodation 2 or 3 boys. Also board. Outdoor entrance, hot and cold water inside. 1468 Tennesse. Phone 888 or 3120. BOYS: Have you seen the good modern rooms at 1601 Rhode Island? Prices reasonable. Phone 1-800-327-87 -87 BEAUTY SHOPS PHONE K.U.66 TAXI SPECIAL~50c reduction on any per- manent, with this ad, except Saturday. Permanents $1.50 to $5.00, complete with hair cut. IVA'S BEAUTY SHOPS 723½ Mass. Phone 2333; 9411½ Mass. Phone 333. TYPING TAILOR TAXI Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S - 920-22 Mass. Charles Hazen of Kansas City spent One Stop Clothes Service Station SCHULZ THE TAILOR 924 Mass. LAUNDRY: Student bundles a specialty. Good work at moderate prices. Called for and delivered. Phone 2945 88. LAUNDRY HAVE YOUR term papers typed by an experienced typist. Very reason-able. Phone 60. -87 BOYS: Board and room. Excellent location. Large, family style meals. Reasonable rates. 1238 Ohio. -92 ROOM AND BOARD BOYS—delightful room with private lime bath. Excellent meals twice time a day including Sundays and Labor Day. Manor, 191. Massachusetts. - $23 ROOM AND BOARD for boys $20 per calendar month. Meals served family style. 1208 Kentucky; Phone 2323J. $75. Phone 516 LOST: Red Vacumatic Parker foen-tain pen. Reward. Call Marjorie Brooks 181SF. 1242 Ohio. -88 FOR SALE: Our home at 1115 Louis- ana with furniture. Shown by ap- partment. Telephone 173. Florence M. Hodder. 100 FOR SALE: Holtclaw's "Principles of Marketing," and a "Land Economics Text." (Mississippi Survey Committee) Pat Cafat a 3675J. -90 FOR SALE LOST AND FOUND No. 2 411 W. 14th MISCELLANEOUS $5.00 Pens for $2.50 $7.00 Pens for $3.75 $10.00 Pens for $5.00 Student Loans ABE WOLFSON 743 Mass. Twenty-five words or one interjection, 25; three insertions, 36; six insertions, 72; contract rules, not more than 25 words, 28; per month fathal, 54. Pursue in advance and complete your assignment. 10 COE'S DRUG STORE ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP 1017 Mass. W.E. Whetromen, Prop. Phone 686 Keep Your Foot Dry and Take Your Cod Gizard Regularly and Let Us Do Your Code Repairing THESE WILL ALL BE SOLD "Genuinely Capitivating Play" ATKRINSON, N. Y. TMES 27 Life Time Sheaffers 19 Parker Duofolds 22 Conklin Enduras Life Time Pens at ONE-HALF Price We have permission to sell at 1.2 price all our old medal Life Time Pens. We have in stock: ACCENT ON YOUTH WITH A New Slant ETHEL BARRYMORE COLT Youngest Member of America's Greatest Theatrical Family A LEGITIMATE THEATRE ATTRACTION Saturday, February 8 FRASER THEATRE Phone 174 for reservations. Tickets are now on sale at office in basement of Green Hall. [Royal coat of arms] Admission — 50c, 75c, $1.00 M. SCHWARTZ J. KENT THE AUTHENTIC WIDE-SPREAD COLLAR Arrow SHIRTS and TIES Fashion reporters say — With the college man in mind, Arrow presents KENP, the new end fashionable wide spread starched collar. Admittedly not for campus wear — but a requitate for your weekend social engagements. 25c "White stiff collars worn with white or colored shirts are going places this season." KENT Starchel collars are coming back. Try this new and fashionable wide-spread Duke of Kent model, designed particularly for young men. Each 25c ARROW SHIRTS & COLLARS Obei's HEAD TO BOOT OUT KITTE Fresh SILEX COFFEE An invigorating stimulant. at the UNION FOUNTAIN Sub-Basement Memorial Union JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH $ \textcircled{2} $108. H. J. Bartolola Toh. Co. CAMEL'S "TRY 10" OFFER CONVINCES NEW THOUSANDS OF COLLEGE SMOKERS! Read Our Invitation to You Smoke 10 fragrant Camels. If you don't find them the mildest, best- fashioned cigarettes you ever smoked, return the package with the rest of the cigarettes in it to us at any time within a month from this date, and we will refund your full purchase price, plus postage. (Signed) R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Knowing the finer, more expensive tobaccos used in Camels, we make this offer . . . confident that you'll find your ideal cigarette in Camels... For experience shows that people quickly sense the difference in Camel's COSTLIER TOBACCOS! GAMEL TURKISH DON CIGARLUX Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS-Turkish and Domestic than any other popular brand. I'M SO GLAD I TRIED CAMELS or they cost you Nothing! Camels must please you, or they cost you Nothing. PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1936 Kansas Wrestlers Rated Under-Dogs In Nebraska Meet Jayhawks Are Determine To Make 'Match of It' In First Contest Of Season The Kansas wrestling team open its season against Nebraska right nownight with a dual meet at Lincoln. The Jawhawkers rate as under-dogs but are determined to make a match of it. Last year, the Kansas wrestlers defeated the Cornhuskers twice for their first dual most victory in seven years. But the Tigers will get revenge for those defeats. With the win a stay a day away, Nebraska leads 10-0, for Kansas has no contries in the 118- and 128-foot zone. The No. 3-ranked bruska ten points. The Jayhawkers that will compete however include several wrestlers of proven ability and seven others who are not yet a bruska ten points. Captain Bob Childs will wrestle in the 135-pound class. Childs finished in his weight at the Big Six tournament last year and is a real scraper. He alternated between the 135-pound and 145-pound classes last year and did not win. He won by lifting the lighter weight, which is the division he will compete in, tomorrow. Children will face a strong opponent. The Cornhawk 135-pound wrestler to a draw with Shirau the Missouri Star; Shirau the Haiti Star; Shirau a senior, has ruite a reputation. The dual meet between Missouri and Nebraska ended in a victory for the Huskers, a result which indicated that Nebraska has a decidedly stronger team than last year when the Jayhawks beat them twice. Two seniors, making their debut as Kansas wrestlers, are also expected to be among the Kansas stars. Both men are wrestling for the national title by McConwell, 175-pound, and the other Sam Ericson, heavweight. Both men were intramural champions last year and performed brilliantly in the intramural tournament. Heavyweight Ericson heaviest weight Ericson throw Emil Weinecke, 190-pound variety quarterback, in the finals. It took Ericson only 2 minutes and 47 seconds to pin the grinder. McConwell opponent in 2 minutes and 25 seconds. In the 185-pound clear Kansas was be represented by August Amnberg, a letterman. Amnberg completed in six games that earned him one of his matches by a fall. Amnberg is not as polished a wrenster as some but has a good deal of strength which makes him a formidable opponent. McConnel will face one of the strongest hustler wrestlers. The Hushker 15-pounder weighed just over 20 pounds and probably give McConnel as much as he can handle. Nevertheless McConnel stands a good chance of winning and may even throw up his hand. James Bount, a quadrant from last year, will wrestle in the 145-pound class and a sophomore, Sig Brumu will compete in the 145-pound class. Ericson should win his match, although his opponent is a good deal more experienced than the Jaushawk entry. The Husker heavy dropped a few points in this game, but it would appear that Kansas will pick some points in this weight. At the start of the year it appeared [ ] Our Serving Hours Are Breakfast 7:30-8:30 Lunch 11:30-1:30 Dinner 5:15-6:30 THE CAFETERIA that Kansas was going to have one of the best teams the school has had in a long time but the list of entries for this year's national championship one thing and another have robbed the squad of some of its most promising players. Most importantly is this true in the lighter weights. --- Women's Intramurals Three of the four division champions in the women's intramural basketball have been decided and the fourth division will be decided next Tuesday even though both teams will play in the kettleball team meets Pi Beta Phi for Division 2 championship. After the Division 2 champion is decided the winners will play will play for the 'vind championship.' Alpha Delta Pi is the winner of Division 1, Corin hall has Division 3 championship and I.W.W. was the fourth division champ. **Resume Intramural Play** The men's intramurals will play several games, including intralunar management, announced yesterday. Due to the fact that the gymnasium will be used for registration purposes until Saturday it is impossible for basketball games to be played in the gym. The team managers will receive their tickets, which will be completed for the remainder of the season. Saturday morning. Resume Intramural Play Campus Laws Will Become Effective Monday Morning Enforce Traffic Regulation FLOWERS Finest Selection of Spring Blooms for Your Valentine Remembrances. George Snyder, campus policeman, states that all traffic and parking regulations will take effect next Monday. Feb. 10. Persons who have the campus licenses on their cars may park in any one of the following parking places: back of the Chemistry building; west of the library, back of the Entrance Every woman knows that our selection is the finest to be had anywhere and can appreciate the individuality that is expressed when you choose flowers for her Valentine gift. DOZEN ROSES Free Delivery Phone 621 Attractively boxed. All freshly cut. $2.50 BOUQUETS Sweet peas, violets and gardenias. $1.50 WARD'S FLOWERS "Flowers of Distinction 931 Mass. Mr. Snyder also states that there can be no parking along the main drive between 8:30 and 4:30 each day and all cars parked there will be tagged without fail. The main drive extends from Thirteenth street to the center flower bed at the west end of the campus. gineering building and back of the Administration building. Students who do not have licenses may use the limited parking space available on the one-way street in front of the Watkins dormitory and the parking lot west of the Observatory. The regulations are necessary because of the increasing number of automobiles and the limited parking space available. Students who have cars and need them on the campus and do not have licenses should consult the Business office as early as possible. STARTING TODAY "EXTRA SPECIAL" WOOL SUITS' FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK Values Up To $25 Selling 50 $14.95 See these Suits TOPCOATS 1-3 Off $20.00 Topcoats ... $13.35 $22.50 Topcoats ... $15.00 $25.00 Topcoats ... $16.65 $30.00 Topcoats ... $20.00 $35.00 Topcoats ... $23.35 "Buy a Coat Now" ON SALE Leather Jackets Wool Jackets Duck Coats Odd Trousers Corduroy Slacks Here is your chance to save $$$$ Volour Hats Flannel Pajamas Flannel Robes Swaters Button Coats Shirts Pajamas Wool Sox Neckties Gloves Better Come CARLS GOOD CLOTHING The DAILY KANSAN Better Come Now Only $1.75 for the rest of the year The Kansan is the only medium for keeping in touch with all the Hill news. There's no substitute for your college newspaper. Have the report of all the activities, at your own room, in your own Kansan, regularly. The Convenience of having your own Kansan is well worth the money. Call at the Kansan Business Office in the Journalism Building and turn in your subscription the first thing tomorrow. A LIGHT SMOKE offers something to each smoker! PLEASANTVILLE MILEE HUNT/TIMLY TAAG PLEASANTVILLE LUCKIES a light smoke OF RICH, RIPE-BODIED TOBACCO—"IT'S TOASTED" LUCKIES ARE LESS ACID LUCKY STRIKE "IT'S TOASTED" CIGARETTES LUCKY STRIKE LUCKIES a light smoke OF RICH, RIPE-BODIED TOBACCO-IT'S TOASTED LUCKIES ARE LESS AC LUCKY STRIKE "IT'S TOASTED" CIGARETTES LUCKY STRIKE JAMES BONDY HAEDY PIACO ... Luckies are less acid Copyright 1958, The American Tobacco Company Recent chemical tests show* that other popular brands have an excess of acidity over Lucky Strike of from 53% to 100% *RESULTS VERIFIED BY INDEPENDENT CHEMICAL LABORATORS AND RESEARCH GROUPS Excess of Acidity of Other Popular Brands Over Lucky Strike Cigarettes BALANCE LUCKY STRIKE BRAND B BRAND C BRAND D All kinds of people choose Luckies, each for reasons of his own. But everyone agrees that Luckies are A Light Smoke of rich, ripe-bodied tobacco. It is a rather surprising fact that the leaves of the same tobacco plant may vary far more than the leaves from plants of quite different types. Chemical analysis shows that the top leaves contain excess alkalies which tend to give a harsh, alkaline taste. The bottom leaves tend to acidity in the smoke. It is only the center leaves which approach in Nature the most palatable, acid-alkaline balance. In Lucky Strike Cigarettes, the center leaves are used. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXXIII --the conference-leading Kansas basketball team departed at midnight last night for Oklahoma City, where he was a beaten Kansas day celebration, sponsored by Kansas alumni, tonight. Dr. F. C. Allen, coach, will be the main speaker. on the SHIN NUMBER 89 By BUD EVANS, 36 A splendid Observation . . . Ninety-Eight Gabs Stuck Up . . . Shore Gotta Have Religion . . . Theta Pranksters At It Again . . . “Red” Blackburn Honored . . . The Glee Club Boys. Professor Jens P. Jensen pointed out a tall young man to Mrs. Jenseys as they were walking down the campus yesterday morning. Said the professor, "There goes our new instructor." And the lady knew his name, Professor Why. "Why -he looks intelligent!" Read the other day where a well-known chewing gum manufacturer inadvertently included a large proportion of rubber cement in one of his batches of chewing gum. Ninety-three sorosity girls were said to have died of starvation when their jaws became firmly cemented together. Five more died of starvation on the same day, the deaths to "chewicide". Dangerous stuff—this chewing gum! ♦ ♦ ♦ Our old pal Shore has deserved the journalism department this semester, and is taking work in the School of Religion. All we can say is that it won't do him any harm. We don't do the journeyman or the harm either—so I'm told. No offense! + + + Hear that of the Theta pranksters decided to have a bit of fun last night by breaking a stink bomb in the living room. Good clean fun you know! The stairs were forced to run up three flights of stairs, and lock themselves in the "free-for-all". What—you don't know what the "free-for-all" is? Well, Catherine joined the others where all the sisters "pool" their forms so in case one of the gals is invited out (yeah-Hartley says it happens all the time) she (the popular one) can have her choice of the evening wear-or-cover herself with a stink bomb—and I don't think I will! Now that the ex-Pi Phi flash (the Dodge City one) is married, and the drinks have been passed, etc., etc., we understand that Gene Haughey, a Pi Delt who recovers quickly, has begun his social duties anew. This time he seems to be starting from the ground up, so he has given his choice) his greatest attention on one of the Pi Phi newest freshmen. Haughey isn't so sure about this ground floor business—it seems—so he still plans to keep an eye in the direction of one of the Pyle sisters (either Pyle-it doesn't make any particular difference) of the same lodge. This last bit of news should sort of keep the focus overging over-confident—tweed seem. Gloe—has Hope Hambus was right about all of this! Seems like Peggy Anne just laughed and laughed cause she knew she'd get a "C" out of the course anyway! Heard that some freshman approached "Red" Blackburn (you know—the guy with the top hat and tails) the other day and asked, "Are you any relation to THERAPY LEADER?" We don't know what Blackburn's reply was, but it wouldn't be hard to guess. Possibly the new fellow haven't ever heard "Red" band play, or else he wanted to borrow a drow or so. He didn't. But top hat and tails for the costume Boux Arts ball! I hear they're offering a prize. Seems the Glee Club boys have been having quite a time of it. The latest report comes that they were last seen at a Country Dance club in Marysville. The report says that they all had dates with some of the local high school girls. There are also reports of the girls insists that Les Rees is the farthest girl she ever seen. Tsk! Tsk! MINERS WILL WORK SATURDAY TO ALLEVIATE COAL SHORTAGE Washington, Feb. 6- (UPC) -Illinois miners will be allowed to work Saturday to help alleviate the state's coal shortage, it was announced tonight by Ray Edmundson, president of district 12 Uintune Workers of America. Following a special meeting of union district presidents and international officers, Edmundson announced that the union will suspend their contracts in this instance. Arranges To Get Costumes Cochrane Contacts Kansas City Firm For Beaux Arts Ball Bill Cochrane, Union manager, announced today that he has made arrangements with the Kansas City Continuing company to help those who are having trouble finding appropriate work for the Beautx Arts Ball, to be held Feb. 14. The costumes should represent artists, a country, or a class of people and not in keeping with the traditional "tacky" affairs. A special price from $1.50 up, depending on the individual taste, has been made for each costume. Anyone who is interested in taking advantage of this offer should see the hostess at the desk in the Union lounge. Rifle Match Schedule Completed For Spring New Members for Men's Team Announced After Trout Series The schedule of rifle matches which the University team will compete in this semester has been completed according to an announcement from the department of military science and tactics. The telegraphic match scheduler for the week ending Feb. 22 include University of Pittsburg, John Hopkins University, University of Wyoming, University of Dayton, Rose Polytechnic Institute, University of Pittsburg R.O.C.T., and Carnegie Institute of Technology. The week ending Feb. 29 include State University of Iowa, University of Missouri, Alabama Polytechnic Institute School of Mines, University of Washington and Natoma County high school Matches scheduled for the week ending March 7 include: University of Michigan, Michigan State and Utah State Agriculture College. Announcement also has been made of the men's rifle team after a series of try-outs were held for the determination of the new members. Old members retaining places on the team include: Edgar Leigh, c37, captain; Bakey Winton, c37, manager; Wayne Hale, Dennis Martin, c38; Hugh Wire, c38; Stan Marietta, c37; George Traug, c36; Carl Helman, c36; Norman Smith, c38; Bernice Humphrey, c38; James Traw, c38 and Charles Ward, c38. New members are Lester Hauk c, 29 J. B. Hill, ph. Carl Snyder, e, 39 J. Jim Chew, e, 39 George Wood,ph, King Aitken, b, 37, Edward Hunt, e, 38 Bigelow, b, 36, Joseph Langworth, e, 39, Walter Rippee, e, 38 James Hilton, e, 39, and Earl Wade, e'uncl. FIRESIDE FORUM WILL MEET EARLY NEXT SUNDAY EVENE! The Fireside Forum of the Plymouth Congregational church will hold its meeting at 630 Sunday evening instead of at seven. The change is to have a lecture later in the evening travelogue lecture later in the evening by Bryson Jones, Kansas City insurance executive. Mr. Jones recently returned from a trip to the Holy Land, and has an interesting series of color photographs capacity audiences in Kansas City. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1936 The Forum discussion will be led by Henry Baker, gr., and Albert McCulough. The subject will be the Wistar Institute, a research institution which has attracted much attention. Trenton, N. J., Feb. 6-(UP) -Governor Harold G. Hoffman was told to take the time to meet with the accomplices in the Lindbergh baby kidnapping without the aid of Department of Justice agents, who uncovered much more evidence that convicted Bruno Giuliani Houseman. HOFFMAN MUST INVESTIGATE WITHOUT HELP FROM G-ME Pi Kappa Alpha, House, 12 p.m. Christian Young People's Society, 11 p.m. AUTHORIZED PARTIES Friday, February 7 Phi Delta Phi, Memorial Union, 12 p.m. Saturday, February 8 Varsity, Memorial Union, 12 p.m. Alpha Gamma Delta, House, 12 p.m. Adviser of Women, For the Joint Committee on Student Affairs. Triangle, House, 12 p.m. ELIZABETH MEGUAR Triangle, House, 12 p.m. --the conference-leading Kansas basketball team departed at midnight last night for Oklahoma City, where he was a beaten Kansas day celebration, sponsored by Kansas alumni, tonight. Dr. F. C. Allen, coach, will be the main speaker. Accent on Youth' To Be Given Here Tomorrow Nigh Ethal Barrymore Colt, latest heires to the Barrymore stage genius, will make her first appearance tomorrow night on the stage of Fraser Theater. The youngest of the acting Barrymore family, she is possessed of a grace of manner and a charism which, at times, seems to leave her carrying her as far as her famous mother and her two uncles, Lionel and Johr have gone in the stage world. thel Barrymore Colt Will Have Featured Part In Famous Play At Fraser Although she has been in a position to capitalize upon the family name she refused, in her apprentice days, many of her friends were often be offered out of respect for the reputations of her family. She studied in Paris, worked hard to create a name on Broadway, ultimately formed her own company, and is touring the country with one of the best of the New York shows, "Accent on Youth." Highly Recommended Winifred Stillwell, a former University student who was well-known as a local actress for the Kansas Players, and who has since traveled widely with the theatrical companies, writes that she gave Ebel Barycott McCormick in "Inaccent on Youth" in Bristol, Va., and that the novel won the New York production of the play. A great many persons have expressed pleasure at the return of the "road show" business which has had a better season this year over the country than for a very long while. Prof. J. P. Brown of the department is in good spirits and said, "I grew up with the legitimate theater. I am very happy whenever I have a chance to attend a good legitimate theatrical production." Stage Is "Coming Back" A great many people feel that the stage is making a "comeback." It is hoped that everyone will take advantage of the low price which the department of speech and drama is offered, and Barrymore Colt and her company. DU PONT DE NEMOURS MAN WILL SPEAK TO CHEMIST Tickets will be on sale until Saturday at 4 p.m. at Green hall, and may be purchased the evening of the play at the box office in Fraser hall. George R. Beach, Jr., of Wilmington, Del, assistant manager of the personnel division of the E. I. DuPont de Nemours Company, will speak Feb. 12 to graduates in chemistry or in chemical engineering. Those who desire to confer with Mr Beach will have an opportunity to do so for 15 minutes by appointment. MITCHELL AND JONES ATTEND MEETING ON OIL SANITATION To Speak on Palestine R. C. Mitchell, petroleum engineer, and Ogden Jones, geologist, of the University division of sanitation of the city, to discuss last night with oil producers to discuss methods of oil field brine disposal. The meeting is the result of studies which have been carried on in co-operation with the U. S. bureau of mine administration. Washington, Feb. 6-(UP)—President Roosevelt's new tax bill will not be "staggering" but may demand enough revenues to meet heavy costs of the relief program, the congressional lead-ing tonight after a White House conference. NEW TAX BILL TO FINANCE MUCH OF RELIEF PROGRAM Meantime Mr. Rosevelt studied means of curtailing government expenditures. Bryson Jones of Kansas City will give an illustrated lecture on Palestine at the Plymouth Congregational church Sunday evening. The pictures were made by Jones and his wife while visiting the Holy Land a year or two ago. Mu Phi Epionion Will Give Award Xi chapter of Mu Phi Epionion will award a cash scholarship of $23 to some woman student in music early in the school. The scholarship may be made by the faculty of the School of Fine Arts, will be based on the talent and need of the student making the application. All applications should be submitted by no later than at an early date and should include reasons why such assistance is desired. Sixteen-Month Tour Through United States Costs Only 20 Cents Pottstown, Pa.—(UP-11 cost Stephen Ritenhouse, 24, exactly 20 cents to take a 16-month tour of the United States. Rittenhouse left here with $2 in his pocket. His travels, accomplished through hitching and train rides, and a little baggage, he brought as far south as New Mexico. He worked in restaurants for mech and panned gold in California. One time he had a strike of two ounces glittering metal, which netted him $85. Recently he returned with one fivecent piece and $1.75 worth of gold. Madison, Wis., Feb. 6—UP) (Tf of fate Clarence W. Spears as University of Wisconsin football coach sustained another jolt today when he was accused of ordering noviates for an extra game in a hauled ones—even before repeal. Trainer Testifies Against Spears, Wisconsin Coach Novocaine and Liquor Were Given to Players, Fallon Says Fallon, never a man to talk for the newspapers, or the public, brought an avid interest in his work from making a public declaration. He preferred to submit an affidavit to the government. William Fallon, chubby good-natured trainer for all Wisconsin athletic colleges, investigated committee that he was ordered by Spears to administer a pain-killing narcotic, novosaine, to George Deanovic, minutes before he became president. He spiked with liquor was given the Wisconsin team between halves of the Minnesota game in 1932 and again in 1953 at Spears' direction. Failtest tested. Regents Insist on Getting Facts But the regents insisted on a complete disclosures of what had sat before the stern-faced regents and talked quietly with frequent references. A conection of orange juice and sugar was tried on the Badgers in the Purdue game last fall, Fallon said. The following weekend, just before the Northwestern game, Spears called Fallon and directed that the players be given brandy and coffee between The Interracial Commission of the Y.W.C.A. met last night at Henley ley house. Dorothy Hodge gave a re-entry speech and commission of the Eates conferences. "Let's not have any more of this orange juice and sugar," he quoted Spears as saying, "and don't let the fellows in the front office know about it." Jobs Needed Interracial Commission Meets John Needel Although no figures are available, there is a definite indication that the enrollment in the School of Business will be greater this year than ever before. The 10 per cent increase in Accounting I has made it necessary to add a 25 per cent increase in M. J. Juicus. Accounting II has a 25 per cent increase and another class in Economic History under Professor Jesen has been established while Mr. Jesen's class in Elementary Principles of Economics at 10:30 has been trans-ducted to Professor John Lee. The course in Accounting Systems has been withdrawn. Townpeople who can use employees in exchange for room, board or cash, please call the Women's Employment Bureau at K U. 25, the office is located in 280 Administration building. Business School Grows Falcon. Mewell involved. Falcon would not get the inside into a room where he had mixed with the coffee privately so he did not administer it. After the game, he called on Dr. Walter Mewell, athletic director, for a "stimulant" to give John P. Williams an electric, who stood in the railroad station with his hair wet from a shower bath. Mewell, he said, gave him some whiskey, an act which the director of athletics at Spartanburg State University of Spartanburg. Falcon emphasized the fact that Golgusseq only asked for a stimulus and that a doctor such as Mewell might have just as well called for camper water; he could do both as a result of today's hearing. Dr. Meanwell Involved --the conference-leading Kansas basketball team departed at midnight last night for Oklahoma City, where he was a beaten Kansas day celebration, sponsored by Kansas alumni, tonight. Dr. F. C. Allen, coach, will be the main speaker. 'Capitalism Yields To Co-operatism,' Says Dr. Warbass Forum Speaker Declare His Proposed Plan Is Non-Political Move "The co-operative system is here simply because of the inability of capitalism to keep goering forward. But cooperation is held up to its high standard by the presence of, or the imminence of, a competitive, profit-seeking rival," said Dr. James P. Warkasse before a meeting on two hundred persons last night. Dr. Warbasse was speaking on the subject of "Co-operatives, the Only Way Out for Farmers and Workers". "Capitalism does not adequately meet present-day needs", Dr. Warbassse said, "but communism and fascism could be alike aimed at providing a means to empower a democracy. And that is where the co-operative serves. Movement Is Independent "Co-operatives acknowledge no creed or recognize no political affiliations They can exist side by side with political divisions, and in time of emergency "A co-operative plan is feasible because it recognizes the individual as a consumer, and not as a worker. It is as a consumer that most economic problems are met, and Co-operation devices means of meeting these problems Dr. Warbasse asserted that Co-operation did not contemplate a complete suzerainty of consumption, but that he knew that he must sell an absolute monopoly of markets. When a sufficient number of persons in a community are interested in increasing their buying power, and have become interested in literature on the subject, Dr. Warbusse said, the next step is to make contact with representatives from North Kansas City, Mo., in this case, sell share capital and set up a retail store. Gives Essentials of Scheme The essentials of the scheme, according to Dr. Warbause, are that the cooperatives be democratically organized and shareholder, regardless of the amount of his holding; that invested capital receive only a fair, legal rate of interest, not mounting to the levels made by a profit-seeking organization; and that the difference between the price paid to the producer and the price paid by the consumer be returned to the councils in the form of patronage duties proportionate to the amount of purchase. "It is a dull eye, looking over the world, that fails to discover a changing economic system," Dr. Warbasse said. "As capitalism calls to meet needs, governments do not because of government-controlled business is ideal, but because no other substitute has appeared in the breach, in many instances. But it is a notable fact that in countries with Co-operative ground around attacks is being made." Dr. Wrathbeau offered a few figures to back up his assertions as to the extensiveness of the plan. In England seven million persons live under a co-operative society, he said, and spend more than a billion dollars annually. Over one hundred million people are united in the International Co-operative Alliance, which spends twenty billion dollars. The Scandinavian countries are especially forward in the adoption of this plan, and in Stockholm alone there are 340 stores serving 75,000 families. The stores are much finer than profit-seeking stores and the Scandinavians have come to accept cooperation as the nature order of business. Statistics Are Giver Campus Calendar Dr. Warbasse said Co-operation Firdav. Feb. 7 (Continued on page 3) Psychological examination for new students. Phi Delta Chi dance, Memorial Union. 9-12 p.m. Pi Kappa Alpha party, 9-12 p.m. Basketball: Kansas vs. Oklahoma at Nerman. Campus Sister tea, Henley house, 3-5 p.m. Ethel Barrymore Colt in "Accent On Youth,"剧 theater, 8:15 p.m. Between-seamsters variety. Memor Youth," Fraser theater, 8:15 p.m. Between-semesters varsity, Memorial, 9-12 p.m. Alpha Gamma Delta party, 9-12 p.m. Triangle party, 9-12 p.m. Training Position Is Open Major Kansas Oil Company Offers Course To Chemists Two application blanks and two outlines of training courses for college graduates were received recently by Dean Shaad of the School of Engineering and Architecture from an outstanding oil firm in Kansas. There is a possibility of an opening in the company's training course at once and probably one or two more that have the opportunity to apply in June. The firm would like to have men with a good scholastic standing, a good personality and leadership ability. They also insist the applicants be proficient in mathematics as there are no vacancies for other branches of the engineering profession. Instructors To Open Office For Research on Pension Plan Committee Will Study Proposed Retirement Bi The Board of Regents recently appointed a committee to study the proposed Retirement Bill. The bill, if adopted, will provide retirement measures for the personnel of all five of the state schools in Kansas. The committee only recently started the study and no plans have yet been adopted. The committee is composed of Frank Stockton, dean of the School of Business, chairman, and the following faculties: W. F. Kissick, economics; W. F. Kissick, economics instructor; L. H. Axe, professor of economics; W. H. Shannon, professor of economics; U. G. Mitchell, professor of mathematics, and Karl Koesar, bsarz. The committee, in its study of the bill, will try to determine who will be eligible for the retirement, the age at which they will be retired or the length of their period of service. The bill will provide plans for the retirement of faculty, and all employees of the five state schools which are located at Hays, Emporia, Pittsburgh, Manhattan and Lawrence. The need for a plan of retirement should be discussed with some time. Many professors have resigned positions in Kansas schools in favor of those in states which offer a retirement plan. Most of the larger colleges and universities have adopted retirement plans of various kinds and an added incentive in attracting desirable professors and employees. A room has been prepared in the Administration building to provide an office for the study. Professor Dade has turned his class in Elementary Statistics over to Lloyd Metzler, assistant instructor in economics, so he may devote his time to the study of the bill. He will be absent from classes leased from their classes in order to take up the study of the bill, it was announced. Former Champion Comes to Union on Better Billiards Program Frank Taberski To Appear Frank Taberski, former world's pocket billiard champion, will appear at the Union billiard room Tuesday, Feb. 18 at 3:30 p.m. Taberski will play an exhibition match with a student openturn glove later give an exhibition of trick shots. After the exhibition he will give advice and instruction to any one that desires it. Welker Cochran, 18.2 bank-line billiard champion, will be the last person to appear on the Better Billiards program being offered by the Union. Cochran won the three-cushion billiard championship in November at Chicago in December and lost it to Willie Hoppe the following month in a special challenge match. Cochran will be presented on March 3. There will be a 25-cent charge to these exhibitions but the tickets are for 23 cents in trade at the billiard room. ... Students wishing to make changes in their enrollment will enter at the EAST door. Late Enrollment Late enrollment for the College will be held in Robinson gymnasium Saturday, from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. J. H. NELSON, Associate Dean. KANSAS SQUAD OFF TO NORMAN FOR BIG GAME Conference Leaders Will Attempt to Increase Lead As They Meet Sooners Tomorrow Night EBLING HAS INJURY Jayhawkers Will Attend Belated Kansas Day Dinner This Evening The squad would work out this afternoon in a high school gym at Oklahoma City, and will go to Norman by bus. The Jayhawkers have been riding high, but the stage is all set for a recurrence of what happened in 1924, when the Sooners carried a Kansas game against by taking the thirty-fifth game 26-20. Teams Gun for Jayhawkers The squad is in good shape with the exception of Ray Elsing who is suffering from a stiff neck which he picked up in the Iowa State game. The team went through a light practice on Wednesday and came into mastication yesterday before leaving. 12 straight victories under its belt, the Kansas team is on top of the world at present, but every team in the league is out gaining for the Jawkowers. mage yesterday before leaving. The Sooners are not to be taken lightly. They have a strong team which makes good use of the quick-breaking offense, and against Kansas State displayed an accurate eye for the basket, making good in 18 of their first 23 shots at the goal. The addition of Denny Lomax this semester, to the squad has bolstered the Sooners' stock a few notches higher. Playing in his first Big Six game Livingston, a guard, made six field goals against Kansas State to jump into the conference scoring lead. The return of Herman "Red" Nelson to the center post is expected to give the Sooners a much needed gain at this position. Nelson injured his shot on the home Angles, and did not play against Kansas State. Will Be Naismith Night The Oklahoma game has been designated as Naiismhite, and a blanket will be passed between the halves, the proceeds going to the Naiismhite fund. This will be the second game in which the Jawhakers have played that has resulted in a loss, as the proceeds of the Iowa State game went for the same purpose. The probable starting lineups: Kansas Oklahmia Ebling f Warren Allen f Connelly Noble c Nelson Pralle g Martin Kappeiman smith Officials: E. C. Quigley, St. Mary's; Parke Carroll, Park College. HIANNAH OLIVER LATIN PRIZE TO BE AWARDED NEXT JUNE The Hannah Oliver Latin Prize, amounting probably to $15 or $20, will be awarded next June to the undergraduate student who has done the best work in Latin throughout the year. This prize is the income from a sum contributed by former students and other fraternities in honor of oaths birthday. The recipient of the prize must have completed at least six hours of Latin and an equivalent degradeum classes are eligible, but if a choice is difficult, preference will be given to advanced students and general excellence in other studies will be con- Organ Recital Will Be Sunday The first Vesper Organ Rectal of the spring semester will be presented by Laurel Eevere Anderson, University organist, at 4 p.m. Sunday in the University Auditorium. The first part of this eighty-sixth organ rectal will be made up of compositions of the seventeenth century, while the latter part will consist of modern numbers. These Sunday recitals are planned to give to the University and to the community a quiet hour of the best in music. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1936 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS PUBLISHER HARRY VALENTINE EDITOR IN CHIEF w. w. w. ASSOCIATE EDITORS BULL GILT AMAIR FRASER MANAGING EDITOR PRED M. HARRIS, JR. BUSINESS MANAGER F. QUENTIN BROWN STAFF CAMPAUS EDITOR BILL ROGERS MAKE UP EDITORS | DON HUELS | BILL DOWNS SHOOTS EDITOR LIEFER COME, JR. NEWS EDITOR DENNIS SMART SOUTHEY EDITOR PRINCE BOOM SUNDAY EDITOR JAMES POLLINKING KANSAN BOARD MEMBERS TELEPHONES Business Office K U. 66 New Business K U. 66 Night Connection, New Business 7001 J F New Business K U. 66 Sole and exclusive national advertising representative NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE, Inc. Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland, Seattle Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday mornings except during school holidays by students in the department of Journalism of the University of Kansas from the Press of the Department of Journalism. Subscription price, per year, $3.00 cash in advance, $3.25 on payments. Single copies, £cash. Entered as second class master, September 17, 1910, at the post office in Lawrence, Kansas. FRIDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 7, 1936 WHAT TO DO NEXT! Dyche Natural History Museum was opened in the school year of 1902-03; the building originally cost $75,000—appropriated by the State. At that time, the collection was valued at $100,000. The Museum was closed to the public Nov. 20, 1932, upon orders from the Board of Regents after an investigation proved the floors of the building were unsafe. Since the Museum was closed $10,000 worth of specimens has been added by members of the staff and students. The State appropriated $25,000 in the fall of 1933 and repair work was begun. A grant of $10,500 was received from Washington, under the Public Works Administration. That $33,500 has been used to move and store the displays, tear out all the floors and replace them with new ones, re-enforced with a steel frame. Now, the reconstruction is at a standstill—lack of funds! While the collection valued at $500,000 (a very conservative estimate)—that cannot be replaced under any circumstances—is deteriorating rapidly, because of unfavorable storage conditions. To re-open the Museum, $47,000 is necessary. That's nothing to sneeze at, but neither is our (the people of Kansas) priceless collection of birds, mammals, insects, and fossils, benefitting absolutely no one! What to do next? A new scale has been developed that weighs as little as a million million-millionths of a gram. This is great news to those on reducing diets.—Kansas City Kansan. Most of the novel theories that got a try-out in the amateur hour were given the gong by the Supreme Court.-The CinematiEnquirer. This is going to be one year when those who point with pride are going to do plenty of viewing with alarm on the side—The Cincinnati Enquirer. SENATOR BORAH ANNOUNCES Senator Borah, the Idaho war horse, has formally cast his hat into the presidential ring by announcing he would campaign in Ohio for delegates pledged to his nomination in the Republican convention. Borah announced, in his declaration, that he would strive to free the Republican party from the domination of the old guard. Borah's announcement will cause dissension in the ranks of the Republicans. All other potential Republican candidates are of the conservative pattern. They stand opposite the present administration which is liberal and has leftist tendencies. Most of the Borah's political doctrines are more in line with Roosevelt's theories than in accordance with established Republican principles. It is questionable if Borah's efforts toward the Republican nomination is beneficial for the public good. The United States has been used to a two-party system of government. The duty of the opposition, according to many political theorists, is to criticize the party in power. The two parties should be unlike so that there is a definite cleavage. If the two parties embrace the same fundamental doctrines there is little choice for the voter except as regards personalities. As the situation now stands, the Republican party is the conservative element and the Democratic party is the progressive. Should Borah succeed in gaining the nomination, there would be no fundamental difference between the two parties. Should one of the "old guard" succeed, there would be ample opportunity for the voter to choose between a progressive Democratic or a conservative Republican administration. OUR OWN BACKYARD These Olympic alarmists who view with consternation the alleged discrimination of Germany's Olympic officials against Jewish athletes might do well to turn their glasses near home. It is always more difficult to see the flaws in our own systems than in those of other countries, but an unprejudiced mind cannot help but wonder at a recent action of the Amateur Athletic Union. For the first time in Olympic Games history, basketball will be included among the team contests this summer, and the United States, birthplace of the sport, will naturally enter a team. This team will, however, have been selected by a method fully as unfair as any Germany may have. All colleges allowing athletes to compete four years are barred by an A.A.U. rulting from entering their teams in the pre-Olympic tournaments. Besides eliminating a majority of the collegiate teams from consideration, this requirement is based on no reasonable distinction. All independent and Y.M.C.A. teams are eligible for their respective divisions of the tryouts. Surely the theoretical advantage of the four-year over the three-year college is no more than the advantage of the independent teams. The organized protest that the coaches of these ineligible colleges are making seems fully justified under the circumstances. It is doubtful if any action can be taken in the few months remaining before the tournaments, but if the opinion of sports followers can be focussed on the matter, it is probable that a fairer arrangement can be made before 1940. "To Aid on Income Tax."—Headline. A reading of the item, however, brings the disappointing information that the assistance offered is in making out returns and not in paying the tax—Kansas City Kansan. "ISMS" DEFINED Just what is Socialism, or Communism, or Fascism? During our present times these terms are in almost constant use, but unfortunately the majority of people listen to, talk about, and even pass judgment without a clear understanding. To many people, a Socialist, a Communist, or a Fascist is one and the same thing—a radical who has set out to overthrow everything. A distinction between these terms or even a definite understanding of each separate "ism" is often miscontruired. For this reason, the Kansan is attempting through a series of editorials printed from time to time, to explain as plainly and as clearly as possible just what these terms mean. It is not our purpose to pass judgment, but rather our hope that a clearer understanding of the real meanings of Communism, Socialism, and Fascism will be derived. Campus Opinion Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the University Daily Kaman. Articles over 200 words in length are subject to cutting by the editor. Contributions on any subject are invited. Editor Daily Kansan: I should like to take this opportunity to give my opinion, as well as the opinion of many of the men on the campus, on the recent and past decisions as to whether K.U. will have a baseball team. I don't believe that the baseball players have been treated fairly the last three years, because the great American sport has been left out of the sports curriculum. Each year there has been the cry that it is not a paying sport, because it is so dangerous, because at the present time, tennis, wrestling, swimming and probably track do not pay expenses. Last year and again this year announcements have been made about this time of the year, that the reason K.U. would not have a baseball team was because there had been no appropriation for the equipment or an announcement of a tentative schedule of games made? Baseball is not only much more interesting to the spectators, but also offers competition for as many or even more individuals than all of the above sports. It is a sport that can and often does become the means of livelihood of many men after their college days. It is a sport that has been accepted by practically every community in the world, with large number of foreign countries. I can't understand why people don't understand the few major schools in the country "that can't afford to support a team," it also being the only school in the Big Six that does not have a baseball team. J.M. PSYCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATION: Psychological Examination for new students will be held this afternoon at 230 in the Auditorium. All new students, except those with developmental disabilities, must enroll for enrollment is considered complete. A. H. Turenne. FIRST SEMESTER GRADES. Grades for the fall semester may be obtained from the Registrar's office February 10-15, according to the following schedule of student names: Vol. 33 FEBRUARY 7,1936 No.89 OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Notice due at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m. preceding regular publication days and 11:30 a.m. for Sunday meetings. Monday, Feb. 10—A to G inclusive Tuesday, Feb. 11—H to M inclusive (except during convoction) Wednesday, Feb. 12—N to S inclusive Thursday, Feb. 13—W to S inclusive Friday, Feb. 14 (Those unable to come at the Saturday, Feb. 15) scheduled time Thursday, Feb. 13----T to Z inclusive George O. Foster, Registrar. INSECTS ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR CURING MANY DISEASES Historic Physicians Made Use of Magic That Gradually Developed Into Useful Preventives By Mary Rutter, c'37 Monquites Responsible for 100,000 death in USs, from 1792-1900. Costimates Cost American Home Owners Over $30,000 a year. Housewives Trimmet Typhoid Fever, Dysentery, Cholera, and Tuberculosis. This is a sample of the type of articles which are being written on the subject of insects. A nature magazine is no longer complete without a glossy discussion of these creatures. The Gradual Destruction of the Human Race. But in reality the insect has always led a sort of Dr. Jekel and Mr. Hydie existence. It fact has become the most important factor in the scientist's work—but I am getting ahead of my story. It is hard to realize that there was ever a time when there were no competent physicians to minister to the needs of the people but such was the case for many centuries. Anyone who wanted to practice medicine. Merchants, grocers, shepherds, book sellers, doctors, nurses and regular occupations. Consequently, many absurd offerings were offered for sale and the more bizarre they were the better they sold. Many of these prescriptions contained insects or their products in some form. A typical example is the following, compounded by Dr. William Salmon, a London practitioner, in his book. He described it as an "Tauric University" not particular for any distemper; and it contained the follow- Poulder of a Lyon's heart Fillings of a Unioncorn' horn Ashes of the whole Chameleon Bark of the Witch Hazel Dried man's skin (worms) a score Dried Man's brain Bruewort Rex Metallorum (gold) Egyptian onions Knowledge of both human anatomy and of the origin and habits of insects was practically nil, consequently many queer theories and practices grew up. It is possible that insects were formed from the environment in which they were found. For example, lice and maggots were supposedly developed from human skin, worms from corpses, etc. Medicinal remedies contain the virtues of their generator. Fantasies of Insects In the 18th century druggists carried such things as bees, ants, beetles and earthworms to treat their patients' leeches to bleed their patients as a cure for certain diseases. Favorite remedies of the time included: the use of bees that had died in honey to cure bad hearing and hearing, masked flies heads to protect against them, powdered in powdered form for droopy. Sow bugs were believed to be beneficial also. A bag containing a number of them was placed around the neck to cress fluids and the water in which they wetted is supposed to be a cure for jaundice. We sit back, secure in our knowledge of science, and have a good laugh at these practices, but we must not judge them. They were "getting warm." They saw that some of their prescriptions really helped the patients although they did not know why. Modern science, with its many facilities, has discovered the reason. The gradual evolution from magic to science may be illustrated by three insects: spiders, ants, and bees. In the beginning, spiders were used entirely for magical purposes in treating disease. This insect was supposed to have acquired his venom by attracting people who were infected. People carried a spider in a box because it would soak up all diseases which might be harmful to the person. In the 17th century, typhus or spotted fever was treated by anointing the pulse and applying ointment mixed with oil of spiders and seasons. Ague was a disease for which spiders were supposed to be particularly efficacious. At first, spiders were carried around the neck in a nutshell and when they became entangled, coats of exosides, a Greek physician living in the first 1st A.D., made a spider plaster which was applied to the forehead. Next, they were taken internally, still as a treatment for ague. In Ireland they were taken in place of places they were taken in powder form. Ants have been used from ancient times to cure palsy, gout, nerve and muscle diseases, etc. Medieval people and even some in modern times have used the old Roman remedy of dropping ant eggs mixed with water and onion into the ears to cure deafness. Doctor Lemerick wrote "the spirit," or as it would now be known "a tincture" from winged ants which was supposed to be a general stimulant and good for apoplexy, giddiness and catarrh. Primitive tribes have used the bites of ants to the women more active and industrious and to cure in- Duke Ellington 1845 and his Famous Orchestra PLA-MOR K.C., Mo. Sat.Feb.8th SPEED COMFORT SAFETY ON THE Streamliner BETWEEN SALINA AND KANSAS SALINA MISSISSAUGA MANASYA CITY-SD SCHEDULE The Streamline makes one round trip daily between two campus and two round trips daily between Topeka and Kansas City. Keep detail schedule for "hurry up" trips. The utmost in modern train travel for only 2c a mile—even less for round trips. Cheaper, safer than driving, and far more comfortable. For full details and information about travel everywhere—ask your UNION PAGIFIC AGENT UNION PACIFIC sanity. In the latter case, they took the subject to an ant hill and buried him there for a time. Ants were also put in love philhers in Medieval times. Scientific justification for the use of ants has come in the last few years. Some oracle aldehyde have been extracted and used as a general stimulant and tonic. Dakotas Fear Grasshoppers Maize to Yield Alcohol Dakota Fear Grasshoppers elected here indicate that western and northwestern North Dakota are due for a grasshopper invasion this year. Entomologists, studying records of egg freezing, indicate the plague will only be in isolated areas. New York (U.P.)—One million gatons of alcohol will be produced from maze in a new South African chemical plant early in 1936, according to "Industrial and Engineering Chemistry"; it will be a by-product of the process. NEW CLASSES in SHORTHAND and TYPEWRITING For K. U. Students Lawrence Business College Fresh SILEX COFFEE An invigorating stimulant. at the UNION FOUNTAIN Sub-Basement Memorial Union --for the rest of the year WRIST WATCH BRACELETS by HADLEY 1936 Bristolite Ask your Jeweler to show you the latest HADLEY creations in Wrist Watch bracelets for Men and Women. You will find styles to suit every occasion, mod- erately priced. Send for "SMART WRISTS" trated folder showing the watch bracelet styles for 1936 HADLEY • PROVIDENCE • R.I. NEW YORK • Chicago • Los Angeles COMPANY. INC. Toronto Canada • London England WRIST-WATCH BRACELETS EXCLUSIVELY-SINCE 1912 The DAILY KANSAN $1.75 Now Only The Kansan is the only medium for keeping in touch with all the Hill news. There's no substitute for your college newspaper. Have the report of all the activities, at your own room, in your own Kansan, regularly. The Convenience of having your own Kansan is well worth the money. Call at the Kansan Business Office in the Journalism Building and turn in your subscription the first thing tomorrow. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1926 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAJE THREE K Hill Society BEFORE 5 P.M. CALL K.U. 21; BETWEEN 7:30 AND 9 P.M. CALL 2701K3 OR 2702K3. Tennola Club Entertains Members of the Tennola Club entertained with a dinner for their husband Tuesday night at the University Club Mrs. J. B. Henry, president of the club welcomed the 40 guests, and E. F. Enniston, professor of German, made the response. V Following the dinner an entertainment in the form of a radio program, Mr. J. W. Nishihara, A. Nash, Harry Frazzee, Dr. J. W Twente, S. C. Wilkson, Hrow, Ray Wright, J. F Jones, Dr. J. B. Henry, Fred Elsher, Prof. J. K. Jister, and Alan Mrs. B. A. Nash, Mrs. Harry Frazee Mrs. S. C. Hinsbaw, and Mrs. J. B Henry were in charge of the party. Hults-Inman Marriage Announcement was made this week of the marriage of Eunice Margaret Hults, Mrs. of Dr. and Mrs. A. P. Hults of Lawrence, and Arthur Eugene Irmann, son of Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Irminan. The wedding took place 5. Jan at 5.AT. Mrs. Imman attended the University in 1934 and 1955, and is a member of the Chi Omega security. Since August she was also a member with the law firm of Halts and Gray. Mr. Irman is a senior in the School of Engineering and Architecture and is a member of the Kappa Sigma fraternity. ☆ ☆ ☆ O. Wright Rhodos, O. College student touring America, who was a visitor at the University during the between-seemers vacation, was a Saturday lunch-bench guest at the Delhi Chi house and had a 4 clock tea Saturday afternoon. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Students of the Wesley Foundation are invited to spend an evening of table games at the Wesley Foundation parchment Room, Friday, evenings from 8 to 11 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Bryson Jones, who will arrive Sunday to give a travelogue to "Obelise" at the Plymouth Congregational Church in Lynn, where she hosts at the Beth Theta Ptia house Sunday. Eleonor Grant and Anabel Walker, both of Kansas City, were guests Tuesday night at the Gamma Phi Beta sorority house. Triangle fraternity will have a Racketeer party Saturday evening at the chapter house. The chaperons will be Dr. Ward and Prof. and Mrs. C. W. Armstrong. ☆ ☆ ☆ Delta Tau Delta ternifery announces the pledging of Lloyd Foy, e37, Emm Inlow, e38, Lawrence Bale, b37, and Gray Bale, b37. Pi. Beta Pha announces the pledging of June Patmore, Pittsburg, Catherine Turner, Amarillo, Tex, and Mary Ann White, Kansas City, Mo. LAUNDRY LAUNDRY: Student bundles a speciality. Good work at moderate prices Called for and delivered Phone 2945 TAILOR Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S — 920-22 Mass. One Stop Clothes Service Station TAXI Kappa Eta Kappa, electrical engineering fraternity announces the pleading of George Glimare, e'38; Waldo Graber, e'ucll; Edward Hurt, e'38; Richard Jenner, e'38; and Thomas McKale, e'38. SCHULZ THE TAILOR 924 Mass. TAXI ☆ ☆ ☆ ROOMS FOR RENT The following were dinner r guests at the Sigma Nu house last night: Dorothy Fritz, fa 39; Margaret Ryan, c'36; and Maxine Laughlin, fa 38. CLASSIFIED ADS BOYS—Large front room for two boys $12.00 per month. Board in the house at $4.00 per week. 1321 Tenn. -90 Mr. Hubert P. Lattimore, of Denver, Colo., was a dinner guest last night at the Sigma Phi Epsilon house. ☆ ☆ ☆ Blair Bill, c39, was a dinner guest at the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity house last night. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Delta Chi announces the pledging of Anthony Onofrio, c'29; and David Cox, c'1urel, both of Kansas City. Dr. and Mrs. W, W. Davis and Virgil Courtwright, c29, were dinner guests last night at the Pi Kappa Alpha house. Alpha Chi Omega sorority entertained the Delta Upsilon fraternity with an hour dance last night from 7 to 8. Aracia announces the pledging of Albert Bloklin, of Long Island, N.Y., and Worden Davis, of Garnett. ☆ ☆ ☆ Charles Decker, c 29, was a dinner guest at the Beta Theta Pi house last night. Sigma Phi Epsilon announces the pledging of Jim Brandt, c37. Sigma Nu announces the pledging of Iius Davis, c'uncl. Earl J. Johnson, fs21, recently was promoted to the position of general news manager of the United Press, following several years' service in various capacities with the organization. Prior experience in journalism, organization, Johnson worked on newspapers in Lawrence, Winfield, and Kansas City, Mo. --companies from universities. would learn to grow. The students would let alone and instead to grow. The Consumers Co-operative Association in North Kansas City now ships oil to four European countries and competes successfully with European oil interests. Co-operative societies are pledged to support free trade, and Dr. Warbassia said he would advocate the need for every form of international barrier. ROOM FOR BOYS: Large, first floor outside entrance. Hot and cold water Southwest room second floor. Very desirable. 1488 phone. Tennessee 7163 FOR RENT. To nice rooms. Extra good beds. $5 and $8 per month. Also garage. Breakfast if desired. Call 2922J Howard Randles was a dinner guest at the Acacia house last night. Gamma Phi Beta sorority announces the pledging of Eilene Duval, c39. Johnson Is Promoted PENNSYLVANIA HAS IMPORTED MANY RABBITS FOR HUNTERS The Commonwealth's game lands are to be stocked with 70,000 cottontails. Previous seasons the lands were with between 50,000 and 60,000 rabbits. Harrisburg, Pa. — (UP) — Hunters should have little difficulty getting their limit of rabbits in Pennsylvania when the small-gammon season opens next March. The greater number of the animals are to be purchased in Missouri. PHONE K.U. 66 ROOM AND BOARD --companies from universities. would learn to grow. The students would let alone and instead to grow. The Consumers Co-operative Association in North Kansas City now ships oil to four European countries and competes successfully with European oil interests. Co-operative societies are pledged to support free trade, and Dr. Warbassia said he would advocate the need for every form of international barrier. Female: 26 wounds or lost an insertion. 25; c: three insertions, 26; all insertions. 26; contrasts,训声 or less than 25; no restraints, 26; no搜身术. Pay in advance. Includes: BOYS-Large delightful room with private title bath. Excellent meals twice a week at including Sundays. Time to stay in the Manor, 1941 Massachusetts. -52 BOYS: Board and room. Excellent location. Location. Large, family style meals. Reasonable rates. 1328 Ohio. -62 FOR SALE. Our home at 1151 Louisville and our furniture. Shown by appl appointment. Telephone 173. Florence M. Hodder. 100 FOR SALE FOR SALE: Holtzwalt "Principles of Marketing"; and a "Land Economics Text," (Mississippi Survey Committee) Cat Pat a 2675J. -90 --companies from universities. would learn to grow. The students would let alone and instead to grow. The Consumers Co-operative Association in North Kansas City now ships oil to four European countries and competes successfully with European oil interests. Co-operative societies are pledged to support free trade, and Dr. Warbassia said he would advocate the need for every form of international barrier. Student Loans SPECIAL--50c reduction on any permanent, with this ad, except Saturday. Permanents $1.50 to $5.00, complete with hair cut. IVA'S BEAUTY SHOPS, 732½ Mass, Phone 2333; 941½ Mass, Phone 333. BEAUTY SHOPS ABE WOLFSON 743 Masse MISCELLANEOUS Ethel Barrymore Colt SINCE 1920 University audiences will have the opportunity to see the youngest member of America's outstanding stage family in the popular Broadway production "Accent on Youth." Supported by a distinguished New York cast, Miss Colt will appear in Fraser Theater tomorrow night. Warbasse Gives Views On Co-operative Move (Continued from page one) The next student forum will be held Feb. 25, and will be addressed by Miss Anna Louise Strong, who is recognized as an authority on the Russian situation. She is the author of the recent best seller "I Change Worlds." FAVORS SOCIALIZED MEDICINE Warbasse Scorns Economic Set-up for Medical Profession A system of socialized medicine, designed to prevent rather than cure illness, was urged by Dr. James Warbasse, speaking before a group of medical students and others in Central Adelaide auditorium yesterday afternoon. "Unless the medical profession and the public can provide means for more widespread distribution of medical care in hospitals, the state will be compelled to step in and we will have government operation in the medical field as in many other fields today." he declared. "We should the economy of saarcity as applied to the medical profession," he stated. "In spite of the fact that 40 per cent of the people of the United States do not receive any medical service in the face of incapacitating conditions, that have been requested by the most few 'Pacifists.'" Dr. Warbasse recommended a system of socialized medicine such as is being used in Denmark and Sweden, with co-operatives hiring physicians on a salary basis to keep the members in good health. The cost of medical services in these countries has been reduced, he said, because of the greater opportunity to prevent disease, rather than attempt to cope with it in its advanced stages. He also predicted great advances in the science of preventive medicine, under this system, since physicians would VALENTINE SPECIAL 14 ounces 29c THINK of it! 14 ountes of truly delicious chocolates for only 29c. The outstanding Valentine candy value in America. You can af- ford to buy several packages at this price. RICKERD-STOWITS Drug Co. "THE REXALL STORE" Phone 238 9th and Mass. SAVE with SAFETY at MeTexall DRUG STORE Valentine Heart Boxes Make Your Selection Now. CANDY FINAL CLOSE-OU T on $2.00 and $1.50 Pipes 49c research and for application in this field. "Many of these co-operative organizations provide for higher salaries for the doctors most successful in keeping their patients in good health," he stated. "Thus, in place of the old system whereby the doctor attains economic security only in the presence of illness, he finds it more profitable to train them often before the patient himself is aware of any disorder." Rankin's Drug Store 1101 Mass. have greater opportunity both for re-search and for conflation in this field "Handy for Students" Phone 678 Fraternity Sponsors Dance Pri Delta Phi, legal fraternity, will sponsor a dance at the Union ballroom tonight, which is open to all students in the School of Law. Faculty members in the School of Law have been invited. Appoint Lab Mechanic George Ditlew, e38, has been appointed laboratory mechanic the electrical engineering department --are as sweet and different as the big heart in the window. Our Valentines VIRGINIA MAY'S "A CARGO OF GIFTS" In Hotel Eldridge --- Everything IN UNIVERSITY SUPPLIES Zipper Books Note Book Fillers Fountain Pens Medical Equipment Artists Supplies Drawing Paper Drawing Ins'eruments Buy your paper by the pound at CARTER'S STATIONERY Opposite the New GRANADA Theatre 1025 Mass. Phone 1051 "Genuinely Capitulating Play" ATKINSON, N. Y. TIMES ETHEL BARRYMORE COLT WITH ACCENT ON YOUTH Youngest Member of America's Greatest Theatrical Family A LEGITIMATE THEATRE ATTRACTION FRASER THEATRE Admission — 50c, 75c, $1.00 Saturday, February 8 Phone 174 for reservations. Tickets are now on sale at office in basement of Green Hall. DRAM PERFUME SALE LA FERMETTE Friday - Saturday An Odor For Every Mood CARON **GUERLAIN** Reg. Sale Snailmar 1.60 1.25 Blue Hour 1.00 .79 Liu 1.75 1.54 En Aviol 2.25 1.79 Sweet tea 2.25 1.79 Balladium 1.90 1.60 CHRONO Doux Jamin .95 .74 Surrender .1.95 1.64 Night of Night .1.00 .84 Collection .1.00 1.69 CORDAY Taurus Mol...1.25 .98 Gardenia...1.10 .75 JEAN PATON Dominate Supreme 1.50 1.24 Dominate Dry 1.90 1.70 Combat Dry 1.80 1.60 D'RAYMOND D'RALMAND Lime 1.00 .73 Sweet Magnolia 1.00 1.25 MILLOT Crepe de Chine ... 1.00 .84 **BOURJOIUS** Evening in Paris .55 .45 Savings time in Paris .55 .25 **BOSTON** Charming Hour .59 .20 **LUISEN DE LONG** Whisper .1.50 1.24 Mon Image .2.00 1.75 Indirect .1.25 1.00 **ELLERSTEIN ARDEN** Moon Moss (Close out) .1.00 .50 Le Rewire (Close out) .1.00 .50 **COHN** Paris .65 L'Aimant .65 L'Origan .65 D'RAYMOND (Original Dram Bottles) DeMain 1.25 1.00 Valli Lily 1.25 1.00 Trell 1.25 1.00 Mimzy 1.25 1.00 Gardenia 1.25 1.00 Sans Aileau 1.59 1.49 HIGHLIGHT Quetches Fleurs .69 WEAVER'S PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 7, 1936 Nebraska Huskers Meet M. U. Tigers Tomorrow Night Other Big Six Teams Play As Conference Race Enters Into Final Stretch Stretch Nebraaska's fast-traveling cagels will attempt to down Missouri at Columbia tomorrow night, a task much like bearding a bear in his den, only worse. Missouri Rejuvenated There is an old saying that to beat Missouri on its home floor you have to be at least ten points better than the Tigers. This combined with the much improved showing Missouri has made in its last two conference starts, has encouraged some of the experts to predict that the Huskers will go down to defeat. Spurring Nebraska on, however, will be the realization that a defeat will eliminate virtually all opportunities for them. By winning, the Cornhukers will still have at least a mathematical chance at the pennant. Missouri played brilliantly against Kansas and then after a slump in its game with the Warrensburg Teachers hit the high spots again in upsetting Iowa State in a game at Ames. This latter uprising was led by Jay Todd, a guard, who became eligible at the beginning of the second semester and played his first game against the Cyclones. The dope is that Todd is a better man than of the men who comprised the team during the first semester. Todd's addition to the team means that Missouri will have to be taken seriously in getting ready. Edward teams always reach their ground around the end of the season. Nebraka is also going great at the present time and the game has all the aspects of a nerve-wracking struggle from start to finish. It should be one of our best plays. Iowa State has not only droops, from the running as far as the championship is concerned but also looks like a strong team. Cyclones toowed to Missouri and then lost their crack guard and captain, Tervald Holm, through illness, an event which left them no match for the Jayhawkers. If Holmes is out for the season, as reports say he is not, Iowa State is in for some best-feat. Oklahoma Riding High Oklahoma, on the other hand, seem to have hit its stride. The Sooners defeated Kansas State impressively in a game played at Manhattan Monday despite injuries to their first and second string centers and two more to the back. Deep dept three of them on the bench. Denton Lington, another lad who became eligible at the middle of the year, played center for the Sooners and collected 12 points to 14 times and rang up 8 field goals, a very good percentage. Heads Olympic Sport Schoo Kansas and Nebraska still very strong. Oklahoma and Missouri improving and Iowa State and Kansas seeming to be the whole story. Iowa Professor Will Conduct Conference in Germany CHAIPAMAG, Ill. — (UP) — Prof Seward C. Staley of the University of Illinois Department of Physical Education, will conduct an International Sports Education Conference in June as summer during the Olympic Games. Staley was selected as the head of the conference upon the recommendation of the American Physical Education Society. Professional physical education students will take part in the conference. Approximately 20 persons from each of the schools in the games will attend, Stanley said. The American party will sail July 15, with the American Olympic team, meeting delegations of other countries at the German border. The assembled conference then will proceed to Berlin, where study will begin. Germany is bearing the expense of the entire conference and its participants. Stalley has been granted a leave of absence from the university, here he had been scheduled to be in charge of school work in physical education. COURT SHOWS NO SYMPATHY FOR CHEATER AT POKEI Branford, Ont.—UP) John Toth appeared in court here on an assault charge. He told the court he was a victim of an assault. He said he caught him with aces up his sleeve. when a man plays cards with aces up his sleeve, and gets hit, I don't think he should lay a charge of assault" the crown said. Toth was dismissed. HIS CHAMPIONSHIP TRAIL 19 CHAMPIONSHIPS IN 25 YRS. OF COACHING BASKETBALL 1914 OF COACHING 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 1922 1908 "20" AT KANSAS...1913-1919 INAL AT WARRENSBURG TEACHERS COL.: SINCE 1920 AT KANSAS...THE DEAN OF BASKET BALL COACHES...HAS ALWAYS WORKED IN THE INTEREST OF THE GAME...BASKET BALL IS ON THIS OLYMPIC PROGRAM LARGELY THRU HIS EFFORTS. 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1931 1932 1933 1934 1936 Dr.F.C. Phog Allen DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS COACH OF BASKET BALL UNIV OF KANSAS ED. CLARELL Women's Intramurals Basketball Finals Tuesday, Feb. 11-8:15; Pi Beta Phi plays Gamma Phi for Beta for winner of the second division; Watkins hall vs. Chi Omega. 9:00: Corbin hall, winner of the third division, vs. IWW, winner of the fourth division. Thursday, Feb. 13—8:15: Alpha Delta Pt will play the winner of the Pi Beta Phi vs. gamma Phi Beta game. Tuesday, Feb. 18----8:15: championshij game. game. The basketball divisions are: The basketball divisions are: Division I: Kappa Kappa Gamma Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Omicron Pi, Alpha Chi Omega. Division II: Pi Beta Phi, Sigma Kappa, Gamma Phi Beta, Alpha Gamma Delta. Division III; Watkins hall, Kappa Alpha Theta, Corbin hall, Chi Omega. Division IV; TNT, IWD, IWW, ETC. --though, in a big way. He stayed out of basketball this fall to train on his brother, Jake Mimmo, and Jim Bausel's record hung up at the 1932 games. Jay Bawerberg, Chicago University's All-American halfback was one possible candidate for Uncle Sam's team. SPORT NOTES By H. M. Mason, Jr., c37 Tall basketball players seem to have a central spot in the lime light this season. Here are a few you might not have heard of as yet. Howard Hobson, coach at the University of Oregon, can put a team on the floor with an averaging 5.6 points per game starting line averages only 6 feet, 2 inches however, and his squad of 11 players the same average, 6 feet, 2 inches. It might be interesting to know that the tallest player in basketball today is one Herman Cain who plays for the Catholic team in Brooklyn, N.Y. He stands 7 feet, $6\frac{1}{2}$ inches in his stocking feet. . . The Big Ten has a nice array of centers this year varying from Earl Thomas, Ohio State's 6-foot, 3-inch to John Gee, Michigan's 8-foot, 4-inch by the way, as well as other Michigan team members, has caused the athletic department quite some added expense, as they are so tall that they require special Pilburn bearer. Gee was born in New York, and he grew an inch over the summer. . . If the measurements of all the basketball men in the Missouri Valley Conference were rolled into one and used to make one player, he would be a sophomore 6 feet, 2-10 inches tall, or a junior 6 feet, 2-12 inches tall. Creighton has the tallest team in the conference, 6 feet, 1 inch and also the heaviest, 17.45 pounds. . . Drake Drake has the tallest centimeter, but also the heaviest. Wills Ward, one of the greatest all-airborne athletes in the world has announced that he is not going to compete for the 1936 Olympic decathlon. Don Elser, smashing Notre Dame full-back, will be contending for honors Vale holds a unique record in intercollegiate victories by virtue of inning 138 consecutive victories in dual meets including last season. This recollection stems from the team which hasn't tasted defeat in Harvard. Years ahead to hang one on them this year, however, to break the strong. . . Coach Ed Galleger's rolling setback in Oklahoma also has an upset. He takes 163 victories, 4 losses, and 2 ties. Seventy-three straight, from 1921-32, is long time to go without being beaten. Lasbon, Ohio — (UP)—Roy Custer, WPA worker, dug up a five-dollar gold piece dated 1823. He sold it to Calvin O. Ackers for $6. Ackers then received an offer of $1,000, but turned it down and put the coin in a safety vault, swaiting the highest bidder. Rare Gold Coin Found Lawrence's Bargain Theatre PATEE 10c 15c ENDS TONITE Joan Blandell Glenda Farrell Hugh Herbert "WE'RE IN THE MONEY" Kansas State Swimmers Meet Jayhawks Saturday Shows 3-7-9 SATURDAY BIG DIBLE SHOW GENE AUTRY "THE SINGING VAGABOND" AND JAMES KLEINSON ZASU PITTS "HOT T I P " Also Chapter 11 "MIRACLE RIDER" Aggie Team Will Provide First Competition Of Season 100% $5.00 values now $3.75 $6.00 values now $4.50 $6.50 values now $4.85 $7.50 values now $5.65 SUIT PANTS and SLACKS 58 Corduroy Slacks Values to $3.95 $2.35 47 pr. Odd Wool Pants $2.95 ODD TROUSER SALE —here is your chance to buy a pair of trousers for odd wear or match up your coat and vest. CARLS GOOD CLOTHES Kansas University's swimming team will get its initial trial for this season against competition tomorrow afternoon at 3 p.m. when the Kansas State squad comes to the Kansas pool for a dual meet. The meet will contain events in both diving and swimming. Owing to failure of several swimmers to make the necessary grades, eligible men who did not return to school will be placed on the last and lack of time for participation by former men coach, Coach Alphin announces that his squad may prove to be a little weak. On the other hand, several of the men on the squad show strength and endurance as swimmers even though their work under competition has not been proven. Kansas' entries in Saturday's meet: 400-yard relay: Pussey, Tiller, Brantid, and Fisher; 800-yard breast stroke: Pussey, Tiller, Brantid, and Fisher; 50-yard dash: Pussey and Waggoner; 400-yard swim: Brantid and Fisher; 100-yard dash: Waggoner and Tiller; 220-yard swim, Brantid and Tiller; midley relay: LaShelle, Elias Waggoner; diving: Pussey and Humburt. Kansas State has not yet sent its list of eligible men who will make the trip to Lawrence. Students will be admitted to the meet upon presentation of their activity books and identification cards. Ladies 25c 'til 7 — Why Pay More? Now It Can Be Told! Amazing Secrets! 25c 'til 7 — Why Pay More? GRANADA NOW! Never Before on Any Screen MARTIN MOONNE, Famous Reporter who wrote the Revolutions of Gandam's infomercial went to jail rather than Betray the Sources of His Information. The Whole Inside Story EXCLUSIVE STORY FRANCHOT TONE MADGE EVANS STUART ERWIN PLUS CHARLIE CHASE RIOT JOHNNY GREEN'S BAND—News Continuous Shows SUNDAY 1-3-5-7-9 JEANETTE MacDONALD NELSON EDDLY "ROSE MARIE" Mat. 25c Nite 35c Come As Late As 6 p.m. Sunday for 25c — After 6 p.m. 35c. 100 should come in the east doors of Robinson Gym through the ladies' side of the building. Men are asked to enter from the west side and go to the pool through the men's locker rooms. The Ebel will set as announcer and referee. needs an A.C. or D.C. It is here; the last word in modern shaving. Come in. And see this Shaver that is not a razor, that has no blade and needs no lather for shaving. Iowa Coaches Are Satisfied the NEW Schick Shaver Simply plug it into an electric outlet and get a quick, clean shave without injury to the tenderest skin. in one year after-year expense of blades, cream, brush and lotion by investing in a Schick Shaver which soils the skin with its shaving beads to laxing a pleasure not a nuisance. One Hundred Ten on Track Squad At Iowa State College RICKERD-STOWITS Drug Co. Price, $ 815.00 Drug Co. "THE REXALL STORE" Phone 238 9th and Mass. Coach Robert I. Simpson and his assistant, Marshall Wells, were very well satisfied with the 110 Iowa State College varsity and freshman track aspirants who took their first try at "time trials" on the indoor track in the State gymnasium Saturday and Monday. SAVE with SAFETY at The Jexall DRUG STORE The squad consists of 25 varsity men and 75 prep stars. They tried their skill at one-, two-, three-, and four-lap races, the three-quarter mile run, and the pole vault. Although not one of the highest scorers, they were handed in that were very encouraging for this stage of the season. Coach Simpson has a system by which he picks men who have given credible showings the previous week Eleven Cyclone varsity rummers were named on his "honor roll" for the week following last week's trials. Some of those on the honor list were Bill Brown Lewis, sophomore, who topped the list of varsity sprint candidates in both the one- and two-lap races. He circled the Iowa State track once, approximately 131 yards in 143 seconds, and ran the lap-race in 301.2 seconds. For the sprints were Bill Stoufier of Council Bluffs and Stian Christie of Belmond, letterman in the 220- and 440-yard events; Cardo Bortolo of Henderson, Coin, sophomore, and Lawrence Minkay, Big Six champion in the javelin. Holmes Brown of Ames, captain of the Cyclone two-mile队 lant fall led the three-lapers to the tape Saturday, while Maynard McHardy, head coach of the four-lap race. Ralph Gruwaldel of Delmar and Leonard Chewsworth of Attleboro, Mass, minor letter winners in the two-mile sport led the three-quarter mile entrants. Wayne Lyon, Des Moines, senior, led pole-vaulters with a leap of 12 feet. Henry Hoff of Ottawa, Neb., are other varsity pole vault contenders. The Cyclone' first dual meet is at Minnesota, Minn., with the University of Minnesota tracksters, Feb. 15. Shrimp — Any Time FREE Friday Night LARGE'S CAFE 9th & N.H. Formale Crème' Lunch Formerly Gross' Lunch Complete Meal for only 30c --at the Always a pleasing combination of foods offered CAFETERIA Positively CLOSING OUT entire During the Next Eight Days Shoe Stock at Weaver's YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO SELECT BEAUTIFUL NEW SHOES FROM THESE FAMOUS MAKES Red Cross $6.50 arch shoes, close-out price . . . $4.45 Rice O'Neil's lovely pumps and ties, $8.50 values, close-out price ... $5.45 Foot-Savers, $10:50-$9.00 values; close-out sale price ... $6.85 Johansen's popular dress styles, $6.50 values, close-out sale price, $4.45 PIONEER by Johansen I Flexies styles, attractive for street or school wear, $5.00-6.00 values, closeout price...$3.85 Choice of all formal slippers —silver, gold, and satins, $5.00 and $6.50 values, close-out sale price $2.95 WEAVER'S One rack Style shoes, up to $6.50 values . . . $2.45 Novelty house slippers, $1.50-1.75 values, close- out sale price ... 89c NEW-START VARSITY Featuring Roger Anderson and his Fourteen-Piece Orchestra SPECIAL FEATURES Violin Trio - Harp - Blues Singer, Norma Walker SATURDAY, FEB. 8 Dates 75c Stags MEMORIAL UNION BALLROOM, 9:00 - 12:00 Don't Forget Beaux Arts Ball Friday, Feb. 14 Costumes - Serpentine - Hilarious Entertainment RED BLACKBURN'S Orchestra 1 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXXIIII LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1936 NUMBER 90 FIRE RAZES UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH Jayhawkers Win 43 to 36 Over Oklahoma Sooners COLD HAMPERS FIREMEN; Jayhawkers Win 43 to 36 Over Oklahoma Sooners COLD HAMPERS FIREMEN; LOSS IS NEARLY $20,000 Ebling Scores 19 Points; Takes Lead In Conference Race The University of Kansas' basketball team continued on its march toward an undefeated season by turning back the University of Oklahoma 43-36 last night at Norman. It is the thirteenth consecutive victory for the Jayhawkers this season and extends their winning streak to fifteen games since their last defeat at the hands of the Missouri Tigers last year. Kansas took the lead in the first few minutes of play and was never headed, although the Sooners were within one ponit of overtaking the Jayhawkers twice in the first half. Ray Ebling, stellar Jayhawker forward, continued his brilliant working in the Oklahoma Gold --house by scoring 19 points to lead the rest. It was the fifth and final game of his career there, and in the five games he has averaged better than 18 points per game. on the SHIN By BUD EVANS, '36 More About the Glee Clubbers . J. Ottawa and the Kappa's . Alpha Chi Still Feel the Draft . Roman Sandals . Hornbaker and Cunningham . Just Stuff. One of the Glee Clubbers reports that in Horton, Kan., the boys discover, by mistake we hope, that they had picked up a baby girl at the hotel in Hawaii, and had driven off with them. Seema the material belonged to a traveling salesman. Well—to make a long story more compelling, she bawled out for being so careless. --house by scoring 19 points to lead the rest. It was the fifth and final game of his career there, and in the five games he has averaged better than 18 points per game. Leave it to these Glee Club boys to make "shin'" news! Thanks a lot lella! Heard that one of them accidentally gave a taxi driver a five dollar bill instead of a "one spot," and hence, is out four bucks—careful deduction don't ya think? I imagine that the Dieter brothers had sort of a family fight when they went back to Lawrence, as a result of this sad mistake. Seems they have a joint expense account; Looks like you are the loser, John! That commotion heard at the Kappa house a few nightings wafted not caused by a fire, as many were led to believe. No, it was caused by the arrival of Jack (J. Ottawa) Richardson, the boy who was merely listening up for dinner. If the Betas, Phi Gams, and all the other boys had been listening, they might have discovered what it takes to sway our friend Bottom's affections. We also understand that Jack did very well with our friend, but I felt that fainting spell. Don't know whether it was the food, or that Toul personality, but anyway, Jack didn't feel so good, and he had to go home. Even if Jack "took" that Phi Gams' place, we won't hold it long if he acts, but I'll take another aspirate please! Understand that the Apilla Chii's still are getting mail at their lodge addressed to Mary Alice Woods, the freshman beauty queen, who did sort of a fade-out on the Alpha Chi's not so long ago. Evidently this doesn't set so well with the sisters of that club, but it is also true that the draft that was previously caused by the "air" Miss Woods handed them, but remember, I'm only guessing! (Continued on page 3) Can't help wondering why "Flossy" Kehl, that attractive little blonde number from the Kappa house, took such a sudden notion to go to Arizona for the coming semester, and without a word of warning, either. I guess it just got to the place where DeMotte is simply hinting her, and a change of 1. Do Not Need Jobs Needed Townpeople who can use employees in exchange for room, board or cash, please call the Women's Employees Bureau at once. The number is K U 28 and the address is 202 Admium building. --house by scoring 19 points to lead the rest. It was the fifth and final game of his career there, and in the five games he has averaged better than 18 points per game. Tee Connelly, Sooner forward, hold Ebling to six points in the first EBLIN half, but the All- American Jayhawk got away in the sec- ture and put it in setups. Ferdinand Praille, sophomore, Jayhawk, guard, was second high man team with 11 points team with 11 points. EBLING Bill Martin, sophomore on guard on the Sooner team, was high point man 'o he Oklahoma team with 12 points and was the sparkplug of a Sooner rally LEADING BIG SIX SCORERS BLEM DIRECTOR Ellking Kan. 6 | G Tp. Aave. Ekling Kan. 6 | 78 13.00 Wahiquist, Neb. 6 | 75 12.50 Burna, K-State 6 | 45 11.25 Livingston, Okla. 2 | 21 10.50 Groves, Kana. 5 | 51 10.20 Flemmin, Iowa State 6 | 59 9.80 Cowen, Iowa State 6 | 51 8.50 Cowen, Iowa State 6 | 59 8.50 Whitaker, Neb. 6 | 48 8.00 Tone, Okla. 6 | 42 7.65 which fell five points short in the closing minutes of the game. With nine minutes to go the Jay- minkeyes had a nine point lead. Oklahoma made four points in the four minutes and the spectators were screaming for one of those last - minute rallies. Praille ended the Oklahoma a hopes, however by sinking a long shot driving Kansas to a seven- point lead, Ebling hit JOHN MAYER two baskets in a row and the ball game was over. FERDINAND The Jayhawkers will return home today and begin preparations for entertaining Kansas State here next Saturday. Oklahoma Connelly, f Warren, c Nelson, e Livingston, c Marina, g Romy, g Tore, g F.G. F.T. P.I. 2 0 1 0 0 0 4 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 4 boy store: Kensing, Ears, Allen, f F.G. F.T.P. Allen, f 6 7 Noble, c 3 1 Kempesman, g 0 1 Priddle, g 5 1 Shaffer, g 0 0 Officials: E. C. Quigley, St. Mary's Parke Carroll, Kansas City. TOOTHS Score a half: Kansas 23, Oklahoma 18. The box score: Former Student in Movies TOTALS ...16 11 Former Student in Movies Lorraine Miller, who attended the University of Kansas the second semester of college, spent years in the current movie musical, "Colleen." She has also appeared in several other productions. While at the University she was registered as Clara Lorraine Miller. Miss Miller was born in Wichita, lived in El Dorado and later in Kansas City where she was graduated from high school. She married row and lives in Holy Wood, Calif. Chubb, Brockelbank, Harrison, and Ira Agren, Snacking Bowl TOTALS ... 15 6 11 "American Neutrality" will be the subject of a K.U. Peace-Action Committee forum at 8 o'clock, Thursday evening. Feb. 6, Lounge Bottom, 1024 E. 7th Street, Union Buildings. A panel of four speakers has been chosen to present the subject of neutrality. They are: Prof. H. B. Chubb, Ph.D.; Prof. R. S. Greenfield; Prof. W. J. Brocklebank, professor of law; Rev. Carter Harrison, rector of the Episcopal church; and Prof. John Lise, of the economics faculty. The probable will be prof. Olin Templin. "Every effort has been made," said Alfred C. Ames, c38, chairman of the committee, "to make this forum an outstanding one. The subject of neutrality is, in my estimation, of paramount importance at the present time. To handle this vital subject, we have to proceed in procuring an unusually fine group of people that this forum unquestionably will be the best that we have offered." Each speaker will talk for a period of about 15 minutes, and then the dishe- tled room will be closed. The meeting will close promptly at ten o'clock. The peace group's forums committee headed by Henry Barker, Hobe has been in charge of arrangements. To Fill CSEP Vacancies By Thursday, Says Olsen Sixty New Employees Will Be Hired Next Semester Assignment of students to fill approximately 60 vacancies in CSEP jobs, which is occupying the CSEP office this week, will probably be completed by Wednesday or Thursday, according to Miss Mary C. Olsen, executive secretary of the CSEP begins Thursday, and all assignments be completed by that time. - * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * All students who have joins the second semester are asked to call at the CSEP office on Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday. Feb. Wednesday, or Thursday. Feb. Second semester class schedule. Miss Olson asks that all students who have jobs for this semester call at the CSEP office on Tuesday, Wednesday or Friday to fill in second semester class schedule. Reorganization for the new semester presents a prodigious task to the CSEP office. It is necessary to check all grades, both of present employees and those who fall below the average of 1 grade point, and placing on probation those whose averages are between 1 and 1.5. Qualifications of the applicants must then be examined, and students with proper training and ability selected for them may proceed on probation until 80 degrees or on the day and downstream which are able for CSEP help. "As a whole, though," she points out, "CSEP students have been doing highly creditable work in their studies. During the academic year 1934-1935 the 823 students averaged 1.61 grade points per student. Of the graduates in the University was only 1.33. The greatest difficulty is encountered by first-stemmer freshmen, of whom some are carrying too great a load, while others have not yet been able to adjust themselves to the amount of work necessary to attain satisfactory grades. "We show as much compassion as possible toward these students. When an employee drops below a "C" average he must be dropped; but if his average falls between 1 and 1.5, he is not in danger of being fired. During this time he must raise his total average to 1.5, in order to be retained on the payroll." MARY C. OLSEN. Many of the vacancies this semester were caused by completion of college courses, while others resulted from inability of employees to maintain the scholastic average required. This average has been raised this year from 64.1% to 70.9%. Student Assembly Will Do Honor To Chancellor Lindley Dr. Coffman of Minnesota To Be Guest Speaker At Tuesday's Convoitation Dr. L. D. Coffman, president of the University of Minnesota, will address the All-University Convocation Tuesday morning at 10 o'clock, in honor of Dr. E. H. Lindley, who has completed 15 years of administration as chancellor of the University of Kansas. Thele Also Will Speak The Hon. Walter G. Thiele, Justice of the Court of Appeal and president of the K. U. Lawnship Association, will speak briefly. The subject of Dr. Coiffran's address will be "The Realm of Intelligent Men". C. M. Harger, chairman of the Board of Regents, will preside at the convention, will be introduced by Dr. William L. Burick, vice-president of Thiele Also Will Sneak The program also will include an organ prelude, "Fantasia in C Minor" by Bach, played by Prof. Laurel E Anderson, and a violin solo by Prof. Waldemar Golch, "Romance" by Wien-ausoak. During his 15 years of service at the University of Kansas, Chancellor James B. Burns brought to the University the largest grant of state appropriations for buildings and salaries ever voted, and the memorial gift to the University in a stadium and Union. Dr. Coffman also will speak at a meeting of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce Tuesday noon, on the subject, "Youth and Tomorrow's Probs. Enrollment Has Increased He has seen the enrollment rise from 3329 in 1920 to 4246 in the fall semester of 1935. During his administration, degrees have been awarded to 11,816 persons. Chancellor Lindley had an active part in promoting the College Student Body, and in bringing 120,000 students in America were able to continue in college last year. He is a member of the President's Advisory committee of 37 under the National Council for Education. BASKETBALL RESULTS Drake U. 45, Creighton 38. Washburn 42, Washington U. 30. Ft. Hays 45, Emporia Teachers 28. Chancellor Lindley will be further honored at a dinner Tuesday evening in the Memorial Union building which will be attended by all the administrative and instructional members of the University staff and their wives. BASKETBALL RESULTS WILLIAM C. KENNEDY With dropping temperatures doubling the consumption and drifting snow cutting off the supply, the coal demand in other towns, has become a real threat in Lawrence. Practically all available coal had been sold yesterday evening. Only half a ton was allowed by state laws, and many enough to set even that. The delayed COMPANIES WILL INTERVIEW SENIOR BUSINESS STUDENT arrival of cars of coal expected yesterday, cancelled promised deliveries and many homes are virtually without fuel. Famous Kansas citizen, who died of heart attack in Washington yesterday was the first American of Indian parish in the state and position it on the nation's government. THE FORECAST Generally fair Sunday and Monday; rising temperatures Sunday and in the extreme east Monday. Companies who have set interview dates are: Socony-Vaccum Oil company (foreign department), Feb. 18; W. T. Grant company (chain store), Feb. 20, and General Electric company, Feb. 27. The Goodyear and the Firestone rubber companies and the Ford Motor companies have made arrangements to interview students but no definite date have been set. The eighty-sixth School of Fine Arts Vesper Organ Recital will be presented at 4 p.m. today in the University auditorium by Laurel Everette Anderson. The recital will feature Chaucee (Buxehude), "Elevazione" (Zipil), "Baspille" et Besas de Troupta (Clerambault), "Choral-Herr Jesu Christ, Dich uus unw" (Cantonale), "Symphonie de l'Agne Mystique, Third movement-Pinalte") Two churches, the First Methodist and the Second Presbyterian, have been built to ensure they have insufficient coal to properly heat the buildings. A canvass of organized LAUREL ANDERSON WILL GIVE VESPER ORGAN RECITAL TODAY COAL SHORTAGE THREAT HANGS OVER LAWRENCE THE FORECAST Several business organizations have set dates for the purpose of interviewing seniors in the School of Business, Dean Stockton has announced. BULLETIN The temperature on the campus last night at 12 o'clock was 8 degrees below zero, the lowest reading recorded yet this year. The next School of Fine Arts All-Musical Vespers will be given Sunday Feb. 16. houses last night revealed that there would be no immediate shortage among the Greek lodges. The University has an emergency backup of housing is anticipated. Many campus activities were curtailed because of the extreme cold. The rife team, teamed to go to Leavenworth, the unit of the 15th Infantry abandoned the trip because of the cold and the hazardous condition of highways. The Jayahawk-Kansas State swim meet which was to have been held in Robinson pool was canceled due to bad weather between Lawrence and Manhattan. Kansas City, Feb. 8—(UP)–Winter unleashed its cruelest blows Saturday night against middle west state ally Oklahoma. The temperature of 19 degrees-recorded cold. (Continued on page 2) A raging northwest blizzard, borne on a 40-mile gale, whelped across state after state, stalling traffic, blocking coal railroads and fueling the fuel and food shortages to the emergency point in many sections. Deaths since Jan. 21 have risen to 98. Overheated Furnace Is Believed To Be Cause of Disastrous Blaze Last Night; No Damage To Adjoining Buildings Was Reported; Loss Partly Covered By Insurance Fire totally destroyed the United Brethren church building at Seventeenth and Vermont streets last night, as firemen, hampered by the sub-zero weather, battled fatfully to check the raging flames. Curtis To Be Buried In Topeka Next Tuesday Flames shot from the roof of the church and rose The blaze, which started presumably from an overheated furnace in the basement, had gained such headway by the time firemen arrived on the scene that they could only attempt to keep the fire from spreading to adjoining buildings. The alarm was turned in at 9:30 o'clock by George Forrester, 1705 Vermont street, who noticed smoke coming from the church and investigated. Former Vice-president Dies Of Heart Attack In Capitol Topela, Feb. 8—(UP) -Kansas is preparing to do final honors Tuesday to Charles Curtis, the only Kansas ever to be vice-president. Senator Curtis died in Washington this morning for his work in support of for burial beside that of his wife. Members of the family here said details of the funeral had not been completed, but that it had been deserved. Services would be held here Tuesday. Friends to Pay Tribute Men and women in all parts of the state who were killed in victory and defeat will be here. Thousands who never agreed with him politically, but who admired him and appre- tained them, will be at- tained, will join in the tribute. While no official announcement had been made, it was understood all state officials would have to accept that every honor Kansas could confer would be bestowed at the last rites for the most distinguished and most widely known Kansas ever to represent this nation. Senator Curtis was one of the few remaining of the old line Republicans who were ultra-conservative and who opposed the party for more than a quarter of a century. Much of the fighting was done around Senator Curtis, and always he was in the midst of the debates between advocates and adversaries came to srira. Had Fine Record Evidence of the esteem and appreciation in which the people of Kansas held Curtius was shown by the way he maintained himself in high office no matter how low he performed, movements swept over the state. Only on one occasion did he go down in defeat before the 1532 landslide in which he and President Hoover were That one defeat was in 1912. Curtis then was one of the outstanding men of the United States state. But he rebelled and was defeated on several occasions when Kansas was going over to the Roosevelt Bull Moors. In the primary of 1912 Curis was defeated for a renomination by W. R. Stubbs, who defeated two terms in the governor's office. Two years later however, he was returned by a large majority, and soon became one of the outstanding leaders of the party. He was closely associated in political life with Clyde W. Miller, Topeka insurance man and with the dale D. W. Mulvane, national committee chairperson and vice-president nomination for Mr. Curtis at the 1928 convention in Kannass City. Conversion Schedule First period 8:30 to 9:15 Second period 9:15 to 9:50 Third period 9:50 to 10:00 Fourth period 10:00 to 11:30 Fifth period 11:30 to 12:45 To provide for the all-University convention on Tuesday morning, February 11, at 10 a.m. the class will schedule will be held: one church and rose to a height of nearly one hundred feet. By 10 'o'clock the fire had developed into a fiery inferno that cast an eerie glow over the sky; the ruins were still smoldering early this morning. Nearby houses were endangered, but efforts of firemen were successful in drowning飞ings sparks. 500 People Watch Fire A crowd estimated at 500 soon collected, despite the extreme cold and slippery streets, to watch the fire Traffic was congested for nearly an hour. The structure, completely destroyed, was estimated to be worth $20,000, by J. R. Edmonds, a director of the church. This loss was partly covered by insurance, according to Edmonds. The Reverend N. H. Huffman, pastor of the church, said that nothing had been recovered from the building. He had been in the parsonage until the fire engines arrived and was not aware that the church was burning. Water Freezes Immediately Water, played in the church and nearby buildings from all angles, immediately froze on the streets and sidewalks and caused many upsets among onlookers and firemen. One of the firefighters, carrying more hose toward the burning structure, lost his footing on the ice and fell hard on the pavement. Falling timber from the roof looked like a giant cannon; the danger. Speciators gasped when the church bell supports weakened and the instrument fell into the blaze with a clang. Fire Chief Paul Ingels said that his men were severely hampered by the sub- zero weather and by the fact that the fire had pinned such headway beaten. He agreed. His agreement with Edmond's statement that the building was a total loss. Engineers Meet in Wichita Professors Jackson, McNown, Russell, Boyce, and Shaad Will Attend Sessions The annual meeting of the Kansas Engineering Society and the Kansas section of the American Society of Civil Engineers in Wichita tomorrow and Tuesday. Professors D. C. Jackson, Jr., W. C. #Nown, F. A. Russell, E. Boyce, and bean Shaad of the School of Engineer- and Architecture will attend. Professor Jackson, who is leaving the University to take up his new duties as director of the Lewis Institute in Chicago, is serving his last term as president of the Kansas Engineering Society. Professor Boyce will discuss "What I Know About the Main theme of which will be the effect of the recent relief building projects on the engineering and architectural professions. A future policy of the society may be decided in the discussion which will be opened by Prof. W. C. McNown on the day we shall Wept About a One-Day Session?" STUDENTS MAY OBTAIN GRADES FROM REGISTRAR, FEB. 10-15 All students may obtain their grades for the full semester from the registrar's office Feb. 10 to 15 inclusive, George O. Foster, registrar, announced. The schedule for obtaining grades is as follows: Monday, Feb. 10, A to G; Tuesday, Feb. 11, A to B; Wednesday, Feb. 12, N to S; Thursday, Feb. 13, T to Z; Friday, Feb. 14, and Saturday, Feb. 15, the office will be open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. to their grades at the scheduled time. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 9, 1936 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS PUBLISHER HARRY VALENTINE ASSOCIATE EDITORS BILL GILLE AIMA PRATTER MANAGING EDITOR FRED M. HARRIS, INC BUSINESS MANAGER F. QUENTIN BROWN STAFF Campus Editor BILL RODRIGUEZ MARK UP EDITORS | DON HUELS BELL DOWNS | BILL DOWNS SPORTS Editor JASON CHOEHN NEWS Editor JASONOTHERS SOUTH EDITOR PREFERRED SUNDAY EDITOR JAMES POLKINGDOWN MARGARET BOYAT RUTHFORD HAYES HARLEN MEYER F. QUINCY BROWN HARLEN MEYER JULIEN BROWN RUTHE SYNDON SIMPLY JOHN HARLEN MEYER HENRY HADLEY HARLEN MEYER HENRY HADLEY KANSAN BOARD MEMBERS BILL DECKER Business Office RU 66 Night Construction, Business Office RU 21 Night Construction, Business Office 2701 RU 2 Night Construction, Business Office 3456 RU 2 Sale and exclusive national advertising representatives NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE, Inc. (800) 261-3344 Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland, Seattle Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday morning except during school holidays by students in the department of Journalism of the University of Kansas from the Press of the Department of Journalism. Subscription price, per year, $1.00 cash in advance, $3.25 on payments. Single coupon, tk each. Enter as second class master, September 17, 1910, at the post office at lawrence, Kansas. SUNDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 9, 1936 Superstitions, though age old, are still much in evidence today. THE MODERN SUPERSTITION The average individual of this modern generation merely scoffs at superstitious beliefs as being so much rubbish. To those who hold these irreligious beliefs, however, the superstition is something highly regarded and feared. The average individual is quick to report that ignorance and misinformation cause certain individuals to hold and fear superstitious beliefs. This same average individual who scoffs at superstitions, is the first to shudder with fear at the mention of socialism, communism, or fascism. These terms hold but one meaning—a Red element that is out to destroy and overthrow everything thus for created. To these individuals the Red element is something to be feared greatly. But why does the average individual hold this fear? Again, ignorance and misinformation are the bases for this fear. So, we find that the fear of the Red element is not unlike the fear of a superstition. Education and knowledge of a subject will remove much of the horror element, and for this reason the Kansan will present as clearly as possible for your information, the meanings of communism, socialism, and fascism. -Kansas City Kansan. At the center of the earth, says a scientific item, the pressure is about 22,000 tons to the square inch. Or about that which is brought to bear on political jobbholders in a campaign year. THE MUSEUM- WHAT GOOD WAS IT? The Museum of Natural History was to the zoology student as a library is to a lover of literature. The Museum was the point of contact between the University and the general public. Dyche Museum of Natural History served four classes of people, before it was closed to the public. Nov. 30, 1932. First, zoology students—the Museum housed a wealth of material for research study for the graduate student. The displays and specimens fitted in laboratory instruction to perfection. Second, Fire Art students—the Museum satisfied their aesthetic craving—to see the beautiful things of nature and to be closer to nature. They also sketched the specimens. Third, general students—the Museum satisfied their curiosity and aesthetic cravings. Last, general public—the Museum made it possible for the layman to understand better and to broaden his knowledge of pre-historic life as well as present life of our continent. Life in Kansas was emphasized; however, the specimens represented every mammal of North America. And the Museum will continue to serve those same classes of people. WHEN it is opened again. COMPULSORY MILITARY TRAINING A solution for the much discussed question of compulsory military training in colleges has been placed Congress in the form of the Nye-Kvale proposal. If this bill, which has already been referred to the Senate and House Military Affairs Committees, becomes a law, it would do away with compulsory R.O.T.C. training in civil schools. The proposal is in the form of an insert into the bill of 1920 which established college R.O.T.C. units. This insert provides that no R.O.T.C. unit shall be established or maintained in any school or college "until such institution shall have satisfied the Secretary of War that enrollment in such unit (except in the case of essentially military schools) is elective and not compulsory." While compulsory military training is not required of Kansas University students, there are 118 civil schools and colleges in the United States which compel students to enroll in the R.O.T.C. These schools offer no alternative for conscientious objectors or others to whom military training is offensive. The Supreme Court of the United States has upheld the right of land grant colleges to enforce the regulation concerning compulsory R.O.T.C. It does not appear that compulsory military training in colleges is necessary for the protection of the United States. The students who dislike military training and are forced to undergo it, wouldn't make very good soldiers. Compulsory military training is against the principles on which our Bill of Rights is founded. American freedom is not upheld or practiced when American citizens are forced to do that which is useless and contrary to their own sacred principles. Campus Opinion Article in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the authors and should be consulted when possible. Length are intended to convey by the edition. Contributions Editor Daily Kansan: Why should the North Carolina cribbers get all the publicity? Are they more clever than the local boys and girls who occasionally put their talents to the gentle art? Of course the Tar Tir bunch may have been a bit better organized but the business is here and after all they were caught and we haven't been, so how about it? Cribbing or cheating takes a number of forms on the campus. Every organized house and some unorganized ones have carefully kept files of old booksheets and quiz questions by which the individual may pass a course with a minimum of original work. Students who take an examination usually pass the questions on to others who will take it later. On notebooks which have received high ratingsworth a tall sum. Ghost writing is a thriving business. When it comes to actual embbling in a quiz, there seems to be no end to the originality of our local talent. In one course, memorized poetry had to be written in class. Some bright boy wrote his outread of time on three kinds of paper from the teacher and scribbled on it for a while, switched papers and got a top grade on the exercise. Notes written on the inner side of the shin, on the collar of the fellow in front of you, pinned to the toe of your shoe, or slipped inside a wide cuff are the favorite methods employed by many experts. Members of the father sex often skip notes inside silk stockings at the knee. You can also see these vital skibrillings can be easily read through the hose. Follow cribers, those North Carolina fellows have nothing on us; let demand our rights. We can be evidence of that. ... OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m. preceding regular publication days and 11:19 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issues. Vol. 33 FEBRUARY 9.1936 ALL-UNIVERSITY CONVOCATION. There will be an all-University Convocation at 10 o'clock Tuesday morning, February 11. The speakers will be Justice Walter G Thiele and President L. D. Coffman. Betty Hanson, Chairman ADVANCED STANDING COMMISSION OF W. Y.C. A: The Advanced Standing Commission of the W.Y.C.A. will meet Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 at Henley House. All upper class women are invited. FIRST SEMESTER GRADES: Grades for the fall semester may be obtained from the Registrar's Office February 10-15, according to the following schedule of student names: Monday, Feb. 10-A to G inclusive Tuesday, Feb. 11—H to M inclusive (except during convention) FRESHMAN COMMISSION OF Y.W.C.A.: The Freshman Commission of the W.Y.C.A. will meet Monday at 4:30 at Henley House. All new freshmen women are especially invited to attend. Jean Russell, Chairman. Wednesday, Feb. 12—N to S inclusive George O. Foster, Registrar. Chas. Zeskey, President. Thursday, Feb. 13—T to Z inclusive Friday, Feb. 14 [Those unable] Friday, Feb. 14 ( Those unable to come at the Saturday, Feb. 15) scheduled time. FRESHMAN COUNCIL: The Freshman Council will meet Monday evening at 7 o'clock in room 10 Memorial Union Building. Plans for the second semester will be made. Donald Henry, President. TAU SIGMA Tau Sigma Dance meeting will be held Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock in Brownstein gymnasium. HOME ECONOMICS CLUB: The Home Economics Club has hosted the initiation and waffle supper from September 21 to October 3, 2015. KAPPA Phi: Kappa Phi will have a tea this afternoon from 3 to 5 o'clock at 1209 Room Publicity Chairman KU KU MEETING: There will be a Ku Ku meeting Wednesday night at 10:30 in the Memorial Union Building. All members please be present. Eddie Rice, Secretary. QUILL CLUB: Quill Club will meet in the WS.GCA. Lounge Thursday, Feb. 13, at 7:50 pm. All pledges are accepted. PHI DELTA KAPPA: There will be a short but very important meeting of Phi Delta Kappa at 4:38 p.m. Monday, Feb. 10, in room 115 Fraser. All members should be there. N. D. Ritzzo, President. MEMBERS OF STAFF. Tickets for the dinner Tuesday evening honoring Chancellor Lindley must be purchased by noon Monday. Committee on Arrangements, More Abundant Life Can Be Attained Says Promoter of Co-operative Plan Dorothy Smart, Publicity Chairman By Hugh Gordon Hadley, c'36 Admittedly, the movement has received greater attention and impetus due to the late economic unpleasantness, but when one contemplates the history of its consumers protest, exerting new demands for more evolving from an insignificant beginning to one of the greatest buying powers in the world, one is constrained to view it seriously, with an eye to its possibilities, both of the danger it holds for established business and the potential opens to us for a more abundant life. In a period of highly emotional appeals to the commoner, the worker and the great middle class, it is refreshing to come upon a movement which does not accept self-aggrandement or for undercover work designed to sway the public thinking. The Co-operative movement is such, and although its adherents admit a noble desire to convert the world to their way of doing business, they seem perfectly content to leave it to the commoner, who pouch onward to Elysia where no man shall profit unduly at the expense of another. Here they were beset by many problems of management. They were blazing a new trail, these Rochdale Pioneers, and the way was not always decided upon was that the organization should be democratically controlled. The few weavers who had contributed their money were entitled to some remuneration they reassigned, but they provided that no matter how many employees they had, he should have only one vote in the council. But they paid what they considered a fair rate of interest, since established at about six per cent, and thus eliminated any chance of profiting from simply a consumers betterment movement. The weavers of Rochdale, England, (twenty-eight of them), in the year, 1844, saw their lives being confined by their inability to apply their mass purchases to their jobs. They were bad, wages were low, and all attempts at betterment by such men as Robert Owen and William King had met a dimental fate. These weavers relied on labor and not capital, and signified to assure them the full benefits of their wages, instead of permitting a huge leak between producer and consumer. They pooled their resources, $140 it totalled after nearly a century, into a small store商店 in Toad Lane. In a speech on the student forum platform Thursday night, Dr. James P. Warbasek, president of the Co-operative League of America, scouted the idea that the co-operatives subscribe to Communicative Ideas. Dr. Warbasek proposed a debate about capitalism, but he does not propose to throw over the whole system on a moment's notice for some untried harebrined scheme. "The capitalistic system is a balanced account," he said. "It tells the milk bottle down at the kitchen door. It sets up railroad tracks across it." The unused slums and the Great War." In late years one feature of the Rechdale plan has been more widely stressed than the others, until many uniformed persons conceive it to be the best way to protect themselves patronage refund is an essential part of the plan, but by no means constitutes its whole program. This provides that each consumer shall be refunded a certain percentage of the amount of his purchases when the organization receives a bill for them finds that it has a surplus remaining. This surplus is the difference between what the co-operative paid at a quantity price for the goods, and what the consumers paid for them, after deducting insurance, tax, insurance and other charges. The Co-operative movement, while it does not work insidiously, is yet very effective in communities where the average citizen does not suspect its presence. It does not come with a loud huzzah and rolling of drums, but rather with some small number of neighbors that they could stretch their dollar much farther by co-operative action. In North Kansas City, Mo., are the headquarters of the Consumer's Co-operative Association, with 259 member Co-ops centered throughout several states. The Co-operative products, but has recently branched to include all automobile accessories and a paint factory. swered already. Co-op accepts the market price set by the leading producer in that field, except such instances as England, where the Co-op control a majority of the nations retail expenditures, and are thus able to set the price themselves. Dr. Warbzame explained the almost magical reduction in sales overseas foreign countries, with no actual cut throat competition. Some persons believe that Co-op products are inferior, but the young filling station attendant riddled that argument with the bland inquiry. "Why should we want to retail inferior product to our customers?" recompensated just as much anyway." An attendant at its filling station on the nearby highway, is smilingly ready to discuss with you the merits of the Co-op. He is a graduate of their educational school, and seemingly can communicate well. What are these attacks? One is the plan will dispense with the middle man, a large portion of the public. The Co-op answer this with the assertion that when a local Co-op is set up, the members are willing and anxious to retain the former manager to get the benefit of his experiences, and only then that he become a member himself. Dr. Warbasse explained that Co-op did not worry over their ultimate goal and denied that they were seeking to encompass all industry in the Government's effort to expand to gain control of sources of production and supply, and over one hundred million persons now buy from co-operative, consumer controlled stores, but Dr. Warbasse said the movement needed the stimulus of a competitive, profit seeking business that it up to its present high standards. The movement has been a hundred years in the making, and scarcely can prove to be a flash in the pan. Its goal is to make economic sense by the recent economic upheaval, but it offers the best escape from a money mad, materialistic, cut - throat, competitive system without going to the good side of idealism and hopeless Utopianism. Another person charges that Co-ops out prices. That charge has been an- A Corner On Books By Charles Haward, c'unel. My Country and My People, by Lin Yutang. (Reynal & Hitchcock, N. Y. a John Day book, 1835). One of the most important movements in China today is the discovery of new educational intellectuals. They are beginning to discover their own masses to find that life in the country side, in small towns in the country is the real and native life of China. Dr. Lin Yutang was reared a Christian; he now describes himself as a pagan. He has had a Western education; he is a modern. He is wise and penetrative in his understanding, for the Chinese have been all too po ples wise and penetrative in their understanding of the human heart. He is humorous, because humor is an essential part of Chinese nature, deep, melow, kindly humor, founded upon the great virtue of perseverance. Pearl S. Buck has written a sympathetic and appreciative introduction. In his preface he says, "I write only for the men of simple common sense, that simple common sense for which ancient China was so distinguished. To these people who have not lost their values, to them alone I speak. For they alone will understand me." He traces the Chinese ideals of life through Humanism, Confucianism, Taoism and Buddhism. He praises the Chinese culture, the product of leisure; for the Chinese have had the inneneed of three thousand years to develop it. Dr. Lin Yuanyin divides his book into two parts: Part One "Bases," includes an introduction, a history of character, mind and ideals of life; Part Two, "Life," treats of the woman's life, the social and political life, the artistic life, the artistic life, and the art of living. He stresses China's sound instinct for life, a strange supernatural, extraordinary vitality. She has survived all the trials she has endured by her poor children and grandchildren. Merry Old China quietly prays her tea and smiles on, and in her smile she grins. In writing this momentous portrayal of China and the Chinese people, Lin Yutang finally looks at the pathetic equalizer of the country today. He concludes, "I ask for patience from the country," and he continues, "men, for they have too much of it. And I ask for hope from my countrymen, for to hope is to live." Fresh SILEX COFFEE An invigorating stimulant. UNION FOUNTAIN VALENTINES --- The Book Nook 1021 Mass Tel. 666 How to Dress Well Dear Cherie Taylor PHONE US Any cleaning will make clothes look better for a while! But it takes really good cleaning to make them new. A man is jumping up. New York Cleaners ARE YOU HARD TO PLEASE? WE INVITE THE PEOPLE WHO HAVE NEVER REARRING SATISFIED WITH THE ORDINARY SHOP REPAIRING ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP 10171⁹ Mass. W. E.WESTSTONE Phones 605 LOST! Has one of your possessions joined the foreign legion? Reclaim it through the Kansan Classified Ad column. KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS 1. Recover lost articles 2. Rent rooms 4. Sell typing ability 2. Sell books and instruments 5. Find room mates 6. Locate tutors THE COST IS LOW 25c for 25 words 1 time — 50c, same ad three days The Short-Cut to Results! If the job is possible in any way, Kansan Classified Ads will do it. Call at the Kansan Business Office East of the Library K.U. 66 — Phone — K.U. 66 SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 9. 1936 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Ku Hill Society BEFORE 5 P.M. CALL, K.U. 25, BETWEEN 7:50 AND 9 P.M. CALL 2701K3 or 2702K3. AND 9 P.M.CALL 2701K3 OR 2702K3. Fireside Tea Held A number of new women students on the campus were entertained at an informal "desiree" tea yesterday afternoon from 3 to 5 o'clock in Henley house. The affair was sponsored by the Campus Stats committee. Mrs. Charlotte Walker presided as hostess, with Miss Elizabeth Megnaur, advisor for the School of Rosemary Ketcham, professor in the School of Fine Arts, assisting. A pastel color motif was expressed in the huge bouquet of variegated flowers in the tables set in silver candlebaskets, and in the refreshments. KU The committee in charge of arrangements was comprised of Ecquieline Gimenez, 32, Carlea Leda, 33, captains Helen Barres, 32, Cebul Fennel, 32, Celtie Leda, 33, Lorene Cusaneder, 33, Catherine Penner, 33, Cassandra Ford, 34, and Wilma Secken, 33. Pi K. A. Holds Formal Pi Kappa Alpha entertained with a formal dance at the chapter house Friday. Out of town guests were Jean Swinheart, Ruth Wilcox, Mary Lou Poult, Katherine Kemper, Jimmie Midkiss, Kannas City, Mo. The party was chaperoned by Mrs P. H. Klinikonberg, Mrs. Ralph Baldwin, Mrs. Jane MacLean, and Mrs D. O. Garman. Alpha Gamma Delta entertained with a Valentine party last night at the chapter house. Chaperson were Mrs. John Gilbert, Mrs. Alice Moncrieff, and Mrs. William Hittig. Happy Halloween. In Camosa City, Mo., furnished the music. ☆ ☆ ☆ Rockwell Smith, c33, has his mother as a weekend guest from Gratt at the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity house. Phi Chi, professional medical fraternity, announces the pledging of Dr Kenneth Siler, instructor in the department of physiology. ☆ ☆ ☆ Jane Benton and Mildred Yancey, both of Kansas City, Ms. were lunch guests at the Gamma Phi Beta sorority house Friday. Lois Elaine Willetts, Topika, is visiting her sister, Dorothy Jane Willetts c'29, at Watkins hall during the weekend. Weekend guests of Gamma Phi Beta security are Virginia Sheldon, Kansas City, Mo., and Dorothy Berryman, Tupea. ☆ ☆ ☆ Kappa Alpha Theta sorority held PHONE K.U.66 TYPEWRITERS LAUNDRY ROOMS FOR RENT LAUNDRY: Student bundles a spe ciality. Good work at moderate prices. Called for and delivered. Phone 2948 TYPEWRITERS. Monarchs and Rem- nions for sale. Rentals. Repair of all mats of typewriters. Call Kahnt $92. — 95. BOYS-Large front room for two boys $12.00 per month. Board in the house at $4.00 per week. 1221 Tenn. -90 TAXI 1 TAXI TAILOR CLASSIFIED ADS ROOM FOR BOYS: Large, first floor, outside entrance. Hot and cold water. Southwest room second floor. Very desirable. 1480 Tennessee. Phone 1703 Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S - 920-22 Mass. FOR RENT: Trio nice rooms. Extra good beds. $3 and $8 per month. Also garage. Breakfast if desired. Call 2292J7 ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ pledging services Saturday morning for Vera Darling of Wichita. Alpha Delta Pi sorority will entertain with a buffet supper Sunday night at the chapter house. One Stop Clothes Service Station SCHULZ THE TAILOR 924 Mass. On the Shin Iris Olson, '35, of Kansas City, is a week-end guest at the Alpha Delta Pi sorority house. Train schedules from Manhattan to Lawrence were discontinued until late yesterday afternoon, and the State Highway commission advised Albern against letting the Agile team come back. Job 22 is the date new net for he meet. (Continued from page one) schools was her only means of relief. You shouldn't be so tiring, Jack! As a result of sub-zero weather and drifted snow, the Kansai State swimming team was unable to get to Lawrence for its dual meet with the University of Kansas squad yesterday afternoon. Mike Alaeh, director of the Kansai Athletics, notified Coach Alphin that he had to pardon the meet. Have any of you seen the perfectly "ducky" sandals being worn by Boh Wagner, of the Kappa Sig home? Not Well-I tell you, girls, they're simply stunning! No toes, or nothin', nothing but his cutie little "pinkies" sticking out in the air—and such cold air too, that when there weren't guys like him around, anything to write about, but, nevertheless, did you ever-neither did E I'll bet he reads this — he'll be mad enough to absolutely crush a grump (Continued from page one COLD CAUSES POSTPONEMENT OF K-STATE SWIMMING MEET PHONE K.U. 66 And now that this thing is finished . . . we can't please everyone . . . the gueled pleading for a cleaner column is drowned out by the one screening for it, so as someone has said about mint sauce: "I guess it to take thelam." Marjorie Hornbaker seems to be having a hard time putting up with this college life (and what a life I might say) since Bob Cunningham, erstwhile Barymore of K. U., is out of town. She says (or writes to him) that she can't seem to get anything out of her lecture courses because she's thinking of him. Wonder if she thinks about him when the lecture is over. --morning worship at 11, sermon by the minister. FOR SALE BOYS: Board and room. Excellent location. Large, family style meals. Reasonable rates. 1238 Ohio. -82 BOYS-Large delightful room with private the bath. Excellent meals five times a day at included Sundays, the summer months, Manor, 1941, Massachusetts. -22 Twenty-five words or one line inscription 25c; three inscriptions 32s; six inscriptions 74c; contract inscriptions 106c. Apply for advance payment to approve at the Kansas Business Office. Payable in advance. FOR SALE. Holtzlaw x "Principles of Marketing," and a "Land Economics Text." (Mississippi Survey Committee) Cat Pat a 2675J. -90 WANTED: 1000 neckties to be made to look like new. Only a dime each LAWRENCE STEAM LAUNDRY--92 FOR SALE: Our home at 1115 Louisiana with furnishings. Shown by appointment. Telephone 173. Florence M Hodder. 100 WANTED BEAUTY SHOPS SPECIAL~50c reduction on any per- manent, with this ad, except Saturday Permanents $1.50 to $5.00, complete with hair cut. IVA'S BEAUTY SHOPS $321½ Mass., Phone 2353; 9411½ Mass. Phone 333. Student Loans MISCELLANEOUS ABE WOLFSON 743 Muen Sixty-Eight Go To Rosedale Classes started last Thursday for 68 students in the School of Medicine who have been promoted to the University of Kansas hospital at Kansas City, Kan. Are Announced in School of Medicine Promotions A Those promoted were: Albert T. Aldrich, Topika, Frank F. Albrritten, Jr. Cunningham; Raymond J. Beal, Fredinan; James D. Bennett, Erickson; John B. Case, Ahleen; Luke Dlaihel, Wilson; Hary L. Douglas, Lawrence; Arthur W. Davis, Lawrence; Owen W. owee; Glenn C. Franklin, Hutchinson, Ruth Ann Hornace, Lawrence. Mrs. Berry Havenley, Centralia; Donald G. Holcob, Coldwater; Donald O. Howard, Wichita; Armold H. Janzen, Hillboro; Hdward G. Kelly, Manhattan; Harald J. Kirkla, Cawker City; Royle B. Klinkenberg, Ottawa; Frederick L. Kawerer, Haisington, Paul W. Kramer, Haisington, Paul W. Miller, Coffeville; Heiane Jane Montingo, Attien; Robert L. Newman, Stering Harold Paseman, Wichita; Harold L. Patterson, Lyons; George M. Plagens, Pittsburgh; Marlin P. Poindexter, Topeka; Otto F. Prochazka, Atwood;hew E. Reitz, Junelon City; Gordon H. Rhodes, William; Paul L. Sanders, McLough; John R. Schmidt; Howe; Rowan B. Prochazka; Oral, manhattan; Marlon L. Orant, Smith; Herbert L. Soner, Lincoln; Carl Stenshaug, Lindberg. William F. Stone, Jr. Tulsa; Raymond Tice, Temperate; Alice Marie Wallace, Yates Center; Paul H. Wedin Lawrence; Stewart M. Wilson, Wichita; Fred C. Enp, Lawrence; Donald S. Ferrari; Newton Dellert; Newton Dellert Coffelt; Pittburg; Gretton Guernsey; Pittsburgh; Mrs M. Cray, Lawrence; Gordon B. Sekawen, Brownell; Ernest Uebaker, Willii Minton Bosse, Ellwood; Benkidson F. Klausman, Clay Center; John F. Klusman, Ellwood; Otte哥, John C. Mitchell, Waldo. John F. Bower, Kansas City, Mo; Paul Harrington, Kansas City, Kan; Jack H. Hill, Kansas City, Mo; Thomas C. Hurst, Kansas City, Mo; Wayne E. Monroe, Kansas City, Mo; Jesse David Rising, Kansas City, Mo; David W. Robinson, Kansas City, Mo; Ben Clayton William, Kansas City, Kan; Fred C. Barnes, Kansas City, Kan; G. Davenport, Kansas City, Kan; Albert C. Harma, Kansas City, Kan; William B. Barry,ansas City, Kan; and Albert L. Williamson, Troy. Coal Shortage Threat Hangs Over Lawrence (Continued from page one) Temperature took another dive. Thirty-five below zero was Saturday night's forecast for Iowa—where hundreds of houses were missing and millions locked even a lump of coal. Trains run two to ten hours late or stopped at nearest stations to wait on the worst blizzard in some sections since 1886. Airplanes were grounded and bus, truck and automobile traffic was halted in some sections. Medical Aid Halted Doctors in rural districts were unl able to answer calls Twenty-five school children were snow-locked in a rural schoolhouse at Brigidsgate, Colo. More than 202 boys were marroned on Father Flanagan's 'boy' home of Owma with only two sisters in days. An airplane may drop breezes. Weather forecasters said the storm slowly was moving toward the Atlantic seaboard. The western plains, where temperatures from 20 to 38 degrees became more extreme, expected to feel mild relief Sunday as the cold area moved eastward. The frozen mud was compounded in the air during a combination snow and dust storm in the Garden City, Kan., vicinity. Native Kansas, who the last three years have experienced extreme drought, will not recall a similar freak of nature. The strange weather prank, unknown in that region of weather phenomena, came when the new cold wave rode into western Kansas on a gale and a 50-degree drop in temperature occurred within a few hours. Dust storms, which in some dry spots reduced visibility to 20 feet, swirled over the area late Friday and continued until midnight in with the cold wave Friday night. Snow was a fine, brownish color. Automobile windshield wipers were useless. The frozen mud plastered window, necessitating electric lights in the furnishings entered from the fields with what resembled Florida natans. The K.U. Peace Action Committee will hold its first meeting of the second semester at 4:30 tomorrow afternoon. The committee will consider the general topic of "Neutrality." The committee welcomes all interested students to its meetings. The most severe cold wave of several senses gave the western Kansas dust bowl a blizzard of frozen mud. Peace Action Committee To Meet Taking Rest Cure Brown Snow in Kansas 1930 Overture sends Eleanor Powell, sensational dancing screen and stage stage. She is now in rest for three years. She has time in ten years of trouncing. Eleanor Powell MUST MAKE APPOINTMENTS MUST MAKE APPOINTMENTS FOR LATE CLASS CHANGES College students who wish to make changes in enrollment, and who failed to do so at the late enrollment period should seek their point of emphasis with their respective class chairmen at the college office, according to J. H. Nelson, associate dean, Office hours of the class chairmen, and lists of faculty members are also available at the college office. Seniors who change classes will be required to obtain the approval of Prof. G. W. Smith, senior chairman; juniors, Prof. E. Loe Treese; sophomores, Prof. Else NeuenSchwander; freshmen man, Prof. C. J. Posey; and freshman women, Prof. Florence Black. In addition, any graduate program signifies in his major department need the signature of his major adviser before the chairman will sign it. All necessary changes in the College may be made in this way without any notice to the student. After Friday a special fee will be charged for all changes, including those in the College. No figures are yet available on the results of yesterday's enrollment period. At the Churches First Baptist church, Eighth and Kentucky streets—St Church school at 9:45, church sermon at 11. Sermon topic: "The Message of Two Voices Voices." Young people's meeting at 6:30. Free Methodist church, 1146 Connecticut street—Sunday school at 10 preaching service at 11. YPMS service at 6:43 and preaching service at 7:30. Church of God, Eleventh and New Hampshire schools—Sunday school at 9:45; morning worship at 11:00; morning service at 6:30; evening service at 7:30. First Christian church, Teeth and Kentucky street—Church school at 9:45; morning church at 10:30; forum at 11:30; museums, a Loyal Friend of Quiet Nature." Plymouth Congregational church, 935 Vermont Street - Morning worship at 11; sermon theme: "Youth and His Mission" in the lecture illustrated by Bryson Jones. Elm Street Christian Church - Morning worship at 11. Subject of the sermon: "The Supreme Question." The Sermon of the church will not meet tonight. Friends church, Eleventh and Delaware streets—Bible school at 9:45. Member of Famous Stage Family Says Dramatics Courses Have Dubious Value "College dramatics courses may do as much harm to the student aspiring actor as they do good. It largely depends on the school attended and the experience and ability of the instructors," said Ethel Bairmory Ccolt last night in her theater house before curtain call for her current road play, "Accent on Youth." "If we judge the value of college training in the field of drama by the success of a stage, it can be said that most education is successful. Margaret Sollivan is a good example of the college graduate who has used such training to good effect." At an age when the average college Trinity Lutheran church, Thirteenth and New Hampshire - Sunday school at 9:45; mornings worship at 11. Sermon subject: "Jesus, the Subbath-Breaker" at 6:15; Sunday study at 6:15; 6:15; Luther League at 6:15; Luther student discussion period at 7. Trinity Episcopal church, Teeth and Vermont streets—Holy Communion at 8; church school at 9:45; morning school at 11; young people's fellowship at 6. First Methodist Episcopal church—No services will be held due to fuel shortage and inability to heat building. First Evangelical church, 1000 Connecticut street - Sunday school, 8:45 morning service, 10:45. Dr. N. H. Huffman, minister to the Lawrence United Eastern church, will preach. Immuniel Lutheran church, Tenth and Kentucky-Kundry-School school and Bible class at 10; DIVine service at 11; SUNRISE Church, at 7; That I Am the Lord.' Open forum at 6. Unitarian church, Twelfth and Vermont streets - Church school at 9:45. At 10 there will be a discussion group with an 11 anniversary service will be held. Church of the Nazarene, Nineteenth and Vermont streets-Sunday school at 10; morning school at 11. The subject of the sermon is: "The Stewardship of Life." Young people's service at 4:45 and evening service at 7:45. First Presbyterian church, Ninth and Vermont streets—Church school at 9:45; service service at 11. Sermon theme "The Significance of Kagawa," from the Studebaker Stadium forum meet at the Westminster hall, 1221 Oread. First Church of Christ, Scientist, 1240 Massachusetts street — Sunday school at 10; Sunday service at 11; Subject: "Spirit." Second Church of Christ, Scientist, Wiedemann building, 835% Massachusetts street-Sunday school at 9:45; service at a11. Subject: "Spirit" Church of Christ, 415 Lincoln street, North Lawrence—Bible study and prayer at 10:30; preaching at 11; com- munity at 11:45. Sermon: "The Holy Spirit." If You Think Your Finals Gave You a Perfect Fit You should see what a difference a suit makes that has been tailored to FIT YOU! Repairing, Remodeling, and Cleaning Department DeLuxe CHECK with us SCHULZ the TAILOR "Suiting You—That's My Business" New Location 924 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass DURING THIS COLD WEATHER Hot Water Heaters ----- $4.95 up Prestone, Alcohol, Winter Gear Lubrication Tire and Brake Service GOOD YEAR Carter Service Call 1300 Open All Night woman is preparing to graduate, Miss Cohl has already won individual lattes and she will be playing at the old and has been playing seasonally for the past four years. She received her early stage training from her mother, the famous Ethel Barrymore, and played her first professional part in the play "Scarlet Sister Mary," that fea- "I did not attend a co-educational college but received my education in a Philadelphia convent and a finishing school in Paris. The stage is now my life and I intend to continue in the profession as long as the public will allow Miss Colt was putting the finishing touches on her makeup during the interview. She is dark and has inherited the famous Barrymore profile that adds a note of dignity to her inherent beauty. Grachion and charming. Miss Colt is a fitting prototype to carry on the traditions of her family. APPLICATION PHOTOGRAPHS "The Barrymore family has been very active in the theater this season." Miss Cohl concluded, "My mother has been involved with a recent accident in which she injured her leg. My uncles, John and Lionel Barrymore, are both active in Hollywood. John is one of the stars in the production of "Romeo and Juliet." Lionel Barrymore ways to be busy with some picture." Proofs Shown Each a completely finished miniature portrait Reasonable PHONE 2820 Homer Frerking Studio 1033 Mass. JOIN OUR RENTAL LIBRARY The Book Nook 1021 Mass Tel. 666 Resolve: To "Hang-out" at the BLUE MILL 1009 Mass. Try Our Foods --at the Only 10c Buttered Toast Jelly Coffee BREAKFAST SPECIAL CAFETERIA It's Great to Be In Love NEW RECORDS My Sweet ... Ray Noble Hypnotized ... Ruddy Vallee Moonburn ... Eddy Duchin Weary Let It Be Me ... Joe Sanders Lovely Lady With All My Heart ... Glen Gray It's Been So Long Goody Goody Benny Goodman Bell's Music Store BRICK'S "On the Hill" 35c Special Sunday Dinner 35c Grape, Tomato, or Chicken Soup, Cocktail Swiss Steak (one inch thick) Special 1 lb. T-Bone Steaks Club Steak Grilled Grilled Club (Kosber Style) Chicken Fry Steak Pork Tenderloin (Breaded) Filler Mignon Steak Cube Steak Buttered Peas Waldorf Salad French Fried Potatoes Hard Rolo and Butter Dessert—Fruit Jello Coffee Milk Buttermilk Hot Tea Hot Beef or Pork Sandwich with Drink — 20c 25c—SPECIAL—25c Hamburger Steak Sifloin of Beef Roast Loin of Pork PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 9. 1936 Nebraska Blasts Tiger's Hopes in Big Six Race Cornhuskers Are Victors In Contest Winning 43 to 33 Big Six Standings W L. Pct. Kansas 6 0 1.000 Nebraska 4 2 666 Oklahoma 2 4 333 Missouri 2 4 333 Iowa State 2 4 233 Kansas State 1 4 200 Columbia, Mo., Feb. 18—UP) The University of Nebraska added another blow to the University of Missouri's disastrous basketball season tonight when the Cornhuskers won a Big Six conference game, 43 to 32. Missouri F.G. F.T. P.F. Bever, f 2 0 1 Hatfield, f 1 0 0 Sitrom, f 1 0 1 Henderson, c 2 2 3 Carroll, c 0 0 Powell, g 4 0 3 Murry, g 0 0 2 Todd, g 0 0 2 TOTALS 14 5 12 Nebraska F.E. G.T. P.F. Whittaker, f 4 0 3 Wahlquist, f 7 4 2 Wahlquist, c 3 1 2 Baugh, c 1 2 2 Pharsa, g 1 4 Widman, g 0 1 4 Amen, f 1 0 0 Score at half: Missouri 14; Nebraska 25. Womens Rifle Team Elects Martha Dodge Will Head Organization Fifteen New Members Chosen The Women's Rifle Team recently held an election in which both officers and new members were elected for the coming season. Martha Dodge, c36, was elected captain; Alice Cosandier, c38; manager; Helen Hoffman, c39, treasurer; and Catherine Holmes, c38, secretary. It is desired that each of the new members report to the range on Monday to sign the new practice schedules. Regular practice will begin on the following Tuesday, Telegraph matches, including competition against teams from the University of North Dakota, North Carolina, the university. University of South Dakota, Washington University and the University of California, will begin the week ending Feb. 22. New members elected were: Ruth Worley, e; myra; Myrna Erskine, e; Marjorie Brooks, c; 37. Helen Kerr, c; 36. Emily Brown, e; 35. Melissa Martinez, f; 37. Maxine Matthews, c; 37. Joan Newbill, c; 38. Drew Kreibhiel, e; 39. Mary Wickham, c; 36. Luke萧赞, c; 41. Ignormi, c; 37. Eleanor Klapper, c; 38. Joan Smith, c; 39. Shirley Salabury, fa; 37. (Members of the team carried over from last year are: Mary Louise Belz, fa36; Ebera Everham, c36; Ruth Miller, c36; Ethel Senne, 37; Margaret Card, c39; Helen Ward, f38; Betty Stirling, fa34; Barbara Kirchhoff, fa38; Virginia Starr, c38; Margaret Hays, fa35; and Towanda Gabbart, gr. UNIVERSITY RIFLE TEAM WINS FROM HASKELL, 802 TO 79 The University men's rifle team defeated haeskel's team from Troop I 114 Cavalira of the National Guard, in last week's match by a score of 802 to 794. Lt. Sam McKone was high scorer with 181 points and Wayne Selon, c'88, was high scorer for Kansas with 164. The match scheduled for yesterday with the 17th Infantry队 at Fort Leavenworth was postponed because of bad weather. Men's Wrestling Meet To Be Held An intramural wrestling tournament will be held on Feb. 25-28. All men expecting to participate in this tournament will need to attend, not having a class "A" rating at the hospital will be allowed to enter. The department of intramural athletics for men advises the participants to be getting in condition now. Entry blanks and complete inlays will be mailed out later those expressing a desire to enter the tournament. DR. FELLOWES WILL LECTURE ON 'TUDOR MUSIC' THURSDAY Dr. Edmund Horace Fellowes of Windsor, England, one of the world's greatest authorities on music, and the tutor of the Tudor period, has been engaged for a lecture on "The Rediscovery of Tudor Music" at the University on Thursday evening, Besides being on interesting speaker, Dr. Dellows, by means of a actual old English concert lute, imitates these early English songs that are most common as of great importance in the history and development of music. The recital will be given at 8 p.m. in the auditorium of the Administration building and will be open to music lovers without charge. Mangan Upsets Kansas Cyclone HILLSBORO Hardly a foot separated three famous milers at the finish as Joe Mangan (left), former Cornell star, amazed spectators at New York Millors games by breasting the tape in 4.11 for the Wanamaker Mite, beating both Gene Venze (center) of Pennsylvania and Glenn Cunningham Women's Intramural --states were represented in last year's Relays and just as much interest in the meet has already been indicated. The new schedules for men's intrural contests have been completed F. E. Elbel announced yesterday James begin on Monday, Feb. 10, and continue over into March. The complete schedule for the coming week: Basketball Feb 10: D.D.T. "B" vs. Triangle "B" *Panthers* vs. Bolsheviks. Ploneers vs. First Baptist. Sigma Nu "B" vs. Phi **vs.** Alma Loyola. Phi **vs.** Ploneers Ghosts. A, K Psi vs. Phi **Psi**. Feb. 11; S.P.E "B" "B" vs. Sigma Chi "B"; B, A; E, vs. Sigma Ngu; Phi Gua "B" vs. A, T, O "B"; D. U. vs. Kappa Sig. Feb. 12, Pk I. C "B" vs Beta "B" Hellbounds ii. Coes; S, P "E" vs Delta Chi. S A E "B" >Ps Phi Dlt II "B" Phi. Si. Pg. Phi. Gam. Chick Rock II Phi. Pi. Si. Phi. Gam. Feb. 13, D. U "B" "Bt" vs Phi Psi "B*" Beta. vs Peti "B*" Acacia; vs Haskell Jayhawk; S. P. B *P* vs Triangle "B*" Chalk I; vs Tetau; Rock Feb. 15: Dunkin vs. Whitwinder; Beta vs. A. T.; Oigma Sig; Kappa Sig; Pioneers vs. Christian Church; Pioneers vs. E. K. E.; K. E. K.; Johnson All Star; A. T. O. "B" vs. D. U. "B"; Boker Makers vs. Ober's; D. T. D. vs. Sigma Nu; N. T. D. vs. Sigma Nu Phi Deit; Kappa Siig "B" vs. Nu-Sigma Nu "B"; Acacia vs. First Baptist Church; Bolshoviks vs. Rock Chalk II; Triangle "B" vs. Beta "B". Feb. 11: Beta vs. Triangle; D T. D. s. Nu SigmaNu; Delta Chi vs. Phi belt Feb. 12: Sigma Nu vs. A.T.O. Feb. 13: S.A.E vs. Phi Gam; P.K.A. vs. Sigma Chi. Announce Kansas Relays Schools Are Notified of Games To Be Held April 17-18 The Intercolonial State High School meet will be held the first day of the relays and the athletic office expects to send postcards to over 700 Kansas high schools to get them on. On the first day of the Relays, the first five events of the decathlon will be run off along the course. The second day the college meet will be held and the last five events of the decathlon will be disposed of. More than 500 announcements of the Kansas Relays to be held April 17 and 18, are now being sent to all the colleges, universities and normal schools in the country. Near the first of March booklets will be sent out to these schools with information regarding the rules and regulations of the meet. Later on booklets will be mailed out to each school indicating its desire to enter the games. Last year more than 1800 high school track men entered the various contexts and according to Mr. Thomas more than 1500 actually competed. More than 12 Lawrence's Bargain Theatre 10c PATEE 15c Shows 2-4-7-9 NOW! ENDS MONDAY A BRAND H MUSIC CLARK GABLE CONSTANCE BENNETT "AFTER OFFICE HOURS" A BRAND NEW THRILL TEAM! ADDED Color Cartoon—News Color Travel-Talk The outdoor track season begins on March 18 with the ninth annual Texas Shootout, where teams which are in turn followed by the Drake and Penn Relsh, both held on April 28. It has been customary for the University of Kansas to enter a tractor队 in the Texas and Penn Relsh, and such will undoubtedly be the class this year. Pennsylvania Miller Wins Hunter Mile for Second Time Venzke Defeats Mangan Gene Venkze got revenge on Joe Mangan in the Hunter mile race last night in Boston. Mangan barely nested out Venkze in the Wanamaker mile last Saturday night with a time of 4:14.4 Finals in the Douglas county Golden Gloves boxing tournament were held last night at the Haskell Gymnasium. The final will go to the Kasaa City tournament. Venken won the event of Mangan, Archie San Romani, Emporia Teachers, and Glen Dawson, former University coach. He then led in the first lap and then relinquishing it to San Romani, who held it for seven of the 13 laps. With four laps to go, he was able to finish closely by Mangan, and held it throughout the remainder of the race. Gene Linley, University Student, Lose Decision in Heavyweight Class This is the second successive year that the Pennsylvania star has won the Hunter classic, as he finished first last year with a time of 4:17.6. LAWRENCE'S LEADING THEATRE CONTINUOUS SHOWS TODAY AT 1—3—5—7—9 GRANADA Boxing Finals At Haskell Extensive Minor Sports Mendus of last night's hiatus: Macky Kenny, Haskell, heavy- weight, defeated Gene Linley, Kansas University, decision. Janette MacDONALD NELSON EDDY "ROSE MARIE" Your Girlfriend You Only the Granada Could Bring You the Greatest Musical Show the World Has Ever Known! The Singing Sweethearts of "Naughty Marietta" More Glorious Than Ever. Tommy Blackwolf, Haskell, light-heavyweight, defeated William McAfee Haskell, knockout. Mat. 25c Nites 35c Come as late at 6 p.m. tonight for 25c—After 6 p.m. 35c. Charles Crisler, Haskell, -middleweight, defeated Joe Berger, Haskell knockout. NOTE BALANCE OF ENGAGEMENT THRU THURSDAY Mat. 25c Nite 35c Shows 3—7—9 Mat. 25c Nites 35c Frank Mayhugh, Lawrence, welterweight, defeated Houston Tyner, Haskell decision. Carrol Eoatright, Admire, Kaan, lightweight, defeated George Buck- heart, Haskell, decision. WEEK AFTER WEEK HERE THEY COME *"Ceiling Zero"* *"Petrified Forest"* *"Tale of Two Cities"* *"Wife or Secretary"* *"The Voice of Begu Am"* *"Music Goes Round and Round"* Lucian Emerson, Haskell, flyweight defeated Charles Dushane, Haskell, decision. John Halfmoon, Haskell, featherweight, defeated Glenn Todd, Lawrence, decision. Paintings Are on Display Extensive Minor Sports Program Is Under Way Oil Paintings Are on Display A fine group of oil paintings and water colors by Raymond Eastwood, associate painter of the painting now on display at the Spoon-Thayer museum. A majority of the oil paintings are landscapes while the water colors deal with various other scenes. The department expresses the hope that the artists will themselves of the opportunity of seeing the assembly of paintings. Home Economics Club Will Meet The Home Economics club will hold a combination waffle supper and induction meeting on Thursday afternoon at 4 p.m. The supper was originally planned for Tuesday evening but due to weather conditions and arrangements to honor Charlene and it was postponed to the later date. Big Six Schools Engage In Track, Swimming and Wrestling Basketball will occupy the spotlight in Big Six athletic circles for more than a month yet but a full schedule of other conference sports including indoor track, wrestling, and swimming also has started. Alogether, more than 100 contests of various kinds are to be found on the sports calendar of the conference. Later in the spring, tennis, poi, baseball and outdoor track will add to the minor sports program. Both dual meets and conference meets are slated in track, swimming, tennis, wrestling and golf. The entire Big Six calendar for the month of February, excluding basketball: Friday, Feb. 14 February, 1953 Wrestling—Kansas vs. Missouri at Co- llege tecking Kansas vs. Missouri at Columbia. Kansas State vs. Nebraska lumbia. Swimming—Kansas State vs. Nebraska at Monhottan Swimming-Kansas State vs. Nebraska at Manhattan. *Iowa State vs. Carleton College, Northfield, Minn. Carleton College, Northfield, Mich. Fertility, Iowa. Kansas, State, or Indiana at Wrestling—*Iowa State vs. Indiana at Ames. *Oklahoma vs. Edmond Teachers at Norman. *Oklahoma vs. Edmond Teachers at Norman. Indoor Track:*Missouri vs. Drake at door Track—*Missouri* vs. Drake at Des Moines. Indoor Track—Kansas vs. Kansas State at Lawrence. Nevada state vs. Minnesota at Minn- *Iowa State vs. Minnesota at Minneapolis heapness. Swimming—Kansas vs. Nebraska at Lawrence. *iowa State vs. Gustavus Adolphus, St. Peters, Minn. Wrestling—Iowa State vs. Kansas at Lawrence. Friday, Feb. 21 Wrestling -Kansas State vs. Nebraska at Manhattan. Indoor Track-Kansas State vs. Missouri at Columbia souri at Columbia. *Iowa State vs. Drake at Des *Iowa State vs. Drake at Des Moines.* Swimming—Iowa State vs. Washington, II. Ames. Indoor Track—Kansas vs. Nebraska at Lincoln. Saturdav. Feb. 22 Wrestling—Iowa State vs. Kansas State at Manhattan. Thursday, Feb. 27 Wrestling—Kansas vs. Kansas State a Manhattan *Oklahoma vs. Oklahoma A. & M. Norman (tenative). Swimming-Kansas vs. Nebraska at Lincoln Wrestling-Iowa State vs. Nebraska at Arrow Saturday, Feb. 29 Swimming—Kansas vs. Kansas State at Manhattan. Swimming-Kansas vs. Kansas State at Manhattan. Indoor Track—Iowa State vs. Nebraska at Lincoln. Kansas State vs. Missouri at Columbia. Kansas State vs. Missouri at Columbia. Denotes non-conference matches. Date of Nebraska Game Is Changed Announcement recently was made by Dr. F. C. Allen that the date of the Kansas-Nebraska basketball game at Lawrence will be changed from February 29 to February 28. PHONE 101 Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Advance Cleaners W.C. LONGFELLOW APT. 580 N. LAUDERDALE DAILY KANSAN Now Only $1.75 fortherestoftheyear The Kansan is the only medium for keeping in touch with all the Hill news. There's no substitute for your college newspaper. Have the report of all the activities, at your own room, in your own Kansan, regularly. The Convenience of having your own Kansan is well worth the money Call at the Kansan Business Office in the Journalism Building and turn in your subscription the first thing tomorrow. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XXXIIII Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas on the SHIN NUMBER 91 By BUD EVANS, 36 Aims This It's Cold Air in the Law School .. Trouble Ahead .. Who Said These Japanese Have War on Their Minds All the Time? .. Persuals .. From Other Schools. Hear that Professor P. W. Visselman, of the law school, requires that most of the windows in his classroom be opened during the course of his lectures every day. The same rule applied even to me, as long as the professor uses this as a means of keeping his students awake. Can't help from feeling a little sorry for some of you lawyers, but that's what you get for taking such courses. Hear that Katie Hurt, Kupa queen, and Bill Jones, of the Sig Algebra club, are contemptulating a pairing of the two students for disagreement, though, so no harm can be done. Of course—they might have changed their minds by now, I demand. Not long ago, we read that the musical-show programs in Japan nearly always carry the name, address and telephone number of every girl in the chorus just in case you wish to call and tell her how much you care her dancing. Tactile-these "Japanese" a "Ways and Mans" arrangement. + + + Bill Rodgers, yeah, from California, is back from the hospital. Can't figure out why they didn't keep him over there and get him to rest. I guess the other patients were feeling bad enough as it was—so they turned him up. Somebody still suffer for them. ♦ ♦ ♦ Understand that Ed Wilford, the teacher's pest, has taken to wearing two shirts, ub-huh, at the time name. Someone thought that it was due to the cold weather we have been having (haven't you?) but did not think this as a means of safety-first. Get it? Well—neither do I, but it seems Ed is always wanting to go some place but he can't because his shirt is to be dirty. Now—if this happens to be the case, he merely slips shirt No. 1 in the clean shirt (No. 2). Not a bad idea, but personally, I like pa-jama tops! Then there is the case (and a sad one, too) of Howard Moore who has the museum to him. He might be Howard, old boy—yeah, you might have exposed someone! Read in the Ohio State Lantern that their school (or someone) had started a movement to make debating more interesting by selecting popular topics. To start the movement off in the proper manner, two sorrowly neophytes debated on the subject, "Resolved. That the Head Is the Butt End of a Goal." The Oklahoma publication of the University of Oklahoma boasts that their paper is "More than a student newspaper." We quite agree with them. PROE. LAUREL E. ANDERSON PRESENTS VESPER RECITAI An extremely cold day tended to keep down the attendance Sunday afternoon when, Prof. Laurel Everett Anderson gave the eight-sixth orgus vesper rectal at the University Auditorium. Mr. Anderson presented a program of numbers from Bustadee, Zippol, Clearmann and McMullen, the interest was the Third Movement from the "Symphony of the Mystic Lamp" by the modern Belgian organist and composer, Paul de Moulin. Jay Janes to Mee $ ^{j} $ The Jay James, University Women's pop organization, will meet Wednesday at 4:30, in room 119, Fraser. This meeting will be for the purpose of discussing coming business and financial gains of the basketball sale. 1. L. Modified Townpeople who can use employees in exchange for room, board or cash, please call the Women's Employee Center, K. U, 23, and the office is located in 220 Administration building. City Coal Supply Is Being Rationed By Local Dealers University Fuel Supply Is Sufficient To Last to April; Says LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1936 Bayles WEATHER The report for Kansas says that it will be clear and not quite so cold generally throughout the state tonight. Tomorrow is also expected to be clear with a let-up in the extreme cold. Faced with the prospect of continuance of the cold wave which has held the entire mid-west in its icy grip, Lawrence coal dealers yesterday were rattling out coal to customers in haste for an early return of more seasonable weather. Many dealers were far behind with their orders, and every shipment of coal that came in was immediately bought up and distributed. Lawrence had no buildings and grounds, said the University has sufficient coal on hand to last until April 1. The power plant is burning between eighty and ninety tons of coal a day during the unusually warm summer, average is round forty-five tons a day. Columbia, Mo., authorities yesterday ordered all churches and schools closed in an effort to keep enough coal on hand to meet the unprecedented demand of University of Missouri has enough coal on hand, however, to tide it through. Pittsburgh Co. Fees Hardly any townpeople for their present predicament, saying they refused to stock up in advance. Mr. Constant and other dealers met to discuss the issues from miles in the Pittsburg district, although one car of semi-anthracite was received today from Paris, Ark. The Pittsburgh co. commonly Dealers said the unprecedented demand had exhausted the reserves, and the excessively cold weather hampered the miners, seriously curtailing the mining operations. The authorities are parcelling out the coal in an attempt to make a fair division. At present there is no prospect of temperatures above ten degrees in the eastern part of the state, and coal men will be required to again accumulate sufficient reserves. Warmer in the West Warmer temperatures are prevailing over the western part of the state, but last night did not appear to be moving this way. Highways throughout the state are open now, and no further precinture is in sight. Coal men say they are unable to do anything but wait for warmer weather. The present emergency, they say, should serve as a warning to residents, and should induce them to maintain a sufficient supply in the future. Reports of incoming shipments throughout the day sent many people to telephone in an effort to procure coal, and said only two cars were received. OFFICERS WILL MAKE PLANS FOR YOUNG REPUBLICAN CLUB The officers of the Young Republican Club will hold a meeting the latter Friday at the Club to line a program and discuss plans to be carried out during the second Prof. R. H. Wheeler, head of the psychology department, spoke Monday afternoon before the Psychology club at its regular meeting. The topic he discussed was an account of the future high schools in New York City and the schemes of the historical cycles. The meeting was held in the Administration building. Quentin Brown, 138, president of the club, said that the exact date for the next general meeting has not been set. The meeting was decided by the officers at their meeting. Election of new members was post poned for two weeks. Commission Discuss 'Friendship' Members of the freshman commission of Y.W.C.A. conducted a formal meeting yesterday afternoon at 4:30 in the freshman hall. Dr. Fausti da Fausti, da Fausti, was in charge of the discussion, "Friendships of Men and Women." HIGH SPOTS OF CIVILIZATION DISCUSSED BY PROF. WHEELE Instructors Are Ill Professors Gagliardo and Lloyd Mettler of the School of Business faculty were unable to meet their classes yesterday because of illness. Ecce Homo—Ernest Lindley For fifteen years, there has been at the University of Kansas a man who is well-known in national educational circles. His advice was sought recently in the promotion of the National Youth Administration and especially the College Student Employment Project. At present, he is a member of the President's advisory committee of 37 under the NYA. Today, this man, Chancellor Lindley, will be honored at an All-University convocation. The president of the University of Minnesota, Dr. L. D. Coffman, and Walter G. Thiele, Justice of the Kansas Supreme Court, will speak at this convocation. No doubt, they will discuss the Chancellor's position as an educator, his prominence in national administrative circles, his degrees, and his other attainments of public importance and honor. We wish to honor Chancellor Lindley in a different light. We do not wish to laud his public life—others will do that. We wish to praise Chancellor Lindley the man, as a friend to the student. In his every-day life, he has the welfare of the students at heart. He is not on too high a plane to speak to the student, to discuss at length in his own office, some trouble of an undergraduate and offer friendly, common-sense advice. Out of love for a friend and respect and admiration for a nationally prominent figure, every student should attend this convocation. And while others salute Chancellor E. H. Lindley as educator, statesman, scholar, we salute him as Ernest H. Lindley—the man. Nebraska Beats K-State State Offices To Close Aggies' Second Half Rally Fails As Huskers Win 40-32 Total ...14 4 Mamhattan, Feb. 10.—(UP) After trailing 21-10 at the half time, the Rangers rallied from a four-pointing within five points of the second-place Nebraska Cornhuskers in a basketball game here tonight, but were unable to hold on. The Rangers tied with Nebraska leading 40-32. Whitaker, Nebraska forward, led the scoring for the visitors with 11 points, but Frank Groves, a Kansas State receiver, won high scoring honors with 14 points. Kansas State fg ft Burns, f 1 4 Thornbrough, f 0 2 Klinke, f 0 2 Groves, c 7 0 J. Mihil, g 1 0 Ralstad, g 3 0 Schierlmann, g 3 0 Gilpin, g 0 Nebraska Wahlquist, f 2 6 Leoey, f 0 0 Whitaker, f 5 1 Baker, f 0 1 Ehaugh, e 3 1 Parsons, g 4 1 Woodman, g 0 0 Dohmann, g 1 0 Totals ... 15 10 9 Educational Expenses...M Officials: E. C. Quigley, St. Mary's Parke Carroll, Kansas City. GEORGE HAPGOOD GOES HOME TO UNDERGO EYE TREATMENT Fire damaged the coal bin and part of the chapter meeting room in the Sigma Alpha Epiphany fraternity house last night. The blaze was discovered about 7:30 in the coal bin while the fraternity was holding its weekly meeting. George Happgood, fa 38, star University halfback for the past two seasons left for his home in Clay Center yesterday to obtain a specialist's treatment for a malignant growth on one eye. Fraternity members said that spontaneous combustion in newly delivered damp coal probably was the cause of the damage has not yet been determined. Hapwood is said to have fainted in the library yesterday morning and was then taken to the hospital. The trouble is not believed to be serious, and that he will return to school soon. CAUSES SMALL SIG ALPH FIRE SPONTANEOUS COMBUSTION - * * * * * * * * All students who have jobs the second semester are asked to call at the CSEP office on Tuesday, March 13. Call 202-749-6200, 11, 12, and 13, to fill in second semester class schedules. EMPLOYED STUDENTS Men registered in the Empoy- ment Bureau should file their Lawrence street addresses and class schedules at once. MARY C. OLSEN. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * MRS. FRANK PARKER, Services for Former Vice President Will Be Men's Employment Bureau. State Offices To Close For Funeral of Curt Tomorrow Topkep, Feb. 10.—(UP)—All public offices in the capital will remain closed tomorrow in observance of funeral services for Charles Curtis, former Vice-President, who died Saturday in Washington. The services will be conducted in Representative Hall. Special sections will be reserved for state officials and the State Supreme Court. Curtis will be buried beside his wife in Topeka Cemetery. Accompanying the body are Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Gann, Curtis's sister and brother-in-law, Mrs. Webster Knight, a daughter, and Miss Lola Williams, secretary. Pall bearers will be Topeka friends. The body of the part-indian Kusan was expected to arrive in Teopaka at 10:45 a.m. and the services will be read at 12:00 p.m. A pastor for the First Mythical church, LANDON-FOR-PRESIDENT CLUB TO DISCONTINUE MEETINGS Committee Agrees To Limit Tonnage Of All Warships Schiller Shore, president of the Land-for-President Club, announced yesterday that meetings will be discontinued until the present period of re-adjustment which students are going through is over. Several members of the club attended the Kansas Day celebration which was held at Topeka during the semester vacation and they will be asked to relate some of the highlights of meeting when the next meeting is held. Shore also stated that the club strongly feels the need of a new secretary and publicity agent, two officers from the school, for Woods withdrawal from school. Four-Power Group Decide That All But Capital Ships Will Be Included London, Feb. 10.—(UP)—The technical committee of the Four-Power Naval Conference reached complete agreement on the specifications of gun caliber of all categories of war ships except capital ships. The agreement expected to be concluded between France and Italy for six years beginning January 1, 1937; provides: 1. A naval holiday on construction of 10,000-ton vessels equipped with 8-inch arms. 2. Limitation of aircraft carriers to 22,000 tons, armed with six and one- tenth inch guns. 3. Limitation of submarines to 2,000 tons and five and one-three inch guns. 4. Creation of a new category called "light surface craft" of three sub-divisions: (a) 10,000-ton ships with guns between six and one-tenth and eight inches, of which there may be none built for duration; (b) 8,000-ton ships with six and one-tenth inch guns which shall be allowed to exceed six and one-tenth inch guns not to exceed six and one-tenth inch construction which will be allowed. 5. Creation of another new category called "minor combatant vessels"—hitherto known as skoops with a limit of ten and six-one tenth inch guns. Their speed will be limited to 20 knots and the vessels may carry no torpedo tubes. C. A. Franklin Will Speak Editor of Negro Paper to Appear at Noon Luncheon Forum C. A. Franklin, negro editor of the "Kansas City Call", Kansas City, Mo., will speak at a noon Luncheon Forum with John A. Garrison, W.Y.C.A., and the Y.M.C.A. The affair will be held in the private dining room of the Memorial Union building at 12:30 o'clock. The topic discussed will be contributions. Contributions of the Negro City. Franklin is not a stranger on the Kansas campus. He spoke here at the National Cosmopolitan convention in 2015, where he acquainted himself with a number of famous members of his race. The richness of his experiences and observations combined with his interest in art and an interesting and worthwhile forum. Barbara Pendleton, c37, and Harold Barač c46, represents the Dyer of the Y.W. and the Y.M.C.A., respectively, are the members of arrangements. The public is invited. University Club Hears Smith Prof. James B. Smith, professor or law, gave a talk before the University Club last Friday night on "Government Regulation of Business." Professor Smith traced the development of the interruption of due process" clauses of the United States Constitution by the supreme court. Fifteen Years at K. U. PRESIDENT L. D. COFFMAN CHANCELLOR E. H. LINDLEY Peace Group Plans Forum Discussion on American Neutrality Will Be Thursday Night The Peace Action committee discussed plans for the forum on "American Neutrality" that is to be held in June, 2014. The committee and compared the federal administration's and the congressional peace bills, at their regular meeting yesterday aff- The two bills were found almost similar except in the fact that the administration bill contained no provoke for eliminating the old freedom of the seas doctrine that many claim involved the United States in the World War. Faculty Recital Given By Moore and Conger The panel for the neutrality forum was adjudged complete. It will definitely include Prof H. B. Crubb, of the University of Chicago, W. J. Brockbank, of the School of Law faculty; Rev Carter Harrison, rector of the Episcopal church; and Prof John Ieof of the School of Business. Templin is the tentative chairman. Brahms' Gypsy Songs and Piano Numbers Gave Wide Variety The faculty recital of Miss Meribah Moore, soprano, and Mrs Allie Merle Conger, pianist of the School of Fine Arts faculty, was held last evening at 8 p.m. in the auditorium of the Administration building. Miss Moore has been associate professor of voice at the University since 1930. Her training was received mostly in the east where she was a student at the New York University and Columbia University, being instructor at the lajuan university. She has studied voice under such eminent teachers as Julian Lasker, Ruth Harris Stewart, Herbert Witserson, and Isadore Luckstone. She was winner of the Luckstone scholarship in voice at New York University in 1925 out of nearly 30 contenders for the Minnesota Symphony Orchestra. The program offered among other things, the melodious Gypsy songs by Johannes Brahms which were first composed for a vocal quartet and later adapted for solo voice. These songs offer a wide variety of interesting rhythms and musical idioms characteristic of the gypsy songs and dances. In this context, you will be handled by Handel, Massenet, Besly, Colin, Taylor, and others. Miss Conger is a piano graduate of Union University, later doing graduate work at Indianapolis Conservatory of Music and private study in New York. She was Ernst Liebling, and Alexander Lambert. For several years she was associated as teacher of piano at Baylor College the Harcum School at Bryn Mawr, and the Greenview Woman's College. She has been at Johns Hopkins University 1928 as assistant professor of music. Miss Conger presented numbers by Friedmap, Guion, De Falla, Glazounow and Rubenstein. George Trovillo was accompanist for the vocal groups. Dr. Allen Speaks To Alumni DIY Hours Sponsors to Attend Oklahoma City Graduates Hear Talk on Character Building The character building value of college athletics was discussed by Dr. F. C. Allen in a talk, "Spirit of Kansas," before the Oklahoma City alumni Friday night. The banquet, at which the University of Kansas basketball team were guests, was attended by about 75 alumni of the University. Clyde O. Burnside, f'24, was elected president of the organization for the coming year; Leroy Plumley, 29, was elected vice-president, and Dorothy Angeline, 17, secretary-treasurer. He served as toastmaster at the banquet. Judge John J. Kildren, '95, and Harrison W. Miller, '94, won for the prize offered for the oldest alumnus present, while Clarence McGuire, '29, of Kansas City, won the prize for coming the greatest distance to attend the meeting. Convocation Schedule First period Second period Convocation Third period Fourth period 8:30 to 9:05 9:15 to 9:50 10:00 to 10:50 11:00 to 11:50 11:45 to 12:20 H. LINDLEY. To provide for the all-University convocation on Tuesday morning, February 11, at 10 a.m. Students will class schedule will be held. --president of the Minnesota University Will Address an All-Student Assembly This Morning COFFMAN SPEAKS AT CONVOCATION FOR CHANCELLOR IN HONOR OF LINDLEY Anniversary Celebration Is To Begin at 10 o'clock in Auditorium Dr. L. D. Coffman, president of the University of Minnesota, will address the All-University Convention at 10 c'clock this morning Dr. E. H. Lindley, who has completed 15 years as Chancellor of the University of Kansas. Dr. Coffman received his first degree at Columbia College and then classes with Chancellor Lindley. He will address the students on "The Realm of Intelligent Men." Dr. Coffman is one of the outstanding educational leaders in the United States. He received his Ph.D. at Columbia and has honorary degrees from six institutions. He was professor of education at Illinois University and dean of the College of Education of the University of Minnesota. He has been president of the University of Minnesota since 1902. He served as a national committee for the purpose of making surveys of education in America. Served on Kansas Committee Served in Kansas Committee In 1921 Dr. Coffman served on a committee to make an educational survey of the Carnegie Foundation, and he became number one of the board trustees of the Carnegie Foundation for Advancement of Teaching and also of the Carnegie Corporation. He is the author of numerous books and articles on education. C. M. Harger, chairman of the Board of Regents, who will preside at the convocation, will be introduced by Dr. Will Burdick, vice-president of the facilities. The Hon. Walter G. Thiele, Justice of the Kansas Supreme Court and president of the K. U. Alumni Association, will speak briefly. Prof. Laurel E. Anderson will play the organ prelude, "Fantasia in C Minor." Prof. Walderam Geltch will play his violo sola "Romance" by Wieniadw-a Charles F. Scott, publisher of the Iola Register, will represent Governor Landon at the service tomorrow. KFKU To Broadcast Tonight KFKU will present highlights in the regime of Chancellor E. H. Lindley of the University of Kansas. For 15 years during which he has taught and served as director, he has made an unprecedented development. The following program is an attempt to dramatize events that occurred during his tenure which seem to be happening now at the University. The history of Kansas is, in itself, epic material. The history of the University of Kansas, which is so integral a part of the Kansas epic, has become during its last 15 years a leader in the university by the leadership of Dr. Lindley. The program has been written by Robert Gard, graduate student and technical director of the University Theatre, and by Martin Maloney, a student in the department of speech and dramatic art. Other persons taking part in the program are Carl Peters, Donald Dixon and Virginia Yankee. Alumna To Y.W.C.A. Post Mrs. Fred Martin, 27, was elected to the executive board of the W.C.A. in Topeka, at the annual meeting of the organization last week. Mrs. Martin moved to Topeka a year ago from Oatland, where she had taught for several years in the public schools and in Otowa University. She is now conducting a series of "Opera Synopsies" for the business Girls' league of Topeka. Graduate Throws Hat in Ring Graduate Throws Hat in song A. B. Mitchell, 12, has announced his candidacy for county attorney of Douglas county on the Republican ticket. He was appointed an executive nominee, was county attorney from 1924 to 1925 and city attorney from 1930 to 1934. Besides engaging in a general law practice, he is Kansas legal representative for several casualty insurance companies. Close Hospital for Convacati Close Hospital for Conviction be closed this morning from Bib to I1, to enable as many members of the hospital staff as possible to attend the all-University convocation, honoring Chancellor Dr. Ralph I. Canute, director to Dr. Ralph I. Canute, director PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 11. 1936 ≈ Comment "If Winter Comes----" A writer in the Southern California Daily Trojan is crying for rain. Nay, he pleads for it saying that nothing is needed so much at the present time as rain. He also bemoans the fact that lack of moisture has produced very little snow in the higher altitudes of the mountains where students of S. C. apparently are wont to play. It wouldn't be necessary to take a vote of the student body here at K. U. to decide the momentous question of "to send or not to send," with our love and kindest regards a couple of carboids of the combination ice-sleet-snow that makes travel perilous just now. The man who plays checkers in the Union lounge was just a bit skepical about the weather when he last spoke on the subject but he did report that a couple of robins are to be seen about the purples of the campus. Robins and wintry blasts don't seem to go together and apparently other parts of the country are worrying about the state of the weather. But as we go hurrying along Oread avenue the lines of the bard keep running through our head: "If winter comes. Can Spring be far away?" -Boston Evening Transcript. A New York doctor blames birth control for the slump in the city milk sales. What are the New Yorkers supposed to do--double the relief rolls just to make some cows happy? Yesterday and Today Yesterday—Charles Curtis took his leave from Kansas to become vice-president of the United States. This office topped off a political career that began as county attorney of Shawnee county, followed by his election to congress, then to the United States senate, and finally a candidate for presidential nomination. That is the story, in brief, of the latter two-thirds of his life. The earlier years of his life are shrouded in mystery. It is known that he was a member of the Kaw Indians, with whom he lived for years, at the age of eight he rode to Topeka to bring aid to his tribesmen when they were attacked by an unfriendly tribe of Cheyennes. After that he lived in Topeka for a number of years, where he completed his high school work, studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1881. Three years later he began the political career that we are familiar with. Today—Charles Curtis, deceased, is returning to Kansas to receive all the last rites honors that Kansas can confer on such a beloved and distinguished son. —Boston Evening Transcript Horses named "Supreme Court," "Balanced Budget," and "Home Loan" are reported to be doing well at the tracks. How about christening some "Roosevelt," "Landon," "Borah," etc., just to see how they come out? Co-operation the Way Out The pleasant prospect of international free trade, absence of war, and a vast international business system that has service as its motive instead of profit, was outlined recently by James Peter Warbasse in a Student Forum address. Idealistic as this may sound, the ground work for such a society is actually being laid by Co-operative groups throughout the world. A foothold is even being gained in materialistic America. Co-operative leaders realize, however, that such a program cannot be put into effect over night. They know that an intense program of social education must be absorbed by participants before such a scheme can become an actuality. They know that there are problems within their own organization that must be met before they can expand too far. Consequently the co-operative movement in the United States is progressing slowly. It is expanding only as rapidly as security allows. It is not trying to overstep itself. It is not driving for members; it is letting people, whose interest has been aroused, come to it. It is meeting and solving the problems that arise through its growth and organization. As it has no ulterior motives to hide, and no selfish interests to satisfy, it can be free and open in all its dealing. So while the ultimate accomplishments of the co-operative movement may fall short of its high ideals, it can, nevertheless, and does offer a discount to its members as it strives toward its goal. Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the University Daily Kansan. Articles over 200 words in length are subject to cutting by the editor. Contributions on any subject are invited. Campus Opinion For another year, the Athletic Department has seen fit to exclude baseball from our catalog of spring sports. Just last month, the University of Minnesota Editor Daily Kansas: able to determine. However we'll assume for the basis of argument or otherwise that it lack of finances. Consider our Activity Ticket. In the spring semester there seems to be very little if anything, aside from the relays (and these are usually held at some convenient time when the students are out of town on spring vacation), offered in the realm of sports. Doesn't it seem peculiar that $275 per student paid for our spring semester activity but that there is sufficient tuition emtation to provide for anything but the relays, and possibly a little tennis? Of course we realize that the pitifully small share of this activity ticket that the Athletic Department receives does not even begin to ad in deferring the expenses of the reals, so that the merchants and others must contribute to all in these expenses. That being the case, might it not be better to send the merchandise to that bassball for even a few games could be included? Baseball is conceded to be our Great American Sport. Why then, in this school which is endeavouring to rank itself as a leader in American Sports, must it be entirely excluded here? We have a multitude of material for students to learn and play in the sport, who greatly desire to see this game played as an integral part of our competitive sports system. By bringing baseball back to Kansas, we can not only satisfy the desires of our student body and faculty to see some real baseball games, but we can balance up the activity ticket so that the spring ticket will begin to offer something comparable to the present. How about a stand on this Dr. Allen? --men was about 7 feet long, attache- tive to itself the hook, or at least appeared to do so. Dr. Lindley drew it up to the wharf and half a dozen youthful volunteers rushed forward to gaff it. The honor fell to a grave young gentle- woman, who was responsible for the job, responsibility very seriously, indeed. He gently stopped over and reached downward. The point of the big hook rested on the gar's wainbone. A second's hesitation, as the amateur drew a deep breath, and possibly muttered a prayer to the gods, and then ... He watched a group of the famous long-nosed family Belonidea concluded that this group of handsome bipeds was acting in a very suspicious manner. He promptly opened his mouth, the bit of catfish containing the hook dropped out, and Mr. Belonidea promptly disappeared froth the screen. E. R. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Notices at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m. preparing regular publication days and 11:30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issues. FEBRUARY 1. 1936 No.91 --men was about 7 feet long, attache- tive to itself the hook, or at least appeared to do so. Dr. Lindley drew it up to the wharf and half a dozen youthful volunteers rushed forward to gaff it. The honor fell to a grave young gentle- woman, who was responsible for the job, responsibility very seriously, indeed. He gently stopped over and reached downward. The point of the big hook rested on the gar's wainbone. A second's hesitation, as the amateur drew a deep breath, and possibly muttered a prayer to the gods, and then ... He watched a group of the famous long-nosed family Belonidea concluded that this group of handsome bipeds was acting in a very suspicious manner. He promptly opened his mouth, the bit of catfish containing the hook dropped out, and Mr. Belonidea promptly disappeared froth the screen. ALL-UNIVERSITY CONVOCATION: There will be an all-University Convocation at 10 o'clock Tuesday February, 11. The speakers will be Justice Walter G. Thiele and President L. D. Coffman. ADVANCED STANDING COMMISSION OF W.Y.C. A: The Advanced Standing Commission of the W.Y.C.A. will meet Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 at Henley House. All upper class women are invited. Betty Hanson, Chairman. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: There will be a regular meeting of the Christian Science Organization to discuss current issues. Keith Davis, President. FIRST SEMESTER GRADES: Grades for the fall semester may be obtained from the Registrar's Office February 11-15, according to the following schedule of student names: Tuesday, Feb. 11—H to M inclusive (except during convoction) Wednesday, Feb. 12—N to Z inclusive. Thursday, Feb. 13—T to Z inclusive. Friday, Feb. 14 Those unable to come at the Saturday, Feb. 15 scheduled time. George O. Foster, Registrar. Evelyn Wallace, President. HOME ECONOMICS CLUB: The Home Economics HOME has postponed the institution and waiver from Temple University. Beulah Pinneo, President. KAPPA PHI. There will be a meeting this evening at 6:30 at 129 Tennessee. Please be present. KU KU MEETING! There will be a KU ku meeting wednesday at 10:30 in the Memorial Union Building. We'll have lunch at 12:30. Chas. Zeskey, President. QUILL CLUB: Quill Club will meet in the W.S.G.A. Lodge Thursday, Feb. 15, at 7:30 p.m. All plaques are due by March 28. RHADMANTHI. Rhadmanthi will meet tomorrow. Feb. 12 at 4:30. Alfred C. Ames, President. SIGMA ETA CHI: Initiation and banquet will be held at the Colonial Tea Room, Friday, February 14, at 5:15 p.m. Banquet charge is $60 cents. Please make reservations with Iris McDonald by Wednesday evening. PUBLISHER HARRY VALENTINE Evangeline Clark, President. OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE. KANSAS TAU SIGMA: There will be a Tau Sigma dance meeting at 7:30 this evening in Robinson Gymnasium. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Mohson, Gymnastium. Helen Johnson, President. M. JAYESMAN MANAGING EDITOR Pearl M. FLAKE BUSINESS MANAGER F. QUINTON BROWN ASSOCIATE EDITORS BILL GILL ALMA FRATTER CAMPAIGN EDITOR BILZ ROGERS MAKE UP EDITORS (BILL ROGERS) SKYE EDITORS (BILL ROGERS) SKYE EDITORS (BILL ROGERS) LIVESTRON COMBS, JOHN DOWNEY NEWS EDITOR DOMINIC SHOEN SHOOTER EDITOR BRIDA BLARR TIMES EDITOR JAMES RIEBER Sale and exclusive national advertising representatives NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE, Inc. TELEPHONES Business Office KU. 66 Town Office KU. 94 Night Connection, Business Office 7901 KU Town Office 8456 Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday mornings except during school holidays by students in the department of Journalism of the University of Kansas from the Press of the Department of Journalism. Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland, Seattle. Subscription price, per year. $0.00 cash in advance, $1.21 on payments. Single copies, 1c each. Chancellor E. H. Lindley is versatile in his abilities. Besides being nationally known as an educator and a ruler, he also has an avocation - fishing in his favorite avocation - fishing. Chancellor Enjoys Summer Vacation Fishing With Three Fellow Anglers Entered as second class master, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas. By Alma Frazier, c'36 Dr. Lindley usually spends his summer vacation fishing with his three companions: Dr. R. L. Sutton of Kansas City, President L. D. Coffman of Minnesota and President Walter A. Jessup of the University of Iowa. As in the Gulf they flutter and swish? What will the tarpons do, poor fish, What will they think when the Ph.D's. Bait their hooks with doctors' degrees? Will say to his crew: "Now gentlemen! This is a fight to make tarpon love We guess the boss of the tarpons then So make the waters rumble and roar, And as a prize, bring back to me a shiny Phi Beta Kappa key" Doe Hartley, in the Kansas Cit Doe Hartley, in the Kansas City Star—reprinted from the Outdoor Life March 1352 Young Lads Entertain Chancellor "To be a good fisherman," our Proxy explained, "you must get one out of seven strikes. My first catch was the most thrilling. I missed the first 11 strikes but I caught the next three in succession. We also like to study Indian archeology in Mexico and the remains of the Indian culture." "Chancellor Lindley's happiest afternoon was on the desk, trying for a gai. Dr. Stutton wrote about their expedition to Armens Peak, near the town of Killenbury, March 1823. "He was assisted by fifteen or twenty little chips, freckle-faced and sandy-haired for the most part, all of them energetic fishermen, who were on deck." A hospitable youngster, who had just captured a small, ash-colored bullhead with pink whalers, halved it with a dull pocket knife, and graciously pre-nailed a portion to the kindly Press "What is that creature other half?" asked Dr. Lindley. "Other half for the cat," said the little fellow, and just then a huge black feline, with a pleasure-arched back and gently tail, strilled up to claim its share. "Finally, a gar begen nibbling at the bait and carried it out several feet from the dock. "Sock him." yelled one diminutive cleverer. "Let him swinger it, sagged advisely another. 'Wait until he turns,' insisted a third. At last the gar --men was about 7 feet long, attache- tive to itself the hook, or at least appeared to do so. Dr. Lindley drew it up to the wharf and half a dozen youthful volunteers rushed forward to gaff it. The honor fell to a grave young gentle- woman, who was responsible for the job, responsibility very seriously, indeed. He gently stopped over and reached downward. The point of the big hook rested on the gar's wainbone. A second's hesitation, as the amateur drew a deep breath, and possibly muttered a prayer to the gods, and then ... He watched a group of the famous long-nosed family Belonidea concluded that this group of handsome bipeds was acting in a very suspicious manner. He promptly opened his mouth, the bit of catfish containing the hook dropped out, and Mr. Belonidea promptly disappeared froth the screen. Hollywood Film Shop Hollywood — (UP) — Goofy looking Stuart Erwin says it isn't so—he's not dumb, he's just smart. He takes the formula so seriously that he even applies it to living his private life. "Ive found the easiest way for success," he chuckles. "Play dumb and be smart." The "bobb" of the screen—the slow thinker, the slow walker, the wondering taker—peeps his off-stage lines in the same key drawal that he affects the camera and microphone, and be has seldom been known to hurry. Erwin has developed the "play damn and be smart" formula during the last seven years. When he made his debut in 1984, he had little to become a director. He even though he'd be a producer some day. However, those in the high places of command decided that he would decide — a dejoior of "simple" roles. As a result, he's just kept on acting—or being smart, by appearing dumb. "A comedian," he says, "should be allowed to use his own method for achieving an effect. His work is far more spontaneous. Many have been fired because he simply became a comedian could not adjust his natural tendencies to them. Friends of Ewin have told him that he should make a change in pictures. His continual portrayal of individuals not brisk mentally, might "ub" him as one. He should demand a more serious role, say Hamlet, they declared. "Character actors have less worries and a longer curver," he explained. And the exponents of the "play dumb and be smart" school chalked up another victory for the foremost exponent of their school. Erwin's greatest worry at the present time concern his home. It seems that he has an uncontrollable yen for dogs and must collect them. What his wife, the dog owner, formerly of the screen, has to say about the dogs is unknown. Nor does she mention all the photographic equipment he has tucked in odd corners of the room. No one in her hobbies. He can even devise the negatives now, he says. Likes Traveling Incognito The Chancellor delights in going places and meeting people. Extremely democratic, he likes to converse with men in all walks of life. "I like to hide my identity in the summer time and get to know all kinds of people, especially gas station men and others," remarked Chancellor Lindley. Chancellor Lindley is interested in the students' wellness while they are in school. She encourages students in their careers and success. The Prexy encourages every student to participate in intramural sports and provides a variety of opportunities to innovate the health of the students. He also enjoys his game of golf. He is interested in the theater, movies, art, music. "The University aims to teach the students the 'Art of Living,' bringing them with others and making the best of their opportunities," he concluded. Dark Continent Unable To Support More Whites.Report Statisticians Continent Not Congested THREE UNIVERSITIES PLACED IN SAME CLASS AS HARVARI It is pointed out by statisticians that it isn't lack of space in Africa or overpopulation by native peoples that has hindered white migration for this continent, which covers about 11,500,000 square miles, supports a total population of 150,000,000, which hardly compares with congested Europe, one of the world's square miles, with a population four times as much or about 550,000,000. All of Africa, after a century of colonization, only contains a total white population of about 3,550,000. Although northern Africa bordering the Mediterranean has been known and colonized by whites for centuries, a really vivid example of this is relatively modern, dating back approximately half a century. The University of California, the University of Wisconsin and Harvard are ranked in that order as distinguished institutions of learning by Walter C. Eells, writing in the current Atlantic Monthly. The contention that most of the area of the second largest continent in the world is not favorable to white settlement is borne out by the fact that 50 per cent of the white inhabitants are from northern and southern extremities. White Population Groused With a few figures, these statisticians prove that the climate and geographic conditions of the "Dark" Continent are hostile to white men and that therefore the arguments advanced by Italy and Germany for territory in the over-populated conditions at home are fallacious ones. Don't Be Deluded, Not All Snakes Harmful; Says Visiting Author Paris, Feb. 5. — (UP) -Africa cannot support many more whites than are there now, for most of the African Continent does not favor white colonization, according to French statisticians. The article was written in refutation of a similar piece, by Edwin R. Embree, which appeared in the Atlantic last fall and was published that Harvard was "in a class by itself." According to Eells, Embree's article is "dogmaate and annoyed," and was the result of subjecting the facts to questions and perhaps questionable treatment." He is the author of a number of books on the subject, his "King Snakes in the United States" being regarded as a classic. He and his colleague, Mr. H. K. Gloyd, have just arrived here just arrived here from a five months trip to Europe. He will go and after more than a week here they will go to St. Louis. They expect to examine every snake in every collection of any size in the country. Mr. Glioy is a former student and instructor at Ottawa University. The two men will examine the snakes with their tongues, if any, variations exist among species. The Union of South Africa has the greatest proportion of whites, with 2,000,000, while French North Africa, comprising Aligiers, Morocco and Tunis, has 1,200,000. The remainder of Africa supports the remaining 350,000 whites. Persons suffering from the popular delusion that all snakes are harmful can unburden themselves of that notion right now, according to Dr. Frank Schmitt, an expert in cannage, who is studying the collection in Snow hall preparatory to writing a book on the subject Dr. Blanchard says Lawrence people need fear only the Copperhead and the rattlesnake, the other harmless or actual boon to man. Divided by national possessions, Great Britain leads with 2,154,000 whites in her colonies. France is second with 1,246,000. Portugal third with 65,000. Italy fourth with 56,000, Belgium last with 26,000. Germany, which was considered one of the greatest colonizers before the World War, in 1911, after 25 years of colonization, only succeeded in amassing 15,800 white subjects in all her African colonies. Italy, with her three African possessions-Lybia, Eritrea and Somaliland. The population of 56,000 has a square mile* only—has a colonial white population of 56,000. Of this, total only 4,100 are located in Eritrea, 3,550 are settled in the capital town of Ammas. Lybia Sparsely Settled Lycaena spatharia Lycaena is used for the stretch along the coast, it is an uninhabited desert. Most of Somaliand is a lowland reeking with disease, while only the north of Eritrea can support any kind of a population. Although there still remain certain sections of Africa which have not yet been explored or seen by white men and are still left uncolored on maps, they do not account for the statistics that Africa could not furnish healthy subsistence to many more Campus Gets Giant Clock whites than are there now. They believe that the saturation point has almost been reached. The conquest of Ethiopia by Italy and restoration to Germany of the colonies which were taken from her after the war would not start a flow of Italian and German immigrants to Africa, say those scientists, and the manner of rebuilding it is unclear. The Peninsula and the German nation would still remain unsolved. Austin, Tex. (U.F.)—Soon there will be no excuse for University of Texas students not knowing what time it is. A tower clock 12 feet in diameter will be erected on the new administration building. It will be visible five miles. Fifty-five clocks will be in the new building. KISSING LET A BOOK LET A BOOK Convey your sentiment on VALENTINE'S DAY You will find just the right one here. THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Tel. 666 BRIDEGROOM FORGETS HEES ON PROBATION New Bedford, Mass. (UP)—It took a 2,300-mile trip to jog Peter Messinger's memory. Messinger failed to report once a month to the federal probation department here, so they sent an officer to Great Falls, Mont., where he had made He had been given a two-year suspended sentence and probation for a year in connection with a robbery charge. Messinger was found in the west and returned here. Wine Manufacturer Claims Direct Descendancy From "Old King Cole" Tours, France — (UP) — Wills Vernon Cole who claims to be a direct descendant of "Old King Cole" who was not only a nursery hero but also a genuine character of history, is a former cowboy from Wyoming. The court asked why he had violated his probation. His answer was that he was married en route to Montana and "forgot" to keep his terms. Cole today is the proprietor and manager of a prosperous wine business, Author, and globetrotter. he is marshal of the Paris peace tree children were born in Touraine. The chateau where they live is an old eleventh century building, modernized. This residence is surrounded by fireplaces and its cellars are 900-900 bottles of wine. Sanfte lowest round trip WINTER FARES California AND THE Southwest EVER Santa Fe The ease and economy of a California or Southwest re- cruitment increases season by season. There's less time on the way and more comfort for fewdollars. @ NOW—and all thru the winter— 'Arizona's famous desert inn, hotels and ranches, and California- ers are at their warm out doors best- So, this winter—daily Phoenix and Grand Canyon Pullmans on Grand Canyon Limited; fire and water in the spring; and all the Southwest. COMFORT in air-conditioned trains; ECONOMY in lowest winter round-trip fares in Santa Fe history. RECORD LOW WINTER FARES Again Santa Fe has cut its Round-trip Winter Fares—to the lowest level in history. Delicious LOW COST Fred Harvey Meals. May we quote fares and help you plan your trip? W. W. BURNETT, Agt. Lawrence, Kan. Phone 32 THE biteless blend you'll call your friend THE biteless blend you'll call your friend BRIGGS PIPE MIXTURE WHEN A FILLER NEEDS A FRIEND 15¢ E. P. Southland Oils, Inc. BRIGOS PIPE MIXTURE "WHEN A FELLER NEEDS A FRIEND" 15¢ © P. Lounfield City Bldg. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1936 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE KU Hill Society BEFORE 5 P.M. CALL K.U. 21; BETWEEN 7:30 AND 9 P.M. CALL 2701K3 OR 2702K3. Alpha Kanne Psi Initiation Formal initiation services were held for new members by Alpha Kappa Psi national professional commerce fraternal chapter the chapter house Sunday morning Those instituted were. Bill Gough, b'36; Chanef; Alfred M. Hansen, c'39 New York City; Willard Dexter, c'unel Centerville; Wado Lee D孔, c'38; Moran; Lauren Fereau, b'37; Chanine; C. Miller, c'unel, Kinaid. Faculty members present for the initiation and dinner were: Prof. J. H Taggart, L. D. Jennings and J. G. Blocker. Alumni students present were Wajte Wustel, 35; Homer Longenkeer, 35; and Don Crane, 32. ☆ ☆ ☆ At a buffet supper held at the Alpha Delta Pi house chapter house Sunday night, the following students were guests: Bill Couchran, Lloyd Rourke, Harold Hugh Stevens, Paul Fisher, Gene Lauphe, Jake Levine, Paul Pucup, Andy Santino, Roy Crawford, Twemley Klender, Robert Dunham, Charles Bendingfield, Bill Borth, James Coleman and Bob Scolore. Out-of-town guests included: Bob Charlton, John Glps and Gus Owen, all of Karsa D., Dietrich Ziesel, was also present. Mrs. Nelle Hopkins and Mrs. MacLure Butcher served. Sigma Alpha Epilon entertained the following with a buffet super Sunday night; Jane Walker, c36; Cuth Ether Euther, purdy, c37; Helen Deer, c4; uncle Smedley, c38; Lucille Bottom, c38; Bette Wasson, c39; Dorothy Kremenchy, c39; Mary Katherine Rutherford, Betty Barnes, c39; Elizabeth Hannah, c39; Peggy Glarmery, c39; Isabell Townley, c39; Alexandra Sheldun, Harriet Sheldon, c39; Athelia Woodbury, c4; uncle; Marie Forbes, c38. ☆ ☆ ☆ Women students, new on the campus this semester, will be honored at a tea Wednesday afternoon from 3 to 5 in the Central Administration building lounge. The W.S.G.A. and Y.W.C.A. members will sponsor the affair, to which University women are invited. Frank Porter is chair of cabinet members of the two organizations, is in charge of arrangements. Prof. and Mrs. E. F. Engel entertained a group of friends at their home in West University Heights Sunday afternoon. Coffee was served which had been sent as a gift from Puerto Rico to the students. The guests at KFKU and their wives were guests. --private tile bath. Excellent results three times a day including Sunday. Fassend garage free. Reasonable. The Monor, 1941. Massachusetts. -92 KU ☆ ☆ ☆ PHONE K.U.66 LAUNDRY TAXI Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S - 920-22 Mass LAUNDRY: Student bundles a speciality. Good work at moderate prices Called for and delivered. Phone 2945 ☆ ☆ ☆ TYPEWriters. Monarchs and Remingtons for sale. Rentals. Repair of all makes of typewriters. Call Kahun 932. - 95. TYPEWRITERS TAILOR TAXI Kappa Phi security held an after- merium Sunday from 3 to 5 p.m. at the at- home of the Rev. and Mrs. Edwin F. Price, 1209 Tennessee. The affair was in honor of new women at the University Attended. Approximately 40 women attended. ☆ ☆ ☆ Delta Zeta entertained with a farewell dinner Sunday for McEe LaLM, '35, who will leave soon for her home in Atlanta, GA. Miss Lichten, who teaches in Orared Training School, and Margaret Clevenger fa'38, were guests One Stop Clothes Service Station SCHULZ THE TAILOR Nov. 19 Mrs. Agnes T. Rutledge, Tula, Omaha inspector, and Mrs. Ruth Miller Winder, Welth, province president of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority, are guests this week at the Alpha Chi Omega house. Vetra Lein, Richard Sklar, c.38; Venor Hornbick, Washburn College, Topkapi Kemenm Von Achen, c.38; Robert English, b.38; and Harry Valentine, c.38; were dinner guests Sunday at the Alpha Chi Omega sorority house. ROOMS FOR RENT ☆ ☆ ☆ --private tile bath. Excellent results three times a day including Sunday. Fassend garage free. Reasonable. The Monor, 1941. Massachusetts. -92 Sunday dinner dinner at the Ph Kappa Ppa fraternity house were Mr and Mrs. Harry Green, Lois Words c'uncel, and Miss Williams, Hutchinson. Frank Forman, Kansas City, Mo., was a dinner guest Sunday at the Chi Omega house. Officers will be elected at the regular meeting of Kappa Pi security tonight at the home of the Rev. and Mrs. E.P. (Mary) Braswell, who are especially invited to attend. ☆ ☆ ☆ FOR RENT: To nice rooms. Extra good beds. $5 and $6 per month. Also garage. Filled if desired. Call 292217 Alpha Chi Omega announces the engagement of Margaret Alloway, c20, to Robert Hightower, Jr., Kansas City, Mo. ☆ ☆ ★ The K. U. Dances will entertain with a Valentine party for new members Wednesday, Feb. 12 at 8 p.m., in the building of the Administration building CLASSIFIED ADS ROOM FOR BOYS: Large, first floor, outside entrance. Hot and cold water. Southwest room second floor. Very desirable. 148 Tennessee. Phone 7603. Alpha Chi Omega announces the pleading of: Anna Katherine Kleih-Pittburg: Elizabeth Lindsay, Horton and Pauline Shawen, Topela. Delta Chi bold initiation for the following last Saturday. Toy Crawford c'39; Jack Carlson, c'39; Otis, Perkins c'39; and Lawrence Beryn, c'39. BOYS: First floor room near campus. Double bed with Seaty Mattress. Rent cheap, either single or double. 304 W. 14th. — 03 Alpha Omicron Pl announces the engagement of Verna敬s, c29, to Cadet Ralph Praeger, United States Military Academy, West Point. PHONE K.U. 66 ROOM AND BOARD BOYS: Board and room. Excellent location. Large, family style meals. Reasonable rates. 1528 Ohio. -82 FOR SALE Twenty-five words or least one insertion, 25c; three insertions, 30s; six insertions, 72c; contract rule changes, 84c. Request for information. Payable in advance and approved at the Kirkland Business Office. WANTED: 1000 necklaces to be made to look like new. Only a dime each. LAWRENCE STEAM LAUNDRY-.92. GENIINE STEEL ENGRAVING OF Gen. Washington will be sent post-paid to any address on receipt of $5.00. The engraving perfectly made on first press of every issue. Address care of box 100, University Daily Kansan. —01 SPECIAL--50c reduction on any per- manent, with an ad, except Saturday. Permanents $1.50 to $3.00, complete with hair cut. IVA'S BEAUTY SHOPS 732½ Mass, Phone 2355; 9411 Mass, Phone 323. BEAUTY SHOPS BOYS—Large delightful room with WANTED Student Loans --and Louis Sullivan." April 7—Albert Bloch, "What Is All This About Art?" (Tent) MISCELLANEOUS --and Louis Sullivan." April 7—Albert Bloch, "What Is All This About Art?" (Tent) ABE WOLFSON 743 Mass. Bernice Burns, cunel, was a dinner guest at the Phil Delta Theta house Sunday. Albert Bramble, Baker University, and W. A. Hes, Kansas City, Mo., were Sunday dinner guests at Watkins hall. Helen Moore, c'38, and Lucille Bottom, c'38, were dinner guests at the Sigma Chi house Sunday. Mrs. Lyle Towell entertained the members of Delta Zeta sorority at her home Sunday evening. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Major Finley, Ft. Leavenworth, and Alane Bennett were luncheon guests at the Pt Beta Phi house Monday. Chi Omega announces the pledging of Marilee Stewart. Olathe. Sigma Chi announces the pledging of Jack Watkins, of Kansas City, Mo. Phi Kappa Psi will hold initiation services Thursday evening. Campus Calendar Tuesday. Feb. 11 Convocation, University Aud., 1 Snow Zooloy Club, dinner, 201 Snow ball, 5:30 p.m. W. S.G.A.-Y.W.C.A. tea in honor of all new women, Women's Lounge Ad. to 5 p.m. Dinner honoring Chancellor and Mrs. Lindley, Memorial Union ballroom, 6:30 p.m. Tau Sigma, Robinson gpm, 8 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 12 Chemistry Club meeting. 201 Chemistry building, 4:30 p.m. Circle Francais, 306 Fraser, 4:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 13 Quill Club, Women's lounge, Ad. 7:30 p.m. Sigma Eta Chi initiation, Colonial Tea room. 5:15 pm. Friday. Feb. 14. Benux Arts Ball, Memorial Union 9 to 12 p.m. Siam's King Gets a Lesson Kappa Sigma party, 9 to 12 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 15. Basketball: Kansas vs. Kansas Sta (Nasumith Night) University Aud, 7:30 m. SHANNON'S ACCOUNTING TEXT USED BY BEGINNING CLASSE "Principles of Accounting" by William H. Shannon, assistant professor e economics, has been adopted as the official text for beginning accounting courses for the spring semester to reinforce the principles to Principals of Accounting. This new text, in mimeographed form, presents an analytical approach to accounting procedure rather than a mechanical approach. This departure from the ordinary approach has been seen in the authors' classes for three years and is not an experiment. The text will be published in book form as soon as the material for the second course in accounting has been completed. CLYDE B. YENNER FUNERAL SERVICES HELD SATURDA Funeral services were held Saturday morning for Clyde B. Yonner, 21 who died Thursday at his home, 1135 Rhode Island street. Services were held from Funk's chapel. Burial was in Memorial Park cemetery. King Henry VIII of England was an enthusiastic amateur pharmacist. He liked to mix prescriptions and then try them on his friends. One of them called for the pulverized bone of a human skull. Yenner was a carrier for the Daily Kannan as were his two brothers. He was graduated from Oread High school in 1934. Next we are informed that "drinking cups, made from horns of unicorns, were much in demand in the Sixteenth Century. It was believed that these horns would render any poison in the drink innocuous." "Well, it's just hair today and gone tomorrow," said King Tat as he mixed up his remedy for baldness. It consisted of a thick, oily cream called the biopromega, the ear, and the nose. The people of ancient Babylon had a rather unique method of diagnosing diseases which could be applied to any of them. The patient's bed was placed in a manner that some possibly might recognize the disease and recommend a cure. New Haven, Conn. — (AP) -Jitjeuz, the ancient Oriental art of self-defense, has been added to Yale's already crowded academic curriculum. As the result of a request by the Yale News, Eddie O'Donnell, Yale wrestling coach, is conducting daily classes in the sport, which has attracted a large following. This is one of the interesting bits of information concerning pharmaceutical practices of the past which form the ex-nihilator College of the University of Texas. Ancient Druggists Used Queer Ingredients To Cure Sickness Yole Teaches Jin Jitsu IN Young King Ananda, 10-year-old monarch of Slam, seasons Interested in reading at Mc. Morris Library, where he is in school. Ananda uses his skills as a child to write stories about animals. ADMIRAL BYRD TO LECTURE ON ANTARCTIC DISCOVERIES Admiral Byrd, famous Antarctic antelope, will deliver a lecture in the University auditorium at 8:20 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 26, on his new discoveries and compacts in Antarctica. The lee will be illustrated with motion pictures. Admiral Byrd will be brought here under the auspices of the Community Lecture Course of the University of Kansas. Reserved seats will be 76c. Admission to children will be admitted for 25c. Admission for all others will be 50c. To Revive Old Civilization Unemployed Families Will Move to Canadian Wilderness Montreal—(UP)–Several score unemployed men and their families, tired firing for "better times" and jobs, and they are now living with us and we like early Canadians lived. Uniting under an organization known as the Canadian Prosperity League, the men will establish a small settlement on the outskirts of the city next spring and will attempt to re-establish themselves on a self-maintaining basis. They will build their own homes, grow their vegetables, and maintain their own clothes and govern themselves. The league is organized along the same lines as the Liano Corporation in Louisiana and will be a combination of agricultural and commercial it. It is headed by B. A. Scali, who receives employment relief from the city. Saciak said he hopes to persuade city authorities to allow the league to solicit funds to buy lumber and other equipment necessary to establish the village. HIGHL SCHOOL DEBATE MEET WILL BE HERE FEB. 28-2 February 28 and 29 is the date set for the State High School Debate tournament to be held here at the University. District debate tournaments are being held throughout the state this week and next. The winners of first and second district tournaments will be invited to participate in the state tournament. Schools entering the state tournament and now competing in the elimination district tournaments are divided into class "A" and class "B". Schools with large enrollments are placed in the class "A" competition and schools with small enrollments compete in class "B" competition. This week in Kansas City the Orpheum theater is presenting Mine. Nazimova in Henry Isbn's much-discussed play "Ghosts." This Norwegian drama, which was first produced 50 years ago, Mine. Nazimova has rewritten the play and is directing it as well as taking the role of Regina. She is aly supported in the cast by McKay Morton and the Natalie Kernoguard and Raymond O'Brien. 'Ghosts' Will Play at Orpheum Prof. Joseph F. Wilkins announces that tryouts for places on the Mer's Glee Club will be held in his office. 132 Administration building, at 9:30 p.m. Wednesday. He is particularly anxious to see you. The club, and has vacancies for other voices. Tryouts for Glee Club Airmail Is Postponed The Trans-Pacific airmail which was to have left San Francisco, January 22, has been postponed until further notice. Hindu Yogi Spends Forty-five Days in Stone Tomb for Penance Calcutta—UPP) A remarkable instance of the practice of the Hindu Kush in ancient India is a peculiar absorption of thought into the subject of meditation, the Suprabein Being) is reported from Rishi Kash, a place of pilgrimage in the northwest of the Indian Peninsula. A yogi (ascetic) had himself immerified in a stone structure 16 feet square and 4 feet high. The entrance was closed with a stone which had been cemented, and a guard was posted. Before he entered his tomb he took the sword from his left and he left instructions with a priest that on the 45th day, between 7 a.m. and 10 a.m., when they should hear him say the sword "om," they were to take him out and give him fruit juice and message his body with oil. He was then walled up in his tomb, and for 45 days crowd of Himself quietly waited outside, as he performed the highest form of venonice. He took neither food nor water all this time, but on the forty-fifth day his disciples heard him say "inbn" in his tales taken out with life still in it, amid the prayers of thousands of worshipers. The last time the axcetic under-strengthened himself his hands was partly eaten by white ants while he was in his trance. Alumna Gets Laboratory Position Miss Frances M. Fink, 34, has been engaged as laboratory technician for the American Institutional Laboratory City, Me. Lectures Will Start Soor Sponer-Thayer Museum To Be Stage For Art Series The department of adult education of the Lawrence schools under the direction of M. Ralph Graber, is making possible an annual series of art lectures by bearing the expenses of opening Spooner-Thayer Museum. The first of this art series will be Tuesday evening, February 18, at 7:30 o'clock. The lectures are open free of charge to the public. They are given by teachers in the University departments of architecture, design, and painting and by other citizens who are particularly qualified for special sub- The following schedule gives the speakers and their subjects: Feb. 18—Rosemary Ketcham, "The Story of Textiles." Feb. 25—Raymond Eastwood, "Graphic Processes." March 3—Joseph Kellogg, Lawrence Architecture." March 10—Mrs. F. B. Dovis, Architectural Society." March 24—Sculpture," Sculpture." March 24—Marlery Whitney, "The Art of Jewelry." March 31—Geroge Beal, "Architecture A woman in a long dress holding a flask and a necklace. NANETTE OVER THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Phone 511 *Nanette's new prints make us know it's time to "spruce up" the wardrobe a bit. They're all extinguisher, new and what's more, surprisingly, priced, at $7.99. - Have you ever used the convenience of Nancees's "Will call closest?" —A dollar or so holds any dress will kill you A Greeting That Grows For A Valentine SPRING FLOWERS Potted plants or artfully arranged bouquets, for as little as $1. FRESH CUT FLOWERS Long stemmed, grown under expert supervision in our own hothouses. FOTTED PLANTS Old favorites as a lasting, living greeting. A wide selection at $2. Telegraph and Delivery Service Telephone 820 Ward's Flowers "Flowers of Distinction" Ward's Flowers PRINCE ALBERT IS MILDER *You can buy Best Practice Allerml for a small cell, *you can buy Best Practice Allerml for a small cell, *you can buy Best Practice Allerml for a small cell, No-risk offer wins college smokers to a better pipe tobacco! I'M A P.A. BOOSTER TOO! Richard Durham, 37, says:“P.A. is mild and slow- ward — and around 50 pounds in the big red tin.” DON'T MISS THE P.A. TRIAL OFFER 0 R "If you've never tried Prince Albert, don't miss the special trial offer they're making on the big 2-inch. tiz.忍. A's Swall," say Dick Megaes. P.A. Aisner's favorite because it offers its reservations. TRIAL OFFER FOR COLLEGE SMOKERS Smoke 20 fragrant gift of Prince Albert. If you don't find it the mellowest, tastiest pipe you can smoke, you return the smoker within a month from this date, and we will refund full purchase price, plus postage. (Signed) R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company PRINGE ALBERT THE NATIONAL JOY MUSE PRINCE ALBERT 2 INCHES DURABLE CRIMP CUT LONG BURNING LIPS AND CIGARETTE TOBACCO 50 pipeful of fragrant tobacco in every 2-ounce tin of Prince Albert LOOK FEBRUARY 14th IS VALENTINE DAY You Can Get That Special Valentine a~~ Ochse Printing and Party Shop 814 Mass. Street Phone 288 PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1936 Spring Football Practice To Start In Three Weeks Eleven Veterans of Last Year Will Not Return To Gridiron Next Season Spring football practice is scheduled to begin Monday, March 2, for the football candidates not engaged in some other type of athletics at that time. As it happens this year, very few of the men expected to report for practice participate in other sports. Sessions will be held for a period of six weeks, during which time there will be practice five days of each week from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Many of the veterans from last year's team are lost to Kansas this year for various reasons. Captain John Peterson, fullback and all-Big Six choice, was injured in a tackle that united or who have concluded their three years of competition are: Fred Harris, halffallback and punter; Rutherford Hayes, all-Big Six end; Ed Laub, halffallback; Tommy McAll, guard and guard; Tasha Mack, middle tackle; Ed Phelps, all-Big Six center; Dick Sklar, all-Big Six guard, invited to play in the East-West game this season, Manne Stukey, speedy halfback who was unable to play after the team was as a result of a head injury; and Hill Decker, pass-throwing halfback. Center Position Open Center Position Open Grant Barcus, substitute center for the past year. He must make a strong bid for next year's center position, but will be unable to compete Coach Adrian Lindsay is expecting the lettermen and other variety men of last year to report again this spring. He said he'll be training men from last year will, of course, be on hand when practice swings into his stride. Coach Lindsay feels that there is surely good talent on the Hill who are showing itself for some reason or another. He says, "There are probably some fine football players here at the University of Kansas who have not reported for football. Although they may feel that they haven't sufficient time for football; aren't heavy enough; haven't won any games; aren't small a school; or haven't a chance to make the team for some other reason. I wish those men would report for spring practice. They will be given plenty of chance to win a berth on the team. I'd like to have as great a number of candidates as possible from which to select a squad, and I want them to be football men to feel that they are entirely welcome at the practice field." Manv Free Berths Nearly all of the team positions are wide open for the man who can offer the most to fill them. Next year, the men will be filled with highly trained new ofmen, and Coach Landeys hopes to recruit some of these from the team that hasn't shining back and not trying out for it. Spring practice will consist of numer- out scrimmages to give a good chance for judging the ability of the men who check out suits. The team lost some good kickers and passors last year and the ones must be developed to replace them. Women's Intramurals Many plans for this semester work in Women's Intramurals were made a the intramural meeting last Thursday Feb. 8. The women's intramural swimming meet will take place Feb. 19 and 20. The women will organize into two teams, one from each half, Feb. 18, the other half, Feb. 20. Each person may enter three individual events and one relay. Those participating have been given entry thanks for their participation and turned in by Tuesday, Feb. 18. Last year Pi Beta Phi won first place in the swimming trials, Kappa Kappa Alpha. In recent years, Kappa Alpha Theta fourth. Since each of these four houses has a number of experienced girls back again this year, the competition should Other events soon to take place are deck tennis tournaments, singles and doubles; basketball free throw contest; the tennis final for last fall which have not yet been played, will be played indoors in a gymnasium between Dora Stockwell, independent, and D. J. Wilcutts, Watkins hall. Ping pong finals, doubles, to be played this week are as follows: Feb. 11, 4:30 Ago Dal played this week list as follows Tuesday, Feb. 11—4:30, Alpha Delta Bronx Alma Gamma Delta Wednesday, Feb. 12—4:30, Corbin ball vs IWW. Thursday, Feb. 13-4:30. Championship game between the above winners. U. S. Olympic Puckpushers OLYMPIC SQUAD Champion OLYMPIC SQUAD OLYMPIC SQUAD Problem of getting money for expense of trip abroad faces members of Ellsworth Rocks, Ross Stink, Slubk Stink and John Garciax and Frank Spain; Ellsworth Rocks, Ross Stink, Slubk Stink and John Garciax and Frank Spain; Kansas Outlook Is Rosy For Game With Aggies Bobling Is in First Position In Scoring and May Break Record Kansas' undefeated basketball aces, with a string of 15 consecutive victories behind them, resumed practice yesterday. The 38-36 contest Oklahoma Saturation. When Oklahoma collected 36 points against the Jayhawkers, it was the first conference game in which a Kansas opponent scored more than 25 points. As the Sonnors passed this mark by 11 points one might wonder how they did not go on that trip is that Oklahoma was "hot." When they shot it was two points. Ray Ebling, Kansas' All-American forward, had a big night, collecting six field goals and two free throws for a 30-14 victory. He averaged an average of 13 points a game and boosted him to the No. 1 position in the scoring race. Ebling was using his old "under-hand stretch" shot and he gave his team a big win against Nebraska, Iowa State, and Oklahoma, he has averaged 17 points a game so that it is quite possible that he will break the scoring record of 124 points in 10 games which he equalled in Fred Praile, sophomore guard, seems to have hit his stride. In his freshman year, it appeared that Praille was going to score a win against Kansas but Kaupas has ever had an 12, the 11 points he scored against Oklahoma and the 10 points he collected in the game just previous to that, the one with Iowa State, which he did not realize that he is realizing that promise. Emporia Begins Football Forty-one Candidates Brave Weather To Study Fundamentals Ray Noble, Milton Allen and Francis Kappelman are all playing at top speed now and the Jayhawker outlook is very ros as Dr. F. C. Allen is preparing his squad for the game with Kansas State here Saturday. In spite of adverse weather conditions, spring football practice has begun in Emporia Foothills college. Practice at the campus will be on the weather becomes more favorable, and the work will consist of a study of fundamentals and conditioning exer- Nearly 1650 students have paid their fees for the spring semester, Karl Klooz, bursar, announced late yesterday afternoon. He stated that a fine of 50 cents a day would be charged all students paying their fees after Wednesday; but he said they may not having paid their fees by Feb. 19. May be withdrawn from their classes. Twelve lettermen and 29 other candidates reported for practice this week. Ceill Dryer, senior and all-conference player, was selected to charge of the practice during the absence of Coach Fran Welch, who is in the East with his star milor, San Romani. Paul Kutnick, assistant football player, helped Vie Tracer with basketball. TO PAY FEES TO AVOID FINE Kloez urged students to pay their fees early to avoid the last minute rush and the possibility of not having time to them before the penalty is applied. WEDNESDAY IS LAST DAY Students must bring their identification cards when paying fees in order to have them stamped. Identification cards must be stamped "paid" at the office before they can be used for admittance to any second semester activity. Men's Intramurals The men's intramural basketball schedule for the week beginning February are as following: Bef, 10. DT "B" vs Triangle "B." Panther vs Bolsheviks, Sigma Nu "B" vs Phi Delti Campus Haus, vs Gallowpen Kai, vs Rock Chalk II, Kai vs Phi Psi, Feb. 11, S.P.E. "B" vs Chi Bai "Chi", Phi Bai "B". vs A.T.O. "B". S.A.E. vs Sigma Nu, Delta Upsilon vs Kapig. Sib. Feb. 12, Pi KA "B". vs Beta "B". S.A.E "B". vs Phi Delti Rifle Team To Have Match Olympic Coach Declares Cunningham Best Mile Infantry Team at Leavenworth Will Oppose University Sharpshooters The University rifle team will go to Leavenworth Saturday morning, Feb. 15, for a rifle match with the 17th Infantry. The match was scheduled for last Saturday morning but was postponed because of the cold weather. The entire team will go to Leavenworth if transport can be arranged to take them; otherwise the team will be made up of 10 men who will be picked according to their showing this week in practice. The fundamentals for a lovely skin are good general health and the proper external care. Members who will make the trip will get to witness the inspection of all the troops at Fort Leavenworth. This inspection will take place just before the match. The team will also be taken on an inspection tour of the barracks, grounds, kitchen and buildings at the fort. JANICE LEE offers the proper preparations for the cleanliness, protection and stimulation of the skin. THE HISTORY OF WOMEN IN AMERICA Lawson Robertson Believes Kansas' Star Is U.S. Olympic Hope JANICE LEE Medically Pure Cosmetics Band Box Beauty Shop Coe's, Rankin's, Round Corner "Glenn Cunningham will win the mile at the 1936 Olympics." is a statement recently made by Lawson Robertson, coach of the American Olympic track team. He believes that Cunningham was not at his best when beaten by Jack Lovelock, the English star, last year in the Princeton meet, and that Glenn has not hit his stride yet this year. Inquire at Cunningham has been the center of much discussion since his defeat by Joe Mangan and Gene Wenner. Sport writers are beginning to wonder whether Glen is still the dean of American milers, or whether age is creeping up on him. Most of them are overweight, but others believe that he should be able to swing into his old form later in the season. Glenn will give a partial answer to these questions when he returns to competition Saturday in Madison Square Garden. There he will run against a strong field in the New York Athletic Club meet, and the latter part of February he is scheduled to run against Ben Eastman, the Stanford [ ] WAFFLE Why Not Have a Onlv 12c O at the CAFETERIA PATEE Shows 3 - 7 - 9 NOW! WEDNESDAY ALL SHOWS ALL SHOWS LLOYD NOLAN WALTER CONNOLY "ONE-WAY TICKET" From the Daring Exposo Written Behind Prison Walls Added—Our Gang Comedy EI Brendel Panic Wet, Stloppy Weather Will Be Here Any Day Now. Wet, put a good pair of shoes and heels on your shoes. GRANADA NOW! Janette MACDONALD NELSON EDDY ROSE MARIE Mississippi Gildenwood Mayer ROSE MARIE Prices: Mat. 25c; Night 35c ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP 1017 1/2 Mass. W.E. Whetstone, Prop. Phone 686 middle distance champion in San Francisco. It had been rumored that Cunningham might return to the University of Kansas for the spring semester, but an announcement of his enrollment at the University of Iowa contradicts this. He will finish work for his degree and attend the University for a chance for his Olympic contest under the team of Bill Hargas at Kansas. Read the Daily Kansan want ads Jayhawks To Have Track Duals The Jayhawker track team opens its 1936 track season Saturday, with a dual meet with the Kansas State队. The meet had been scheduled for last Saturday but it was too cold to be held under the stadium. Coach Hargis and yesterday that unless it warms up the meet will be postponed again. It has been decided to work out under the stadium which makes it impossible to hold any time trials in order to select a team. Fresh SILEX COFFEE An invigorating stimulant. at the UNION FOUNTAIN Sub-Basement Memorial Union "LUCKIES" CENTER LEAVES "LUCKIES" PROPER AGING "LUCKIES" SCIENTIFIC BLENDING "LUCKIES" IT'S TOASTED "LUCKIES" MOISTURE CONTROL "LUCKIES" STANDARDIZED UNIFORMITY "LUCKIES" ARE LESS ACID A LIGHT SMOKE of rich, ripe-bodied tobacco Over a period of years, certain basic advances have been made in the selection and treatment of cigarette tobacco for Lucky Strike Cigarettes. They include preliminary analyses of the tobacco selected; use of center leaves; the higher heat, treatment of tobacco ("Toasting"); consideration of acid-alkaline balance, with consequent definite improvement in flavor; and controlled uniformity in the finished product. All these combine to produce a superior cigarette—a modern cigarette, a cigarette made of rich, ripe-bodied tobacco—A Light Smoke. Luckies are less acid Gortrietti 1906, The American Tulipan G. Raccent chemical tests show 'that other popular brands have an excess of acidity over Lucky Strike of from 53% to 100% Excess of Acidity of Other Popular Brands Over Lucky Strike Cigarettes BALANCE LUCKY STRIKE BRAND B BRAND C BRAND D LUCKY STRIKE The Smoker CIGARETTES LUCKY STRIKE *RESULTS VERIFIED BY INDEPENDENT CHEMICAL LABORATORIES AND RESEARCH GROUPS a light smoke OF RICH, RIPE-BODIED TOBACCO "IT'S TOASTER" "IT'S TOASTED" UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXXIII --- LAWRENCE KANSAS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1938 on the SHIN By BUD EVANS, '36 Flowers to Mr. Lane . . . A Tobacco Act . . . Dancing at Brick's . . . Bull Sessions . . . Health Week . . . A Diamond Deal . . Hats . . . Ain't It Punny! . . Letters Wanted. --- Some gal called—wouldn't give some, but favored old "Snoop" with a smile. Delia Tan, received a bouquet of panies with a card which read: "From your loyal friends and most stuunch guests, who recently elected president of the lodge." Some of the back-office boys of the Kansas are complaining about Professor Doin's absence—mindlessly walking off with their smoking tobacco. Doin has been in some places, but the boys believe they have the "goods" on the professor. Anyway, there is room for an arsenal of kids. So seems Shore is the biggest loser. The "Snoop" and his associate "Stogues" have been wondering whether or not J. B. Berry, from the University of Chicago, is one of the Alpha Chi gi's, are going to continue their dancing sessions in at Brick's. There's nothing like good, but he has a wonderful time when the next act is to be held. We don't want to miss it. Thank you! NUMBER 92 --- Dave Kelso, the Beta's Bean Boom boy, flashes the news that Mary Frances Depew, an Alpha Chi freshman, has been the subject of recent Beta bull-sessions. Ah—hems the boys are trying to figure out a way to cover up the false rumors that accused the little Miss of being all "stupid." The students are in soita function like a crutch—to help the gal get around! If you should call the Chi Opsome within the next few days, and Hattie Hi-School answers with "Kiss-me quickly. Quickly," don't take her at home—it's just the latest result of information—the Snoop didn't try it.) Understand that Kay Willard, Phi, is sporting a brand-new diamond ring. Mark Robertson, a "babe" from the college he school last year, is the lucky金 key. Kay just returned last Sunday from a somewhat delayed, or extended, between-seemless vacation. but it has been a pretty good excuse. Congratulations. They tell us that John Malone has quite a collection of rare (care meaning-of an uncommon nature) hats. The one he has been wearing most recently (a favorite of his fans) is a very novel creation of his, to say the least—(and that's what we intend to do). You'll have to admit, though it is a rare one. Betty Lou McFailand, a Pi Phi, who in recovering rapidly from a recent accident, wore a headband in fine shape. Not long ago, she dropped a radio on her foot. We might add—the radio in working conditions of the Music Goes Round and Down. The latest pun comes from Marty Davis, Theta has, who says, "Dorothy" Fry-ed, and she's seeing Stotts before ever!" ♦ ♦ ♦ And if any of you guys and you gals have a little "dope" you'll like to see in this column, just drop us a line or so, and we'll see what we can do about it. This depression has been sore hard on good news, and your letter or calls would certainly be appreciated. haven't any news in mind, call 2838, and the "sooop" will be glad to go to the show with you—or something. FEES MUST BE PAID TODAY IF FINE IS TO BE AVOIDED All fees must be paid by 5 o'clock the afternoon if a fine of $0.60 cents for every day overdue is to be avoided. Students not paying fees will be withdrawn from classes. Each hour seems to see the line waiting to pay fees lengthened. In the afternoon rush it extended from the business office to the west end of the Administration building. Karl Kloes, barron, announced that approximately 2900 students had paid their fees by yesterday afternoon. Nine Tracksters Declared Ineligible Because of Grades Scholastic Difficulties Dea Death Blow to Big-Six Track Chances This Year Kansas track hopes receives another seven backset when semester grades were handed out. At least nine men will not be out for track because of ineligibility, and several others have voluntarily dropped out of school. This, coupled with the fact that many of the men who were out last year have failed to report, has reduced to a minimum Kansas' chance of putting up any serious opposition to the other members of the Big Six. Among those declared ineligible were Dalton Landers, Arkansas City, sophomore pole vaulter and hurdler, and Don Bird, Lander's teammate, who hails from the same place and is also outstanding in the same events. Hope in Sophomores Fades Not Stewart, burden from Dollar Falls, Calif. on the West Coast and Tenghenhong, former Wyandotte high and Kansas City Junior College middle-disc Grant Barcus, football letterman who was counted on to take over the lion's share of the work in the weight department, has dropped out of school and is now a basketball player City, and George Stapleton, another football man who was being groomed for the javelin throw, with withdrawn from school to enter Bethany college. Ralph Caldwell and Robert Cameron, distance runners, and Hugh Crane, basketball players, will make the scholastic hurdle and will not be available for duty this semester. Others Leave School Counter Cunningham, distance runner who made his letter last year will not be back this year, and Ernest Klann, distance man, has also failed to return. Alvin Rowland, dash man from Raytown, M., also failed to return. Meet Scheduled Saturday With these men lost to the team, the outlook for Kansas in indoor track is rather dark. Early in the season Coach Hargiss was worried about the pressure of a national championship candidates to report for practice. The crop of sophomores had plenty of ability, but semester grades have taken their toll of these men and Coach Hargis will have to build almost an entire team from the few remaining men. Meet Scheduled Saturday Kansas has a meet scheduled with Kansas State for next Saturday under the Memorial stadium here. This meet was set for last Saturday, but wow, but wow conditions. Unless it warms up considerably, it is feared that the two teams will be unable to meet this week. Coach Hargis has been working his charges out regularly, but is working under a severe handicap with such cold weather. He hopes to have his team in shape, however, in time for the indoor season, which opens soon KANSAS PLAYERS TO PRESENT "OLYMPIA" MONDAY, FEB. "Olympia," the second Kansas Player's production of the year, will open Monday, Feb. 17. After presenting the team's first game against the cast will start Feb. 26, on a tour of the state with the production. They will carry their own scenery and costumes by truck and will play in Wichita Falls, Parsons, and other Kansas towns. Tickets for the play may be obtained at the ticket office in Green hall, which will open Thursday. Feb. 10 at 10 a.m., and presented in exchange for reserve tickets. A special meeting of the Ku Ku's been called by Eddie Rice, secretary. The meeting will be held tonight at 10:30 in the Union building. Ku Ku's to Meet All students who have jobs the second semester are asked to call in on Tuesday, or on Wednesday, or Thursday. For 11, 12, and 13, to fill in second class schedules. Men registered in the Employment Bureau should file their Lawrence street addresses and class schedules at once. MARY C. OLSEN. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * MARY C. OLSEN. EMPLOYED STUDENTS MRS. FRANK PARKER, Office Secretary University Health Service Originated Thirty Years Ago in Small Association Men's Employment Bureau. Now that fees are paid, students are looking over their receipts and wondering about the items listed there. They see one three-dollar item—they remember they paid it last semester, to "Health service," the receipt roads. "Yes, it is a lot of money—that $ we pay each year for 'health service,' but in terms of benefits to students and students in many similar institutions, it is relatively low. It has grown through the years from 50 cents to $2 and on up to the present $6, but we have given bad students a similarly increased service. State and Nation Mourn Passing of Charles Curtis The University health service orig Friends of Beloved Leader Gather To Pay Final Topeka, Feb. 11—(UP)—Charles Curtis, who left an Indian tepee to rise in the nation's second highest post, was named the state's governor that his native state could offer. Respects Funeral services for the man who had been successively county attorney, congressman, senator, and vice-president, were conducted in the Representative Hall of the capitol building. Gift Alf M. Landon, other state officials, and many other justice heads headed the throng which filled every seat in the chambers. Elaborate Floral Displays Floral displays were the most elaborate ever seen here. Mr. and Mrs Herbert Hartworn, during whose administration Curtis was wife-president, served on the President and Mrs. Roosevelt and chiefs of several Indian tribes also sent flowers. The American flag and the Kansas flag stood at opposite ends of the coffin. Nearby lay a bow and arrow sent by the Kaw Indians to be buried with their belongings. In ground, Curtis was one-eighth Kaw. Dr. Harold Case of the First Methodist church read the funeral services. Organ music and the singing of a quartet were brought to the hall from the telephone and broadcasting equipment. Elaborate Floral Displays "He was a man of such standing in the hearts of his fellow men that a whole nation today is grieving for Charles Curtis, rather than for a senator." "May the great spirit speed his steps to the happy hunting ground." Burial was in the Topeka Cemetery next to Curtis' wife. Relatives present included Mr. and Mrs. Edward Everett Gann, sister and brother-in-law, and Mrs. Webster Knight, Providence, R.I. Senator Arnor Capper lead the honorary pearl bearer. The Shulman County guardian who he was a member conducted a special meeting to pay him tribute. inated about 1906, when a Benefit Health Association of 42 members, each of whom paid 50 cents into a general health fund, was formed. During the first year only two students were cared for by the funds of the association By 1908 the association had grown to 742 members who each paid $2 yearly. A hospital building was fitted up on East Campus in the present. The housing arrangement continued with the association struggled along by itself, trying to survive and working always for an increased membership, until in 1916 a group of patients entered the picture and took over the health association's work. In 1919-20 the present Faculty Women's Club building was the hospital. In the former year the present health fee came under control. In 1921 the hospital was moved to 1406 Tennessee street where it remained until 1913, when Mrs. J. B Watkins recognized the need for a campus of its own and gave to the University the present beautiful Watkins Memorial hospital. Building Ranks High This building ranks among the finest in the United States. It has a large dispensary with laboratory and X-ray department, a surgical unit, record offices, and beds for 46 patients, or one bed for every 100 students enrolled. Cold Wave Is Making Exit The professional staff consists of three full-time physicians, an interne who comes from Bell Memorial hospital, and a nurse, a physician and filing clerk, a laboratory techni- (Continued on page 3) Two Hundred Eighty-Five Person Reported To Have Perished BULLETIN At 11 a.p., the temperature stool at 30 degrees above zero and was still dropping steadily, although not as fast as in previous nights. Chicago, Feb. 11—(UP) The worst prolonged cold spell in the twentieth century abated today. For three weeks the Middle West has been battered by ice gales, blizzards and sub-zero temperatures. Roosevelt Builds Defense Against Expected Attack As state and county authorities won their battles with 30-foot drills, coal trucks lumbered once more into furfew towns, milk trains reached terminals, and travelers had farewell to those who had sheltered them over the weekend. In some sections, suffered remaining acute but hope was in sight for all. Continued cold weather was forecast, but snow was not anticipated. An estimated 285 persons perished in the 21-day period of unprecedented weather severity. White House Conferences Held To Lay Plans For Trimming Expenses In other states, main highways were reported clear. South Dakota was reported still snowbound. Weather conditions were reflected on the livestock market. Hog prices soared to the highest level in four months in the Chicago stockyards. Paralyzed transportation reduced shipments to the smallest total in history. Washington, Feb. 11—(UP)—Press President Roosevelt said today that the New Deal is awaiting a triple-edged attack on the housing market, an earlier budget estimate out of line and called for federal expenditures involving the national debt and the rising He said he expected to have the solution ready within a week. Meantime, the White House is collecting daily reports from the various bureaues. Conferences are being held with heads of federal lending and spending agencies in order to re-arange the New Deal's federal response. Mr. Roosevelt added, have discussed the following question: 1. How much money appropriated or authorized for federal bureaual and state agencies? 2. How much money could be saved by trimming present authorizations or by cutting them off? 3. Re-examination of appropriation which affect the budget or the deficit. Cancelled Authorized Loans The first move in the program came last week when agencies canceled loan authorizations to lending agencies totaling nearly one billion dollars. These authorization, however, did not affect either bid of the The president today did not indicate whether he had a definite financial goal in prospect or how much money he would have to represent represented by Representative Adolph Fabah, Democrat. The White House conference was eager to avoid higher taxes now and insistent that Congress make appropriations to necessary expenditures. Fabath and members of the House Democratic Steering Committee, which he heads, renewed the legislative situation with Mr. Roosevelt and assured him that every effort would be made to secure legislation, grant and send Congress home early. To this observation of Fabath's, the president said, "That's fine." The congressman asserted that the chief executive is working on a special report, bringing the financial condition of the various government departments up to date in connection with the budget needs for the coming fiscal year. President Roosevelt included the amount he would keep for relief needs during the 1937 fiscal year in his budget to Congress. Secretary of Treasury, Henry Morgenthau, Jr., subsequently fixed this figure at two billion dollars when he appeared before the United States Senate tomate the effect of immediate payment of the soldier bonus on government finances. Governor Sends Regrets Curtis Funeral Prevents Chief Executive's Attending Lindley Ceremonies The following letter was sent to Chancellor E. H. Lindley by Gov. A.M. Lundberg, in explanation, and the convoction and reception yesterday, celebrating the Chancellor's fifteenth year at the University. My Dear Chancellor! I regret that owing to the funeral of the late Vice-president, Charles Curtis, Mrs. Landon and I will be unable to attend the ceremonies being held Tuesday in honor of the fifteenth anniversary of your coming to the University of Kansas as head of that institution. You are well deserved for your advancing with earnest endeavor. the interests of the University, its development, and its accomplishments for our youth, is but one of the many services that we offer to the state. Throughout the decade and a half you have given generously of your energy and of your notable ability to furthering the welfare of the entire commonwealth. Your counsel as an adviser to the Board of Trustees thought has been an important factor in the upholding of our community life. I extend to you my own good wish and my hope that the recognition o Yours faithfully, Alf M. Landon. Coffman Pays Tribute To Chancellor Lindley Progressive Social Policies Praised by Minnesota President Speaking as a friend and fellow educator, L. D. Coffman, president of the University of Minnesota, paid a sincere and glowing tribute to Chancellor E. H. Lindley in yesterday morning's convo- Complimenting Chancellor Lindley on fifteen years of active service at the University, President Coffman said, "From his boyhood, Dr. Lindley was animated by the spirit of the explorers and the frontiersmen, and in his later years he worked in connection in the industrial world and to experiment in social and political theory." "His unfailing courtey, his gentle manner, his impressible optimism, his kindness, his strength of interests soon win the admiration of all those who come in contact with him. He long regarded him as one of the greatest angel figures in American education." Present and Future Orders Discussed President Coffman also discussed the present and future social order of America. "There is no salvation in a policy of drift," he said. "There are some things men want and mean to take on in universal peace, tolerance, international unity, and the opportunity for work." To achieve these things, America must follow a sane, middle course, between the extremes of liberty, which result in chaos, and complete loss of (Continued on page 3) Dr. Lindley Feted At Faculty Dinner Held in His Honor Addresses of Professors and Regents Review Chancellor's Years of Success More than 500 faculty members and employees of the University of Kansas paid tribute to Dr. Ernest H. Lindley, who has just completed 15 years as Chancellor of the University, at a dinner given last night in the Memorial Union ballroom. The banquet tables were decorated with the official colors of the University. Following the dinner, several musical numbers, and short speeches were given Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, served as toastmaster. Miss Ivane Sloo resisted Ivane Peabody, assistant professor of art an arti. Cha faro senza Euridice "Orefo," by Gluck. D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts, accompanied Miss Peabody. A series of pictures then was presented to the group, depicting various interesting events in the life of Chancellor Lindley. The Chancellor's "eternal triangle" was discussed by Henry Werner, merman's student adviser. H. H. Lane, professor of zoology, and U. G. Mitchell, professor of mathematics. Deem Werner discharged the students from the students of the University, Professor Lane told of his faculty contacts; and Professor Mitchell recounted the Chancellor's connection with the citizens of the states. It is these three elements that comprise the "eternal triangle, with which Chancellor Lindh used in contact and with which he must deal in carrying out his daily routine. Many Congratulatory Messages Ralph H. Major, professor in the School of Medicine, told the of Charn- lery campus, that of the School of Medicine, Following this, W. E. Sandelius, pro- fessor of political science, read to the group the numerous congratulatory messages had been received by the Chancellor. Charles F. Scott, Iola publisher, who was slated to be the official representative of Gov. Afl M. Landon at the convocation and dinner, was unable to be in Lawrence, and he sent his reservation and his greetings to the Chancellor. Memory of Abraham Lincoln Still Revered by Thousands Mrs. C. F. Nelson, wife of C. F. Neton, professor of biochemistry, spoke on the "Chancellor's Inspiration," a tribute to Mrs. Lindley, and the aid she has given him in carrying on his work as head of the University. THE MEMORIAL OF THE DEATH OF JOHN W. PARKER Abraham Lincoln Sen. Fred M. Harris, member of the board of registers, of Ottawa, told me that he was "well aware" of the state, and of his worth to the University as a figure known from one end to the other. Abrham Lincoln THE HUNCHBACK LODGE Lincoln monument at Springfield, Ill. Replica of birthplace Thousands will pay honor to Abraham Lincoln, martyred Civil war president, whose birthday anniversary is today. Each year the impressive monuments at Washington and Springfield which honor the great president are visited by thousands from all parts of United States. The towering marble structures are in strange positions, carved into a bank in which Lincoln was born, a replica of which is at the right. U Lincoln memorial at Washington, D. C. The highlight of the evening was the final address made by the Chancellor. In his talk, he told of some of the more interesting events that have occurred during his fifteen years at the helm of the University, and expressed his group for them in which they had bestowed upon him at the banquet. KANSAS FRESHMAN DEBATER WINS ST. LOUIS TOURNAMENT Irving Kass, c39, a member of the freshman debate team, won the St. Louis debate tournament on Feb. 8. and 9. the subject of debate was "Public vs. Private Ownership of Land in Palestine." As a result of the victory, Kasa receives a free trip to the international debate convention in Pasadena, Calif., this summer. He won the right to enter the St. Louis tournament by winning the tournament at Kansas City in December. Kass, a member of the Aloph Zadik Kass, a fraternity for Jewish young men, was a member of the Topka Championship of the Championship of Kansas for two years. French Club Meets Today There will be a meeting of the French Club this afternoon at 4:30 o'clock in room 306, Fraser hall. An informal program under the direction of Mr. Kenneth Cornell will constitute the French club program. Botany Club Postponed the Chancellor of the University. The meeting befits the university Club will be held Feb 25. The regular meeting was not held last night because of the Chancellor's banquet. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1936 Comment Lincoln and Kansas As the years roll on and birthday anniversaries are observed people are apt to pay homage, if they think about it, to a name rather than to the individual who carried the name or to the ideals for which the man stood. Such is the fate of all great names in history at the hands of generations marching farther and farther from the period in which the man lived. Abraham Lincoln, one of the truly great and God-minded men who contributed to the development of the United States, stands in just this danger. Much is made of the Rail-Splitter and the least scout of folk-lore is not too insignificant to furnish up and bring out for the edification of new generations of young people. "Honest Abe" has become a bye-word in the American language. "The Great Emancipator" is another phrase to which we at this time pua lip service. At the same time, the celebration of the anniversary of Lincoln's birthday should have a real significance for citizens of Kansas. Seventy-five years ago Kansas was admitted into the Union. In that same year Lincoln took the oath of office as President of the United States for the first time. The two events are closely related for if there had been no question of slavery there would have been no particular hurry on the part of politicians from the northern states to get more senators and representatives from abolition territory into the national congress. Lincoln was elected partly because of his forthright stand in regard to the question of slavery. Mr. Lincoln did not make the conditions that brought on the Civil war. Neither did he bring on the questions that made politicians scramble to carve new states out of the vast western plains. All this is not to detract one iota from the sterling personal qualities with which Abraham Lincoln was endowed. His virtues were of such a quality that we in this day and age may well emulate them. Lincoln inherited the tense political, social, and economic problems from the past. He was guided by what he felt to be the best interests of the entire nation in pursuing the policies he did. And as the years have gone on, a united and grateful nation pays him tribute. Kansas should feel a definite sense of obligation to Lincoln. Also, Kansas should be proud of the part her settlers played in the Civil War. Her's was a definite and glorious contribution to the scheme laid down by Abraham Lincoln. Today, Kansans are proud of their state. Not only is the state known throughout the world as a great agricultural region, but in the past few years Kansas has become one of the potentially great producers of petroleum. In matters of government, Kansas and the men who hold the executive positions of state have called nation-wide attention to what can be done, even in times of stress. Out of the same set of circumstances came the leadership of Abraham Lincoln and the state of Kansas. Let us not forget this in paying tribute to Lincoln. ( The museum was closed to the public Nov. 30, 1932, because the floors were not safe. Reconstruction is at a standstill. Lack of funds! To re-open the museum and again display specimens worth a half-million dollars, $47,000 is necessary. The Fine Art of Cheating At the University of North Carolina recently a group of students backed by the president and the faculty uncovered a "cheating ring" that had been in operation on that campus for over three years. They presented to the student council all the evidence they could gather and that organization, acting on the evidence presented to them, suspended indefinitely more than thirty students for violation of the "honor principle" which is in operation at that University. The ring was so well developed that its leader had on several occasions boasted that he was able to get any quizzes to be given at the University except those in chemistry. The functions of the ring were varied, ranging from simply supplying the quizzes to be given to actually taking them by proxy for its clients. The ring obtained its copies of quizzes and other desired papers for their clients from a confederate in the mineographing department of the University, this aid was supplemented by the use of a pass key to one of the halls on the campus. Here at the University of Kansas we are able to feel rather sure that there is no such "cheating ring" in operation. But we do know that during the past few weeks many rumors as to the amount of cheating that goes on have been evident. Some of the hearsay even goes so far as to imply that unless you take a good "crib" to the exams in some classes you will be lucky to pass the course. That is probably a slight exaggeration, but we do Working in absolute secrecy the student committee was able to secure enough evidence on the leaders to get from them a full confession of their activities, along with all their quiz files, papers, and correspondence. From this they were able to gain enough evidence to place before the student council for trial ninety-eight cases of violation of the "honor system." know that there is an enormous amount of creating taking place on this campus. Not only on exams but in many other ways, such as, having someone else write your term papers, themes and like. Cheating of this type might be laid to the professors who either cannot or will not stop it. Probably the only way that this practice of cheating can be stopped is by the action of the students themselves, as was done in the case of the North Carolina University exposure. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Notes due at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m. preceding regular publication days and 11:15 a.m. on Saturday for Sunday issues. FEBRUARY 12. 1936 AIEE: The regular meeting of the AIEE will be Wednesday, February 12, at 4:30 p.m. in Marvin Brown's room. Edward Lonsdale, Secretary. AS.ME. There will be a regular meeting of the AS.ME Thursday evening at 8:00 in Marion hall. EL ATENEO. El Atenente tendra una sesión el juices a has cuatro y media de la tarde. Margarit Osma, secretaria ESTES REUNION: A chill supper for all students who have attended the Estes Park conference will be held from 5:00-8:00 p.m. Sunday. There will be a fifteen o'clock movie show, followed by a free or Fred Meier by Friday night. Nancy Calhoun. FIRST SEMESTER GRADES: Grades for the fall semester may be obtained from the Registrar's Office February 11-15, according to the following schedule of student names: Wednesday, Feb. 12—N to S inclusive. Thursday, Feb. 13-T to Z inclusive Friday, Feb. 14 Those unable to come at the Saturday, Feb. 15 scheduled time. George O. Foster, Registrar. HOME ECONOMICS CLUB: The Home Economics HOME has postponed the initiation of a super supper from Tuesday to Saturday. Evelyn Wallace, President. JAY JANES. There will be a meeting of the Jay James at 4:30 in Room 119 in Fraser hall. Betty Tholen, President. K. A.C.E. The Kansas Association of Chemical Engineers will have an election of officers Thursday, February 13, at 7:30 in room 101 C. All chemical engineers are urged to come. Gordon Miller, President. KU KU MEETING: There will be a Ku Ku meeting Wednesday at 10:30 in the Memorial Union Building. QUILL CLUB: Quill Club will meet in the W.S.G.A. Lunge Thursday, Feb. 13, at 7:38 pm. All pledges are accepted. Chas. Zeskey, President. RHADAMANTHI: Rbhadamanti meets today at 4:30 in the Green Room. Alfred C. Ames, President. RIFLE CLUB: There will be a meeting of the Rifle Club Thursday, February 13, at 7:30 p.m. in Robinson Hall. SCHOALSHIPS: Applications for scholarships for next year may be made during the hours 3 and 5 p.m., Monday to Friday, inclusive, in Room 203B administration building. Applications must be filed by March 1. Committee on Aids and Awards Mrs. Flora S. Boynton, Executive Secretary, Committee on Aids and Awareness SIGMA ETA CHI: Initiation and banquet will be held at the Colonial Tea Room, Friday, February 14, at 5:13 p.m. Banquet room is 60 cents. Please make reservations with Iris McDonald by Wednesday evening. Evangeline Clark, President. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WORLD AFFAIRS COMMISSION: The World Affairs Commission of W.Y.C.A. will meet Thursday, Feb. 13 at 8:30 p.m. at Honeywell Hall. All girls interested in social activities are invited. June Thompson, Ethel Anderson. PUBLISHER HARRY VALENTINE OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Chairmen. ASSOCIATE ELECTORS MANAGING EDITOR PETER M. HARRIS, B.S. BUSINESS MANAGER T. QUENTIN BEIROU CAMPUS EDITOR MAKE-UP EDITORS BIO. HUVAS | BIO. HUVAS | BIO. HUVAS LIBRARY COMBS, JR. NEWS EDITOR DONNA SMITH SOCIETY EDITOR FREDA BEAM SOCIETY EDITOR JAMEE FROLLER Business Office K.U. 66 News Room K.U. 25 Night Connection, Business Office 2701 K2 Night Connection, News Room 2702 K3 TELEPHONES STAFF Sole and exclusive national advertising representatives NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE, Inc. Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday mornings except during school holidays by students in the department of Journalism of the University of Kansas from the Press of the Department of Journalism. Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland, Seattle Subscription price, per $3.00 in advance, $1.23 on payments. Single copies, 1e each. Entered as second class master, September 17, 1910, at the post office at LAWNES, Kansas. National Political Situation Assumes Aspects of Battle as Spring Approaches Breezes are blowing these days—nice gentle breezes for the most part, but gradually gathering momentum and fraughts—and these breezes carry whisheries of politics. There are no oxybenzes, that bear tidings of speeches, of charges and counter-charges, and of threats of "walk-out"; and then there are the calmest of the short grass and the grapevines; and the planning and field-marshaling back of the drums and fanfare of trumpets. And out of the currents and cross-currents come hints which, if fitted together, may give the men on the political chestboard. Is the Democratic camp breakup? Do the threats of Al Smith and his Liberty Leaguer们 to "take a walk" come as a shock to the administration forces? Is the possibility that predictions made several years ago by the more astute political observers, to be considered anything other than a threat to the policy of the Roemewelt-Farley camp. By J. Howard Rusco, e'38 Democrat Split Improbable These observers, early in the Roosevelt administration, told of the desire of the President to reorganize the two branches by laying the progressive members of the Republican party into the Democratic ranks, and making it so uncomfortable for conservative Democrats that they themselves into the Republican fold. There has been ample evidence that New Deal forces for the past three years have been following this line of campaign. They have openly defied big business, known for its conservatism; and they have ground out legislation designed to attract the liberals of both parties. The success of half the program seems assured, with the revolt of the Liberty Leaguer2-who, be it noted, represent Wall Street and big business, if we may judge from the list of contributors to the league's war chest. The purging of the Democratic party is approaching the status of an accomplish fact. So much for the first phase of the program. Its accomplishment has not been difficult; but what of the second and third phases, which must be recalled that it is easier to members than to acquire new ones—members who not only will fall in line, but will work as zealously behind the group, have those who are being eliminated. The answer to this question seems to lie with the Republicans; and its solution presents no easy problem. responders. The Republican party primarily is faced with two alternatives this year: it can nominate a progressive slate and adopt a platform designed to hold to the liberals and block the Democratic strategy, or it can adhere to its tradition, and thus make its ranks more attractive to the AI Smiths and the Carter Glasses. Two Roads for Republicans Either alternative, in unadulterated form, is hazardous. The former not only would make the party less attractive and conservative Democrat, but would also be conservative Democrats, because he been the keynote of attacks upon the New Deal "the dangerous radicalism" of the Rosevelt administration. That is to say, the campaign might resolve itself into another case of the pot and with their respective degrees of blackness. On the other hand, if the G.O.P. decides upon a conservative course, it is playing in the hands of the opposition by using the word "tender" to fight for rights. It is, in effect, bidding well to those progressive Republicans who, disagusted with the rejection Howe-Curtis regime, deserved tempers and a side of the enemy in the 1932 and 1934. What, then, will the Republican do? Will they nominate Borah, whose well-known stand in favor of inflation sends chills chasing the spines of the big industrialists and bankers, and whose semi-alignment with the Townsend forces gives bad dreams to the nation's taxpayer? It is doubtful. Will the allies an offer-conservative, and revive views of the Hower administration? Borah or Hoover? Happily, political leaders do not lack ingenuity; and the fact that the Democrats have pointed out two paths does not remove the possibility of a third. Rather, they can encourage or forge the greatest promise for the Grand Old Party, embodies primarily the nomination of a candidate who is repugnant to neither faction; a man whose record shows him to be safe From a focal point of view, and yet who has the progress-constructive ideas of government that are essential in this atrocious period. Landon a Possibility This is the course that at this time seems most likely to be followed; and a keynote of this course is the nominec of AIF M. London for the Presidency. a man who, in normal times, it must be admitted, would never have been considered for the Presidency. And thus it is that the brees are growing louder and luder in their whispering that the governor should June as the standard bearer of the Republican party. Will he be elected? Alas, the brees do not tell; but stranger things have happened, and Kansas holds at least a reasonably good chance of seeing her governor transcribe to the White House next January. And thus we have the line of reasoning which points to the nomination of Hollywood Film Shop Hollywood—(UP)—Mothers of child screen stars cause much worry to studios. It seems in the past it has been the usual practice for the mothers of children who have caught public fancy suddenly to decide they know everything about pictures. As a result, they take it upon themselves to teach the motion picture makers how to make pictures. It's all embarrassing for the picture makers. They don't care to offend the parent but, on the other hand, they don't care to have their picture ruined—with resultant loss on their investment—by amateur direction. Until a year ago, the studios solved the problem in what was considered a high-handed method in some parental circles. Mothers, and some fathers, too were barred from the sets where their children were going through their paces. Now it seems that child screen star mothers are becoming more sensible or the cure is having its effect. Several mothers have been known never to say a word or give even one bit of advice while they were on the set. One of them who never becomes concerned over the rights of her darling is the mother of Shirley Temile. She assumes the role of an ordinary spectator while her daughter is working. Studio executives, in their unguarded moments, concede that Mrs. Temple has every right to speak her mind. Shirley, a former producer and maker for producers in the industry. "I don't ever want to give the impression that I'm in the way," Mrs. Temple says. "I'd a lot rather be too conservative." In inauguration of the "yen standard" in China is regarded as something more than a matter of convenience to the Japanese residents and tradeppees. There are those who see in it plans to embarrass the workings of the Chinese Government's new monetary project, which they claimed that announced the nationalization of silver and the control of exchange at a fixed level was received with surprise and indignation in Japan, some circles in Tokyo seeing the move as an Anglo-Chinese maneuver directed against the Nipponese. But Mrs. Temple has studied the history of former child stars and also learned from their mistakes. She tries to be helpful rather than dictatorial. "I decided on that policy a long time ago. I don't want to acquire the attitude that the screen mother known what is best for her child—as far as picture making is concerned—because it always has caused endless friction. Loss of Trade Feared "During working hours, Shirley belongs to the studio." Mrs. Temple explains. "The time she is off the set, she belongs to me." However, many Japanese merchants, whose shops are patronized by Chinese and westerners, or who deal in articles from China, would like to make the change, for aside from the probable confusion the use of the yen would create, they see a loss of trade resulting from their customers' unwillingness to accept Japanese currency as a basis of trade. New Stenographic System To Revolutionize Secretarial Work Palo Alto, Calif. — (UP)—Based on what psychologists call "kinesistic perception," Dr. J. Kevin cover, proverbs and games that sharpen versatility, has invented a new shorthand and typewriting system which he beats revolutionize present-day stenogrammetry. Japanese Business Men in Shanghai To Dominate Chinese Trade With Yen In contrast to all, Japanese merchants, regardless of size, are to conduct their sales on a yen basis according to the newly inaugurated central bank. They deal in bundles of small Japanese shops throughout Shanghai will be in yen. While this arrangement is likely to be an annoyance to non-Japanese trading in Japanese shops, the Japanese sponsors pay for the goods from the yen not only will mean monetary saving, but will constitute a convenience, as the bother of calculations of exchange according to the fluctuations of the exchange rates will be elimin- The new shorthand, which will be known as "notescript," is made up of omanometers with dots and dashes for the systems now in use. Dr. Cooper declares, tests have demonstrated it can work directly from direct code without difficulty. The typing system is based on a sense of position rather than on sight and touch. The student learns a different finger position for each key below the keyboard, and when actual practice starts, his fingers fall naturally into position. Dr. Coover declares the system is applicable to all individuals regardless of physical differences or disabilities of the senses. Shanghai, Feb. 11-(UP) - Declaring that the fluctuations of the Chinese dollar had caused them both trouble and money loss in the Japanese business, Shanghai was used by the Japanese yen in all commercial transactions and to extend the plan from Shanghai to all central and local offices where Japanese are engaged in trade. The practice of using currency other than Chinese in business transactions is not new here. Large American firms quote prices in U. S. dollars when engaged in wholesale dealings. However, the standard Chinese Government or dollar and its subsidiary coins are widely accepted in retail sales and purchases. Chinese commercial circles here are Banks Defy Silver Order infilmed to resent the move and the Chinese Manufacturers' Association has petitioned the National Government to request the Japanese authorities to prevent the innovation. This group deceived Japan by attempting to impose of Japanese currency in China was likely to lead to a penetration of Japanese influence into the Chinese commercial market and that the future of the Chinese industries and country would be jeopardized if this move were left unchecked. Further, these groups of this group have been requested to boycott the use of Japanese currency. TORY SUNDAY OFFER Japanese government instates the monetary program has been manifest by the refusal of Japanese banks for some time to surrender their silver holdings to the Central Bank of China. Some time after the monetary plan was unveiled, Chinese banks broached and quickly translated into action. Japanese consular authorities made no objection to the move and as a result, Chinese have charged the Japanese with bad faith in persistently pursuing the yen as a basis of trade in China. The local foreign press sees a "self-imposed" boycott in the move and prophesies that losses incurred by fluctuations of Chinese currency will be nothing when compared with the invisible losses resulting. Particularly significant, however, is the fact that no mention of the use of yen has been made in North China, and this sphere of influence is being extended. Airplane Pilot Enlisted As Cowpuncher In Modern Roundup Cody, Wyo—(UP)—Times are becoming increasingly tougher for the western cowboy. First it was the barbed wire fence which cramped his style. Then came the automobile which reduced the need for horses and horsemen. Trucks followed the automobile and cut down the work of the cowboy. Now it is the airplane that is making it harder for a cowboy to keep his job. Effectiveness of the airplane in round-the-world flight has been here recently. A band of wild horses had been on the loose for four years. Some of the best cowboys in the state attempted to drive the mutants out, but they were mountains defended their best efforts. Then Bill Monday, an aviator, accepted an offer to attempt to chase the horses out of the jagged mountains. Accompanied by Lawrence Siddle, the pilot flew his plane over the peaks until he sighted the outlaw band. ROCK CHALKLETS By circling and diving at the band Monday was able to herd them out of the hills and into the open country where the cowbys could handle them. "It was as easy as handling them in a nature," Monday said. A news story tells that prisoners at Minnesota's Stillwater penitentiary who are enrolled in extension courses offered by the University of Minnesota, have a higher scholastic average than students attending the same courses at the school. Well at least they aren't bothered by too many outside activities. This weather reminds of Bill Blizzard who once last year was editor of the Kansan. There may be some beautiful figures displayed at the Beaux Arts Ball. All honor to feminine pulchrite. And it won't be a relax varix either. After all this publicity concerning the "dust bowl" last summer, it seems fitting to call to cast parts the "ice chest" now. Begin Studying NOW Then you can have a long Stay on the Hill for Dinner We serve from 5:15 until 6:30 evening for study Eat at the CAFETERIA CHECK with us DURING THIS COLD WEATHER Hot Water Heaters ... $4.95 up Prestone, Alcohol, Winter Gear Lubrication Tire and Brake Service GOOD YEAR Carter Service Call 1300 Open All Night Don't Forget to Give Your Sweetie That Valentine She's Expected—A nice selection at--- Ochse Printing and Party Shop 814 Mass. St. Phone 288 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12. 1036 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRFNCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Koel Hill Society BEFORE 5 P.M. CALL K.U. 25; BETWEEN 7:30 AND 8 P.M. CALL 2701K3) OR 2702K3). CHINA Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Clewenger announce the marriage of their daughter, Elda Mae, to Louis Smith Parsons, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Parsons, Wamogo. The marriage took place Feb. 7 in Ottawa at the home of the Rev. Mr. W. I. Hastie, pastor of the Methodist church. ☆ ☆ ☆ Mrs. Parsons was graduated from the University of Kansas in 1933, and is a member of Alpha Omicron Pi srover协会 for his degree in mining engineering last semester. he is a member of Kappa Eta Kappa, honorary electrical engineering fraternity. Mr. and Ms. Parsons received a law degree in lawrence with her parents. John Ise, professor of economics, entertained the Old and New Club at dinner Saturday night at the Manor. Following the dinner the members went to the Ise home, where the host read a paper entitled "Excelier." Charles Ise of Coffeeville and his son, Tom Ise, Iune, were guests. ☆ ☆ ☆ Miss Helen Rioda Hoopes, assistant professor of English, read a paper entitled, "Shakespeare in the Movies," at a meeting of the Quirin Club veneration was held at the home of Mrs. W. K. Schieve, 1062 Tennessee street. ☆ ☆ ☆ Miss Clerice Painter, Manhattan president of West Central Province of Mu Ph Epsilon, was a Sunday guest to the opening of the MTA's regular inspection of the sorority. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Harry Thompson and Fred Gardner, both of Leavenworth, were dinner guests last night at the Kappa Sigma house. ☆ ☆ ☆ Dr. and Mrs. W, F. Boven, Topela, will be the guests of their daughter, Jeanette Bower, c38, at the Kappr Alpha Theta house town. The noon Lincoln forum luncheon, which was to have been held Thursday noon has been postponed until 12.30 p.m. Friday in the cafeteria. ☆ ☆ ☆ An informal dinner will be given tonight at the University Club. Prof C. B. Realey is in charge of the arrangements. ☆ ☆ ☆ Mary Kay Daughtry, 35, of Independence, will be a week-end guest at the Kappa Alpha Theta house. Mary Frances Schultz, '35, Wichita will be a week-end guest at the Kappa Alpha Theta house. KU PHONE K.U.66 ☆ ☆ ☆ TAXI LAUNDRY TAXI WANTED: 1000 neckties to be made to look like new. Only a dime each LAWRENCE STEAM LAUNDRY--92 Kappa Kappa Gamma held pledging services for Glenda Speakman, Kansas City, Mo., yesterday afternoon. WANTED LAUNDRY: Student bundles a ap- ciality. Good work at moderate prices Called for and delivered. Phone 29458 University Health Service Started Thirty Years Ago Watkins hall will hold open house Thursday from 7 to 8 p.m. One Stop Clothes Service Station SCHULZ THE TAILOR 924 Mass. Former Student Disc Mr. and Mrs. C. W. McKeen, Topeka, were dinner guests at the Kappa Alpha Theta house last night. CLASSIFIED ADS ROOMS FOR RENT Mrs. Lenore Bird Gere, fec20, died Feb. 1, at Cushing, Okla., following an appendicitis operation. Funeral services were held at her home in Drumright; she was buried in the Cemetery, John Loosin Gere, and an infant baby. Mrs. Gere was 29 years of age. ROOM FOR DOYS: Large, first flop outside entrance. Hot and cold water. Southwest room second floor. Very desirable. 148 Tennessee. Phone 1769 Gamma Phi Beta entertained Sigma Epsilon at an hour dance last night. Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S — 920-22 Mass. BOYS: First floor room near campus. Double bed with Scaly Mattress. Rent cheap, either single or double. 304 W 14th. —95 FOR RENT. To nice rooms. Extra挖, beds. $5 and $6 per month. Also garage. Breakfast if desired. Call 22821 The $2 paid by each student each semester almost entirely supports the hospital, except for heat, light and water. The costs which are provided by the University. Provides Isolation Ward (Continued from page one) Quill Club Thursday Watkins hospital provides the only place in Lawrence for the hospital isolation of contagious diseases. Each year the hospital is caring for more and more students, with an increase in the number of disaparties and absences. It has been a gradual decrease in the duration of hospital illness. It would seem then, that the early attention to illness is reducing the number of new cases and shortening the period of disability. There will be an important meeting of the Quill Club in the W.G.A. lounge, tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. All members are urged to attend, and the nudges are requested to bring their initiation manuscripts. Real benefits, then, are coming in through the $6 health fee. If it is only in the sense of security which the student pays, it will help to every student who pays the fee. cian, a visiting radiologist, and five graduate nurses. At the hospital there is provision for adequate medical care for all students. Their health fees cover three days of the year and are a charge of $1 a day. In 15 universities over the country there are health fees that total as much as $29年; in three, there are fees of $1 a year. Fees are low in comparison with these. PHONE K.U. 66 *twelve-word words or one insecond.* 28x three inseconds; 54x all inseconds; 76x *narrative words*, 96x all inseconds; 116x all inseconds; 136x all inseconds. *advance at the European Business Office*. --liberty which results in individual compulsion. "If government grants too much liberty, the common welfare will suffer; if it becomes too dictatorial, the people will be ruled by fear." President Coffman said. ROOM AND BOARD --liberty which results in individual compulsion. "If government grants too much liberty, the common welfare will suffer; if it becomes too dictatorial, the people will be ruled by fear." President Coffman said. BOYS-Large delightful room with private tite bath. Excellent meals three times a day including Sundays, a luncheon, a barbecue, a tanner, 141. Massachusetts. BOYS: Board and room. Excellent location. Large, family style meals. Reasonable rates. 1228 OH -62 OR SALE: Our home at 115 Loulaha nursery for furniture. Shown by pointment. Telephone 173. Florence M Hodder. 100 SPECIAL--50c reduction on any per- manent, with this ad, except Saturday. Permanents $1.50 to $5.00, complete with hair cut. IVA's BEAUTY SHOPS 732% Mass, Phone 2332, 941% Mass, Phone 233. FOR SALE TYPEWRITERS: Monarca and Remi- ngiments for sale. Rentals. Rentals o all makes of typewriters. Call Kahri 932. -55. TYPEWRITERS BOYS: If you are looking for part time work inquire at 730 Massachusetts. Phone 666. –94. Student Loans BEAUTY SHOPS MISCELLANEOUS ABE WOLFSON 743 Moss Y.W.C.A. WOMEN'S ADVANCED STANDING COMMISSION MEET! A critical discussion of the organization of daily life comprised the nucleus of discussion afternoon when the Y.W.C.A. women's advanced standing committee met in Henley house. Elizabeth Hanson, e38, presided at this first meeting of the spring semester. The many phases of the "Organizational Life" course discussed in this semester. A large attendance attested the interest of students in this group. The date set for the next meeting was March 10. Costumes May Be Rented At the request of many of the students concerning the costumes to be worn at the Becty Arts Ball this Friday night, Betty Winne, fa36, who is in charge of the arrangements for the ball, has announced that costumes may be provided by the United Fund, from the Kansas City Costume Co., before Thursday. Numerous Styles Are Available For Beaux Arts Ball Many students are taking advantage of this special offer for the costumes in the collections on hand, in on the nature of the costume desired. The styles available are gyppe, sailor nuts, French girl, Topsy, Argentine, cowboy, naval officer, Eyepatch, jazz girl, Oriental, jazz girl, Oriental, tuxedo, cap and pawn apache, Indian, minstrel, Chinese coolie, convicts, jester, jockey, English rider nut, cowboy, policeman, All orders must be placed with Bill Cochran, Union manager, or at the desk in the union lounge by 3 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 13. The management of the bail has requested that there be elaborate costume and no masks wear. Joan Long and Catherine Dunkel, c38, will appear in two novice dance numbers as a special attraction. They will be in keeping with the spirit of the ball. Dr. Fellowes To Lecture Musical Authority Will Speak on "Red discovery of Tudor Music" Dr. Edmund Horace Ffollowes of London, who will deliver a lecture at the University Thursday evening on "The Re-discovery of Tudor Music," will illuminate midguts and partie with a large lute of the sixteenth century. Dr. Fellows is one of the world's best authorities on the English madrigal and music of the Elizabethan period. He has written many books on music of the Tudor period which are in the libraries of Cambridge University. Dr. Fellows lectured at the University on "The English Madrigal" to a large and interested audience. The lecture will be given at 8 a.m. Thursday in the auditorium of the Ad- ministration building. It is open to the public without charge. Meter to Be Set Up STUDENT'S ESSAY PUBLISHED IN K. C. UNIVERSITY REVIEW Coffman Pays Tribute To Chancellor Lindley A critical essay on Thomas Chatterton written by Newton Arnold, c36, has been accepted by the University Review, published by the University of Chicago. It has been accepted from a student on this campus. It will appear in two sections, beginning in the next issue. Arnold is a Summerfield student from Wichita. Although he is a major in the Georgia Tech, he has been active in creative writing. Alumnus Teaches in New York Milton Cummings, '22, *B*'28, this semester is taking over his new duties as head of the department of economics at the Brockport State Normal school, in Brockport, New York. Cummings has taught in the East following his return from age ago from the Philippine Islands, where he is Mrs. Cummins, formerly Lela Belt, '23, both taught for several years. Dr. Gail A. McClure, assistant physician at Watkins Memorial hospital, has been ill with pneumonia during the past week according to Dr. Ralph L. Camntosh, director of the hospital. She will be unable to meet her classes for two more weeks. Taking her place in the clinic is Walker, physician in the clinic at the University of Kansas hospital in Kansas City, Since the return of students after the Christmas holidays, the number of cases of illness treated at Watkins Medical Center has increased for the year. The dispensary has been crowded with students. According to Dr. Ralph L. Cautonno, director, a severe type of cold can cause significant applications, is the reason for the increase. L. K. Spink, manager of the meter and gauge division of the Foxbore Geological Instrument company, will view the set up of a gas meter given to the geology department by the Foxbore company. The meter is valued at $200. Dr. McClure Is Ill Hospital Is Popular Place (Continued from page one) "In trying to maintain this middle course, and solve the economic problems of our country, one has to be overcome. One is ignorance and fear on the part of many people. The other is the illusionary hopes and impossible promises of impractical social progress." Will Experiment in Future Will Experiment in Future Mr. Coiffon believes that American will experience a future than in the past. This country will become "a testing and experimental ground for an unusual number of difficult problems, industrial, sociol" problems. "But thoughtful men," Mr. Coffman said, "will seek to dwell in the realm of self-disciplined liberty." Harger Introduces Speaker Harger introduces Speaker Dr. Warner, ideal of the School of Law, and vice-president of the University, opened the conversation by introducing C. M. Harger, president of the Board of Regents. After complimenting Chancellor Lindley or his resignation, Mr. Harger introduced the speaker of the morning, President Coffman. Preceding the main address, Prof. Waldemar Getch played a violin solo, accompanied by D. M. Swartout. Prof. E. Anderson played an organ player. Newell To Speak at Wichita Kansas Geological Society Meets There Today Dr. Norman D. Newell, of the geology department and State Geological Survey, will address the Kansas Geological Society, a society of Kansas peatologists, on the prospects for oil and gas possibilities in the northeast corner area of Kansas. An intensive study of the fourteen counties comprising this area State Geological Survey. This survey has been made with the view of stimulating the use of oil and gas exploration in this region. Another topic to be discussed by Dr. Newell covers his own work in a design context, and he has studied Miami, Miami, and Wyndesteau colleges. Following this report, Dr. Newell will give his results of a regional study of the architecture in eastern and southeastern Kansas. Before the Game Basketball Players Are Delicate Eaters Entomologists to Meet Entomologists to Meee the twelfth annual meeting of the Kansas Entomological Society will be held at Emporia, April 4. R. L. Parker, second from the left, that title of all papers to be read should be submitted to either him or to the president of the society not later than Feb. 27. For a long time we spectators have wondered just what the basketball players eat before they play a game. Many of us have been satisfied with the explanation of spinch but for those of us who don't care for that ruddy vegetable this explanation is not enough. The Spanish club, El Atenoc, will meet tomorrow at 4:30 p.m. in room 113 Administration building. Prof. J. M. Palmer, the painters, El Greco and Valaquez. After the talk the club will sing Mexican folk songs. Refreshments will be set- Spanish Club To Meet players under the title, "The Meal Before the Game." Meet of them agreed that the meal should be eaten about two hours before the game. Apparently the spectators were not the only ones bothered by this fascinating question because the department of intramural athletics has received numerous requests to meet me immediately before athletic contests. Most of these requests came from men already participating in intramural contests so in order to satisfy this group a recent issue of the "First Aide"; the Fraser Chester Co., was devoted to answering this question. Approximately 40 basketball coaches listed their favorite men's for Coach Glen Rose of the University of Arkansas gives his players two booleys, dry toast, hot tea, and butter it will use. c M. W. "Naire Price" coach at the University of California, prepares a baked potato, one baked apple, and no drink. N H. Norgen of Chicago University is more even thrifter than most of his colleagues. He says they are allowed tea and toast and occasionally a poached egg. another coach who beaches them, she adds. L E. Menez at Iowa State College. His favorite menu is a cup of hot tea, two pieces of toast and a honey (the kind coming in jars). At Missouri, Coach George R. Edwards recommends two pieces of dry toast, one piece of poached three ounce steak, and a cup of wortle Our own Dr. Allen is a very broad- for his players. In addition to tea and tea, he orders a sliced orange or sliced orange with three stalks of nice tender celery. QUICK PICK-UP FOR CURED EYES Want to give your eyewear use Murine, Scratching, refreshing to her eyes, drying and denied eye pain. Great for eye irritated by meet, red blood cells, smoke, or light glare. Use it daily. MURINE FOR YOUR EYES *Murine is supplied free to all athletes of the "Murine is supplied free to all athletes of the University of Kansas, for use in their training courtes." Department of Speech and Dramatic Art TKE KANSAS PLAYERS PRESENTS IN OLYMPIA A Modern Comedy By Ferenc Molnar Make reservations early and avoid the late rush. Ticket office in Green Hall opens Thursday, Feb. 13. Office hours, 9 'til 12 and 1 'til 4. February 17-18-19-20 Single Admission 50c FRASER THEATRE Activity Tickets Admit. Exchange for Reserved Seats at Ticket Office, GREEN HALL - Phone 174. N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N FLOWERS Say it Best "We Telegraph Flowers" Potted Plants Jonquils Tulips Hyacinths Cylamen PHONE 72 Colonial Bouquet "The" Valentine Arrangement Corsages discriminately arranged POLYPHONES 1234567890 Flower Spring flowers with a meaning ROSE RUMSEY Shop ALLISON PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1936 Nebraska Remains As Biggest Hurdle For Kansas Cagers Clash at Lincoln Will Be Jayhawkers' Real Test In Battle for Championship The Nebraska Cornhuckers, runners up in the Big Six conference race, continued their relentless pursuit of the Kansas Jayhawks by defeating KanState Monday night, 40-32. The Huskies, with five games won and two lost, remain a very definite threat to the Kansas队. While they may not be able to topple the Jayhawkers from first place, they still have a chance to spoil the perfect record built up by the Kansas men. At present, the Kansas team remains one of the few major college teams in the country with an undefeated record. The University at the hands of Tempe. Crucial Game With Nebraska Apparently the real test for the Jayhawks is to play Nebraska the team goes to Lincoln to play Nebraska The two teams are almost on a par in their scoring abilities, Kansas has averaged 37.5 points per game and Nebraska 371. However, Kansas holds opponents to 23.9 points per game while Nebraska's opponents have averaged 30.3 point. The 36 points scored by Oklahoma against the Jayhawkers last week were scored against the team this year. Three of the six teams in the conference are definitely out of the race for first place, as they have lost more games than Kansas has remaining in its schedule. Oklahoma is in third place, having won two games out of five and have a chance to see they will have a more crack at the Jokwahers. Missouri and Iowa State are tied for fourth place, each having won two games out of six. The Cyclones have played both of their games with the Kansas team, but the Tigers still have one remaining. Kansas State in the Cellar Kansas State, whom Kansas meets next Saturday night here, is the sole possessor of the cellar position, and will be the first to despite the fact that it possesses two of the leading scarcers in the conference, Groves, who was all-conference center last year, and Al Burris. Although the Wildcats have been doing so well for years, a point where they may be expected to cut lose any minute. If the time should ever come when their two high scarcers should be "hot" at the same time, it would be too bad for their opponents. Out of the ten big six states are predic- ting this week in preparation for the election. Alabama is No. 1, Bosnia Bosnia is the Kansas State game here, Missouri meets Oklahoma at Norman and Iowa State neets Nebraska at Lins- alo. Standings of Big Six teams: W L Pct. Kansas 6 0.100 Nebraska 5 2.714 Oklahoma 2 2.434 Missouri 2 333 Iowa State 2 4.333 Kansas State 1 1.167 Swimming Meet Saturday Clash With Nebraska Is First for Kansas Tank Team Nebraska University's tank team will invade the Kansas pool next Saturday afternoon for a dual swimming meet to begin at 2:30 p.m. This will be the first meet of the season for Kansas because the meet with the Kansas Agages, scheduled for last Saturday, was postponed until February 22. Entries for Kansas will be: 400-yard relay: Pusey, Fisher, Brendt. and Tiller. 206-yard breast stroke: Elias and Heter. 150-yard back stroke: LaShelle. 440-yard swim: Brandt, Fisher, and Nichols. 100-yard dash: Waggoner and Tiller. Fancy dive: Puxey and Humphrey. 220-yard dash: Brandt, Tiller, and Schultz. Medley relay: LaShelle, Elias, Wagoner. Dean Tiller, junior member of the squad, transferred here from Wash-burn College where he made his "W in swimming during his freshman year, then transferred his freshman year here at the University, he is now ready for competition. Kansas will meet Nebraska in a re turn meet February 28, at Lincoln. Men's Intramurals Three intramural basketball games were played Monday night with the Galloping Ghosts, D.P.D. "B", and the HE HAS ENOUGH HEIGHT TO MAKE HIM A VALUABLE MAN AT EITHER CENTER OR FORWARD. HE IS A SKIP TRACK MAN OF OUTSTANDING ABILITY. HIS SPECIALITY IS THE MACHINE JUDGE. YATES CENTER IS HIS HOME. MARVIN COX KANSAS ED FLEML --g f h Cowgrass w 1 f, rn' f 3 + f, rn' f 0 Ogren, c 3 1 Jone, g 0 Jone, j g Smith 0 0 Petrovich 0 0 Petrovich 0 0 Phi Delt I "B" literally smothering their respective opponents. Covey was high score for the Galloping Ghosts in their win over the Campus Raiders 45-15. The D.T.D "B team defeated the Triangle "B team in this game, which scored often for the winners while Johnston lead his teammates in their scoring. Brown was high point man for the Phi Delt I "E" team in their win over the Sigma Nu "B" team by a score of 20-7. The leading scoreer for the Sigma Nu team. Gal. Ghosts (45) Knight, f g|f 1 Lainford, f 2 Lionf, f 2 Covey, c 7 4 Kelly, g 7 3 Merrigan, 2 1 Merriam, 2 1 Yost 0 0 20 5 3 Raiders (15) Referee, McEnroe Triangle "B" (12) John nals f "I" johnn l s "f" Sharp, f 0 1 2 Thorne, c 0 1 2 Bowers, g 0 2 0 Dearing, g 0 2 0 D. T.D. "B" (28) D.T.D. **(28)** f 28 Spines, f 2 Willock, f 2 Willlock, f 2 Veach, c 3 Schum, g 1 Elmure 1 0 Elmure 1 0 Referee, Allen. 12 4 Pihlt Dell I B (B) 08 Robert s, f 1 G Roberts, t 2 C chh'b m 5 Brown, c 6 0 Brown, c 6 0 Tow'le y 2 0 Sleeper 2 1 Cookin Nu *F* " (8) Sigma, F i Cooki, f 0 1 H'din n' g 0 1 H'din n' g 0 1 lewis, g 1 lewis, g 1 Towel n' g 0 2 Towel n' g 0 2 bearn 0 bearn 0 Referee, Burkett. Oread Will Play Baldwin Game Friday Night Will Be in Honor of Dr. Naismith Oreed Training School's basketball team will meet Baldwin high school in Robinson gymnasium Friday night. A preliminary game will be played by the second teams of the two schools beginning at 7:30 p.m. and the first team game will get under way at 8:30. Since other schools are having their Naismith sport, Herbert G, Alphin. PATEE SHOWS 10C ALL SEATS LLOYD NOLAN "ONE-WAY TICKET" Campbell's ENDS TONITE supervisor of physical education at the Oread School, has announced Friday night as Oread's Nasmith night. Thursday - Friday TOM BROWN VIRGINIA WEILER in Georgia State Park Supervisor Alphin has charge of appointing student teachers for athletics at Oread, and he has appointed Gordon Gray, former Jayhawk guard, as the student basketball coach this year. Coach Gray Oread Oquint will complete its season in its game with Lecompton here February 20. Women's Intramurals "FRECKLES" BANK NITE THURSDAY Jennette MACDONALD NELSON EDDY ROSE MARIE GRANADA NOW! ENDS THURSDAY In the semi-finals of the basketball tournament last night Pi Beta Phi defeated Gamma Pi Beta, 7-4. The high scorers were Kiene and Karlan. Corbin hall defeated IWW, 18-16. High scorers were Griffin and Andrew, respectively. Thursday night Pi Beta Pi will play Alpha Delta Pi. Next Tuesday night Corbin hall will play the winners of the Thursday night game. Rose Marie Prices Matinee 25c; Night 35c In the ping pong tournament yesterday afternoon Alpha Gamma Delta played Alpha Delta Pi, winning 22-24 against Alpha Delta II and Cornell ban hall will play IWL. Clyde Coffman Comes Here For Short Workouts Over Weekends Alumnus Decathlon Star Is Training for Olympics Clyde Coffman, former University of Kansas track star, is beginning in earnest to train for the Olympic tryouts which are to be held soon. Although now employed in the State Highway Commission office at Tupeka, Coffman manages to come to Lawrence on weekends for short workouts. Because of the cramp put on in his training by bad weather lately, Coffman has been forced to work out on the inside track at the Kansas stadium. In order to enable him to practice pole wailing last Saturday, he set up the standards, bundled up and ran a few lengths of rope for him, then immediately to vault, using a pole which had been hurriedly brought from the warmth of the stadium. three kernels in Troyons At the time, that university that the University of Kansas will have three of its former students prominent in Olympic tryouts. Other than Coffman, Glenn Cunningham and Elwyn Dees are preparing for a try for Olymphus. Three Kansans in Tryouts Cunningham, who was defeated by both gene Venzek and Joe Mangan in the Wannamaker mille recently, will try trying for a comeback in the travails. Lawson Robertson of Pennsylvania, head Olympic coach, says, "Cunningham, regardless of that setback, still is our greatest miler and potentially the best bet for the Olympic 1500." Robertson declares that Cunningham's record surpasses any other over the last three years surpassed by any of any other miler, here or abroad. Fears Milers Run Too Much Robertson fears that the milers will injure their Olympic chances by too much wearing competition among themselves before the tryouts. The campaigns ahead of the milers look like a chance to win a mile of the Boston Athletic Association; next Saturday, the Baxter mile on the New York Athletic Club card; the National A.A.U. championships, the eastern intercollegiate, and the Knights of Columbus meet. Venkze, Robertson's own pupil, failed to make the Olympic games years ago after just such a campaign. Kansas' third competitor for Olympic honors, Dees, is now serving as trainer for the University of Kansas basketball team and finding time for working out also. Cold weather is also hindering his work in training, but he plans to get into fine shape soon. The Kansas City team would have served as a good trial for both Coffman and Dees, has been indefinitely postponed. JAYHAWK WRESTLERS LOSE TO CORNHUSKER TEAM, 32-1 The University wrestling team journeyed to Lincoln last Friday night and took the short end of a 32-0 score. The Nebraska Cornhuskers seemingly were getting revenge for the basketball defeat the Jayhawks forced upon them a few weeks ago. The Kansas team was without a man in either the 118-pound or the 128-pound class and in entering the match gave Nebraska the odds. The team did not return to Lawrence until Monday night because of the heavy snow that made it impossible to travel on the highways. Childs, Anneberg, McComwell and Brunn lost close decisions while Boutz and Ericsson lost their matches by falls to the Husker grapplers. The team will go to Columbia Friday night and try and win a trip to Missouri at the expense of Missouri. Read the Daily Kansan want ads. Fresh SILEX COFFEE An invigorating stimulant. at the UNION FOUNTAIN Sub-Basement Memorial Union --- $18.85 4 tube $25.50 5 tube STUDENT RADIO SETS Powerful Superheterodyne Radios with big set performance. A six tube, all car radio, $29.95 GREEN BROS. Phone 631 VALENTINE CANDY 10 C. Rice and And, in the manner tha. delight the wo. receives it! CREAMY. SMOOTH. Rich with nuts and fruit and the finest flavors! And packed so carefully in the frilly Valentine manner that it's sure to delight the woman who receives it! Rankin's Drug Store 11th & Mass. "Handy for Students" Phone 678 By mild ripe tobacco we mean just this- FIR' VENDING CELLAR Picking leaf tobacco in the "Bright" Virginia and FIRST—ripened in the sunshine... and picked leaf by leaf from the right part of the stalk when fully ripe. THEN—each day's picking cured right by the farmer . . . at the right time and in the right way . . . no "splotching"or brittleness, but every leaf of good color and flavor. FINALLY—bought in the open market...re-dried for storage...then packed in wooden hogsheads to age and mellow for two years or more until free from harshness and bitterness. That's what we mean by mild, ripe tobacco. And that's the kind of tobacco we use to give Chesterfields their milder, better taste. CHASSE Hogshead of leaf tobacco "ageing" for two years in storage warehouses. Type of barn used for "flue- curing" leaf tobacco. Chesterfield CIGARETTES Outstanding Outstanding .. for mildness .. for better taste © 1936, LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXXIII on the SHIN By BUD EVANS, '38 Oval Angles on the Beaux Arts Ball . . . We Apologize "Crutch" . . . The Fickle Finger of Fate . . . "Hell" Week Stuff. A "Snooply" eye-view of the coming Beaux Arts Ball in the form of a Valentine from me to you: Place-Memorial Union ball room. Time-anytime Feb. 14 or Friday (take your choice, but make it after 8:30 p.m. plez). The Delta Phi Dia theater is at停放室 ultra-intraactive, de luxe and what have you . . . Professors Matern and Eastwood are doing their share, and then some. The latter is contributing a large partly-mute creation to hang behind the orchestra. ("Red" will be the only one in the orchestra who can am it, so the music will not be affected.) A concert hall, with the honor par excellence, is doing his bit (not a little bit) to add "color" to the scenery! Squinting through the key-hole, old "Snoop" noticed the decorations. Main dancing floor appears to be something of a French picture gallery, etc. . . Two other rooms represent something in the same style as the key-hole, and you couldn't make it out.) Still another room (we weren't aware of so many rooms) will be dressed up as a studio. . . Carol Johnson and Don Silks (flying his own colors) will occupy this room, and will do sketches. . . Nepil-yil do you say, is that the room or to let them to do it, and for what? Nothing at all my freest! A hasty glimpse at the contains再现: Betty Sterling, Alpha Chi sister, sister in a jockey's outfit ... Dorothy Winston in a dress that has a bliss lassie ... (no hope no scars are being exposed) ... Frank Ewing, New Sig EP way, as an Indian, providing his outfit arrives from home in time. He goes to the gym, one in a grass skirt. Ts said to be Hawaii's original stuff. (Notice: there will be no smoking allowed on the dance floor!) ... Judy Jenkins, blonde Kappa, is still determined to be Moe Joan Long, well-known high school lass, is scheduled to give, as one of several entertainment features, a novel soft-shoe and tip dancing number. Understand she possesses "God - what a lady!" She will be well-earned by all the Benux Arts goers. Orchestra will be there (naturally yau sily) advised as artists (the painting kind) with berets, smocks, Bying, ties, everything—whoops! it all should be included, and if someone called the "Snow" a free ticket—hit out. The "Smoody's" assistant, who submitted the little article about the Boston Bean. The article caused some misunderstanding. So if so our apologies to Mary and Dave. We still think "Crutch" was correct, and we've gone to remember it. autorfurte certainly overlook Elena DuVall, Gamma Pi pledge who attended St. Mary's College last semester. Seems she decided that she should be closer to one Darri托丽, University student dwelling at the Pfilt Delt hotel, so she came eart! Ah—enrolling for the spring semester at K. U. was her happy thought of the hour—she could go home and back to school. Elena is now bracing school without her heart throb. This touches the "Sooop" deeply, but that's the way with Fanny Fate when she points her finger fickle. The latest "Hell" week doke comes from Susie Engleman, C O plodge who gives us an ear-full on the Deli freshmen. Says they answer the phone LAWRENCE, KANSAS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1936 NUMBER 93 "I'm a little pledge of D T D. Gee glad you speak to me: I'm not pretty no smart at all, But is there someone I can call!" To Tour South America Chester Woodward, 36, member of the alumni board, and Mrs. Woodward, 00, left their home in Topka last week for an extended tour of South America. Woodward will give the alumni achievement report at the annual meeting of the Alumni Association this spring. Law Honor Roll Announced Twenty-Three on List Adopted at Fac ulus Meeting ulty Meeting The Law School honor roll was adopted yesterday at the faculty meeting. To be eligible for the honor roll, a student must have better than a "B" average. The senior group honor roll includes Miss Darlene Anderson, Jack W. Fleifer, Raymond H. Carr, Eugene G. Philpick, Philip Fick, and Paul R. Kecberk. The second-year class includes: Vester S. Davidson, William F. Hazen, Roy H. Johnson, Robert J. Lewis, Fred A. Johnson, and Lawrence R. Smith. The first-year class includes: Justi D. Hammen, Donald A. Hansen, Tom Ise Richard O. Jones, Charles R. Lyon Samuel J. Molly, Richard F. Mullins Gumar Mykland, and Abraham Weinloe. Changes Are Announced On C.P.A. Examinations Applicants No Longer Need Experience To Be Eligible The University committee on accounting has announced several changes in the requirements for applants to obtain an accountant examination. The former requirements made it necessary for a person to have four years of practical accounting experience before he could apply for a CPA license. Under the new ruling a person may take the examination without any experience and if he passes, the certificate of CPA will be issued to him. The University has three years of accountage experience. This new ruling will make it possible for accounting majors to take the examination after graduation and gain their experience later. Frank Stockton, dean of the School of Business, said the new ruling would make it possible for accounting majors to take the next examination which will be held in May. Another new requirement that will go into effect in 1940 will make it necessary for an applicant to have two years of college work before he is admitted. To meet this requirement, present, Kansas, like most other states, requires only a high school education. Examinations for the C.P.A. certificate are given here at the University twice a year, in May and November. Applications for the examinations are received by George Foster, registrar, secretary of the accounting committees. GIVEN AT MID-WEEK DANCE! AMATEUR PROGRAMS TO BE Mid-week varisties will have amateur night programs as part of the entertainment, it was announced last night by Gene Lloyd, c36, to a large mid-week crowd. He stated that both non-organized and organized houses could compete. A grand semester finale舞会 is to be given. The best five dancers will be selected for a loving cup and a 16-piece band will furnish the music. Fraternities and sororites will send a representative each week and students at non-organized houses will be given audiences. At every mid-week varsity, there will be two amateur performances. BIOLOGY FRATERNITY WILL HEAR H. V. CLARK TODAY H. V. Clark, associated with Parke Davis & Company, will address the members of Phi Sigma, honorary biology fraternity, at the regular meeting to be held today at 7:30 p.m. in room 206 snow hall. Mr. Clark's subject will be "Bochemical Research and Immunology." Glen Bond, of the bacteriology department, will report on the national convention of Phi Sigma, held in St. Louis during Christmas vacation. Bond was the official delegate to the convention from the local chapter. Joe Brewer, c36, spoke on "Mathematical Measures of Aesthetic Values" at a meeting of Radamantil hold yeas of the morning in the Green room of Fraser hall. Speaks to Radamanthi KFKU Program Announced The program to be broadcast over KFKU today is as follows: 2.30 p.m. Spanish Flash: 2:44 p.m. News Flash: 10:35 a.m. Elementary German Lesson: 6:00 p.m. Elementary German Lesson. Chemical Engineers To Meet The Kansas Association of Chemical Engineers will meet in 230 room 191 of the Chemistry building. Officers for the semester will be elected. ical Engineers To Meet New Cold Blast Covers Mt. Oread With Icy Shee All Middle-western State Are Caught in Grip of More Sub-zero Weather WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy, with snow, possibly heavy. Strong northerly winds. Cold wave in the southwest. The temperature at 11 o'clock last night was 15 degrees above zero and was dropping slowly. A thick layer of ice, formed by fint and sleet which fell through the day yesterday, coated the streets and sidewalks of Mount Oread and Lawrence last night to add considerably to the danger and discomfort caused by the severest spell this vicinity has experienced in years. Motor traffic was almost paralyzed in the University district with streets leading up to the hill practically impassable. This afternoon, sand was spread on some of the more heavily travelled hills in order to allow cars to pass. Pedestrian traffic was becoming increasingly destructive and mist continued after nightfall. The coal supply crisis continued 1 remain a serious problem for Lawrence households, although enough supplies are being delivered few days to take care of the demand Four carloads of coal were received by local dealers yesterday, and were immediately distributed. Seven valves have been installed to move coal from mines in nearby Lawrence. Farmers have been bringing all of their spare cord wood into Lawrence to be dumped. There has been difficulty getting gas lines open. Kansas City, Mo. Feb. 12. (UHP) The central United States after brief respite, entered a new period of blizzard and sub-zero cold Wednesday Snow blocked the highways again, the mercury fell sharply, and coal shortages, already acute, were even more sharply felt. Heavy snow which had already struck Iowa, the Dakotas, and Minnesota with fresh frost was forecast for Thursday, but a slight snow fell during the day. Traffic moved hazardously over the highways just cleared of 30-foot drifts in some areas. With communication difficult it was estimated that some 300 had perished within three weeks. Airplanes equipped with skis, were to fly food-bearing rescue squads to three South Dakota communities where 400 persons were isolated. Another dreaded sleet storm struck across the state to the south of the snow area alluding the mercury was not higher than 18 to 20 degrees. Weather forecasters predicted near zero temperatures for the plain states by Thursday morning. Throughout much of the state, frost freeze as fast as it sticks streets. In some sections the sleet changed momentarily to snow which fell as pow'r and then doubled slippery. Northwestern Missouri and Central Kansas regions which just have dug out from under the snow but where the ground were dismayed by new snowfalls. The precipitation fell as freezing vain and virtually paralyzed automobile traffic. All graduates of the University of Kansas Law School who took the examination for the bar at Topeka Monday and Tuesday of this week passed successfully. Dr. Burdick, dean of the law school, passed by (telephone from Topeka yesterday). those who took the examination were Darlene G. Anderson, Ogle V. C. Ferguson, Robert P. Coquitaine, Mast L. Lecker, Philip S. Frick, John L. Herlicker, Gerald K. Ollerman, Mary Louis Quiett, William C. Norton, Rex Henry, P. Jarry J. "Ochrony Club to Help Today" The Chemistry club is host the afternoon building of the Stratoprotein building. Prof. G. W. Straton will speak on "Ozone in the Atmosphere" and Velt Stafford will speak on "Some Results of the Stratoprotein Flights." THIRTEEN KANSAS GRADUATES PASS STATE BAR EXAMINATION Chemistry Club To Meet Today Dr. Burdick, commenting on the success of the candidates, said, "The University can be very proud of the fact that we have achieved our goal in the School of Law were successful." Berkley, Calif., Feb. 12—(UP) -A University of California professor deposited a musty tone on the "Return Letter" desk of the university library today. Professor Keeps Library Book 26 Years; Fine Is $1,335.50 "Yes," said the professor. "I borrowed it 26 years ago—April 7, 1909. I forgot about it. I just found it while cleaning my attic." "Les Poetes Francaises?" murmured the attendant "The book is worth five dollars," said the attendant, "but the fine for 20 years, nine months, 11 days—the fine is $1,335.50." Library officials told the attendant to forget the fine. Three persons prominently mentioned as Republican presidential possibilities attacked the New Deal as being wasteful financially, and understanding the Constitution, and as regimenting American life. Lincoln Day Speakers Outline G.O.P. Platform Washington, D. C., Feb. 12—(UP) Lincoln Day orators sketched the Republican platform for the November election in speeches in all parts of the nation Tuesday night and emphasize the line of attack against the New Deal. Presidential Possibilities Vigorously Attack New Deal At Boston, Frank Knox of Chicago said President Roehring was encouraging on the liberties of the people "behind a smoke screen of false liberalism." In Portland, Ore., former President Herbert Hoover said the New Deal already was "generating the forces of inflation." He challenged President Roosevelt to explain to the nation how he was going to balance the budget. Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg of Michigan in a New York speech invited the "Jeffersonian Democrats" to drive the N.J. down so that it could drive the N.J. Down out of power. Fifty-two Students Will Assist in Oread Training School Fifty-two University seniors are doing practice teaching in Oread Training School this semester. The courses being taught by them are English, computer science, world history, algebra, geometry, biology, general science, chemistry, music, problems of democracy, physical education, sociology, and home economics. The language group includes Alfred McMullen, Harvey Hartley, Adalyn Salyun, Margaret Walton Zurn, Irene Pennock, Mary Pierson, Josephine Riederman, Mary Burgess, Kathryn Ingrine, Ava E. Heske, Gretchen Kaufmann, Odessa Flerence Bergman, Linda Sawyer, Shoemaker, Freda Hosack, Juanna Ford, and Ruth M. Nice are teaching English. Vernon M. French, Bessie Altean, and L. Marguerite Jarrett are taught English. Freda Bly, Virginia Hasford, and Verna Fern Old are "bring Spanish." Physical education will be taught by Francis Palmano, Loize Montgomery and Kathleen Teagarden. Roberta L Badsky will help in home economics. Hazel L. Overey is teaching sociology; Lois Seaman, F妃 Forbes, and F. A. Speerscheider, general science; Leonard Herme, Florence Briscoe, and Jennie L. Doane, biology. William B. Sommerville and Joo Bruer are teaching chemistry, Valerie Dauro, Verona will work in the music department. History: Virginia Stearn and Marian Fegan, American history; Mary Louise Humphrey and Carrol M. Mickey, American history; Dennis M. McKay, Mary Irwin, problems of democracy Mathematics: Viola Ferguson is teaching geometry 08; Dorothy Luece Milben, Millicent C. Robinson, Margaret E. Brooker, Mildred Hawkins, and FAREWELL ASSEMBLY HELD FOR PROF. D. C. JACKSON The University student organization of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers hold a farewell assembly for Prof. D. C. Jackson, Jr., professor of electrical engineering, yesterday afternoon in Marvin auditorium. The meet is followed by a dinner show last night at the Manor in House of Professor Jackson. Professor Jackson leaves the University this week for Chitago where he has accepted the presidency of the Lewis Institute. Principals Asked To Nominate Men For Scholarship Prof. Olin Templin A sk High School Heads To Name Summerfield Candidates All high school principals of Kansu have been invited to nominate candidate dates for Summerfield scholarships to the University of Kansas, for the year beginning next September. Letters of invitation was sent to Prof. Oluf O'Temple, chairman of the Summerfield Scholarship committee. Nominating Due March 1 The examinations are to be in by March 1. When they are not nominees are situated, arrangements will be made for preliminary examinations in eight or ten cities of Kansas, to be conducted at the university between April 24 and 25. The preliminary examinations cover the details of high school courses, while the examinations at the University have been studied by the student's reasoning powers. Final announcement of scholarships will probably be made at Commencement. Established in 1928 The Summerfield Scholarships were established in the fall of 1928 when the first group of ten was selected. Students maintaining proper scholarship are required to complete four-year college college course. There are more than 50 Summerfield scholarships in the University present year, and 50 have been graduated since the inception of these scholarships. The scholarships are the gift of SOL Summerfield, New York silk manufacture, and of UNIVERSITY in 1899 and 1901. The scholarships are awarded entirely upon results of competitive scholarship tests. Students who pass upon the student's need for assistance. Reorganize R.O.T.C. Units The R.O.T.C. cadet corps was organized Wednesday afternoon for the current semester and appointments of commissioned and non-commissioned officers were made by Lieutenant-Colonel Franklin Babcock, professor of military science and tactics. The corps has grown to two companies each and except for a very few changes the set-up is about the same as last semester. Lieutenant-Colonel Franklin Babeola Makes Several New Assignments Cadet second lieutenants, B. F. Givens, Robert L. Flint, and S. M. Chambers, having completed their second year of the advanced military course, have been graduated from the cadet battalion and appointed by the lieutenant in the Officers' Reserve Corps of the Army of the United States. In the Cadet Corps: Cadet Second Lieutenant Roger L. Young has been promoted to the rank of cadet first commander of a platoon in Company B. Cadet Sergent Herbert Tracy has been promoted to cadet second lieutenant and is assigned to Company D. Cadet Sergent Lawrence N. Bigelow was promoted to cadet first sergeant of Company D. Cadet Corporals William C. Clarke and Conrad W. Foster were promoted to the grade of cadet sergeant and were assigned to Company D. The following cadet privateers were promoted to the grade of cadet corporal: M. Flint, Company A; G. M. Moore, Company A; James Hail, Company B; E. F. Bowers, Company D; and R. R. Corey, Company D Appointments are based on outstanding work in the department of military science and tactics during the last semester. WEEKLY FINE ARTS RECITAL WILL BE PRESENTED TODA The regular weekly recital by students in the School of Fine Arts will be presented at 3.30 today in the Administration auditorium. The program will be to follows. Piano: "Eude, Pad 10, No. 8" (Chopin) Lila LeVan; voice: "The Secret of the Stars" Grossman; voice: "Dear Marty, Marie Meyn; cello and piano;" "Sonatina for Cello and Piano" (arranged by students in instrumentation) Elaine Prutchett, cello, and Dorothy Pry, Bartels, cello, and Judith Debusky, (Debusky), Jean Eichsenberg; harp; "Chaconne" (Durand), Elizabeth Searle; 钢琴: "Cancoe in A Minor—First Movement" (Grieg), Orene Yowell, and parts of the second part by Ruth Cordt Junior Honorary R. M. Robertson Is New Head of Owl Society R. M. Robertson, c. 37, was elected president of the Owl Society, honorary society for junior men of the University, at a meeting held at the Phi Gamma Delta house Tuesday night. Vacancy of the office was created when Arnold Gilbert, b. 37, withdrew from school. Three new men were elected to membership at the meeting. They were: John Handler, D. Dean Nesmith, C. 37; and Susan Miller, D. Dean Nesmith, C. 37. The men will take place Sunday, February 23 at 5:30 p.m. The organization is seriously considering a plan to co-sponsor the Junio Prom in the hope of making it a bigger party than usual. Final action will not be taken on this matter until a later date. Landon To Be Present For Kansas State Game Will Take Part in Program Honoring Naismith Saturday Gov. Alf M. Landon has acceptes, an invitation to be present at the Kansas-Kansas State basketball game Saturday night, which has been designated for the first time probably will make a brief speech between the halves of the game. The details of the intermission program honoring Dr. Naismith are as yet unknown. He was coached by Frank Root, coach of the Kansas State team; E. A. Thomas, secretary of the Kansas High School Athletic Association; Chancellor E. H. Linden, associate. Reports Wide Interest teachers Wine interviews reporters from Kansas and Oklahoma indicates that a local issue in the national Naihism fund to which spec- tators are contributing to send Dr. and Mrs. Naishim to the Berlin Olympi­ nest summer. "I am confident that Kansas is going to respond in a fine way," said Dr. F. C. Allen, director of athletics and chairman of the Kansas-Oklahoma district in the Naitumsh fund drive, "Mr. Naitumsh will work with the Naitumsh night, and will report at that time what the high schools of Kansas are doing." Oklaahoma Secretary Reports "I have just had word from Mr. Carpenter, the head of the school athletic association secretary, saying that more than 50 high schools in that state have designated Naisim mihts and they already begin to make their investments." Leaile Edmonds, long-time sports of ficial in this region, recently wrote that she should do their part in contributing to the fund. Although he is not officiating any more, he slipped a five-dollar bill from his pocket as a gesture sending in their personal contributions. KANSAS GRADUATE BECOMES NVA VOCATIONAL COUNSELLOR Miss Helen Olson, '21, has accepted a position as vocational counsellor for the National Youth Administration in Kansas, with offices in Topeka. Her work consists of guidance and counseling of unemployed youth from 16 to 25 years of age who are referred to her office by teachers. She is also the state, educational camps for unemployed girls, and through freshman colleges, a new project of the NYA. She also has done considerable work in the launching of the freshman college. Miss Okon was engaged in social work and helped up her new work in Topeka. NOON FORUM DATE CHANGED FROM THURSDAY TO FRIDA The luncheon forum, originally planned for Thursday, will not be held until Friday. The program, however, will be held on Friday. The Negro editor of the Kansas City Call will speak on the subject "Recent Contributions to the Cult to Cut The meeting will be held in the private dining room of the Union cafeteria. It is under the auspices of the Y.W.C.A. and the Y.M.C.A. ... AUTHORIZED PARTIE Friday. February 14 (Limited Date) Saturday, February 15 Corbin hall, House, 12 p.m. Friday, February 18 Kappa Sigma, House, 12 p.m. Beaux Arts Ball, Memorial Union, 12 p.m. ELIZABETH MEGUIAR, Adviser of Women, Adviser of Women For the Joint Committee on Student Affairs. Neutrality Forum Expected To Draw Large Attendance Your Speakers Will Discuss Topic From Different Standpoints at Meeting Because of the current interest in the subject, members of the Peace Action Committee are expecting a capacity crowd at the Forum on "Neutrality" to be held in the lounge of the Union building tonight at 8 o'clock. Four speakers, each well able to consider the question from a different standpoint, will lead the discussion. They are H. B. Chubb, associate professor of political science; W. J. Brocklain, professor of law; Rev. Carter Harrison of the Trinity Episcopal Church; John Ise, professor of econometrics; Dr. James Dunn of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will preside. Professor Chubb will consider the political angle of neutrality with special reference to bills now pending before congress. The Rev. Mr. Harriet L. McDonald, a professor of history, Professor Ise, well-known for his sagacious satire, will present the economist's viewpoint. Professor Brockbank will speak from the lawyer's standpoint. Questions from the audience may each speaker at the close of his talk. Assistant Dean Nelson says that he believes the meeting will be one of great interest and importance to those with imagination and foresight." Alfred Ames, chairman of the Peace Action Committee, considers the forum "One of the most important ever sponsored by the committee." The group sponsored forums on "The Ethiopian War" and "The League of Nations." Last fall. The Peace Action Committee, organized in October, 1954, led the campus peace strike that conspired and arranged for the Peace Convocation held last November. It may have charge of the publication of a state-wide newspaper to be started this spring for the purpose of making serious about the stand of local congressional candidates toward peace legislation. Ames said that the Peace Action Committee expected to initiate forums on "Peace and Literature" and on "Pacific Question" later in the spring. Students and Friends Will Help Celebrate Botany Professor's Birthday Dr. Stevens To Be Honored dinner celebrating the seventh-fifth birthday of Prof. W. C. Stevens of the botany department will be held at the Eldridge hotel, Friday, Feb 21, at 6 10 AM. A guest given by former students and friends of Dr. Stevens. Tickets will be 75 cents. Letters have been written to former students living out of town, but no special invitations to students and friends in Lawrence have been sent, but all tickets to tickets will probably go on sale Monday, this will be announced later. Professor Stevera was born Feb. 21, 1861, and obtained his B.S. degree from the University of New York in botany of botany at the University from 1899 to 1899, and professor of botany since then. He was chairman of the department of botany from its beginning until 1904. Dr. Stevens is the author of several textbooks on botany and plant structure. WILEY IS GUEST CONDUCTOR OF CONCERT IN OSAGE CITY Russell Wiley, director of the University band, was guest conductor of a 75-piece band of high school students from Lyon. The band was made up of musicians from Burlingame, Osage City, and Lyon high schools. The concert, sponsored by the Osage City Chamber of Music and in favor of an in- and in honor of Lions' birthday. Special numbers on the program included a trumpet solo by Boyles, and a clarinet solo by Russell Howland, both students at the University. SECOND TERM TAU SIGMA TRYOUTS SCHEDULED TUESDAY - Second semester tryouts to be held Tuesday, f. 18. were announced in a meeting of Tau Sigma Tuesday night. * Helen Johnson, c. 27, president, said that the policy of holding only one tryout each year had been changed due to the earlier presentation of the recital this year than before. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1936 ≈ Comment To The Victor--the bleachers. Another unpleasant phase of life among the bleacherites comes with the numchick of posterior, or hip blemish. At the Jackson Day banquet held recently in Washington the President of the United States took advantage of the occasion to compare himself to the rugged individualist, Andrew Jackson. It might be noted that this is a rather unfortunate comparison, according to the New Republic, for Jackson was a stauta supporter of the spoils system as such and although Mr. Roosevelt preaches support of the civil service system he practices the spoils system. To quote Mr. Roosevelt before he became President we find him saying, "I would like to see one of the great parties come forward with a challenge to the other party offering to enter into a compact to uphold and defend civil service." Then recently in response to a request by the League of Women Voters, the President, this self-styled likeness of Andrew Jackson, says that "there can be no question of greater moments or broader effect than the strengthening and extension of the merit system, established in the competitive principles of the Civil Service Act." These sayings from the President tend to convince one more than ever that he is always ready to say whatever he believes will please his companions or audience. This break-down of the Civil Service system which has taken place during the recent administration is more serious than most people think. The most efficient department of the Federal government is the post-office department, employees of which are largely selected through the merit system. Through the merit system much of the waste and inefficiency of governmental administration is eliminated. The citizens of the United States should take the President's statements that he is a believer in the merit system with a grain or two of salt, in light of the existing conditions. When Mr. Roosevelt entered office there were 447,000 jobs under the merit system and approximately 110,000 outside of it. After two years, about 100,000 jobs have been added to Federal payrolls. Practically all of which were added through the use of the present Administration's spoils system. Yet the President has told his listeners that he favors the merit system. Many instances can be cited of the manner in which Mr. Roosevelt, Jim Flarley and other members of the Cabinet have issued orders stating that only Democrats be hired and they, only when they are supported by some official of the Democratic Party organization. —Ohio State Lantern. Look before you leap! "Don't marry while in college," warns a psychology professor at Boston University. He says the success of the matrimonial venture depends on the matching of personalities, and he affirms that no character is the same after four years of maturing in college. The University of California has instituted a new course in its curriculum and it would be well if Kansas followed suit. This course is called "Personality" and the purpose is to teach etiquette. Personality Plus ~ After eating in one or two of the "eating places" on the Hill, it is obvious that this course would be of much use if the students who needed it would take it. It would do no damage to make it a required course because if a college graduate is lacking in manners, then everyone else can be forgiven the offense. This course wouldn't have to teach such farfetched things as "how to pick up pears that have fallen to the floor" or "whether spaghetti should be eaten with a knife or a spoon" if it taught all students the elementary principles of what to do with napkins and finger-bows and how to use knives and forks, and other simple courtesies, it would be a great aid to civilization. Campus Opinion Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the author. All opinions expressed herein are subject to casting by the editor. Contributions length are not required. Editor Daily Karsan: "Boo!" is a nasty word at a basketball game and we all hate it. However, to get a true understanding of the situation that is encountered by the hundreds of students who participate in basketball games, it is explained to much of the booing. In the first place, every student is required to present his identification card as well as the ticket for the game. It is astonishing how many students forget their card or sit down and walk back down the hall and up again in order to see the game. Once past the stilten however, one's troubles have only begun. Locating the correct seat in a nerve-racking hunt in which the unhers are little help. Once spotted, the seat usually turns out to be occupied by someone or his cost, both of which have to be made up for, the holder balances precariously on the narrow plank. Now all those students siting on numbers 1 or 12 find they are in the aisle (a technical term used by the umbers to denote an imaginary number) and then jump over on numbers 2 and 11, causing a dizzard-like sensation and appearance in Other things such as the late arriver with seat number 6 who steps on toes and kicks hats under the bleachers might be dwell upon at length but will be passed over for the sake of brevity. Such a recital might well be entitled "The Trials and Tribulations of a Kansas Basketball Fan." A. L.M It should be fairly apparent by the stage that viewing a Jayhawk game from the stage is a nerve-fraying experience that is conducive to some form of outward engagement. It is also important to consider the next time you hear a boo, consider its background. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN *Niceies at Cancellor's Office at 3 p.m. preceeding regular publicdays and 11:30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issues. Vol. 33 FEBRUARY 13, 1936 No. 92 AS.ME: There will be a regular meeting of the AS.ME. Thursday evening at 8:00 in Marvin hall. EL ATENENO. El Ateneo tendra una sesión el jueves a la casa y media de la tarde. Margarita Osma, secretaria. ESTES REUNION: A chill supper for all students who have attended the Estes Park conference will be held from 5:00-8:00 p.m. Sunday. There will be a fifteen hour period of lunch with food and/or Fred Meier or Friday night. Nancy Calhoun. FIRST SEMESTER GRADES: Grades for the fall semester may be obtained from the Registrar's office February 13-15, according to the following schedule of student names: Thursday, Feb. 13 - T to Z inclusive Friday, Feb. 14 } Those unable to come at the Saturday, Feb. 15 } scheduled time. George O. Foster, Registrar. K. A.C.E.: The Kansas Association of Chemical Engineers will have an election of officers Thursday, February 13, at 7:30 in Room 101 C. All chemical engineers are urged to come. Gordon Miller, President. KAPPA PSI. There will be a regular meeting of all novices and pilots on Thursday, February 15, at 7:30 in the McDonald's gym. MEN'S PAN-HELLENIC COUNCIL: There will be a meeting of the Men's Pan-Hellenic Council Sunday morning. February 16, at 10:30 in the basement of the Men's Penis Fins will be presented not represented. Lloyd Morgan, Secretary. NOON LUNCHEOEN FORUM: The Noon Forum has been postponed from Thursday to Friday, Mr. C. A. Franklin, will speak on "Recent Contributions of the Negro Race to Culture." It will be held in the private dining room of the Cafeteria from 12:30-1:00. Everyone is invited. Harold Gregg, Forum Committee. QUILL CLUB: Quill Club will meet in the W.S.G.A. Luncheon Thursday, Feb. 14 at 7:30 pm. All pledges are welcome. Chas. Zeskey, President. RIFLE CLUB. There will be a meeting of the Rifle Club Thursday, February 13 at 7:30 p.m. in Robinson Hall. Tel: (516) 942-8666. SCHOLARSHIPS: Applications for scholarships for next year may be made between the hours 3 and 5 p.m., Monday to Friday, inclusive, in Room 308B admin- building. Applications must be filed by March 1. SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: There will be a rehearsal of the Symphony Orchestra at 7:00 bis evening in the Auditorium. Karl Kuesterer, Conductor. Mrs. Flora S. Boynton, Executive Secretary, Committee on Aids and Awards **WORLD AFFAIRS COMMISSION:** The World Affairs Commission of Y.W.C.A. will meet Thursday, February 13, at 4:30 p.m. at Hensley Hall. All girls interm and social activities will be invited. June Thompson, Esther Anderson. June Thompson, Esther Anderson, Chairmen. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Ralph McKibbin, Vice President. Y.M.C.A. CARIBET. There will be a regular meetin- g room. Cabinet this afternoon at 4:30 in Roo- 19 of the MCA. PUBLISHER HARRY VALENTINE EDITOR-IN-CHEF BOB ROBINSON OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS CAMPUS EDITOR BILL ROGERS MAKE UP EDITORS { DON HUJA | BILL RODEN SHOREY EDITOR LIZA COMPAE JA LITTLE COMPAE JA NEWS EDITOR DOROTHY SMART SOCIETY EDITOR FREIDA BLIRN SUNDAY EDITOR JAMES POLKINGHORN BILL GIRL AZIZA MANAGING EDITOR FRED M. HARISH, Jn. BUSINESS MANAGER F. QUENTIN BROWN Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Sunday of April 19. In addition to the proceedings of the Journalism of the University of Kansas from the Proceedings of the Journalism of the University of Kansas Sale and exclusive national advertising representatives NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE, Inc. Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland, Seattle Business Office K.U. 66 News Room K.U. 25 Night Connection, Business Office 2701 K2 Night Connection, News Room 2702 K3 TELEPHONES Subscription price, per year. $1.00 cash in advance, $1.21 on payments. Single copies, 1 each. Entered as second class master, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas. Maggots Used To Cure Bone Disease And Bee-Moth Attracts Tuberculosis During the Middle Ages, the sting of a bee was thought to be treatment for rheumatism, and recently two French physicians have been experienced using the freshly caught worker bee in a pair of tweezers and held it against the spot. The resulting sting has given remarkable relief in cases which had not been treated before. The form is inflamed in the fluid from the bee is given credit for this success. note—The first part of this story was run in Friday's issue, Feb. 7, 1936—Ed. Scientists are just beginning to realize the great potential value of insects and accordingly are using them in their laboratories along with cats, dogs, and other animals. For example, cancer is the result of cell growth, and they also know that if a few legs are torn off of an insect they are quickly replaced by a growth of cells. What causes this growth? When science finds evidence of this effect, it suggests formation of that dread creature—cancer. Tuberculosis Attacked Tuberculosis Attacked Another terrible disease which claims many human lives annually is tuberculosis. Scientists have been able to develop scrups for other life by infecting them when they have built up a resistance, have taken blood from them which contain these resisting factors. But no animal has ever been found which could resist tuberculosis. There is a tiny insect known as a bee-moth which链啄 into bee hives to lay eggs, and its offspring can soon destroy the entire hive. Consequently, bee raisers are ever on the watch to externaliate it. But in the laboratory it is guarded jealously and watched over even more carefully than a mother watches over her child. For here in this tiny being a natural resurrection by TB strains are injected into its body, it kills them all. If scientists can find out the composition of this resistance they will have scored another victory over death. Maggots Used to Cure Bone Disease Probably the most well known use to which insects have been put is that of the treatment of osteomyelitis or bone disease. During the World War, Dr. William S. Baur, who held the position of chief surgeon at the Medical Corps of the second army, was stationed at a base hospital in France. He observed that men who had lain on the battlefield for a few hours Hollywood Film Shop Hollywood—(UP)—Mae West goes about her simple way of earning a thousand dollars a day (see federal income report for 1935) secure in the knowledge that she is the final reincarnation of the sirens of the ages. The plump star, who placidly chews her gun at Hollywood fight cards, doesn't come right out and admit it. However, she is practically certain of it if her theory on the future of the siren business is any indication. narmers can't be so charming in this day and age because of modern civilization. Mae argues. The so-called whirl of modern living doesn't give them time to add 'grandmother to their parents' or 'increase an irresistible appeal for men.' She says there will never be another Cleopatra, Catherine of Russia or Helen of Troy. Real great charmers of men went out with muskets and Anna Held. They were not muskets. "Clothes today detract from a woman's allure rather than add to it. And don't think that the dress of the charm is overkill." A Jot do with their sex appeal." Then there is the matter of clothes, Mac continues. The final clincher to her argument is that women divert their interests from the classroom and master at the same time. Their desire to have careers—in industry and the professions—doesn't allow them enough time to develop the career of a siren, "Women doctors, politicians, scientists and authors," confides Mae, "are considered as competent as those of the opposite sex. And how can any man be interested in a woman who does just as well the work he's interested in." I wonder just what amount of allure a woman has for a skilled lawyer. She is not a doctor; she is subconsciously thinking that she knows more about cross-examination and torts than he does. I tell you, they just don't have much allure." So it goes. She can continue on the subject for quite a while. And out of t all comes the impression that Mae West believes she is the last of the irises and that after she's gone there unt won't be any more. Her latest picture is "Klondike Annie." "It's about the colorful life of a Prisco doll, who had what it takes on the Barbary Coast and carries it all alonga during the gold rush," says Mate. after being wounded often developed infection and died, but that those who had him three several days had no fever non am there several days had no fever or infection. When he looked at the wounds of these men, he was surprised to find them full of tiny white morgues in the chest, and to think that in this case the wound was totally lacking in pus or dead skin and instead was a healthy pink and healing nicely. After the war, Dr. Beer returned to America on his own practice. He had a heart attack and suffered a flamation of the bone which is most common in children and requires immediate surgical treatment. If this is not recovery is often delayed for years and the disease may reach a fatal level. Cases Refuse Treatment Some of these cases refused to respond to ordinary treatment so the Doctor began to experiment with them. He re-examined his patients and then clenched the wounds of the soldiers and he began to raise these larvae in his laboratory from the eggs of the common blue bottle fly. method perfected. At first, the larvae sometimes caused an infection themselves, so a system of sterilization was developed. The crayons are now sterilized whose maggers cannot be used. In case the Mount Altto Veteran's Hospital was one day and they hatch the next. The larvae are then sterilized and the third day they are put in the wound. This spot is not sterilized chemically because this would be injurious to the larvae. Instead it is washed out with water, and light is put on it to make the maggots grow faster. When the wound at the end of five days they are washed out and new ones are put in. As the wound heals, the life of these maggets gets shorter and they live only two or three days. When the place is thoroughly cleaned of dead tissues and is healing the maggot treatment is ended. Dr. Bae reported that between 60% and 80% of the 825 cases given this treatment were successful. Although Dr. Baer died in 1311, his work still goes on. Recently, two doctors found that maggots not only remove dead tissue but produce a substance which prevents the growth of harmful bacteria. These maggots are ground up and cultured in laboratory flasks to persons suffering from bone diseases such as mastoid infection where the As time goes on, more and more will be learned about the medical uses of insects. The magical beginnings will have their end in scientific facts, and people will learn that these creatures which have been the subject of so much adverse criticism. It is well to keep in mind that out of 400-000 species of insects, only 200 are harmful and that from at least a few of them expect great benefits for the human race. established as a training center for doctors wishing to learn the Dr. Baer treatment of ostemelitis. ROCK CHALKLETS --- A loaf of bread, a bag of wine; And though this isn't such very good rhye. Valentine, Valentine's day, lily, (leap year): A valentine, a valentine, A loaf of bread, a bag of wine; And though this isn't such wine. This cold weather is seriously threatening wild life. We noticed that things are very quiet around the Hill there last few days. Lines for St. Valentine's day, 1936 (leap year): It's leap year time, it's leap year time. 80 SUITS and OBERCOATS $15.50 Suits in Regular, Shorts, Longs, and Stouts — $25 values now--------- Read the Daily Kansan want ads. FINAL CLEARANCE ON Men's Suits & Overcoats 50 OBERCOATS and SUITS $ 10.50 Suits in Regular, Shorts, and Longs $30 values — now___ 36 SUITS HALF PRICE $ 19.50 Dark Grevs. Sizes 35 to 40. Values to $22.50 NOW $12.50 Sizes 35 to 40—Were $25 to $35 NOW 9 TOP COATS All regular sizes 34 to 42. Values to $40 — Now $ 23.50 SHORT LOTS--ODDS and ENDS 14 WOOL SHIRTS, many patterns Now $2.65 33 WOOL POLO SHIRTS Assorted colors. Values to $3.95 Now $2.65 26 SWEATERS, Slipovers All Wool $3.95 values New $1.65 59e 80 SWEAT SHIRTS, All Colors Sizes 30 to 36 only. $1.00 values 60 Pairs Imported WOOL SOX Many patterns. $1.00 values Now 75c 12 LEATHER JACKETS $5.00 values for $3.95 8 LEATHER JACKETS $6.00 values for $4.75 60 PAJAMAS Slip over and button, all sizes. Values to $2.50 Now $1.45 7 PURE WOOL PAJAMAS Slightly faded. Sizes B, C, D. $6.00 values Now $2.95 300 MEN'S SHIRTS and SHORTS Extra values 35c Of Nationally known make, mostly collar attached, a few white. Sizes 13 to 18 in Now 95c 150 SHIRTS 60 MEN'S SHIRTS Odds and ends from stock. Values to: $1.65 Now $1,55 5 MEN'S SHIRTS Now $1.55 75 MEN'S SHIRTS dollar attached, fancy and plain. Values to $1.65 Now $1.15 Now $1.15 2 for $2.25 48 PAIRS MEN'S GLOVES 48 PAIRS MEN'S GLOVES Button and slip over, values to $2.50 Now $1.65 New $1.65 B Pairs $5 FRIENDLY FIVE Shoe $3.05 75 Pairs BOSTONIANS $7.00 value $5.85 70 Pairs SHOES Odds and ends from entire stock $1.95 55 SCARFES, Wool and Silk Slightly soiled, $1.95 value for 65c 150 HANDKERCHIEFS Fancy border, plain white, values to 50c 2 for 25c 16 BLUEWOLF JACKETS $4.50 value for $3.15 $1.00 Ties 65c $2.00 Ties $1.35 SILK TIE SALE $1.50 Ties 95c $2.50 Ties $1.65 $3.00 Ties $1.85 Many New Patterns Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUT FITTERS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13. 1930 PAGE THREE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS K Hill Society BEFORE 1. P.M. CALL K, U. 21; BETWEEN 7. 00 AND 9. P.M. CALL ZK1701 OR ZK7102 New Women Students Honored at Tea W. S.G.A. and the Y.W.C.A. men bater entertained the new women students with a tea in the Women's building yesterday to 3 to 5 p.m. The table decorations were red and white and a large Valentine held prominent place on the table. Tea cakes, nuts, and candy were served. Mrs. P. H. Walker, sponsor of the Y.W.C.A., presided at the tea table Ea. G. Toten, 31, singer and actress, was a dinner guest at the Alpha Kappa Alpha house last night. Ms. Mitten was attended by Dr. Michael Hickey, who attended the University. She has sung over nation-wide radio hook-ups and has applauded the motion picture stage production. The League of Women Voters will hold a luncheon today at 12:45 at the University club. Mrs. Joyce Hoxey, chairwoman of the college's saint court League of Women Voters will speak on "Abolition of the Spoils System." Mrs. J. F. Brown, chairman of the "Better Personnel in Government campaign," is in charge of arranging the event. Women Voters' League To Have Luncheon ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ The Wesley Foundation Valentine party, which was scheduled for Friday evening, has been postponed until a later date. Dinner guests at the Alpha Delta Pi house this evening will be Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Nichols and Mr. and Mrs. John G. Stutz. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Sigma Eta Chi will hold initiation ceremonies Friday evening at the Colonial. Initiation will be followed by a banquet. Mr. Kenneth Barnard, national treasurer of Phi Kappa Paena, will be a guest of the Kaunas chapter this evening for initiation services and a banquet. Mrs. B. C. Kiplinge, of Chanute, and Mrs. Roy Wiggin, of Erie, were lunch-room guests at the Alpha Tau Omega house yesterday. ☆ ☆ ★ Sigma Alpha Mu announces the pledging of Lewis Abrasch, of Brooklyn, N. Y. Martha Speed, of Kansas State College, Manhattan, was a dinner guest at the Chi Omega house last night. Alpha Garama Delta will entertain the Delta Chi fraternity with an hour dance tonight. Donald Wood, c39, was a dinner guest at the Delta Upsilon house Tuesday evening. Ku Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes, professor of English, was a dinner guest of Gamma Phi Beta sorority last night. Mrs. Louis B. Smith, of Prett, will be a week-end guest at the Sigma Kappa house. Watkins hall will hold open house tonight from 7 to 8 p.m. PHONE K.U.66 Corbin hall will hold open house to night from 7 to 8 p.m. The basketball team of Owred played a close game with Michigan Valley Tuesday night. The final score resulted in Michigan Valley's win, 19-14. The following boys made the trip to Michigan. Jason Benson, Raber, Roger Montgomery, Gerald Banker, Jerry Sisson, Charles Rumgam, Larry Osmond, Leconrain Rainwater, and Herman Hunn Francis Kappelman, a University varsity player, bud of the team at Michigan in absence of Gordon Gray regular coach. Corbin hall will hold open house this ening from 7 to 8 p.m. Dr. F. O. Russell, director of Elephant Training School, and Wendell Nystrom, Gilbert Ulmer, Rheil Hemphill, and Leonard Elliott will attend a Phi Delta Kappa banquet in Kansas City tonight. The banquet is given by the Theta chapter of Phi Delta Kappa of the two Kansas Cities. Several new students have enrolled at Oread for the second semester Among them are Anne Johnson, who attended St. Mary's at Levenwerren during the first semester, and Mary Lynde, a senior who has been attending Baldwin University. Anderson, who lives near Baldwin, is enrolled in the junior class. Baldwin high school meet the Oreda team in Robinson gym next Friday night. The game promises to be a good one in view of the fact that Baldwin defeated Atalid at Baldwin last week by a score of 30-24. Miss Mary Cushing, who has been a supervisor of English in Owed Training School for the past four and one-half years, has resigned her position to accept an appointment to teach in the Kansas City, Mo., schools. Miss Cushing will begin her work at Southwest High School, Monday, Feb. 17. Miss Elizabeth Dunkel announced yesterday that a master tap and soft shoe class to be held at 3:30 on Tuesday, February 15 will start next Tuesday, Feb. 18. TAP AND SOFT SHOE DANCE CLASSES TO START TUESDAY The purpose of the class is to perfect dance routines for presentation in public performances. Oread News Notes LAUNDRY So many requests have been received for this type of entertainment that Miss Dulker ules all advanced tap and soft shoe dancers to attend. TAILOR CLASSIFIED ADS --at the TAXI --at the BOYS: First floor room near campus. Double bed with Sealy Mattress. Rent cheap, either single or double, 304 W 14th. — 93 FOR SALE ROOMS FOR RENT LAUNDRY: Student burdens a speciality. Good work at moderate prices Called for and delivered. Phone 2945 ☆☆☆ Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S — 920-22 Mass. TAXI PHONE K.U. 66 FOR SALE: Our home at 115 Louis ona with furniture. Shown by ap- pointment. Telephone 173. Florence M Hodder. 100 One Stop Clothes Service Station SCHULZ THE TAILOR SCHULZ THE TAILOR 924 Mass. --- LOST: Leather key case containing keya. Finder please call Home. Jacobus, phone 2773. -83 LOST AND FOUND LOST: Brown Wahl Fountain pen. Call 3117, T. A. Perry. Reward. 83 TYPEWRITERS TYPEWRITERS: Monarchs and Reminders for sale. Renaults Repair of all makes of typewriters. Call Kahut 932. – 955. BEAUTY SHOPS Two-day ward or one-hour inpatient, 25c; three-hour inpatient, 175c; contract pain, not more than 25 hours, 70 cyst visits. Piecewise in advance and discharge. Fee may vary by location. --at the SPECIAL----50c reduction on any per- manent, with this ad, except Saturday. Permanents $1.50 to $5.00, complete with hair cut. IVA'S BEAUTY SHOPS, 732½ Mass, Phone 2533; 9411 Mass, Phone 523. BOYS: If you are looking for part time work inquire at 730 Massachusetts. Phone 648. -94. MISCELLANEOUS Student Loans ABE WOLFSON 743 Mass. San Francisco, Calif.—(UP)—Officials of the Archives of Hawaii have ist reported to San Francisco authorities the finding of an apparently genuine authentic document and signature in their place of origin. 5,609 miles on its place of origin. Lincoln Document Found The document, found in the archives, by Ms. Horetta Holt, an employee, is a simple official book, reading as follows: Secretary of State to affix the seal of the United States to my proclamation and in doing this shall be warmer. Officials Report Signature Apparently Genuine and Authentic (Signature) "Albrahim Lincoln... As the date of the document is Jan. 16, 2014, he will be the Emancipation Proclamation for the freedom of the slaves and is believed to have been a The American Society of Electrical Engineers of which George C. Shaad, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, is chairman, will meet tonight in Kansas City, Mo., at the President's hotel. Dr. T. R. Waterman, librarian of the archives, believeth the signature is genuine, but is unable to offer any explanations or evidence in the territory's archives. DEAN SHAAD WILL PRESIDE OVER ENGINEERING SESSION Several students and members of the faculty of the School of Engineering and Architecture will attend. Major T. J. Strickler, vice-president and general manager of the Kansas City Gas company will speak on "The Impact of Transportation and Transportation of Natural Gas." Fresh SILEX COFFEE An invigorating stimulant. at the UNION FOUNTAIN Sub-Basement Memorial Union Plans are being made for a meeting of St. Louis alumni in connection with a meeting of Department of Superintendent, an organization of educators, at St. Louis, Feb. 22. Howard Lane, g31, a member of the faculty at Northwestern, promoted the idea. Elden Haley, president of the St. Louis alumni. JOINT ALUMNI AND EDUCATION MEETING ATTRACTS PROFESSOR The following professors of the University of Kansas will attend the Department of Superintendents Dean R. A. Schweiger, B. A. Nash, C. B. Athaus, J. W. Twentieth, E. E. Bayles, F. A. Hurtine, A. H. Turenne, and N. P. Pizzo. THURSDAY We Offer Swiss Steak Roast Pork Also Chicken and Dumplings Also many other Good Foods CAFETERIA "Tony's" Monopolize Team Medford, Mass.—(IP) The Tufts College basketball team is three-fifths "Tony." Of the five players on the team, three are named Tony Radvili, Tony Spath, and Tony Wojciechowski. J Wet, Sloppy Weather Will Be Here Any Day Now. Let us put a good pair of soles and heels on your shoes ELECTRIC SHOP SHOP 1017 1/2 Mass. W.E. Whetstone. Prop. Phone 686 BEAUX ARTS BALL The Mardi Gras of Kansas University IT'S GOING TO BE IT'S GOING TO BE STUPENDOUS MAGNETIC GIGANTIC COLOSSAL In Fact, It's Going to Be Darn Good Fun WITH Hilarious Entertainment Serpentine Favors The First Real Costume Party Costumes for this dance may be obtained at a reasonable price through the Union Building. Leave size and type of costume desired, at the Main Desk. Prizes will be awarded for the best worn. Red Blackburn's Band $1.00 Couple - Stag FRIDAY--February 14 ion Building 9-12 © 1900, B. 2. Reynolds Teb, Co. CAMEL'S MONEY-BACK OFFER STILL OPEN TO COLLEGE SMOKERS! Read Our Invitation to You Smoke 10 fragrant Camels. If you don't find them the mildest, best- flavored cigarettes you ever smoked, return the package with the rest of the cigarettes in it to us at any time within a month from this date, and we will refund your full purchase price, plus postage. {Signed} R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY WINSTONSALEM, NORTH CAROLINA YOU'LL LIKE THEM TOO! ...We who make Camels and know Camel's quality are confident you'll like them! Camels are made from COSTLIER TOBACCOS! CAMEL TURKISH & DOMESTIC FICKEN BLIND CIGAR Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOB ACCOS - Turkish and Domestic - than any other popular brand. Camels must please you, or they cost you Nothing PAGE FOUR THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1936 Aggies Prepare For Last Contest With Jayhawkers Saturday's Game Promises Thrills for Spectators In Hard-fought Battle UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS When the Kansas Aggies step on the court at the University of Kansa Saturday night, spectators should be prepared for anything "to happen. The Manhattan stars are spoiling for a victory and nothing would give them more than knocking the conference leaders out into striking position for Nebraska. In two previous meetings of Kansas and Kansas State this season, the game has been nip and tuck until the greater staying power of the Jahyawkers sent them into a substantial lead. At Kane's start, on Saturday, days when the two rivals met on the second night of the four-tourney, the score was near a tie with about six minutes to play. Kansas State then proceeded to fold up, and the Lawrence men built up an eleven-point lead before the closing white. Similar circumstances occurred at Mahanah, where a conference meeting of the two teams K-State Is Working Hard To make up this apparent deficiency in the stamina of his quintet, Coach Frank Root has been drilling his Wildcats on their plays and giving them stiff workouts each day. It is possible they will be dismayed by light games that are disgusting to the Jayhawks Saturday night since there is not an enormous difference in the abilities shown by the two teams. K-State Is Working Hard Although the Kansas State men now constitute a cellar team, they are not at all used to it or willing to resign themselves to the task. As a loss because of the injury, they have no more to lose, but have everything to gain. The Manhattan crowd will show a good deal of respect, as proven by the fact that the Kansas-Kansas State game at Manhattan was a sellout before Kansas rooters had opportunity to buy tickets, and many could help to stimulate the Angle players. Aggies Have Good Scorers Groves, last year's Wildcat All-Conference contribution, and Burns, a new recruit in the scoring average of the Big Six. With a little help from the rest of the team, and these two men both hitting hard, Groves will be offered to the Jayhawkers. Groves has been pretty well smothered in the other two meetings by Noble, who was forced to forsake scoring against his time to the fall Akgie center. Loss of this contest next Saturday would put Kansas on the spot in a big way. With Nebraska fighting to keep the lead, the Cornhuskers would allow the Cornhunkers their chance. The Lawrences men make the trip to Lincoln where they will play. They would there have an excellent chance to even the count at two losses each. Men's Intramurals Two intramural volley ball games were played Tuesday night with the Delta Tau's and the Triangle's winners. The Delta Tau's won an easy game from the Nu Sigma Nu's by a score of 21-5, 21-3. The Triangles had more trouble in downing the Beta', by a score of 21-14, 13-21, 28-8. Dr. F. C. Allen yesterday receive a telegram calling off the Western Reserve football game which was scheduled for Oct. 31, 1936, at Kansas. WESTERN RESERVE REPLACED BY ARIZONA ON FOOTBALL BILL The reason stated for canceling the game was that Western Reserve was unable to find a suitable date in their season. The return game with Kannas at Cleveland. Arizona University will take the place of Western Reserve, on Oct. 31 at Kansas. The Kansas team will join Wisconsin. The Arizona, Nov. 20, 1977, for the return game. PATEE BANK NITE TONITE NOW! ENDS FRIADY Gene Stratten Porter's Thrilling Romance of the Limbiotost- "FRECKLES" TOM BROWN VIRGINIA WEILER - ADDED - Comedy - Oddity - Vodvil SUN... MON. WINI SHAW "Broadway Hostess" YALE SWIMMERS WILL SPLASH FOR EXERCISE THIS SEASON New Haven, Conn. — (UP)—Through a misunderstanding the Yale swimming team, regarded as the strongest in the country without league affiliation this year. The number of personal fouls, or rather the avoidance of personal fouls, is not usually used as a criterion for measuring, but it is interesting to note that the conference-leading Jayhawk们 are also the players with the fewest personal fouls, both for team average and game average. Last fall Yale resigned from the Intercollegiate Swimming Association and voted to join the newly formed Eastern Intercollegiate Swimming League, which does not require water polo. Much to the surprise of Yale athletic officials, it was found that the league is not to become operative until 1837. The old association could not be rejoined because water polo had been abandoned. Yale has held the IS.A. championship plaque for eleven years straight, and this year will mark the first time since 1924 that the trophy will find a resting place outside the Yale gymnasium. In six games played by Kanas, 11 players have made 53 personal fouls, an average of 8-5-6 per game, or 47-11 per player. Ten players who are personalised made by nine players in six games, averaging 9-1-3 per game, and 6-2-9 per player. Iowa State has 57 personalities, made by eight players in six games, and 9-1-2 per game, and 7-1-8 per player. Personal Fouls Avoided By Conference Leaders Only 59 Violations Charged Against Jayhawkers This Season Nebraska in seven games has 75 personalals charged against nine players, for a game average of 10.5-7 and a player average of 8.1-3. Oklahoma has distributed its personalls in five games among 10 players, so that while the game average is 11, the player averaged 9.9. The team with ten scoring players, has 75 personaluls, averaging 12.1-2 per game and 7.1-2 per player. On the Kansas team, Milton Allen leads with 14, but Ebbing and Noble, with five and six personalities respectively, have the low records, especially when it is considered they have played practice games. Incidentally, Ebbing is the high scorer of the conference with an average of 13 points per game. Read the Daily Kansan want ads. GRANADA Your Last Chance Jennette Mac Donald Nelson Eddy "ROSE MARIE" Mat. 25c, Nite. 35c FRIDAY - SATURDAY A baffling mystery to hold you spell-bound and amazed! TWO IN THE DARK with WALTER ABEIL MARGOT ORHANAGE Waltery Ford Gail Pattinell Bristol Erica Blore Eric Blore Eri Rhodes Erie O'Brien-Moore "STARLISH DAYS AT THE LIDO" Cartoon - News M E Loss of Nine Sophomores Fails To Dishearten Track Mentor The Screen Gives You the Sweep of the Skies to the Thriller That Made Broadway Say Its Prayers! SUNDAY 4 Thrilling Days JAMES CAGNEY PAT O'BRIEN In commenting on the chances for the coming year Hargiss said that he still has several promising sophomores, including Jack Richardson, former Missouri Valley A.A.U. sprinter champions; Gordon Lucas, a spinner and broad-jumper; Hardace Hardacre, Jayhawker who is in a job on the cinders. In Harry Wiles, Harlargis has a good 440 dash man, who is now working on the hurdles to replace four sophomores who failed to return this semester. Hargiss has another sprinter in Lloyd Foy, a Hutchinson high school product. Radigan, Hughes, and Chads are sophilimous. The company develops into runners of high caliber. "CEILING ZERO" Continuous Shows Sunday at 1 - 3 - 7 5-9 25c 'til 7 — After 7 35c The meet with Kansas State scheduled for Saturday will be held if there is any let-up in the bad weather. Hargis said that he did not want to hold a meeting because he believes "Zero air is too likely to freeze the radiator when pumped into the tars. Harggiss believes that one is too pt to look at the dark side when there re actually several good prospects. Meet Depends on Weather lungs as fast as an athlete must breathe in active competition." Bill said that he had been unable to hold trials because of the cold weather, but that his entries would probably include: 60-yard dash: Richardson, Hardacre and Clucas. 60-yard high hurdles: Wiles and Foy. 440-yard dash Trotter, McNown, Greene, and McCaskill. 60-yard low hurdles: Wiles, Foy, and Clucas. 880-yard run: Schroeder, Guise, and McCoy. Mile run: Fitzigibbons and Zadigan. Two-mile run: Chads and Hughes. Pole vault: Ardrey. Shot-put: Karatzar and Pitts. High jump: Shannon, Wellhausen, Ewing. Broad jump: Pitts, Clucas, Ewing, and Richardson. Mile relay: McNown, McCaskill Greene, Trotter, Wiles, and Schroeder. The Quack Club, for women who ex-cell in swimming, will have its second semester try-outs at 10 a.m., Saturday, Feb. 15. Women's Intramurals VALENTINE YOURSELF --to a new SPRING HAT Stetsons $5 Mallorys $4 —All the new styles and colors here for your choosing. The following are the two groups that have been organized for the women's swimming meet beginning Feb. 18. Group 1: Alpha Chi Omega, Kappa Alpha Theta, Sigma Kappa, Watkins Alta, Alpha Omicron Pi, Alpha Gamma New Spring Suits on Display CARLS GOOD CLOTHES Delta, and Independent. This group will swim Tuesday. Feb. 18, at 7:30. Group II: Gamma Phi Beta, Pi Beta Phi, Corbin Hall, Alpha Delta Pi, Chi Omega, TNT and IWW. This group will swim Thursday, Feb. 20. The finals of all swimming events will be held Wednesday, Feb. 26, at 7. 30. The time has been changed because of a concert. Ping Pong, semi-finals, singles, to be THE KENT WHEN THE OCCASION CALLS . . . for a little extra neatness in your dress, wear KENT ... the new and fashionable wide-spread starched collar played this week: *Lemon*, Pi Beta Eta vs. Foreman, Chi Omega, Barcarman, Corbin hall vs. Hansan, Pi Beta Phi. Basketball, Tuesday, Feb. 13–8, 15. Pi Beta Phi won the second division and Alpha Delta Phi won the first division. ARROW SHIRTS & COLLARS 25c Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFitters Read the Daily Kansan want ads. THE KENT WILLiam O'DONALDY and ANNA LEVINE. A NEW ARROW COLLAR FOR YOUNG MEN T HERE are times when the occasion calls for a white starched collar—whether it be a House Party weekend, a trip to the city, or an important Saturday evening date. . . The Kent is a new style arrow collar with wide spread and square corner points. It is set off particularly well when worn with a colored shirt. 25c ARROW SHIRTS & COLLARS EXTRA Better Times D VOL.XLIII...NO.28973 THURSDAY Millions Acclaim A Light Smoke OF RICH, RIPE-BODIED TOBACCO EXTRA Better Times D VOL. XLIII...NO. 28973 THURSDAY Millions Acclaim A Light Smoke OF RICH, RIPE-BODIED TOBACCO Luckies Are Less Acid Recent Chemical Tests Show'That Other Popular Brands Have an Excess of Acidity Over Lucky Strike of From 53% to 100% *Results Verified by Independent Chemical Laboratories and Research Groups Excess of Acidity of Other Popular Brands Over Lucky Strike Cigarettes BLANKING LUCKY STRIKE BRAND A BRAND B BRAND C BRAND D SEVEN GREAT STEPS TO A LIGHT SMoke the chief contributions of the American industry in the development of the design CIGARETTES Luckies-a light smoke OF RICH, RIPE-BODIED TOBACCO—"IT'S TOASTED" Other Popular Brands Have an Excess of Acidity Over Lucky Strike of From 53% to 100% *Remio Verified by Independent Chemical Laboratories and Research Group SEVEN GREAT STEPS TO A LIGHT SMOKE 1. Greater lower of chosen tobacco plants. 2. Protect Aging. 3. Sensitivity Blinding—more than 10 different strains in Indonesia every year. 4. Guarantee to give out cigarettes only during manufacture. Luckies-a light smoke OF RICH, RIPE-BODIED TOBACCO—"IT'S TOASTED" 络框 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXXIII on the SHIN By BUD EVANS, '36 Valentine's Day By Heck . . . It Takes Skilled Labor . . . On a Party Line . . . Our Mistake . . . A Rubber Pin Deal . . . Ray's Going To Do Noble. 'Tis Valentine's day (and you have it!) Understand the comic valentines—those that dwell on one's less attributes in sort of a "see yourself as others see you" manner—are being received quite abundantly by some. our more prominent (?) Hill personalities. Art ("Can I take you girls any Presence?") Cain got one this morning preset hat and no stump on it. You know Irene *n* curiosity works—well, Art paid retary, poster opened the letter and added a message. Cain was elking to destroy the evidence, ate Hunt, *sucker immediately*. That's what Middlet all-making the best of an embargo Eldh 6 situation! LAWRENCE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1936 esses: B. the *tear* that Don Dieter, Sigma Chi pledge, has received three of these comic epics. Don has been trying to find out who sent them so he can thank his benefactors for all their love and affection—but with little success. --on Student Amina Apparances are oft-times misleadng. Tub Carlsen, of the Kappa Sig beaney, appeared to be starting a new dad last Wednesday night when his wife called for a corsage. They're all right Tub, but please—not at these races! Even though you didn't give her to her (she being donated by the sorority which she just pledged) don't let her do it – it might give someone else the idea. 💎 💎 💎 Who is 'the Kappa who has a PhGam pin, and is keeping it a dead secret until the PhGam's have their initiation so she can get another one to go with it?' They say it's nice work if you can get it! Down on Ohio street, there have been some complaints about the twenty-four seige on a party phone One woman on the party wife told the time that she had been in the roaming house next door to her and the wire was always busy. A check up revealed that "Jay" Jans Baker, of St. Louis and points East at the house, said she was all the trouble. The girls insisted however that it was no trouble at al We'd like to retract our statement in yesterday's column accusing Carby Trott of leaving school this semester. Securs Darbly didn't quit school after taking a year off, but returned to the hotel. The Fill Delt (apartently one of the second floor boys who gave us this "scop" yesterday confessed—he thought Trott he pulled out. Maybe the third floor boy and the second floor boys should go back to school. But he would be kinda hard to keep track of (87 not authentic) gens. "Headline" Hughley Hadley is bale in print again, but this time it's his shady personal life that draws our attention. His recently-acquired Seams Delta Chin pin, possessing all the quirkiness of the bouncing back to him the other day, Yeah—the gift sent it back for him to wear. The only thing that bothered Hadley was the fact that the girl lives in Kansas City, and he didn't ever have a chance to argue with her Hughle can't express himself by writ Understand that Roy Noble, high flying center on the University basketball team, isn't going to risk going with the team on the rest of their outside schedule. He's not going to the Lowa State tilt last week Noble found his lady-love wearing a bandaged head (very becoming). It not the razing Noble minds, but it's the grief the little lady went through after being comforted by her sorrow gets him! And our "Hell week notes for today center around the Alpha Delta Pi house where all the freshmen are busy carrying paddles across the fraternity man, and one social fraternity man to sign. This shouldn't be such a tough assignment. If there is anyone who doesn't know what type lice are, call Burrow or Grant. The number is 295. Takes Lead in Play PROF. ALLEN CRAFTON PETER HOLMES University dramatic instructor and prominent figure in local productions will be featured again in the Kansas City production. If you call for a run of four days next Monday. Third Vesper Service To Be Presented Sunday Fine Arts School Sponsors All-Musical Program In Auditorium The third All-Musical Vowers of the year will be presented by the School of Fine Arts next Sunday afternoon at 4 p.m. in the University Auditorium. Mr. G. Cris Simpson, organist, will open the program with the brilliant "Concert Overture in B Minor" by Rogers. A featured number will be the two intradas from Melchirois Franck, who lived and wrote about the time of Bach and Handel. The selections will be given by a string ensemble of three bassoons, violas, one cells, and one central bass. The newly formed University String Trio consisting of Ruth Curtz, pianist; Karl Kuersteneiner, violinist; and Raymond Stellini, cellist; will make its first appearance in a movement from the Schubert Trio in B Flat. The Universi- cal Movement with the "Quartet in G Minor" by Havn. Prof. and Mrs. Joseph Wilkins will present a sacred duet from one of Mendelsohn's Motets. The University Men's Glee Club, recently returned from a successful week's tour under the direction of Provenance, will present three numbers which will include an excerpt from the opera "The Desert Song" for solo voices and chorus. The solo parts will be taken by Professor Joseph Bartow; and Ed Egren, bass. The All-Musical Vesper programs, now in their thirteenth year, offer each year during the winter months programs of group music that are among the most varied of any presented at the University during the year. Canuteson Spikes Rumors Boarding Clubs and Water Supply Are Not Causing Current Epidemic The rumor that the stomach ailment known as infectious gastro-enteritis, which is now prevalent among people of Lawrence and University students, is either contracted from boarding buses or the milk or奶水供应 supply stations, according to Dr. Paul N. Canutan, accountered of the Walks Memorial hospital. The boarding clubs and the milk and water supplies have been found to be in first class condition by Dr. J. Mott, city health officer Earnest Boyer, of the state board of sanitation; and Leon Baum, local milk sanitarian. The exact cause of the sickness which lists from one to four days, is similar to intersal influenza. It is contracted in a way similar to colds. Dr. Ross Laybourn of the State Board of Healtl is examining cases in an effort to find the exact cause of the disease. --on Student Amina Friday, February 14 Kappa Sigma, House, 12 p.m. Beau Arts Ball, Memorial Union, 12 p.m. AUTHORIZED PARTIES Friday, February 14 (Limited Date) Saturday, February 15 Corbin hall. House. $ ^{19} $ For the Joint Committee ZLIZABETH MEGUIAR Molnar's 'Olympia' To Be Presented By Campus Actors First Production of Play West of Mississippi Will Be Offered In Fraser The Kansas Players will present as their second production of the season the brilliant concert, "Olympia," by Ferenc Molnar, which has been published in eight languages, and which has been presented in nearly every country in the world. It is one of the best and most brilliant plays of an all-around orchestra living dramatists of today. The play opens Monday for a four-day run. The production in Fraser Theater, however, will be the first west of the Mississippi river. In 1926 the play had a successful run in New York, and it has been chosen for production by Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontaine. The action of the play results from a well-planned situation which involves, with portending ruin, several members of the Austrian Royalty who are especially close to the Emperor. The setting is a great hotel in a wealthy resort in Hungary, and a party of four persons are representing the Emperor and his wife. On his birthday, the four are Olympia and her mother, the Princess Plata-Ettingen, Count Albert and his wife, Countess Lina. Olympia Falls for Hussar Olympia I a woman during her way in the hotel has failed to appear in a dashing, wittery, fearless young captain of Hussars who, with his bridge playing and his peerless conversation, has swept Olympia and her mother completely off their feet! Countess Lina, who is played with a great deal of comedy finesse by the princess, but the princess that unless Olympia sees captain away a scandal will result. This Olympia does, after a command from her mother, who is terribly afraid of publicity. After doing some of the work for vacs, the captain, in order to teach Olympia a lesson in democracy, poses as a swindler, a card sharp, a cultured jajibird who speaks 11 languages, and a minister of jails in 17 different countries. In an Amusing Situation It is easily seen what the knowledge of this sort of past would do to the peace of mind of the royal person and daily seen in the captain's company. NUMBER 24 An extremely amusing situation exists between the characters the Princess, played by Mrs. Crafton, and the Countess Lina. These characters are likely to be the high-lights of the show. Other parts are taken by Professor Crafton as Colleen Kebl, Beth Ruth Smith as Olympia, Norbert Anschutz as Captain Kovacs, Charles Pikpin as the General, and Donald Dixon as Count Albert. The play will run four nights in Fraser and then will be taken by the Kansas Players on a road tour of the state. Tickets are available now at green hall, and students are urged to obtain seats early so as to avoid the last-minute rush. Music Lecture Postponed The lecture of Dr. Edmund Fellowes of London, England, which was to have been heard at the University last night was postponed because of the delay of Dr. Powell's train. The lecture will be heard this afternoon at 3:30 in the Addison auditorium. The public is invited and there will be no charge for admission. Dr. Felwones will lecture on "The Rediscovery of Tudor Music" and will illuminate the songs with a large lute of the sixteenth century. He is the author of many books on the subject and is recognized as the best authority on the English mongolian. Delayed Train Prevents Speaker's Appearing Here as Scheduled Topeka, Feb. 14—(UP)—Unsettled tonight and Friday with snow probable. Not so cold tonight except in extreme east and extreme northwest portions. Colder Friday in northwest portions. Wind may become strong. A lecture was given at the University in 1922 by Dr. Fellows on "The English Madrigal." WEATHER FORECAST APPLICATIONS FOR STUDENT LOAN FUNDS STILL AVAILABLE The temperature at 12 o'clock last night was one degree above zero, and was falling rapidly. Funds for student loans are still available, Karl Kluez, secretary of the University Loan Fund, announced yesterday. Short-time loans of small amounts are made to students who show need. Applications for the loans are received at the office of George O. Foster, registrar. Mr. Klozo stated that collections on the loans have been exceptionally good, averaging from 500 to 100 dollars a month, and that the loans were usually amounts less than 100 dollars for periods of a year or less. Noted Vienna Boys' Choir Will Present Program Singers To Be Offered As Concert Course Attraction Wednesday evening, Feb. 19, will see the return of the famous Vienna Choir Boys as the fourth regular attraction on the University Concert Course. This historic choir is listed among the world's finest. These twenty-two youngsters are members of a choir that had its inception in Maimoniel. For more than four years they were scholastic functions. Then it disappeared with the Hasburg monarchy at the close of the World War, but was rescued six years later. For two years she was on the guardian carrying on the organization from his private funds. Then the choir launched out to support itself, turning to secular music. It was a happy initiative, and high light in Vienna's musical season. In the years past, the choir has enrolled in membership such famous names in music as Franz Schubert, who became the choir's soloist and conductor; Maude Haydn, remained a member from the age of eleven to sixteen. Joseph Haydn, another world renowned composer, was a typical choir boy, remaining a member of the school until sixteen when his voice broke. In recent years, Felix Koehler and two Wagner directors of the Wagner festivals at Bayeuv, was a choir boy. Membership in the chair is so sought after that last year there were three of them. All of the boys attend the same public school that four centuries of choir boys have attended. In addition, they enjoy band lessons, and eight singling lessons a week. The program Wednesday night will elude a scene from "Der Hausleiche Krieg" by Franz Schubert. It was especially arranged for the Vienna Choir Boys and will be given in costume as miniature opera. Student Sunday to Be Observed Student Sunday will be observed by the First Baptist Church next Sunday at 11:00. The students will participate in the service with the pastors and their mea- mens, e'und; and Mrs. Helen Cunningham, c'33. The student choir will join John Regier, c'37, as solist. Speakers Discuss Neutrality Angles At Peace Meeting Rev. Harrison, Chubb, Ishp, and Brockelbank Give Their Views on War Policies Touching on a wide range of topics concerning the possibility of American neutility in case of a foreign conquest, she presented her dressed The Peace Action forum, sponsored by the University Peace Action committee. The meeting, attended by approximately 250 people, was held in the change of the Memorial Union building. Prof. H. B. Chubb of the political science department, speaking on "American Neutrality," last night said that the American people have the habit of talking about rights, but seldom about duties. Today natalry books that are placed on our status books that will restrict our later activities, he said. **ELECTIONS.** Chubb felt interested that neutrality laws apply to subjects of contraband, visit and search, and blockade. Such laws existed as early as 1807 under Thomas Jefferson, but such pressure was brought to bear by big business interests of that time that they were removed from the statutes in 1890. As a result of their removal American entered into the War of 1812. Chubb pointed out that some people believe they should be forced to war if anyone questions them others believe they should be laid down by Congress. "As a business proposition," he said, "neutrality laws should be placed in place. We should make sure that businesses should be made on big business interests that make money out of war. No neutrality laws will prevent us from making a military decision; many chances will be far more remote." Prof. W. J. Brockelbank of the School of Law said that one should look upon neutrality laws as a department of a larger problem of war. Certain neutrality laws exist in nationalation, and, even though the United States is considered the most self-sufficient nation today, we are not willing to decrease our needs and become an enemy. Rav. Carter Harrison stated that the Embargo药 Act of 1807, during Jefferson's administration caused American trade to drop one-fifth in six months' time. He believed the Non-Intercourse act both the British and the French still seized American ships and the only reason for the United States going to war in 1812 with England instead of France, was that it had the largest control of the sea. Guard Against Isolation Must Understand Issues Must Understand Issues John speaks on American necissity, John speaking on American necissity, and to try to formulate a policy before the issues of the impending conflict are (Continued on page 3) Stirring Figures and Sirens of the Past Will Curtsy and Pirouette Tonight Great figures of the Classic and Renaissance periods, and sirens of the past will meet tonight at the Memorial Union ballroom for the first time in the history of the school to celebrate the Beaux Arts Ball. Parisian artists originated the idea of the Beaux Arts Ball, because it served as a means for them to exhibit their work to the public. It attracted a great deal of attention because so many people were interested in discovering new artists. It was given in the Latin quarters of Paris and at first was not elaborate in any way. The wealthy people that attended gradually developed the ball into more of a society function. Men and women from all over the world constituted the artists' colony in Paris, and their interests were not confined to that city. Many of them also became the ball as being representative of different parts of the country. As a result, the spectacles with various classic episodes of the past. Artists in New York continued the idea in this country. The first of the balls given by the architects in New York was held in 1912. It was called "Venice Through the Ages," and was given under the auspices of the Society of Beau Arts Architects. Various periods of history were represented, including the "Midsummer Ball" ("The Ball of the Gifts") "A Fate in the Garden of Versailles" "Napoleon," and "A Pagent of the Renaissance" were among the first ones to be held. The Beaux Arts Balls in New York have the reputation of being the most sumptuous and beautiful given in this country or abroad. They surpass, so it follows that and the respendant Covent Garden Ball of London. Thousands of people prominent in society and the world of art, literature and drama comprise the gaily costumed throne. Some are attired in silver Pierer coatlets of modern lines; medieval gowns of red wigs and a tunic adorned with a skull. Sent queen Isabella of Spain, Catherine of Aragon, and ladies of the Spanish court. The funds received from the ticket sales make possible the holding of competitions and the sending of the winners to the exhibition at the famous Ecole des Beaux Arts. Dr. James A. Naismith The honorary art fraternity on the campus, Delta Phi Delta, composed of juniors and seniors with high scholastic backgrounds, will be given a work, decided it would be appropriate to have a Beauts Arts Ball in connection with the varsity dances. They are creating special murals and paintings to be displayed in the hallway of the ballroom will be a studio, three students will sit and sketch anyone who so desires. The members of the fraternity are planning on carrying out a Cafe De La Paris scene on the campus. Each portrait will be decorated to represent an art gallery. PETER L. KENNEDY The illustrious inventor of basketball will be fendt tomorrow night in the Jayhawk-Kansas Aigie game played on Saturday honor celebrating "Naismith Week." Leibowitz Cracks Bruno's Nerve in Hour Interview Noted Criminal Attorney Refuses To State Particulars Trenton, N. J., Feb. 14—(UP)-Sam Leibwitz, the nation's best-known criminal lawyer, cracked Bruno Richard Hauptmann's nerve in a hour interview that may change the fate of Charles A. Lindbergh, the murderer of Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr. The attorney came out of the death house at Trenton State Prison, a wide smile on his face, and said: "It was a very satisfactory interview. Bruno broke down and cried like a child. I did not understand." "Did you get a confession?" someone shouted at him as he stood on the sidewalk outside the prison. "No comment," Leibowitz replied. Mrs. Hauptmann was with him and she seemed more cheerful than at any time since Governor Harold Hofft, who had been in charge of death with a 30-day reprieve 28 hours before he was to be electrocuted. Leibowitz, who has saved 112 men from the electric chair, had said that he would not interest himself in Hauptmann's behalf unless the prisoner confronts one man could not have committed the crime but he also contends that the defense told "fish stories" on the witness stand at Flemington. It was assumed that Leibowitz would not have agreed to return San Salvador, where that Hauptmann was ready to co-operate in the line of defense mapped by the lawyer. PROVISIONAL QUARANTINE PUT ON ATO FOR SCARLET FEVER A provisional quarantine was placed on the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity house yesterday by Dr J. M. Mott, health officer, after Evan Beln, c36, a member of the organization, was taken to the Memorial hospital with scarlet fever. Following the diagnosis, other members of the fraternity were given the Dick Test, in an effort to determine if any of them have contracted the disease. The house will remain under bar rules until outcome of the tests has been determined. This is the first case of aacreet fever encountered so far this year at the University, and every precaution is being to guard against further outbreaks. University Graduate Sails Home Shirowa Matsumoto, who was graduated last semester from the School of Education, will leave to leave Monday for a trip to New York before returning to Hilo, Hawaii. his home. He will spend five days in New York City and then take a steamboat for Hawaii via the Panama "Canal." Westminster Cabinet Meets To Give Illustrated Lecture Westminster Café Meets their monthly business meeting held their monthly business meeting Wednesday night. Eleanor Mann e38, was appointed publicity chairman, for Lent were made, and a date for the fellowship banquet to be held in March. To Give Illustrated Lecture. A professor of the Portland Cement engineer of the Portland Cement Association of Kansas City, Mo., will give an illustrated lecture on the modern uses of concrete in architecture on the 15th floor. A 4 o'clock in room 210, Marvin hall. Doctor Naismith Will Be Honored Tomorrow Night Program Between Halves of Kansas-Aggie Game To Be Broadcast over WREN The Aggies will undoubtedly be out to blast the Jayhawk's hope for an undefended season which promises to be a test of their best from a spectator's viewpoint. The University of Kansas will do its part tomorrow night in the nationwide honoring of Dr. James Naismith, "Father of Basketball", when the Kauai Agnews come to Lawrence for their third meeting of the season with the Jayhawk cage stars. The program honoring Dr. Naismith will take place between halves of the game and will be broadcast over station WREN start at 8:00 p.m. Speakers will be Chancellor Ernst H. Lindley, Governor M. L. Mandon; and Dr. James O'Brien M. Elbel will be master of ceremonies. Javhawkers Primed Coach F. C. Allen has detected a slight amount of easing up in his squad and is determined to prevent a slip-up through over-conference or a bit-down of moral. Daily scrimmages in which the starting five have plenty of hard work will probably be employed to push up a few weak points and keep the men in top shape. Last year the Jayhawkers had the Big Six title within their grasp and then apparently went to pieces under the pressure of the Tigers were, like the present Wildcats, one of the cellar teams at that time, but they come through with an amazing success out of the Jayhawk's reach. Coach Allen is apparently taking every precaution to see that his quintet is prepared to stop any such happening this year. Have Rigid Practice Rules During the last few practices, Coach Allen has had Gordon Gray or Ernest Vanek referee during practice scrimmages while he ranged up and down the sidelines insert remarks and in-game calls. All of them have been called religiously and all the technical rules of the game have been emphasized. Concentration has been strong on free throws. The probable starting lineup, Ray Noble, Ray Ebling, Fred Pralle, Francis Kappelman, and Mit Allen has been opposed in scrimmage by a second group composed of Bob Holmer, Paul Rogers, and Wilmer Shaffer. Other squad members are frequently inserted into the second team lineup and those men are shifted to first team lineup to give them a trial. Try Position Changes Frequent trials are being made with Praile in the front line on defense and Noble shifted back into the guard position, but the regular positions seem to have been used to center jump from wearing to much on one man, Noble, Ebling, and Praille are practicing alternation of the jumping. Other than resting the men, this method serves to contuse the opposing hands; they do not watch the shift carefully. Kansas State, with its team in much better condition mentally and physically than on the occasions of the other two Kansas-Kansas State meetings, has its chance for the glory of downing the conference leaders. After having made the Nebraska Corshuskets hustle as a team, they are encouraged as to their chances for an upset to be scored over the Jayhawkers. Kansas Is Not a "Killer Team" Kansas has not piled up its conference opponents. The Jayhawkers do not own a "killer-type" team, but rather one inclined to coast when a substantial margin has been attained. This deficit can be further exacerbated by an excellence in the execution of fundamentals. Dr. Allen goes on the theory that a man versed in the use of kickoffs makes him less likely to think about such things during a game and will therefore devote his timo to playing the game. Kansas goes into the game Saturday night a strong favors that doe buckets have been up-set before. Entertainment between the halves will be devoted to the dedication of Kanas' Naismith night. Vanderbilt a Guest of Landon Topkala, Feb. 14. —(UP)—Cornelius Vanderbilt, Jr., magazine writer and novelist, was the luncheon guest of Gov. Jeb Bush in New York today. He is here to interview Landon PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 14. 1930 ≈ Comment Beaux Art Ball Phi Delta Phi, national honorary art fraternity, in co-operation with the Memorial Union Operating Committee, is staging an event tonight at 10:30 a.m. to announce an annual affair at K. U., It is for Baux. Arts. The first Beaux Arts ball was given in New York in 1912 as a means of obtaining money for scholarships for deserving artists and architects. The funds realized from the K. U. ball will go toward helping support the free art classes given in Lawrence in the summer and also to defray the expenses of the art convention to be held in Kansas City this year. The tradition that the ball must be outstanding is being carried out here. Mural paintings, required costumes, and an art studio where patches will be drawn will emphasize the art note. This is the first attempt at having a fancy dress ball on the Hill, and it is hoped that it may become a tradition. To stress the importance of the affair, a Kansas City costume company has come out to furnish suitable attire for the revelers. If this attempt to combine fun and an art education is a success, K. U., as well as other universities and large cities, will have a traditional annual Beaux Arts Ball. Would some kind soul tell us where we can buy a fur cap (1900 model) with ear muffs attached, fur-lined gloves and a pair of old time red flannels? Night Driving Governor Harold G. Hoffman of New Jersey has been severely criticized for his recent activities in the Lindbergh kidnapping case, but the Governor deserves nothing but praise for his excellent magazine article, "When You Drive After Dark." The astonishing facts he brings out, which have been overlooked in most of the safe-driving campaigns, are that over half of the motor fatalities occur in the after-dusk rush hours when drivers are tired from a day's work and that the fatality rate of night accidents is 26 times higher than the day rate. As the article wisely points out, better headlights won't solve the problem. The only solution must come through a realization by drivers that a safe rate of speed during the hours of daylight becomes dangerous at night. Let's face the facts with Governor Hoffman and remember to increase our vigil while driving at night. Always Late Kansas University's large number of basketball fans have become divided into two groups, which could aptly be named the Majority and Minority. Both teams have a common affiliation; they both miss part of each home game. However, there is one point of difference in the two parties. The Majority group robs the Minority group of a chance to see the spectacle. The situation is this. A few enthusiasts come early, or at least before the starting time, find their seats, clap with the band, and perhaps discuss the outcome of the big event with their neighbors. The Majority group waits until play has begun, then straggles in, one by one. They either become a continual obstacle for the spectator, causing him to give up trying to see the game, or else they march in front of him, then hesitate to watch a play, and as a consequence gave the seated on-looked a stiff face. Not only does the Majority party block the vision of the prompt fans, but the members insist either on crawling over the Minority, pushing them into half the seat allotted them and gaining for themselves the other half, or trampling on the Minority's feet, in order to crawl up the stand. This party division causes a sad state of affairs. However, the entire audience at games realizes that one group is exhibiting poor sportsmanship. Pretty poor stuff for lovers of sport! The faculty at the University of Toronto passed a law prohibiting students from bringing stenographers to class with them to take lecture notes.-The Daily Princetonian. Anonymous Gifts Someone has forethought! Someone saw what dioramas — scenes made by a combination of sculpturing and painting—would mean to Dyche Museum of Natural History, when it is re-opened. Someone gave an anonymous gift of nearly $2,000 January, 1935. He specified that he wished it to be used for the construction of dioramas by "Peeo" Frazier. When the $2,000 was spent, this someone was so impressed by the pre-historic scenes of Kansas, vividly portrayed in the six dioramas completed, that he made another anonymous gift January, 1936 of $500 to continue "Poco's" work. The museum was closed to the public Nov. 30, 1932, because the floors were not safe. Reconstruction is at a standstill. Lack of funds! To re-open the museum and again display specimens worth a half-million dollars, $47,000 is necessary. ≈ A Costly "Ride" The people of the United States have been taken for a 10 million-dollar "ride." Swift and Co., one of the three largest packing firms in the country, intends to pocket that amount it will receive back in processing taxes "because we were forced to pay the tax." It was understood under the AAA that the company could not absorb the tax and that it would have to be passed on to the consumer. But the company claims it was impossible to pass the tax on because of "bootleg pork," that which was country killed and cured and on which no tax was paid, and the company had to pay it. The high price of pork during the life of the AAA indicates that the consumer did actually pay the tax, however. According to the financial records, Swift and Co. in 1935 enjoyed a big business increase over the preceding year and stockholders in the company received the largest dividend on their investment since 1932. Would this have been possible if the company had been forced to pay 10 million dollars in taxes out of their own reserve? Common business sense denies such an assumption. It appears that this sum of money is nothing more nor less than a gift from the government—and the taxpayer; unearned increment to Swift and Co. Undoubtedly, the same is true of large processors in other industries. Large sums are being refunded in the name of the processing taxes. Taxes not paid by the processor himself, but indirectly by the consumer through higher prices under the AAA. Thus the American taxpayer is finding himself paying millions of dollars in processing taxes which he has already paid before. Congress isn't openly criticising the Supreme Court, but secretly it must be sorry it gave the court that new building—The Wichita Eagle. Campus Opinion Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the author. Contributions are being solicited to copy the editor. Contributions length are unless stated to copy by the editor. Contributions are not accepted without prior written permission. Editor Daily Kansan: One gance at any of the college buildings along about 4 o'clock reveals a rather lamentable condition—sometime similar to the debris left by a tornado. Through the years, students have thrown candy wrappers, origami of paper, and other waste in every conceivable place, with a waste basket or container placed for its disposal. Is it necessary? Or is it just collegiate to be non-chant and careless? It doesn't seem possible that these students treat their homes as they misuse the property of the University. Too few students realize when they enter the Memorial Union that they are walking into a building dedicated to those men who made the supreme sacrifice for our country. Is it too much to ask the men of the University to remove their hats as they go into the Memorial Union? And it might be well for men and women to realize the importance of college so that visitors could see the interior of the University without having to make unnecessary detours. N. M. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Notices at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m. preceeding regular publication days and 11:30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issues, Vol. 33 FEBRUARY 14, 1936 No.94 BASKETBALL STILLEM AND USHERS: Sillemon report at 615; ushers at 635 Saturday night at the Basketball Hall of Fame. DER DEUTSCHE VEREBEN: Der Deutsche Vererbene sammeln sich mit Zeit den. February 17 um half hält ENGINEERING BOOK EXCHANGE: The Engineering Book Exchange announces its pay-off date, Monday at 10 a.m. (US) on the internet. Bernadine Berkley, Sekretauer. ESTES REUNION: A chill supper for all students who have attended the Estes Park conference will be held from 5:00-8:00 p.m. Sunday. There will be a fifteen- to-under-six-hour session on Friday or Fred Meier by Friday night. Nancy Calhoun. FIRST SEMESTER GRADES. Grades for the fall semester may be obtained from the Registrar's Office Friday and Saturday, February 14 and 15, by students unable to come earlier this week. Howard Moreland, Manager. George O. Foster, Registrar MEN'S PAN-HELLENCIS COUNCIL. There will be a meeting of the Men's Pan-Hellencis Council Sunday morning February 16, at 10:30 in the basement of the Men's Center. Fires will not be represented. Lloyd Morgan, Secretary. SCHOLARSHIPS: Applications for scholarships for next year may be made between the hours 3 and 5 p.m. Monday to Friday, inclusive, in Room 308B administration building. Applications must be filed by March 1. Mrs. Flora S. Boynton. Executive Secretarv. NOON LUNCHEN FORUM: A noon luncheon forum will be held today in the cafeteria at 12:30, Mr. C. A. Franklin will speak on "Negro Contributions to Culture." Harold Gregg, Forum Committee. Committee on Aids and Awards Frightful Ordeals for Neophytes No Longer Feature Mt. Oread's Hell Week Hell Week is again in the offing as a part of pre-initiation activities for the nene too unsuspecting freshman of the nationally organized Greek letter societies. But Hall Week does not strike terror to the hearts of the freshmen as it did in years past. In former times it was done by nuns, then ladies, mike hikes beginning at midnight, guarding tomatobats, and hunting black and white striped cats. The sororities place lighter penalties on their freshmen, confining their activities only to the ridiculous. Many of the sororites began their activities this week. This accounts for the number of girls walkin' around with sandals and carrying such things as umbrellas, old shoes, empty bottles, and market baskets. By Kathryn Cassidy. c'36 Hell week is an institution as old as organized houses themselves, and it is accepted as one of the most realistic traditions accompanying the wearing of a necktie and the nocturnal activities, have been curtailed by the police to such an extent that in 1928, the Men's Student Council went on record as favoring a bill embedding three departures from the old order mainly, the restriction of preinticipation and the confinement of all night maneuvers to the fraternity premises. Hell Week in the old sense of the word has really become a thing of the past as far as national social securities militaries on Mount Oread are concerned. Thus nothing is left of "Hell Week" as it was originally, but the vestiges which have been renamed "Health Week" or "Work Week" by several orchestras are now invagued in several organized houses and affords the activities an opportunity to have their rooms cleaned, floors waxed, and closets and drawers straightened. The reason for the formlessness of the city and into the countryside it was very dangerous, due to the risk of their being taken for prowlers. It --was not unusual for shots to be fired occasionally at a fraternity pledge proving through a barrary trying to find a cock of a certain size and color Hollywood Film Shop Hollywood—(UP) This giddy villaage has known many a two-fisted drinking man, but now comes forward with the appeal of attendance at the flowing bowl. The accomplishment is purely professional, of college. That description sounds legitimate because it seems, after all, that anyone who performs naturally in such a role doesn't have time to blueprint the process. "Now the often overlooked details of hiccups," he says. Paul Kelly, Arlington Judge, Mona Barrie and Gregory Katzer, both convicted of Trouble, Ernie could have them. Ernie Alexander, who currently has appearing in a "drunk" role in the Township Century-Fox production of "The Lone Ranger," is the expert of professional technique. He is a tectoaller - off-stage. However, Alexander takes his drinking, and its reaction, seriously when he imbibes before the cameras. In fact, he's taken it so seriously that he has broken down the state into fine points. "Twe not only discovered them, but I weaved them and am able to pro- duce a book. Throughout the course of OU course, the degree of intoxication an im required to portray is vivid in dis- tinction." "There are five distinct and separate varieties of hiceps," continued the expert after he had taken them. "Then comes the molar hiccup. It doesn't sneak up on one. It telegraphs the punch, as it were, and as a result the victim has about an even break. He forces the explosion to ricochet from molar to molar and hurts the nerve. "First, there is the plain bipeck. It is the first result of an attack by Demon Rum. It usually catches the victim unknowing, of course, with his mouth open. "last but not least is what I have termed 'The Big Bertha.' It is the most dangerous because it attacks the victim after he has been led to believe that the such suspense force that it mimics a disguise a tonal or an upper plate." "Thirthly, there is the silent variety It is complicated and sometimes can be concealed. That is, if no one is looking for you, you can body contour but no sound. "Next is the motionless hicup. It may be described simply—it is the reverse of the third type. It is, however, all sound and no body movement. That is, no body movement but those of the epiglottis and diaphram. When Alexander had concluded his scientific lecture, he smiled and relaxed in his chair. His mouth opened in a smile. Then he looked embarrassed. He hiccups. He closed his mouth as he checks puffed out his body. Afterward, he let it slide "Big Bertha" exploded. He ran to the water cooler and took ten hasty swallows. He finally went home for more water. The name Hell Weak was very misleading and much of the feeling against the custom was due directly to it. A few years later, the old-fashioned Hell Weak instituted the old-fashioned Hell Weak period and substituted one or more days during which pledges were placed on probation. Fraternities are slowly following in the steps of the sororites and Hell Weak is becoming a "pantheist" fear which none of the freshmen fear. The purposes of Hell Week may be to take down cocky pledges and to allow spiteful acts a last opportunity to humiliate a pledge. On the other hand, it is also a reason for these activities. It does draw the pledges together against the active chapter, and it does bring the active members together in a common bond. Remember, Hell Week is on and will continue until the young fraternity neophyte who are carrying shopping bags, and the sorority neophyte who insist on saying sly things to you and ask you to autograph an egg. It is a harmless noun used by the fraternity that result from its participation distrates from sliding down steps. There is a popular notion that Hell Week is a period when the pledge is physically and mentally tortured, subjected to inhuman devices and beaten severely. The truth of the matter is that the hell Week they have 'o understee the loss of sleep. Shanghai, Feb. 12. — (UP)—In a world in which the trend is toward greater concentration of power in the hands of governments, China steadily proceeds with a plan to return more and more political power to the people. Two Principles Outlined Carefully following the mandate of Dr. Sun Yat-sen, father of the Chinese Revolution, as expressed in his famous "Three Principles of the People," the head of China's political tutelage. In May of this year, China's constitution is to be put into its permanent form along the lines of western democracy and it will be adopted when the National People's Conference meets atanking on Nov. 12, 1966. | Until! then every effort is being made to promote self-government in every district under the direction of Gen. Chiang T-oo-pin, former ambassador to Japan and recently appointed Minister of the Interior. On June 1, 1931, a provisional constitution for the political tideupage was promulgated at Banking. It provided for rebuilding the Republic of China on the basis of two principles: First, Dr. Sun Yat-sen's "Three Principles," nationalism, democracy and livelihood of the people; second, administration of the government by five organs the Executive Yuan, the Legislative Yuan, the Judicial Yuan, Examination Yuan and the Control Yum. The Executive Yuan is the highest executive organ and has direct supervision and general direction over the various executive ministries and committees, the highest legislative organ and has the power to decide upon general legislation, budgetary questions, amnesties, declaration of war, negotiations for war and other matters of affairs. The Judicial Yuan is the highest judicial organ. The Examination Yuan conducts examinations for what amounts to China's civil service. The Central Yuan is the highest supervisory body in China and powers of its impeachment and auditing. China Proceeds With Plan To Return More Political Power to the People Tutelage Period Closing Among other things, the National Government's task during the period of political tutelage has been to train and guide the people in the exercise of the four political rights of election, initiation, recall and referendum. The Minister of Education and the Minister of the period and is doing all in his power to prepare the people for their new responsibilities. In the past five years, the provisional constitution has been revised and the new constitution will amend some its final form and in November the people themselves will meet to adopt it. China's masses are nearing the end of their political schooling and with the final adoption of their constitution they are now more aware among the democracies in the world. Monotone Lectures To Blame for Students Sleeping in Class China Has "Strong Man" The former commander of the Wham- China Has "Strong" But during this transition period, China has been generalissimo Chiang-Kai-shek. He dislikes and avoids the use of the word "dictator". The fact is, however, that the firm control he exercised over the recent Kuomintang meetings at the capital and the growing list of important post-secondary universities too weak to describe his present status. The former commander of the Wham- "Hypnotism involves the placing of the attention of the subject on some object and holding it there. Anyone who has a knowledge of the principles of hypnotism and a little practice in the art can be a hypnotist." The students who fall asleep in classes are not the ones to blame but the professors who lecture in monotones are to blame, says the Rocky Mountain Collegian. The students have been hypnotized. TORONTO COMMUNIST CLUB "When professors talk in a monotone voice and there is little disturbance in the room, the more susceptible are the students. I have done it myself," he continued. These are the conclusions reached by Dr. Myron C. Barlow, head of the psychology department of the University of Utah. It's hypnotism, pure and simple," said Dr. Barlow, waving a pencil in the air, "silent most of the hypnotists but one who is unmindful of their latest nouns." Toronto, Ont.—(UP) The University of Toronto Communist club is operating on the campus without interference from authorities, and will continue to unless members fail to observe University doctor Dr. H. J. Cody has announced. "I think we have adopted the wisti course," he said. "What students present most is to be treated as children. The organization will, of course, be required to observe all university regulations." poa Military Academy at Canton, early disciple of Dr. Sun Yat-sen and the only political survivor today of the triumvirate which carried on after Sun Yat-sen's death, is more than ever his keystone of the Kuomintang arch. When he speaks of nation-building, Chiang thinks of many things. In the regions recovered from the Communists, where his word as the supreme military commander was the only law, the effort and money he devoted to constructing markets, schools and other facilities has been widespread in a wide attention. In the New Life Movement* he has sought to remold the character of the people. ROCK - - - CHALKLETS Constructed by L M Conducted by J. M. The make-up editor of the Kansan did not miss Miss Ehcel Barrymore Colt make up for the show the other day and have had it. He only makes up excuses. Notice to Kanisan advertisers If you will take a lesson from Sally Rand you will be successful in your business. You will receive an access to a prudent use of white space. One of the most surprising things about college which we learn while here is that the professors are able to take place throughout their own lectures. The ice is 30 inches thick on some of the lakes around here. And when ice is that thick it is as hard to break as some lakes we know. Take it from us. Now is "hell week" for a good many of the sororites and fraternists. However, because of the state of the sororities, I think that hell is just about frozen over. We read in the paper the other day of a man and his family of 24 children, whose mother that's one of the causes of this hereb depression; to much over-production. The Supreme Court has declared Huey Long's tax on advertising unconstitutional. The press is free. (The University Daily Kansan THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS HARRY VALENTINE ASSOCIATE EDITORS BILL GILL ALMA FRAZIER Campus Editor Bill Ridgers Make Me Editors Diane Howe Downs Letter Editor Lennie Carr News Editor Domny Smart Postscript Editor Jeffrey Dugas Sunday Edition James Follangage Portland, Seattle educ and exclusive national advertising representative NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE, Inc. 420 Madison Avenue, New York City Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles Entered as second class master. September 17, 1916; at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas. Subscriptions price, per year, $3.00 cash in ad rance, $3.25 on payments. Single copies, 5c each. Kansan, however, is still $1.75 for the rest of the school year.) Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday more events, except school holidays by students in the department of Journalism of the University of Iowa, from the Press of the Department of Journalism. Ho hum. Thirty-nine more days until spring. Ad in New York Times: "Associated Ghost Writers, articles, fiction, speeches, written for you; editing. 11 West $2nd." That probably means that you will be haunted, if you use their stuff. Anyway, we know where all those Rhetoric 1 papers are coming from. We are advised that the Owl society will assist the junior class in sponsoring the Junior Prom. Let me see, not that doesn't give the Owl passes to the dance? You can't get around them guys for thinking up things like that. We are told that midwife weeks after this are to have an "amateur nurse" night feature. But from the looks of it, it's a lot of the boys, that is nothing new. CENTURY OLD PEAR TREES HAVE BORNE FRUIT SINCE 1818 Sim Rafael Calif.—(UP) Two-year trees planted more than a century ago by Franciscan fathers, give every inch of sunlight to the crop this summer. For half a dozen years past, the "crop" of the ancient apple tree was harvested from four to six pears each year. One of the trees still stands on the spot where it was originally planted in 1818, presumably by Father Vendru Fortuni, one of the founders of the Mission St. Pauwel Acamal. The sec. church was named an original orchid site to Boy's Park in San Rafael by the Women's Improvement Club. MEN and WOMEN this all purpose skin MENWEIN WOMEN FIGHT OVER the future of living Women say there's no shelter for the guarding skin against wind and wind, for keeping skin soft and smooth regardless of weather. Men sweat by it for mening the beard and protect the skin before shaving . . . after shaving. Keep it handy. SMALL ILASOL 25c LARGE 50c ALISOL BRIGHT LONDON COFFEE BEANS RICKERD-STOWITS Drug Co. "The Retail Store" Dk Brands 288 9th & Mass. Phone 238 SAVE with SAFETY at Mexall DRUG STORE PARKER PENS and PENCILS as low as 49c Drug Sundries - Toiletries - School Supplies Rankin's Drug Store 11th Mass. "Handy for Students" Phone 678 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14. 1926 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE THREE K Hill Society BEFORE 5 P.M. CALL KU, 21; BETWEEN 7:30 AND 9 P.M. CALL 2701K3 OR 2702K3. --established, is to the our hands ahead of the crisis. A satisfactory policy cannot be adopted without knowing the risks. Mr. Beira raised two questions that must be considered in relation to neutrality: should the United States maintain a neutral stand in the case of a European war, and would it be possible to remain neutral, Neutrality, or neutral? It stands to be said, stand, but it might be justifiable Yet America could avoid trouble by anticipating here trouble will begin. By lying up behind a principle, the United States could let the rest of the world know just where she stands, thereby preventing the activities of the belligerent nations. Douglas-Wedlin Marriage Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Douglas of Lawrence announce the marriage of their daughter, Loretta, to Paul Herbert Weldin, also of Lawrence. The marriage took place Sept. 14, 1933, in Stockton, Wis., home of Mr. Weldin's parents. The couple are now at home at 119 West Thirty-ninth street, Kansas City, Mo. Mrs. Wedlin received a B.S. degree from the University in 1934, and Mr. Wedlin is a sophomore in the Medical School at Roll Memorial hospital. Kappa Kappa Gamma announces the marriage of Mary Juliet萍会, c27 to Charles Stough, 173, member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity. The wedding was held at Temple Beth Israel in kabasa. Mr. and Mrs. Stough are at home at 1356 New Hampstead street. Shinman-Stough Marriage The following women were elected officers in Kappa Phi security Tuesday evening at the home of the M. F. Price President, Linda Goebbels, president Ime Goebbels, 'C8; secretary, Irene Moll, cmu!; corresponding secretary, Louise Doolittle, 'C3; treasurer, Violet Thompson, e38. Mrs. E. F. Price Professor, Ruth Hunter, H. B. Latimer, Hunt, Mrs. B. Latimer, Mrs. A. G. Midtellon, Mrs. E. F. Engel and Miss Edith Beech were chosen as patronesses. Balden Phum review "North Orchid" by Anne McCurry Lindbergh ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ The following were dinner guests at the Sigma Nu house last night: Rocester Blue, fa39; Athlea Woodbury, cuneil; Eleanor Fowler, cuneil; Mary Wynne, cuneil; William Warrington, wards, cuneil; Betty Aime, wards; Meredith Dyeen fa39; Marie Rocer, cutel; Marie Stevene, c37; Margia Louise Smith, c58; Catherine Turner, Mr. and Mrs. Warren, cutel; Van Mete, instructor in the Harvard Medical School, Harvard University. ☆ ☆ ☆ Phi Kappa Pai held initiation辜 vice last night for the following men: Arthur O'Donnell, c:29; Smith Ainsley Lunt, c:30; William Lunt, c:31; Charles Hibbell, c:41; Sidney Lake, c:29; Roy Steinheimer, c'unel; Lester Combs, c':29; Ceil Roberts, c':39; Sam Steele, c':39; Fenlon Daraud, c':40; George Bowles, c':30; Neal Williams, c':38; Barnes, c':38; William Anderle, c':29 and Joe Yew c'unel. The following were guests at the hour dance given by Delta Tau Delta fraternity last night: Maxine Laughlin, fa; 38; Elizabeth Allerdice, c; 36; Ether Gather, c; uncle; Mary Ellen DeltM, c; uncle James, fa; james; Bettrey Cremer, c; 37; James Cremer, c; Shearer, c; Lydia Allen Brown, c; virgin; Virginia Eagle, fa; 37; Mary Helen Fake, c; 39; Bety Eidson, c; 38; and Jacqueline Roberts, c; 36. Sigma Eta. Chi, Congregational church sorority, will hold an initiation and banquet at the Colonial tea room at 5:30 this evening. The following are to be initiated Wilma Arlene Irion, c:39; Virginia Rizzo, c:39; Elizabeth Raymond, c:39; Charlotte Jones, c:39; Alain Bigelow, c:39; Helen Rice, c:39; Margarita Osma, c:37; and Marcia Albert Seamans, c:37. Approximately 75 members of th KU University club attended the dinner held there Wednesday night at which Prof. W, W. Davis, of the department of history, told of his trip to Junan. Prof. F. Lawrence, of the college ford and Prof. D. L. Patterson were members of the dinner committee. ☆ ☆ ☆ Koppa Sigma will hold its anum, "black and white" dinner dance tonight at the chapter house. The chaperons will be Mrs. P. H. Klankenker, Mrs. A. J. Ojgen, and Mrs. W. H. White, St. Louise, Louise Kohn's orchestra will play. The University class of the First Baptist church recently elected the following officers: Paul Masouer, cunel, president; Genevieve Higinis, c39., vicepresident; and Guy Bixby, c38., cuncl, secretary. Prof. W, R. Maddox and Lloyd Meltz wered were guests at the Alpha Kappa Pai house Wednesday night Professor Maddox gave a brief talk "Business Opportunities in Government." ☆ ☆ ☆ --established, is to the our hands ahead of the crisis. A satisfactory policy cannot be adopted without knowing the risks. Mr. Beira raised two questions that must be considered in relation to neutrality: should the United States maintain a neutral stand in the case of a European war, and would it be possible to remain neutral, Neutrality, or neutral? It stands to be said, stand, but it might be justifiable Yet America could avoid trouble by anticipating here trouble will begin. By lying up behind a principle, the United States could let the rest of the world know just where she stands, thereby preventing the activities of the belligerent nations. ☆ ☆ ☆ Eleanor Fowler, cunet; Chelly Barnes, c'39; and Elizabeth Hannah, c'39, were luncheon guests at the Kappa Alpha Theta house yesterday. S. L. Sissock, Erie; Wim Tate, Kane City, Mo.; Blaine Hile, Chanute; Whib Lanning, Chanute, and Ken Burrell at the Phi Kappa Pai house. Corbain hall will entertain with a party party from 9 to 12 p.m. Chapelers will be Mrs. Eli Lewis and Mrs. Eta Cole. ☆ ☆ ☆ PHONE K.U. 66 ☆ ☆ ☆ TAILOR Louise Moor, c'uncel, was a dinner guest at the Kappa Alpha Theta house last night. Gamma Phi Beta announces the pledging of Jean Stephenson, c'uncel, and Marjorie Keen, r'uncel. Alpha Chi Omega entertained Sigma Phi Epsilon with an hour dance last night. ☆ ☆ ★ Mary Katherine Frith, c29, was a dinner guest at the Kappa Alpha Theta house Wednesday night. ☆ ☆ ★ George Moore, e'36, was a dinner guest at the Beta Theta Pi house last night. Elizabeth Runney, '35, Arkansas City was a guest at the Pi Beta Phi house yesterday. Joyce Champim, c'39, was a dinner guest Wednesday evening at the home of Prof. and Mrs. A J. Mix. Alpha Omicron II piled pledging services Wednesday for Flora Underwood c'39, of Lawrence. CLASSIFIED ADS Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S - 920-22 Mass. One Stop Clothes Service Station SCHULZ THE TAILOR 924 Mass. ☆ ☆ ☆ Chi Omega announces the pledging of Mary Katherine Rutherford, of Leavenham. TAXI FOR SALE: Our home at 115 Louisiana with furniture. Shown by appointment. Telephone 173. Florence M Hodder. 100 PHONE K.U.66 TAXI --established, is to the our hands ahead of the crisis. A satisfactory policy cannot be adopted without knowing the risks. Mr. Beira raised two questions that must be considered in relation to neutrality: should the United States maintain a neutral stand in the case of a European war, and would it be possible to remain neutral, Neutrality, or neutral? It stands to be said, stand, but it might be justifiable Yet America could avoid trouble by anticipating here trouble will begin. By lying up behind a principle, the United States could let the rest of the world know just where she stands, thereby preventing the activities of the belligerent nations. FOR SALE FOR COAL, FOR BRIQUETS—Phone 219, Kaw Valley Fuel Company. -9 AAAAAAAAAA TYPEWRITERS TYPEWriters: Monarchs and Remem- nants for sale. Rentals. Repair of all makes of typewrites. Call Kahn 932. – 95. SPECIAL-$50 reduction on any per- manent, with this ad, except Saturday $1.50 to $5.00, complete with hair cut, IVA'S BEAUTY SHOPS 732¹⁴ Mass, Phone 2353; 941¹⁴ Mass. Phone 533. BEAUTY SHOPS wdwsix five words or less, one insertion, 26$ three insertions, 56$ six insertions, 75$ contract years, not more than 25$ weeks, 85$ four month. Payable in advance and with advance deposit. BOYS: If you are looking for part time work inquire at 730 Massachusetts. Phone 646. -94. Student Loans MISCELLANEOUS ABE WOLFSON 743 Mass. --established, is to the our hands ahead of the crisis. A satisfactory policy cannot be adopted without knowing the risks. Mr. Beira raised two questions that must be considered in relation to neutrality: should the United States maintain a neutral stand in the case of a European war, and would it be possible to remain neutral, Neutrality, or neutral? It stands to be said, stand, but it might be justifiable Yet America could avoid trouble by anticipating here trouble will begin. By lying up behind a principle, the United States could let the rest of the world know just where she stands, thereby preventing the activities of the belligerent nations. FOUR NEW SINGERS CHOSEN OUR NEW SINGLES CHOSEN FOR PLACES ON GLEE CLUB Four new men have been selected to fill a vacancy in each of the sections in the Men's Glee Club, said Prof. J. A. Wilkins last night. Professor Wilkins, director of the club, said that the recent试训 were for the purpose of only four vancancies and that he was able to bring up a great amount of excellent material. The new men are: William Everritt, c'38, first tenor; Ed Hyatt, c'73, second tenor; John Riise, c'38, barton; and Blaine Grimes, c'39, bass. Fee Payments Show Gain Klooz Says 300 More Students Have Paid Than Last Year Announcing that nearly 3,400 students had paid their fees up to yesterday morning, Klar Kloeus, bursar, revealed that this figure represents an increase of approximately 300 over the number who had paid at the same time last year. This figure disregards almost 500 students who have enrolled for work this year, but have not as yet paid their fees. The Faculty of Arts and School at the University Hospital in Kansas City are also excluded from this tabulation. Complete and final figures on enrollment will not be ready until about March 1, but it is evident from preliminary checks that the number this semester will be slightly smaller than last. However, records show that attendance in the spring semester is always smaller than in the fall due to students' requirement of a percentage of students require an extra year to complete the work for their degrees and consequently graduate in the middle of the year. The business office yesterday began to assess the penalty of 50 cents additional for each day after the deadline, which was last Tuesday. All students who have not paid their fees by Tuesday, Feb. 19, will be withdrawn from their classes, according to Mr. Klooz. Topeka - Westhamb College will be loaded from noon today until Monday to enserve the fuel supply. The library and the field house will remain open. WASHIBURN COLLEGE TO CLOSE IN ORDER TO CONSERVE FUED Jay Janes to Usher at Concert Jay Jones to Usher at Concert Jay Jones will usher at the concert to be presented by the Vienna Boy's Club sometime in March, sometime in March, it was announced at a regular meeting of the organization yesterday afternoon in Fraser Hall. It was also decided to fill two memorial vacancies at the regular spring election. There will be a meeting of the Freshman Council of the Y.M.C.A. Monday, Feb. 17, at 7:00 p.m., in the Union Base. The meeting will be devoted to officers for this seminar. All those who join the Y.M.C.A. activities are invited to attend. Freshman Council to Elect THE Steel Highways ARE ALWAYS OPEN UNION PACIFIC RAILWAY anew, sleek process of Neutrality Possibilities Discussed at Meeting In discussing the possibility of remaining neutral in case of foreign war, Mr. Ise said that the United States government does not understand the principles that lead a nation into war. He argued that American officials' naive matter no longer how urgent its wish. This being true, America should join the force that is opposed to Fascism. Union Pacific trains carry you to and from your destination nominally, the delightfully reflecting air-conditioned Blanks for the filing of applications for aviation training with the marine air corps and the navy air corps have been received by Prof. Erald D. Hay, of the School of Engineering and Architecture. Information and blanks may be obtained at Professor Hay's office in room 117, Marvall hall. Education Conference Held Marine Air Corps Blanks Here (Continued from page one) Your Union Pacific Agent has new travel information and literature for you. Call on him today. The Regional Conference of the Progressive Education Association will hold at Wichita today and tomorrow. The conference will be held at Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma. Dr. Wheeler is to be one of the principal speakers at a meeting hold this afternoon. His subject will be "Proofs" and he will present Dr. Bert A. Nash will be chairman of a group discussing "Personality Difficulties as a Cause of Failure," this afternoon. Dr. R. H. Wheeler is a memoir panel that will discuss this question. Professors and instructors from the University who will participate in the program are: Dr. E, E. Bayles, Dr. Raymond A. Wheeler, Dr. J. W Twente, Miss Matte Ellsworth, and Miss Remesy Ketcham. It's smart to go by train! Swift travel—Safe—Certain. Dr. J. W. Twente will speak tomorrow morning before a section considering "Trends in Adult Education." Miss Mattie Ellsworth and Miss Rosemary Ketchem are members of an invited panel that will discuss "Trends in Education." The Progressive Educative Association is an organization of schools that is attempting to revise and improve present methods of education. The Association is fostering its change under the assumption that "education grows out of human experiences, rather than from the acquisition of information and motivation of skills for deferred needs." Ask about startling new economies and comforts of travel on Union Pacific trains. With rail fares at their all-time low, you simply can't afford to drive your car on 'cross country trips. Several University Professors To Take Part in Meeting at Wichita ENDS TONITE Gene Stratton Porter's "FRECKLES" PATEE SHOWS—3—7—9 2 MIGHTY 2 HITS SATURDAY UNION PACIFIC BERT WHEELER ROBERT WOOLSEY "THE RAINAKERS" to the Chapter "MIA RAINAKERS" SUN.-MON. WINHA SWAN RANDOLPH SCOTT KAY JOHNSON "VILLAGE TALE" "Broadway Hostess" Dr. Landes to Washington State Geologist May Have Kansas Geological Map Published Dr. K. L Landes, assistant state geologist, will leave for Washington, D.C. Sunday night to confer with officials of the United States Geological Survey concerning the publication of a Kansas survey map may recently completed. The preliminary map is drafted in black and white. If the United States Geological Survey consents to publishing the map it will be in one piece with the different formations shown by different colors. During recent months sections of the state map have been published by the state printer. The geological map shows the distribution of the various rock formations in the area, pyramid oolites and minerl products and different geologic forms. The see- 25c 'til 7 - Shows 3-7-9 GRANADA NOW! ENDS SATURDAY A menacing, baffling and blooding set of tangled circumstances in this gin tragedy that has been made possible by the hearts of two strangers! "TWO IN THE DARK" Walter Abel Margot Grahame And Big All-Star Cast X-TRA "STARLIT DAYS AT THE LIDO" A Musical Novelty With All Your Favorite Stars in Gorgeous Technicolor. Also Cartoon - News. Continuous Shows SUNDAY at 1-3-5-7-9 Contrary to Rumors We Are Not Increasing Our Prices on "CEILING ZERO." "CEILING ZERO." You Will See This Amazing Drama Which Held Meld New York Through a Solid Season at Our Regular Low Prices— 25c 'til 7 After 7 35c JAMES CAGNEY PAT O'BRIEN "CEILING ZERO" PRESENTS THE KANSAS PLAYERS IN A Modern Comedy by Ferenc Molnai OLYMPIA Make reservations early and avoid the late rush. Ticket office in Green Hall opens Thursday, Feb. 13. Office hours, 9 'til 12 and 1 'til 4. FRASER THEATRE February 17-18-19-20 Single Admission 50c Activity Tickets Admit. Exchange for Reserved Seats at Ticket Office, GREEN HALL — Phone 1742. tions of the map already published have been in great demand, especially by those engaged in oil and gas exploration. Over 75 per cent of those calling at the State Geological Survey office for information inquire about oil and gas. D. Drs. will stay in Washington until Saturday, February 22. While in Washington he will attend the annual meeting of the Society of American State Geologists held February 20 and 21. Shrimp — Any Time FREE Friday Night LARGE'S CAFE 9th & NW Formerly Gross' Lunch Ridiculous Sale of Left Overs The greatest savings of the entire Season. 53 TOPCOATS 86 TROUSERS 37 JACKETS 28 JACKETS 167 SHIRTS 178 NECKTIES 144 HOSE 99 HOSE 27 OXFORDS 77 PAJAMAS 47 MUFFLERS A twice-a-year cleanup of all short items at absurdly low prices. All sales final; no exchanges or C.O.D.s. 46 SUITS were $1.95 ... 97c were $1.00 ... 37c 50c-75c irregulars ... 23c regular 50c ... 37c were $5.00 ... $ 2.97 up to $2.50 ... $ 1.27 $1.45 to $3.50 ... ½ off to $7.95 ... ½ off up to $4.95 13 Toilet Cases $12.00 $12.00 $ 2.77 $ 3.77 $ 2.97 97c 37c 23c 37c $ 2.97 $ 1.27 ½ off ½ off And plenty of other items. The Palace 843 Massachusetts As seen in VOGUE Elynor Fashions You'll date on Elynor Fashions, for their wide shoulders and dress maker tricks with more or ribbon and their ning contrast with the Romaine crepe! And Fashion is such a great you won't have to wom to own a varied spring w on your clothes - bu have it! Sizes 12-20. Weaver's PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1936 CUNNINGHAM MEETS VENZKE SATURDAY Jayhawk Miler Resumes Competition With Old Foe Upset in Wanamaker Mile Indicates Real Test For Kansan Glenn Cunningham, holder of the world's record in both the indoor and outdoor mile, will resume his rivalry on the board track tomorrow night in the New York A. C. meet, when he matches stride with Gene Venake, who conquered him for the first time in the Wanamaker weeks ago, in the Wanamaker mile. Joe Mangan, who won the Wannaker event, will probably not be in the race, as he was put to bed with a case of "fau" after losing to Venkee in the Hunter mile at Boston last Saturday. Mangan Not Competing This will be a disappointment to track fans who would like to see the dispute between the former Cornell track captain and the Kansas飞床 fitted for good. Cunningham took an awful wazze when he defeated Mangan, but the fans claimed that Cunningham had cut over in front of Mangan at the finish to keep Mangan from passing him. Prominent sports writers claimed, however, that Cunningham was in no way disrespectful to the team nor does the treatment afforded him. Venzie will give Cunningham all he can ask for in the coming race, as the Pennsylvania lad has been on the upgrade for the past two years, and this year has turned in some surprising performances in his three races. When he finished ahead of Cunningham in his first game, Venzie said that it was the first time he had anything like Glenn but his back since he had been running against him. Bonthron Threatens Cunningham won the Baxter classic last winter, breaking the meet record of 410, set by Venkite in 1932. Cunningham's blend of Venkite with a time of 409.8 Bill Bonnthorpe, who finished third in the 1935 meet, rosed out Cummingham in 1854 with a time of 4:14. Cunningham in the 1936 meet with a time of 4:14.3. Cunningham won the Wanamak race when he was actually in no shape to run. He admitted that he had been studying a lot, losing much sleep, and then falling ill during the race. When he bid New York farewell after the race, he declared he was going home for a long session with Morpheus, and given nine hour night a trip to two weeks he should reverse his previous performances. Cunningham's cue is to copy the tactic he used in last year's Baxter miler when he reached the halfway post in 2.014. He had such a lead at this point over Venkze that he slowed down on the last half. Companies Are Showing More Interest in Collegiate Personnel Business Seeks Graduates "Business organization are showing more interest in collegiate personnel this year than any time since 1980." Frank Stockton, dean of the School o Business, stated yesterday. The placement bureau has made employment contact with 15 firms which are seekers for positions to represent to the University to interview seniors in the School of Business. Not since the period of 1926-30, when graduates had from six to eight offers of positions, have business firms shown so much interest in securing college graduates for their personnel. The placement of last year's graduates was quite similar to that of current students being unemployed at present, but more interest is being shown this year. The following companies are among those that are granting interviews to senior students: Socony-Vacuum Oil Co. W, W T Grant (chain department store) General Electric Co. Goodway Co. Fireside Inc. Harvester Co. Travelers Life Insurance Co., General Motors Co. and a packing plant in St. Louis. NAZIS CONTINUE CAMPAIGN AGAINST CATHOLICS AND JEW Berlin, Feb. 13.—(UP)—Nazi Germany's campaign against Catholic and Jewish "enemies of the state" was intensified today. Albert Immel, a Catholic priest, was sentenced to a year in prison after he defended on charges of "missuing the pullet" and "malignly attacking the Nazi party and the State." The sentence was the most severe of the recent series of cases against priests and Protestant ministers charged with political offences. Glenn Attacked Miler's Attitude Toward Nazis Blamed By Clarence P. Oakes, 22 (Special to the Daily Kansan) New York, Feb. 13 — Glenn Cunningham, idolized by eastern fans and press during the two preceding weeks of the war, is stinging of boos and jeers now for the first time in his spectaculair career. He has even been accused of intentionally elbowing a d. n. blocking opponents, and that he will be to entirely foreign to his nature. The inside story is that the Kansas flyer is paying the penalty for being honest in reporting to the American Olympic Committee his impressions of the climate. He was used by the committee in combing anti-participation sentiment, was in part, "I feel that the situation regarding the discrimination against certain students in Germany is greatly over-emphasized," the summer of 1933, when I competed in Germany, there was some talk in this country about discrimination there, but my personal observation failed to justify an justification for such public-ty." His Word Carries Weight As one of the few American athletes who had competed in Germany since the Nazi regime took over, his word carried considerable weight with the men who decided the issue. This aroused the resentment of some liberals, radicals, Jews, and other anti-Nazi elements against Cunningham and others, while some of the indoor brand of track. Some who have let international athletics get the better of their sportmanship have turned bitter on Glenn. One of the sports writers not affected by the current hysteria, George Trevor of the Sun, quotes this bit in his columna: "We were so shameful abuse he took from supposedly well-bred boxholders at the finish of the race. They jeered him boorishly and called him all kinds of 'bastard' and heart-beatened when he took the train West." But the great majority of eastern cats quietly resent these unwarranted ferrets and influential few, and will be on hand at the Baxter Mile to show him that they still believe in him as his remarkable mille contemporaries. --at the K F K U --at the February 14-Friday 2.30 p.m., Music Appreciation Hour. 6.00 p.m., Athletic Scrapbook, 137th Edition. 6:15 p.m., Musical Program, arrangee by Carl A. Preyer, professor of piano. February 15—Saturday 6:00 p.m., Musical Program, arranged by Alice Moncrieff, associate professor of voice. Wrestling March Postponed The wrestling match between Kansas and Missouri, scheduled for tonight at Columbia, has been called off because the team is unable to sendencing to Dr. F. C. Allen. The meet will probably be held at a later date. SPECIAL for Friday DELICIOUS Clam Chowder 10c Also Fillet of Haddock Tartare Sauce Salmon Plate 心 Glenn Cunningham Men's Intramurals CAFETERIA Intramural basketball games Wednesday night resulted in victories for the Hellhounds, Beta "B", Sig Eps S A E "B", Phi Pai, and the Johnson All Stars. The most exciting were those between the Phi Pai and Phi Gam, and the Johnson All Stars and the Johnson All Stars, before to Beta "B", McNaughton of the Phi Pai was high, with 10 points against the Phi Gam, O'Dell of the Johnson All Stars scored 21 points in helping the All Stars win from Rock Chalk II, 33-17. In volleyball, Sigma Nu beat A T O 21-11, 19-11, and 21-25. HILARY BALKOVA Rock Chalk II II 29 From f m I 1 Schrew f 0 0 Schrew f 0 0 House g 1 0 House g 1 0 Nelson g 0 0 Nelson g 0 1 Reed g 2 0 The famous Kansas miler will compete Saturday night in the annua Baxter mile to be run in New York. 12 5 14 Phi Shi 29 Phil stm f 1 0 f Aimsw th f 1 0 Mnict m .3 c Mnbct t .3 c King g 1 ___ ___ Johnson A. S. Z. Haworth f 1 0 D Dell f 2 0 O O 2 0 Stark c 0 1 Johnson g 1 Patrick g 0 1 Patrick g 0 1 Women's Intramurals S A E B "A" 41 Winters f 3 4 0 Barben f 5 0 0 Allspa f 4 0 0 Morley f 2 0 2 Morley g 2 0 1 Raeder g 2 0 0 12 9 PGiam GIam Harwu f 2 Goude, f 2 0 Harmon, f 0 0 Bucker, t 0 0 Kellg, t 0 0 Kell g, t 0 0 Hellhounds 32 Fleeson f 1 1 Ward f 5 31 Kreuger c 3 0 Heldr'h g 3 0 Kimbee g 2 1 Alpha Delta Pi won the basketball game last night with a score of 23-3 against the Pi Phi's. The winner will play Corbin hall to decide the intramural championship next Tuesday night, Feb. 18. 18 5 3 Daih C17 18 Ondrafa D17 Hays f 3 1 1 Longan c 2 1 1 Birney g 2 0 3 Sorino g 1 0 3 The I.W.W.'s, independent pong team, won the championship last right, 2-1, from the Alpha Gamma Delta's. In the first set, Edwards and Montgomery, I.W.W., w恩 from Pearson and Star. Alpha Gam. In the second, Potter and Young, the Alpha Gam. Young and in the third, Baker and Andrews, I.W.W., w against Krebs and Jennings, Alpha Gam. The players for Alpha Delta Pi were Teagarden, Smith, Muriel Manning, Pope, Ware and Janet Manning. On the Pi Phi队 were Perry, Short, Kiene, Jones, Lemon and Jenkins. Weaver's SPECIAL Phi Holl D IIF "H" 2 Pha s F 2 1 Wright f 0 1 B'dn ahl 0 1 M'Coy c 1 0 I'hargg g 0 1 H'argg g 0 1 14 4 1 Sig KiP Kip Ko $ kUFs 2 5 Ewing f 5 1 Herbert f 1 1 Gerwe g 1 1 Miller g 1 1 "WHEN HEALTH AND COMFORT ARE INVOLVED, I BUY ONLY THE VERY BEST." 14 4 Coes Drug 26 Sizemore f 1 0 Ledb' f 0 0 White c 8 0 Nuzum g 1 0 Pecabush g 3 0 Elizabeth Arden's Tooth Paste CALL in the night for a hot water bottle. The discoverer that the one you have is leaky is closed. A blood of suffering. 13 0 That's when you find that quality in payees in Rubber Goods. Play safe! Buy guaranteed, Retested Quality in Rubber Goods. Retested pays extra dividends in health and comfort. They last longer. GUARANTEED Roncalli RUBBER PRODUCTS RICKER-STOWITS Drug Co. "The New York Times" 9th & Mass. Phone 238 SAVE with SAFETY at The Jessell DRUG STORE 19c reg. 35c Fresh SILEX COFFEE An invigorating stimulant. at the UNION FOUNTAIN Borough Hospital --for the rest of the year FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY The Mardi Gras of Kansas University BEAUX ARTS BALL IT'S GOING TO BE STUPENDOUS MAGNETIC GIGANTIC COLOSSAL In Fact, It's Going to Be Darn Good Fun WITH Hilarious Entertainment Serpentine Favors The First Real Costume Party Red Blackburn's Band $1.00 Couple - Stag FRIDAY--February 14 Union Building 9-12 The DAILY KANSAN Now Only $1.75 The Kansan is the only medium for keeping in touch with all the Hill news. There's no substitute for your college newspaper. Have the report of all the activities, at your own room, in your own Kansan, regularly. The Convenience of having your own Kansan is well worth the money Call at the Kansan Business Office in the Journalism Building and turn in your subscription the first thing tomorrow. 1.63 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas NUMBER 95 VOLUME XXXIII --on the SHIN By BUD EVANS, '36 Prize Winners at the Beaux Arts Ball . . . Conspirators at Work . . . A New Find in the Dramatic Dept. . . This and That. The Beaust Arts ball was quite a success—fancy decorations, unique costumes, novel entertainment, good music, and some fun; kid! Bette Wasson, Chi Omega, won the prize for having the most beautiful dress as dressed at Mae West. (Seems more than one girl went West, and there is no telling how many young men did) Frank Ewing, from the Sig Ep Ledge, drew down first prize for the males in his indian garb. And this reminds the "Snow" of a good story—'oil Frank, same of the Ewings, failed to get his costume from hine in time for the ball, so he decided to borrow one from out Haskell way. He also wanted to get one (costume for date—being the thought that he was going to be there). They asked Frank what size he wore, and he told them. Next, they asked him what size he desired for his date. Frank said, "I don't know, but she's a Fi Phi." This was really giving the Indian a fair rough estimate, and the man kept him a costume with no further delay. Later, he going out at Haskell? Hear that the "steady" of Paul Rogers, Kappa Sag basketballer, isn't as faithful at times—as she might be. Rogers received a telegram upon his arrival in Norman for the Oklahoma tilt last week from Mary Frances Martin. Cal Queen's alluring asking (or was it telling) permission for a date with "Slicker." We are where he gets his shots. So Berkeley has quite earned up done on a crisip—you might say). didn't answer said telegram, but, Mary Frances knew he wouldn't mind, anyway, so she had the date. And speaking of this sort of thing—there's another compassor, by name of Wallingford Big Sig, who followed Wallingford sorts after brother Ebling's interests while Ray is away on basketball trips. A fine assistant with Mr. Ebling in a brother Big Sig Alp. Was told that Dusinie Tubbs, Sigma Chi bewareweight, and Ann Horton, via the Pi Phi house, sat in the theater the other afternoon for fifteen minutes after the program was over. Hereafter—someone beamed at me. Maybe they were waiting for spring, but anyway love—you funny thing! Preston Anderson, erstwhile Hill bandman, and Norma Wallace, singer for band and bandman, are hitting it off in fair shape. Nice work Preston—in another week or so, maybe you won't even have to pay her rent. And then again—there are always two sides to every argument. A.T.O.'s Still Quarantined Understand the dramatic department has uncovered a new actress — the like of which hasn't been seen on this here Hill in many a day. It's also one of the few girls for girl who has never before taken part in a real honest-to-good play. She has the title role in the production "Olympia," which starts its run next month. It stars Emma Swan, Smith, a Theta. She deserves a big hand, and we will think she's get it Fifteen Men Have Positive Reactions To Scarlet Fever Test Fifteen students from the ATO fraternity will remain under quarantine for a week as a result of their positive reactions to the Dick test which show no symptoms. They are according to Dr. Ralph I, Canutone of Watkins Memorial hospital. All members of the fraternity were given the test after E. D. Bolin, c38 was taken to the University hospital last Tuesday suffering from the dis- The 15 students will be quarantined until they show negative reactions to the test. Other students in the house will be quarantined unless more cases develop. Dr. J. M. Mott, city health officer said yesterday that only the one case had been reported to him. Bolin was reported yesterday as being considerably improved. Einstein Pupil Locates Astonishing Star In Outer Space Dr. Sergei I. Gipsochak, a former professor of Einstein, recently discovered "25"th the celestial champion in space at the Harvard College observatory. The scientific name of the star is "S2" Canis Majoris, which means that it is the twenty-ninth in the constellation of the Great Dog. Dr. Gaposhnik estimates that it is 1,000,000 times heavier than the earth for the same distance. It weighs 42 acrethousand, as compared with the weight of the earth which scientists estimate to be 147,000. This champion is known to be 100,000 times brighter than the sun, which obviously puts the latter in the shade. Dagepichok estimates that the heat on Gaspicon of the star is 65,000 degrees Fahrenheit of seven million degrees at the interior. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1936 Old "29" which is 20,000 light years away, or some 111 quadron miles, has been known to astronomers for 2000 years, but Dr. Gaproskin discovered the fact that it held the heavyweight title of the universe. 'Olympia' Opens Monday For Run of Four Days After Performances Here Play Will Make Road Tour of State More tickets have been reserved for the Monday evening performance of "Olympia" than for any of the other nights, it was reported yesterday. Due to the cancellation of Boys on Wednesday, the play audience on that night will probably be the smallest of the run. Those who have not reserved their tickets will find good seats more easily obtainable for Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday nights. The play "Olympia," by Ference Molar, is a suave comedian comedy recognized as one of the outstanding works of the author. The characters often revolve around the roles and the action takes place in a hotel, in an exclusive resort in Hungary. The production has been presented in nine languages and in nearly every European city. York in 1926 and Alfred Lunt and Lyon Fontaine have picked it as a future vehicle. The Kansas Players night in its midwest premiere. Professor Allen Crafton and Mrs. Crafton will be featured in the play, with other parts being taken by Betty Kearns, Christopher Charles Pipkin and Donald Dixon. After its run of four nights in the Fraser theater, the play will be "ten." After its run of four nights in the raster theater, the play will be taken y the Kansas Players on a road tour f the state. Return From Conference Cancellor E. H. Lindley, R. H. Wheeler, professor of psychology, Bert Nash, associate professor of education, Ernest E. Bayles, associate professor of education, returned yesterday from the regional conference of the Progressive Education Association, which was held in Wichita, Feb. 14 and Professors Take Prominent Part in Education Meeting at Wichita Professor Wheeler was one of the principal speakers Friday at the Alli hotel, where 2,000 educators had gathered. He is in the field of mental hygiene. A panel discussion followed the speeches. Representing the University of Kansas in the panel discussion were Professors Nush and Wheeler. Others participated in the discussion were Dr. Cedric Hogan, Professor Robert Bridgen of Friends University, and Dr. Grayson Kefauver, Dean of Education in Stanford University. Professor Nash asked as chairman of the panel discussion on "Personality Difficulties as Cause of Failure," Professor Bayles sat on the Friday Professor Bayles sat on the Friday morning panel discussion progressive education, and one on "Individualization in Education," Saturday morning. Nebraska, generally fair in north, ossibly snow in south, continued cold unday. Monday cloudy, probably with now and not so cold in south por- THE WEATHER FORECAST Kansas, snow Sunday or Sunday light and probably Monday, continued old Sunday. Not so cold Monday in est and south. At 11 p.m. last night the thermometer registered 4 degrees above zero. The high for the day was reached at 2 p.m. when the mercury reached 10 above, and it started a steady decline soon after. Venzke Defeats Jayhawker Miler In Thrilling Race Glenn Is Unable To Match Blistering Pace Set By Pennsylvania Athlete New York, Feb. 15—(UP)—Never able to turn the trick in more than 29 races, Gene Venkze of the University of Pennsylvania tonight finally won a mile race in which Glenn Cunningham of the University of Kansas was a participant. Venken's time was 4:10.2, the fastest mile of the winter. Venzie set a blistering pace to whip the western speedster in the feature of the New York Athletic Club's twenty-fifth annual track and field meet in Madison Square Garden tonight before 15.000 cheering spectators. His victory, Venzek proved that his second place ahead of Cunningham in the Milrose meet two weeks ago was not enough. The record holder took the lead, going into the ninth lap of the eleven-lap race and fought off Cunningham's famous finish kick and ended the grid a good distance from one of the man who holds the world mark. Venzie, who has been trying to capture a race from Cunningham for almost three years, held command of the situation throughout. With Joe Mangan of Cornell University, the lad who whipped both Cunningham and Venzie in a cold, hot rain, cold, tonight's grind developed into a two-man battle with Venzie finally returning to the form which made him the terror of the pine boards in 1932. DR. JOHN BENNETT TO SPEAK AT NOON LUNCHON FORU! Glen Dawson, formerly of the University of Oklahoma, was third at less than 25 yards behind Cunningham. Dr. John Bennett, professor of Christian theology at Aucunb Anthropological Seminary, will speak to a noon Lunch Forum next Friday at the cateriare. In addition to his speech at the Forum, Dr. Bennett will speak at 4:30 on "The Christian Message for Individual and World Cultism," at 3:30 on "Standards for Personal and Social Action" at Westminster hall. German Club to Meet The council on religion, headed by Ralph McKibbin, e37, is sponsoring the meetings. The German Club will have its first meeting of the second semester next Monday at 4:30 in room 313. Fraser, a program of games and singing has held Retrainings will be served. All members in German are invited to come. Negro Editor Speaks C. A. Frankin, Negro editor of the Kansas City Call "Kansas City, Mo." poke briefly on "Negro Contributions we're in" on a luncheon Forum Friday. Fine Arts Vespers Today The School of Fine Arts will present the forty-ninth All Musical Vespers at 4 p.m. today in the University Auditorium. Men's Glee Club Will Make First Appearance of Year From New York came the request from a man, who according to his letter, had been a minister in schools, caps and gowns, and novelles to schools and churches. This man wanted information concerning the success of the bureau and how it was handled. The bureau has received numerous requests from persons outside of Lawrence who desire names of students with whom they can correspond. One young man in Oxage, Okla, wrote requesting the name of a woman and included the 10 cent fee, adding that he had a friend named and additional 25 cents. The name was sent, but the bonus never was received. Although it has received no recent publicity, the University date bureau is still functioning, and according to the creator and manager, quite successfully. The manager states he has been successful in that application, and that applications are plentiful. The program will be opened by G. Criss Simpson, organist, who will play Ropez "Concert Overture in B Minor." The Men's Glee Club will make their first public appearance of the year by presenting "Passing By" by Purcel and "Now Is the Month of Maying" by Morley. They will close the program with a concert number from the second act of "The Desert Song" by Romberg. In this last number Program will have won Origen will have solo parts. The club will be directed by Professor Wilkins and accompanied by Clarence Bridenstine. Then the University String Quartet composed of Prof. Walderam Gelch, first violin; Carl McGrew, second violin; Karl Kue斯特er, violin; and Raymond Stubl, cello, will offer Haydyn's "Quartet in G Minor." Prof. and Mrs. Joseph Wilkins will sing as a duet "I Weep Because They Have Taken My Lord Away" (from Shakespeare's *Twelfth Night*). Jan Chaphusse will use as accompanist. University Date Bureau Continues To Thrive on Campus Lonely Hearts The bureau has several dozen applicants from women students and nearly as many from men. The "deluxe" service offered by the bureau is not as extensive as the other administrative manager states. The "deluxe" service is that offered to those who desire a date with a specific individual and costs 25 cents, while the ordinary service is merely the arranging of a date with an available, and costs only 10 cents. "Andante con moto from Trio in E Flat" by Schubert will be presented by the New University String Triade made up of Karl Kueisterein, violin; Raymond Stuhl, cello; and Ruth Orcutt, piano. Bitter Feud at Wisconsin Ends in Athletic Shakeup Spears, Meanwell, Fallon Are Fired Following Coffee Sniking Madison, Wis., Feb. 15—(UP)—Two years of wrangling, intigret and bitter personal food in the Wisconsin athletic facility where he was recently regents fired. Dr. Walter E. Meanen, athletic director, and Dr. Clarence W. Spears, head football The controversy was the most drastic in the strife-torn history of Badger sports. With out them went William "Billy" Pallon, veteran trainer who put whiskies into a bottle to drink between the halves of important games. Falcon said he had been ordered to spike the coffee by 14 oz. and have it the contrary, previously when Dr. Meunwell admitted giving whisky to two football players after the Northwestern TICKETS WILL GO ON SALE FOR W. C. STEVENS' DINNER Tickets for the dinner to be given Prof. W. C. Stevens of the botany department, Friday, Feb 21, at the Eldred hotel will be on sale Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, at the botany business office, and the Eldridge hotel. siring the names of three girls with whom he could correspond. The dinner, to be given by friends and former students, will mark Dr. Stevens' 75th birthday. Several requests have been sent in by girls in near-by towns wishing to join the men's car pool of cars among the men applicants have made it difficult to arrange dates for them. All applications from Lawrence have been from students, except one, which was the application of a local school teacher who wished a date with a widower between the age of 45 and 50. The manager wrote back and told her that no one of that age had made application to the bureau but, if any of the former were satisfied with the university applied, he would try to arrange the date. Practical狱者, nearly caused the failure of the bureau, have not been able to find someone to apply this type of applicant, the manager phones each time he receives an application to find out if it was sent by the person signing it and not by some KANSAS SMOTHERS AGGIES IN 'NAISMITH NIGHT' GAME The manager feels the bureau is successful, and he has every intention of continuing it. Information to be sent with the application is: name, age, height, weight dancing ability, make of car, and a photograph. This information should be sent to the Date and Time application for a date costs 10 cents. A date with a specific individual costs 25 cents. Naismith Honored As the Originator Of Popular Game Tribute Paid to Inventor of Basketball; Hailed Enthusiastically By Crowd "Don't be afraid to work for humanity and wait for your reward," said Dr. Naismith, the originator of basketball, speaking at the ceremony held in his honor between halves of the Kanada State basketball game last weekend. "People tell me I could have made a million dollars if I had anticipated the popularity of basketball." Dr. Nishatmushi said, with a millionaire and a great deal demeanion when I think of the thousands of friends I have made throughout the world. The appreciation of his work in originating a game that has achieved such great popularity has been reward groom for him. When the idea of basketball was first conceived, Dr. Naimsih had no ideas the game would develop as it has. He attributes this development to the desire of all young people for activity, teamwork and skill required to play the game. Expresses Appreciation Dr. Naismith extended his thanks to the man who had studied basketball and developed it to the point of perfection that was displayed on the court last night. He also expressed his appreciation for the work of those who have carried the game to foreign countries. These men deserve special thanks, Dr. Naismith stated, for basing their work not part of their regular work. In conclusion, Dr. Naisim thanked the people of the country who, through their contributions, and attendance at basketball games, are making it possible to visit the Olympic games in Germany this summer. A two-minute ovation was given Dr. Naismith by students and townpeople of Lawrence when he was introduced to the honored honoree when Charles Louk, chairman of the Douglas District Boy Scout organization, presented him with a Boy Scout handbook in behalf of a million young boys throughout the nasc- Chancellor Praises Naismith Chancellor Lindley in introducing Dr. Charles Lauren who has left traces of himself throughout the world. "By his work, he not only brought into being a great recreational game" the Chancellor said, "but also gave him a new contribution to the building of strength and character in young people all over the world. He is a man whose influences have gone farther than that of any other in history." In speaking of the importance of the sports program in modern life, Chancellor Lindley stated that one of Dr Naismith's most important contributions was the bridging of the seasonal gap between football and baseball. He said, "The team is more confident and attitude of the man who originated one of America's most popular sports." During the ceremony, Boy Souts passed through the audience receiving donations toward the fund to finance the complimentary trip of Dr. and Mrs. Naismith to the Olympic games. Ed Naismith, the sports director, was chairman of the program. DESIGN DEPARTMENT HEAD TO SPEAK AT ART MUSEUM Miss Rosemary Ketcham, head of the department of education and public school art at the University, will speak at the University Museum Tuesday. Feb. 18. at 7:30 p.m. Miss Katemba's subject will be, "The Story of Textiles". Her lecture will be given at the Museum through the co-operation of the departments of architecture, design, and painting, and the adult education department of the museum. The public is invited to attend. Fay Movs Librarian Ie Ill Fay Moy, Librarian, Is II Miss Fay Moy, who is in charge of the library has been absent from the library during the past week because of illness. LEADING SCORERS Player Gns. G. 43 F. 27 T.P.Ave. Ebring, Kan. 6 15 F. 10 T.P.av. Livingstone, Neb. 8 17 F. 10 T.12 Livingstone, Okla. 3 15 F. 4 34 11.25 Groves, K.� 3 15 3 9 10.7 Burns, K. S. 6 18 25 61 10.16 Flemming, I. S. 1 6 28 64 10.14 Whitaker, Neb. 8 30 10 70 8.75 Wilson, K. S. 8 30 10 70 8.50 Morton, Okla. 6 19 10 70 8.40 Pralle, Kan. 7 22 5 70 7.00 Parsons, Kan. 7 22 5 70 7.00 Todd, Mo. 3 6 8 10 6.67 Allen, Kan. 3 6 8 9 45 6.43 Stron, Mo. 7 17 8 8 42 6.00 Moore, Kan. 7 17 8 8 42 6.00 Powell, Kan. 7 17 8 8 42 6.00 Wyandotte Debaters Win Tournament Here Lawrence and Ottawa Tie For Second Place Among Seven Wyndale High School of Kansas City, Kan., yesterday won the second district debate championship of class 1A and Ottawa and Ottawa tied for second place. The seven debate teams, composed of an affirmative and negative team each, debated upon the question "Re-enter citizenship?" Each court legislation providing for a system of complete medical service available to all citizens at public expense." The tournament, which started at 10 o'clock in the morning, was held in Fraser theater. The Wyandotte team now will be eligible to enter the state tournament which will be held at the University Feb. 28 and 29. Other teams participating in the tournament were Pedia, Garrett, Garnett, Lawrence, and Atchison. The tournament was worked on a round-robin basis, with two rounds held in the morning and three in the afternoon. Judges of the tournament were Dr. J. Smith, W. C. Chubb, W. C. Nystrom, Prof. W. E. Sandelius, Prof. B. J. Smith, Miss Helen Waagsfall, Merelaeus Litus, 137, Prof. H. E. Chandler, and Prof. E. N. Dean. The tournament held here yesterday distributed to the districts of the state are sponsored by the University Extension Division, of which H. G. Ingham is director. A Capella Choir Will Sing Pretentious Anthem to Be Presented at Granada Theater This morning at the Union church services in the Granda theater, the Westminster A Capella Choir will sing the most pretentious anthem of its 1936 concert program. It is a number entitled "O God, Hear My Prayer," by the eminent Russian composer, Mikhail Korovin, who years ago spent nearly a week in Lawrence and gave a recital of his own works at the University. The work is very difficult and the choir under Dean Swainthorth's direction has devoted several weeks of intensive study in its preparation. It is a work of major proportions, taking some eight to ten minutes to perform. Much of the composition is written for divided voice parts, often running to seven-part harmony which gives an orchestral quality For the offerty solo; Charles Neiswender, a bartolomei声在 the chair will sing the new and dramatic setting of "The Lord's Prayer," by Malotte, dedicated to and often sung by the great American barton, John H. Kellogg, who gave a recital here last spring on the University Concourse. Dr. Robert A. Hunt, of the First Methodist Episcopal church, will devise a method for organizing the union in the union include the First Methodist, Plymouth Congregational, First Baptist, Unitarian, First Christian, First Church, Side Presbyterian, and the Friends. Student to Review Book George Cronemeyer, c38, will review "The Revolt of the Masses" by Prof Ortega y Gasset at the K. U. Peace Action Committee meeting Monday afternoon at 4:30. Prof. Ortega y Gasset is a Spanish and is prominent in Spanish politics. His influence is felt throughout the world. Alfred C. Ames, chairman, extended a greeting to all who are interested to attend. EBLING PILES UP THIRTEEN POINTS IN 52-34 VICTORY Outcome Never in Doubt As Allen Quintet Forges Ahead in First Moment of Game STAND 23-14 AT HALF Jayhawk Scoring Ace Has Tallied Over 400 Points In College Play The Kansas Jayhawkers, paced by Ray Ebling and Ray Noble, continued their march toward an undefeated season by turning back the Kansas State Wildcats, 52-34. last night. Ebling scored 13 points to lead the scoring for the evening, and with less than a minute to play in the first half, scored the four hundredth point in his college career. Noble and McCormack had but Ebling made three free throws. Frank Groves, All-Big Six center last year, made nine points to lead the scoring for the Wildcats. Brilliant guarding on the part of Noble kept the Wildcat ace from scoring more. The Jayahawks took the lead at the start on two quick baskets and a free throw by Eling. They were never headed. Early in the game, Noble pulled up within seven points of the Kansu, but that was as close as they ever came to 'ead. Kansas Opens Up at Start Kansas Opens Up at State first half, and holds it to 1 first point in the first game, and with fifteen minutes of the first half gone the Jayhawkers led 21-8. Al Burns and Lee Railsback found the range in the last half of the first period to keep the Wildcats in the game, and alongside Levi Brooks and Grews scored in quick succession to bring the Kansas State total up to 14 points as the half ended. with the score 23-14 in favor of the Jayhawkers. It was the third successive game in which the Kansas team scored three points, and Grews opened the scoring in the second half with a nice follow shot and then Prada slipped in for a nice set-up. Allen made good one of two free throws, and then Burns and KiLMek dropped in quick goal goals to bring the Wildcats up to within seven points. Then he scored the last bid the Kansas State team made for the lead. Allen made one free throw and followed his next attempt in to run the ball. Auburn's Komas total to 37, before Haliakof hit a Thornbrough dropped in two nice baskets to bring the Wildcat total to 24, and Kappelman rang up his second basket of the evening to make it 38 for the Kansas. He punched in the goal and when they finished the Jayhawkers had a 47-29 lead over the Wildcats. Gamas sank two field goals and a charity toss to finish the scoring for the Kansas State team, and Holiday and Shaffer, who had been substituted as the game neared its end, brought out the third throw and threw on a field goal by Holiday, and a gift toss by Shaffer. Javhawks Play Clean The Kansas team played a clean game, only five fouls being called on巾, while Kansas State was guilty of three rule violations. State Team had a perfect night at the free throw line, missing none of their attempts, while the Jayhawks missed The Jayhawkers played alternately brilliantly and poorly. At times the Kannas handled the hall perfectly and they had an unrestrained spell in which they missed shot after shot. Praille continued in his role of a long range siege gun, and Ebling made several of his famous "strokes" shots. Every man was on the ground at least four points, and this ability on the part of every man to score is one of the reasons why the Kannas team is at the top of the conference. team will have a breath (Continued on page 8) PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY FERRUARY 16 1936 Comment A Future Ideal A captivating idea did Dr. Coffman bring to us in "The Realm of Intelligent Man." In honorning Doctor Lindley he dwell on an ideal which the Chancellor has also expounded. Far be it from them to believe that there are no more worlds to conquer. In spite of all the changes that have taken place, inventive genius yet has pioneered work to do. The speaker especially pointed out the great field for frontiersmen in the sciences of sociology and government. After some description of various forms of government in the world today, Dr. Coffman said that the problem of governing a nation will never be settled. The generations of the future will still be searching midway between complete liberty of the individual and regimentation by a totalitarian state for that state of affairs which will be best conducive to the offering of all that is creative and constructive in the individual for the betterment of society. It demands of every intelligent person a strict self-disciplining that will make him become more social-minded. It is indeed the captivating ideal of those who strive to seek an upper strata of thought and constructive action. Monday used to be wash day, but everything's reversed now, and Monday is only an opportunity for the Supreme Court to take the starch out of the New Deal—Boston Evening Transcript. In a recent speech, President Glenn Frank, of Wisconsin University, made the following comment. "The ensuing campaign should be kept free of mud slinging and slander. The advocates for each party should take up the issues the men represent, not the candidates themselves." Rowing Up Waterfalls There have been thirty-two presidential elections in the United States. Starting with the early subdued battle between the Federalists and Anti-Federalists, this idealistic plea has been made at every four-year interlude. This year, as the statement of Mr. Frank proves, is not an exception. Neither have this year's party leaders proved themselves to be exceptions. The mud slinging has started and it looks like it will continue until November. Why an intelligent plea to American politics has no more avail than this, no one knows. But the fact remains that the process of initiating such a procedure in our elections' would prove to be about as difficult as rowing a boat up a waterfall. ≈ Why then must speakers waste words in condemnation of a system which seems immovable? Why not devote such time to offering improvements for that system in the hope that it will eventually work itself out? In the case of Mr. Frank, his time would have been much more worthwhile had it been directed toward this ideal rather than an unattainable, Utopian election, procedure. One wonders whether the new British king has the same attitude on what England owes America as his father had on the same subject. The Wichita Eagle. Neutrality The question of neutrality, especially the pending legislation before Congress, came in for an all-around discussion at the University Peace Action Committee forum; recently. Ideas of the value of the proposed bills were freely exchanged. Different aspects of the war problem were stressed but nearly all of the speakers emphasized the fact that the influence of big business is one of the most potent factors in the declaration of war. The questionable activities of international financiers and merchants must be curbed before the dream of world peace can possibly become a reality. However, as was pointed out by one of the speakers, a policy of complete isolation is not conducive to a peaceful and beneficial condition. In the first place, isolation breeds hatred of the United States in the minds of foreign peoples and secondly, although the United States appears to be self-sufficient, a complete isolation policy would soon prove that such is not the case. Friendly trade relations with foreign countries are absolutely necessary for our national welfare. This speaker raised the question of the wisdom of a policy of neutrality. By lining up on one side or the other, the United States would have a great influence in preventing conflict. The practice of so flourishing the big club over the heads of war-informed nations has not been notably successful in the past, however. Selfish minority interests cause the majority of wars. There is no reason why American citizens should suffer and die to protect the foreign investments of some corporation; neither is there any reason why we should enter war to protect the existence of some political group, other than the one which now feeds and educates us. Minority groups should be protected but whenever they, by selfishly conceived political or economic motives, threaten the safety and well-being of the majority, they forfeit the right of the majority's protection. It was brought out by another speaker that to tie our hands by some definite policy before the nature or issues of a crisis are known would be unwise and harmful. The practice of waiting until a war is inevitable before neutrality proposals are suggested is unsafe because in the hectic, propaganda-filled days which always prevail in an unsettled, warlike world, cool and wise neutrality legislation is impossible. Peace time is the best time for such action. Campus Opinion Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the University Daily Kanan. Articles over 200 words in length are subject to cutting by the editor. Contributions on any subject are invited. Editor Daily Kansan: There is always so much talk about students doing their own work and not using someone else's notes and the like. All of this is quite right, but why not advocate that the faculty members do their own work too. It is quite true that each faculty member usually attends his classes and teaches them but there are many who do no more than this. The quiz and term papers are made up by the professors, professor never touches the papers except in carrying them to and fro between the pupils and the graduate student. These graduate students into whose hands these papers are entrusted may be very brilliant, but they do not know what the professor has emphasized to his pupils, and so they have been brought into his cause to know as much as the professor. Of course the professors are busy with so many papers to grade at the same time, but the student also has time to talk to them and that he has taking at the same time. He has to do a great deal of reading and thinking, before the final writing of the paper. The faculty members has only to read them over it, then to work. Instead he hires the graduate student to do it for him. The students plan to do their own work, but they expect to have their term papers and quiz papers graded by the professor who assigns the paper and teaches the class. This seems only fair and more of the students own work so they likely to co-operate in doing their own work if they know that the professor will course the will will. T.C. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Notices due at chancellor's Office at 3 p.m. preceding regular publication days and 11:30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issues. FEBRUARY 16, 1936 Vol. 33 FEBRUARY 16, 1936 No. 95 COLLEGE FACULTY. The faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will meet on Tuesday, February 18, at 4:30 in the Auditorium of the third floor of the Administration building. E. H. Lindley, President. DER DEUTSCHE VERINE: Der Deutsche Verine ver- sammlt sich Montagen 17 der 12rem August um half凳 Bernadine Berkley, Sekretaer. ENGINEERING BOOK EXCHANGE: The Engineering Book Exchange announces its pay-off date, Monday February 17. Hours: 9:30 to 12:30 and 1:30 to 4:30. Harrison, Monroe, Manager FRESHMAN COMMISSION OF W.Y.CA: Freshman Commission of W.Y.CA. will meet Monday at 4:30 at Henley house. Good discussions are held each week. Female women are urged to come. Howard Moreland, Manager. Jean Russell. Chairman. Neal Hardy, President. Donald Henry, President. FRESHMAN COUNCIL. A very important meeting of the Freshman Council will be held Monday evening at 7:00 in Room of the Memorial Union building. Officers for the new semester will be elected. INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB. There will be an International Relations Club meeting Tuesday eve- night at 7:00 p.m. in the cateraies of the Union building. The topic far discussion will be "Navaral Fear" Don't believe that they're not a fear. KAPPA PHI. There will be a bledge and cabinet meeting Tuesday at 6:45 at 1290 Tempee. Fledging service for new members will be held. Active members are requested to be present for this service. K. U. PEACLE ACTION COMMITTEE. The K.U. Peace Action Committee will meet at 4:30 Monday afternoon in Room 16 in the Memorial Union building. Everyone is welcome. Alfred C. Ames, Executive Secretary. K. U. DRAMATIC CLUB: There will be a meeting at 4:30 p.m. tuesday. February 18 in green hall. Attenuation must be arranged. Beulah Pinneo, President. MATHEMATICS CLUB: The meeting of the Mathematics Club which was scheduled for Monday, February 17, not be held. The next meeting will be Monday, March 2. James K Hitt, President. By Dorothy H. Hodge, c'37 Negroes Contribute Much to America In Way of Art, Crafts, and Learning MEN'S PAN-HELLENCIL COUNCIL. There will be a meeting of the Men's Pan-Hellencil Council Sunday morning, February 16, at 10:30 in the basement of the Men's Hospital. Will there be an event not represented. Lloyd Morgan, Secretary. Millions of dollars have been spent in establishing schools for Negroes, for research, and for practical methods of alleviating his socialills. All in all, the Negro has generally been viewed as a rather than as an asset. But there is evidence that this picture. The Negro has played a very credible part in the history and building of America and has made worthy contributions to its progress. SCHOLARSHIPS: Applications for scholarships for next year may be made between the hours 3 and 5 p.m. Monday to Friday, inclusive, in Room 303B administration building. Applications must be filed by March 1. Because this is Negro History Week the forum committee of the W.W.C.A. and the Y.M.C.A. brought to the campus, Chater A. Franklin, editor of the Kansas City Call, who spoke recently on "Recent Contributions of the Negro People" in America has created many problems which have been the cause of much study on the part of sociologists and economists. For more than two centuries the great majority of American Negroes were in slavery, a condition that contributed to their ultimate celebration in the Civil War. The long controversy over slavery and its resulting economic and social problems and the difficulties of political reconstruction after the Civil War were so important in the history of America that it is only an a-minute-slave or, as an illiterate, dangerous freedman. Much has been written of the Negro spirituals, of the rhythmic and syncruped jazz, and of doul-kore, the Uncle Remus stories. Regardless of present problems, the Negro's progress and achievement has been phenomenal. According to James Bryce, the progress has been more rapid than was ever shown by any other group in an equal length of time. This marks the beginning of a remarkable growth. Mrs. Flora S. Boynton, Executive Secretary, Committee on Aids and Awards But what were the Negroes doing during the time of alovery? Were they all praying for the "sweet charlie" to "swing how" and take them to a heavenly home? Are they bowling low in humidity at the feet of some "Mussolium?" Or are they obeisance to escape from chains or the whip of a slain Leguas. No, not all of them. Accompanied Early Explorers It is quite surprising and interesting to discover and realize that cotton pickin' was not the task of all Nigroes. It was neither the task of Negroes did not come to America first in 1619. They first came as explorers, some free, some encailed, a hundred years earlier. Ancient manicurists mention Alonzo Pietro "Il nero" (the pilot of the Nina, one of Columbus's ships), with Baleno when he reached the Pacifica, with Cortex in Mexico; with the explorers of Guatemala, Chili, Peru, and Venezuela. Another, Estatenico, arose to usefulness and prominence among the Spaniards while they were exploring the Americas. He and into what is now the southwestern part of the United States. He was usually the foremerer of the forces preparing the way for those who were to claim the country, going far enough in advances of the expedition to clear the rainforests of India, Menendez had Negro艺士留 place in which he founded St. Augustine in 1585. Negroes Stainton in *Negras Stainton*. The slaves did not come to America emp-handed, but they brought with them the village of native endowment, skill, and art. The natives of Africa were among the first to smelt iron and forge instruments of usefulness and beauty. This may account for the fact that throughout the days of slavery Negroes did the work of South's blacksmithing, wagon-makers, machine shops and mills, and even ran its trains. From Africa they also brought the skill as weavers, rug makers, potters, and wood designers. In America they soon developed and masons and erected many of the Sanest most beautiful and stately structures. Many of them attained such skill that they were hired out profitably by their owners. Others accumulated enough power to protect their own freedom. This practice was still common in 1880 when there were $68,000 free Negroes in the United States, or more than one-third of the total Negro population at that time. In 1880, the free Negroes of Charleston alone are said to have been property valued at more than $70,000 and those of Philadelphia twice amassed. The distinct gift for music and a fund of folklore also came from Africa. The adaptations of native African folk stories express a common sense and practical philosophy. The weir beauty and soul-stirring power of the spirituals have made them popular around the globe. It is a matter of comment that, but once bits of bitterness of revenge, but no traces of faith, hope, and love. This is a significant commentary on the Negro's essential character. in Africa, and Omar ibn Isaad, another North African slave, was a devout Mohammedan who read and wrote Arabic with ease. Brought in from the West Indies where they had been in contact with all nationalities of Europe and had not been restricted in their development, many slaves could speak several languages, and advertise for fugitives one learns that many slaves could read and write. Manifest Literary Ability Intellectual ability was also manifested in these African slaves. Lahmen Kebty was educated as a school master There was Phillis Wheatley, a little African girl who was sold at auction at the age of eight and enjoyed an international reputation as a poetess before going to Horton, a slave employed as a junior at the University of North Carolina, used to write love letters and verses for the students. In 1829 his friends公仆 called "The Hope of Liberty" which was called to sell for enough to buy his freedom. Benjamin Bannoner, a Negro astronomer and philosopher constructed the first clock in America to style the hour markers. He was also invited by the civil and was invited by Thomas Jefferson to assist the commissioners sent to lay out the lines of the District of Columbia. Participate In War Crispus Attucks was the first American to fall in the Boston Massacre, Peter Salem, Black桑普, and Austin Dubney were other Negro soldiers who believed their devotion to the country in the Revolutionary War by some brave act. These examples show what was done before the race had its freedom. With the hope that the years bring toward more freedom economically, progress has been made. The following statement has been attributed to a well-known Southerner: "The Negro is not a menace to America. He has proved himself worthy of confidence. He has been and may continue to be a blessing. In the years that are to come he needs the help of those who have voices of influence. He needs only that we remove the negative aspects and give him a chance to demonstrate that under God he is a man and can play a man's part." President James Rowland Angell called the union the most significant institution in the country, administration, and President Roosevelt and others have commended the Another prominent member of the Union, Whitalea Reid of New York, son of Ogden Reid, of the New York Herdal-Tribune, is a conservative. "formation of the Yale Union," says Douwert, "is a direct challenge to those who have little or no ability of schools to prepare for political life. We hope to train the college students." Founders of the Union were Max Milliken, son of the famous California scientist, now at Cambridge, who was its first president, and a conservationist; August Heckscher II, grandson of the late Richard Heckscher, whom he, when editor of the Yale News, schooled Universityciren when he advocated that Yale give courses in Communism and Fascism, and gave a young editor of the Yale News. Heckscher, Moore, and Bingham were distinctly liberal so that it might be said that the membership of 120 it largely controlled by the Liberal eli Sons Unlike Fathers The liberal viewpoint is defended by Stewart, editor of the Yale News, who says that they have their own ideas and think out things for themselves. "Thunly, there cannot fail to be a tinge, even an entire dyeing in liberalism," he added. Stewart is a New Dealer. Simulates Political Thought The state of politics, to simulate, in the words of Potter Stewart, one of its members, "undergraduates along the lines of political activity, so that at some point they may go into politics after graduation." Brock Pemberton's Play 'Ceiling Zero' Showing At Granada Theater There are those who view the po- This union is unique in university annuals in Americas, and is patterned largely upon the Oxford and Cambridge universities where statesmen have been members. Stanley Baldwin and Sir Anthony Eden were members at their respective col- James Cagney and Pat O'Brien are together again in "Celling Zore," now playing at the Granada theater. The film story is based on the stage play produced in New York by Brook Pemberton, a university graduate of 1909. Yale Political Union Formed a Year Ago Studies Governmental Duties "Ceiling Zero" is the story of three war buddies who are thrown together in commercial aviation. Cagney, O'Brien, and Stuart Erwin have the idea of the third aircraft when a teenager is airport where Erwin is a pilot. Cagney, the most spectacular flier of the three, joins the pair. New Haven, Conn., Feb. 15, (U.P.)—The Yale Political Union, although little more than a year old, has attracted international attention and occasionally will be the portal through which will enter politics than in many years. The membership of the Union, while preponderantly liberal, is not made up exclusively of that school of thought. Like the English House of Parliament, the frequency of about 120 students composes of conservative, liberals and radicals. June Travis, a newcomer to the screen, has the leading feminine role, that of an air hostess. Cagney is completely broken up and when the order comes through to send the hostess' fiancee out in a terrific storm, he has his opportunity to make sense of it. When he takes the run himself, a run which he knows will result in certain death. The picture will run at the Granada for four days, ending Wednesday. Cagney makes a play for the hostess, although he knows she is engaged to a fellow pilot. In order to keep a date, she has to give him a kiss, run him, Ewen exees and is killed. Jacksonville, Ill.—UP)—The Leap Year matrimonial business received another boast here when Justice of the Peace C. S. Smith offered to perform ceremonies for couples, where tip-protected bride made the proposal, free. e' Value Census. GIRLS WHO PROPOSE TO GET FREE LEAP YEAR MARRIAGES Smith said his offer is good for all of Leap Year and all that he demands is that the prospective bride sign up to the effect that she proposed. Newspapers' Value Stressed Stanford University, Calif.—(UP)—Newspapers constitute the most valuable historical sources for the historian, according to Prof. E. E. Robinson, head of the Stanford history department. They are the most complete, colorful and vivid history to be found, he declares. clares tentialities of the union with interest. The institution of the union undoubtedly means a greater interest in government and its problems, a keener political consciousness on the part of Yale students. When Jack London, invited to Yale as guest of the few undergraduate Socialists, he was nearly thrown out of Woolley Hall. There has been a vast change in sentiment since that time. Oats Thrive at Matanuska Palmier, Alaska—(UPC)—Oats weighing 42.5 pounds per bushel were produced last season by colonists in the Matanuka valley, H. J. Leckner, superintendent of the Matanuka experiment station, announced. Most of the grown in the United States do not exceed 120 pounds per bushel. Leckner said. PATEE 10c 15c SHOWS—3—7—9 10c 'til 7 then 15c NOW! ENDS WEDNESDAY THE "LADY IN RED" FLAMES INTO STARDOME! WINI SHAW PHIL REGAN LYLE TALBOT ALLEN JINKINS In a Riotous Romance of Red-Hot Rhythm "BROADWAY HOSTESS" 100 BROADWAY BEAUTIES 10, TORNIA, TORCH, SONGS A D D E D Comedy Riot News Vitaphone Varieties University Daily Kansan OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS UBISHER HARRY VALENTINE DITOR-IN-CHEF BOB ROBBINSON JULI GUL ALMA FRASHER MANAGING EDITOR PRED M. HARRIS, JE BUSINESS MANAGER F. QUENTIN, BROWN BUSINESS MANAGER F. QUENTIN BROWN Campus Editor Bill Barretts Cleveland Post Donna Jones Sports Editor Dougie Drumm, Co. News Editor Dyman Smart Music Editor Jason Tolley sunday feature James Penkirkland de and exclusive national advertising representa- tive NADVERTISING SERVICING, Inc. 420 Madison Avenue, New York City Chicago, Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles. Subscription price, per year. $10.00 cash in ad vancees. $25.00 payment. Single accounts. Seach. Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday of Sunday morning except during school holidays *c* students in the department of Journals at the First Campus from the First at the Episcopal Journal. Entered as second class master, September 17, 1910, at the post office in Lawrence, Kansas. Neglect to use space bars points to a careless person and over-use, a concienced one. Typewriter Shows Person's Character Traits, According To Expert Failure to correct mistakes is due to one's being either self-assertive, or merely ignorant. A German expert, Herbert Gentner, inscribed in a recent German periodical that typing script is valuable in determining character. Repeated errors and misuse are indicative of personal traits. Among ones on his list the following appear: An excess of abbreviations is used by the over-familiar, indirect person, a great amount of italicizing means an emotional person. Its Prayers! --NOW-- Large space and margin is the sign of a punctilious, formal person and a lack of attention. He lays much stress on the relevancy of the amount of pressure placed on the keys, a heavy touch indicating a high pressure, an unacceptable, a changeable person. The Screen Gives the Sweep of the Skies to the Thriller That Made Broadway Say "WHATVER YOU DO, IF YOU LIKE EXCITEMENT...DON'T MISS CEILING ZERO!" Action scenes that will draw your cheer — you can heart it in their throat. This Amazing Drama Held New York Through a Solid Season. They Trembled Before Its Shock the Came and Knew on Coming. CEILING ZERO JAMES PAT CAGNEY • O BRIEN June Travis Starr Erwin Barron MacLeane PLUS CLAUDE HOPKIN'S BAND Color Cartoon Novelty World's Latest News Events CONTINUOUS SHOWS T O D A Y at 1-3-5-7-9 Ends Wednesday Contemporary to Rumors We Are Not Increasing Our Prices, our Jobs, our Wages, our Little Theatre, our Run-Hits Mat. 25c 'til 7 Little Theatre of Big Hits At Our—Regular Low Prices After 7 35c GRANADA CHECK with us DURING THIS COLD WEATHER Hot Water Heaters ---- $4.95 up Prestone, Alcohol, Winter Gear Lubrication Tire and Brake Service. GOOD YEAR Carter Service Call 1300 Open All Night SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10. 1926 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE X K Hill Society BEFORE 5 P.M. CALL K.U. 21; BETWEEN 7:10 AND 9 P.M. CALL 2701K3 OR 2702K3. Mr. and Mrs. F. O. Wulkehuther, Leavenworth, announce the marriage of their daughter, Sophie, to Dr. Robert Jeffries, Atchison. The wedding took place Wednesday evening at the home of the bride's parents. Mrs. Jeffries was graduated in 1833 from Smith College, of Holyoke, Mass., and attended the Sorbonne in France for a year. Dr. Jeffries was graduated from the School of Medicine of the University of Kansas in 1923, and served his internship in Research and Mercy hospitals, Kansas City. Mo. He established an office in Aichon recently. Prof. and Mrs. Lawrence Woodruff Miss Jeannette Wheeler, Miss Carrie Watson, and Miss Maua Smolen, al., Lawrence, were guests at the wedding. ☆ ☆ ☆ Gregg-Pearce Marriage Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Gregg, of Lawrence announce the marriage of their daughter, Haze Irene, to Merle Poore, c.37. The wedding took place Thursday at the home of the Rev. Joseph King of Lawrence. ☆ ☆ ☆ Mrs. Pearce attended the University of Kansas in 1835. Mr. Pearce is a member of Kappa Pi, pharmacy fraternity will be at home in Kansas City, Mo. The following were out-of-town guests at the Kappa Sigma "black and white" formal party Friday night. Alumni from Kappa Sigma, Dixie Lee, and Georgia Jeffries, all of Kansas City, Mo.; Mary Eater Noble, and Max Jones, both of El Dardo; Marcia Grace and Eder Cower, both of Empire; and Gordon Shaffer, Steuver. ☆ ☆ ☆ Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Linnville, Sr., announce the birth of a daughter last week. Mrs. Linnville, who was Ms Christie Angell before her marriage, attended the University of Kansas, and then graduated from the University in 1933. Corbin hall entertained with a party last night from 9 to 12 p.m. Chapleons were Mr. Ellis, Lewis and Mrs. Els Corke. Out-of-town guests were Rich Daugherty, Independence, Mo., and Dale Cortea, Tepeka. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ KING ☆ ☆ ☆ The following will be dinner guests at the Phi Delta Theta house today: Katherine Katherine Frith, c.30; Berdeen Bastain; Mrs. W. B. Shaefer, Russell; Eleonor Nolan, Kansas City, Mo; and S. Radian Cowles, Kenun Hills. The following are weekend guests at the Pii Delta Theta house: John Bilt Miller, Archson; John Breidenstein, City City; and Leo Haughey, Concordia. Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity, hold an hour dance at the chapter house last night. The chaperone is Mrs. H. W. Russell, A. F. Russell, and Mrs. H. W. Russell. Dinner guests at the Delta Upson house Thursday evening were Lorraine Luther Lathr. Gretten Speelkamp and Elva Calceo, Cuncl, Elva Elae Cheung. €39. Mrs. Louis Smith Parsons, who before her recent marriage was Elda Mae Cleverenger, 35, was a honor guest at a --surprise shower Friday evening at the Alpha Omicron Pi house. PHONE K.U.66 FOR COAL, FOR BRIQUETS—Phone 219, Kaw Valley Fuel Company. -97 TAILOR TAXI TAXI Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S — 920-22 Mass. FOR SALE: Our home at 115 Louisiana with furniture. Shown by appointment. Telephone 173. Florence M Holder. 100 One Stop Clothes Service Station SCHULZ THE TAILOR 924 Maps FOR SALE The following are weekend guests at the Sigma Phi Epsilon house: Richard Beeson, Bill Bolton, Kansas City, Mo. Robert and James B. Murphy, of Mirau, ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ CLASSIFIED ADS The following are weekend guests at the Chi Omega house: Vivian Marquita, Linwood; Nudie Marquita, Dw Moinza, Linwood; Nudie Marquita, City Mo., and Helen Hall, Windfield. Dinner guests at the Gamma Phi Beta house Thursday evening were Mary Wickham, c'36, and William Ferguson, c'uncl. Totals 14 6 0 34 13 200 Officials - E, C. Quigley, St. Mary's and Reeves Peters, Wisconsin. Dinner guests at Corbin hall thursday night were alvin Lee Barnett, e29 Donald Barnett, e37; and joy Bo Neale, e36. ☆ ☆ ☆ Mrs. D. G. Kemp, Kansas City, Mo. as been a guest at Corbin hall this weekend. Ann Jeffords, counsel, will be a dinner guest at the Kappa Alpha Theta house today. ☆ ☆ ☆ Marjorie Walker, who attended the University of Kansas in 1853, is a week-and guest at the Gamma Phi Dia house ☆ ☆ ☆ Canilla Moore, Ponce City, Okla., is a weekend guest at the Delta Zeta house. Totals ... 29 12 6 52 5 200 Randals State (34) Killeen, f 4 1 0 0 31 Kilmeek, f 2 0 0 4 25 Poppyhouse, f 1 0 0 3 18 Cleveland, f 3 0 0 3 17 Cleveland, f 0 0 0 1 1 Fatton, f 0 4 10 0 5 Gilpin, g 0 2 10 0 4 Gilpin, g 0 2 0 2 42 Schreibman, g 0 0 0 2 13 Schreibman, g 0 0 0 2 13 Railback, g 3 0 0 3 35 ☆ ☆ ☆ Laura Gray Dodge and Elizabeth Marshall will be dinner guests at the Beta Theta Pi house today. Cliffon Ogden of the Nebraska chapter of Delta Upsilon was a weekend visitor at the local chapter house. Kansas (32) g ft unft p lpf pld Malen, f) 3 2 3 8 2 8 29 Dilming, f) 5 0 5 0 34 Burnett, f) 5 0 10 0 34 Folliday, f) 1 2 0 4 0 1 Voble, c) 5 0 10 39 Voble, g) 5 0 10 0 39 Cappelman, g) 2 2 0 6 0 38 Traille, g) 4 2 2 10 35 Gapers, g) 4 0 10 0 35 Gapers, g) 0 1 0 1 0 35 PHONE K.U. 66 Twelve-dive or less at one inception, 25c; three inception, 36c; six inception, 72c; contract size, not more than 48 feet, 24 cus. per foot set. Payable in advance at the rate of $150.00. Mr. and Mrs. Wiles and their son Edward, of Macksville, are weekend guests at the Delta Tau Dei house. --ing spell now, as their next game is in affair. Offers a further availability at Tappan Shores. The entire once- game game is with Nebraska at Lincoln, Feb. 28. Kansas Buries Wildcats In 'Naismith Night' Gam (Continued from page one) Student Loans Anthony Horton, of Atwood, is a weekend guest at the Sigma Chi house. --day, Holy Communion at 8; Church day at 9:45; Morning prayer and ser- mon at 11; young people's fellowship at 6 p.m. TYPEWRITERS TYPEWRITERS: Monarchs and Remingtons for sale. Rentals. Repair of all makes of typewriters. Call Kaht 932. — 95. BOYS: If you are looking for part time work inquire at 730 Massachusetts. Phone 648. -94. ABE WOLFSON 743 Mass. MISCELLANEOUS SPECIAL--50c reduction on any per- manent, with this ad, except Saturday. Permanents $1.50 to $5.00, complete with hair cut. IVA'S BEAUTY SHOPS 732½ Mass. Phone 2335; 9411¹ Mass. Phone 333. BEAUTY SHOPS WOMEN'S SWIMMING ENTRIES Miss Ruth Hower, assistant professor of physical education, announced yesterday that the entry blanks for the first group of the women's swimming meet to be held Feb. 18 and 20, must be in by Tuesday morning. Feb. 18 MUST BE FILED BY TUESDA Corbin hall will play Alpha Delta Pi in the basketball finals, Tuesday, Feb. 18. The members of group I, who will swim Feb. 18, are: Alphi Chl Omega, Aphi Gamma, Alpha Tau Omega, Kappa Kappa Gammas, Wakkins hall Kappa Omicron Pi, Alpha Gamma Omicron Pi. Frank Taberski Successfully Defends Title in Twenty Challenge Events Billiard Artist To Appear Frank T札彼斯基 of Schenectady, New York, one of the world's first ten ranking banker billiard artists, will appear at the Union building, Tuesday at He is one of the oldest championship players and has held the world's pocket billiard title six times, first in 1916 and last in 1929. Tenkarih has never been defeated in championship challenge matches and has won five of his seven events. In the 1933 tournament played in the roof garden of the Pennsylvania hotel in New York hat December, he finished ninth in a strong field When he comes to the Union Tues- day he will devote one of his two hours exhibition to instructing all those who are interested in the fundamentals of There will be an admission charge of 25 cents which will be good for 25 cents in trade at the Union billiard room. Dr. Signature Followers spoke Friday afternoon in Central Administration Auditorium on the subject, "The Rediscovery of Tudor Music." DR. FELLOWES GIVES LECTURE ON MUSIC OF HIS HOMELAND Freshman Council officers for this semester will be elected Monday evening at 7 o'clock in room 10 of the Memorial Union building. A president and secretary will be elected from the following candidates: David Angevine, James Bounts, William Leonard, Paul Moritz, and Louis Taylor. Dr. Fellows, of London, England, is making a tour of America, attempting, through his lectures to create interest in English music. All freshmen are urged to attend as the officers are to be elected by a general vote. After the election the program for this semester will be presented and approved. All old business will be held over until the next meet- Mabel Elliott, assistant professor of sociology, will speak this evening at the Congregational church. She will speak at the Fireside Forum on the subject of "Russian Germany." The meeting will begin at 7 o'clock. Mise Elliott Will Sneak Campus Calendar --day, Holy Communion at 8; Church day at 9:45; Morning prayer and ser- mon at 11; young people's fellowship at 6 p.m. Men's Pan-Hellenic Council, Base Memorial Union. 10 a.m. Entomology Club, 321 Snow hall, 4:30 Sunday, Feb. 16 All Musical vespers, University aud. 4 p.m. Kansas Players, "Olympia," Fraser theater. 8:20 p.m. Sigma Eta Chi informal tea, 721 Teen. 3-5 p.m. Freshman Council, room 10, Memorial Union. 7 pm. German Club, 313 Fraser, 4:30 p.m. K. U. Peace Action Committee, room 10. Monday, Feb. 17 Freshman Commission of Y.W.C.A. Henley house, 4:30 p.m. Kappa Phi pledge and cabinet meeting, 1209 Tenn, 6:45 p.m. K. U. Dramatic Club, Green hall, 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 18 Kansas Players, "Olympia," Fraser theater, 8:20 pm. W.S.G.A. Tea, Ad. lounge, 3:30-5 p.m. X.W.C.A. cabinet supper meeting, 5:30 pm International Relations Club, café International Design & Decor University Enrichment Course, Vienna Boys' Choir, University aud, 8.30 p.m. Kanaas Players, "Olympia," Fraser At the Churches Wednesday, Feb. 19 Kansas Players, "Olympia," Fraser theater, 8:20 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 20 Phi Gamma Delta dinner dance, 6:30-12 p.m. Henley house, 5:30 p.m. Kansas Players, "Olympia," Fraser theater, 28 p.m. --day, Holy Communion at 8; Church day at 9:45; Morning prayer and ser- mon at 11; young people's fellowship at 6 p.m. Negro student party, Memorial Union. 9-1. Saturday, Feb. 22 Delta Tau dance, 9-12 p.m. Christian church, north Lawrence—Morning service, subject: "The Good Confession" at 11; young people's meeting, subject: "Why I Will Not Drink Liqueur" at 6:30 p.m.; evening service, subject: "A Praesenter in Liquor" at 7:30 p.m. Church of the Nazarine, Nineteenth and Vermont—Sunday school at 10; morning worship, subject: "The Stewardship of Devotion" at 11; young people's service at 6:45 p.m.: Evangelistic service at 7:45 p.m. United Brethren church — Sunday school and worship services will be held at the usual hours in the hall over the week. Please visit Nine tenth and Massachusetts street. St. Luke A. M. E. church, Ninth and New York - Sunday school at 9:45; preaching, subject: "We and Our Inheritors" at 11; A. C. E. League at 6:30 p.m.; sermon, "The Final Touch" at 8. a.p. St. James A. M. E. church, Church and Maple, North Lawrence—Morning worship, subject: "Aggressive Fighting" at 11; evening worship, subject: "Fighting a Good Worship" at 7:30 p.m. Assembly of Beth, Fourteenth and Rhode Island—Sunday school at 9:45; morning worship at 11; Christ's Amman Temple; evangelistic service at 7:30 p.m. Free Methodist church, 1146 Conn- Sunday school Rt 10; preaching service at 11; Y.P.M.S. at 6:45; preaching service at 7:30 p.m. Trinity Lutheran church, Thirteenth and New Hamp—Religious instruction for people of all ages at 9:45; general assembly from 10:30 to 10:45 honoring missionaries of the Church; morning worship and service; mission "The Sacredness of Human Life" at 11; at 7 p.m. a student discussion period. Topic: "Jerusalem as the Disciples Knew It." at 7:45 p.m. a pre-conference session "The Book of the Ages." Church of God, Eleventh and New Hump—Sunday school at 9:45; morn- ing worship and sermon at 11; young men's worship at 4 p.m.; evening worship and serenity. First Church of Christ, Scientist, 1240 Mass—Sunday school at 10; church service at 11; Subject: "Soul" Immanuel Lutheran church, Truth and Kentuckie—Sunday school and Bible class at 10; Divine service, sub-room at 11; open forum discussion at 6 p.m. Trinity Episcopal church, Teenth and Vermont-, Rev. Carter, H. Harrison, rector, and Prol. H. C. Taylor, organist and chair director*s Xasimum-Sung GOOD BOOKS To Add to Your Personal Library Day, Life with Father, $2.00 Sheean, Personal History, $3.00 Jaffe, Crucibles, $1.48 Jarre, Crucibles, $1.48 Gibran, The Prophet; $2.50 Stop in Whenever you are down town THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Tel. 666 Second Church of Christ, Scientist, Wiedemann building, 8351 Mass—Sunday school at 9:45; Sunday service. Subject "Soul" at 11. Friends Church, Eleventh and Del — Bible school, Subject of lesson: "The Answer to Sincere Inquiry" at 9:45; the Friends church will join the other students on Wednesday to Granda教室 at 11; Senior C. E. will be at the parsonage at 6:15. PENGUIN V First Evangelical church, 1000 Coon. —Sunday school at 9:45; Morning work and service Subject: "What Is the Meaning of Life?" at 10:45; ELCE. topic: "How For Should Authority Be Respected?" at 10:45; J.A. Barnett, a sermon, "Who is the Devil!" at 7:30. - Yes we say it again- - Nanette's $7.99 dresses are surprising for the money! They look 'so many dollars more. - Use the convenience of the "Will Call Closet." NANETTE --at the TRY OUR Excellent MEAL only 30c CAFETERIA Net, Sloppy Weather Will Be Here Any Day Now. Let us put a good pair of soles and heels on your shoes. ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP 1017 ½ Mass. W.E. Whetstone, Prop. Phone 686 BRICK'S "On the Hill" 1 Free Delivery 35c SUNDAY MENU 35c Cocktail — Grape, Tomato Fried Chicken (New York Style) Grilled Club Steak (Kosher Style) BRICK'S 1/2 lb. T.-Bone Steak Country Fried Sausage Roast Sidonin of Beef Chicken Fried Steak Mashed Potatoes Cream Gravy Green Beans Buttered Peach Salad Hot Rolls — Butter Coffee, Milk, Buttermilk or Tea Dessert — Home Made Pie SPECIAL 25c 32. New York Style Fried Chicken, Potatoes and Gravy Try Our 25c Evening Plates. Pie per cut, 10c. Subscribe for THE KANSAS CITY STAR PHONE 17 H. L. Nevin Distributor 13 papers - 15c per week 847 Mass. St. New Records I've Got a Note Dardanella I've Got a Note I'm Gettin' Sensational Over You ... Torny Dorsey Somebody Stole My Gal ... "Fats" Waller Barbaraena Avalon Paul Whiteman Moonburn My Heart and I ... Hal Kemp Gotta Go to Work Again... Ozzie Nelson Bell's Music Store Phone AT YOUR SERVICE One-Day Service We press 'em while you wait Enjoy Satisfactory Cleaning and Pressing CLEANERS 14th at Tennessee THE KANSAS PLAYERS PRESENT The Brilliant Comedy OLYMPIA WITH Allen Crafton - Betty Ruth Smith Mary Myers Elliott - Norbert Anschutz Fraser Theatre February 17-18-19-20 Single Admission 50c Activity Tickets Admit. Exchange for Reserved Seats at Ticket Office, GREEN HALL - Phone 174. PAGE FOUR SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1936 SOONERS AND HUSKERS WIN IN BIG SIX GAMES UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Nebraska Continues To Chase Kansas Doggedly in Race for Big Six Title by Overpowering Cyclones 49-20; Oklahoma Trims Tigers in Game at Norman, 36-21 Nebraska continued to haunt Kansas in the race for the Big Six championship, by turning back Iowa State 49-20 last night as Missouri was losing to Oklahoma, 21-36. The Huskers still have an outside chance to overtake the Hawkeyws, as the Kansans have three games remaining and one of these is at Lincoln against the Nebraska team. None of last night's games made any difference in the standings of the teams. OKLAHOMA 36—MISSOURI 21 Norman, Okla, Feb. 15 — (UP) The Oklahoma Big Six basketball team de- fected Missouri 36 to 21 tonight in the most exciting game of this season in the field house here. Both teams missed dozens of easy shots while fans showered pennies and mill tokens onto the floor during a dull second half. The teams played even during the Big Six Standings | | W | L. Pct. | T.P. OPP. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kansas | 7 | 0 1.000 | 177 | | Nebraska | 2 | 750 | 309 | 260 | | Oklahoma | 6 | 528 | 309 | 260 | | State | 2 | 192 | 132 | 255 | | Missouri | 2 | 528 | 194 | 259 | | Kansas State | 1 | 643 | 113 | 255 | opening part of the game, Missouri holding a 15 to 14 point lead just before the end of the first half. Demont Livingston scored to quick goals for Oklahoma to give his team an 18 point lead in the last few seconds of the half. Claude Todd, Missouri guard, was high scorer for his team with seven points. Livingston was high scorer for Oklahoma with 13 points. Totals ... 14 8 | Name | (36) | fg | ft | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Oklahoma (36) | | | | | Connolly, f | 4 | 3 | 1 | | Warren, f | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Torman, f | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Gunning, c | 2 | 1 | 1 | | Martin, g | 3 | 1 | 1 | | Livingston, g | 0 | 3 | 1 | | Smith, g | 1 | 0 | 1 | Missouri (21) Strom, f 3 0 Hatfield, f 0 0 Murray, f 1 0 Carroll, f 0 0 Henderson, c 0 0 Adams, g 1 0 Berg, g 0 0 Powell, g 2 0 Todd, g 2 3 16. Officials: Miller, Iowa; Olds, Kansas Totals 9 3 5 Scores at half: Oklahoma 16 Missouri NEBRASKA, 40- IOWA STATE, 20 Lincoln, Feb. 15—(UP)-Avery University of Nebraska basketball team tonight walled Iowa State 49 to 20. In defeating the Cyclones the Cornhuskers clung to a slim chance for the game, but they outscored two games and won six. Kansas University is undefeated but the Jayhawks have yet to play in Lincoln and will have won every content this season. Both teams batted the ball off the backboard frequently during the first five minutes of the game with neither team being able to locate the goal. Then Cowen of Iowa State threw in a field goal. Nebraska employed stricter man to man defense to advantage against Iowa State, throwing the Cyclone's deliberate offense out of gear. The Iowans frequently found it impossible to get the ball past its part of the court. The game was rough and both coaches substituted frequently. Nebraska (49) fg ft Wahlquist, f 3 2 Whitakaker, f 4 1 Leucox, f 1 0 Hale, f 0 Ebaugh, c 2 0 Dobhrman, c 2 0 Nelson, c & g 0 Widman, f 1 1 Parsons, g 4 1 Baker, g 2 0 Amen, f 0 --- --- Totals ... 21 7 11 Iowa State (20) Cowen, f 4 0 1 Fluemann, f 2 1 2 Anderson, f 0 0 1 Poole, c 1 0 1 Kilburn, c 1 0 2 Gibon, g 0 2 3 G Johnson, g 1 0 2 Partridge, g 0 0 0 Swell, g 0 0 0 Totals 8, 14 Score at half: Nebraska, 26; Iowa State Officials; Ted O'Sullivan, Kansas City; E. C. Jones, Kansas State. Basketball Scores Wichita University 44, Washington 32. Drake University 29, Oklahoma A. & M 18. Michigan 41, Michigan State 23. June 23, Chicago 20. Iowa 33, Chicago 20. S. W. Texas 20, North Texas 16. Ohio State 43, Indiana 34. Men's Intramurals High and low scoring games featured Thursday evening's intramural basketball schedule. The Hankell Hawk Jay Hawks (6-1) secured the national title by a score of 50-23. The Phi Delt team conquered its Beta opponent by the low score of 23-17. The Christian Church was downed by the Phi Chi's, 23-16. The lowest scoring game resulted when the Rock Chalk I team tangled with Theta Tau, the score being 16-14 for the Rock Chalk five. The D. U. J. C. team tied Theta Tau with a forfeit and a scheduled game between the S. P. E., "B" team and the Triangle 'B' team was not played as neither team appeared. In a close game the S.A.E. volley ball team defeated the Phi Gam team by the score of 21-16, 17-21, 21-8. The team foiled to defeat the Sigma Chi team. Saturday's Basketball Games Kappa Sigma forfeited to Sigma Chalk II. Bohlewski forfeited to the Rock Chalk II. Sigma Nu "Bu" forfeited to the Kappa Sigma "Bu". Sigma Alpha Pioneer forfeited to Christian Church. Acacia 32 | | g ft 1 | | :--- | :--- | | Cox | 5 0 0 | | Martin | 4 2 1 | | Carter | 1 1 0 | | Kabler | 1 0 0 | | Chapman | 3 1 1 | f 1f ft Hildreth 2 0 1 Fleeson 1 0 1 Kimble 1 0 0 Kreuger 1 2 1 Ward 4 2 0 Hellhounds 22 Sigma Nu 35 D. T. D. 33 Kably g fft 8 g ft 4 g ft Kelly 8 0 0 Olson 4 2 Pfeiffer 8 0 1 Veitch 4 1 Davis 3 3 3 Elmore 3 1 Dubach 3 1 3 Moran 3 1 Dubach 1 4 711 Whirwinds 11 Dunakin 25 Whirwinds 11 Dunakin g fft 8 g ft 4 g ft Mobley 5 0 1 Bingalde 5 1 Black 2 0 0 Leonard 0 1 Clark 0 0 2 Niso 1 1 Russell 2 0 1 Gillpie 0 1 Ober's 21 Bo尔默makers 19 Ober's g fft 8 g ft 4 g ft Lindsey 1 0 2 Harper 1 0 Seckman 1 0 3 Bigelow 4 2 Brown 2 0 1 Carse 0 0 Peerce 2 1 1 Blake 0 0 10 1 7 K.E. K. 12 criangle 22 K.E. K. 12 Cerrig g fft 8 g ft 4 g ft Kerr 3 0 1 O. Hantla 2 0 B.d'fregel 4 1 1 Hantla 2 0 Goleman 4 1 1 Hantla 2 0 Motley 1 0 0 Crouch 2 0 10 3 3 6 6 2 9 4 3 Phil DeL. Theta 19 Deng g gilt h Mize Benton 2 1 1 Young 1 2 1 Bowman 1 2 1 1st baseman g ft Allen 0 1 J. Fornell 0 2 Dempster 1 0 Brighton 1 0 Wampler 1 0 First Baptist 1 Gal. Ghosts 48 Gallium gt 11 Mightier gt 0 Knight 5 0 Knight 5 0 Dawes 0 Lindley 3 0 Kelly 3 1 Triangle 'B' **12** Sharp 0 1 Johnstone 0 1 2 Stakeke 0 1 2 Thorne 0 0 0 Smith 0 0 0 Delta Upsion 16 g ft McCann 0 Boucher 0 Barclay 2 1 Davis 2 2 Broch 1 1 5 2 7 Gal. Ghosts Cornhusker Swim Team Overpowers Kansas Men Beta Theta PI 35 Stocktor 1 Kane 2 0 Nicholson 0 0 Nicholson 2 0 Morgan 3 3 Marshall 1 1 University Tank Records Smashed By Speedy Nebraskans Smashing all University of Kansas pool records as well as several Big Six records, the Nebraska University swimming team overpowered the Jayhawks by the one-sided score of 17-12 in yesterday afternoon. Kansas was unable to capture a first place in any event. Advance Cleaners N.C. LINDSTROM P.N.T. M.E. LINDSTROM Nebraskans 400-yard, free style relay—the team of Dort, Colland, Krouse, and Barry beat the Kansas队 of Pusley, Humphrey, Tiller, and Fisher in a time of 6 150-yard back strike -Gavin, Nebraska, first; Lindwick, Nebraska, second; La Shelle, Kansas, third. Time: 1:57.1 200-yard irst strike -Gibbons, Nebraska, first irst. Forthorn, Nebraska, second. Ellas, Kansas, third. Time, 2.51.3 19-yard, dash — Lyndie, Nebraska, first; Wiggerson, Kansas, second; Puscey, Kansas, third; Colland, Nebraska, fourth. Time 24.2. The events: 40-yard swim—Hagelin, Nebraska first; Krouse, Nebraska second; Nichols, Kansas, third. Time, 517.8. And What a Difference Cleaning Makes Phone 101 100-yard dash — Lynde, Nebraska Fresh SILEX COFFEE THE EVERYMAN IN THE WORLD An invigorating stimulant. The difference... CLEAN CLOTHES! Meet Yourself! at the UNION FOUNTAIN Sub-Basement Memorial Uniort first; Ludwick, Nebraska, second; Waggoner, Kansas, third. Time, 56.4. Diving-Rirmerman, Nebraska, first, 102.6 points; Deming, Nebraska, second, 88.9 points; Pusey, Kanasa, third, 75.5 points. 220-yard swim — Barry, Nebraska, first; Hogebink, Nebraska, second; Brandi, Maddy, third. Time, 3:38. Medley rehy — Gavin, 3:58. Clement rehy — Kansas, 4:05. team of LaShelle, Elias and Waggoner in the time of 3:10.8 Medley Race Record Smashed Nebraska's medley relay team made the announcement that it would attempt to break the Big Six record for the women's record by about 15 seconds, but the record is unofficial because the Kansas pool is only a 50-foot pool whereas the regulation pool for the Big Six records must be from 60 to 75 feet. Other Big Six records broken unfolded. Some of them were: the 400-yard relay with a record of 3.587 to top the Big Six record of 4.022; the 50-yard dash was broken by Lyndae with a time of 24.4 Nebraska Defends Title Coach Jack B. Minor's swimming team won the Big Six title last year and looks to be well on the way to breaking a braska dash champion, last year shattered three of seven official Big Six records that were broken last year at the seventh annual Big Six championship. The team gave a large amount of the credit for Nebraska's attaining the Big Six championship. Lynde holds the 50-yard, free style, the 100-yard dash, and the 220-yard dash, all in a series. Thedivisional seems which were held the compulsory dives of the front header, the back header, the half gainer, the backward jack-knife, and the front one-half twist. In addition to these five dives, the divers were able to choose five optional diva apice. Officials of the meet were Refere, starter, and announcer—E. R. Eibel; Clerk of the course—Gordon Gray judges—first place, Jack Riggs, see and place. Poco Fraser, and third place, R. H. Beamer; timers-Fred Malo, G. W. Smith, and Justin Hill; judges of the turns-Dr. James A. Naimish and Richard Mullins. Kansas next home swimming meet will be held in Robinson gymnasium for three days. The biggies. The Kansas Aggies were defeated Friday night by the Cornhuskers by a score of 60 to 24. Allen Announces Candidacy Ambrose Candidate Donald C. Armstrong, who served almost four years as county attorney of Jefferson county, has announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination for State Senator from the Fifth District of Douglas and Jefferson counties. JANICE LEE Cosmetics For Beauty Skin loveliness is a gift that every woman can give to herself! Most skin flaws can be corrected with proper care with the right preparations. J ANICE LEE medically pure creams, lotions, powder, lipick, and other beauty oils sold at Band Box Beauty Shop Coe's, Rankin's, Round Corner THEY'RE FIT FOR A KING But you don't need a King's money to buy one of our personal rare items with many added features you may like, such as the ability to access personal data. SCHULZ the TAILOR ruiting You - That's My Business 924 Mass. 914 0. 0 Buy it at the Bookstore Canvas Notebooks 35c - 50c - $1 Notebook Paper 2 or 3 hole wide, narrow rule 10c Pkg. 3 for 25. REALITE Mechanical Pencil University of Kamas, red-blue 25c Zipper Notebooks $2.50 - $2.75 - $3.50 Laundry Cases 95c - $1.35 - $1.85 Verb Wheels German, Latin, Spanish, French 35c Jayhawk Stationery 29c Greeting Cards For All Occasions Typewriting Paper 100 sheets — 10c Genuine Eversharp Pencil With Load Gauge- Shows to Refill K9c Fraternity and Sorority Stationery 30 Sheets Created 24 Envelopes Blotters—All Colors 10c — 3 for 25c We Deliver Rowlands TWO BOOK STORES [4]O The DAILY KANSAN Now Only $1.75 fortherest of the year The Kansan is the only medium for keeping in touch with all the Hill news. There's no substitute for your college newspaper. Have the report of all the activities, at your own room, in your own Kansan, regularly. The Convenience of having your own Kansan is well worth the money Call at the Kansan Business Office in the Journalism Building and turn in your subscription the first thing tomorrow. DVD TM C UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NUMBER 96 Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXXIII --on the SHIN By BUD EVANS, "36 Susie Fleming and Her Fond Followers . . . Elbel's Wrong Again . . . A Game for Cold Nights or Knights . . . Basketball a la Coty. Sunday night, a young lady by the name of Susanne Fleming called up some 20 or 23 of the Hills leading male doctors to attend the Lean Year Varsity. each one to the Lean Year Varsity. Susanne Fleming was, in reality, a small group of female tricksters, who determined to test the gibbity and egde of the male contengent on the Hill. And, for your benefit (C), ladies and girls, here's a list of the chumps who John Tyler, Bill Asher. Bill Brown, George Gurencey, Frances Kupfelman, Jack DeMotte, Franklin Murphy, George Lemon, Don Putney, Bruce Gleaser, Harry Lane, Jerry Griswold, Jason Hood, Jason Hood, David Riess and Bill Drows. Note Plez: Dave Roberts, in fact, was so overwhelmed at the thought of getting such an invitation that he made a date with Susanne at 3:30, yesterday afternoon in front of the post-office! Franklin Murphy suddenly declared, his Saturday night were taken up (touching fidelity), but offered to get a date. Mr. Murphy came out of the Beta freshman class. Frank Allen eagerly volunteered his address, phone number, etc., and Bill Downs suddenly stunned Stassina, and agreed to meet her at 11:30 a.m. morning to "Let her know," evidently after an hour of waiting afar, and then give her his decision. + + + Evidently the girls didn't have enough training in high school for their adolescent anties, were not completely successful. Griswold and Downs happened to smell a railty oatie and traced the call to an Ohio street annex. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1936 Since when have the Jay James turned Boy Scouts? At the Kansas-Kansas State basketball game the other night, the announcement, Ed Ebel, now you all know who it is that continuity the Jay James would pass contribution can through the audience for the Dr. Naismith Olympic fund, instead, a local troop of Boy Scuds did the passing, thereby showing that either the Jay James are neglecting their duties, or else Dan can't tell the difference between the two, going to forgive Ed 'cause we realize one's mind is apt to wander. At last some good has been found for the frost that forms on the car windbills. The other day Sally Joey and I went to her ever faithful admirer, were seen playing a snappy game of Tit, Tat. Ten on the windshield of Barc's car. From what we hear, Sally Jo didnt win a game, but she did for one up the D. U. prey. Hear that Mitt Allen, cracked (forced) onward in the championship-bound Hajawaker basketball team, started a new vogue for cage men when he recently appeared for a rough and tough practice session wearing finger-nail polish Mittweir think you've got something there—why don't you clean it up? That is what we do, which is plausible, but we've decided to give you a break, and take your word for it (And, this is something the fellow ball players wouldn't do.) Such a business! BUSINESS SCHOOL SENIORS MUST ATTEND CONFERENCE It is essential that all seniors in the School of Business, except those who already have positions, attend a conference on business placement to be held at 7:15 p.m. today in room 201. Students from other divisions who are qualified to apply for business positions also are invited to attend. Dean Stockton will be in charge of the meeting and will pass out papers on Wednesday for interviewing all seniors in the School of Business in the next two weeks. Debate Team Meets Drake The University debate team met one from Drake University yesterday on a question relating to the Supreme Court before the civics, history and government classes of the Lawrence Memorial High School. No decision was given. New Deal Upheld In TVA Decision With Vote of 8-1 Decision Based on Right of Congress To Better Navigation — Not Humanity Washington, D.C., Feb. 17. —The United States Supreme Court now in a sweeping 8-to-1 decision, held constitutional the main principles of TVA upon which President Roosevelt has based his program of providing cheaper electricity to the common man and to industry. The decision rested on the right of congress to improve navigation in the interests of commerce and national defense, and not on the more far-reaching, humanitarian objectives repeatedly associated with TVA by Mr. Roosevelt. The sharply challenged right of the nation to power developed at Wilson Dam on the Tennessee river and acting incidental to other TVA activities, was upheld. It was a smashing victory for the New Deal at the hands of the nation's highest tribunal, which formerly dealt the administration such staggering blows by invalidating the Triple A and NRA. The ruling said, in effect, that if Mr. Roosevelt's power program is developed along these lines, it will well within constitutional limitations. Chairman Frank R. McNinch, member of the Federal Power Commission, tonight held that the decision was so satisfactory that questions of the constitutionality of other government projects such as Grand Culee and Bonnerville Victory for the New Deal "Furthermore," McNinch added, "the opinion implies that the government is empowered to authorize private companies to build dams for the improvement of navigation and to regulate the disposition of power created thereby." Hughes Reads Decision The silver-plumed, white-bearded Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes, whoided with the conservatives in killing the Triple A, read the majority vote against him, and the largest crowds that ever had thronged the court's tiny chamber. The lone disencontrer was Justice James McReynolds, the stoutest conservative on the bench who shouted, "The Conspiracy Is Hiding," and upheld the New Deal Gold Act. Hughes' words sent utility stock tumbling on the market stock market. In rapid fire order came these momentous rulings: The Rulings in Detail 1. Stockholders of the Alabama Power Company who brought the test of TVA were legally invited to do so. 2. The government had full authority to build the Wilson dam—the keystone of TVA. 3. Congress has undisputed power to order disposal of electricity developed at the dam. 4. The government acted legally in building or obtaining through purchase from private companies, certainransporting power to a wider market. 5. Arguments by TVA foes that validation of the act would throw the government deeper into competition with industry, were brushed aside irrelevant. 8. There is nothing in the Constitution that says the government can sell only part of the electrical energy developed by the dam and must throw the rear away. 6. The Alabama Power Company had no constitutional right to demand that it be the sole purchaser of the Wilson Dam power. 7. The government has the same right to dispose of surplus power as it would have to dispose of copper, gold, and minerals on public land. The court made it clear that it was not passing, at this time, on the sale of electricity at other dams constructed or owned by New D. which questions, other than those decided today, may be involved. But julian New D 'L tenures gleightly hailed the rulr, as an unequivocal "gee-er" statement in the yard's "sardar power" program. Dean Shaad Accepts Appointment Prof. G. C. Shaad, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, has accepted an appointment as representative of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers on the delegative committee for Professional Development for the region which includes the states of Missouri, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, and Texas, at the Pecos river. Dean Shaad Accepts Appointment Vienna Choir Boys To Sin Much interest is being shown in the appearance of the famed Vienna Choir Boys tomorrow evening in the University Auditorium at 8:20 p.m., as the fourth regular attraction on the University Concert Course. Young Choral Group Making Fourth American Tour The Vienna Choir Boys (die Wiener Saengerkunde), under the management of S. Hurock, are making their fourth American tour this season. They present small operas, national songs, church songs, and folk songs with the instrumentation of the edition which began in 1498 when Emperor Maximilian founded the choir. The press throughout the nation hauclaid this boy-chair. The New York Times said, "Their voices are flute-like and lovely." The Boston Hearst stated "a concert by the Vienna Choir Bears is one of the most unusual and certainly the most captivating of occasions to be seen and heard in America." The Chicago Daily News asserted that criticators in the most ancient and horrific of musical circles melodies are voiced with pungent delicatiousness. Activity tickets will admit. Smallest CSEP Payroll Is Turned in at Topeka Examinations Take Toll As Students Work Less Hours The smallest CSEP payroll of this school year, covering the period from Jan. 13 to Feb. 12, was sent to the state offices at Topaek yesterday morning, according to Miss Mary C. Oleen, executive secretary. The total pay for school, including the College and Graduate divisions, amounted to $6,233.35. Final examinations in January constituted the principal reason for this decrease, a large number of students reducing their hours of CSEP work in order to devote more time to reviewing. Further reduction was caused by employed students who dropped out of school at the end of the first semester, a fact that prompted them from the payroll of those students whose grades for the first semester disqualified them for further work in the department. New Students To Be Added A number of new students will be put on the payroll in the near future, Miss Olsen said. The reduction in this month's payroll, coupled with a somatic month because of the Christmas vacation, has resulted in the accumulation of an unused balance which will be used to pay much additional employment as possible. The new students who are added to the payroll will be recruited largely from those who applied last fall and were placed on the waiting list. These comprise, for the most part, the student who had sufficient funds for the first semester, but not enough to complete the school year. Others applied last fall after selections had been made, while still others, formerly on the denial list because of grades, have now raised (Continued on page 3) Kansas Orators Back From Coast After Debate Trip Gay Comedy and Sparkling Lines Were Highlights of 'Olympia's' Opening Night Phillips, Zupanec, and Field Have Great Success in Seven Schools John Milton Phillips, William Zanapanze and Lymn Field, three of Kansas' most outstanding speakers, returned Saturday evening from a two day trip. Betty Ruth Smith, appearing for the first time with the Kansas Players, was peraps a bit naive, but her charm and attractiveness won the audience. Allen Crafton as Captain Kewacs was highly enjoyed by the audience. Norbert Anschueh, Charles Pipkin and Don Dixon carried their parts well. Since all of the debates were held free style, there were no decisions, but Professor B. C. E. Buckley, while, Prof. E. C. Buckley, varsity debate coach replied emphatically to them. featuring gay comedy, brilliant lines, a n d entertaining interpretations, "Olympic" opened a four-night run in Salt Lake City, with a responsive audience of 400 persons. Phillips, a junior in the College, was a winner of the national high school oratorical contest, and was winner of the regional champion oniphonor oratorical last spring. The play deals with the attempt of a young officer, Captain Kovacs, to break down the false impression of greatness held by the nobility of Austria. Olympia, first lady in waiting to the princess, falls in love with the captain but is forced by her mother to give him up because of the adverse treatment she has received in an affair. The captain, however, is not so easily put aside, and by starting a report that he is a criminal, places Olympia and her mother in a rather A witty satire on Austrian nobility, the play was elevated into its imaginative atmosphere by the excellent acting of its small cast. Jessica Carraft carried well the part of Princess Eugene in a scene where she articulated humor of the play appeared in her dialogues with Mary Myers Elliot, as Countess Lina. Visited Team Takes Various Stands Kansas uphold the affirmative action in medical medicine" which was argued at the University of Oklahoma and at the University of Arizona; "The New Deal," discussed at the University of California, and "Curbing the Power of the Supreme Court" to subject the subject at the remaining schools. Accompanied by Professor and Mrs. Buehler, the debaters left Jan. 29 to make this trip, marking the first time they have gone gone as far west as the Pacific Coast. Zupanina Hass Gobei Recover a senior in the School of Engineering at University of the local junior-senior artorial contact. He is president of the local chaperone of Delta Sigma Rho, national debate fraternity, and a member of Phi Rho Pi and Sigma Phi Alpha, national honorary debate fraternities. Each of the three debarts was well qualified to make the trip. Fields, a senior in the College, is president of the Men's Student Council. He has won several honors in the oratorical field among them first in place both in the ex-commissioned speaking and the oratory divisions of the Missouri Valley tournament in 1934. California proved to be the most interesting state to the debaters. In Los Angeles, they appeared at the largest university in the country, the University of Southern California. The debate with the University of California at Berkeley was broadcast. Also, while at Berkeley, they were honor guests at the annual Harvard reunion and the University of California. The schools at which they debate were the University of Oklahoma Southern Methodist University, University of Florida and the lands,lands,lands. University of Southern California, Leland Stanford University, and the University of California at Berkeley. The debate with the University of New York at Columbia because of road and car trouble. embarrassing situation. The climax of this situation and the play came as a distinct surprise to the audience. Team Takes Various Stands Zupanic Has Good Record Phi Chi Delta To Meet Tonight Phi Chi Delta will meet at Westminster hall today at 5:30 p.m. Mary Robb, c37, will lead the discussion on social work 9hi Chi Delta To Meet Tonight After a rather slow start, the play swings in action near the end of the first act, and makes an entertaining climax when the young captain calmly takes Olympia in his arms and carries her from the stage. Once the audition is then led into the mood of the play, they followed the action with high interest. Setting for the production was made by Robert Gard and Allen Crafton, of the department of speech, and was designed with the idea of expressing something of the atmosphere of the play. Ferenc Molnar, author of the play, brings to his work the point of view of a journalist, acquired through service as a member of the leading Budapest papers. During the war, his daily column was so accurate and popular that it was reprinted by two of the leading enemy papers, the Times and the London Morning Post. Molnar had written a number of plays and humorous novels before the war, but his greatest success was achieved with the production of "Lilah," the *Swain* which brought him the French Cross of the Legion of Honor. Magazine To Be Out Soor Mid-Winter Issue of Jayhawker Wil Appear in One Week John Chandler, editor of the Jayhawk, John Chandler, has announced that the midwinter issue of the Jayhawk will be published on one week. Chandler and Elizabeth Shearer, secretary of the Jayhawk, have gone to Wichita and completed arrangements This issue will be distinguishive, rico, the previous ones by the cover. It follows the current focus of the color scheme is particularly attractive. The most interesting part of this number is the sophomore beauty queens who were judged by Benny Goodman, popular band leader. There will be three articles concerning the past issues and a special art concerning the Board of Regents written by C. M. Harger, Abilene, who is chairman of the Board of Regents. Of these articles the snapshot section and Hill personalities. The magazine will be distributed in the usual way. Subscribers may object and those who buy each one separately may get them from the Jay James. Vespers Attract Crowd In Third Performance University Men's Glee Club Feature of Program at Auditorium The third all-musical vespers of the year attracted a good sized audience to the University auditorium Sunday afternoon. G. Criss Simpson opened the program with a performance of Roger's Concert Overture in B Minor. The University String Quartet, consisting of Waldermear Gellch, first violin; Conrad McGrew, second violin; Karl Kurter, third violin; Evelyn Coles, cello; gave a reading of the first movement of Haydn's Quarter in B Minor. This was followed by a duet by Pro. and Mrs. Joseph Wilkins, "I Weep Because They Have Taken My Lord Away," by Mendelsohn. The University Trio, consisting of Karl Kuersteer, violin; Raymond Hustell, cello; and Ruth Orcult, piano, in their first performance, with the carefully studied performance of a movement from the Schubert Trio i E Flat. An interesting ensemble number in the form of two Intradas by Melchion Franck from the early eighteenth century was played by Conrad McGrew first violin; Robert Sedore, second violin; Homer Dodge Caine, third violin; Karl Kuenterstein, first violi; Peggy Reidman, second violi; and Luther Cortelyou, contrabass. Prof. Waldemar Gelch directed the group. Closing the program, the University Men's Glee Club sang two old English numbers by Pursell and Morley, and an excerpt from Romberg's "The Desert Sensation." The students, Ogren, bass; Claude Dorsey, baritone; and Professor Wilkins, tenor. Professor Wilkins, regular director of the club, conducted the first two numbers, and Professor Wilkins, senior director of the Romberg number. Clarence Bridens-stein acted as accompanist for the club. Freshmen Y.M.C.A. Elects Angevine, Taylor, and Bounds Are New Officers Named "Freshman and sophomore representation in the M. S. C." is the slogan of the freshman Y.M.C.A. council for this semester. After electing David Angevie as president of the council, Louis Taylor is vice-president, and Jim Bounds as secretary. At night, the council proceeded with plans for persuading the Men's Student Council to recognize the wisdom of giving the freshman and sophomore students voting power on the Student Council. As an opening shot for their attack the council is planning to invite a member of the P.S.G.L. and Pachacamac political parties to present their party's opinion on the subject of representation at the meeting of the Y.M.C.A. council next Monday night. A council was appointed to make plans for a forum which would enable both students and faculty speakers to express their opinions concerning humanism and apohorn representation. Professor Sterling Confined Prof. M. W. Sterling of the Greek department has been confined to his home at 1129 Louisiana since last Wednesday with a cold. Professor Sterling was able to meet his classes yesterday at his home. COLD WEATHER BRINGS FROZEN WATER MAINS WEATHER FORECAST WEATHER FORECAST In Kansas: Fair Tuesday, not so cole in the air; warm Wednesday, increasing cloudiness, with rising temperatures Thursday. The temperature on the campus at midnight last night was seven degrees below zero. Yesterday's maximum was 85 degrees, and the minimum as five degrees above zero. Cold Wave Lingers on After Passing New Mark Hope for Weather Break Seen in Historical Statistics When the break comes, it will be none too soon for scores of communities suffering from an acute fuel shortage and for hundreds of families blockaded by snow drifts. The heavy snow made it impossible to town to buy medicine, food and fuel. Topeka, Feb 17—(UP) Kansas today based their hopes for an early break in the current, history-making cold on the sayin that "history repeats itself." Break Will Be Welcome S. D. Flora, federal meteorologist here, pointed out that in the three Februarys of the past 50 years which produced colder weather than the present one, the period of worst suffering was marked by a peak in temperatures to the years 1859, 1889 and 1905. Brown county was among the worst sufferers. Two deaths were blamed on doctors who were unaware of illness were prolonged because doctors could not break through the drills. WPA 'Storage Developes' WPA workers at Hiwatara, Horton and Robinson chipped wood with which to supply needs of suffering farm families. Lack of fuel also was reported from Topeka, Borton, Lawrence and many smaller communities. Union nine employees in the Pittsburg area were ordered to work six days a week instead of the customary five to relieve the *soil famine*. Meanwhile hundreds of a locked water because of frozen zones. Ice-coated highways made motor, train and automobile travel hazardous and caused numerous injuries and at least one death. Telephone and telegraph lines weighted by frozen mists interact with the state, interrupting communication. Ice on streams and lakes formed from 15 to 30 inches in depth and created a fresh flood mound in southeastern Kansas. Water that had already been soaked before the sub-zero weather came in, and a sudden that ice-digged gorges on ramps. Theta's Have Positive Tests Sorority Pledges Go Home for Scarle Fever Observation Elizabeth Carruth, c39, Mary Jane Shlockey, c39, and Joan James, c39, pledges of Kappa Alpha Theta, have gone to their respective homes for the summer, after showing positive results in the Dick test, given for scarlet哭. The girls, along with several others, had been with members of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity just before that anniversary. They provided a provisional ban for scarlet fever. The men quantitated at the ATO fraternity for scarlet fever were given the Dick test again last night by Ralph L. Canuteus, of the Watkima Memorial hospital. Fifteen students from the ATO house showed positive results in the test was given a week ago, which indicated they were susceptible to scarlet fever. The quarantine probably will be lifted from any individual who showed negative results last night. No more cases of scarlet fever have developed at the ATO house since E. D. Bolin, Jr., c'38, was taken to the University hospital last Tuesday. Ketcham Lecture Postponed Kettonman Lecture rostophen On textiles, "it have been given to the Ketton museum in Spooner-Thayer museum tonight, has been postponed indefinitely because of bad weather. The date for this lecture will be announced later." Miss Elliott To Speak in Topeka Miss Mabel Elliott will speak before the Women's club of Topela Thursday as part of the Primitive Culture in Modern Society. SUB-ZERO BLAST SERIOUSLY CUTS WATER SUPPLY Many Homes Here Without Water As Calls Submerge Department Employees For Repairmen SITUATION IS SERIOUS Estimate Between 300 and 400 Houses Have Frozen Water Systems Many houses in Lawrence were without water yesterday because of frozen pipes, it was disclosed by officials of the water department. Several houses in town have been out of water for some time, due to the weather and the lack of repairmen with the necessary equipment to thaw pipes. More than 100 distress calls were received by the water department yesterday, and more than 750 have been already during this cold spell. Yesterday, more calls were received on any other day. Mr. W. P. Corcoran, clerk at the water department office, estimated that between 300 and 400 houses in town are without water at the present time. The main trouble lies in the service lines running from the main to the houses. It is these lines than freeze—not the main line itself. Mr. Frank E. Willey, superintendent of the water plant, said that no water main proper was frozen. Many meters, it was said, were frozen. Repairmasters are working as fast as possible on service calls to repair the frozen lines. Two electrical thawers are at work constantly. In many instances the thawing is not as hard as digging into the concrete or driving drillers are used for the breaking of the ground. Frost line here now is 50 inches. The department suggested that all who have water now should leave a small stream flowing throughout the night to keep the pipes open. Lawrence Residents Forced To Decrease Coal Consumption COAL SHORTAGE INCREASES With the cold weather showing no signs of abatement, the coal shortage in Lawrence continues to become more severe. Dealers report that they are still able to obtain small shipments of coal, but the supply is far short of the demands. Several Lawrence coal dealers say that the mines from which they usually buy their entire supply are unable to handle the few small cars at irregular intervals. Many of the residents of Lawrence are being forced to decrease their consumption of coal, which must be purchased in small amounts. Several of them have been discontinued or united their services, save heating more than one building. The coal dealers have adopted vary- polies on the distribution of the coal, which are usually only their established customers, others refusing all except those who come in stock. A survey of the coal supply of the organized houses on the Hill showed the following results: Kappa Sigma's were able to get one ton yesterday. Phi Gamma Delta's are getting enough to have enough to last them for a few days. Sigma Alpha Epsilon has a week's supply. Sigma Alpha Mu was out last night but has arranged to get some this morning. Sigma Nu's have enough for a week. Sigma Phi Epsilon's have about 300 pounds. Triangle's have about one-half a ton. Delta's have about one-half a ton. Delta Zeta's have enough to last until Monday. Sigma Kapappa's have enough to last until noon today. TOPEKA INVESTIGATE HOARDING Topeka, Feb 17 — A city coal administrator may be appointed here if inquiries that reports of "hoarding" are correct. Mayor H. G. Barrett made the foregoing decision after being informed that people in need of coal were having difficulty getting orders filled, probably with ample fuel supplies are complicating the situation with orders. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1036 ≈ Comment Education and Progress In times of anxiety and discontent, when discontent has engendered the belief that great and widespread economic and social changes are needed, there is a risk that men or States may act hastily, rushing to new schemes which seem promising chiefly because they are new. People catch at expedients that have a superficial air of practicality, and forget the general theory upon which practical plans should be based. It is education and its proper application that people should look to. Modern doctrines of equality have discredited the ancient view that the chief aim of instruction is to prepare the few wise and good for the government of the State. It is not upon this world but also upon the material things of this world, power and the acquisition of territory, industrial production, commerce, finance, wealth and prosperity in all its forms, that the modern eye is fixed. Modern education should have three chief aims: One aim is to fit the student to be at least explorers, even if not discoverers, in the fields of science and learning. A second is to fit them to be leaders in the field of action, leaders not only by their initiative and their diligence, but also by the power and the habit of turning a full stream of thought and knowledge upon whatever work they have to do. A third is to give them the taste for, and the habit of enjoying, intellectual pleasures. Many moralists, ancient and modern, have given pleasure a bad name because they saw that the most alluring and powerfully seductive pleasures, pleasures which appeal to all students alike, were indulged to excess, and became a source of evil. But all students will have pleasure and ought to have pleasure. The best way of drawing them off from the more dangerous pleasures is to teach them to enjoy the better kinds. Moreover the quieter pleasures of the intellect mean rest and greater fitness for resuming work. At the present time, however, there is a real danger — in some quarters at least — of unduly emphasizing the specifically vocational, or "practical" side of education. The man of affairs knows little or nothing of young minds and their limitations, or of the educational values of the various studies in a school curriculum. He is prone to choose subjects chiefly or solely because of their immediate practical utility. Thus in his view the chief reason for learning a modern language is that business communications will thereby be facilitated. Strong pressure is being brought to bear to commercialize American education, to make it subservient to wealth and convert the students into a money-making mob. A nation cannot last as a money-making mob. It cannot with impunity—it cannot with existence—go on despising literature, despising science, despising nature, despising compassion, and concentrating its soul on pence. The only explanation is that the weather this winter was determined to get as much publicity as politics—Cincinnati Enquirer. The man who never locked the stable door until after the horse was stolen now has a son who thinks about the antifreeze after the car is frozen.-Kansas City Star. A Racket That Pays "POLice court news the other day," editorializes the Topeka State Journal, "told about the destroying of a couple of slot machines confiscated by the police. As the machines fell to pieces some forty nickels fell to the floor. Twenty dollars a machine isn't a bad return for a week—and it is likely the machines are emptied every other day. Say there are 200 machines in a town the size of Topeka, and the number is likely two or three times that many, it means $8,000 a week in this one town." "Can you visualize the nickels from school children who should have spent it on lunch and the nickels from hard working people who could ill afford the loss? Eight thousand a week means $14,600 a year—just from 200 machines. Easy money and lots of it." "If we must have such a racket why not the city or the government own the machines and raise in the enormous profits? Then the money would at least do some good in the way of reducing taxes or helping out in relief. If they can't be put out of business they should at least be controlled and made to work part of the time for something worth while." Across the top of the Daily Texan front page is printed this line: "The First College Daily in the South." Across the top of the front page of the Daily Tar Heel of the University of North Carolina is printed this line: "The Only College Daily in the South." Looks as though the editors of the two papers ought to get together and decide just what is meant by "The South." Borah's Chances Over forty years ago a dynamic figure came striding out of the young state of Idaho to write his name among the records of the political greats. Now at the age of seventy that man stands as a prominent candidate for the Republican nomination for the presidency of the United States Senator William E. Renah, the senator from Idaho, has truly accomplished what he started. During all his long years in the public eye William E. Borah has met every political issue with a square and forceful stand. In both success and defeat he has remained one of our Congress' most dynamic figures. Now that he has proclaimed his desire for the nomination, his record will be laid open for all to see and judge. There are certain tests that that record must meet and pass and the following embody a few of the most important points: He must have a record of having supported more Republican measures than Democratic ones. He must stand for the open door of opportunity for industry against planned economy. He must stand for private industry as against government competition in all industry. He must stand for a sound money of stabilized value as against the managed currency folly or irredeemable paper. He must permit a citizen to live his own life as against bureaucratic dictation from Washington. He must stand for increased purchasing of goods in order to increase the increased cost of living through secrecy. In itself this is a pretty good platform but whether Senator Borah can come up to it is a rather large question. The feeling seems to be growing that the senator from Idaho, brilliant as he is in debate and despite his great intellectual qualities, can hardly be considered genuinely representative of those forces which seek to end the tenure of Franklin D. Roosevelt in the White House. His record of liberalism does not make him the logical spearhead of the Republican attack. Also Republicans are not likely to forget that four years ago Senator Borah refused to lift a hand in aid of the party's presidential candidate. We can only be stating the obvious when we say that Senator Borah has a great many things to live down before he can command enough support for the Republican nomination. Some students sow their wild oats—then pray for a crop failure—Daily Californian. Kansas Is Ashamed! Why does Kansas have such a high record for auto fatalities? There is little excuse. Although Kansas is not especially noted for its broad, straight, well-kept roads, carelessness and violation of traffic rules must be largely the cause. Kansas is not proud of its record. Motor car deaths increased 13.2 per cent in 1935 over 1934, according to figures of the National Safety Council. Only five states showed a higher percentage increase than Kansas last year. They were: West Virginia, 21.8; South Dakota, 18.8; New Hampshire, 17.9; New Mexico, 16.2; and Virginia, 15.2. The American Legion, Kansas Safety Council, Kansas Highway department and several motor associations are co-operating to reduce the toll of life in Kansas. The Legion will launch a 60-day, statewide safety campaign, today. This organization has nearly 20,000 members in Kansas. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Let us all take part in the drive to reduce the number of auto deaths in Kansas, so that Kansas will no longer be ashamed. Notices at Dacechallor 2 Office at 3 p.m. preceeding regular public days and 11:10 a.m. saturday for Sunday inns. No. 96 CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: There will be a regular meeting of the Christian Science Organization Wednesday morning at 7:55 in Room C at Myers hall. Keith Davis, President. FEBRUARY 18. 1936 Vol. 33 COLLEGE FACILITY. The faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will meet today at 4:30 in the Auditorium on the third floor of the Administration building. E. H. Lindley, President. INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB: There will be an International Relations Club meeting this evening at 7:00 p.m. in the cafeteria of the Union building. The club meets on Thursday and Friday. "Don't forget the dinner prior to the meeting." Russell Young, Treasurer. ENGINEERING BOOK EXCHANGE PAY OFF; Call for your money at the Book Exchange today, February 19th. Neal Hardy, President. KAPPA PHI. There will be a pledge and cabinet meeting today at 6:45 at 1298 Tennessee street. Fledging service for new members will be held, active members are requested to be present for this service. Beulah Pinneo, President Marjorie Hornbaker. President. K. U. DRAMATIC CLUB: There will be a meeting at 4:30 p.m. today in Green hall. Various Jobs Occupy Yale Students As One-Third Earn While They Learn Now Haven, Conn. — (UP) — From taking care of babies to baby训 club entertaining and working for an understaking establishment is the lot of more than 750 Yale students who earn while they learn. The average student working his way through college could not be schooled better in domestic accomplishments. He handles a baby as nonchallantly and efficiently as he handles a car. He cuts a hedge, and a gardener makes a fence. He boots a rug with the stroke of a professional. And he's good humored. In the end, these young men will come doctors, lawyers, engineers, diplomatics, and business process they are becoming alert American businessmen of the most practicable. As for talents and abilities a student should be more than amidextrous. If he sings, he can be an entertainer at a night club. A few Yale students do that. If he plays, then there is the chance to perform. Or he can be a solo jazz artist. Opportunities for Talent If the music student's job grates on his artistic sensibilities, at least he has one comfort. He works with live people. He doesn't have to spend the night in the company of cadavers as they do, does who works for an undertaker. There's a handsome young music student who sits up nights studying and planning a career as a composer. He dislikes jazz, but he plays a piano until the early morning hours at a night club. They're a light-hearted crew, these self-effiring Yale students, no matter what their jobs. Being an understudy or an undertaker doesn't depress them, but being a rooming to a minor hushes that mother runs in the movies does not humiliate them. It is a catch in a court to be affiliated as a stage-friend, but only picked men can fill the bill. They must look like movie heroes. They must dance superbly, of course. They are hired technically as "users." They are guests and can list up to them in see that dance or party is a complete success to every girl there. They introduce young men to young girls. They "cut in" them, they舞词 unwearfully from the end of the affair to the end. But the sessees are infrequent for the average Yale student. The majority who work get "Ushers" Entertain Guests H J L P D I G Hollywood Film Shop Hollywood (U.P.)=That individualistic settlement of the United States known as Brooklyn has sent another candidate to Hollywood and she bids fair to the borough honor as did Clara Bow. The newcomer is Ann Loring. Her studio, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, says she entered the studio portals via the contest winner route. The story of her coming to Hollywood is something to hear. As the plot developed, the movie moguls were left practically breathless by it. That she was adjudged winner of a movie contest in Brooklyn isn't hard to imagine. But what happened after she was given the loving cup is what floored the talent scouts and their superiors, who knew her better than they really any other word opportunity. The studio experts looked over her data and ordered key to report in Hangzhou. A foregone conclusion that she would be here on the next train if not on the plane. campus tasks. Since the depration, the Yale employment authorities have pledged themselves to create jobs on the campus. They wish to withdraw Yale men from outside employment, which might be interfering with family men. Ann had to attend the college classes six months more to win her degree. She had been an honor student, so the degree was almost assured. It seems that when scouts uncover Ann's potentialities as a movie actress they discover she was a student, a senior at Brooklyn College. "The way it turned out," she says now, "I am one of those persons who came here." The director Ann has been cast as the love interest of the studio's production entitled, "Robin Hood of El Dardo." It's some kind of shaggy glove on the characters wear period costumes. Ann feamed them. She wanted to stay until commencement and come to Hollywood with her degree. The mendings could not understand it. To finish her job, she was astounding enough, to find one and then have her, a Brooklynite, ask postponement of the tryout behest and finish college was something she again. It is this policy that is, in part, responsible for Yole's much discussed College Plan, which provides for the maintenance of each one of the colleges as a separate unit, with its own facilities, dining room and athletic facilities. So Ann Loring remained in the world of books, in Brooklyn, for a half-year and then journeyed to Hollywood. The College Plan presupposes a reorganization of college life on the Oxford idea, with students taking their meals at the college and in most instances making their home there. The plan was inaugurated in its fuller aspects last year and made possible the employment of around 300 self-impulse students, able to secure secretaries, historians, and in number of less specialized positions. Perhaps the strangeness of it all won their consent. Patterned After Oxford These are called bursary appointments. To be eligible for these College Plan Jobs, the applicant must be a student of scholarship rank. The plan originated at Harvard and has been approved by the Board of Appointments with success. However, she isn't entirely happy. "I'm a bit hit someone," the say. After all, Hollywood and Brooklyn are a continent apart and are different, but they have one thing in common — they're less than two individuals. An interesting feature of the plan is the fact that an effort is made to place students in work as nearly allied to the subject matter of their major studies as possible. A man majoring in English may have a job in one of the English seminars. A business student may have a position as prospective scientist that speed his working hours in the Peabody Museum. A total of $40,000 was earned last year by 266 men working in the student agencies. Thirty-five per cent of these students are registered at the university, represented by 1744 students, registered with the Bureau of Appointments for termite control, and 155 students registered for either termite or summer work. The bureau obtained employment of some form or degree for 74 per cent of all registered, according to Bureau data. We Know 'Ts Cold' Before Reading Morning Weather Reports Every day in every newspaper in the United States, country and metropolitan nike, appears at least one story that informs us. As if we did not know it was cold! The average student, however, who is trying to earn his way with a hard time making ends meet, unless he has had to be the policy of the university to discourage students with limited means, since their proper maintenance at school becomes a serious problem, he must therefore our academic year is completed. PROFESSORS DECIDE READER EFFICIENCY BY NEW METER Layfette, ind. —(UF)—Some people can separate good readers from poor readers merely by watching how rapidly the pages of a book are turned, but a tachistoscope-chronoscope is used by we Purdue University professors. Dr. Otis C. Tromble of the education department and R. R. Townsley of the electrical engineering school discovered that excellent readers absorb writing in the terms of phrases, good readers will often take 300 times as long as the highest classification, spell out each word, letter for letter. When everyone arises in the morning and on stopping out of bed into his shiplers and dressing gown discovers that he is frozen stiff in an instant, he knows immediately that a cold day is coming. He asks for his newspaper. Imaging his joy and excitement when he discovers that the mercury sank to 54 below in Yukanet, Coronad "Why," he says, "it's almost unbelievable." But what good does that sheek kit of information do him. He knows that it is, in fact, he is probably even colder. Of course, there is no denying that there is some educational value in the story we read every day about how we lived and worked in the world. But didn't we know in the first place that northern United States and Canada was the coldest region in North America, that it usually gets very bitter, even when more thermal statistics are of no value to us; we forget them anyway an instant after we read them. And we know that when one part of the United States is cold the other sections are warm. So away with it all, we say! Cease to torment us with a constant reminder of our uncomfortable condition, and stop telling us how cold it is. Blood Disease Again Threatens Spanish Heir Once more the name of the dread malady, haemophilia, comes into the news as the former heir to the Spanish throne fights for his life against her case of the Spanish Bourbons. Her illness is "the king's disease," is one of the world's strongest malades. It affects only men, and is transmitted in hereditary cases by the woman who herself does not have the affliction. The slightest cut may cause bleeding to death because blood does not have cell-forming necrocytes. In the case of the ex-royal family of Spain, Queen Victoria was not a hemophilic but she, nevertheless, was still infected with severe and recurrent bleeding. The youngest of these two sons died a few years ago from a slight cut received in an automobile accident and the other from a life attack against dread disease. University Daily Kansan The disease also existed in the late Russian royal family. In 1907 the only son of the czar, at the age of 3, fell while playing in the garden and his nose began to bleed. Court physicians tried to stop the flow of blood, unable to stop the flow of blood. Haemophilia, which caused the young czar's death, had been hereditary in the Russian family for over 300 years. In 1631 ex-King Alloson of Spain, his daughters to wed as he realized that light transmit the disease to their sons. Although the disease in called "the OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS GOLDER HARRY VALDEN EDITOR IN CHIPF BOB BORRISON DILLE GILA ASSOCIATE EDITORS ALMA FRAPER MANAGING EDITOR FRID M. HARRER KJ BUSINESS MANAGER FACULTY BROWN Campus Editor Bill Rodgers Spokesperson Dana Kimberly Spotter Jeffrey Carter News Editor Donny Smart Editor Robby Schwartz Senior Editor John Paulson deal and exclusive national advertising representatives NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE, Inc. 470 Madison Avenue, New York City Chicago, Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles Friday, February 14, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday meetings, except during school holidays by students in the department of Journalism of the Department of Journalism from the Office of the Department of Journalism. Subscriptions price, per year, $3.00 cash advance, $2.75 on payment尊享额度, each payee. Enrolled as second class master; September 17, 1910, at the post office in Lewiston, Massachusetts. kings' disease" and may be hereditary, it is not necessarily either. The disease may originate in persons with no family history of the defect through mutation. Haemophilia is also found in the general run of population as well as in the royal families of Europe. The only way of telling whether the woman is a carrier of the disease is by the useless method of waiting until the sons and grandmothers have been produced. Science so far has searched in vain for some method of successfully treating the disease. Experiments being carried out by Dr. Curzol La Flour Illinois give some hope that a solution to the problem may be worked out. TUESDAY SPECIALS Baked Beans and Boston Brown Bread 10c Or our Fruit Plate at 12c (2) at the CAFETERIA Money-Back offer helps pipe smokers find what they want IT'S THE WORLD'S SWELEST TOBACCO "The money-back offer introduced me to Prince Abbey," says John T. Norton, "S'it's great." PRINCE ALBERT NEVER BITES MY TONGUE THE MONEY-BACK OFFER STARTS ON THIS TOBACCO "Prince Akensi the mildest tobacco I've ever smoked," says Ice Haze, "It 'killer bites." "Prince Albert is a grand tobacco," says Jaunen Potter, 57. "More men like Prince Albert than any other kind. This mild, choice tobacco is sure to please you. See no-risk offer below." --- HOW TO TRY P. A. WITHOUT RISK Smoke 20 fragrant piceus of Prince Albert. If you don't find it the mellowest, tastiest pipe tobacco you ever smoked, return the pocket from this date, and the tobacco in it to at any time within a month from this date, and the tobacco in it to at any time within a month (Signed, R J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N.C. PRINGE ALBERT THE NATIONAL JOY SMOKE --- PRINCE AUBERT THE BEST 2 BOXES OF THE CRMHPLDT JOHN M. MAYER & CO. INC. CINEMA TORNICO 50 pipelike of fragrant tobacco in every 2-ounce tin of Prince Albert TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1930 24 PAGE THREE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS KU Hill Society BEFORE 5 P.M.CAL, K.U, 23; BETWEEN 7:50 AND 9 P.M.CAL, CALI 2701K3 or 2702K3. The following were dinner guests at, a weekend guest at the Alpha the Chi Omega house Sunday; Martha Gamma Delta house. ☆ ☆ ☆ The following were dinner guests to the Chi Omega house Sunday: Martha Jase Stockman, Morrishd Filkin, and John Kelley. John Kelley, Philip Beattie, Salma; Paul Rogers, c;77 John Morrison, fi; Bill Blecha, c;encl Gourd, c;88 Gaillard, H37; Helen Walt, Winfield; Alfred Dicker, Clement; cration, c; 27, and Elwyn des, edc 36. ☆ ☆ ☆ The following from Corbin hall spent the weekend at their homes: Katherine Goldsmith, Dorothy Buldita, Peggy Clark, Robert C. O'Neill, Park all, park of Kansas City, M.; Dorothy Esperailan, Nadine Burke, Irmot Ford Rush Modell, of Kansas City, Kan.; Spiegel Dorothy Burden, and George Spiegel, of Topeka; and Lucille Davis, La Harpe. Sunday dinner guests at Watkins hall wore; Hazel Ruppenthal, 'faund'; Charles Alexander, c'38; Sylvester Schmidt, c'38; Kael Ruppenthal, c'39; Howard Winn, 'euncel'; and Tom Mc-Curnell, c'38. Dinner guests at the Sigma Phi Epsilon house Sunday was Dr. Jane Nahmith and nieces, Miss Juda and Sarah Garett, Miss Ribald and Ribald Garett, Kansas City, Mo. The following were dinner guests at the Alpha Chi Omega house Sunday: Harry Wiles, c38; Joe Elmoore, c39; Bruce Brunel, bumel; and Dick Kennedy, c39. Guests at the Phi Kappa Pi house for dinner Sunday were Mr. and Mrs Corlett Cotton, Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Brown, Ms. Ann Foster, Dual Mellon, Osp. Mich. ☆ ☆ ☆ Hoen Warren, *cuml*, Dorothy Dorothy Lano, *fa37*, Alexia Marks, *c39*, and Wright of Lawrence, were Sun Wing Guess at the Delta Upland house. Sunday dinner guests at the Alpha Gamma Delta house were Katherine Bellmore, Kansas City, Mo; Mary Campbell, Kansas City, Kan; and James Mallow, 178 Herbert Saanall, V. F. Webster, and Cecil Hearn, all of Kansas City. Mo., were weekend guests at the Ancilla house. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Mrs. Frank Parker and Susan Hudson, both of Lawrence, were dinner guests Sunday at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house. dinner guests at the Sigma Chi house Sunday were Martha Davis, c38; Betty Eiden, c38; Dorothy Lemon, c9; and Nellie O'Brien, c39. ☆ ☆ ☆ Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Howard, Hutchinson, and Betty Howard, fa'93, were Sunday dinner guests at the Kappa Eui Kappa house. Mary Louise Kanaga, c39, was a dinner guest at the Pi Beta Phi house Sunday. ☆ ☆ ☆ Bill Rothrock, c'38, was a dinner guest at the Gamma Phi Beta house Sunday. Harriett Harriss, Kansas City, Kan. ku Mrs. William W. Brant, of Pittsburgh, Pa., arrived last night from the East for an extended visit with her daughter, Mrs. A. M. Loe, and Professor Lee of the departments of sociology and journalism. Raymond Campbell, e'unel, and John Crouch, e'unel, were Friday dinner guests at Wattons hall. Mabel Arnot, Blue Rapids, is visiting her sister, Lucie Arntt, at Westminster hall. ☆ ☆ ☆ Nadine Schuerman, Leavenworth visited her sister, Doris Schuerman c'38, at Watkins hall over the weekend Mary Cavaness, c. 35, spent the weekend in Topeka visiting Frances Smith, 35. PHONE K.U.66 Lucile Mavity, fa'39, was a Saturday dinner guest at Watkins hall. Philomene Bourassa, c39, spent the weekend at Mexico, Mo. Betty Judd, fa'39, spent the weekend at her home in Kansas City. Smallest CSEP Payroll Is Turned in at Topeka their averages to the required minimum and are elicible for jobs. Draw on Unexpended Balance This is the first year that the CSEP of its opn been permitted by the regulations to use an unexpended balance. Essay Contest Nears Close (Continued from page one) This month's payroll for the College division totals $5,637.17, covering the work of 410 students for 16,133 hours and generating an additional revenue worked 1,455 hours for a total of $88,290. The largest payroll of the current school year, for the month训拔 Dec 12, amounted to $6,174.45 for $43 students in the College, and $740.80 for $79 graduates. The College payroll for was $5,750, and the Graduate $677.90. All entries in the Eddie Center essay contest must be in by Saturday, Feb 22 as competition for the scholarship award closes on that date. The essay question is, "How Can America Stay Out of War?" Any man, woman, or child who resides in the United States is eligible to enter the contest. The essay must not be over 500 words in length. The winner will be provided with tuition and complete maintenance for four years at any college or university. Should the winner be unable to attend college, he may designate the recipient of the award. Contributions for Eddie Cantor Award Are Due Feb. 22 More than $8,000 essays have been received already. Thousands of essays have come from high schools all over the country. Judges of the contest are four college presidents: Robert M. Hutchins of College, New York; Ray Layman Wilbor, Leland Stanford; and Henry N. MiCracken of Vassar. The judges are unselected. All papers should be addressed to CLASSIFIED ADS Are Due Feb. 22 All papers should be addressed to Idle Cantor, general postoffice, Box 9, New York City. TAXI V V V V V V Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S - 920-22 Mass. TAILOR PHONE K.U.66 One Stop Clothes Service Station SCHULZ THE TAILOR SPECIAL—50e reduction on any per- manent, with this ad, except Saturday. Permanents $1.50 to $5.00, complete with hair cut, IVAN'S BEAUTY SHOP, 7321¾ Mass., Phone 2333; 9411¾ Mass., Phone 533. TAXI BEAUTY SHOPS 924 Mass. FOR SALE FOR SALE. Our home at 1151 Lloyds ana with furniture. Shown by ap- pointment. Telephone 131. Florence M. Hodder. 109 --writes words or least one instruction, 25c. three insertions, 35c. six insertions, 75c. intrastats, or more than one instruction. Payable in advance and due by the Karenian student at the Karenian Student Center. FOR COAL, FOR BRIQUETS—Phone 219, Kaw Valley Fuel Company. -50 ABE WOLFSON 743 Mass. MISCELLANEOUS Student Loans Read the Daily Kansan want ads. --at University Professor Stevens To Be Honored a Dinner for 75th Anniversary A dinner in honor of the seventy-fifth birthday of Prof. W. C. Stevens of the botany department, has been planned for Friday evening at the Hotel Elridge. Chancellor Lindley and Mr. Irving Hill will be principal speakers and speakers for the lecture. Professor Steven has been a member of the University faculty for 47 years. Before coming to this University as a faculty member, he taught high school biology. He came to this University in 1899 as assistant professor of the botany department. He received his B.S. degree from this University in 1885. All friends and students are invited o attend. Reservations can be made at he Eldridge hotel, or at the botany office. John M. Van der Vries Was Popula at University Former Professor Passes John M. Van der Vries, former professor and head of the mathematics department in the University, died of earturtle at his home, 928 Pine street, Winnetka, Ill., late Thursday night. Mrs. Mant Der Vries, the former Bernie Tather of the class of 1911, was chosen to lead the nation'sizations, being elected to the Illinois Legislature succeeding Mrs. Ickes, wife of Mr. Taster. Plan Birthday Celebration BOYNTON TO GIVE While in Lawrence Professor Van der Vries as extremely popular with the students. He was head of the Commercial Club here in 1018, and sang in the band of the Red Cross War, he was head of the Red Cross Campaign in Lawrence, and attracted national attention by his work. Because of his national recognition, he was asked to work for the United States Congress. For the past several years, he has been manager of the North Central Division of the Chamber of Commerce with offices in Chicago. Mr. Van den Vries was a member Rotary for a number of years. Mr. Van der Vries was a member o Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. 17 23 27 39 --ranged by Dr. Bert A. Nush). 2:45 p.m. Books Old and New, Mr. Kathryn Redmond. February 18—Tuesday 2:30 p.m. Mental Health Books, Mrs --- 6:00 p.m. Athletic Scrapbook, 138tI Edition, Prof. E. R. Elbel. EPRESENTATIVES FROM OHIO COLLEGES IN MODEL LEAGUE A model League of Nations has been planned by the students of the University of Cincinnati. The model League will be made up of representatives from the colleges. Various organizations on the Cincinnati campus will participate. Each participating student will represent a country belonging to the League of Nations, and will take part in an international event in the country he or she represents. The model League will meet some time in the spring. No definite date has been announced. The Festival Opera Company, assisted by the Topka high school chorus and orchestra, will present Verd's "I Truman," a musical adaptation of Auditorium this evening at 8 p.m. The principal roles will be taken by Barbara Darley, soprano; Sian Sher-* *Will Blake, bassist; and John Neher, bass. These well-known artists have been with the Chicago Grand Opera and have been featured in European opera house.* OPERA COMPANY PRESENTS IL TRAVATORE AT TOPEKA Shruwed RoReshens Class Duties Dr. N. P. Sherwood, professor of bacteriology, has been confirmed to his home since Saturday, and was unable to meet Tuesday, and Monday classes. He will resume his teaching activities today. Read the Daily Kansan want ads. Roland E. Boyton, J.A.G.D. Reserve and former state attorney general, will speak at a meeting of the Reserve Officers' Association at 7:45 Wednesday evening. He will talk on the subject "Law and Courts Martial Procedure." BEFORE RESERVE OFFICERS The meeting will be in room 204 Fowler shops. Major N. P. Sherwood will be in charge. Beginning at 6:45 p.m. the usual pistol practice will be held on the indoor range for all reserve officers. Engel Completes Survey Prof. E. F. Engel, editor of the radio department of "The Modern Language Journal," recently completed a survey of radio stations in the United States that broadcast lessons in modern foreign language, and there are five stations including KFKU which broadcast French, German and Spanish and only one station, WSIU in Iowa City, that broadcasts a larger prose collection than these three languages than does KFKU. Five Stations in United States Broad cast Language Lessons The survey shows that there are 40 educational radio stations in this country spreading over 22 states. Questionnaires were sent to all of these and to other commercial stations which had no access to the radio languages. From answers received, Professor Engel reports that there are 20 stations in 17 states that broadcast modern languages. Of these, 13 broadcast Spanish, 13 broadcast French, nine give German broadcasts, three give Italian, Polish, one Chinese and one Portuguese. One interesting fact brought out b. the survey was that only five of the 6 educational stations broadcaster foreign languages, the remaining 15 in the list being commercial stations which offer facilities for this educational service. Jane Allen, fa37, was recently informed that her entry in a nationwide poster contest conducted by the Institution had been declared one of the winners. ENTRY OF JANE ALLEN WEE NATIONAL POSTER CONTEST Miss Allen's entry was one of 70 in a contest in which 100 winners were selected. The prize posters will be displayed over the entire United States and media in the next few months to help stimulate travel during the coming season. HODGE AND FUSON TO SPEAK AT CHRISTIAN CONFERENCE ENTRY OF JANE ALLEN WINS HODGE AND FUSON TO SPEA Dorothy Hodge, c 37, and William Fuson, c 1ell, will speak at the opening panel discussion of the annual state-wide conference of the Student Christian Movement to be held at Bethel University. Dr. Henry Nelson Wieman, professor of religion at the University of Chicago, and Dr. John C. Bennett, professor of Christian ethics, Auburn Theological Seminary, will head the list of speakers. ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP The total number of students enrolled in the School of Engineering and Architecture is 541, according to Dean G. C.Shaad. There are 135 freshmen, 131 sophomores, 145 juniors, 123 seniors, and seven special students. U may be snwedin now BUT we know U will need good shop repairs, very useful. Remember ELECTRIC SHOP STOJ 1017 Mass. W.E. Whestone, Prop. Phone 686 I - Nanette presents new $7.99 dresses of all descriptions... one or two of which is sure as well as your pocketbook. OVER THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Phone 511 Correct Cole Giennes! NANETTE Subscribe for Headquarters Rexall Drug Store THE KANSAS CITY STAR A Roosevelt Awarded Degree PHONE 17 Acceptance Address Will Be Broadcast From Temple University Feb. 22 H. L. Nevin Distributor 13 papers- 15c per week 847 Mass. St. President Franklin D. Roosevelt's address of acceptance of an honorary degree from Temple University will be broadcast from Mitten Memorial Hall in Philadelphia, Saturday, Feb. 22, from 10:55 to 11 a.m. The President is expected to arrive in Philadelphia from Washington and proceed at once to Temple University where he will be entertained by a citizen's reception committee for 15 or 20 minutes prior to the opening of the exercises. The program will begin with the playing of "Hail to the Chief," by the Temple Bund. Bishop Taitt will give the invocation and Dr. Charles E. Bourg, president of Temple University, will speak briefly. After a vienna soe by Dr. Charles E. Bourg, he covered on Mr. Rosenvelt by Governor George H. Ease of Pennsylvania. To Hold Carnival March 20 W. S.G.A. To Request 1:30 Closing and Date Dutch Treat The W.S.G.A. held its first meeting of the new semester last night in the Union building. The members discussed the Carnival Midway, which the team had been working on. The motion was made and carried that a petition be presented to the joint committee on student affairs to the effect that closing hours on the night of the carnival would be extended. The purpose of this petition is to make it possible for students to have an hour after the dance in which to enjoy the attractions of the midway. It was decided that the man and his date should expense the expense of the evening's entertaining it and that unanticipated women, as well as girls, would be welcome. It was announced that Betty Cox, former president of the W.S.G.A., who retired from office because of ill health, will be regarded in the future as an honorary member. The tea, which will be given at 3:30 this afternoon in the Administration building by the W.S.G.A. and the V.W.C.A., was also discussed. LABELS ANNOUNCES CANDIDACY FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE Edwin F Abels, publisher of the Douglas County Republican, announced recently that he would be a candidate of the eleventh district for state representative in the Republican primary. A spokesman said Mr. Abels is the University of Kansas in 1914, later serving as superintendent of several high schools in Kansas. Ten years ago he moved to Lawrence from Humansia, Mo., where he published a newspaper, and established the Douglas County Republican. C. C. Gerstenburger of Eudora, present representative for the eleventh district, has not indicated whether or not he would be a candidate for re-election. Kansas City Alumni Plan Dance Kansas City Alumni Plan Dance Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the Alumni Association, attended an alumnite evening in Kansas City, Kan. For evening, to help work out plans for a dance which will be held there this spring. Another meeting will be held Friday evening of this week, to complete details. Warm Up with a cup of STEAMING COFFEE at the 1009 Mass BLUE MILL 1009 Mass. 11 12 10 13 11 12 10 13 11 12 10 13 11 12 10 13 11 12 10 13 The 2,000 Alarm Clocks In Lawrence are the best advertisement for this "getting dressed on a cold morning" service. Yesterday 14 men woken to the fact they needed underwear . . 9 found woolen hose more comfortable than silk . . 5 didn't need new mufflers but were wearing old ones . . 7 man, on their way to and from work, were shy gloves, caps and the other little items that take the g. out of the daily grind. Look us up when you get up tomorrow! Last week of our Extra Value Sale. Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS IF you've lost your last dollar, you've found a diamond ring, your room-mate stole your collar, you need 'most anything, you'd like to sell the whoopie, you'd change the room you've had, in fact, you need assistance, Merely use a Kansan Ad New Simplified Rates Any ad of less than 25 word inserted once for 25c three times for 50c six times for 75c Use Kansan Want Ads PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 18. 1936 University Track Team Opens With The Cornhuskers Weakened Team Depends On Untried Athletes To Take Meet Saturday The Kansas track team opens its 1966 campaign Saturday when it engages the Nebraska Cornhoppers at Lincoln. The Jayhawkers were scheduled to meet the Kansas State tracksters last Saturday, but the meet was called off due to the severe cold spell. The meet will be held later in October and chance to see what Coach Hargis has since he lost a large number of sophomore stars. Kansas will be greatly weakened in the pole vault, high-jump, and hurdles. Ray Noble, Big Six pole vault champion not will be available until after the basketball season is over, as is the case of Marvin Cox, sophomore flesh has cleared the bar in the high-jump, 6 feet 9 inches. Cox is also a hurdler. Dalton Landers and Donald Bird Arkansas city sophomore stars who had shown strong form in the pole vault and hurdles, and had been counted on this season. Neo Stewart is another high-speed hurdler who is not eligible to play. The Jouhawk hopes lie mainly in such sophomores as Jack Richardson, former Ontario University star, who is also a former Missouri Valley A.U.V. sprint coach and Florida speedster; Gordon Cluas, a broad-brimmer and dash man, who has been showing much promise; Harry Wiles, a 440 dash man, who is being converted into a hurder; and Russell Hines, the first woman with royalty and life dash department. In Zadigan, Chad, and Hughes Coach Hargis has three distance runners who have not yet had much chance to show their wares. The team also has several lettermen from last year. They include: Charley Patt, broad-jumper and sprinter; John Bassett, long-jumper and hurdler; Schreeder, who runs a good 880; John Fitzgibbons, a hard working distance runner; Harry Kanatzar, shot-platter; Al Wlahlawee, high-jumper; Paul Ardney, long-jumper and Robert Ardney, a pole vaulter. Squad Will Engage in Telegraphic Matches This Week Rifle Teams To Compete The men's and women's University rife teams open their season this week by competing in the telegraphic games throughout the United States. The schedules have been made out and both team will shoot during this week and then telegraph their results to the schools with whom they are compet- The men's rifle team competes against the University of Pittsburgh, Johns Hopkins University, University of Wyoming, University of Dayton, Rose Polytechnic Institute, and Carriegie Institute of Technology in this week's matches. The women's team competes against the University of South Dakota, Cornell University, University of South Dakota, Washington University, and the University of California. The match for last Saturday with the 17th Infantry of Fort Leavenworth was postponed indefinitely because of the cold weather. Members of the men's team who were chosen to compete in this week's matches are as follows: Captain Edgar Leigh, Bailey Winton, Wayne Sellon, Edward Hunt, George Trawe, James Trawl, Carl Helman, Martin Denlinger, William O'Neill, Daniel Mooda, Wade, King Aikin, Hugh Wire, Stanley Marietta, and George Wood. Tournament Weights Listed Intramural Wrestling Competition T Get Underway Next Tuesday The intramural wrestling tournament will be conducted from Tuesday, Feb. 25, through Thursday, Feb. 27, according to a statement made yesterday by E.R. Feli, assistant professor of physical education. The weight classes for the tournament are a fullows: 121-128, 138-145, 158-168, 179 and a hastyweight after three men in each class. Men who are not members of an organization may cater unattached but not as individual owe men will be allowed to compa- who have not been certified by the hospital entrants. We must be checke- checked not later than Friday, Feb. 21. After checking at the hospital entrants must weigh in on the basement floor. Feb. 24, between 4 and 6 c'clock. Members of the Freshman wrestling squad are eligible to enter the tournament singly, but no other member of any varsity squash may compete. The entry fee for the tournament will be 50 cents per organization. Basketball Patrons Contribute Generously To Naismith Fund The Kansas contribution to the National Naimith fund, taken at the Kansas State game Saturday, totalled $105.35. Of this sum, $4 was in bills and check, and there also were 15 half dollars, 80 quarters, 288 dimes, 364 nickels, 96 cents. A Mexican nickel and ten of Missouri's milk tokens also were contributed. The athletic office furnished $21.93 This was obtained by taking 1 cent from every admission to the game. Prof. and Mrs. R. D. O'Leary were unable to be present at the game, but they sent a dollar bill to be added to the fund. Their son, Ted O'Leary, was high scorer for the Big Six conference several years ago. Cunningham Plans Bid For U.S. Olympic Team Hargiss Says His Protege's Run in Baxter Mile Was up to Par Bill Hargiss, Jayhawker track coach, said yesterday in commenting on the recent defeats of his protge, Glenn Cunningham, that he was well satisfied with Glenn's running in the Baxter mile. The Jayshawker ace was defeated in the famous event by Gene Venze, Pennsylvania star, who won the race in 4 minutes 10.2 seconds. This is the fastest time Venze has made since he set a world's indoor record of 4 minutes 10 seconds a few years before when a student at Pottsown high school. Coach Hargis said that Glenm's time for 4 minutes 10.7 seconds was a good choice, and he did not disappoint as well as ever. He further disclosed that Glenm is running this winter with an eye toward the summer when he will compete in the championship ship in the 1500-meter run. Cunningham won permanent possession of the Baxter miler trophy when he finished second because he had won the event on two previous occasions and the trophy was to be given to him if he competed in the event this year. Billiard Tourney To Start Annual Intercollegiate Competition Will Be During February and March Bell Cochrane, Union manager, announced today that he had received final instructions for the annual intercollegiate billiards tournament to be played off during the months of February and March. in the qualifying tournament five players who make the best showing will be chosen to represent the school in the national championship tournament. There will be teams picked for the final, three-cushion, and pocket billiards. The National Billiard Association of America has prepared charts of key shots that will be used to determine the scores of the qualifying players. The qualifications will be under the supervision of billiard room attendants. The qualifying rounds for pocket hil- bards and straight rail will be played from Feb. 17 to 21 inclusive and for crew-cushion from Feb. 17 to March 3. The scores of the national championship games will be wired to headquarters for this year's tournament and the winner will receive day ten of the day. The trophy cups are donated by Gene Turney, Gar Wood, and Nole Kizer. The name of the university or college represented by the winning team will be awarded and the winning team will retain the trophy until the date of the next year's tournament. Members of each competing team will be presented keys at the National Billiard Association of America. All players must be bona fide students in the schools which their teams represent and must be taking the minimum required work. Registration must be made with Cochrane, who will furnish the exact details and requirements. Aldene Kizler and Jeanette January passed the Quack Club try-outs Saturday morning, Feb. 15. Women's Intramurals The tennis finals between Doria tockwell, Independent, and D. J. Wiltuls, Watkins hall, was played in indoor days. Watucills won, 6-3, 6-3. The women's swimming meet begins at 7:30 Tuesday evening. Mr. Allpin will start it. There will be races, dives, and strokes for form. Those participating Tuesday are: Alpha Chi Omega, Kappa Alpha Theta, Sigma Kappa, Wakatha肌, Alpha Omicron Pi, Alpha Gamma Delta, and Independent. The performance Thursday, Feb. 20, consists of a performance; lowing Gamma Beta Phi, Beta Phi, Corbin肌, alta Delta Phi, Chi omega, TNT, IWW. Basketball, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 8:30. Corbin Hall vs. Alpha Delta Pi. K-State Wins Wildcats Smother Iowa State 41-25 Manhattan, Kan. Feb. 17. —(UP)— Frank Groves scored 17 points tonight at Kansas State against Iowa State to lead his teammates in a 41-28 victory in the final game of the season for the Wildcats. The victory, second in Kansas State, enabled them to pull up in the Iowa State owens in fifth place in BI Six standings. It was not until 15 minutes of play had elapsed that Johnson, Cyclone guard, connected for the first and only Iowa State field goal of the first half. The first period ended with the Kansans leading, 19-6. The score: Kansas State (41) fg Burns, f 2 Poppenhouse, f 0 Thorbrough, f 3 Fulton, f 0 Cleveland, f 0 Klimek, f 1 Groves, c 8 Miller, g 1 Glipen, g 1 Schiermann, g 1 Railaback, g 1 Iowa State (25) fg It Fleming, f 2 3 Cowen, f 1 3 Anderson, f 0 0 Poole, c 0 0 Kilborn, c 1 2 Johnson, c 1 2 Snell, g 1 1 Gibson, g 0 2 Pardridge, g 0 2 Score at half: K. S. 19, I. S. 6. Officials: E. C. Quigley, St. Mary's Pat Mason, Rockhurst. Totals Co-ed Hop Wednesday The Co-Ed Hop, for University women only, will be given Wednesday from 4 to 5:30 p.m. in the Union ballroom by the W.Y.C.A. and the W.S.G.A. Arrangements for an orchestra and special dance were made by Leize Montgomery, e38; McKenna w/ c38. A joint cabinet supper for the sponsors will follow the mixer. PATEE Walker Means, '25 of Hiawatha, has announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination for state representative from the thirty-seventh district, comprising Brown county. Means received his AB degree at the U.S.A. College of Law at Yale. He has practiced law in Hiawatha for the past eight years. Means, '25, for Representative SHOWS--3----7--9 NOW! WEDNESDAY 2 MIGHTY HITS 10c ALL SEATS ALL SHOWS "WESTWARD HO" Robert Armstrong "The MYSTERY MAN" El Brendol Comedo Riot Allen Announces Halt In Wrestling Schedule Dr. F. C. Allen, director of the University of Kansas athletics, announced yesterday that the Kansas wrestling team had been cancelled. Ineligibility and lack of interest are given as the chief reasons. The squad was reduced to six active, eligible members with two pairs of athletes but in turn but four of eight classes represented. The dual meets cancelled are: Iowa State here, Feb. 22; Kansas State at Manhattan, Feb. 27; and the Missouri meet, which was postponed from last Friday because of the weather. It is now a week away and we have a few individual entries in the Big Six meet at Norman, Oklah, March 6 and 7. Cancellation of All Meets Due to Ineligibility and Apathy Active and eligible wrestlers included Sian Ericson, heaviyweight Auguat Annelberg, 165 pounds; Sig Brom, 155 pounds; and Robert Childs, 145 pounds. Warren is working his way through school and has no time this year for wrestling. Warren McDougall, the scrappy little 128-pound letterman from Colby, is so engaged with his pre-media studies that he is now working at Tom McCowell, in the 175-pound GRANADA NOW! ENDS WEDNESDAY X-TRA CLAUD HOPKINS BAND Color Cartoon Novelty Latest News Events JAMES CAGNEY PAT O'BRIEN THURSDAY "CEILING ZERO" For the Week-end "A TALE OF TWO CITIES" SUNDAY Hailed by the New York Critics as Last Season's Greatest Hit--class, made passing grades the past semester, but under a new rule of the College of Liberal Arts, he is not permitted to participate in athletic activities, since he is on probation. Becomes Their Greatest Screen Triumph--class, made passing grades the past semester, but under a new rule of the College of Liberal Arts, he is not permitted to participate in athletic activities, since he is on probation. Acclaimed by Noted Film Critics as the Most Wonderful Picture in Year ONLY 3 MORE PERFORMANCES LESLIE HOWARD BETTE DAVIS "The Petrified Forest" Alen Crafton - Betty Ruth Smith Mary Myers Elliott - Norbert Anschuetz Jessica Royer Crafton - Donald Dixon - Charles Pipkin Activity Tickets Admit. Exchange for Reserved Seats at Ticket Office.GREEN HALL Phone 174. Tonight — Wednesday — Thursday PRESENT Single Admission 50c Fraser Theatre THE KANSAS PLAYERS WITH Curtain — 8:15 p.m. The Brilliant Comedy OLYMPIA FRANK TABERSKI, BILLIARD EXFERT. TO PERFORM HER Funk Tuberski of Scheductey, N.Y., will give a two-hour billboard exhibition at 3:30 this afternoon. Half of the exhibition will be devoted to instructing those who are interested in the funda- mentals of the game. Mr. Tahderi ranks among the first ten of the world's pocket billboard artists. An admission of 25 cents which will be charged for the exhibition will be good for trade at the Union, billiard room. Professor Bloch Ill With Flu Professor Bloch III With Flu Prof. Albert Bloch, chairman of the department of art, was confined to his bed today with influenza. Sub-Zero Weather Calls for CH I L I 10c at the Union Fountain Sub-Basement Memorial Union --- LUCKY STRIKE "THIS TOASTED" CIGARETTES LUCKY STRIKE Copyright 1954. The American Tobacco Company Each puff less acid—Luckies are A LIGHT SMOKE OF RICH, RIPE-BODIED TOBACCO For twenty-five years the research staff of The American Tobacco Company has worked steadily to produce a measurable finer cigarette—namely, a cigarette having a minimum of volatile components, with an improved richness of taste — "A LIGHT SMOKE." We believe that Lucky Strike Cigarettes embody a number of genuinely basic improvements, and that all these improvements combine to produce a superior cigarette—a modern cigarette, a cigarette made of rich, ripe-bodied tobaccos—A Light Smoke. Luckies are less acid Recent chemical tests show "that otherpopular brands have an excess of acidity over Lucky Strike of from 53% to 100%. Excess of Acidity of Other Popular Brands Over Lucky Strike Cigarettes BALANCE LUCKY STRIKE BRAND B BRAND C BRAND D Luckies *RESULTS VERIFIED BY INDEPENDENT CHEMICAL LABORATORIES AND RESEARCH GROUPS a light smoke OF RICH, RIPE-BODIED TOBACCO-"IT'S TOASTED" UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXXIII on the SHIN By BUD EVANS,'36 Howell's Last Stand . . . A Record We Think . . . Tueses on Wednesday . . . Lost . . . Wrong Class . . . Etching Notes . . . A yarn on Wrestler's Knitting . . . Other Sour Stuff Understand that Ed Howell, some say he's an ATO, is going to get him all married along about the first of April—and it's no joke either! Jump the little girl is from back home, and we don't know her name. Ed probably will be looking for spring even more anxiously than the rest of us! Tales will be heard. Heard that Bob Kruse, of the Sig Ep Lodge, put his pin on Carellyn Smith, Alpha Chl las, last Thursday night, and got it back last Friday. Why don't you check that time—we think it's a new record! Thought we were seeing things not long ago when Madison Marks and Lawrence Fikin, a couple of medics (nuff said), appeared for their dates at the Rocky Mountain hospital the week, too. Had he warred for a while. Thought maybe old "Snoop" was missing something, but found out later that the boys were just pulling; fast one on their dates, Lucie Waghee and Harmon. Boys will be girlfriends. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19. 1836 What's become of Robert Feister Johnson—"Drink" to you—of the Sig Alph club? Understand that he refuses to appear in public (thank Heaven) without his upper-chasmos — the 'bwers! Might as well come out Johnson, we don't think the boys are coming back! Professor Chubb entered a classroom not long ago, sat down, and proceed to check the table. After calling a fe names, (since ones of course) the student up to find himself he wrong code. Xe-ye' get up at walked out. Wonder why we haven't heard any complaints about the cold from some of the "West Hills" boys? It's about time for the annual harvest of frozen cars and noses from out that way. Asked Gkeine Lloyd, D. U. playboy, for a plausible explanation, and he said the weather didn't affect the guys out there because they had "hot-blooded." But before long they're reverting to primitive man, and will be seen going around in bathing trunks! Let's hope not! Hallie Harris, foreman of the juniors, finally came up with a joke that is almost printable (everyone has own opinion, however). Harris asked if we had heard the runner that Joe Louis wasn't going to be able to fight Johnny Nelson. "Louis was talking to Amos and Andy, and was struck by Lightning." What makes people bite — that's what we want to know! The etching class was dishessing fish not long ago when Meredith Dyer, Theta, rose up in defiance with the declaration that she didn't like the wild fish that one catches. The only kind she liked were those she bought at the store. Whereupon, someone should have thrown her one, and made her like it Observe one member of the wrestling team undergoing great training difficulties the other day, Tom McConwell was having a tussle with a ball when he lost his knee. The skeins (whatever that is) and has to be rolled into a ball before the knitting begin. Get to work Tom! Wonder if it wasn't because of things like this, that prompted Phoen Allan to call a rest of the K. C. wroaking schedule? KANSAS CHEMICAL ENGINEERS ELECT BISHOP AS PRESIDENT At a meeting of the Kansas Association of Chemical Engineers FI. 13, the meeting was convened by Dr. E. c'88, president Joe Robertson, e'92 vice-president Nelson Ebens, e'turul professor Ralph Sackett. Preceding the election, Prof. T. H Marshal outlined the qualification for a chemical engineer in the Chemical Engineers, a group that the KACE intend to join in the near future. All chemical engineers are invited on alternate Thursday each month. A. T. O. Quarantine Lifted Students Resume Classes After Showing Negative Reactions to Scarlet Fever The fifteen students from the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity, who have been under quarantine since they showed positive reactions a week ago to the Dick test, given for scarlet fever, were allowed to resume attendance of classes yesterday morning. It was found that the student had acquired scarlet fever when they were examined Monday night by Dr. Ralph I. Cannonston, of Winston Hall's Memorial Hospital. The three james of Kappa Alpha Theta, Joan James, c39, Mary Jane Shockley, c39, and Elizabeth Carruth, c39, who were with the A.T.O. before they were quantified, and a week ago showed positive results of the test, have not contracted scarlet fever and are returning to school today. E. D. Bolin, Jr., c38, in the only case of fever that has developed so developed progressing satisfactorily at Wakka Market and, where he has been for the past week. hirty-nine Win Degrees In College of Liberal Arts Class Is Six Larger Than Graduating Body of Last Year Degrees for 39 persons who have recently completed all requirements were voted by the College of Liberal Arts faculty at its meeting yesterday after it was six greater than similar list at the same year. Degrees voted were as follows: Bachelor of Arts—Joe Wendell Baker, Owainie; Maude Arts, Harveville, Mont Louis Belot, Jr. Clyde; Dale M. Chase, University of Michigan; Linda Brunckham, Hutchinson; Enisaible Carey, Lawrence; Robert Lawrence Cunningham, Kansas City, Kan.; Kathleen Donahue, Lawrence; Arnold R. Carr, Lela A. Garrett, Medicine Lab Benjamin Franklin Givens, Kansas City, Kan.; Margaret Dwons Goods, Lawrence; Faye Ganfield Hibbard, Lawrence; Fern Horns Kielsen, Kansas City; Fern Horns Horsehill, Albert C. Huber, Kansas City, Kan; Ida G. Lanning, Topeka, Maytius August Dodge, City Ma; Mary Elizabeth Bacon, City Salma, Maxine Broen Mitchell, Salma Madge Lousse Myers, Kansas City, Mo; Maron Alice Myers, Kansas City, Mo; Joan Miller Noel, Glacier; Clint Chailers Onyer, Nickerson; Jack Brock Penfield, Lawrence; Harold N. Raport, Lawrence; Mary Jane Roby, Kansas City, Kan; Lillian May Sands, Bartlesworth, Oklahoma; Loa Elva Scoggins, Courtney McA, M Shannon, Lawrence. Bettie Gough, Kansas City, Kan; Kenneth Friedrich, St. Joseph, Mo; Dorothy Helen Taylor, Sioux City, Mo; Rufus Heen Thompson, Lawrence; Ernest Joe Vanek, Ellsworth; Frederick Arthur Walker, Lawrence; Eugene A. White, Hutchinson, Sail Zimmer, Lawrence. Bachelor of Science in Medicine—Ralph Eugene Anthony Hines, Leavenworth. Carnival Plans Crystalize W. S. G. A. Affair to Require Three Tickets—Complete Plans Today W. S.G.A. members at their meeting last night made further plans for the carnival which is to be held March 20. The carnival is being given this year in place of the musical comedy as in previous years. Three different tickets are in the general admission one, one for the side show and one for the dance. A prize will be given for the best decorated booth displayed by a Hill organization. The building committee gave a report on the construction of the booths and it will be necessary to know the exact amount of space and light to be used by each booth before any estimate of the cost of construction can be made. A note was read from Chancellor and Lindsay thinking the members of the congregation would be seen at the celebration held honoring he Chancellor's fifteen years of service. Final plans for the carnival will be made at a meeting of the house presidents tomorrow. Tau Sigma Announces Pledges Helen Johnson, president of Tau Sigma, announces that Rebecca Corbett, c³⁹, and Elizabeth Irwin, c¹⁸¹, are involved in the organization. Others who are second try-out next Tuesday evening are: Betty Hamilton, c³⁶, Jean Eick- enberg, c³⁷, Bette Wenger, c³⁸, Mary Stevens, c³⁷, and Mary Ellen DeMotte, c³⁷. Tee Sigma Announces Pledges Norman Thomas, Socialist Leader Will Speak Here Liberal Author, Active in Labor Movements for Years, To Lecture Tuesday Mr. Thomas has visited the Kansas campus twice before. In 1834, he leeched a convocation on "Students and Social Evolution" at a conventation, at the noon Forum, and at the Why Club. At that time he went to the League for Industrial Democracy. Norman Thomas, well known socialist leader and student of political affairs, will speak at 2.30 p.m. Monday, Feb. 24. The speech will either be given in the University Auditorium or in Fraser theatre, according to Raymond Nichols, secretary to the Chancellor. Mr. Thomas was twice a presidential candidate on the Socialist ticket, and has been prominent in labor movements for many years. He recently participated in the garment Workers strike in New York Although probably best known as a Socialist, Thomas M. also is an author. Some of his best known works are: "The Conscientious Objective In America," "The Challenge of War," "Socialism of Our Times," and "Prosperity." At present, Mr. Thomas is making a lecture tour, and after his speech here Tuesday afternoon, which will be sponsored by the Liberal Club, he will go to Emporia, where he will speak Tuesday evening. On Lecture Tour Former Pastor He was graduated from Princeton University in 1905, and later from the Union Theological Seminary. While in college he defended against Harvard and the university's pretreatment of his chase, and was elected to membership in Phi Beta Kappa fraternity. In his senior year at the Union Theological Seminary, he became associate pastor of the Church in New York City and later, as director of the American Parish, did extensive work with the church. NUMBER 97 With the advent of the war, however he deserted the church and turned his attentions to labor and politics. He has served as editor of "The World Tomor row" and as associate editor of "The Nation." In 1924 he ran as Socialist candidate for the governorship of New York, and in 1925 for the office of mayor of New York City on the same ticket. Communist Editor To Speak Anna Louise Strong, associate editor of the "Moscow news," will speak at the CBC's *Australia News* and the M.S.C. Tuesday, Feb. 25. In 1921, Miss Strong has spent most of her time in Russia, where she was one of the first managers of the first managering editor of the News. Dc McClure to Meet Classes Dr. Gail A. McCurlie, assistant physician who has been ill with pneumonia, will be able to meet her classes Wednesday Anna Louise Strong, Founder of "Moscow News," Will Address Forum At first an illustrated weekly for American engineers and tourists, the Mossew News has since become a daily newspaper to be published in English in the Soviet. and Thursday this week. He will go to Osage City on Feb. 26, to conduct a mass band composed of musicians from the Linden, Burlington, and Osage City high schools, Feb. 27, he will be a guest at the Burlington School, Feb. 28, Abilene on March 5 for the annual spring festival played by the high school band and orchestra. Miss Strong also organized the John Reed Commune and the American Educational' Workshops, which became the first watch factory in Russia. He will be accompanied by two solitars chosen from the University band who will play selections at each of the concerts. Russell L Wiley, director of the Uni- versity of Kansas band, will act as guest conductor of several high school bands the later part of this month. Dr. McClure to Meet Classes HIGH SCHOOL BANDS TO HAVE WILEY AS GUEST CONDUCTOR She began her career as a welfare worker, later becoming a journalist when in 1919 she became editor of the "Seattle Union Record." Besides her work as a newspaper woman and organizer, Miss Strong has written several books, among them "Worlds," and "Russia Conquers Wheat." MURDER SUSPECT ACQUITTED The jury of eight men and four women returned a verdict of not guilty after being out four hours end 15 minutes. Blumenthal was accused of manning the machine gun which sent five shots ripping into the crusading editor's back as he stepped from his automobile at the rear of his apartment last Dec. 9. Minapolis, Feb. 18. (UP)—Isdor Blumenthal tonight was acquitted of the murder of Walter Liggett. Admiral Byrd Will Speak At University Next Week Account To Be Given of Second Antaretic Expedition As the third number on the University lecture course, Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd, aerial conqueror of both Poles, will speak Wednesday, Feb. 26 in the University Auditorium. He will give an account of the achievements of Antarctica expedition which him landed at. The important of his entire career. His skull will be illustrated with 9,000 feet of motion pictures never shown before. Expedition Byrd's recent discoveries in Antarctica have added thousands of squarmed sea ice to Byrd's map. The fascinating details of this creature's predition will be described by Byrd, and the vast areas upon which human eyes can see are before looked will be show by the pictures. The expedition covered the period from Oct. 27, 1933, to May 10, 1933. The voyages over ice seas in the gallant ship *Bear of Oakland*, and the exploratory vessel *Pioneer* contain at the bottom of the word *beautiful* be pictured and described. Stories about the sledge and tractor parties which unearned new data of Antarctic biological and geological important, the day by day of the other interesting incidents will be told. **Alive Abo Five Months** Fifty-two men lived buried under the ice for twenty years. For five months of monotonous night, eighty-Bryd lived completely alone where he companion or a single living thing in a barn but 128 miles south of Little America. Lived Alone Five Months Rear Admiral Byrd, who will personally describe this perilous trip, has received almost every honor the United States can bestow. By special aet of Congress he ranks the rank of Commander after his North Pole flight and to the rank of Rear Admiral after his conquest of the South Pacific. He has twenty-one citations on officer's leave, but returned from his most recent expedition he received the highest honor which any incoming celebrity, native, or alien has ever received. Not satisfied with greetings at the White House President Rosewood, he sent the dock of the Washington Navy Yard and on May 10, 1953, saluted Byrd in the name of the nation, as he stepped off the vessel. A committee of Converse also greeted the expedition members. Law Faculty Recommends Nine The law faculty meeting held yesterday is recommended for degrees the nine following students: Darlene G. Anderson, Reymond Carr, Elizabeth C. Coombs, Max L. Frederick, Phillip P.rick, John A. HerLOCKer, Gerald E. Kollerman, William C. Norton, and Rex Parr. These students also passed the Kansas bar examination in Topea last week. Law Faculty Recommends Nine Greek Freighter's Crew Is Rescued In Raging Atlantic Five Other Craft Stand By While American Liner Takes Men Off Sinking Ship New York, Feb. 18-(UP)-Another drama of the high seas was enacted in the storm-swept Atlantic 400 miles off the Maryland coast late today as the crew of the sinking Greek freighter abandoned the ship and was taken aboard the American liner "City of Newport News" In a communication from the office of the state architect in Topela at that time, it was learned that a bill appropriated $150,000 for this work had been The sketches submitted by the students are done in water colors and crayon and may very well serve as ex-planations for the design of the new steps. priating $6,500 for this work had re- Throughout the night and day, the crew of the Greek vessel fought viisure to keep the 5000-ton craft afloat. Its broken seams were admitting water faster than the ship's pumps could pour it back into the sea. The American ship was the first of a frotula of six rescue vessels to reach the side of the distressed cargo-carrier "Stefano Costomei", which flashed an SOS last night that it was "leaking badly." First evidence of progress being made on the construction of new steps for the front of Watson library was seen yesterday. Suggested plans, drawn by the students in the classes of Prof. G. M. Beal, in the School of Architecture and Engineering are being exhibited on the bulletin board in the second floor vestibule of the library. Those whose plane is on display are Gerald Dearing, e37; Jon Belson, e38; Foster C. Parrish, e38; John Ecklon, e38; and Lloyd Roark, e37. A campaign for the construction of the steps was conducted by the "Daily Kanen" last December. It came as a response to the university's suffered by several University students. Realizing the hopelessness of the fight, the master flashed a plea to rescue ships plowing laboriously into the water. "Save the crew; the message read. Waging Hopeless Fight The rescue ship maneuvered to form a lee. It required time. Meanwhile the men in the crew's decks were wainsh and that he had ordered his crew of 33 men to abandon him. At 3:36, watches aboard the "City of Newport News" saw the crew of "Stefano Costomeni" begin attempts to lower lifeboats. The "City of Newport News" arrived to the sides of the sinking vessel shortly before 3 p.m. Only a few feet of the ship and the superstructure were visible. Ship Abandoned Quickly Three minutes later the first lifeboot pulled away from the buried bull and rode toward the "City of Newport News." Suggested Plans for Library Steps Exhibited by Architectural Students Erroneous Report Brings Confusion Arriving at the given spot, the "City of Newport News" reported it could find no trace of the "Stefanos Costomici." At first it was believed the stricken ship was blotted from view by a blinding snow storm. It was learned that the ship was moving away and proceeding in the direction of the Virginia Gate at about eight knots an hour. The remaining boats were launched successfully and shortly before 5 p.m. word of the entire crew's safety aboard was recorded. The boat was intercepted by coast guard here. Rescue might have come sooner had not the skipper of the floundering vessel sent out an erroneous position. When the first SOS was flashed last night the position was given as 180 miles southeast of Nantucket灯。 "The City of Newport News" captain ordered the Greek ship to hold to at a given position or he would have to proclaim his name. This edict was apparently obeyed. The "City of Newport News," the freighter "Gate City" and the tanker "Cities Service Boston" as well as three coast guard vessels the "Champaign," "Thetis," and the "Galatea" swung off their regular courses to the rescue. Erroneous Report Brings Confusion ently been plotted through the state legislature under the guidance of Dallas Krapp, state senator from Coffeyville. The reason given by the state architect was that the WPA projects in the state had taken up the entire time of the department during the last few months. It was also stated that work would be done time to have the steps completed before the beginning of the fall semester of 1938. University students have been of unanimous opinion that the steps are a serious danger as well as an eye on the campus. Despite previous agitation by various groups, the University authorities have never permitted money to be taken out of the fund for campus movement to make construction possible. The present ice weather has made the wooden steps hazardous. Even the addition of the risers has not alleviated the difficulty to any great extent. Students are in hopes that the initiative and architectural students will not be in pain. Will Hold 'Amateur Night' Chi Omega and Delta Tau Delta to tonight will present the first of a series of amateur acts to be given at the midweek varties. Tonight's act by Chi Omega is 'The Spectacular Sound' and a dance routine, while the Delta Tau will present a one-act play. Chi Omega and Delta Tau Delta Present First Show The amateur nights will last for a period of five or six weeks, after which time the winners will be selected. There will then be a three-hour varsity at which the winners will compete for a silver cup, in admission to this varity will be free. Each competing fraternity or sorority may use as many persons in their respective acts as they deem necessary, and each act must be limited to five minutes. All independents wishing to enter the contests are to call Gene Lloyd, 2903. Received Enthusiastically on Fourth Tour of This Country Vienna Choir Boys Sing Tonight in Auditorium The Vienna Choir Boys, famed for their "fuite-like" voices, will appear tonight as the fourth number on the University Concert Course at $8.30 p.m. in the University Auditorium. On their fourth tour of the United States, this group has been enthusiastically received in all the cities in which it has appeared. The program tonight will be in three parts. The first part includes "Repliet Sunt" (J. Gallus), "Omnes de sa Hena Surge" (J. M. Aulsa), "The Virgin's Slumber Song" (Max Reger), and "God in Nature" (F. Schubert). The second part of the program will be a miniature opera entitled "A Song for Klee" (Song Krieg) by Franz Schubert. This lengthy number, which will be given in costume to the entire ensemble, was arranged for the Vienna Choir Bees. Choir Has Long History Uhirn Has Long History The third and last group consists of "German" (F. Schubert), "Little Landman" (a folk singer), Ruck, Ruck ("Arranged by V. Gomboul"), and "Tales From the Vienna Woods" (J. Strauss). These 22 little boys are members of a musical organization which has been the pride of Austria since 1488, when the choir was founded by imperial decree. The choir is directed from all kinds of homes throughout Austria, although the majority of them come from peasant families. They are kept at school, educated and trained so long as their voices remain childish in tone. When their voices change, the choir must keep on and kept on at the choir boys' home for another three years of education. Although they were for years supported by the state, they now are self-supporting. However, for two years Father Lutz was the director of the expenses of carrying on the organization from his own private funds. Then the choir, turning to secular music, launched out to support itself. It was a happy innovation, for their work became a high light in Vienna's musical world formed. In Schubert Sing in the Music Hall, his choir has enrolled in membership such famous musical names as Franz Schubert, who became the choist's soloist and first violist of the orchestra. Now the choir is singing many of Schubert's works. Joseph Haydn, another world renowned composer, was a choir boy, remaining a member of the school until he was 18 years old when his voice broke. The New York American praised the boys as singing with the assurance of their music, while the Tribute said "Captivating musicalness ... enchanting children, rewarding to gaze upon." Other papers throughout the book have likewise herdred the group. Songs in German Although their songs and plays are all sung in the German language, it does not detract from the effectiveness of their programs. Identification cards will admit students to the concert, and others may purchase tickets at Bell's Music Store, the Round Corner Drug Store, and the office of the School of Fine Arts in the Administration building. John Blocker's Father Dies John G. Blocher, assistant professor of economics, has been called to Dayton, Ohio, by the death of his father. Mr. Blocher is a member of by other faculty members temporarily. He is expected to return early this week Relays Announced As Preliminaries For 1936 Olympics Program of Unusual Events To Be Included at Annual Kansas Contests The Kansas Relays will be one of the accredited preliminaries for the 1936 Olympics, which are to be held in Berlin, Aug. 1 to 16 this year. Dr. For-Man Amen, director of athletics at the University of Kansas, announced today. Decathlon in Relays This will cause the inclusion in the Lelays program of a number of events secular to Olympic competition, in particular the steeplechase; he 400-meter hurdles; his tep-and-jump. Whether the standard special events of the RELays, which are included in the 100-yard dash, 120-ward high hurdles, pole vault, shot, and the like, shall be in the metric system, its distances, has not been determined. In writing Dr. Allen regarding the plans of the Olympic committee to make use of established athletic carnivals for the qualifying of American material for the final tryouts, T. N. Metefal of the University of Chicago, and secretary of the committee on selecting the American track team, urged the commission be kept as a part of the relays. Her former team, now at California, has two prospective entries for this event at the Kansas Relays. In this connection, Dr. Allen pointed that this event has been a part of the company's history and has started, and has been gaining in popularity as evidenced by increasing comm- Value of the decathlon, year after year, at the Kansas Relays, was demonstrated four years ago when the winners of the first three places in the American tryouts, and therefore the American decathlon, were displayed previously in the Kansas decathlon, and all had received training for the Olympic tryouts under the Kansas coach of the time. Brutus Hamilton, winner of the 1956 Olympics, were James Bauch, holder of the record of the decathlon record and of the Olympic decathlon record. Clyde Cofman, winner of the Kansas Relays decathlon in 1853, and Buster Charles, Haskell coached well in the 1923 Olympics, Bauch winning with a new world record. Improved Scoringx An improved scoring system, used first in America at the Maryland Kelons last year, greatly simplifies the scoring for 10 events constituting the decathlon. Kansas has another good chance of being represented on the Olympic decathlon team. Claye Coffman, who last year won the American pentathlon championship, is again looking forward to his awards. At Wellhausen, lanky Jayhawker, is also interested in the decathlon and is now in training for such competition. Some of the special Olympic events will be set for Friday afternoon, with the opening day in decathlon, and the running of the 320m interchallenged track and field meet. FACULTY MEMBERS WILL HEAR LECTURE BY FRANK A. COWAN Several members of the faculty of the School of Engineering and Architecture will attend an illustrated lecture on the history of telecommunications, Cowan of the American Telephone and Telegraph Co. of, New York City. The lecture, given in Kansas City, is sponsored by the Kansas City section of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers. ALUMNI TO MEET INFORMALLY IN TOPEKA FOLLOWING GAME An informal alumi meeting will be held tonight at the Green Parrot teambroom in Toperka immediately following the K.U.-Washnumbasket game, Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the alumi association, disclosed yesterday. The members of the University basketball team and the coaches will be present together with as many alumni as are able to attend. Peace Leader Visits Campus POLICE LEADER Visits Campus Paul A. Koehler, president of the Kansas Peace Action Committee, will visit the campus today to consult with members of the local organization, Alfred Ames, president of the University Peace Action Committee, has called a meeting to be held at 2:30 in the Union building. He urges all members to attend. 1 PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 10. 1936 ≈ Comment It Can't Happen "It Can't Happen Here," that is if you are inclined to believe as Sinclair Lewis but it seems that he is contradicted by Will Hays, cna of the movies. The reason for the contradiction lies in a best seller novel written by Mr. Lewis entitled, "It Can't Happen Here." Said novel was sold to a motion picture producer to be made into a motion picture. But Mr. Lewis understands that Mr. Hays has decreed that it can happen here by placing a ban on the production because of "international complications" which might arise. Mr. Lewis is told that Mr. Hays will base the suppression on two grounds first, that the film industry is opposed to using the motion picture for controversial politics, and second, that the film will have international complications and may offend Mussolini and Hitler. The author admits that his book is purely propaganda, but he says, "it is completely non-political in the sense of being non-partisan, and it is propaganda for only one thing, American democracy." The imaginative Mr. Lewis has written a story of the plight of a liberal Vermont editor, fighting against a Fascist revolution, led by a former middle western senator, who is elected to the presidency in the campaign of 1936. The new president immediately takes control of all branches of the government. Shortly after he is forced, by his former secretary, to flee the country. The secretary takes over the dictatorship and is assassinated by one of the Fascist leaders. The book ends with the hope that the Fascist rule is on the way out. In the novel Mr. Lewis makes the anti-Fascist leader a Republican supported by a number of Democrats. And Mr. Hays has told the producers "that he didn't know which way the next elections might go, and that he certainly didn't intend to offend the Republicans." To quote the author, "If Mr. Haws thinks that an anti-Fascist film might be interpreted as anti-Republican, that ought certainly to interest a lot of Republicans." It seems that Mr. Lewis is most indignant over two main issues which are, to again quote the author, "isMr. Hays going to rule once and for all that fiction or drama dealing with public problems cannot be considered film material? and, are we to be delivered over to a film industry whose every step must be governed by whether or not the film will please or displease some foreign power. Mr. Hays actually rules that a film cannot be made showing the horrors of Fescism and extolling the advantages of liberal democracy because Hiller and Mussolini might ban other Hollywood films from their countries if we were so rash." Mr. Lewis goes on record as being a champion of democracy by saying, "demonocracy is certainly on the defensive when two European dictators without opening their mouths or knowing anything about the issue can shut down an American film causing a loss of $200,000 to the producer. I wrote 'It Can't Happen Here,' but I begin to think that it certainly can." —Readers Digest, February. There are only four letters of the alphabet not now in use by the Administration. When we establish the Quick Loans Corporation for Xyloxane, the first letter of the alphabet will be exhausted—Herbert Hoyer. President Roosevelt and the new deal have at last been saved a leg to stand on. The Supreme Court has ruled the TVA is valid. Which, in a measure, is surprising in view of the previous hostile stand taken by the high court on the President's new deal policies. The Akron rubber workers won't stand for a pay cut, so they are sitting down—Cincinnati Enquirer. The Second Victory In a succession of findings, Chief Justice Hughes ruled that: 1. The government had the power to build Wilson dam under its war powers and its power to aid navigation. write the decision did not involve the constitutionality of the TVA as a whole, the court's opinion was in terms general enough to indicate it approved future development of the potential power of the Tennessee river as well as the sale of power already generated at Wilson dam, the only project directly involved in the case. It upholds the right of the government to dispose of surplus power from dams constructed for purposes of navigation control or as a national defense measure. Surplus power is power produced in excess of purely governmental needs, the sale of such by the government being the basis for the court's ruling. 2. Power produced at such dams may be sold by the government. 3. Transmission lines to a fair market for the power so developed are entirely constitutional. This decision marks the second victory for the new deal in the series of cases brought before the court against a total of seven reverses. A welcome victory for the Democratic party, too, in view of the coming election. Reward in Waiting "Don't be afraid to work for humanity and wait for your reward." Thus advises Dr. James Naismith who has tested, this philosophy of life and found it not wanting. The kindly Doctor's greatest contribution has been one of continuous service to youth, which is far greater than the mere invention of basketball. In like manner, the nationwide recognition which has come to this unselfish gentleman during the past few weeks is as much an expression of respect for the Doctor's character as for his achievements. The game which Dr. Naismith views in Berlin next summer will be greatly different from that which he devised almost half a century ago. He credits its present status to those men who have studied, developed and spread the game. This attitude is typical of the Doctor and explains why the campaign to send him to the Olympics has met with such widespread approval and acclaim. Humanity believes in those who honestly believe in humanity. Best Is Not Good Enough The specimens that once occupied Dyche Museum of Natural History are deteriorating rapidly. No human power is great enough to prevent this disaster, under the present storage conditions. When the Museum was closed to the public Nov. 10, 1932, the best vacant space and rooms on the Hill were turned into storage rooms and a museum room for specimens vox moved into sleep. But best, the best. Oh, what a good time mice and insects have in those specimens! And, oh, what a terrible time, the keeper has always driving the mice and insects out! Some of the storage space is not dust and moisture proof. Those storage conditions are the best available. But the best is not good enough! The deterioration of specimens will continue until they are moved back into the Dyche Museum building again. And they cannot be moved back into the building, until $47,000 rains from somewhere. Campus Opinion Editor Daily Kansan: Why, I am asking, don't they fill the casts of University Dramatic productions with students? In the first instance, this is primarily a school. Students are to be taught here—at least, they are to be given a chance to learn the arts, sciences, and professions. Students are to be taught the arts, when there comes a chance for practice, the members of the faculty, and as many of their respective families, who have run into the cool, naturally, because they have had more time. In the second instance, when I go to a College production, I do not go with the idea that I am going to see a finished dramatic masterpiece. I go to see the students whom I know, rather than to see the teachers who teach the artistry. If the teachers can not teach the students that failed to perform on the stage, then the department has failed. Perhaps the students are not such good actors as the faculty; perhaps their plays aren't so well done, but so well performed. You see, dear dramatics department, this is not Broadway. New York City, but a university in a small town. It's really great. No. I did not fail to get place in the cast of any of the places of the department and did I不哭 any of the casts. Noticees die at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m. preceding regular publication days and 11:19 a.m. for Sunday's issue. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN CO-ED HOP. The annual Co-ed Hop, an informal party for all University women, will be held from 4 to 5:30 this afternoon in the Memorial Ballroom. Catherine Hall No. 97 ENGINEERING STUDENT COUNCIL: There will be a regular meeting of the Engineering Council in Marvin Vol. 33 FEBRUARY 19, 1936 Russell Young, Secretary-Treasurer. LE CERCLE FRANCAIS : Le Coracle Francais se re- muite mardi à quatre heures 2050. Tous ceux qui font une session sont inscrits. MEN'S STUDENT COUNCIL: There will be a meeting tonight at 7 o'clock. LIBERAL CLUB AND S. L. I. D.: There will be a joint meeting of the Liberal Club and the Student League for Industrial Democracy, Thursday night at 8 o'clock. Important business will proceed the round-robin. Helen Corbett, John Piercy. Ruth Brandt, Secretaire. Herbert Sizemore, Secretary. NEWMAN CLUB: The Newman Club will meet at 8:00 p.m. on Thursday, February 20. Election of officers will be held. All Catholic students are urged to attend. Katherine Searcy, Secretary. Vienna Choir Group Founded by Royal Decree to Sing in Worship Services W. A. A: There will be a meeting of W.A.A, today at 4:30 in Robinson gymnasium. Loize Montgomery. By Lucille Offutt. c'uncl. Katharine Aston, Secretary. The Vienna Chloe boys have become a world-known institution. Their story is extraordinarily interesting. The Saengkuncken (Vienna Choi boys) was established in 1498, the same decade in which America was discover- ed institution was originated by the Hamburg. From Lower Social Order The boys are mostly from the lower social order of families, and many of large families who relapsed them because of financial reasons. The boys are bright and jany and they wear trim little sailor blouses. They are all very musical and they have to pass a graduation test before they are accepted. The boys live in the former Imperial Palace overlooking the city of Vienna and the Wiener Wald, the lovely wood which Johann Strauss made famous in his music. There are 22 of these singers and they range in age from 8 to 15. They are under the charge of the Reverend Ferdinand Josef Schmitt who has been teaching their children how to bear the boys, they didn't want to hear Mozart done by anyone else. The boys have been highly prized by Pope Pim XI who blessed them for their "voices as flutile and sweet as a song." The boys call them the "Song birds out of Vienna." These boys are princes of song and it is very appropriate for them to live in the Emporium's castle. They will also wear their former patrons, the Hapsburg. From Lower Social Order The Vienna Choir boys are the living personification of the best that the Austrian Empire produced in art and scholarship. Today, they are a sign of the new Austria's courage as they earn awards for their artistic ability without tatts. Originality Song Masses The congregation was established because since the church for women to sing sacred masses. This choir continued its church and scholastic functions for about 420 years to disappear with the Hapurburg at the end of the World War. In 1924, it was recured. Vienna needed a medical school, Father Schmitt revived it and paid all its expenses for two years. When Father Schmitt ran out of money the chair learned secular songs and began to support itself in 1936. Their performance was a high-light on Vienna's musical play played with the skill of genius, Monsant "Bastien et Bastiens." The entrance requirements to the Saengkunken are severe. Recently they had three vacancies with 300 app-licants who were chosen and given a three month course to test their aptitude and knowledge. The six best were chosen and the three neediest obtained the coveted entry. All of them have been going to the same public Hollywood Film Shop --school. They have two piano, two violin, and eight voice lessons a week The rest of their time is filled with rehearsals, singing at muses, and practicing secular music. The boys can net as well as sing. When visiting royalty and artist charge that American lives too "fast" to develop any art, no one gets excited about it. However, there should be something to it when the indictment is returned by an American. Hollywood—(UP)—It is an old, old song-charging Americans with being too busy to become artists—but it has been given a new twist here. It is only in Europe that an ambitious artist can find sufficient "freedom" to develop his art, the man who was born in France, and circle as circles as "France Forest", declares. The educational plan is to give the boys a normal bringing-up. They have dancing lessons with girls for partner. There is a house mother and maids so they are not shut off with men alone. If the boy commit an offense, they are punished not by being allowed to perform Opera or National Theatre on their next opera. The boys attend in rotation and sit in the box that is reserved weekly. Frank Forest, native of St. Paul, one-time instructor in community singing at Hunter College, and now Newly-arrived resident in the sensation*, had made the charge. He complains that before he went to Europe to return with a satisfying contract with Paramount, his friends never gave him time to practice. He first began taking his singing ambitions seriously while he was ennured by the death of a colleague in this country. Three times he had tried to put the flair of his operations into action. "I decided to study singing there for two years," he relates. "I remained 10." During those years he devised him a new song. He denied himself to American friends. "in time," he says, "I was able to sing well enough to tour the cities, and finally won professional recognition from the La Scala organization in Milan." On the fourth try, the company showed a profit. So Forest packed his bags and took a boat for Italy. Father Schmitt thinks the music acts as a soothing, refining influence on the youths. The lads aren't frail, "numby-pamby" boys. They are bright, clean, alert and amazing. The friends of the institution in Vienna take the boys on outings in their automobiles and to the amusement parks and buy them "hot dogs." They don't want them to be afraid, but they value theity and common sense which balances their musical genius and takes them out of the child prodigy class. The death of his father called him back to America, and then he learned that his "bugy American friends" hadn't forgotten him. After the choir's first interpretation of secular music in Vienna, it was invited to all the capitals of Europe. They went and triumphed. Despite all their tours, the boys were excited over the prospect of coming to America all of the three months that they spent in the Alpa preparing to come. Since Vienna, she has been generous with her singing songs, with so much talent, she has been generous with her singing songs. At the same time he was developing immunity singing. Franz Schubert was with the choir for five years in his first soloist and first violinist in the orchestra. He learned to play the cello and enabled him to create so much before he did at the age of 31. Hijayd sang in the choir and also Felix Mott, famous conductor of the Wagner Festivals, and conducted a conductor in Vienna and Frankfurt. Studio executives recalled his European success. They thrust a contract at him and his first glance at the figures he had seen immediately caused him to forget Europe. There is nothing immature, childish r "cute" in the performance of the angerkbenkan. They go even beyond dult perfection because of their intense classical training and their tradition. The boys now remain in the convent until they are 18 and finish their education though they usually stop singing at about 15 when their voices change. Father Schmitt gets $20 a month a boy to pay all his expenses. When the choir started in 1924 there were 17 boys and now there are 40. Triumphed in Europe Well-known inclusions in their repertoire are Mozart's "Bastien et Basile" and Haydn's "The Apothecary," and the Opera Rehearsal by Lortzing. Novel Course Asks For No Requirements Or Prerequisites A novel course, one with no requirements or prerequisites, is offered this semester by the School of Extension Teaching and the College of Home Economics at Syracuse, New York. This course meets on the part of non-college needs. New methods of meal planning, easy ways of renovating wardrobes, and inexpensive solutions to home decorating problems are discussed in this non-credit course in homemaking, which takes Saturday for a two-hour period. Statistics Show Different Campus Habits The latest statistical nightmare on the nation's college boys' and coeds' preferences in tobacco, toiletries and radios, reveals that 59 per cent of them smoke it. It per cent don't, says the 1933 college fire test conducted by Collegiate Diesel. It further demonstrates, quite concisely, that 82.2 per cent of them have a hot cereal for breakfast, but 71.76 per cent would rather have a cold cereal every morning in the week. Powl of them have one for breakfast and one for lunch each week and that 9.6 per cent don't have cereal at all, not even on Sunday. Twenty per cent of the collegiate own ers have a smartphone. Of the 80 per cent who don't quite a few intend to get them soon, and these less 12.5 are going to get rades in them. Getting back to smoking, the survey iow that men use 18,123 packages of garrets a week, and women use only 664. Thirty-four per cent of the women think that one face cream for all purposes can adequately care for their skin. Fifty-one per cent don't and 11 per cent don't. Twenty per cent of them don't use perfume. Forty-one per cent are regularly. Other points of interest include that only 1.2 per cent never read their college papers; 20 per cent never chew gum; 42 per cent have radios in their rooms; and that women don't have as many stockings as men. One hundred per cent would like to get a running start on the next person that comes around with a question—Minnesota Daily. Longest Snake Is in London London—(UP)—What is believed to be the longest snake in captivity has arrived at the London Zoo. It is a reticulated python 28 feet long from Malaya. The python is a little longer than the zoo's previous biggest, presented by the Prince of Wales. University Daily Kansan OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS PUBLISHER HARRY VAN DEN EDITOR IN-CHEEP BORRION RONNISH ASSONIC EDITORS BILL GILL ALMA FRATZER MANAGING EDITOR FRIDI M. HAMS, Jr. BUSINESS MANAGER P. QUESTINANT Campus Editor Bill Buckles Mike Up/Editors Dusty Huey, Bill Downs Jonathan Smith Jeff Sullivan New Editor Dianzy Smart Sunday Editor French Ritter Monday Editor Liam Lennard Sale and exclusive national advertising representatives NATIONAL ADVERTISING Service, Inc. 420 Madison Avenue, New York City Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday mornings except school holidays by students in the department of Journalism of the State University from the Press of the Department of Journalism. ROCK - - - CHALKLETS Conducted by J. M. Subscriptions price, per year, $100 in cash add- mption, $1.25 on payment, single copies, 30 each. Entered as armed class master; September 17, 1910; at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas. Now that the goose honks high for lf, let us be the first to suggest that r. John "Slippery" Ie be No. 1 brain-tuser in the Laindon cabinet. We would like to go on record as nequivocely condemning the refunds) the packing companies of the AAA recessing taxes which we paid every month. That is, the restartk. That, we believe, is pulling "Swift" one on the people. Order your sulphur and molasses now. Only 36 more days 'til spring. Now that having a mud is synonymous with culture, we are glad to see that Mr. Morgan's $20,000 for training moulds for "Kansas Culture." And here we thought Pierp Morgan was on the outs with the New Deal That, good friend is, Now it is uncovered in one of the history classes that Tom Jefferson advocated a revolution every 19 years. It was his theory that if the government be to in accord with the principle of Independence, the people should have frequently a good little revolution to prevent stagnation in affairs of state. Over in the medical school they celebrated Lincoln's birthday, Wednesday. Not because it was Lincoln's birthday necessarily, but because it was also the birthday of Darwin, the great exponent of evolution of species. and so do prices at Ober's MERCURY HITS NEW LOW! during our Even sub-zero temperatures have not kept wise buyers from attending our final clearance sale. While they have made inroads in our stock there are still plenty of bargains left. Do not wait too long, tha, because they're going fast and this sale ends Saturday FINAL CLEARANCE SALE Suits and Obercoats $25.00 Values $15.50 Suits and Obercoats $30.00 Values $19.50 Fine Quality Suits Values to $40.00 $23.50 Group of Suits Now Half Price Group of Topcoats Now $12.50 ALSO FINAL CLEARANCE PRICES ON Men's Furnishings Boys Clothing Men's Shoes Odds and Ends Sale Ends Saturday Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUT FITTERS Sale Ends Saturday WEDNESDAY, FEDRUARY 10: 1936 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE KU Hill Society BEFORE 1 P.M. CALL K.U. 25; BETWEEN 7:30 AND 9 P.M. CALL 2701K3 OR 2702K3. Entertains With Luncheon Mrs. Charles C. Roger of Puerto Rico, who is spending the winter in Lawrence, where Mr. Roger is enrolled as a graduate student in the University, and married with a Spanish Iuambean house at her home, 131 Vermont street. The hostess, who told much of interest about her native country, wore a Spanish costume. Mrs. Roger was assisted with Mrs. Roy E. Lawrence. Collins-Wilson Marriage Mr. and Mrs. John G. Collus, Mankato, announce the marriage of their daughters, Cleo, to Edmund Victor Wielon, son of Julech R.P.B. P Wilson, Hutchinson, son of Julech R.P.B. P Wilson, by the Rev. Carter Harrison, rector of Trinity Episcopal church. Mr. Wilson is a teacher in the Lawrence schools where Wilson is in school in the School of Law. --newly elected officers of the Acacia fraternity are: Forrest Chapman, b38; venerable dean; Kenneth McIntyre, e37; senior dean; Edward Wilford, e36; junior dean; Marcel Pugh, e37; trenurs and Kenneth Hawley, e7; secretary. KU ☆ ☆ ☆ Sorority to Give Tea ☆ ☆ ☆ Pi Lambda Theta, honorary education sorority, has invited invitations to advanced students in the School of Education to attend a tea tomorrow afternoon in room 161, Fraser hall, from 4 until 8 am. Miss Ruth Lickenhoff, O'Rourd Training School, will pair, on Wednesday, Siecle is in charge of arrangements. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Kallala Kirkendall, 94, Robert Bonne Kansas City, M; Lloyd Shaffer, 63, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Tombaugh, 63, Alden Edson, 53; and Charles Tombaugh, 38, were dinner guests Sunday. Thompson, fa 29, and Laura Thompson, fa 39. Mrs. Otto Barteldes, Miss Maufe Smeltzer, Miss Helen Wagstaff, Miss Helen Beard, and Mrs. Robert Haggart, all of Lawrence, were guests Monday night at the Kappa Alpha Theta house. Phi Gamma Delta held initiation services Monday night for Carlton Dickenson, c'38; C. L. Bernacking, c'37; and Lloyd Molyed Griger, gr. Mrs. Hovey Hamia entertained the Gamma Phi Beta Alumnae association last night. Bridge was played following the business meeting. ☆ ☆ ☆ A waffle supper was held in honor o the publicity committee of the Y.W.C.A. at night at Henley house, Ted Evens, Wichita, and Bill Blair c39, were dinner guests at the Phi Gamma Delta house Sunday. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ The Rev. and Mrs. Irvin E. Deer Chicago, Ill., were weekend guests of their daughter, Helen Deer, e uncl. The Inter-Racial Commission of the Y.W.C.A. will meet at Henley house to-morrow at 7:20 p.m. Gretchen Speelman, c37, was a dinner guest at the Kappa Alpha Theta house Sunday. Nadine Marquis, of Des Moines, Iowa was a dinner guest at the Chi Omega house Monday night. PHONE K.U.66 Phi Kappa Pi was entertained at an hour dance last night by Alpha Gamma Delta security. Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S — 920-22 Mass. Alpha Chi Omega entertained the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity with an hour dance last night. TAXI --- TAILOR ☆ ☆ ☆ TAXI A supper meeting of Phi Chi Delta was held at Westminster hall last night. CLASSIFIED ADS One Stop Clothes Service Station SCHULZ THE TAILOR 844 Miles Kansas City, Kan., Feb. 13 —(UP) A limited number of college graduates from western Missouri, Kansas, Iowa, and Oklahoma are training in naval and marine corps, Lieutenant Frank E. Wild, Commanding Officer of the Naval Reserve Air Force. Air Cadets To Be Selected The Y.W.C.A. Cabinet supper will be given tonight at Henley house at 5:30. Weld said 43 graduates will be chosen from the area for training made up of the two colleges. The dwell will receive a substantial salary plus a bonus of $1500 on completion of the course. Limited Number of College Graduates Taken From Middle-west --- The applicant must be 29 to 27 years old and single and must agree not to marry during the four-year period of the course. Training will start here May 15. After a month of instruction at Fairfield Air Field the cedars will be sent to the Naval Air Station at Pensacola, Florida for completion of the course. Grad-10 course corresponds to marine corps, the beak, or marine corps. Salaries during training will be $105 a month. On active duty, the salary will receive $150. A ten thousand bonus will receive $200. Salaries will be seen out on each course. BEAUTY SHOPS SPECIAL~50c reduction on any permanent, with this ad, except Saturday. Permanents $1.50 to $5.00, complete with hair cut, IVA'S BEAUTY SHOPS 723½ Mass, Phone 2335; 9411½ Mass, Phone 333. CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION Students will be sent into training in groups of six every 30 days. Economist, various grades, $2603 t $5600 a year. The United State Civil Service Comission has announced open competitive examinations as follows: CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION LISTS OPEN EXAMINATION Associate milk specialist, $220 a year, and assistant milk specialist, $900 a year. Public Health Service, Treasury Department. Co-eed Admitted to Law Practice Miss Darlene Anderson, 138 of Chanute, was one of the three young women admitted to the annual mid-winter bar examinations at Topken. She was highest ranking student at the University of Kansas School of Law during the fall semester, and won the Herbert Spencer Hadley $200 gift scholarship in law a year ago, becoming the first woman to receive the prize in her career. She is employed by the legal department of an oil company in Bartlesville, Ohio. Refrigeration Mechanic (mas-electric), $1680 a year, War Department Quartermaster Corppe, Ft. Riley, Kau. Woooping Cough Caught at 90 Maysville, Mo.—(UP)—John B. Ower has his "second childhood" or not—but his "woooping cough." He is 90 years old. Inspector, engineering materials, various grades, $200 to $300 per year Shipfitter, U. S. Navy Yard, Philadelphia, Pa. Full information may be obtained from the secretary of the U. S. Civil Service Board of Examiners at the Lawrence post office. PHONE K.U.66 writely-words or less insections, 35c three insertions, 35d six insertions, 75e intirections, but more than 25, 158 per month. Payable in advance and on demand. (Federal funds are available.) FOR SALE FOR SALE: Our home at 1151 Louisiana with art furnishings. Shown by appointment. Telephone 173. Florence M Hodder. 100 FOR COAL, FOR BRIQUETS—Phone 219, Kaw Valley Fuel Company. — 87. ABE WOLFSON 743 Mass. Read the Daily Kansan want ads. MISCELLANEOUS Student Loans Boyton Interviews Seniors Nearly 100 seniors in the School of Business were interviewed yesterday by P. V. Boyton, of the Scooney-Vacuum Oil company of New York City. Mr. Boyton was interviewing for foreign service in China and is visiting universities for the purpose of talking with business graduates. Personnel Service Director in Business School Several large firms are sending men to various schools for the purpose of interviewing business graduates, and then enrolling them in school in the state that is being visited. Students from other schools are coming here to see these men. One from California and two from Missouri were送给我们 to meet Mr. Boyden yesterday. G. V. Packard will interview students tomorrow for the W. T. Grant chain department stores. Thursday of next week, M. L. Frederick of the personnel department of the General Electric company, will talk with seniors in acclimatization to the new job. Frederick is known as one of the best personnel men in the United States. Interviewing schedules for business seniors is much heavier this year. Dean Stockton, head of the Placement Bureau, said that 17 firms have made employment contacts with the bureau, the record ever made this early in the year. Faculty Committees Report New Courses Approved; Statistics Concerning Student Body Presented A business meeting of the college faculty, with Dean Paul B. Lawson in charge, was held yesterday afternoon to discuss the reports of committees, and the report of the administrative committee recommendation that course 167, Selected Topics in Engineering Mathematics, be added to engineering subjects open to College students for professional credit; recommendation that course 138 only, course 147, American history, 1783 to 1850; and 168s, Modern Far East; that the request of the School of Fine Arts be granted permitting College students to enroll in the second band to obtain the presencial training necessary for band credit. The administrative committee reported it had approved a new course 169, insect toxicity, with limitations on course 168, insect physiology; and had approved certain changes in the prerequisites for course 84, child care. Dr. Nelson reported that he College, reported that 120 College students failed in 40 per cent of their work the past semester; that 53 petitioned for re-instatement, and that 43 of these were permitted to re-enroll. Dr. Nelson reported the number on probation last semester was 136, of whom 67 failed to make the necessary proofs. Of these, 39 petitioned for re-instatement, and 31 were thus re-instated. Dr. Nelson expressed the fear that some of the 67 failing in 40 per cent of their work had left the University without making any effort to gain reintroduction. Dean Paul Lawson, who reported having had made strong efforts to reshall all students reported falling, to see if assistance could be given. KFKU --p.m. Kansas Trees and Shrubs, Dr. W. H. Horr. p.55 News Bulletin, W. A. Dill, K.U. News Bureau. 2.50 Health Through the Ages, Dr. Florence Brown Sherbon. 3.15 Music in the Library. 3.15 Violin Recital by Waldeman Gelch, Professor Violin. February 19—Widnesdav Two Scholarships to Be Given The University of Akron is offering two scholarships in Rubber Chemistry during the academic year of 1938-37. Each one is worth $750 and exceeds the requirements for the M. S. degree may be completed during the tenure of appointment. All applications must be filled with Dr. W. A. Cook at the University of Akron not later than March "Bull Sessions" and Reading Take Much of Typical Student's Leisure Same Paper Read 55 Years Ash Grove, Mo. —(UP) —W. M. Bear, editor of a weekly newspaper here, recently acknowledged the 4th renewal subscription from John Wilson. He has not missed an issue in 55 years. The typical college student in the average midwestern university has 42 hours of leisure time a week, and he or she must study at least 80% of the results of a survey conducted by three graduate investigators, reported recently in the New York Times maga- About a third of this spare time is spent in "bull sessions," listening to the radio, drinking, driving or riding in an automobile, and dancing. Another third is spent in playing cards and in other non-athletic games, reading newspapers, magazines, and light fiction. The third is spent in training for horses and more athletic sports such as swimming and hiking. Others in this category are drinking, singing or playing some musical instrument, sleeping and "just loafing around." What You Dream Is No Longer a Secret Say Psychologists Even your dreams will no longer be secrets! The workings of the mind, long a puzzle to psychologists, are being recorded on sensitized paper by Dr. Lee Travis, University of Iowa psychology- By measuring the intensity of the human brain impulses, the instrument delicately notes on a graph the course of a person's mental activity. Two platinum electrodes are applied to the scalp of a sleeping person. The feeble electrical impulses of the brain are intercepted and amplified 300,000 times. Although few tangible results have been accomplished, further perfecting the therapy has been a purpose of studying the causes of stuttering and epilepsy, since both these malauses are directly traceable to a de-formation in brain impulse — Daily California. DEPARTMENT OF JOURNALISM RECEIVES PUBLICATION LIST A complete list of publications issued in the Kansas high schools has been sent to the department of journalism by Miss J. B. Loomis, the senior high school at Leavenworth. The list includes names of faculty directors and 235 publications, consisting of monthly magazines, weekly papers, newsletters and as a department of the local paper." As shown by Miss Reedon's list, news writing is taught in more than half the high schools in which papers are published. These lists will be used to furnish the journals of journalists mailing its regular issue. The High School Newspaper. Cornell to speak to French Club Le Cercle Française will meet this afternoon at 4:30 in room 300 Fruzer. Prof. W. K. Cornell will speak on the Panthenon in Paris. He will also show projections of mural paintings, found in the Panthenon, representing historical scenes concerning French history. Read the Kansan Want Ads WEDNESDAY SPECIAL Coast Beef Sausage Fried Apples Corn Fritters Headquarters Rexall Drug Store Subscribe for PHONE 17 with the exception of reading, which consumes about six hours of each week, "hull sessions" occupy the greatest amount of time in the life of the average college student. They take up about five hours a week. The subjects included in them are many. Classes and assignments are usually discussed, as are instruction and incidents on recent dates the student has had. Then, if not be-ware of their reading ability, go over, along with sports, "life" and the eternal subject of sex. THE KANSAS CITY STAR Roast Beef And other Good Foods Dancing, exclusive of all other forms of activity that occur on dates, takes up about three and a half hours a week. More important, at least in point of time at the spent, are card-playing, ping-pong, billiards, and other phases of indoor sports. Listening to the radio occupies roughly three and a half hours a week. Reading is done in drink, apart from allied activities, amounts to one一半-hour a week. CAFETERIA O The investigators found that only 38 per cent of the students attend lectures of any kind. Concerts, plays, hobbies, travel and leisure interest from 34 per cent to eight. Surprisingly enough, it was discovered that students having one roommate do better scholastically than those who live on more people or with two or more people. H. L. Nevin Distributor 13 papers - 15c per week 847 Mass. St. Band Fete To Be Held Here in May Many Contests to Feature Festival The Mid-Western Band Festival, formerly known as the National Band Festival, will be held at the University of Kansas on May 7, 8, and 9. The Festival will be part of the program held at the University in celebration of National Music week. The feature of the Festival will be a mass band of over 2,500 musicians conducted by four nationally-known bassists, Bachman, Smith, and R. Wiley.) Other features will be a marching contest, a context to determine the best high school band at the Festival, and a parade up Massachusetts street. Nationally known conductors will be will be guests at the festival will be: Dr. Edwin Franco Goldman, conductor of the famous Golden band; Walter M. Smith, famed cornetist and conductor from Boston; Harold Bachman, conductor of the University of Chicago band; William F. Ludewig, president of the Ludwig Drum Company; Dewey O. Wiley, conductor of the Texas Tech band of Lubbock, Texas; Earl D. Irons from Arlington, Texas. Russell M. Wiley, director of the University band, anticipated that 3,000 bandens from 10 mid-western states would attend the Festival. DEAN LAWSON WILL ADDRESS KANSAS UNIVERSITY MEETING Kansas University day will be observed at the Kansas City, Mo. chamber of commerce meeting to be held on February 28, at the Muebelhospital. Prof. Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College, will speak and Prof. J. F. Wilkins, of the School of Fine Arts have charge of the musical program. Professor Frazier Speaks to Engineers Prof. R. H. Frazier of the School of Engineering and Architecture recently received a grant from the branch of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers on the subject "Honors Courses in Engineering." While there he was the guest of R. G. H. Frazier of the School of Engineering department at K.S.C. Read the Daily Kansan want ads. at the Union Fountain Sub-Zero Weather Calls for CHILI 10c --by Richard E. Byrd We Recomend DISCOVERY The Story of the Second Byrd Antarctic Expedition For sale here — $3.75 The Book Nook 1021 Mass. Phone 666 --with attractive prices from 25c to 75c Smart Individualized Stationery--and for a small additional cost we will print your name and address or your crest on the stationery. The Trend Eclipse Vellum Radio Old Chatham Melton Fifty-Fifty Sheraton Antique LaVague Portfolio OCHSE 814 Mass. Phone 288 Congratulate Her Invitation Fresh Cut Quality Flowers at Reasonable Prices With a Bouquet or an Arrangement of Our Beautiful Flowers Flower 820 Fone "Flowers of Distinction" IF WARD'S FLOWERS you've lost your last dollar, you've found a diamond ring, your room-mate stole your collar, you need 'most anything, you'd like to sell the whoopie, you'd change the room you've had, in fact, you need assistance, Merely use a Kansan Ad New Simplified Rates Any ad of less than 25 words inserted once for 25c three times for 50c six times for 75c Use Kansan Want Ads PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10. 1936 Jayhawkers Meet Washburn Tonight For Return Game Ichabods Are Out To Snap Kansas' Long Victory String; To Honor Dr. Naismith In the lull between the Kansas State tilt and the coming conference game with Nebraska, Feb. 28, the Kansas basal squad will meet the Washburn Ickbush Ichabod Topea tonight. The game which will start at 8 o'clock, is a benefit contest for the Naimnith fund, making the fourth in a row honoring Dr. Naimnith. If the Blue cage stars can push through to a win over the Kanaks, they have something to about about for weeks. On the other hand, in case they lose to Kanas, they were merely a small team fighting against great odds. In that kind of scenario, step out on the court tonight with everything to win and nothing to lose. Washburn would rather beat the University of Kansas in a basketball game than eat. Every year, the Washburn crowd is out in full force to cheer or to razz the Jayhawks. Although the Kansas men are the "little giants" in conference, they are the "big boys" so far as the Jabtabs are concerned. Nothing To Lose Washburn Handicapped In 21 games, the one tonight will either be the Jayhawk's nineteenth win or their third loss. Washburn is back in Kansas twice once in 1833 and again in the dedication of the dedication of the Whiting field house in 1929. Both of these Ichabod wins were by one point margins gained by free throws in the closing inning. The Washburn game was close, but the Jayhawk pulled away in the last few minutes to a six-point lead, 33 to 27. This year in the first meeting of the two teams in Lawrence, the University of Michigan played a significant score on the Blue five. Washburn will be somewhat handicapped by the loss of Dorsell Elliott sophomore guard who showed up well against Kansas in the other game this season at Lawrence. Elliott received a knee injury in the game against Cridenton. Joe Fee and Bob Lee, veteran Ishmael recovered from injuries received in the Tuhs game and will be ready to start tonight. Other probable starters will be Bert Collard, center, and Harry Kinter and Chris O'Neill. As an emperor Emporia high school star, was not with the squad when Washburn come to the University of Kansas. He is a junior, and Kansas will have to watch Late Starters The Blue squad, in the Missouri Valley conference, has proven a late starter, but has pulled into four place tie with Tikai as a result of five straight contests. To add to the glory, Ichabods have taken the three league leaders in their five-game stride. Even though the Wichita Shockers broke their winning streak in their last game, Washburn showed up in a manner that proves they can play well against even the now considered one of the most dangerous teams in their conference. Naismith Honored Dr. James A. Naimish will be a guest at the game, and will be introduced to the spectators at half-time. Members of the Washburn dramatics department will depict the development since the late 1970s of the game and the between-halves sketch will be given over station WIBW at 4:45 o'clock. The probable starting lineups Kansas Washburn Ebling f Fee Allen f Lee Noble c Collard Pralle g Kinter Kappelman g Roskam Pat Mason and Ab Hinshaw will offiicate. After the game, the University of Kansas alumni will entertain Dr. F C. Allen and his players at the Green Parrot. Rifle Team Opens Season Women Will Compete in Telegraphic Matches This Week The members of the team who were chosen by Sergie Engle for this week's matches are as follows: Mary Louise Belt, Margaret Hays, Towanda Dodge, Rachel O'Reilly, Alice Casounder, Martha Dodge, Catherine Holmes, Barbara Krochart, Betty The women's rifle team will open its season this week by competing in the telegraphic matches against women teams from the United States. During the week they will compete against the University of Michigan, Cornell University, University of South Dakota, Washington University, and the University of Califor- Current Indoor Track Season Forecasts Selection of Crack U. S. Olympic Team TROPHY Bill Bonthron Earle Meadows Jesse Owens Percy Beard Jack Torrance Glenn Cunningham Jesse Owens Stering, Helen Hoffman, Ruth Miller, Virginia Stirr, and Margaret Curd. These 15 members will shoot scores during the week and the results will be announced. The students at universities with whom they are competing. They do not compete with the schools individually but the results for the week's shooting are compared by the school. It is possible to have matches with team in all sections of the country. Racing Wings Offered University A letter from a Texas oil firm offering the training and certification from the plane used by Capt. Frank Hawks in setting several world speed records has been received by Earl D. industrial engineering. Racing Wings Offered University Women's Intramurals Alpha Delta Pi won the final round of the basketball tournament last night by defeating Corbin hall 28-10. At the half the score was 12-8 in favor of the losers, but the winning team started hitting the goals soon after. The second half was a victory for Garden, Smith, Muriel Manning, Ware, Pope, and Janet Manning. Corbin hall players were Erskine, Griffin, Lois Anderson, Bubult, De T. Sur Teigerson, Jesse Tsegarden and Lois Anderson of Alpha Delta Pi and Corbin respectively. California U. Is Largest School According to the magazine "School and Society," the University of California is now officially the largest school in the United States. It has an enrollment of 20,388 students. Columbia University is the second enrollment of 14,116. Minnesota is third, and New York University, fourth. In the swimming meet held last night, Kappa Alpha Theta was first with 37 points; Kappa Kappa Gamma, second with 18 points; Alpha Chi Omega, third with 13; Sigma Kappa Gamma, fourth with 12; and Wattkall hall was fifth with 11 points. Individual high scores were Sharp, Sigma Kappa, 12 points; Archer, Alpha Chi Omega, 11 points; and Engleman, Kappa Alpha Theta, 10 points. Both teams broke the side stroke record set by Bobby Neely. '30: Time. 24 seconds. In the semi-final rounds of the ping-pong tournament, Barcachan defeated Hansen. 21-13 and 21-15. She will play with the Lemon of the Lemon - Forman match. Drawings for the deck - tennis matches have been made. They are as follows: Group I: Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Chi Omega, Pi Beta Pi, and Alpha Omicron Pi. Group II: Kappa Kappa Gamma, Alpha Gamma Delta, Kappa Kappa III: TNT, IND, EW, and CTE Group IV: Alpha Chi Omega, Gamma Pi Beta, Sigma Kappa and Walkins Hall. The schedule for next week: Tuesday, March 3: Alpha Delta Pi vs. Chi Omega, 4:30; Pi Beta Pi vs. Alpha Omicron Pi, 5:00; Wednesday March 4: 6:00; Thursday March 5: 4:30; Sigma Kappa vs. Walkins, 5:00; Thursday, March 5: TNT vs. IND, 4:30; IWV vs. ETC, 4:30. Olympic Basketball Planned Kansas Team Will Compete in Seventh District for the Honor Plans for Olympic basketball competition for the seventh district, composed of Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, and Missouri, are expected to be announced this week. The committee of Kansas City, Mo., district chairman. The national committee has set the dates for the final national elimination, in which college will have five of the top teams from the conference in Madison Square garden, and have specified that district and inter-disc trict contests be held between March 9 and 28. Dr. Reilly is expected shortly to announce a plan by which the 11 colleges and universities of the seventh district will hold preliminary eliminations, and then meet in a district tournament. Winner and runner-up of each district will meet like teams from eight districts in the National Tournament, Utah, Wyoming, and New Mexico. The Olympic team of 14 members will be chosen after the New York tournament, with not more than eight players from the winning team, not more than five from the runner up, or from the remaining teams in the finals. Big Six Representatives Will Revise Rules Here Athletic Regulations To Be Codified at Meeting Feb.28-29 Faculty representatives of the Big Six schools will meet at the University of Kansas, Feb. 28 and 29, for the purpose of revising and recodifying the rules of athletic competition in the conference. The last printing of the Rules and Regulations was in October, 1931, since which changes and interpretations have occurred to have the rules rested in the form now desired by the governing body. One of the suggested changes to be discussed was offered some years ago by the University of Kansas, providing a summer course that requires an athlete to have completed (with any passing grade) 27 hours of scholastic work in the previous two semesters, be changed to require complete scholastic work, but with a higher scholastic grade. The standards of athletic eligibility of other conferences will be considered, as will those endorsed Nov. 21, 1833, national Association of State Universities. Faculty representatives of the Big Six schools are: Kansas State, Dr. H. J. Deer, University of Kentucky, Dr. H. D. Bergman, secretary, Nebraska, Dean D. J. Thompson; Missouri, Prof. Samuel B. Shirky; Oklahoma, Dr. E. D. Beaham; Kansas, George C. Seabank RED CROSS REPRESENTATIVE TO HOLD EXAMINER'S SCHOOL Ralph L. Carr, representative of the American Red Cross first-aid and lifesaving service of the mid-west area, will be in Lawrence from Monday, Feb. 24, to Wednesday, Feb. 26, to give a life-saving examiner's school The purpose of the life-saving examiner's school is to review the older life-savers and to appoint new ones who can qualify. At present there are three examiners at the University. Those interested must be already qualified in the senior test. While in Lawrence, according to Herbert G.ell, chairman of lifesaving of the Douglas County chapter, Mr. Carr is going to help work out plans for a highway first-aid program for this vicinity. Frank Tuberski, six times pocket-jaillord champion of the world, played an exhibition game before a large audience at Memorial Union building yesterday. Frank Taberski Matches Skill With Joe Rohr, Local Expert Champion Gives Exhibition During the exhibition game with Joe Rohr, local champion, Taberski executed several bank, combination, and position shots. Before the game had progressed very far Taberski had made a run of 43 balls. Read the Kansan Want Ads. Mr. Taberski turned professional in 1916 after playing many years as an amateur. At the present time Mr. Taberski has won 307 consecutive games of pocket billiards, and has a high run of 43 balls. Welker Cochrane, former 182 balk-line champion, will appear in an exhibition game in the Memorial Union Little Theatre of Big Hits PATEE SHOWS----3----7---building next Friday. He will be the last of the seven billiard experts to give an exhibition billard game at the University this year. ENDS TONITE ALL 10c SHOWS SEATS JOHN WAYNE "WESTWARD HO" ROBERT ARMSTRONG "MYSTER MAN" THUR. - FRI. 10c $ ^{n} $ 15c $ ^{7} $ THUR - FRI GRETA GARBO FREDRIC MARCH "ANNA KARENINA" BANK NITE THURSDAY GRANADA 25c 'til 7 — Then 35c ENDS TONITE! JAMES CAGNEY PAT O'BRIEN GIRLFULING ZERO "CEILING ZERO" Plus—Claud Hopkins Band Latest News Events THURSDAY For the Week-end 'A TALE OF TWO CITIES' Here It Is For the Hundreds Who Asked for Its Return and the Thousands Who Want to See It Again! with RONALD COLEMAN And a Cast of Thousands SUNDAY Leslie Howard's Latest Stage Hit Which New York Acclaimed for 52 Capacity Weeks LESLIE HOWARD BETTE DAVIS "The Petrified Forest" RIDE THE BUS Prompt - Dependable - Courteous and Economical Service to All Parts of City Save Money — Buy a Coupon Book from Driver The Rapid Transit Co. Phone 388 for Information Regarding Schedules The Call for a Milder better tasting cigarette Chesterfield CIGARETTES CHESTERFIELD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXXIII NUMBER 98 --on the SHIN --on the SHIN By BUD EVANS, 30 new Invention . . . Checking Up On the Phi Giant. . . Now. Girls . . North Wins A Bet. Alligators and Cats. Just Things . . It's A Close Race. Saw a fellow walking across the campus the other day who seemed to be comfortable in spite of the cold. Seems as though he had a large paper sack covering his head which had two holes cut in it so he could see what he wrote. "Such a start proves the judge that 'necessity is the mother of invention.'" Afterthought: He reminded us of the wreather of several years ago who called himself the Mandrake Marvel—only this time a wreather, and by no means a marvel! + + + LAWRENCE, KANSAS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1936 Understand the Phi Gamma's are giving their annual Stag Pig dinner the night of February 29th. This, by the way, is the same night of the Lemp Year Variety. The boys are determined to have a good time, and this is their method of handling the situation. That's really sticking together, fellas! A young Kappa was asked recently why her kledge didn't combine with one of the fraternities for rushing—sort like the plan the Phi Dhl's used in helping the Pi Phli's about in their annual rushing business. Said the Kappa—"Oh, that's a labor union, and really, couldn't work for us!" More? 117 Understand that Telfa North a won a bet down at the Phi Psi board club today by dowing (eating) eight desserts, while the boys were engaged in their favorite sport of feeding the mice. Nice going Tefl, but we hardly think that two-bits is temperament enough for the agony you must have suffered. 💎 💎 💎 And then there's the one about J Burrow who thinks that a rebutta is just another form of plastic surgery. This morning a cat entered one of the classrooms in the journalism building strolled around the room for awhile and then jumped up in the chair that was then being accepted by more than our good friend-Heady Heughie someone fabricated that the cat surely knew his rats, and the class was dismissed! Jane Givens, Theta freshman, received an alligator not long ago from the school. "We've seen her now attend Tulane. Understand that the animal dwells in the basement of the Theta house, and has been initiated into that select (7) group—the Someone suggests that we ask Sally Jo Deemsey, PI Phi, how she plans to figure out the present situation what with Barclay, of the DU. house raising a, new Beta, and a former admirer who is a professor at the school she should flip a coin, and get it all settled in a hurry. Understand that so far she has hitched two bids to the Men's Pan Hel party in order that she might attend the Beta辛迪-dig to be a president of the organization. That's her affair, and we're glad she didn't even mention it! The story is told that some slightly imbriated young man attended a dance at Corbin hall some night ago. While he was there, he locked himself in the men's room for the biggest part of the evening; if the boy is naturally jelly so. WEATHER FORECAST Generally unsettled with rising temperatures are predicted for today. The temperature last night at midnight was 18 degrees and the high for yesterday was recorded as 29 degrees above zero as one --on Student Affairs. AUTHORIZED PARTIES Friday, February 21 Negro Student Party, Memorial Union, 1 a.m. Phi Gamma Delta, House, 12 nm. Saturday, February 22 For the Joint Committee on Student Affairs. Delta Tau Delta, House, 12 p.m. 'ELIZABETH MEGUIAR, Adviser of Women. Leibowitz Thinks Hauptmann Guilty Drops From Case Suggests That Bruno Gave Full Confession of His Part in Lindbergh Kidnapping Trenton, N. J, Feb. 19. (UP)—Sam Lelowbitt, New York attorney retained to defend Hauptmann, withdrew from the case tonight with the declaration that he believed Hauptmann guilty of the kidnapping of the Linderberg baby. Leibovitz, who entered the case a week ago, said three coefferences with Hauptmann in the latter's death cell that Hauptmann is guilty. "Therefore," he said, "I want no further part of it." Leibwitz, it was pointed out frequently, stated even before he entered the case that he believed Hauptmann guilty but that Hauptmann was not alone in the crime. He gave this opinion several times in radio broadcasts and in newspaper articles. He made it clear tonight that he still holds the same opinion. Haupimman Understands Situation Lebowitz issued a lengthy statement in which he mentioned C. Lloyd Fisher's claim that the man's counsel. The statement said: "Lloyd Fisher today was more than co-operative. We brought to Brune Richard Haumann at the death house in unmistakable language the price which confronts him. He understands the law. He also newly discovered evidence that the law demands before any court of this state will grant him a new trial. "He understands also that his case has been fought up to the highest tribunal of the country—the Supreme Court of the United States in Washington—and that Mr. Fisher and Judge Pope have moved heaven and earth to through the courts. He understands very well that he has been played before the Court of Pardons and that he has lost there as well. Call Do Nothing Further "Be." Mr. Fisher and I have told him that we shouldn't further that any lawyer can do for him. His only salvation as matters stand now lies in his muking a clean bread of whatever guilty part he may have had in this hiemn crime. Mr. Fisher says the lawyer he still believes Hauptmann's story. "I cannot see how I can serve the interests of justice any further by my continued participation in this case. I want you no further part of any of it. "I know that Lloyd Fisher has done everything that is humanly possible for his client. He is a splendid lawyer and will continue to exercise his power and energy to the utmost in his client's behalf. Refuses Hauptmann's Defense "But I for one have refused to associate myself as this man's lawyer." Leibwitz was asked the direct question: "Do you believe Hauptmann guilty?' "My statement speaks for itself," he said. "Speaking for Judge Pope and myself, we are exceedingly sorry that associating himself with his way to associating himself with the outlook admitted that the outlook is dark but Judge Pope and myself are hopeful that matters under investigation will be resolved." And any circumstances, we shall continue to do our utmost in our client's behalf." A statement also was issued by Fisher. He said: The weekly recital of Fine Arts students will be presented at 3:30 p.m today in the Administration auditorium. The following program will be given: WEEKLY FINE ARTS RECITAI Piano. "Value Caprice" (Cyril Scott). Shirley Miller; voice: "The Secret of the Heart" (Leonty) (Brahms), "Muse Meyn" (Kountz), "Mute Meyn" (Rhodaphe in E Flat" (Brahms), Bill Lee; violin: "Kol Nidres" (Bruch), Elizabeth Eligert; piano: "Concerto in E Flat" (Brachys, Orene Yoyell, with orchestral parts on a second piano by Miss Ruth Orcutt. Several faculty members are attending the annual state Masonic convention in Topka this week. They are: Wiliam L. Burdick, dean of the School of George O. Foster, registerer; F. R. Jones, george; E. James, master of engineering. TO BE GIVEN TODAY AT 3: Attend Masonic Meeting GEN. WILLIAM MITCHELL DEAD NEW YORK Brigidier-General William D. Mitchell, retired former fiery chief of the army corps died at the Army's hospital late today. He had been confined there several weeks with a serious illness. The war-time commander of the army aviation forces had been suffering from influenza complicated by a heart condition which his physicians attributed to overwork. He was 56. Joseph Payne Appointed Kansas Relays Manager Other Committee Member: Are To Be Chosen Next Week The new manager is well qualified to serve as chairman, as he has been an active member of the Relays Committee for the past three years. Joseph Scott Payne, 138, of Kansas City, has been appointed senior manager of the Kansas Relays committee. The announcement was made late yesterday by the athletic department of the University. Other members of the committee will be selected in about a week from those who have served before. The junior members of the committee will be chosen from these men: them Bridges, 63; Stanley Martinea, 63; William Martinea, 63. All have been members of the committee for the last two years. There will be four men selected to act as sophomore members. These positions will be filled from the list of the following men: Russell Benton, c38; Richard Hardcock, c38; Paul Fisher, c38; George Carrion, c38; and James Gilliph, ph. The Relays committee has charge of the entries, advertising, and in no small measure, the actual running of the meet. When asked to comment on his plan for committee activity for the near future, Payne said, "I want to urge all those freshmen, who feel themselves qualified to serve on the committee, to hand in their applications for the freshman appointments as soon as possible to Ed Elbel, intramural manager, in the school's athletic department, include being able to run a typewriter and having had previous experience with the handling of track meets." This year the Kansas Meet will be This year the Kansas Relays will be held April 18. RACIAL CONFLICTS IN SOUTH TO BE DISCUSSED TONIGHT Discussion at the meeting of Inter- cial Commission of W.Y.C.A. tonight will be on the Scottishshire case and the problems of the British case, c37, and Erna Breen Llewen, c20, will discuss the problems. Mary Ellen Doree, mctre, will report on the Cottigan-Wagner bill and Betty Walker, will report on other activities against bynching. RACIAL CONFLICTS IN SOUTH John Regan, a rigger, clammed up with an acetylene torch. He cut a hole in the side of the cab nearest McCoy, and then descended. Bill For Founding Of Student Court Tabled by M.S.C Skillful Surgeon Amputates Man's Arm While in Mid-Air Fellow workers of the Lowell Gas and Light Company summoned police and firemen. A 80-foot extension ladder was raised and a fireman climbed to the cab. The cab was crushed and entrance was impossible. Dr. Long, uminfuld of the biting cold, dotted his fur coat, removed his jacket, and rolled up his shirt sleeves. His hand elicited a hack-and lamp wrapped up in a bed sheet. Fireman George Collins preceded him up to the door, who helped to girder and another rope to help support the doctor. He also held a storage battery lamp to supply illumination. Lowell, Mase, Feb. 19—UP) (John McCoy, gritter 47-year-old train operator, owed his life tonight to Dr. Norvall. The wounding was as great as his surgical skill. McCoy was trapped in the cab of a crane which had fallen from its perch 80 feet above ground. The cab fell 20 feet and was pierced by a steel girder that pinned McCoy's right arm against the roof. Dr. Long, worked left-handed because he had to use his right arm to catch the ball. Coy's right arm at the shoulder in sub-zero temperature 60 feet in mid- Measure Providing fo: Campus Judiciary Set Aside for Later Readings Philip Raup, c'38, who is in charge of the complete revision of the Council's constitution, reported that the work of indexing and adding of rule changes will be completed before nearing completion and will be ready for presentation at the next meeting. Correspondents To Hear Dr. Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College, will describe the University's setup for assisting students in various ways. In addition, he will present this afternoon at 3:30 in room 103 Administration building. While the meeting is primarily for those students who are writing University news for their home newspapers, everyone interested is welcome to attend, according to Kenneth Born, c. 736, who was not present at the meeting, previously had asked President Field to tender a request for him, and it was accepted. Correspondents To Hear Dean Phil Bramwell, chairman. Bob Williams, c37, social chairman of the Council, was asked by President Field to confer with the W.S.G.A. in making plans and arranging for a joint banquet of the two organizations similar to the one hold last year. The doctor climbed aloft and looked into the aperture. Mernela Litras, 137, chairman of the Student Court committee, last night presented a report in the form of a bill to the Mon's Students' Committee for the second semester. The bill presented is for the formation of a judicial court composed of two members of the PSF party, two from the Parliament, and six party affiliations and has never held a political office. The new bill contained 22 sections and was tabled until the Council's next meeting, when it will be carefully considered by the board. Allen, who is chairman of the traditions and re-organization committee, said that he would have to explain he said that the work consisted mainly of making an exhaustive study A discussion was held concerning the possibilities of holding an intramural carnival again this year. It was decided that since the carnival met with such issues, it would be continued. It will be held April 2. The Council was unsuccessful in choosing a carnival manager but agreed that President Lyland Field, c36, and Frank尔, c36, should confer with Prof. E. R. Eibel of the physical education department, in choosing the manager toward promotion of the event. of the files of the University Daily Kansas, and all of the files of the Men's Student Council since 1923. The work investigates very satisfactorily, he said. Dr. Lung descended. the priest, the Reverend Edwin F. Carey, climbed up Clutching a rope with one hand, he gave McCoy the sacrament. McCoy smiled grimly Just then there was a shout from below. A priest had arrived to administer last rites. "Is my arm gone, Doe?" he asked. "We'll see," Long replied. "Take it easy." Then Dr. Long returned to his precarious perch. He began the operation The handiwork were almost overwhelming. He had to contend not only wit the awkward position in which he was forced to operate, but also with the danger of infection. Some of McCo's clothing had been ground into the flesh by the pinning girder. As the operation progressed, McCoy was given morphine and whisky, but they didn't make much difference. Hitch had had been numbered by freezing cold. The amputation completed, Dr. Long applied surgical snaps. Then McGoy was drawn through the narrow aperture. A rope was bound around his mid-section and he was lowered head-first. Dr. Collins said McCoy had at least an even chance of pulling through. Enroute to St. Joseph's hospital, McCoy's only remark was: "Guess my feet are frost-bitten." GLADYS SWARTHOUT GUEST Gladys Swearthout, star of the Metropolitan Opera and a featured artist on the concert stage, over the radio, and in the films, will sing with the Kansas City Philharmonic orchestra tonight and tomorrow evening in Convention Hall at Kansas City. The concerts will begin at 8:15 o'clock. Miss Swarthout is a niece of Dean Donald M. Swarthout of the School of Fine Arts. Choir Boys Entertain Concert Course Crowd Appreciation of Audience Shown by Numerous Exposures Encores As the fourth number on the University Concert Course, the famed Vienna Boys Choir last night was well received by persons in the University Auditorium. Throughout the evening the choir pleased the audience with its lovely voices, blinded perfectly in a harmony almost instrumental in quality. These 22 youngsters, who range in age from 8 to 15 years, were attired in colorful costumes and smaller blouses. Their musical director, Victor Gonlos, led the group in the A Capella numbers and accompanied them on the piano in the other selections. As the program proceeded there was a steady crescendo of applause which brought the boys back to the footlights for repeated curtain calls and encrosas. With the exception of "The Star Spangled Banner", which opened the program, all of the numbers were sung in the German language. The first division of the program consisted of the following: "Repeit Sunt" (Gallus), "Ommes de Saha Venient" (Asula), "The Virgin's Slumber Song" (Reger), and "God in Nature" (Schubert). The second part was an operetta "A Sung From Old Vienna" by Franz Schubert, which contained many solo works. It is also the half of the bawn being dressed as girls. The last group of four numbers included "German Dance" (Schubett), "Little Landman" (a folk-song), "Madele Ruck, Ruck, Ruck" (Gombz), and "Tales From the Vienna Woods" (Strauss). Traffic Rules in Effect Now Snyder, Campus Cop. Emphasizes Observeance of Traffic Regulations George Snyder, traffic policeman states that all students should be aware of the traffic regulations that are in place and remind all persons that the speed limit is 30 miles an hour and stop signs must be observed at all times. These signs are on each side of Mississippi and campus to the East end of Administration drive. No stops should be made to let persons out of cars at intersections because they could damage the right-of-way and should have the right-of-way at all times. No cars are allowed to park on the campus drive which extends from Thirteenth street to the flower bed at Fourth Street. A very close check is being kept for violators and three men are on the job at all times to check the campus drive for parked automobiles. All students who get tickets for violations are urged to go to the business office at the time specified on the ticket and get the violation taken care of. Snyder states there is no way to escape the police if you fail to report that they cannot get their grades. The fine for parking offenses is one dollar if taken care of at the specified time. AMATEUR NIGHT' RECEIVED BY LARGE MID-WEEK CROWI An unusually large crowd turned on for the mid-week variety last night and voiced their hearty approval of the amateur act presented during the even- The Delta Tau Delu's put on a sketch entitled "Little Nell." The Chi Omega's had a kitchen band. Instruments combined with skillets, skillets, and other kitchen utensils. Jice Grisswin, c'26, stated that the amateur period will be limited and each contestant will have only four minutes for an act. CSEP STUDENTS Graduate CSBP checks are available in the office today. Checks for the college employees are expected in the office either today or Friday. Mary C. Olsen. --- KANSAS WINS EASILY AT WASHBURN 51-26 Honored at Topeka T. H. Dr. James A. Naisimh, inventor of basketball, was feted at between-halves ceremonies during the Washburn-Kansas basketball game last night. John Bennett Will Speak to Students on Christianity Theologian Here Tomorrow Tomorrow afternoon the first of a series of meetings of interest to young Christians will be addressed by John Bennett, professor of Christian Theology from Auburn Theological Seminary. At 4:30 tomorrow afternoon Dr. Bennett will address a group at Westminster hall on the subject, "The Christian Church as an Individuals and World Citizens." Monday he will speak before the noon luncheon forum on "The Living God in a World of Science," discussing whether a belief in God is intellectually compatible with what we know in the world of science. Monday evening at Westminster hall he will speak on standards for Personal and Social Action." Charles Clayton Morrison, editor of the Christian Century, who delivered the baccalaureate semen to theGradent last year, said of Dr. Bennett: "Above all, he is an honest thinker. I have yet to find a single bubble of bunk in anything he has written. In my judgment he has a vital Christian message for students." Henry R Van Duenze of the Union Trust has the clearest and fairest mind among the younger interpreters of religious thought in this century." Edwin R. Price, chairman of the Council on Religion of Lawrence University, has the clearest and fairest appearance, said the University was fortunate in procuring Mr. Bennett for even this short time, as he is being released from his theological work for this semester only, to meet with col- STUDENTS FROM NEWSPAPER FAMILIES ARE PHOTOGRAPHE Thirty University students in the department of journalism are from newspaper families, it was disclosed yesterday, when they gathered in the Kanan news room to be photographed to appear in the Graduate magazine. The list includes: Bill Blair, Frieda Blair, Lestor Combs, Betty Carey, Alice Haldeman-Julius, Fred Harris, Jr. Mary Jane Haynes, Clyde Redeem, Eric Hobson, James Valentine, Grace Valentine, James Coleman, Frank Headley, Harry Epperson, David Conderman, Joseph Postma, Harry Moore, J. Howard Russe, Mary Hobbs, Tara Temple, Michael Suller, Sarah Lister, Jane Baker, Claude Duroff, Philip Nohe, Riley McGeorge, Barley and Mary Stough. Henry Speaks to Classes jav Janes to Entertain Crowd Clarence Henry, director of education of the Chicago Board of Trade spoke to several of the economic classes Monday and Tuesday. He told the history and present functions of the Board of Trade and discussed some of the issues of the board. Mr. Henry was formerly a member of the faculty at Purdue University. Jay James to Entertain Crowd The Jay James will take charge of the 15 minutes between - halves program of the Kansas - Missouri basal games on Monday, yesterday at the regular meeting. The Ku Ku will assist the Jay James in making a formation to spell out the names of the competing teams. Ebling Scores 18 Points To Again Run Away With Scoring Honors in 15th Straight Victory GAIN LEAD AT START Allen's Proteges Ahead at Half-time, 25-8. After One-sided Period The Kansas Jayhawk basketball team smothered the Washburn Ichabads 51-28 in a non-conference game at Topeka last night before the largest crowd to be seen in Whiting field house against the North Carolina conservative victory for the Kansas. The Ichabbs were never able to solve the Jayhawker offense and never threatened the Kansas lead. Ry Belling kept up his torrid scoring score, collecting 18 points for himself in 30 minutes playing time. Kansas took the lead in the first minute of play on a set-up by Kappelman, and at the end of six minutes the Washburn team was trailing 14-2. The Kansas队 sank basketball from all over the floor, and the team plettely baffled. The Kansas defense kept the Washburn team away from the basket in the first half, and the only goals the Ichabods were able to make were from well out on the court. Noble and Eibling beet the brunt of the first shot by every one on the starting five scored. Ebling is Big Gun Ebling opened the scoring for the second half, and the Jayhawkers ran their total up to 54 in the first five minutes of the second period before the Ichabods were able to tally. Noble, Ebling, and Pralle were the big guns in the second half scoring, and ran the Jayhawker at top up to 43 points before they were able to play ten minutes remaining to be played. An entire new team went in at this time and played the remainder of the game, holding the Ichabods even. Noble turned in a good game at center, making several tip-in shots that had the crowd gasping. Ehleng had to pick up his trick shots and could not be stopped. Praille had a good night. He scored six points and did a fine job of guarding, several times breaking up plays. Kappelman and Allen turned in their tricks, both guarding. Kappelman daring a fine bit of guarding without collection any fools. For Washburn, Fee showed up well, making several of his two-handed over- head shots. Celebrate "Naisim Amir" The game was designated by Wash- land University, and a per- cent of the gate receipts were donat-ed to the Naisim fund. Dr. Naisim wuest of honor at the game, and the halftime intermission was given over to a pageant dramatizing the invention of the mystery of the game by Dr. Naisim. The Jayhawkers' next game is the social one with Nebraska at Lincoln, where they will win. They will begin serch preparation for this content, as the Husker still have an outside chance to knock the Jay- hawker off the top ring of the Bix Six ladder. The box score Kansas (Ebl) fg ft f Bling, f 7 4 0 Allen, f 1 3 2 Noble, e 5 1 3 Kappelman, g 1 1 0 Praalle, g 2 2 1 Holliday, f 2 0 0 Rogers, f 0 1 1 Shaffer, f 1 0 1 Cox, c 1 0 0 Holmer, g 0 0 0 Schmidt, g 0 0 0 Hormuth, g 0 0 0 Washburn (26) fg ft f f Fee, f 3 1 1 Lay, f 2 2 1 Collard, c 2 2 1 Rookam, g 0 0 0 Kinter, g 3 1 3 Bethel, f 1 1 0 Brave, f 1 0 0 Dittorne, f 0 0 1 Landes, f 0 0 1 Totals ...10 6 12 PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS THURSDAY FEBRUARY 20.1936 Comment Failure of Justice Justice is not only blind, as the legend has it, but is also deaf and dumb if one were to judge by the recent acquittal of Isdore Blumenfield in the Liggett murder case in Minneapolis. It seems that this city has just as well-organized underworld as Kansas City or Chicago ever had. The defendant was positively identified as the slayer of the Minneapolis crusader by the victim's wife and another person. Blumenfield's albi was severely shaken by the prosecution but evidently the jury considered not the facts of the case but the vengeance of Blumenfield's fellow *gangsters* if an unfavorable verdict were returned. Upon hearing the verdict, the defendant's wife severely criticized the Minneapolis police and Governor Olson for the handling of the case and the connection of Olson with the underworld. In light of the verdict reached It appears that her accusations might be founded on fact. Liggett was a militant publisher who exposed alleged connections between politicians and the gangster element. His murder was undoubtedly in retaliation for his editorial attacks. The defendant had been connected with the persons accused by Liggett and the prosecution established a motive on the grounds of retaliation. From the facts which appeared in newspaper accounts of the evidence presented in the trial there seems to be little doubt of Blumenfeld's guilt. However, a jury found that such was not the case and acquitted him. It seems to be another case where American justice gave way before the threats of gangsters and crooked politicians. "Continued Cold Weather" "Continued cold weather" has been for the past several weeks the general weather forecast of the entire nation. Gripped in the severest winter in years, practically the entire nation has suffered. The press of the country almost daily relates through pictures, headlines, and stories the handworks of "Old Man Winter" at his worst. Coal shortages; whole towns cut-off, humans and animals alike marooned on ice flows; transportation and communication brought to a standstill; mining camps wiped out by snowslides; many dead from exposure; firemen able to adequately combat the flames. All because Mother Nature has given her blacksheep son, Winter, a free hand. Besides the suffering, however, the frigid conditions has its lighter aspects. Automobiles cut queer capers on the highways; dash unsuspectingly into snow ploughs that apparently were whirlwinds; and in one case, even alleged to have made a complete loop-the-loop over another passing car. It has given some, heretofore but observers, a chance to taste winter sports. It has caused others to repent their slanderous weather remarks made during last August's heat waves. And better still, has given the younger generations who have before been forced to remain silent a free tongue in voicing their own opinions on the present weather conditions without fear of hearing. "Now back in---" Public Record "Just so it will be a matter of public record and would not be a surprise to the public should it come out later in some congressional investigation, we wish to state that J. Pierpont Morgan & Co. today renewed its subscription to The Gazette for another year. "Come again, Pierp!" "Looks like money is loosening up around the headwaters of the creek, and times will be better in the spring. /// Come again, Help. —From the Emnoria Gazette. Nazi Embarrassment Now, Herr Hitler's position becomes more embarrassing with the announcement that a fund has been raised for the defense of the young Yugoslavian born Jew, David Frankfurter, who last week assassinated Nazi organizer, Dr. Wilhelm Gustloff, physicist at the observatory at Davos, Switzerland. To let the case go without retaliation is to lose prestige in the Nazi anti-Semitic program but to interfere might bring international complications to say nothing of the adverse publicity among Olympic visitors. To date, the only action taken has been an announcement by propaganda minister Goebbels which bans all Jewish meetings and theater productions in Germany "until further notice." The appearance of the rather large fund for the young Jew's defense is just another fly in the Nazi ointment for it shows that many groups condone the crime and that Herr Hitler must indeed be careful in his retaliatory activities. Campus Opinion Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the University Daily Kanun. Articles over 200 words in length are subject to cutting by the editor. Contributions on any subject are invited. Editor Daily Kansan: It seems to me that in his recent article on Glen Cunningham, Mr. Oakes went out of his way to spread his usual Nazi propaganda. Cunningham was bowed for allegedly unsportmanlike conduct; whether he really did interfere with Mangan or not is a debatable point but there is no doubt that he was booed because of what was going on on the track. Mr. Oakes lumpes together "liberal," radicals and Jews" and blames the booing on them because of Cunningham's stand on Olympic participation despite the fact that Cunningham was unpopular in the East long before the Nazis began to murder their political opponents. In all of his articles, Mr. Oakes indicates the belief that there is nothing shady going on in Germany and attributes opinions to the contrary to hysteria. I am not acquainted with Mr. Oakes' experiences in Germany, but by his ridiculing the idea of persecution of minorities in that country he puts his word against such strong evidence that there seems to be very little doubt that he is poorly hiding the facts or that he is just uninformed. James G. McDonald, appointed by the League of Nations to direct the work with refugees from Germany, resigned because of the hopelessness and size of the task. Dees Mr. Oakes intimate that Mr. McDonald is suffering from hysteria, or has he failed to read that report and letter of resignation? (For the information of Mr. Oakes, that report appeared in a respectable Christian magazine. The Christian Century, and not in any radical journal.) And does Mr. Oakes suggest that the German program must be changed so they were suffering from hysteria? If he does, he is certainly over-estimating the power of hysteria and underestimating Nazi brutality and intolerance. If Mr. Cokes has any intelligent idea to express with regard to the German government and its morris and short-comings, he certainly should be free to express his views. But if Mr. Cokes is not however, is much more suitable for a book entitled "Why I Love Hitler" or something of that sort rather for a reading paper that seeks unbiased information. S. Suss. Editor Daily Kansan: Misunderstanding of the dramatic setup on the campus has brought about the accusation that faculty members of the department of speech and dramatic art are stealing lead parts in theater productions, thereby crowding out student actors. There is no legitimate reason for such a charge. There are two distinct dramatic groups that produce plays on the campus. One is the University Dramatics Club; the other is the Kansas Players. The dramatic club is composed entirely of students, and its productions are written by students who form the dramatic group corresponds in many respects to a little theater group, and anyone, student, faculty member, or town-person who is interested in the theater may become a member of this organization. The Kansas Players, as a dramatic group, has the privilege to select the members of the theater group. There is no reason to confine this choice to student. The two organizations should not be confused. One is a student group; the other is not. One uses an all student cast; the other quite justly uses the best available talent regardless of whether that talent belongs to student, faculty member, or an interested person outside of the University circle. B.R. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Notice to D. Ciannelli & Office at 3 p.m. preceding regular publication days and 11:30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issuance. Vol. 33 FEBRUARY 20,1936 No.98 --to see **points of interest** the tourists are apt **Guide to miss.** COSMOPOLITAN CLUB: There will be a short business meeting of the Cosmopolitan Club on Saturday, Feb 10 from 6:30 to 8:45 p.m. at the University of Florida. Margaret Messenheimer, President. LIBERAL CLUB AND SLID. There will be a joint meeting of the Liberal Club and the Student League for Industrial Democracy this evening at 8:00 o'clock in the library, an important business meeting will precede the regular program. KAPPA PSI. There will be a regular meeting of all actives and pledges today at 7:38 p.m. in the Union Building. Edith Borden. NEWMAN CLUB. The Newman Club will meet at a parade hall where officers will be held. All Cuban officers registered to us. Evangeline Clark, President. Helen Corbett, John Piercey. RED CROSS EXAMINER'S SCHOOL. Make applications at 102 Robinson Gymnastics. The school will be open on Thursdays from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. W. S.G.A. BOOK EXCHANGE: The W.S.G.A. Book Exchange will be open from 9:00-4:00 daily (except on Sundays). Katharine Aston, Secretary. RELAYS COMMITTEE: Applications for freshman members of the Kansas Relays Committee will be received in writing at 165 Robinson Gymnasium not later Wednesday, Feb. 26. J. S. Payne, Senior Manager. SIGMA ETA CHI: The regular super meeting of Sigma Eta Chi will be held at the house of Mrs Bayles, 1408 Kentucky Street, at 5:15 o'clock on Tuesday, Feb. 25. Patronesses have charge of the program, please notify Marigold Hall (phone 2846) by Monday evening if you can be present. Herbert G. Allphin. Writers' Project Invites Voluntary Articles for American Guide Manual Kantans will be inspired to see Kansas first, by the American Guide Manual, when it is completed. It will paint a vivid picture of the cultural, historical, aesthetic, recreational, economic, industrial, commercial and industrial. The Federal Writers' Project, 921-14 Kansas Avenue, Topeka, is soliciting voluntary contributions—such as child papers, these and features articles—from persons outlying communities to help localities represent their localized representations. Copy is coming into the state office, where it is being verified, edited and compiled under the supervision of A. Q. Miller, director. The topics to be included in the manual include history, literature, Indian tribes and reservations, folks, monuments, literature, music, art, education, religion, libraries, museums, health and social work, recreation, transportation, industries, pro-gambling, waterways and conservation. Tourists speeding through Kansas over coast-to-coast highways or on stream-lined trains, miss the state's cultural, historic and economic traditions. Their interest will be quickened in the sights and advantages Kansas has to offer, with this guide book. Visitors to Kansas would divert their routes in order to visit a landmark, attend a festival, or inspect an industrial field. The manual is to be published in five regional volumes and will include not only points of interest but also a variety of information which will be of service to school children and business men. For examples, near Junction City is Logan Grove, the legendary site of Corndorado's disillusionment in his search for the mythical seven cities of Cibola. From the grove, described in 1857 at "a remarkable body of timber" thou-surmounted, all bodies of acorns were gathered last fall and planted in the Plains Shelter Belt. Peter Pan Park, which Mr. and Mrs William Allen. White gave to Emporia in memory of their daughter Browni's life. Her rose garden in Gage Park, at Topkapi the John Brown Monument at Osawatou; Waconda Springs, near Beloit, described in Margaret Hill McCarter's book. She is also Shawnee Mission near Kansas City, are Hollywood Film Shop Hollywood—(UP)—Justice has been denied Leslie Howard because he has been almost forced to become an actor. He isn't fitted for the profession, it isn't a pleasure for him—nearly hard work. Such statements should be considered, for the person best qualified to know, Howard, is their author. "I'm not temperamentally gaited to acting," explained the bashful appearing English star of stage and screen. "I have none of the instincts which makes it pleasurable for some. To me it's just hard work." Howard has announced his determination to return from the foot and Kloes lights when he makes one more picnic appearance in one more stage production. By his confession, Howard became a star through accident and a matter of pride. He went to war after a short illness. He was haunted by him a feeling of distaste for finance. His grand finale as a motion picture actor will be in the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer production *Ragtime*. He says he will fall back on Shakespeare for his final stage event. That will be a role that every actor can play, more lofty, artistic moments, "Hamlet." When he was back in civilian life after the world conflict, he sought to write plays. To tide him over until his literary efforts were profitable, he accepted roles in small English剧院s and in small GermanCabardboard Lover" created a sensation. "Nothing else seemed open," he continued, "so I decided to remain an actor. I was medicine. I actually believe I was awful. Then I got thinking it over and decided that I would be a success as an actor." The determination to overcome something distasteful caused him to study the art of acting—more than he knew, and more would have done in some I liked. His efforts marked his appearance in London and New York and he was a moderate success. Then he was given the role coveted by many actors in the play *Berkley Square*. His work raised his profile and he had won his triumph before the foilights, but the English persistence to carry on would not let him retire. He devised a formula of portraying a character in motion picture productions and then taking the same play to the footboards. The idea worked out such success that Howard has been both artistically and professionally. Annual events, which would no doubt attract tourists, if their vacations were guided by attractive information are the Apple Blessing at El Dorado, the Steeple Chase at Ft. Riley, the Kansas Free Fair at Topeka, the Kansas State Fair at Hutuhinson, the North Dakota Welsh Estedford (the Kansas State Music Content) at Emporia, the Newolwh Festival at Independence, the Lindhabor Messiah, the Phillipsburg and the Frontier Fair at Dodge City. The Kansas Pyramids in Logan County will attract students of unusual geologic formations. The Fawcett Indian Village in Repubic county will draw visitors from all over the world to Church in Wabauaeuse county, Old Fort Zarah in Barton county, the Chilton Monument at Dodge City, Council Oak and Custer Elm at Council Grove, and the old arsenals, stables and churches. The area are associated with early Kansa history. Agricultural state, although primarily an agricultural state, nevertheless has attractions for the industrially-minded traveler. For instance the airplane facade at Kauai is a 70-foot-long line at Kauai City, the coal, lead and zinc mines in Southeastern Kansas, the sugar beet fields at Garden City, the flour mills at Salina, the oil fields of Southern Kansas, the salt works of Northern Lyons and Kanopolis vicinities. The Federal erosion project in Jewellshire county is attracting interest throughout the Middle West. A memorial statue of John Thayne, a Brown County, is interesting from the standpoint of art and novelty. The Thayne Museum at Lawrence and the old Terrestrial Capitol at Old Pawnee. The Brownsborough district draw hundreds of tourists each year. The guide will stimulate business by bringing customers from other cities and states and will direct tourists and sight-seeers to hotels, restaurants and commercial establishments off the main streets which they will visit for their own amusements and for the instruction and entertainment of guests. It will enable the city dweller of moderate means to solve his week-end problems and vacation trips. On the other hand, it will help them in their search for pleasure in the cities. Kansans will be made more conscious of the beauties, resources and advantages of their own state. On the whole, they will need to learn to care when until others begin to take an interest in them. This new pride will tend to stimulate conservation, preservation of relics and literary and historical treasures and develop natural resources. From the point of view of the history, student, the guide will be a wealth of information from which to reconstruct the past and will serve to assert and establish countless details which from a background of twentieth century culture. Since it will supplement, but not superadee road guides and other private publications, it is non-competitive and non-commercial. Want Ad Shows Material for Date Bureau At Northwestern Apparently the man behind the University Date Bureau didn't use the university's name. The bureau has been established at Northernwestern University in Chicago and has An enterprising young man there placed an advertisement in the Daily Northwestern which said "WANTED: Date for Junior brom by good looking male Commerce student without social background." He asked for a 6 a.m. Wednesday to make arrangements." The response to his advertisement was so good, and the applicants so numerous that he decided that there must be something to the idea of those students classifying dates for those students to advertise it. The Date Bureau was the result. The Bureau, for a nominal fee, will furnish photograph, biographies, and all other pertinent data necessary for a rood date. The Daily Northwestern failed to mention how the young man selected a girl from the many who answered her request. She then console the unsuccessful applicants. FOREIGN POLICY ASSOCIATION SPONSORS EDITORIAL CONTEST In an effort to stimulate clearer thinking on the subject of how to keep the United States out of war, the Foreign Policy Association and the publishers of "Nation" are jointly sponsoring an editorial contest for college students. The subject of the contest is "Will Neutrality Keep Us Out of War?" The first prize is $0 and the editorial winning this prize will appear in the May 8 issue of *The Nation*. Other smaller prizes are for second and third place editors. Search for Bones Of Prehistoric Elephant In Western States Fort Morgan, Colo.—(UP)—Digging parties are at work in this section searching for the bones of an elephant who is moving more than a thousand years ago. One tusk of the old elephant was found recently by Harry Dorn while he was hunting bones in the San Ar- dera. He took 30 miles southwest of Fort Morgan. Dorn saw the tusk sticking from the ground in a deep ravine where most of the top soil had been washed away. The roots were then driven into the ground and dislodged it from the ground. When Dorn attempted to saw off the tip of the tusk, to make a knife handle, he discovered that instead of bone he was sawing into a solid piece of ivory, in nearly a perfect state of preservation. He took the tusk to Dr. S. L. Lamoreux, who identified it as a tusk from the skull of a female elephant. He was about 18 years old, "being about 22 inches in length and straight," proclaims the female. The male tunks are longer and arched. The species has been extinct on the North American continent for more than 1,600 years." A Conducted by J. M. ROCK - - - CHALKLETS Don't be surprised if dogs start going south for the winter. Nashville is building a $25,000 WPA dog pound. Coal dealers say there is a shortage because customers refused to stock up in advance as was advised. Aspob initially turned over in his grave on learner's day, but the final of the "sat and the grasshopper" men was so disregarded by modern men. An oil company representative has seen interviewing some of the of men in the school of Business in regard to some positions with the company in the oil industry. There are good salary attached to the jobs, and very few expenses, there have been very few who would go where it takes mail from the U. S. six to eight weeks in the job. The transportation is donkey or ox or cattleization still seems to have its carl. It must be awful in the East. North Thomas, who is to talk here next week, was arrested recently in Baltimore. This week Representative Marcy New York City was arrested for participating in a WPA demonstration. The improvement which would probably do the greatest good at the present time is a wall or building from the POPULARITY and the ability to dance go hand in hand. If you you've acquired art yet you're ready to move at Marion Rice Studio. Classes for both Men and Women MARION RICE DANCE STUDIO 924 Mass. Phone 914 Read This! One of the rare grains amid the movies' chalk is the Warrior Brown's play, *The Petrified Forest*. Here's an important photoplay, a movie that has been adapted to both the emotions and the intellect and entertains excellently with its lively character. Logue, situational, sound-dynamic construction and superb photorealism, the sadism experienced delight of finding a movie which expects of the audience more than the obvious._Taken from Sunday's Kansas City Journal University Daily Kansa OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS "The Petrified Forest" is Lusie Howard's latest stage hit, which New York acclaimed for 52 capacity weeks. It starts Sunday. HARRY VALENTINE HARRY VALENTINE PRESIDENT LOREN TEMPESTE EDITOR-IN-CHEF BOB ROBINSON ASSOCIATE EDITORS GRANADA BILL GILL ALMA FRAZER MANAGING EDITOR FRED M. HARIS, JR. BUSINESS MANAGER F. QUINTIN BROWN Campus Editor Bill Ridgway Make Up Editors Dana Huey Bill Dawson News Editor Daniel Smith News Editor Daniel Smith Sunday Edition James Pekulangku ode and exclusive national advertising representative NATIONAL ADVERTISING Service, Inc. 420 Macdonald Avenue, New York City Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles. Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday lessons except during school holidays by students in the department of Jurassic of the Paris, from the Paris at the Department of Journalism. Subscriptions price, per year. $1.00 each on ad- vance. $2.25 on payments. Single copies. 5e each. Entered as second class matter, September 17, 1810, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas. From good authority it comes that the word "angel" came from "Angle" the ancient name for Englishman and came to imply having a very fair skin. Memorial Union to Dyche museum to shut off the draft that comes directly in from Butte. Mont. Nomination for the worst pun of the year: "Erdition up the tuters' yet Susy?" There is nothing that brings out the juvenile in people better than a good sleeted sidewalk on which to slide. Now that the class in elementary tap dancing is well started, several of the rooming houses have put up signs: "No Tap Dancing." --- Let the SAFE FLOTATION PROCESS brighten your smile Here's a tooth paste your whole family will enjoy. They'll like it. Start brushing your teeth and massaging your gums with Braten today. It Brite Heating Oil CITRUS AND MANGANESE TEA will pay you. flavor and the way it brings out the natural whiteness of the teeth. Its penetrating foam reaches angles where decay danger刃器; removes stale matter that often causes bad breath. 9th & Mass. Phone 233 H. W. STOWITS SAVE WITH SAFETY at The Jexall DRUG STORE THURSDAY Why not have Buckwheat Cakes for breakfast? You will enjoy them - at the 跳跃 CAFETERIA Let Us Tint, Dye, Clean, Resilver or Rogilt Your Party Slippers. Try Our Better Shoe Repairing ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP 1017 Mass. W.E. Whestone, Prop. Phone 684 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20. 1936 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Hill Society Fhi Chi Delta, Presbyterian society, hold a supers meeting at Westminster hall, Tuesday night. "Personality in Social Work," was the subject of the program which was presented by Mary Adams (Mary Adams), Sam Schumloeffel, c.37. Guests at the supper were Mabel Arnot, Blue Rapids, and Beaty Edwards, edd. Unidella Campbell, e.c8, and Maxine Schoen, cited as new members of the sorority. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Announcement has been made of the marriage of Mice Helen Charrier Brantz to Harold Clinton Scott, which took place January 23, in Holmola, Hawaii. Mrs. Scott, who is the daughter of Mrs. Joseph G. Brantz of Santa Rosa, Calif., has been attending junior college and father was the late Joseph G. Brantz of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at the University. Deltai Tau Delta will entertain with a formal dance at the chapter house Saturday night. Chaperons will be Mrs. Rachel H. Butler, Mrs. Eva Knoepe, Mrs. Carolyn Gaskell and Gene Combs, and Mrs. C. H. Landez Louis Kuna's orchestra will play. ☆ ☆ ☆ "The Fennee" medics, women's medical organization, held a dinner Monday evening, in the Women's Lounge on the floor of the Whitney Hotel. White, m'unal, read a paper on "Medical Application in India, Rebecca Smith," a doctoral thesis. "s8, were in charge of the dinner." ☆ ☆ ☆ Pii Gamma Delta will hold its thirty-seventh annual "pig" dinner at 6 p.m. at the chapel house, Mrs. F. B. Meyers, B.M., victoria and Judge and Mrs. C. E. Sewors, Kansas City, Mo., will be performing an orchestra will furnish the music. ☆ ☆ ☆ The Alpha Kappa Psi, professional commerce fraternity, announces the pledging of Charles Bakshi, c37, New York College Geigerhuis, c37, Kansas City, Mo. ☆ ☆ ☆ Members of Kappa Eta Kappa, electrical engineering fraternity, will entertain with their semi-annual smoker, Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the chapter ☆ ☆ ☆ Prof. E. D. Kinemer and Edward Hyatt were dinner guests Tuesday evening at the Alpha Chi Sigma house. Sigma Chi will hold initiation services Saturday and Sunday at the chapter house. Mr. and Mrs. Dana Davis, Topela were guests at the Kappa Alpha Thetet here yesterday. Boh Locke, fs, Kansas City, Mo., was a weekend guest at the Phi Kappa Pai house. ☆ ☆ ☆ Dorothy Snyder, e'uncl, and Betty Hamilton, e'37, were luncheon guests at the Chi Omega house yesterday. Julia Jeremy, eunel, will be a dinner guest at the Kappa Alpha Thetus house tonight. The Summerful scholars will hold their monthly dinner meeting tomorrow evening at the Colonial tea room Betu Gamma Sigma, business fraternity, held a smoker last night at the Colonial tea room. Corbin hall will hold open house this evening from 7 until 8 p.m. Read the Kansan Want Ads. School Publications Listed Builtin Contains Names of Contributions from Each Department A complete list of all the known publications of the University of Kansas, with the exception of catalogues, and a listing of the books by Mary Maude Sandler, accessions librarian at Watson library, and published by the University in bulletin This bulletin, containing 127 pages of material, lists under the title of each department of the University all the publications pertaining to that particular department. There is one listed which was published in 1988 and others which appeared as late as January 1, 1985. Most of them have been written by members of the University bulletins; but most of University bulletins are often wanted by other universities, and this list provides an index from which they may order. Miss Smailer, author of the pamphlet, has been associated with the library since 1903. As well as being head of the accessions department, she is in charge of the collection of Kansas books in Watson Library. According to her, Ms. Smailer is the university of Kansas publications as given in her bulletin measure up well with those given in similar lists of other universities throughout the country. Nve To Appear in Topeka Will Address Conference of Eastern Kansas Methodist Churches Governor Alf. M. Landon will greet the conference in the first united session on Tuesday evening. About 500 church officials, ministers, and laymen will be present. The evening meetings will be open to the public. Senator Ney will fly to Topeka from Washington to deliver his address on Friday evening at 7:45 a.m. in the White House, where he will be, "Is Peace Possible?" Senator Gerald P. Nye of North Dakota will be the featured speaker during the Annual Conference of the members of the Methodist churches of eastern Kansas, to be held in Topkach the week of March 3. The senator has just received the Iowa Foundation award annually in recognition of what does the most toward World Peace. He is a leading advocate of American neutrality and also is bear of the comformist movements, the guiding the munitions industry issue. --will act as master of ceremonies. The Granada stage will be decorated to fit the occasion and a revolving stage, on which the models will display the new styles, is being brought from New York. All the spring styles are being con- tained in the exhibition halls, who are sponsoring the revue in collaboration with the Granada. KFKU 2:44 p.m. News Bulletin W.A. Dill K.U. News Bureau. 2. 30 p.m. Spanish Lesson, Mr. Clarence. Chrisman. 2:47 p. m. Elementary French Lesson. M.W.K. Cornell. PHONE K.U. 66 6 p.m. Elementary German Lesson, Prof. E.F. Engel. Dramatic Club to Annear Tom Taylor's "Ticket-To-Leave Man" will be presented by an all-student cast from the K. U. Dramatic Club for a run of four nights starting March 23. In this play the original Jim Dalton, and Howlaway, the detective, appear in the series. This is part of the series of Kansas Players and Dramatic Club productions for the year. Battle Ends In Draw Cambridge, Mass. Fri 19-10.(UP) Fred Sweeney and Vern Wollmayer, centers on opposing basketball teams, jumped for the ball but neither had an advantage because — they knocked each other unconscious, went to the same hospital ambulance, had four stitches each taken for identical cuts over the right eye. CLASSIFIED ADS PHONE K.U.66 One Stop Clothes Service Station SCHULZ THE TAILOR 924 Mass. --will act as master of ceremonies. The Granada stage will be decorated to fit the occasion and a revolving stage, on which the models will display the new styles, is being brought from New York. All the spring styles are being con- tained in the exhibition halls, who are sponsoring the revue in collaboration with the Granada. FOR SALE: Our home at 115 Louis兰姆 with furniture. Shown by appointment. Telephone 173. Florence M Hodder. 100 FOR SALE BEAUTY SHOPS Formats: fax or e-mail or hard copy. 238; three insertions. 584; six insertions. 750; subscription to approval at the Kawai Business Office. Payments and submissions to approval at the Kawai Business Office. Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S — 920-22 Mass. TAXI SPECIAL--50c reduction on any per- manent, with this ad, except Saturday. Permanence $1.50 to $5.90, complete with hair cut, IVAN' ATHEY.BUPS, 7321s Mass, Phone 233; 9411s Mass, Phone 533. --will act as master of ceremonies. The Granada stage will be decorated to fit the occasion and a revolving stage, on which the models will display the new styles, is being brought from New York. All the spring styles are being con- tained in the exhibition halls, who are sponsoring the revue in collaboration with the Granada. TAILOR TAXI MISCELLANEOUS Read the Daily Kansan want ads. ABE WOLFSON 743 Mass. Student Loans NINTEEN NEW MEMBERS IN HOME ECONOMICS CLUE Nineteen new members of the Home Economics club were initiated recently at a meeting at the Home Management A waffle sucker followed the meeting. Gene Lloyd, varsity dance manager, and John Antonello, c'encel, will present a "Spring Fashion Revue" at the "Spring Fashion Festival" today, Feb. 28, it was announced today. The revue will include all the latest spring styles for both women and men. Models for both the women's clothes and the men's clothes will be chosen from the various seciorities and fraternities on the Hill. Roger Anderson and his orchestra will play for the show, and Gene Lloyd Those instituted were: Idella Campbell, c'38; Jane Marshall, c'unic; Nana Wogman, c'38; Retha Poose, c'39; Frances Warde, c'39; Heavrietta Becker, c'39; Mary McFarland, c'38; Kerr, c'36; Sally Jane Martin, c'36; Betty Graham, Peggy Tanner; Janet Manning, c'unc; Nadine Burke, c'38; Jane Reeves, c'unc; Imogene Beamer, c'37; Mary Barnes, c'39; Lulu Tillman, c'38; Shae Sha, c'38; Helen Liot Martin, c'38; To Sponsor Fashion Revue Lloyd and Antonello Will Present Styles at Granada Oread News Notes The beginning ahrondhand class is taking up office practice. This will include the taking of dictation from various members of the faculty. --at Kansas City, Mrs. Steele has her B.S. degree from the Teachers College, Kansas City, and her Master's degree from the University of Kansas. Miss Ruth E. Litchen, Supervisor o. Social Science, was absent from classes Tuesday because of illness. At the basketball game last Friday night at Baldwin and Oread, a group of girls from the Oread gym classes put on a demonstration of girls' basketball skills. The competition was quite unique, and was received with enthusiasm by the spectators. The girls participated were Betty Lou Grant, LaVene Kramer, Marie Barlow, Eleanor Herschell, Atkinson Green, Robert Green, Green Barbara, Owen Heiser, Hebler. Ovrer Beel has returned to school after an absence of ten days, during which time he has been taken his job at the University of the Western Union Telegraph Company. Congratulate Her Initiation With a Bouquet or an Arrangement of Our Beautiful Flowers Flower 820 Fone Always Fresh Cut Quality Flowers at Reasonable Prices "Flowers of Distinction" The general science class under the supervision of Mr. L. P. Elliott, has been studying refrigeration and heating systems during the past two weeks. WARD'S FLOWERS The Oread boys were successful in defeating both the first and second Baldwin teams by decisive scores. Margot Baker, Naima Jean Rummage and Jean Steele, Miss Loize Montgomery, student teacher, acted as referee. Follow Arrow and you follow the style M STRIPES ARE IN DURE OF KNFT - A new, wide- colored shirt on Arrow Shirts, stripes on colored ground. Sunferladed shirt. $2 V ARROW SHIRTS and TIES Only Arrow Shirts have Arrow Collars They visited the University heating plant today, and later plan to visit the cold-storage plant and ice plant, studying air conditioning and refrigeration Mrs. Eliseen Steele of Kansas City has been employed at Oreau to take the place of Miss Mary Cuciling, who resides in New Orleans and is a member in the Southwest High School Ober's WHAT TO DOF OUTFITTERS equipment. Dr. F. O. Russell, director of Ocead Training School, Mr. Gilbert Ulmer, Miss Mary Fee, and Mr. W. C. Nystrom, supervisors, plan to attend the meetings of the department of superinventants at St. Louis, Feb. 23-27. Cao THE HUNT It' s New . . . It' s Smart It's just about time a change occurred in men's shirt fashion—and here it is—the button-down, wide-spread collar, authentiically styled by Arrow for university men. This shirt is presented in white and colored woven owen and madras clothes. $2 and $2.50 ARROW SHIRTS and TIES For Digestion's Sake _ smoke Camels COLLEGE LIFE is a strain on the physique, with its endless despair and body. Often, as a result, digestion suffers. Smoking Cakes emits smoke that whirls – promotes good digestion. TABEER - Natural digestive action notably increased by smoking Camels People in every walk of life get "keyed up". live too hurriedly. The effects on digestion are known to all! In this connection, it is an interesting fact that smoking a Camel during or between meals tends to stimulate and promote digestion- Enjoy Camel's mildness . . . the feeling of well-being fostered by Camel's matchless blend of costlier tobacco. Smoke Camels for digestion's sake! A GUESTS AT KUGLER'S, grand old Philadelphia restaurant, renowned for two generations, are shown above, as they enjoy choice menus and desserts. The famous dining room, is speaking to one of the diners. William says of Camels: "Camels and good food go together. Our patrons naturally prefer quality tobacco, judging by the smell." We can't wait to see if we try to keep well stocked with Camels." IN BRITISH GUIANA - the LAVreres for a river. "Camells make any meal digester easy," says William laVirre, Mrs. Wellington. "They eat in the jungle or dining at home." A PALAMAT GEORGE LOTT, tennis champion, knows how over-exertion strikes at digestion. He says: "I smoke a cigar. I canhaves a gestionation. They help me to enjoy what I eat and more good out of it." TUNE IN! CAMEL CARAVAN DEAN JEANS AND DEANJEANS DTDHUSING GLEN GRAY AND THE TURKEY Tuesday and Thursday — 8 p.m. E.S.T. 8 p.m. C.S.T. 9:30 p.m. W A B C C: Newcastle News A COSTLIER TOBACCOS! Camelis are made from finer. MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS –Turkish and DESSERT –than any other popular brand. GAMEL TURKISH RAISED PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20. 1936 Cunningham To Defend A. A. U. Title Saturday Kansas Miler Will Mee Venzke and Mangan in New York Glen Cunningham will have his chance for revenge against his two arch-rivals, Joe Mangan and Gene Krause in the National A.U.A. 1500 meter race. It will be the first time that the three have met in the same race since Cunningham finished behind Mangan and in the Baster miles several weeks ago. It was in the A.A.U. meet last year that Commsingham set the new world mark of 3.50.5 for the 1503 meter race, finishing 30 yards ahead of Tiger Bilt Bouhnir, and besetting the old mark of 3.523, establishing by himself in 1934 at the same meet, when he barely needed Bouhnir out. It will be Cunningham's chance to prove to the doubtful one that he is not finished as far as racing goes. Although he has lost his last two races, Glenn still believes he is not slipping, but that the others are merely improving, and points to his time in these two races as proof. The Baxter race and the Wanmaker were both under 4:12, which is fast enough in anybody's language. Cunningham has had no excuses to offer for his losing streak, merely saying that he did not run fast enough, he had to work hard to keep back Bank East only a day or so before each race and without proper training. However, since the last race, he have been slaying at George Washington in preparation in preparation for the coming race. Tracksters to Nebraska Hargiss Will Take 19 Men to Lincoln Saturday Couch "Bill" Hargas announced yesterday that he intends to take 19 men to Laredo Saturday for the dual truck race, which he will hold under the Nebraska stadium. Hargis is uncertain as to the Joy-hawker's chances, as he has not been able to get a very good line on his music, and that has made it impossible to do much training. Al Wellhausen, tall Jayhawker basketball is to compete in the high jump for Kansas, although Wellhausen has not started training yet this year. Coach Hargens feels sure that he will win his share of the points at Nebraska. 60-yard dash: Richardson, Hardacre, and Clucas. 60-yard low hurdles: Wiles, Foy, and Clucas 60-yard high hurdles: Wiles and Foy 440-yard dash: Trotter, McNown Greene, and McCaskill Pole vault: Ardrey. Shot put: Kanatzar and Pitts. Mile run: Fitzgibbons and Zadigan Pole vault: Ardrey. High jump: Shannon, Wellhausen and Ewing. Broad juny: Pitts, Clucas, Ewing, and Richardson. Two-mile run: Fitzgibbons and Zadi gan. Mile relay: McNown, McCaskil Greene, Trotter, Wiles and Schroeder. Read the Kansan Want Ads Sports Officials Contribute Sports Officials Contribute The following football officials officiate in the Nailsmith game, have sent their inbounds to the Nailsmith team. E. C. Quigley, who officiated at the K. U. - Kansas State game, contributed $10.00. High school officials who contributed were Carney Smith of Arma, who gave $1.00, George Hamilton, who gave 50 cents, and L. C. Botes of Silver Lake, who gave $1.00. Men's Intramurals Official standing of basketball teams up to and including Feb. 19, 1836 are: Class A, Division I Team W L Pct. Phi Delt H 8 0 1.00 Delt H 6 1 0.50 Beta 6 2 7.50 Sigma Chi 6 2 7.50 Phi Gam 6 2 7.14 Sigma Chi 3 4 3.48 Kappa Sigma 3 4 3.48 Delt D 3 5 3.75 S.A E 3 5 3.75 Phi Pi 3 6 2.56 Deltu Ci 1 4 2.09 Deltu Chi 1 4 1.25 A.T O 1 6 0.00 Class A Division II Hankell Jachwicks 5 4 Rock Chalk I 8 1 Triangles 7 1 Flii Tanks 5 2 K. E.K. 4 3 Pioneers 3 3 Aenca 4 4 Threety Eu 4 3 First Baptist 2 5 Fi. K. A. 2 6 Church Church 2 7 S. A. Mu 2 8 A.K. Psi 1 5 Division II Johnson's All Stars 5 9 0 1.00 Galloping Hoes 7 2 0 1.87 Rock Chalk II 8 2 2 89 Hell - Hounds 7 2 7.77 Cowes 7 2 37.77 Boilermakers 4 5 5.66 Ober's 5 4 4.44 Dunnan Kicks 4 5 4.29 Panthers 3 4 4.40 Campus Raiders 3 4 6.08 Bobblehawks 2 5 2.82 Whirlpool 1 8 11.11 C. S. E. P 0 12 Class R N N N N N N N N | Class B | | | :--- | :--- | | Phi Delt I | 7 | 0 | 1.000 | | Phi Gam | 7 | 1 | 1.000 | | Chi Gam | 6 | 1 | 1.837 | | Sigma Chi | 6 | 1 | 1.833 | | Phi Delt II | 7 | 1 | 1.714 | | Kappa Sigma | 4 | 2 | 1.666 | | A. T. O | 3 | 2 | 1.600 | | Ancestor | 3 | 2 | 1.500 | | Beta | 3 | 4 | 1.400 | | D. E. D | 3 | 2 | 1.400 | | Nuga Su | 3 | 3 | 1.375 | | Phi Pai | 3 | 2 | 1.285 | | Triangles | 1 | 6 | 1.42 | | S. P. E | 1 | 6 | 1.42 | | D. I | 1 | 6 | 1.42 | | Pi K. A | 1 | 6 | 0.900 | Standings of Volley Ball teams up to and including Feb. 18, 2006. Including Feb. 18, 19. Team W L L Pt. S. A.E. 6 0 1.000 Triangle 5 0 1.000 Beau 3 1 1.833 Phi Gam 3 1 726 T. D. 4 2 .660 Sigma Chi 4 2 .660 Phi Delt 3 2 .500 Sigma Chi 2 3 .500 Delta Chi 3 2 .400 Kappeau 3 3 .400 Phi Pi 2 1 .400 A. T. O 1 1 .250 A. T. O 1 1 .250 Pi K. A 1 4 .200 Pi K. A 1 4 .200 Nu Sigma Nu 0 0 .600 Official Standings of Water Polo Teams up to and include Feb. 18, 1836 Tadpoles W 2 L Pct. Pphi Gam 2 0 1.000 Pphi Gam 2 0 1.000 Phi Delt 1 0 1.000 Sigma Chi 2 1 1.000 Reed 1 0 1.000 S. P E 1 1 5.000 D. T E 1 5 1.000 Kappa Sigma 1 2 2.000 Triangles 0 1 1.000 Deltachi 0 6 1.000 Congratulations Initiate! What could be more significant than a beautiful congratulatory gift from our large assortment of individual--- FLOWERS PROVE YOUR SINCERITY PHONE 72 SUGGESTIONS Colonial Bouquet Roses A Corsage of Gardenias or Orchids RUMSEY Flower Shop ALLISON ALLISON K.U. Florist to K.U. 927 Mass. "We Telegraph Flowees" Lawrence High School Undefeated in League Lawrence High School's cages are keeping pace with the Jayhawkers in conference play this year. As Kansas is the only undefeated team in the Big Ten, so are the Lions the only Eastern Kansas team that is unbeaten in league play. Local Cagers Top Eastern Kansas Loop With Five Wins To date, Lawrence, under the tutelage of Coach Edid Wood, has downed all four of its conference opponents Topeka twice, and Emporia, Manhattan and Ottawa once, in addition to non-tournament games. Paese of Kansas City, Osceola and Atchison. Three times the Lions have been defeated, losing to Coffeyville, Chanute, defending state champion, and William Christman of Independence, Mo. In each one the margin of defeat was played games were played away from home. Hunt and Perry Are Regulars Bob Hunt and Eldon Perry, both bitches, are regulars in the rankings. Hunt is the only short man on the team being only 5 feet, 6 inches tall. Nevertheless, he is playing his second year as a regular, a foot which is one inch shorter than his furious dribbling. Despite his lack of weight he is the team's leader scoring. Bok Klawhin, 6 foot, 3 inch senior, is the Lions' center. Although not much of a scoreer, he is one of the best players in the league about this was dispelled by his performance against Rolph Miller, 6-foot, 2-inch catch sensation, whom Klaas Van Rooij was named. sxw foot mark. He showed a good deal of promise early in the year but was diagnosed with appendicitis. Since he has regained his health he has worked himself back Perry is a rangy senior reaching the 五 foot mark. He showed a treadde Guard Positions Well Filled Bob Allen and Billy Johnson, both juniors, handle the guard positions. Allen is the son of Dr. F. C. Allen, who scored four goals for his brilliant ball handling and a good scorer. Allen scored the winning goal. Little Theatre of Big Hits PATEE 10c $ ^{7} $ $ ^{8} $ 15c $ ^{7} $ AFTER BANK NITE TONITE NOW! ENDS FRIDAY GRETA GARBO FREDRIC MARCH Freddie Bartholomew "ANNA KARENINA" in Lawrences' recent overtime victory against Ottawa, 18-16. He is 6 feet tall. Johnson has a good eye for the basket, is a fine defense man and as a general rule throttles the opposition's scoring. He is 5 feet, 10 inches tall. The team was dealt a severe blow by the loss of Paul Moon, leading conspiracy theories that the senator became the eight-tier senator rule. Nevertheless the squid has a good deal of power left and it is expected to be a contender for the state emuption. Women's Intramurals The Kappa Alpha Theta sorority won the first half of the annual women's swimming meet which began at 7.30, Tuesday night. Feb. 18 Kappa Kappa Gamma played against Giu Guang, third; and Sigma Kappa Independent tied for fourth place. The second half of the meet will be Sub-Zero Weather Calls for CHILI 10c at the Union Fountain Sub-Basement Memorial Union at 7.30, Thursday night, Feb. 20. The at 7.30, Thursday night, Feb. 20. The night won first place last year in the competition. But he is given much competition, however, Sub-Basement Memorial Union Here It Is Again for the Hundreds Who Asked for its Return and the Thousands Who Want to See It Again! 25c 'til 7 -- Shows 3-7-9 GRANADA 25c 'til 7 — Shows 3-7-9 NOW! ENDS SATURDAY RONALD COLEMAN And a Cast of Thousands 'A TALE OF TWO CITIES' The other organizations participating at this time are: Gamma Phi Beta, Corbin hall, Alpha Delta Pi, Chi Omega, TNT, and IWW. SUNDAY DOUBLE HEADER Shoe Sale Continuous Shows 1 - 3 - 5 - 7 - 9 STARTS FRIDAY February 21--9 A.M. Leslie Howard's Latest Stage Hit Which New York Acclaimed for 52 Capacity Weeks Is Even Greater on the Screen! LESLIE HOWARD BETTE DAVIS "The Petrified Forest" The six best swimmers in each event from both teams will swim in a final meet to be held next Wednesday, Feb. 26. Weaver's Stock High Grade Women's and Children's Shoes. Entire Spot Cash Stock Men's, Women's and Children's Fine Footwear. CLOSING OUT ENTIRE STOCK Weaver's Shoes—Foot Savers, Red Cross, Rice O'Neill, Johanson, Simplex. Party Shoes and Style Shoes THE SPOT CASH SHOE STORE All New Spring Shoes Included 819 Mass. THE KANSAS CITY STAR PHONE 17 H. L. Nevin Distributor 13 papers - 15c per week 847 Mass. St. Each Puff Less Acid LUCKY STRIKE "FTY ROASTED" CIGARETTES LUCKY STRIKE A LIGHT SMOKE Luckies are less acid. One of the chief contributions of the Research Department in the development of A LIGHT SMOKE is the private Lucky Strike process, "IT'S TOASTED." OF RICH, RIPE-BODIED TOBACCO This preheating process at higher temperatures consists of four main stages, which involve carefully controlled temperature gradations. Quantities of undesirable constituents are removed. In effect, then this method of preheating at higher temperatures constitutes a completion or fulfillment of the curing and aging processes. Luckies are less acid Recent chemical tests show* that other popular brands have an excess of acidity over Lucky Strike of from 530 to 103. Excess of Acidity of Other Popular Brands Over Lucky Strike Cigarettes BALANCE LUCKY STRIKE BRAND B BRAND C BRAND D Luckies - "IT'S TOASTED" Your throat protection-against irritation against cough UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXXIII --on the SHIN --on the SHIN LAWRENCE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1936 By BUD EVANS, '36 Hell Week Rages On . . . Mid- Week a Hot Spot . . . Signs of Spring . . A D.U.'s Mistake . . Guernsey Needs Food . . Size- more the Loser. A bit of sympathy was aroused in the of the Stooge heart (sure—it's possible) the other evening while he was witnessing poor Betty Ames doing sentinel duty for dear old Alpha Chi. It was participant in Hell Week traditions, also the goat (pardon us) of the rest of the 19 pledges undergoing the severe test. Betty's duties were to loat 10 minutes, but she was left holding hands with a girl didn't show up. Seems you've got it all, Miss Ames, but that that's life! Understand that there was such a crowd at the Midweek variety the other night that people were actually "swelling" and trying to get in, but the Hill could get that hot during this cold weather. Heat the place up, Lloyd, that'll pack em in like nothing else. It looks like the Kappa Sigs. D. U's, and the Sig Eps are all prepared for spring! See that the grass is mown in spring before the football season. Alpha Chi'ts out in West Hills, so the boys out that way must be prepared to put them to use as soon as spring gets here. Two bad the Alpha Chi's out in that neighborhood anyway. And was a certain P.i Bp surprised when she called up the D. U. house (of all phones—girls) and heard the answer "145." By the way, Dick keep your mind on something else besides phone numbers so go to answer the phones hereafter! Our friend Anonymous writer: From the looks of a partly-catenous book of matches handed us by Guernsey the other day, we get the impression that he is really good at food enough for themselves, or else George is getting to the point where he will eat anything—as well as with anything (women particularly). Someone better take care of George and be dangerous man when he gets hungry. First sign of spring: Professor R. S. "Butch" Howey wearing a new purple tweed spring suit. Someone should ask professor Howey he got the moniker "Butch." The best happening of the week comes at the expense of Heeb Sizemore, a member of the law barn family. Seems Herbie had been corresponding with the girls, giving them that same old line, etc., and the girls, swallowing it hook, line and sinker, decided to come up K. U. way for a week-end visit with friend Herbie. quite a coincident when she gets her girls hair from two different locations! ☆ ☆ ☆ Well, it seems they both arrived at the same time; monkey, Saturday night, Herb, being in a state of extreme confusion, took a date with the first one she had to stop circulating long enough to get his date a coke. This was his downfault: Upon entering a local joint, he and his friend ran into the jitted N. 2. Date No. 2 (Ceiling in both mounds for the battle) was not on! Sought desperately for the lead. Frequent shots were missed, and the whole thing was a ragged affair! However, date No. 2 was given a close decision, and notices were thirled like anything! They should get together again sometime. Understand that Sizemore lost another decision shortly after to date No. 1. Tough luck, old boy, but those things will happen. Former Student Teaches Music Margaret McNown, fs, daughter of Prof. W. C. McNown, professor of civil engineering, is teaching public school music in the high school at Algona, Iowa. Business Seniors Interviewed G. V. Packard, personnel man for the W. E. Grant chain department stores in New York and of the School of Business yesterday. Speaks Today W. W. Browne John Bennett, professor of Christian theology at Auburn university, who will address a meeting of interest to young Christians at 4:30 in Westminster hall. Bennett Will Address Christian Groups Today Churchmen John Bennett, professor of Christian Theology from Auburn Theological Seminary, will address the first of a series of interest to young Christians today. At 4:30, he will address a group at Westminster hall on the subject, "The Christian Message for Us As Individuals and World Citizens." At 7:30, he will speak on "Standards for Personal and Social Action." Dr. Bennett is everywhere regarded as one of the most progressive of the younger churchmen. He has been released from his work as associate professor of Christian Theology at Auburn Theological Seminary to make a tour of college, speaking on subjects of present day interest to college students. Instead of speaking this after afternoon and Monday, as stated in the program, students will address the moon luncheon forum at 12:30 and will speak again at 4:30 and 6:30. "The Living God in a World of Science, will be his top for discussion," said Dr. Miles Brown, who will discuss whether a belief in God is intellectually compatible with what science has to say. "Olympia" played to a record audience last night, the attendance exceeding that of any other play of the year. The threater was filled to capacity, many being turned away for lack of seats. Compared to the attendance of Wednesday night, the program last evening exceeded it by better than 300 persons. The smaller attendance came from the Vienna Choir Boys presented their program in the University Auditorium on the same night. "Olympia" Packs Fraser Theater i Final Performance Plays To Record Audience The excellent acting and clever come easily kept the audience highly interested in the performances, the climax, when the young captain calmly takes Olympia in his arms and leads her to victory. The cast and Robert Gard, technical director, will leave by motor car Wednesday, for a short tour, presenting their play in Humboldt, Emporia and Parsons. The troupe will return to Lawrence the following Sunday. Vinni Pipips to Give Rest Viinna pupils of Prof. Karl Kurtzstein, 25, from room 304, Administration building, this afternoon at 3:30 p.m. The program follows "Adoration" (Borowski), June Draper; "Spanish Serenade" (Chamindé - Kreisler), Margaret Stough; "Sichero - Tarantella" (Wieniawki), Concert in D Moniori (Wieniawki), Comedy in D Allegro Non Troppo (Lalo), D Robert Sedore; and "Lafreedbus" (Kreisler), Helen Lindquist. Violin Punils to Give Recital State Department Orders an Inquiry Of Redfern Rumor Conflictting Reports From South America Deepen Mystery of Lost Aviator NUMBER 99 Washington, D.C., Feb. 20—(UP)—The State Department today ordered the removal of four American aviators who vanished in South America nine years ago, including D.Redfern, American aviator who vanished in South America nine years ago. Conflicting reports that Redfern is alive, that no evidence indicates he is dead, and that Mr. Trump is holding him as a supernatural being, and that white Americans actually talked with the missing flier, emerged shortly before the news today to deepen the mystery of his death. In 1927, Redfern took off from Brunswick, Georgia, for Rio de Janeiro. Since he no positive news of him has been reported, reports about him have been proved false. Mcclellan Qinon 189 The United States consult at Trinidad, British West Indies, today was ordered to investigate reports that Redferd was in a country near the Brazilian frontier. These advices came to the State Department through British diplomatic channels indirectly from Art Williams, who has been searching for Redferd. Williams was described as visiting a native village where he was convinced that the evidence against his missing man. Williams himself was interviewed today in Georgetown, British Guiana, by the United Press. Williams said he had a definite evidence that bedern is alive. Denies Statement "I never saw Redfern or his plane," Williams said, denying a statement issued by Alfred Harrod, newspaper man of Paramaribo, Dutchessiana, that he and Willams had found Redfern and asked to him. "I met the Kayser expedition (another searching party), but I don't recall meeting Harrod," Williams said. "His report is all wrong." "When I see Redefon, I'll bring him into town. I don't know whether he was a man or woman, but I cropped or malned, from my talk with the Indians, I believe I was in the right locality. No other white man has been where I was—unless it be Redefon." It was Williams who taught Redferr to fly. He has been the most persistent searcher for his lost friend. In months of flying freight planes, in Brazil and British Guiana, Williams had unequaled opportunities to gain detailed knowledge of jungle geography in the section where Redfern is supposed to have been lost. He said he planned to use the work of his team to the boundary between these two countries and may return to the section where Redfern is believed to have disappeared. Fire damaged the interior of a room in the nurses' hall yesterday at the University of Kansas hospital at Kansas City, Kan. The room in Hall hit by Mass Maxine Brueninger of Lafayette, Alice Roeff Reisen of New York. Miss Brueninger, having attended the University of Kansas, entered the University of Kansas hospital this fall to complete her nursing training course. Freebie, superintendent of Hinesh Freible, superintendent of Hinesh Freible, damaged the damage to be about $75 Tonne Nine The annual winter variety dance for Negroes will be held this evening in the Memorial Hall ballroom. Oliver Todd and his Hottentots colored orchestra, has been hired to play for the occasion. The band was obtained in Kansas City. Dancing at the party is scheduled from 9 o'1. Hold Negro Varsity Tonight FIRE DAMAGES NURSE'S HALL IN BELL MEMORIAL HOSPITA Friday, February 21 Baptist Student Group, First Baptist Church, 11 p.m. AUTHORIZED PARTIES NEW COLD WAVE COMING Phi Gamma Delta, House, 12 p.m. Negro Student Party, Memorial Union, 1 a.m. ... ELIZABETH MEGUIAR Adviser of Women Saturday, February 22 For the Joint Committee Chicago, Feb. 20—(UP) The apparent end of the month-long cold wave which came today is just a bull before new arctic blasts, forming in Canada's Mackenzie river basin, crack down on the central United States over the weekend, forecasters reported tonight. Delta Tau Delta, House, 12 pm ELIZARETH MEGUAR EMPLOYEE RESIGNS POSITION AFTER 11 YEARS OF SERVICE Norman Thomas, well-known Socialist leader who is scheduled to speak at the Student Forum Monday afternoon, may find it necessary to cancel his enquiry with her. The university aired a telephone. A telegram was received last night saying that the illness of Mrs. Thomas and conflicting train schedules might be necessary to cancel the engagement. In December the "Old Guardmen", officials of the state party in New York tried to expel Thomas for his dealing with Communists. Thomas then opened separate headquarters and started a new convention to oust the "Old Guardmen." on Student Affairs. Mr. Thomas has been an ardent fighter against Faction, as he put forth in his speech, "We must fight for freedom." In his speech here in 1934, he expressed his views upon dictatorship in China. Zero temperatures are expected to beset the Middle West, emerging from four weeks' of unprecedented biltzards and cold by Saturday, according to C. A. Donnel, government meteorologist. The national executive committee of the Socialist party set up a temporary New York committee, nine of the right-wing members resigning shortly after his election in 1982, broke with James H. Maurer, his presidential mate running in 1982 and 1983. "The text of the coming generation is whether it can initiate leadership rather than dictatorship. Dictatorship, rather than guarantee of relief from economic evils." Mrs. George Hulceen, who for the past 11 years has been a University employee, has resigned her position and gone to Monroe, La., to join her husband in business. For the past six and a half years she has worked full time as counselor at Camellia office, and for the four years preceding she was employed part time. Socialist Party Leader May Not Appear Monday Bad Train Connections and Mrs. Thomas' Illness Am.Cauze Word was sent to Thomas saying that a car had been provided to take him and his wife on to Emporia after the lecture, but no answer has been received yet. Thomas is to speak at Baldwin Middle School in morning and in Emporia Monday night. McNown Gives Lecture For the Joint Committee Student Affairs Thomas, a recent participant in the garment workers' strike in New York City, is making a lecture tour of the University of Pittsburgh to discuss the Socialist party last January. Civil war within the party has led to the suspension of all regular officials until June 30, when a representative state convened and held for the purpose of reorganization. Are Causes Her place will be filled by Miss Elizabeth Rupp, who has been connected with the College office. Prof. W. C. McNown, of the School of Engineering and Architecture, gave an illustrated lecture on the "Colorado River" yesterday afternoon in Haskell hall. The lecture was sponsored by the Institute of Mining Engineering. Mid-Winter Issue Of Jayhawker Out Monday Afternoon Sophomore Beauty Queens Picked by Goodman To Be Featured This Time The Mid-Winter issue of the Jayhawker magazine will be ready for distribution Monday afternoon, it was announced by John Chandler, c37, editor, yesterday. This issue will be a pictorial resume of campus events since the fall issue and in addition will carry many new and interesting features. An outstanding feature of the magazine will be the pictures of the sophomore beauty queens, who were picked by the judges to become leader. Another feature which should hold special attraction for the feminine element will be the article, "Whirligig," a defense offered by the men in answer to accusations that women Men," which appeared in the last issue. Politics Discussed Hill politicians and all those who enjoy either participating in or merely looking on Hill politics will be especially interested in Hugh Haddley's recent book, *The New York Times*. A change in the regular Hill Personalities page will be observed by running the "personalities" in couples instead of individually as has been done in the past. Another change will be noticed when a college student follows a strictly modern design, and the color scheme is particularly attractive. Usual features will be included with a full description of the basketball season to date, a review of campus social activities, a profile of faculty and security corps as well as the variates, and the usual feature panels. More Cartoons There will be more feature articles and more cartoons than in the past is important. The board of Regents written by C. M. Harper of Ahlene, who is chairman of the Board, will be of interest. The magazine will be distributed in Exchange, Boca Raton, in exchange, Jayhawk office, and by the Jay Janes. Those people who have ordered covers and have not called for them should do so at this time to avoid any shortage. Hire More CSEP Students Work Is Allotted to New Employees According to Their Needs Ninety-four new students have been added to the CSEP payrolls this semester, and several more will be beaded within the next few days, according to Miss Mary C. Olsen, executive secretary. Sidty of these replace students who withdrew for one reason or another at the end of the first semester, while the remainder are being added through use of the unexpended balance which has been paid to month through the first semester. Work is being allotted to new employees in accordance with their needs with the result that more students are receiving jobs with a smaller allotment of work than would normally be crutched principally from those who were placed on the waiting list last fall because they had sufficient fund for the first semester, but who will need some additional money to finishdb jobs will be finished some time next week. Noted Explore r in Antarctic New employees may work their full allotments this month, Miss Olsen said, so long as they observe the regulations and eight hours a day and 30 hours a week. NASA Celebrates 75th Birthday Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd, right, will appear on the Community Lecture Course, Feb. 26, is pictured here with one of his assistants as he prepares for a flight to Germany. WILLIAM C STEVENG Prof. W. C. Stevens of the botany department, who will be honored on his seventy-fifth birthday tonight at a banquet in the Hotel Eldridge. Professor W. C. Stevens To Be Honored Tonight W. C. Stevens, professor of botany, will be honored tonight on his seventy-fifth birthday anniversary by a be held at the Eldridge Hotel Anniversary Banquet Will Be Held To Celebrate Birthday Professor Stevens received his B.S. degree from the University of Kansas in 1885, and his M.S. degree here in 1883. During the period from 1898 until 1906, he was associate botany. In 1892 he was made associate professor, a position which he held until 1898, when he was made professor of botany. Professor Stevens has served in his present position at the University of Kansas since 1899, a period of 36 years. The banquet will be attended by students and former students in Professor Stevens's classes. Tickets are being sold for the banquet and last night 110 had been purchased. A large number of the tickets were made by persons from out of town. An interesting and entertaining program has been arranged, the particulars of which were not divulged. The speakers for the occasion will be Dr. E. H. Lindley, Irving Hill, Dr. N. P. Sharwood, and Prof. W. C. Stevens. A committee of professors, of which Dr. A. M.IX is chairman, has been in charge for many years of the celebration. Other members of the committee are. Prof. W. H. Horr. Prof. H. H. Lane, Dean Paul B. Lawson, Prof. H. Hungerget, and Dr. N. P. Sherwood. Students Choose Landon Kansas Governor Selected as Republican Nominee in Poll in Pensylvanix Philadelphia, Pa.-Aalf M. L. Landon, budget-bailer governor of Kansas, would be the Republican presidential nominee if the choice were left to students of the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. John E. Borah, the Pennsylvania campus by the Daily Pennsylvanian, newspaper, Landon edged out his nearest opponent. William E. Borch, by a vote of 327 to 298 Ex-President Herbert Hoover was a poor third, with Knox, Vandenberg, and Dickinson trailing far behind. Another group said that the man for whom they would vote was not named on the ballot. At the same time, students registered the opinion that a simple majority of 5 to 4 should continue to be sufficient for the supreme court to invalidate a law and that a concentration of power in the government is desirable. They voted against the Constitution to permit congress to regulate agriculture and industry. Frazer To Address Forum Bernard "Poo" Frazer will address the Fireside Forum Sunday. The subject of his lecture to the group is "Sculptors." CSEP CHECKS HERE MARY C. OLSEN, Executive Secretary. Checks for both College and graduate students are now available and may be received from 1:30 to 5 this afternoon and from 8:30 to 12 Saturday morning. All students are required to get their checks on these two days. The CSEP office is open Monday to Friday afternoon for civiling out checks. --- Bursar Sees Gain Over Last Spring's Enrollment Figure K. Klooz Says More Fees Have Been Paid Then at Same Time Last Year An increase in the enrollment for the spring semester over last year is indicated by the number of students who have paid their fees, Karl Klooz, bursar, said yesterday. The enrollment for the spring semester last year showed an increase of nearly 8 percent over the previous year and there was no evidence that that mester's figures will show a corresponding increase. Mr. Klooz said 3,664 students had paid their fees by Wednesday night, which is 289 more than had paid at the same time last year. He estimated that less than 100 students had not. Some of these students have made arrangements to pay soon, but others have been withdrawn from classes. So far the spring semester enrollment, exclusive of the medical school in Kansas City, is 589, or nearly 14 per cent less than last semester. Last semester enrollment was 0.2 per cent greater than the preceding fall semester. The record spring enrollment was in 1931 when 4,038 students attended classes on the Hill. In 1932 came a record increase of 670 students had occurred regularly since that time. No figures on the number of students enrolled in the medical school in Kansas City have been received yet, but it is estimated that there are more enrollment figures will make the total enrollment figure for the spring semester nearly 2,900. With the estimated number of new students enrolling the total figure will be slightly less than the 1331 enrollment. Farley Is Guest Speaker Washington Day Banquet at Topeca Will Feature Postmaster-Gerneral Topeka, Kan, Feb. 20. (UK)-PAN Democratics today made final preparations for a Washington Day banquet Saturday which will be addressed by Postmaster-General James McCullough and Senator George McGill of Kansas. David C. Doten, president of the banquet club, said one of the largest crowds in the history of the meeting will attend. The first regular function will be the meeting tomorrow night of the young Democrats. The young voters will hold a luncheon meeting Woosing, former governor and now principal Secretary of War, will be the principal speaker. Most of Saturday morning will be devoted to the meeting by the state committee which will select the date and place for the state convention when delegates to the national convention will be picked. The committee also will visit the state convention to attempt to reach an agreement on the most likely gubernatorial candidate. PROMINENT ALUMNUS DEAD IN TOPEKA AFTER OPERATION James H. Sawtell, 92, died in Toperak Wednesday night after he had undergone an operation Monday. Funeral Mass was held at 3:39 at Penwell Mortuary in Toperak. Mr. Sawtell received an A.B. degree from the University of Kansas and then later studied at Harvard University. While attending the University of Kansas, he took an active part in student affairs. He was a member of the first K. U. glee club. During the five years he attended, he he served on the Alumni Association of U of K and was consequently a frequent visitor at the University. For many years he was the Topeka manager of Stern Brothers, a bond company. Recently he maintained his own bond office in Topeka. His son, James Sawtell, is a freshman in the School of Medicine here in the University. GIST TO PRESENT LECTURES AT UNITARIAN CHURCH CLUB "Morality for Today!" a series of three discussions, will be held by the Promethean Club at the Unifarian church beginning next Saturday at 6:30 p.m. In addition to the sociology department, will speak on "Morals in Primitive Society." Brotherhood Day will be observed at the church service at 11 a.m., when belongings to Jewish, Negro, and other minority groups will be especially welcome. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 21, 1936 Comment Keen Competitors Another chapter in the current sensational track rivalry between the veteran Glenn Cunningham, the revived Gene Venkez, and the surprising Joe Mangan will be re-encased to the accompaniment of Madison Square's ballyhoo tomorrow night. Interest among sport followers the country over is centered on these runners, all of whom are likely members of the United States Olympic team, and promoters are reaping profits from the flashing spikes as never before. Amid such public acclaim and voluble press comments on this "board track triangle," the true nature of the friendly rivalry between these great competitors has become considerably distorted. At the slightest opportunity, publicity-seeking promoters emphasize grids and unimportant remarks into intriguing newspaper releases that keep the box office crowded with paying customers. Beneath it all, there are three boys who go out on the track every Saturday evening to run the eight odd laps in as little time as possible. Each has had a night of victory already this winter, and no expert can predict with certainty the outcome of their next meeting. But most important before and after each race, Gene, Glenn, and Joe are friendly competitors and not warring rivals. Midwesterners, following with interest the career of Glenn Cunningham, discredit much of the disfavorable public that has come out of the East concerning the Ellkart Flyer. No credit is being subtracted, however, from the great showings the eastern milers are making this season. Gene Venkze was one of the most popular athletes ever to appear on a Kansas Relays program, and no one begrudges him his long-sought victory over his Kansas rival. It's an ill wind, etc. The fellow who goes around asking "Is it hot enough for you?" hasn't been heard from lately—Kansas City Kansan. America Participates Active agitation against American entrance into the Olympic games in Berlin seems to have died down, proving that the movement was not widespread or fostered by a majority of American citizens. While the group back of the campaign against American participation undoubtedly had some justification, the wisest and best way seems to be to enter the games, making plain the fact that American entrance does not necessarily mean that we condone the Nazi political system. Although there was some discrimination against Jewish athletes while the German teams were being chosen, there are also several instances, showing that Jewish athletes were not excluded entirely. One member of the German hockey team was a Jew and recently, Miss Helen Mayer, former Jewish hockey in the 1932 Olympics, was called from her home in California to fence on the German team. These are only two cases but they show that the German discrimination does not amount to total exclusion. It is to be understood that no one is trying to smooth over Nazi political methods. There are many incidents of Nazi persecution which are revolting to the American principle of fair play and democracy. But it is rather narrowminded and shortsighted to incur the ill will of foreign countries by refusing to allow American athletes to participate. The A.A.U. has acted wisely in allowing American entrance. The Olympics are international contests, carried on to promote international friendship and give athletes of all countries a chance to compete with others outside of their own particular country. Not to participate because of political differences would be to mix sportsmanship with politics and it is generally recognized that politics are not governed by any altruistic influences such as sportsmanship. Disappointment "Son, when you are twelve years old, we will take you to Lawrence to see Dyce Natural History Museum," promised the gray haired grandfather. "When I was a student at K.U.," he continued, "I spent many hours just looking—I felt as if I were standing in the middle of a woods with beasts and birds all around me—Ah, I can see it now." So, for two long years, the lad planned and dreamed of the day, when he could see the famous collection—the specimens of every mammal of North America. He was anxious and curious to see the various animals displayed in their natural habitat, of which his beloved grandfather spoke. One hot Sunday morning in August, 1935, the proud old gentleman, the boy and his father drove a hundred miles to Lawrence. The visit to the Museum was to be the boy's birthday gift. But the doors were locked and the lad was sadly disappointed. The Museum was closed to the public Nov. 30, 1923, because the floors were not safe. --- At Last An Excuse At last the reckless motorist has an excuse for being dizzy! Writing in a recent issue of the Scientific American Magazine on the effects of carbon monoxide poisoning, Prof. Lawrence A. Clousing of Northwestern's school of engineering has revealed that motorists who suffer from headaches, dizziness, or nausea while driving are breathing small quantities of the deadly gas. In his investigation, Professor Clousing found that from 200 cars stopped at random along the public highways, one car in 20 contained a dangerous concentration of carbon monoxide. Tests also revealed that one out of every two cars contained traces of the gas. Small concentrations of gas in a car's interior, breathed for an hour or two, can produce sleepiness, headache, and impaired judgment, yet the driver will not be fully aware of his condition. Leaky exhausts, heaters, crankcase breathers, or even the exhaust from a car ahead when driving slowly in traffic can produce a dangerous amount. In many cases where cars were tested whose heaters used hot air taken from the exhaust manifold, it was found that they were lethal chambers as much as those used by the state of Colorado to impose the death penalty on convicts. Asphyxiation of many motorists has been traced to this cause. In 1835, over 500 persons who operated their automobiles in closed garages were killed. Probably many more deaths from automobile accidents can also be attributed to this same carbon monoxide. Campus Opinion Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the University *Daily Kanan*. Articles over 200 words in length are subject to cutting by the editor. Contributions on any subject are invited. Editor Daily Kansan; Now that the Varsity Dancer manager has given us Amateur Nights at the mid-week varieties I believe we have a kick coming. Don't misunderstand; I am in favor of Amateur programs at the mid-week dances, but I cannot see any favorable points in a bunch of students, especially when they are ham actors, trying to put on a show. The idea of the Amateur night program is to let them learn how to dance and get the organizations put out last Wednesday night wouldn't last bill dancing in a floor show in a henky-tank in the Chinatown of this fair city. Midweek Amateur nights will not be successful if each organization tries to see how many of its own bright lights can be shown off in the FIVE minutes allotted to it, and that brings up something else; the original idea was to give each organization five minutes for their act. Wednesday night the show was much longer than that, but it was highly esteemed by Dan Manier manager took up much of our good time with his spin which was in itself poor. If the programs are limited to acts of singing, dancing, etc., be only a few members of the organization, instead of the whole group, then the program will be successful. In other words, if the organizations will present acts such as individual singers, dancers, and the choir, it is important that they take more professional work, which will in turn add to the interest taken in the programs and will lead to their success. A Danceless Dancer. I sincerely hope that the organizations will make their entire chapter public appearances at some place other place other than the mid-weeks, save them for the W.S. G.A.C. carnival or some like activity. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Notice due at Cancellor's Office at a. p.m. preceding regular publication days and 11:30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issues. V61.33 FEBRUARY 21, 1936 No.59 Vol. 33 FEBRUARY 21, 1936 No. 99 --formation to people who would otherwise not be able to receive them." COLLEGE FACULTY—SPECIAL MEETING: There will be a special meeting of the faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences on Tuesday, February 25, at 4:30 in Room 322 of the Administration building. E. H. Lindley, President. COSMOPOLITAN CLUB. There will be a short business meeting of the Cosmopolitan Club on Saturday, Feb 22, at 8:00 o'clock at our home, 1316 Vermont Street. Marcus Marmor, Manhattan, District. Margaret Messenheimer, President. Edith Borden. NOON LUNCHEN FORUM: The meetings with John Bennett are all today. There is a noon luncheon forum at 12:30 in the Cafeteria, and meetings at 4:30 and 7:30 in Westminster hall. Everyone is cordially invited. SIGMA ETA CHI. The regular super meeting of Sigma Eta Chi will be at the home of Mrs. Bayles, 1408 Kentucky Street, at 5:15 o'clock on Tuesday, Feb. 25. Patronesses have charge of the program. Please notify Marigold Hall (phone 2846) by Monday evening if you can be present. RED CROSS EXAMINER'S SCHOOL! Make applications at 105 Robinson gymnastics. The school will be available on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Ralph McKibbin, President Council on Religion. Herbert G. Allphin. DER DEUTSCHE VEBEN: Der Deutscher Ver von- messel mit杏 Monden auf 24 Friernight simul半肥 fussim 18 Uhr. Die Tabelle sind auf der Seite zu sehen. Evangeline Clark, President. W.S.G.A. BOOK EXCHANGE 300 W.S.G.A. Book EXCHANGE from $99 to $0 daily (except on Saturday), throughout the month Schools To Offer Radio Curriculum In Future, Says Campus Broadcaster "The time will come, I believe, when regular organized radio curricula will be offered by educational institutions with radio facilities," remarked Prof. E. F. Engel recently in discussing the results of a survey he has just completed. Professor Engel, as radio editor of the Modern Language Journal, the official organ of the National Federation of Teachers, asked students questionnaires to 40 educational stations and to 23 commercial stations in order to discover how many stations were broadcasting instructions in modern foreign language. Professor Lumley of Ohio State University made this same survey three years ago and found that 21 commercial stations and nine education stations are used for lessons in modern foreign language. Professor Engel sent questionnaires to these same 23 commercial stations that Professor Lumley discovered three of them had decreased. As a result of the survey Professor Engel has found that five educational and 13 commercial stations broadcast lessons. Out of approximately 60 students who attended that more than 15 broadcast such instructions. However, Professor Engel did not survey each of these, so he has asked his readers to notify him of any broadcast language lessons. The Language Lessons Given The radio editor has found that five stations in the United States, French, German, and Spanish, KFKU is one of these five and is second only to WSUL at the University of Iowa, at Iowa City. WSUL broadcasts each language two times a week, as are 20 minute long while the latter has only 15-minute periods. The tendency of the major stations is toward the 15-minute period. The other three stations broadcasting instruction in Connecticut, KFAB at Lincoln Neh, and WNYC in New York City. Professor Engel rocked his position as radio editor of the language management department and presented it enlightened. He intends to make this department a clearing house for information and discussion of the radio as a form of instruction for modern language. Other Subjects Anticipated "I," she says in the near future the subjects, other than students, that lend themselves to radio instruction will be taught by this method," said Professor Engel. "Radio will serve as a resource for students who are sending out organized facts and information to people who would otherwise not be able to receive them." Other Subjects Anticipated Hollywood Film Shop Only for the blonde jungle goddess, Edwina Booth, is the future still dark. She continues her fight for life against a mysterious malady in London while the two male stars of the picture have reason for optimism. Hollywood—(UP)—ill luck which dogged the careers of the principals of "Trader Horn," screen epee of the African jungle, reems to be loosing its They are Duncan Renaldo and Harry Carey, Renaldo played the part of the hero who loved the wild white girl and helped win the African trader's star was the wise African trader. A score of treatments were tried. But they did not give her health and her beauty faded. She finally was taken to the hospital, as she is reported to be gaining. Searcely had the company returned to Hollywood, with tales of bitter working conditions and high adventures in Africa, when Miss Booth was a nurse. And physicians sought to learn the real nature of the disease but failed. It was a federal law that caught the handsome Renaldo in the net of misfortune. He was sent to prison for fabelly swearing to an application for citizenship, and he received a Native of Rumania, he had declared he was a citizen of the United States Renalo was ambiguous to remain in the United States and make a comeback in pictures. When he arrived from there he was signed tentatively for a part. Carey, the third member of the star group of the picture, long had been one of the outstanding actors in pictures. He made his rise in westerns and his role in "Trader Horn" was one of his more serious attempts. He was sentenced to McNeil Island federal prison and served two years. Returning to Hollywood recently, he was hospitalized but deportation still threaten him. But while the picture itself was a success from the box office viewpoint and the actor won critical acclaim, he lost his place in the industry. Retiring to a well-stocked ranch not many miles from the production sets, Carey tried to forget pictures but finally attempted a comeback. Currently he is working on a new child actor. Jane Withers. His role has been described as a "sympathetic one." wrote not able to receive them. KFKU began giving instruction in Spanish six years ago but because it was not a success, the instruction was abandoned and instruction under the tutelage of Prof. Erngel Began and has continued since. Three years ago French instruction began under the supervision of Prof. Kenneth Cornell, and last year he revived the instruction in Spanish. The German students who learn in this method receive a certificate of completion if they successfully pass the course. Professor Engel broadcast his instructions 50 times in one course. The first two broadcasts are introductory, the remaining 45 periods, he covers 24 lessons, or two broadcasts to each student. At the beginning of the course Professor Engel ask all those who are interested in receiving the certificate to send in application. Four times during the semester, they are asked to the students and at the end of the term seven received their certificate of completion. If any of these seven should enter the University they are allowed to take an examination over this work. They are also required to given University credit for their work. Speech Coach Uses Electrical Science n Vocal Tests The waves of the voice of the speaker are photographed. From these photographs the waves are studied; the improvement is made by training. Dr. Elwood Murray, head of the University of Denver speech department, makes use of electrical science in testing the voices of his students. A high-speed velenda camera equipped with sensitive film and a special magnifying lens must be used. As the subject talks into a microphone which he can see, he can photograph a cathedral ray oscillograph, a green pen of light writes the picture of the voice as a wavy line which the camera can record. By the use of these photographs it is possible to find out the voice of the speaker voice. By knowing the tone of the speaker voice they can be corrected and pleasing tones can be developed. McPHERSON COUNTY SURVEY REVEALS VALUABLE DEPOSITS A recent clay deposit survey made by Norman Plumber under the direction of Dr. K. K. Landes, assistant geologist, provided of value to McPherson县. The Chamber of Commerce of McPherson asked the State Geological Survey to make a survey of existing clay deposits in McPherson county, and Mr. Plummer was sent out by the Geological Survey department. McPherson county has numerous natural gas wells going to waste. With a view toward utilizing the gas for some commercial project, these clay deposits are being tested for brick-making possibilities. Mr. Plummer submitted his report to the McPherson Chamber of Commerce last week. He reported that abundant quantities of brick-making clay existed in a slightly impure form. If the impurities can be removed cheaply the brick can be utilized in making brick for commercial purposes, Mr. Plummer said. Choir Boys Marvel at American Skyscrapers "I like your country very much and was impressed by New York City," emmented one little boy of the Vienna Boir, who spoke a little broken English. "It was very interesting to be on tour in New York building and sok out over the City." Only one of the boys spoke a little English and Dr. Dietrich Zwicker, German exchange scholar, talked to them in German and obtained their impressions of this country. They all liked New York City and especially the skyscrapers. The traffic and noise were unpleasant. Named them. For amusement they delight in talking around in small groups and watching the traffic go by. Everywhere they have been, they say they have received a hearty welcome. While in Atlanta, the boys were entertained at dinner by several people of German nationality; in St. Louis, they were entertained by a German man who attended a Massachusetts set held a reception for them in the governor's Mansion. The boys have seen only two American movies: Frisco Kid and Rose Marie. They enjoyed both of them, but the Indian Marie interested them most all. Music Lovers in Latin America to Hear The Works of Stephen Collins Foster Washington, Feb. 18—(UP)~Stephen Collins Foster, most famous of North American composers, is to be introduced to music lovers abroad as result of his new book, "The Music Feathered by the Pan-American Union." Foster is the best loved of American song writers because of his four great songs which reflected kindly sentiment of old plightion days in the South and of more recent days into the Western plains and deserts. Among dozens of songs which he wrote prior to his death in New York in 1894, these best known are "Way Down Upon the River," "Home," "Masa's" in de Cold, Cold Ground" and "Old Black Joe." Another of his hits, "Oh Susan," attained modern popularity as the theme of the films, "The Westerner piano epic of the films." Arranged for Concert Band The internationalization of Stephen Foster is said to be the result of a suggestion by Adams. Lilly, an ardent admirer of Foster, writes to the Pan-American Union asking that a biography of composer he deposited in the Union library. Through the talent of Luiz Guzman, a Colombian by birth, now member of the United States Marine Band, 20 of the best Foster melodies have been selected and arranged for concert band. As rewritten material for the Jesiah Kirby Lilly, manufacturer of Indiapolis, Ind., 500 sets of the "Stephen Foster Melodies," for 17-piece bands, are about to be circulated to organizations throughout Latin America. The movement to introduce Stephen Paster bread reciprocates the generous efforts of the southern republic to this country for popularization through a series of Pan-American Union concerts. These free concerts normally and internationally broadcast. Franklin Adams **A**s the movement for Pon-America musical theater here in large part to Franklin Adams, former counseler of the Union, himself a musician, who for 25 years spared no effort to popularize work of the best Latin American composers in the United States, now retired, resides at Athens, Greece. Fan Glans Into Realty Adams, alert to musical possibilities, countered with a suggestion that Foster United States service bands and Latin American organizations which are participating in the Fan-American musical movement. Lilly replied favorably and Luis Guzman, a distinguished composer, undertook the technical work. A beautifully printed series of publications, the "Stephen Foster Melodies," is dedicated to Lilly, whose generosity and love for Foster's songs made possible. The book also features a back of the music in a biographical sketch of Foster in the Spanish language. University Daily Kansan OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSA! LAWRENCE, KANSAS UBLISHER ... HARRY VALENTINE DITOR-IN CHIEF ... BOB ROBinson GILLE MEDIA EDITOR ALMA PRAIMER MANAGING EDITOR FRED M. HABRILL, BUSINESS MANAGER F. QUENTIN BROWN james Edison Editorial Derek Eldert Editorial Don Dixon Editor Brian Lester News Editor Doug Smith Wendy Willett Jaynie Edison James Pollittang oLE and exclusive national advertising representatives NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE, Inc. 430 Madison Avenue, New York City Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles Subscriptions per year, $1.00 each; $1.25 on payments. Single coupon, $3.00. Earned as second class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office, Lawrence, Kansas. Friday, April 20. Publications Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday, Friday, and Saturday meetings occur during school holidays by students in the department of Journalism at the University of Kansas from the Pieris II Department of Journalism. They also commented on the marvelous singing in the musical comedy. The lads told Zwicker that they knew all of the makes of automobiles in the city and that they would organize them. They are exceedingly interested in our modes of transportation. The American boys have not made a deep impression on the lads for the reason that they cannot speak a common language; therefore they have not become acquainted with the youth of this country. "We only can say How-we listen, when we are introduced to Americans," one explained to Dr. Swicker. As for American foods, they are not fond of them. However, they do like ocean and milk very much and like ice, which is like our drug stores for the ice cream. These 16 boys are between the ages of 10 and 15, five of whom were in the group that made a concert tour of the United States last year. The boys are often very excited about having eye have eyes that twinkle with mischief. They swim, play basketball and all sorts of games, in their play time. While on the boat coming over, their teacher held their regular classes but missed class entirely while on the tour of the country. These boys have been selected from the thousands of boys who try-out for the Choir every year, after undergoing audition tests. They are in San Francisco, January 2 and have been throughout the East and are now returning to the West coast, where they will perform in April 8. They have been giving on the average of six concerts a week. Sub-Zero Weather Calls for CHILI 10c at the Union Fountain Sub-Basement Memorial Union --- CONTINUING THRU SATURDAY Final Clearance S-A-L-E Most All Sizes SUITS and OBERCOATS Up to $25, Now ___ SUITS and OBERCOATS Up to $30, Now ... $15.50 $19.50 OUR BEST QUALITIES Up to $40, Now ----- $23.50 58 pairs $7 BOSTONIANS ...$5.85 47 pairs $5 FRIENDLIES ...$3.95 50 pairs $4 and $5 SHOES ...$3.20 30 pairs $4 and $5 SHOES ...$2.95 ARROW and RESILIO TIE SALE $1.00 Ties, 65c $2.00 Ties, $1.35 $1.50 Ties, 95c $2.50 Ties, $1.65 $3.00 Ties, $1.85 Showing Spring Suits, Topcoats, Hats, Shirts and Shoes Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUT FITTERS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1936 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Hill Society ☆ ☆ ☆ Dinner guests at the Delta Chi house last night included Betty Shawer, v. Virginia Taylor, fa38; Virginia Martin, ca29; June Johnson, fa39; Elva Kern, fa39; Mickey Brown, fa39; Jean James, fa39; Maxine Ripley, da39; Dorothy Kennedy, fa39; Betty Ann Lindas, cuneal; Marie Forbes, c38; Fleaser Troop, ca39; Milda Hilsen, c38; Daisy Dunne, c38; followed by an hour of dancing at the chapter house. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Dinner guests at the Sigma Nu house last night were: Jane Marshall, *cuncei* Marry Elen DeMoite, *cuncei* Mel Lockhart, *clark* Chire Louise Connelly, *chire* Claire Kirkman Smith, *falk* Mary Smith, *fa'* March, Mary March, *fa'* 38, and Maxine Laughlin, *fa'* 38. ☆ ☆ ☆ Dr. and Mrs. Forrest Allen who were in Topoka Wednesday night for the Washburn-K.U. basketball game were Harry K. Allen and Harry K. Allen of Washburn College. William Utermohlen, c. 37, Nelson Morgan, c. 27, and Dick Newlin, c. 39, were dinner guests at the Beta Theta Pi house last night. Initiation services will be held Saturdy morning at the Alpha Ch Omega security house. ☆ ☆ ☆ Delta Zeta entertained the Triangle fraternity with an hour dance last night. The alumnum of Chi Omega security entertained the members and pledges of the active chapter with a buffet supper Wednesday night. M. E. P. Martin, of Wichita, was a dinner guest Wednesday night at the Chi Omega house. ☆ ☆ ★ Chi Omega entertained the Pi Kappa Alpha Intrinity with an hour dance last night. Mrs. Gene Whitney, of Kansas City Mo., was a luncheon guest yesterday at the Sigma Kappa house. R. J. Sheiar, of Johnson, was a luncheon guest at the Alpha Omicron Pi house yesterday. Betty Edwards, ed'uncl, was a lumber counsor at the Kappa Alpha Thet house yesterday. Katherine Turner, c'38, and Julia Jeneca, c'uncel, were dinner guests last night at the Kappa Alpha Theta house. Women's Intramurals --ney, will be presented as a candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor at the regular Washington day celebration in Topeka tomorrow. McCluggage has held many offices in the state. He was urged to become a senator and serve in the state but declined. He is an overseer World War veteran and a native of Kansas. In the swimming meet last night the following are the results: Relay: Pi Beta Phi, TNT, IWW, Broin, Breast form, Rowland, TNT, Montgomery, IWW; Spiegel, Cipache; Gamma Pi Beta. Free style: Kienke, Pi Beta Beta. Flexible: Kienke, Alpha Delta Pi; Johnson, TN; Diving: Learned, TN; Dyer, Chi Omega; Short, Pi Beta Phi; Edwards, IWW. Backstroke: Harrison, IWW, Lemmon, Pi Beta Phi; Worley, Alpha Delta Pi; Dyer, Chi Omega. Side stroke: Harris, IWW, Lemmon, Corbin; Johnson, TN; Crawl formation: Kiene, Pi Beta Phi; Finley, Pi Beta Phi; Dyer, Chi Omega; Learned, IWW. Breast stroke: Spiegel, Corbin; Montgomery, IWW; Griffin, Pi Beta Pi; Jones, Pi Beta Phi; Crowd, 50 yards Kienke, Pi Beta Phi; Dalton, Broin; Baruchman, Corbin; Helmut, IWW. Pi Beta Phi was first with 38 points, TNT, second with 22; IWW, third, 21, and Corbin hall, fourth with $13\frac{1}{2}$ points. Individual high scorers were GIGANTIC TELESCOPE ENABLES MAN TO VIEW MORE THAN 1,500,000 STARS Machine for polishing disk View of 200-inch "eye" Site of new observatory on Mt. Palomar Kiene, 15 points; Harrison, 10; Mar; Learnard, 9; and Spiegel, 7. The honorary class teams in basketball have been chosen from the intramural teams. The freshmen will play the juniors and the sophomores will play the seniors in the first game of the championship Thursday, night, Feb. 27 at 8:15. The seniors are: Teagard, forward, Irwin, guard; Montgomery, forward, Dodge, forward and guard; Hannen guard; Perry, guard; Anderson, guard, Kerr, guard; Peacock, guard, and Ripley, forward. The juniors are: Worley, forward; Ekline, forward; Edwards, forward; and guard; Rowland, forward; Pulley, guard; Dunlun, guard; Kiene, forward; Ware, guzz; Beer, forward; and Smith, forward. The sophomores are: Griffin, forward; Trekell, forward; Johnson, forward; Karlan, forward; Anderson, forward; Manning, guard; Thompson, guard; Baker, guard; Learnard, guard; and Bottom, guard. The freshmen are: Willett, forward; White, forward; Simpson, forward; Lattner, forward; Markham, forward; Spiegel, guard; Bird, guard; Stephenson, guard; Bublit, guard and Biglow, guard. --ney, will be presented as a candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor at the regular Washington day celebration in Topeka tomorrow. McCluggage has held many offices in the state. He was urged to become a senator and serve in the state but declined. He is an overseer World War veteran and a native of Kansas. KFKU February 21-Friday 2:30 p.m. Music Appreciation Hour Prof. Charles Sanford Skillen 6.00 p.m. 164th Athletic Interview Prof. E. R. Elbel and Dr. F. C. Alten 6:15 p.m. Musical Program, arranged Joseph Wilkins, Professor of Voice. **february 22—saturday** 6:00 p.m. Musical Program, presented by Mu Phi Epilion, honorary musical sorority. Lecture on Paul Stark Seeley, C.S.B., of Port-au- Prince, and Dr. Marion Chacman, Church Science Sunday, Feb. 28, at the Pink South Congregational church. The lecture will begin at 3 p.m. and is open to the public. Lecture on Christian Science BAPTISTS TO BE ENTERTAINED AT CHURCH PARTY TONIGHT Baptist young people and their friends will be entertained tonight at the First Baptist Church, on the corner of Eighth and Kentucky streets. The entertainment will begin at a o'clock. On the arrangements committee are: Olive Douglas, Mildred Reynolds, Florene Briscoe, and Stanley French. The morning service Sunday will be recognized by this church as "Student Sunday," Paul Masoner, cunel, Mary Cawson, £20, and Mrs. Helen B. Cunel. The morning service will be served, as will be John Reger, £31, who will give a special musical number. The student choir will also be on the program, "Heralds of Tomorrow" will be performed. The choir will be Keoh, the minister. All students are cordially invited to attend the service. COPIES OF COLLEGE PAPER SENT FROM SYRIAN SCHOOL Miss Winifred Shannon, who received her bachelor of arts degree here in 1921 and her master's degree in 1922, is now teaching in the journalism department of the American Junior College in Beirut, Syria. W. A. Dill, assistant professor of journalism of the University, has received from Miss Shannon some complimentary copies of the student paper published by the American Junior College. The paper is called the "Junior college Lampoon" and is edited by the students. GRADUATE OF LAW SCHOOL SEEKS GOVERNOR'S OFFICE R. T. McCluggage, a graduate of the University School of Law, and now first assistant United States district attorney, will be presented as a candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor at the regular Washington day celebration in Topeka tomorrow. McCluggage has held many offices in the state. He was urged to become a senator and serve in the state but declined. He is an overseer World War veteran and a native of Kansas. Mu Phi Bishop Will Give Program The members of Mu Phi Epsilon honorary musical sorority, will present a musical program, Saturday evening at 6 p.m. over KFKU. Two pianos will be given besides several vocal solos. Read the Kansan Want Ads. LARGE'S CAFE Shrimp — Any Time FREE Friday Night Clam Chowder Formerly Gross' Lunch Fillet of Haddock Salmon Plate Fish Salad and try our Lemon Pie at the PHONE K.U. 66 CAFETERIA CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE: Our home at 115 Louisiana with furniture. Shown by appointment. Telephone 173. Florence M. Hodder. 100 KANSAS HIGH SCHOOLS BOAST 235 STUDENT PUBLICATION! FOR SALE PHONE K.U.66 FOR SALE DECANTORY PROPERTY Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S - 920-22 Mass. TAILOR TAXI One Stop Clothes Service Station SCHULZ THE TAILOR TAXI SPECIAL----50c reduction on any per- manent, with this ad, except Saturday. Permanents $1.50 to $1.80, complete with hair cut. IVAN BEAUTY SHOPS, 732½ Mass. Phone 2333; 9411 Mass. Phone 533. More than half the high schools or Kansas have courses in journalistic writing, according to lists compiled by the University of Iowa Journalism at Leavenworth high school. Miss Bearden has also compiled a lia of high school publications, containing 235 names. Some of these are monthly magazines, some are weekly papers, and some are departments in the local paper. Student Loans ABE WOLFSON 743 Masa. MISCELLANEOUS Read the Daily Kansan want ads. - sentences words or phrases one insertion, 25c; three insertions, 30c; six insertions, 75c; * intrastata rates, not marked in italics, 18c; payable in advance, not marked in italics at the Kavanahan Office. --be no compromise with quality in the pursuit of beauty... STUDENT SPECIALS UNIVERSITY STUDENT GIVES RECITAL BEFORE MUSIC CLUB That Mean Real Savings 50c Ipana Toothpaste 37c 25c Listerine Toothpaste 21c 50c Tek Tooth Brush 39c 50c Lavoris Antiseptic 39c 75c Listerine Antiseptic 59c 50c Hines Honey and Almond Cream 43c 50c Marie Astor Cleansing Tissue, 500 sheets 25c 65c Pond's Cold Cream 39c $1.10 Aspirins, 100 39c 35c Bromo Quinine 27c $1.25 Halibut Oil Capsules 79c $1.50 Petrolagar 87c 35c Vicks Vapo Rub 27c Ebel Jean Meleon, a senior in piano in the School of Fine Arts from the studio of Dean D. M. Swarthot, gave a full piano recital Tuesday evening in St Joseph, Mo., as guest artist before the Capp Music Club of that city. Ms Melone's program included music from Bach, Paradis, a Darby Chopin, Brahms, and Lecomma. She will present a recital at the University early in April. Turney Contributes to Book Austin H. Turner, associate professor of education, contributed a chapter on "The Psychological Basis of Grouping" in the thirty-fifth year book for the National Society for the Study of Education. Professor Turvey, who is a committee on the grouping of pupils, met with the meeting of the department of superintendents, to be held in St. Louis Feb. 22. Rankin's Drug Store "Handy for Students" 11th & Mass. Phone 678 Owl Anticipate the Spring - Even when the weather man says snow — we know spring will come. - Nanette is ready with a bright new selection of colorful prints. - Choose yours now — use the “will call client” NANETTE OVER THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Phone 511 College Hen Shows Intelligence in Laying Egg Containing a Note Philips who is a poultry husbandry student at the College claimed that a hollow cork containing the note was inserted in the he's egg. Dork the cork was torn and the white of the egg, the shell membrane, and the shell formed normally. Manhattan, Keg — A note was found inside of an egg by a hen at Kansas State College, but Robert E. Phillips, J., explained that she was a college Phillips then sent the egg to a friend who opened it, extracted the note and read it at a party here. DANCE SATURDAY NIGHT New Eriksen Hall AT 936-28 Mass. Dates—49c—Stags Ladies Free Music by Band from the Bill Read This! "PETRIFIED FOREST" Starts SUNDAY for 3 Days. With Continuous Shows Sunday at 1-3,5-7-9 “*Petrified Forest*, more than any other picture I have seen, damnation is powerful medium for the presentation of a stage play than is the stage itself. Thanks to the use of Decney, the hawkiness that distracts the audience from the theme of the drama. For the rowdiness in the play, Kenyn substitutes beauty in thought and imagination, but his wide appeal than the play could attain . . . Howard, Boree Davis and Humphrey Bogart give magnificent spoken on stage or scream more beautifully than he speaks on life. And for Bette Davis it is another trumpet step in the theater to her ultimate recognition as the greatest actress on the screen.” GRANADA There can Weaver's IF you've lost your last dollar, you've found a diamond ring, your room-mate stole your collar, you need 'most anything, you'd like to sell the whoopie, you'd change the room you've had, in fact, you need assistance, Merely use a Kansan Ad New Simplified Rates Any ad of less than 25 words inserted once for.25c three times for 50c six times for 75c Use Kansan Want Ads PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 21, 1936 Kansas Swimmers Will Meet Aggies With Honors Even Jayhawkers Hold Slight Edge over Visitors in Tank Dual Saturday University of Kansas swimmers will meet the Kansas Aggie tank team in a dual meet Saturday in the Robinson Center, where he has been beaten by the Nebraska Cornhuskers by practically the same score as that which the Nebraska men made against Lawrence, the meet will offer an even challenge for tough competition. The Kansas entries, as announced by Coach Herbert G. Allphin, are as follows: 400-yard relay - Tiller, Brandt; Zupanec, and Pusey; 200-year breast stroke-Elias; 150-yard back stroke-Elias; 150-year backstroke-Tiller; 400-year swim - Brander, Fisher 100-yard dash-Waggoner; Zupecen Diving-Pusey, Humphrey; 220-year swim - Fischer, Waggoner; Medley relay Stellas, Elase, and Pusey or Humphrey. Zupanice, who was away on a debate trip to California at the time of the meet last weekend with Nebraska, has been expected to strengthen it somewhat. William Waggoner, Jayhawk dash man, has been appointed captain for next Saturday's swim. Coach Alliph makes it a practice to appoint the captain before each meet, alternating the honor. By comparing the scores of the meets between Kansas and Nebraska, and between the Agies and Nebraska, one is easily led to see that the swim Saturday should be a close one. The Cornhuskers trimmed the Agies last Friday night, 60-24, and then came to Lawrence the following night and took Kansas by the road. After the fourth meet in Kansas and Kansas State show Kansas to hold a slight edifice for the two meetings. Outside of the fact that Passe he been having trouble with his shoulder the Jayhawk squad has few injuries Colds in the team have been few, a condition which Coach Aliph attribute to him. It is probable which the men are keeping themselves. Kansas' next meet is at Lincoln, Feb 28, with Nebraska. The men will visit the Aagie pool for their return meet with the Wildcats. --ers forfeited to the Galloping Ghosts, and the A. T. O. "B" team forfeited to the Kappa Sig "B" team. --ers forfeited to the Galloping Ghosts, and the A. T. O. "B" team forfeited to the Kappa Sig "B" team. Men's Intramurals Four games were forfeited Wednesday evening in the intramural basket-ball league. The Pioneers forfeited to the Warriors forfeited to the Tigers, the Panthers forfeited to the Triangle Sports Sketches R.W. BROARS JOSEPH LYMAN He's TRAINING IN GERMANY An equal number of games were played with the Phi Delt "B" *B* team defeating the Phil Pai "B" quintet by the overwhelming score of 64-9. The Betta's won from the Kappa Sigma队; 20-22. S. P. E. lost to S. A. E. (Beta) in the second game; Delt队 continued its winning streak by winning a close game from the Sigma Chi team by the score of 14-9. The box scores are as follows: | | g ft f | | :--- | :--- | | Roberts | 4 0 0 | | Chambers | 9 1 0 | | Brown | 1 0 0 | | Brown's v' 5 | 1 0 0 | | Townsend | 2 1 0 | | Sleeper | 0 1 0 | Beta 26 Phi Delt I "B" 64 Phi Psi "B" 9 Total 31 2 0 Referee, Burkett. Dodge g f1 f2 Bowlus 3 2 1 Stanford 3 2 0 Feesy 0 1 0 Newsley 0 1 0 I S. A.E.34 Lamme Bagley Busler North Roberts Hubbel Total 12 2 8 Referee, Allen. Kappa Sigma 22 Signa 24 9 ft Bloombilf 2, 2 Landers 2, 2 Barnes 2, 2 Lindley 5, 3 Pearson 5, 3 Pearson 1 Total 16 2 5 Referee, McEnroe. S. P. E. 27 Phi Delt 14 P. S. E. L. g f t Nees 1 5 Kochs 3 0 Cuchs 3 0 Kruse 1 0 Millar 1 0 Gerbel 1 0 Gerbel 1 0 h gf f l Br'd'hl'h 2 1 Benton 1 0 1 Yauim 1 0 1 Bowman 0 0 1 Basket 0 0 1 Sigma Chi 9 Nationwide College g 1ft Thomason 2 0 MFarland 1 0 Porter 1 0 Porter 1 0 Tylers 0 1 Warren 0 1 Warren 0 1 Total 41 Referee, Foss. Jayhawks Are Powerful In Non-conference Games Scoring Honors Go to Ray Ebling With a Total of 80 Points in eight non-conference games 12 Jayhawk basketsters have amassed a total of 304 points to their opponents' 198. The undefeated Kansans were led in the scoring by Ray Ebling and Ray Bullard, made 80 and 71 points respectively. Elling, conference high score for the last two years, had an average of 10 points per game while Noble had an average of 12.4 points in a low State made 59 points in each game and an average of 11.8 per game. Frank Groves, Kansas State's all-Big Six center, had an average of 11.5 in eight games. All other players have records Kansas made its largest score when it defeated Ottawa S3-22. California held Kansas to its lowest score when DENTIST'S TYPE MOUTH WASH actually kills germs ONLY mouth wash of its kind that can claim pos- 100% antiseptic properties, it kills germs and sweetens breath. Its pleasing cherry color and spicy flavor make it a great favorite. Dentists everywhere use and recommend it. Try it today. Subscribe for KLEEN CLEANER KLENZO Antiseptic Liquid 49c PINT THE KANSAS CITY STAR H. W. STOWITS "The Rexall Store" 9th & Mass. Phone 238 SAVE with SAFETY at The Texall DRUG STORE Headquarters Rexall Drug Store 13 papers - 15c per week 847 Mass. St. PHONE 17 H. L. Nevin Distributor The Jayhawkers defeated them in Kansas City by the score of 27-18. Baker University gave the Kansas their victory, winning a closing minutes 34-32. Other non-conference scores were as follows: Kansas 35 Washburn 18, Kansas 32 California 28, Kansas 34 Southern California 31, Kansas State 23, Kansas 45 Washburn 26. Kansas was the only Big Six school to go through their non-conference games without a loss. In a tournament featuring players from Southern California, co-challengers of the Pacific Coast conference, and Kansas, the Jayhawks remained undefeated. The record for the Kansas players in their non-conference games. Reading from left to right the following columns mean: number of games played, field goals, free throws, points, average points per game, foul tips, average points per game. Player gms. ks. bg i ptl mps. alp v. Ebring, f 83 15 14 8 14 80 10.090 Ehling, f 83 15 14 8 14 80 10.090 Pralle, g 8 19 7 7 19 4 16 5.625 Pralle, g 8 19 7 7 19 4 16 5.625 Kappelman, g 8 11 15 14 3 17 4.625 Kappelman, g 8 11 15 14 3 17 4.625 Holliday, f 7 7 1 1 7 1 7 2.143 Kogers, g 6 4 1 1 7 1 7 2.143 Kogers, g 6 4 1 1 7 1 7 2.143 Stewart, g 2 1 0 0 0 2 1.000 Stewart, g 2 1 0 0 0 2 1.000 Lutton, g 3 1 0 0 0 2 1.000 Lutton, g 3 1 0 0 0 2 1.000 Shaffer, f 6 2 0 1 0 4 .657 Schmidt, f 4 0 0 0 2 0 .657 Schmidt, f 4 0 0 0 2 0 .657 Holmer, f 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Holmer, f 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Hockstok, g 2 0 0 0 0 0 .000 The Shawnee County Alumni Association of the University of Kansas entertained members of the University on Saturday and invited other guests at a dinner at the Green Parrot room in Topesa Wednesday night following the Washburn- AMERICAN RED CROSS REPRESENTATIVE TOPEKA ALUMNI ASSOCIATION ENTERTAINS BASKETBALL TEAM Dr. James Maimon, inventor of basketball, gave a short talk, and Dr. Forrest C. Allen, director of athletes, invited him to hawk paper weights were given as favors to Dr. Naimish, Margaret Boast, c26, who writes a column of University news in the Topopea Daily Capital, and opens a commissioning queen of the University. There will be a meeting of the Botany club at 1134 Louisiana street, Tuesday, Feb 25 at 7:30 p.m. Prof. W. C. Stevens will speak on "The Date Palm" will speak on Botany Club To Hear Stevens (3) Ralph L. Carr Red Cross Representative To Conduct School Here Highway First Aid System Will Be Discussed By Ralph Carr Mr. Ralph L. Carr, traveling representative of the First Aid and Lift Saving Division of the American Red Cross, will be in Lawrence Feb. 24, 25, and 26 to carry on various phases of his work. Mr. Carr intends to conduct a life saving school at the pool in Robinson gymnasium, review old examiners, and evaluate students who required the tests. Persons who wish to take these questions are requested to see Herbert G. Alpinat in the men's gymnasium. Tests and reviews will be given on Monday and Tuesday evenings. In addition to his duties in conducting an examiner's school the Red Cross RENT A BOOK To Read This Week-end (15c for 5 days) THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Tel. 666 STUDENT RADIO SETS $18.85 4 tube $25.50 5 tube Powerful Superheterodyne Radios with big set performance. A six tube, all car radio, $29.95 Phone 631 633-635 Mass. GREEN BROS. SPEED COMFORT SAFETY ON THE Streamliner BETWEEN workers plan a campaign to start a Highway First Aid organization in this county. The Highway First Aid plan is to have first aid stations at danger zones where victims of motor accidents may receive immediate treatment. Mr. Carr also wishes to push the idea of accident victims home, especially in rural communities. SALINA MISSISSIPPI MISSOURI KANSAS CITY, MD The Streamline maker makes one round trip daily between two round trips daily between Topkach and Kansas City. Keep a detailed schedule for that "hurry up clip." SCHEDULE The utmost in modern train travel for only 2c a mile—even less for round trips. Cheaper, safer than driving, and far more comfortable. No definite arrangements for banquets, speeches, or regular meetings have been made, and Mr. Carr intends to make a more or less informal campaign. An examiner in life saving is privileged to teach life saving to others and may give an examination to any person wishing to become an examiner. The University of Kansas has 14 per cent of its examiners as examiners at the present time. They are: Francis Dill, Dlow, Wellbaker, Croft Bruening, Mary Elizabeth Lawson, Murrel Finton, Towanda Bairn, Ruth Hoover, Herbert G. Alphin, B. F. Harper, Herbert G. Lawrence, Ralph Pusey, Fred Male, Loretta Roy, Mary Elizabeth Dolty. For full details and information about travel everywhere ask your Interannel Wiring UNION PACIFIC UNION PACIFIC AGENT Entry blanks must be turned in to the hospital today by all students planning to enter the Uni-门学院international wrestling tournament Entrants must weigh in Monday from 4 to 6 p.m. in Robinson gymnasium. Elbel To Interview Allen Lake Intervie walter E. Gill, assistant professor of physical education, tonight will interview Dr. F., C. Allen, prior to physical education, in his 164th Athletic Interview over KFKU at 6 p.m. Prof. El贝 will ask Dr. Alien questions concerning the Olympic basketball games. Only 305 more days until Christmas. LAWRENCE BAYTHEATRE PATEE 10c $^{\mathrm{t}}$ iI 15c $^{\mathrm{A} \mathrm{T}}$ After ENDS TONITE GARBO - MARCH BARTHOLOMEW BARTHOLEMew KARENINA* SATURDAY BIG DOUBLE SHOW MIGHTY HITS BUCK JONES "FORBIDDEN TRAIL" JOEL McCREEK "WOMAN WANTED" "MIRACLE RIDER" SUNDAY • MONDAY "BRIGHT LIGHTS" 25c 'til 7 — Shows 3-7-9 25c 'til 7 -- Shows 3-7-9 GRANADA NOW! ENDS SATURDAY Here It Is Again for the Hundreds Who Asked for Its Return and the Thousands Who Want to See It Again! - 'A TALE OF TWO CITIES' RONALD COLEMAN And a Cast of Thousands SUNDAY Continuous Shows 1 - 3 - 5 - 7 - 9 Is Even Greater on the Screen! Loslie Howard's Latest Stage Hit Which New York Acclaimed for 52 Capacity Weeks Is Even Greater on the Screen LESLIE HOWARD BETTE DAVIS "The Petrified Forest" Weighed . . . and found worthy You may feel perfectly assured in buying any product that is consistently advertised here in the pages of the KANSAN. Such a product has been weighed . . . and found worthy. Not necessarily by us . . not by any committee on advertising integrity . . but by the sternest judge of the last court of merchandising appeals. the buying public! Advertising is merciless in its treatment of the unworthy product . . it serves only to hasten its failure. No amount of advertising . . no matter how skillfully done . . can force a product of no merit on the public. They simply won't buy it. It seems reasonable then, doesn't it, to believe that the manufacturer of any product to be offered to the public will see that it is worthy before he backs it with thousands... often millions... in advertising! Read the advertisements here in your paper they are reliable statements about reliable products --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXXIII --other contestants, to represent K. U. in the nation-wide inter-collegiate telegraph tournament, to be sponored by National Billard Association on Foley. --other contestants, to represent K. U. in the nation-wide inter-collegiate telegraph tournament, to be sponored by National Billard Association on Foley. on the SHIN By BUD EVANS, '36 Kassidy takes a Bath . . We All Can't Be Basketball Players . Field Again . . Man on Tbird . No Car -No Date . . Hell Week's Over . . Shin Gets a Letter . . Katheryn Cansily, Gamma FI Els has taken to巾帔着 hither失 (grace to hear it). Now—not that way—we mean health baths, Turkish baths, etc. Kay had to confess when the "Snoop" saw her come out of one of the local "cleaning" establishments. Sounds like a great idea! Understand that Jack Scott, local boy, visited the same establishment never went back. Said he was disasatisfied—the baths weren't as good as he thought they would be! Understand that our Jayhawk basketball boys are constantly receiving telegrams of congratulations, and what have you, while they are away on their trip to New York, received in messages, we now think we have the solution for this marvelous winning streak; the boys have been credited with possessing (heidently)—none of these messages were sent collect). Some of them have been sent to us, and it I love you." (An even 10 words from Wichita). Another one read: "Lots of luck in tonight's game. Lots of love from the Pt Phil's." (One like this comes from the Danny Waynell-anyway, let's all play basketball!") LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1836 Heard that Lyman Field and From McFarland had to be called down for making too much noise in the library so not long ago. There's a time and place where children to get many Lyman, not beside them, no place to play! They tell us that someone called the Pi Phi bouse the other day to see if Jack Hashurg, Phi Delt had, was there. The maid, at a said, license answered the phone. Being new, she got her babzzers somewhat mixed, and rang the fourth floor—instead of the first floor—and asked if JACK was there. Understand the girls looked under the beds, but HASHurg couldn't be found! Did they have it in mistake—you can always tell. Tricky follows—the Phi Delt's! --other contestants, to represent K. U. in the nation-wide inter-collegiate telegraph tournament, to be sponored by National Billard Association on Foley. Jane Burtley, Chi Omega pledge, has given up dating the pride of the Skiers because of a fear of getting our. Our only comment is that the "one and only" must have put his foot down (This might or might not be a bad thing—depending on the size of his family). Well-Hell week seems to be over Many of the lads and lasses seem to have acquired that well-known tired look, too. Well, you only have to go through it. Ain't it enough, . . you asking me? Along these same lines, we hear that Chalis Hall, Sigma Chi "Last Years" has given up dating Bertha White, of the Gamma Phi house, because she reuses to use her car on said date? Why don't you rent a car, Hall, that's what you want? You don't need next best thing would be to marry the car. Anyway—do something! Having "few the coup" for the weekend, it was necessary for Jordan to have someone finish off his column, so I will proceed to do that very thing. He has done so well. Had His Share of Publicity, who dropped Evans a little note which reads "Mr. Bud Foens: During your short time as editor of the column ON THE SHIN, you have been writing too much about fraternity and sorority members. Since your column is for dirt and the non-organization members receive most training, University officials should not make more results in finding it. Signed. From One Who Has Had His Share of Publicity." Dear Mr. One Who Has Had His Share of Publicity: Evidently you failed to realize that even a "Snoop" who has an acute sense of smell for dirty things can be extremely helpful by himself. It is these voluntary stouges who come running at the slightest provocation of a bit of scandal about their room-mate or a fraternity brother who really deserve the credit, and discredit. So if you have the courage to make yourself Evans won't do anything else someone will do for him. (You're welcome, Bud). Student Team Qualifies for National Inter-Collegiate Championships Five To Enter Billiard Meet By turning in the highest scores of i pocket-billiard qualifying tournaments, they were crowned nemoral Union, held Friday night and easterday afternoon, five University games. Gordon Weyermueller, who recorded the highest score for the required 15 players in the last four matches, other four members are: Harold Gregg, Dowdal Dawal, George Moore, and Ronald Ashburn. The alternatives for the team were Joe Rohr and Stanley Berhardt. This team will compete, by telegraph against five other university and colleges throughout the country. A trophy will be awarded to the winning team, and that team will be designated as the National Inter-collegiate Champions. Every player competing in a game will be whether on the winner or on a leasing team, will receive a miniature key, The local tournament conducted during Friday and Saturday, followed the rules which will be observed in the national tournament. Founder of 'Moscow News' To Speak Tuesday Night Former Minister's Daughter Turns Communist In U.S.S.R. Anna Louise Strong, for several years editor of the "Moscow News" and an authoritative lecturer on Russia, will speak about "Dictatorship and Democracy in Soviet Union", in Fraser theater Tuesday at 8:00 p.m. Miss Strong, a minister's daughter went to Russia 15 years ago. But for years the Soviet's apparent contradictions of its ideals disappointed her. Fitzgerald was an intelligent hour's talk, convinced her of the merits of this Communist dictatorship. This interview proved the turning point in both her work and her personal life. She dedicated herself to the U.S. S.R. After studying in two countries abroad and three colleges here, she entered welfare work, then journalism. In 1919, when feature editor of the Seattle Union Record, she supported the Seattle general strike. Lincoln Steffins, pioneer liberal, urged her to visit Russia, which she did as a relief worker and Hearst correspondant. She worked during the horror of the 1921 famine and in a starving children's colony. Hor most well-known book, "I Change Worlds," paints a picture of Russia's war. Three years ago she married an investigator for the U.S.R. In Moscow later, her idea for establishing a Russian-American club failed because of lack of support. Instead she founded the Moscow News, which has since been made a daily paper. Its purview includes speaking business men and engineers the Soviet Union imported from Great Britain and the United States. Speech Contest Postponed The Freshman-Sophomore orateal contest, which was scheduled for Tuesday, Feb. 25, will not be held until April 7, E.C. Buehler, professor of speech and dramatic art, has announced. Freshman-Sophomore Oratorical Meet To Be Held on April 7 This year there will be an opportunity for students to participate in a rostral contest on Peace, which will be open to any college student. Seven persons have already entered the Junior-Senior contest with a strong record. There are indications that there will be more entries than ever before in the Junior-Senior content. Only three person records remain. Only Sophomore-content as yet. At a meeting of the Forensic Council last week it was decided that there must be a minimum of five entrants at contests or the contests will not be held. The contest will be in the form of a trial at which one orator will be selected to represent the University of Houston. The winner will receive someone near the middle of April Prizes of $50, $40 and $20 will be given to them, and place respectively at the state contest. The Junior-Senior contest will be held March 10 as planned. Byrd Will Recount Polar Adventures Next Wednesday Famous Antarctic Explorer Will Give Illustrated Lecture in Auditorium Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd, famous explorer who is coming here to tell of his recent momentous discoveries made on his second Antarctica expedition will speak at the University auditorium, Wednesday evening. His lecture will be illustrated with 9,900 feet of new motion pictures. The interesting life of the 56 men who com- group will be recounted and pictured. For 18 months this band of scientists aviators and explorers lived on a whole continent of ice and snow. The expedition was conducted, what were the daily programs of the various explorers in orbit? They rarely rich finds, thrilling glimpses of airplane explorations will all be graphically revealed. NUMBER 100 Byrd was born in Winchester, Va. 1888. He entered the United States Naval Academy in 1908 and was graduated in 1912. In 1917, he was, in his own words, "a fizzie." He was retired from the Navy for physical disabilities and graduated from a mangled ankle which refused to improve under five years of active service. "I was retired on three-quarter-pay," he records in his book 'Skyward,' "ordered home for good. Career ended. I never heard of any chance of coming back; trained for a sea-faring profession; temperamentally disinclined for business. A fizzle." 'Since aviators didn't fly with their legs' he planned to get into the Navy's air service and after pleading with his captain, he accepted in being allowed to learn to飞五. Has Inspiring Record Active During the War During the war he was in charge on the U. S. Air Stations in Canada, later serving on the Commission in Charge of Air Training Camps. His first experience in exploration in the colder latitudes was with the Navy-MacMillan Arctic Expedition in 1925 when he was assigned to the Arctic Command and made Lieutenant Commander upon his return. The next year he headened his own expedition to the Arctic, and with Flybenn Bennett, was first to cross the North Pole by air. In 1927 Byrd realized his ambition of nine years' standing to fly the Atlantic, and achieved this in a memorable flight from New York to France. The following year he headed to Antarctica, where he realized Antarctic Expedition, founded Little America and made the first successful flight over the South Pole, Nov. 29, 1929. He was made Rear Admiral upon his return. On Oct. 22, 1933, he headed the Byrd Antarctic Expedition II, returning May 10, 1935, after almost two years of exploration and research. Y.W.C.A. Assembly to Meet Tuesday A Y.W.C.A. assembly for all members will be held in the Central Ad- ministration Room, 25 Feb., at 4:30. Miss Anne McCracken, instructor in the department of philosophy and Miss Nancy Calhoun, c36, president of the Y.W.C.A. will speak on Y.W.C.A. of XW.C.A. other student work. Unable to confer any further honors upon him, for the simple reason that Byrd has all the citations and medals possible for the government to bestow. Congress adopted a joint resolution execution of the Order of Expedition, and President Roosevelt greeted their return at the Washington, D. C. Navy Yard. Special stress will be placed on methods of making lithographs, etchings and types of prints. In connection with the lecture, an interesting group of the artists' paintings are being shown in the exhibition room of the museum this month. A lecture to have been given by Miss Rosemary Ketcham of the School of Fine Arts was postponed last week. The lecture on "The Language of Textiles," will be announced later. PROF. EASTWOOD TO START FINE ARTS LECTURE SERIE The first of an annual series of lectures by faculty members of the School of Fine Arts will be delivered Tuesday evening, Feb. 25, at 7:30 in the Spencer-Thayer Museum by Raymond East-wood, associate professor of drawing and illustration "Graphic Processes" will address the need for training with the aid of latenight and screen. ROSS ROBERTSON WILL SPEAK ON FRESHMAN REPRESENTATION Whether or not freshmen shall be officially represented on the Kansas campus will be the subject of a speech by Ross Robertson, c37, to be given tomorrow evening at 7 o'clock in the Y. M.C.A. room of the Memorial Union building. An informal discussion, with participation by persons attending, as to the type of representation desired by the students, will be told. Freshman representation has been considered for some time on the campus but no action has been taken toward its introduction as yet. Students are urged to attend the meeting. Kansas State Swimmers Take Close Dual Mee Individual high-scoring honors go to Blanche of Kansas State with a total of 12 points. Blanche was first in the team when he scored 35, and he gained his other two points for being on the winning medley relay team. For Kansas, William Waggoner was high man with 10 points garnered in the 36-yard and the 100-dash holes. Kansas was defeated by Kansas State in a dual swimming meet here yesterday afternoon 37 to 47. The Jayhawks placed first in four events, while the Wildcat squared captured five firsts including both relay events. Kansas Team Places First in Four Out of Nine Tank Events As expected from the comparative scores made by Kansas and Kansas State against Nebraska, the score was fairly close. At the end of the first three events, the score stood at 17 to 13 in the Wildcats' favor. Although the players never took the lead at any time, they were to within three points of the leading Kansas Staters at the end of the 50-yard dash with a tally of 18 to 21. Score Is Close 400-yard relay, won by Kana Statt (Anderson, Wange, Wade, and Lassen); second, Kana Tiller, Brider Zupancie, and Pussey). Time: 4.115. 200-yard战 stroke—Won by Blanche, Kansas State; second, Vinckier, Kansas State; third, Elias, Kansas Time, 2:43. 150-yard backstroke.-Won by hen Keran, Kansas; second, LaShelle, Kansas; third, Dieterich, Kansas State. Time: 2:01. 50-yard dash-Won by Waggoner Kansas; second, Anderson, Kansas State; third, Lassen, Kansas State Time. 27.1. Waggoner Wins Dash 100-yard dash—Won by Waggoner Kansas; second, Ward, Kansas State third, Waage, Kansas State, Time 1.024. 440-yard free-style—Won by Blanche Kansas State; second, Brendan, Kansas third, Eaton, Kansas State, Time, 6:213 Wageren, Wins, Dash Diving, won by Gaume, Kansas State, 98.8 points; second, Pusey, Kansas, 81.1 points; third, Patterson, Kansas State, 80.8 points. 220-yard free-style. Won by Nichols, Kansas; second, Justice, Kansas State; third, Anderson, Kansas State Time, 2:39. Medley relay—Won by Kansas State (Ward, Blanchon, and Lasseus); second, Kansas. (LaShellie, Ellan, Kester.) No time given. Individual scoring points for the Kansas squad are: Tiller, 1; Brandát, 4; Zupanine, 1; Puney, 4; Elias, 2; La-Mancha, 3; Kester, 6; Waggoner, 10; Nichols, 5. Next weekend, the Jayhawker swimming squad will make a two-met trip and attempt to take Nebraska and Iowa. The Jayhawkers Friday and Saturday nights respectively. The following officers were elected by the Newman Club at a meeting Thursday in St. Johns Parish Hall; president Joseph A. Maneus, c`M 38; vice-president, Charles B. Kurtz, b37; secretary, Thomas C. Becker, c`9; sergeant- Thompson C. Lawrence, c`9; sergeant-at-arm, Lewis Gargilone, c`38. Father Hoffmann announced Lenten services to be held Wednesday and Sun-evenings during the Lenten service. WEATHER FORCAST Kansas, generally fair and warmer in cast onion Sunday, Monday somewhat unsettled and colder. Newman Club Elects Officers WEATHER FORECAST --in all, 32 teachers are employed, and there are 60 classes being given for college credits, 12 and 12 or 13 classes in art, humanities, and drama dramatics, not for university credit. There will be a meeting of the Freshman Council in room 10 of the Union building Monday evening at 7 o'clock. JIM BOUND $ ^{9} $ Secretary. Thomas Arranges To Speak on Topic, 'Liberty's Frontier Socialist Leader Will Tall Tomorrow Afternoon; Time Is Changed to 1:30 p.m. Norman Thomas, Socialist leader and author, will speak on "America: Liberty's Frontier," tomorrow in Fraser剧院 before the Student Forum. A change has been made in the time, from accommodate the speaker. It was previously announced that the speaker would be unable to appear due to bad train connections and the illness of Mr. Thomas, but a telegram to Thomas saying that a car has been provided to take him and his wife home on Monday night, has made it unnecessary to cancel the engagement. Is An Ordained Minister A graduate of Princeton University and an ordained minister of the Presbyterian church, Thomas became a Sozialist when as a conscientious objector during the war he could no longer occupy the pulp. Since then he has been active in politics and in labor movements, running twice as candidate for the New York City Assembly and recently active in the Garment Workers' strike in New York City. He believes that America's inherited faith in political democracy has been lost to some degree and that the people of our country have not the faith in the adequacy of political institutions to solve the problems that they once had. He says that our immediate dread is from militant and despotic Fascism. Says American Fascism Possible "There is," he declares, "a ruthlessness and suspicion in America, and sceptical disbelief in political action, which, given a few more years of bad economic conditions, will furnish a just war for an American Hitler to exploit." Thomas is a thorough-gaspic pacifist, striving by legal means to achieve civil and religious liberty. In his speech here in 1854, he set forth the basis for libelary law, and the conditions it is planted in a bed of equality and tolerance. He does not believe that basically the conditions are different in this country from those in foreign countries. He does more to bring about the present conditions than any other factor. A consistent fighter against war and violence in all forms, Thomas has kept the middle path between Capitalism and Communism, preferring to move slowly and patiently so long as he is sure that he is moving. DR. JOHN BENNETT ADDRESSES YOUNG CHRISTIAN AUDIENCE "The Christian message for us as individuals and world citizens," was the subject of an address from Dr. John Kerr, who taught at Auburn Theological Seminary, when he spoke before the Young Christian group in Westminster hall last spring. Asserting that pagan forces "are operating most forcefully," he divided his subject into three phases: the growing secularism of modern life, the development of an economic system, and the development of a new form of tyranny that would destroy the basic principle for which the World War was fought. Sorority Gives Music Broadcast Sorority Gives Music Broadcast A musical program, presented by Maui Barnes, was broadcast last evening over KFKU. The program was as follows: "Scienteine" (Bach), "Humble Us By Thy Goodness" (Bach), by Dulce Barnes ("Goodness"), and by The Nightingale and the arrangement: "The Nightingale and the Rose" (Rimaky-Korakoff), "Time, You Old Gypsy Man" (Maurice Beasley), "Rondo All Turcus," and, once accompanied by Cronie Bayle, "Rondo all Turcus" (Mozart), by Dulce Barnes and Marguerite Jarrott. University Students Attend Rites University Students Attend Rites The following attended the funeral of the Jerusalem Baptist Church, afternoon afternoon: Emma Ewy, nurse at Watkins Memorial Hospital, Hugh Kirk, fa.28, Leaud Sitterty, c.38, Gerald Crawford, Sister Sarah, c.39, and Charles Alexander, c.38. HENRY ROOSEVELT DIES Washington, D. C., Feb. 22—(UP)—AssistantSecretary of the Navy Heyne L. Roosevelt, died late after a battle at hospital of an acute heart attack. Farley Lands on Landon Postmaster General Carries Presidential Campaign to Landon's Doorstep Topeka, Kan, Feb. 22-(UP)-Postmaster General James A. Farley toight carried Franklin D. Roosevelt's campaign for re-election to the door. London, who is a leading contender for the Republican presidential nomination. Speaking to several thousand persons at the annual Washington Day banquet, Farley reviewed "three years of experience" direct two slaps at Governor Landon. "Kansas got its fair share of federal money, and I am informed by Senator McGill and your three Democratic congressmen that it has tailed the tide," he said referring to criticism that Lanier funded Kansas budgets with federal funds. In defending the administration's record, he arraigned Herbert Hoover and charged the Republican party and its "subducial," the American Liberty Party with fomenting an "economic fear campaign" against President Roosevelt. Freshman College Courses Given in Kansas Towns Thirteen "freshman college" projects are now in operation in Kansas under the direct sponsorship of the University of Kansas, and the University is supervising the instruction in Spanish conducted by Kansas State College. Class Projects Operating Under Supervision of University The University's centers are at Leavenworth, Atchison, Holton, Horton, Norton, Olathe, Marysville, Phillipsburg, Atwood, Stockton, St. Francis, Bellevue, and Cohy. The Spanish classes are at Bolleville and Herington. The classes were organized by the University Extension division, under the personal direction of H. G. Ingham, director. The students in these classes, Mr. Ingham said, are for the college, with a few older persons. Classes are held in the local high school buildings, in some cases making rooms otherwise vacant during the afternoon and late afternoon and evening classes. HONOR PROFESSOR STEVENS AT ANNIVERSARY BANQUET The Eldridge hotel was the scene of a banquet and program in honor of Prof. William C. Stevens on his 75th birthday anniversary Friday night. The tribute was made possible by many friends of the university member of the botany department. With Prof. A. J. Mix portraying the part of a schoolmaster and the theme that of a routine school day, the program went along at a lively and interesting rate. Chancellor Lindley presented a humorous discussion of Professor Stevens' activities at U.E.tU. entitled "The Woman who was one of the highlighters of the semester." guests to the 10th banquet. In answering questions from his by Prof. N. P. Shevchenko, a brief mention of Professor Stevens' life and aspirations were given in his own words to all of his friends who were present at the banquet. KANSAS STATE WINS INDOOR TRACK MEET FROM MISSOUR Three meet records were beaten and a fourth was tied in the dual track between State State and Mission Fieldhouse at fieldhouse at Columbia, Mo. Friday. Dick Waters, Missouri sprinter and broad jumper tied with Dick Hotchkiss, Kansas State hurdler and jumper, for scoring honors, each totaling ten points. Waters added four and three points to the record, and age set a new record in the running broad jump of 23 feet, 88 inches. Two other meet records were broken when Roger Snipe of Missouri ran the 440-yard dash in 52.7 seconds and Charles Scolofolky tossed the shotput 44 feet, 7½ inches. Jim Reese of Misericordy scored the meet record of twelve feet in the pole vault. Dean Schwegel to Conver Dean Schweigter to Convention Dean R. H. Schweigler of the School of Education left Friday morning to attend a meeting of the department of superintendents of the N.E.A. held in St. Louis. He will return Wednesday. World Record Set As Venzke Leads Glenn at Finish Old Time For 1500-meters Bettered by Kansan Who Trails Gene Two Yards New York, Feb. 22-(UF)-Gene Venkens, University of Pennsylvania flier, smushed to the greatest triumph of the world in record-setting the world indoor 1500-meter record to defeat Glenn Cunningham, the former champion, in the feature event of the forty-eighth annual track and field meet, at the spectators at Madison Square Garden. Venzie, running the same effortless race which gave him victory over the Kanas in last week's race, travelled around the boards in 3 minutes. 49.9 of them went for 3.505 which Cunningham set winning this championship last year. Cunningham, two yards behind at the finish, also lowered the record, finishing in 3.501. Charles Hornbostel, formerly of the University of Indiana, won the 1000-meter race in 2:29, almost 3 seconds than the world record set in 1927. Venize's victory won his second successive win over the barrel-chested Kanan during the winter's indoor track season. In the Baxter mile last week, Venize paced his Western rival for a stirring victory and one of the best races of his career. His margin at that time was only 5 of a second. The Pennsylvaniaian's narrow victory tonight marked the height of his steady improvement which was sufficient to beat Cunningham although he, too, shattered the world record for the 1,500-meter run which he established a year ago in the same meet in New York. He was also ahead of the lead of Bill Bonton, and further ahead of Venzek. He consistently beat Venzek in last year's contests. Despite the opinion of many that Cunningham is on the downgrade of his running career, the champion miler had to admit he has major meets with stellar performances. His two defeats by Venzke may, in this light, be attributed to a phenomenal improvement in the Easterner's running rather than to a failure upon the part of the Kansan to equal his former marks. Although shorn of his 1500-meter world record, Cunningham still remains an indoor and outdoor mite and may be expected this summer to make a bid for a post on the American Olympic team and further competition in Berlin this spring. Tonight's contest in the 1500-meter event was marked by the absence of Joe Mangan of Cornell University who defeated both Cunningham and Venzake several weeks ago in the Milrose Mangan was ill and unable to compete. GUY CRISS SIMPSON TO PLAY AT VESPER ORGAN RECITAL Prof. Guy Crisis Simpson of the School of Fine Arts faculty will present the Vesper Organ Recital at 4 p.m. today, in the University Auditorium. The program, which will feature compositions by both American and British composers, is as follows: "Concert Overture in B Minor" (James Rogers), "Choral Prelude on Rhysmæredr" (Voughan Williams), "Second Organ Symphony" (Edward Shippen Bappen), "Caprice in A" (Ralph Kinder), "Fountain Reverie" (Percy Fletcher), and "Caprice de Concert" (J. Stuart Archer). TEN STUDENTS ARE GRANTED DEGREES IN BUSINESS SCHOOL The degree of Bachelor of Science in Business was voted by the School of Business to nine men and one woman who have this winter completed requirements for the degree. They will be awarded a Bachelor's degree, Paul Wendell Ahlstedt, Kansas City; Kan; Mary Catherine Bennett, Ottawa;玛丽 Catherine Bawdor, Joe Miller Grosser, Rosville; Armstrong Hatfield, Kansas City; Kan; Max Edward Topka, Topka; Allan Lauck, Topka; Robert W. Lawson, Shapiro, Shapiro, Kansas City; Kan; Albert Wesley Swisher, Utics. Tryouts Will Be Monday Troyons for the next production of the Kansas Playbill, "Ticket-of-Lead-Man," will be held at 3:30 Monday in the KC Fairgrounds. Green Hall. All students are eligible. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1936 --- Comment George Washington As this is being written the results of Walter Johnson's attempt to toss a silver dollar across the Rappahannock river have not been flashed over the news wires. No doubt there are many people in this country who, with Representative Sol Bloom of New York, frown on such stunts to mark the celebration of the birth of George Washington. Somehow or other the idea appeals to us. Great men usually meet the fate of having their virtues carefully wrapped in the wool cotton of sacred tradition. What they may have said is handed down from generation to generation until their once spritely epigrams take on the flavor of dull platitudes. We are too apt to neglect the man as a man. George Washington, despite the efforts of some to disguise the fact, was a human being. It did not need to be proven by the flurry of de-bunking biographies of a few years age to prove that. The myth that Parson Weems was responsible for starting could not hide the man. Even if he does fail to toss that silver dollar across the Rappahannock river, Walter Johnson will have performed a real service. He will have performed that George Washington could be human. But we must not forget that after all, George Washington was a man of vision. His was an extraordinary patience in the face of political adversity. He stood by his principles and by the principles of democracy as he understood them to be. He was a statesman of high order and he did succeed in steering the young republic over the shoals. A truly great combination, the man and the statesman. Some Ohio burglaries recently accidentally stole some tickets to a policemen's ball. As someone once remarked, crime does not pay. Boston Transcript. Presidential Publisher "President Roosevelt is the man who sits in the White House and bears the well-nigh intolerable burden of leadership in this crisis of affairs." "Upon what food does this our Caesar feed? What madness has seized him? Does he not see how dangerously close this comes to conspiracy to break down our institutions of government?" In the two above statements we see at a glance Colonel Frank Knox, the latest of newspaper presidential candidates. And in that glance we see not only one man, but two. In the first statement we find a first rate publisher and in the second the New Dealer's leading critic. It seems that at present, however, Mr Knox is very much interested in playing the role of the latter. He is making his presidential race on the premise that Roosevelt can be made to beat himself, not that Knox can do it. If his present platform is the one which will stand, his approach is right. Now is the time to present concrete issues which people can take hold of, not the preachings of Knox, such as want of constructive thought, adherence to the constitution, and voluntary action as an American system. The position of Mr. Knox is very well stated by a columnist on his own newspaper who says, "I hope he gets the nomination. What is more I would grush no teeth if he were elected. But I think that within thirty minutes after he took the oath of office there would be teeth gnashing—and they would be his! He believes sincerely that as president he could alter the course of government. I do not. I believe that, when put to the test, Mr. Knox's platform would remain as shiny and unmarred as the Democratic platform has been." A lot of folks are speculating on what the veterans will do with their bonus money, apparently overlooking the fact that their wives will attend pretty well to that. -Kansas City Kansan. Music Appreciation "Did you ever hear such a high soprano voice or such perfect blending of young voices?" This is typical of the comment he discussed Wednesday night after the concert by the Vienna Boys' choir. They played to an enthusiastic audience that filled the auditorium. And yet someone has said that college students have no appreciation whatever! Others have said that most of us need to be apprised of the fact that a piccolo is not one of the 57 varieties put out by Heinz. Wednesday night's turn-out would not lead one to believe that such is the case. The Vienna Boys' Choir was undoubtedly appreciated by everyone who saw it. In fact, it had been looked forward to as one of the most spectacular extra-curricular events of the year. The large audience was expected as the historic choral always entertains an enthusiastic crowd. Those persons who think college students do not appreciate music, especially symphonic or operatic types of music, should have been here to witness the enthusiasm and hear the applause that University students gave the Vienna Boys' Choir. ≈ Summerfield Scholarships Invitations have been sent to high school principals throughout the state asking them to select applicants for competition for Summerfield scholarships. Every fall, ten or more freshmen enter the University because of an idea held by a graduate of the class of 1899, Solon Summerfield, now president of a silk hosiery manufacturing company. He said, "My motives for providing these scholarships are embraced in the comprehensive expectation that many students, while living comfortably and happy, will yet strive manfully and successfully to become more capable and more useful members of society." Over fifty students are in the University at the present time because of the endowment made by Mr. Summerfield. These boys were chosen because of their superior ability, high ideals, excellent character, unquestionable fidelity, and definite promise of future usefulness. Such students who have graduated have proved their worth by filling positions of responsibility and honor. Through financial assistance, Mr. Summerfield is aiding Kansas youth to become more useful members of society. Campus Opinion Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the University Daily Kaman. Articles over 200 words in length are subject to cutting by the editor. Contributions on any subject are invited. Editor Daily Kansan: The faculty case back recently at the justification of R.M. We admire them for their spunk and understand their love for acting, but we want to ask them a question about how they interact with our members and town people by their own admission not a student group—why do their performances come in on our Student Activity Tickets? Are they afraid that if they give some plays that the students would be interested enough to buy tickets to see performance? The students on the Hill want to see their fellow students perform. Since there are only four plays on the stage, they need a backstage work and all. Kansas players can present plays in between times to the town and students with an charge. All who are interested will attend although Allie and they can't guarantee themselves a full house four nights. Remember, members of the dramatic faculty, your students when they get out are going to blame you for their training or lack of it. It might be a woe idiot who requests your talents toward "the best reputation." An Interested Student. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Notices at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m. prefers regular publication days and 11:50 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issue FEBRUARY 23.1936 --themselves. Last year the men "instituted a carnival of fun and geyser with hill organizations contributing various acts. They plan to repeat this year, but are planning to add their thunder and will stage one in lieu of their customary musical comedy. The women's celebrations will precede the other by about two weeks, and the men reason, not illogically, that the entertainment will have been sated. COLLEGE FACULTY—SPECIAL MEETING; There will be a special meeting of the faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences on Tuesday, February 25, at 4:30 in Room 322 of the Administration building. No.100 DER DEUTSCHE VERIEN: Der Deutsche Verien verwoertommens mit Montagen den 24 Friulauf him half im freien (30 Uhr am Sonntag) und den 15 Uhr am Samedi. E. H. Lindley, President. FRESHMAN COMMISSION. There will be a meeting as usual at Henley house on Monday at 4:30. PEACE ACTION COMMITTEE: The KU. Peace Action Committee will meet at 4:30 Monday afternoon in room 10, Memorial Union building. Everyone is welcome. Alfred C. Ames, Executive Secretary. Jean Russell, Chairman. Edith Borden. QUILL CLUB: Quill Club will meet Thursday, Feb- ry 28th. 500 seats in the W.S.G.A. Lounge. Pleasures should fill up on food. PSI CHI: Active members of Psi Chi will meet Monday, February 24, at 4:30 in room 21. There will be a meeting on Thursday. Alfred Baldwin, President. Charles Zeskey, President. RED CROSS EXAMINER'S SCHOOL: Make applications at 105 Robinson gymnasium. The school will be held on Sunday, January 28th. SCHOLARSHIPS: Applications for scholarships for next year (including Waltens hall scholarship) may be made between the hours 3 and 5 p.m. Monday to Friday, in addition to building applications. Applications must be filed by March 1. Herbert G. Allphin. W. Y.C.A. ASSEMBLY. There will be a meeting of all members on Tuesday at 4:30 in the Central Administration auditorium. Miss Anna McCracken will speak Everyone is urged to come. Evangeline Clark, President. Mrs. Flora S. Boynton, Executive Secretary, Onsite at Alibaba and Amazon. W.S.G.A. BOOK EXCHANGE The W.S.G.A. Book will open he will open 9:00-4:00 (except on Saturday) SIGMA ETA CHI. The regular supper meeting of Sigma Eta Inc. will be held at the home of Mrs. Bayles, 2533 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10017. 25 Patronesses have charge of the program. Please invite MaryGoldhall Hail (phone 2846) by Monday evening. Nancy Calhoun, President. Political Parties Look Over Situation And Consider Possible Candidates The spring thaw has unleashed another flood of campus political troubled-oil-water and propaganda, and incumbent Men's Student Council about to be cast without the gates by the winners of the impending election, legislating at a fearful rate, bent on grinding out the program of the Progressive Student Government whose their political lives are snuffed out. By Hugh Gordon Hadley. c'36 Looming high on the distant horizon is the election for the Men's council, which this year promises to provide more excitement and raise the temperature higher than is customary. The PSGLS, who started an office at a station in the year, albeit they were outnumbered by the Pachamana, have now gained the ascendancy. Kenneth Born recently resigned because of "ineligibility," a term which covers a multitude of sins. His PSGLS emulates will miss him how laborious his work was; he could recite a bill from scratch without laborious productive grunting. It may be assumed however, that the Pachacamacs will stir from their lethargy in sufficient time to at least make a fight for the incoming nemesis. It is possible that one and one which may be weighed to much advantage, as witness Lyman Field's tenure, is that of president of the council. The men behind the front in both chambers must share a common about discretion being the better part of valor, and thus for the campaign has been unmarked by political pynchnetics. But predictions are that the choice will narrow down to two candidates. Mr. Duncan seems to favor John Milton Phillips, the demostrates of the campus and Martin Witther, a Summerfield solon. PSGL members lean strongly toward Bob Decker, an apparent appeal to be about conical strength. The PSGLs were given a monetary setback in their triumphal march toward completion of their last year's platform when the Pachacamas mustered sufficient strength Wednesday to table the student court prosecution in the next meeting. Their first two assaults at the dormant forum platform, and that to make the purchase of council keys optional with the members, have hurried the Pachacamase barrier, and the court proposal will probably do the same. It will set up a court composed of two numbers of each party and one non-participant found, to judge student offences. These consist mostly of traffic violations. Bob Williams, chairman of the MSC social committee, is completing plans for another dinner where both the men and women legislators will disport Vienna (U.P.)—"Strudl" and Schmarr," the famous Austrian pastries known to every visitor of the country, were prominent in the diet of the population in the Austrian Alps in the second million B.C., excavations on the quarry near copper mine near Kitzbühel, in the Salzburg district, has revealed. The Illiyants, ancient forbears of the present Alpine population, had a surprisingly high standard of living, it discovered by finds made on the Austrian Pastries in Diet Centuries Ago Numerous wooden sticks covered with rumes, unearthed by a staff of twenty scientists, working under the leadership of D. Prittonii of the Vienna University, show that these illiyrans possessed an elaborate script. They raised cattle, sheep, pigs and goats, grew wheat and rice, had wooden earthen and bronze tools which show a very high craftsmanship. Microscopic and chemical inspection of the vessels revealed that the Illyrians lived on about the same diet as the present mountain population. As these ruines strongly resemble the Eurusian script of the 7th and 8th centuries, their inscriptions are the latter obtained it from the Illyricans, and that the entire pre-Roman culture in Northern and Central Italy may have been largely influenced by the Alpine Aside from dairy products and meat they consumed a large amount of pastry. That Alpine Illiyrans migrated to the Balkans in pre-historic times, where they established a district culture, is considered as an established fact. PROPOSE 1000 SCHOLARSHIPS FOR CANADA'S POOR STUDENTS The economic structure of this mountain settlement is of special interest as, according to all indications, it was a combination of mining and dairy farming. Possibly the surplus of dairy products was exported with the copper. Ottawa, Ont.—(UP) A proposal to establish national scholarships to provide for 1,000 perennials Canadian boys and girls introduced in the Canadian Parliament. It is considered possible that Kelch-Alpo, which doubtless was one of the main copper production centers of the world, is an important cultural center as well. A. E. Corrigan, of Ottawa, who is sponsoring the plan, points out, in support of his pleas for the education of all Canadians, that 80 per cent of the political leaders in Canada were produced from less than one per cent of those who attained it. Corrigan proposes, that 1,000 national scholarships, valued at $400 million per year, would be provided to government. The scholars would be chosen for their mental and intellectual gifts, character and temperament. Support of 23 universities in this scheme Hellmann J Tilma Olson Hollywood Film Shop Hollywood (U.P.)—Shilay Temple is the most important star in Hollywood right now but her life is merely sleeping and following a schedule. In 1935 she drew more patrons to box offices than any other motion picture actress. Her studio apparently is keep-away because overtime because children grow older. As a result, her life is lived recording to schedule, the studio has announced. Here it is: She is awakened at 7 A.M, and is allowed five minutes for stretching herself. Then comes two minutes for brushing her teeth. The schedule gives her eight minutes for what the studio described as doing a "thorough job of washing herself." With the job dionne, she begins her breakfast. While the number of movements per second is not listed, the schedule is rather complete: "7:20 A.M.—Drinks her first big glass of milk for the day." At 7:30 A.M. Stuiley dresse her doll for the day and then dresse her dressure that. That takes half an hour and at 8 P.M. she also leaves the studio, arriving at 9. After working for an hour and a half, Shirley resilies until noon in her own studio bungalow before beginning the task of eating a "big, healthful lunch." That takes an hour and she goes back to work at 1.P.M. At 2 P.M. comes time for her schooling. During the time between scenes she receives instruction from her tutor, Miss Lillian Barkley. At 3 P.M. Shirley's director gives her half an hour off to play and after a mid-afternoon from her hungaway ice box, she works up 6 P.M. and goes home for dinner. Her evening after dinner is spent in *reading picture books* for a time. She weighs at 8 P.M. and prepares to go to bed. Five minutes are allotted in the studio schedule for her to say her prayers. of Ray Noble and his orchestra with torch-singer Connie Boswell, the walzets of Wayne King and his orchestra, the droll drama of Fred Alen with his amateur show, the harbital voice of John Charles Thomas, and the dramatic sketch "20,000 Years in Sing Sing." The final event of her day, according to the planners of her life, is the evening visit of her dog. He comes P.M. and then Shrinky falls sleep. Ballet Russe here and there on the hill ——edited by doris kent, c'37—— Breakfast\by the Yard! --a national and exclusive national advertising representative AIDAL, ADVERTISING SERVICE, Inc. 420 Madison Avenue, New York City Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles Dancers who make up the company of the Ballet Ruse, recent visitors in Kansas City, like to drink milk, eat sandwiches, and sleep late. **Breakfast by the Yard!** The department of design has given us some kitchen drapers. One is especially interesting. It is a composite impression of buttered toast, orange juice, and fried eggs. The texture of this drapery looks good enough to eat! Likeave Dienlove Old Panave Ruth Steinfel writes in the current issue of Collider's entertaining about their-life back of the footlights. Although they often have internal struggle of kind and another, the always goes on when the curtain is lifted. Library Displays Old Papers On the second floor of Watson Library. Paper pages taken from the "Herald of Freedom" one of the first newspapers printed in Kansas. The editorial page from the paper published in Lawrence, Saturday, July 7, 1855 is mostly taken up with an oration by Charles Robinson, first governor of Kansas. This was a old-style Fourth of July address. Have You Read These? Have You Icaru 12 Twenty-four of the 50 best books of the American Institute of Graphic Arts, are on display at the Book Nook downtown. Among these are: "The Green Light," by Lloyd C. Douglas; "The Next Hundred Years," by C. C. Furnas; "North of the Orient," an Anne Marnile Holloway book; "The Chase," by Europa; by Robert Briffault; and "Old Jules," by Mari Sandez. A front page of the first number of the "Herald of Freedom" is shown in the case. This was printed in Conneautville, Penn., Oct. 21, 1854, and shipped to Kansas where it was distributed. Student Sight-at-Home Night Wednesday is a real "tay-at-home" night, for the ether waves bring us on that night the "tonfoilery" of George Burns and Gracie Allen, the lovely voice of Lily Pons, the swinging rhythm **Plans for Library Steps** One of the second floor of Watson library is equipped with a plan for the planned library steps. A plan, drawn by J. E. Frieden, e36 seems to attract the most favorable comment. Several of the library's steps are in the sophomore class in architecture. Stage Play Successful Movies "Celero Light," a broad hit of the last few years, was written in answer to a movie producer's challenge that a stage play couldn't be as entertaining. And the Hollywood gentlemen are "taking it back," for the play was not only successful, but it was so successful that the movies have bought it and have made a picture. What Others Think How well do you know the Thayer Art collection? A representative of the Carnegie University Daily Kansan OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS HARRY VALENTINE BOB ROBINSON BILL GILL MANAGING EDITOR FRED M. HARRIS, P.D. BUSINESS MANAGER F. QUINTON BROWN Campus Editor Bill Robles Make Up Entrees Dwight Hunt Leave Course Deserts James Downey News Editor Doug Smarty Journal Editor James Pollack Sunday Edition James Pollack Did You Know? Why not become acquainted with this marvelous collection? Subscription price, per year. $5.00 in cash add. $2.75 on payment. Single copies, 36 each. Entered an second class master, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas. P published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Sunday meals except during school holidays by students in the department of Journalism of the University of Kansas from the Press of the Department. Foundation, who visited Spooner-Thayer museum a few days ago, expressed surprise at the variety and richness of the exhibit which was made by Mrs. Thrayer. The centennial of the "Piekwick Papers" will be celebrated the world over this year. A new edition of the Dickens work in Russian has sold 50,000 copies and a special children's edition in Russian has sold 10,000 copies. Merto-Goldwinm-Mayer is going to run the story of "Robin Hood of El-Dorado" seriously in the press of the nation before they release the picture. Can You Answer These? Can You Answer These: 1. What is the oldest building on the Hill? 4. What statue on the Hill cost $40,- 000? 2. What does the phrase "Rock Chalk" in the college yell stand for? 3. What professor on the Hill is named as a composer of Indian folk music? 5. What is the "Gale"? Answers on page 4. "PETTICOAT LANE" SHOES The First Spring Showing Of Their Exclusive Harzfeld's Announces a collection of 400 pairs of new shoes . . . flats and dress types . . . bucks, kids, fabrics, patient combinations . . . in all the wanted colors and sizes. HARZFELD'S Hill Top Shop "My Friends-! A man is shaking his head and laughing. He is standing behind a table with two jugs of water and two glasses. SPEECH OF A SATISFIED SHIRT: "And while I'm speaking of friends, I've found that a shirt's BEST friend is the Independent Laundry. You can quote me direct, because I've been three, and I KNOW." Independent Laundry Phone 432 SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 23. 1930 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE K 2. Hill Society BEFORE 1 P.M. CALL K, U 35; BETWEEN 7:50 AND 9 P.M. CALL 2701(K) or 2702(K). Fraternity Entertains Witl "Pig" Dinner Phi Gianna Delta entertained with their thirty-seven annual "ugi" dinner Friday night at the chapter house. The guests were: Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ander Lowe, Ms. Caroline Todd, Mr. Donald Greer, all of the Lawrence; Mabel Hatcher, Topkick Marjorie McLoubh, Mahathiah; Natalie Gordon, Leone Iflman, Domina Sutherland, Jane Case, Betty Joan Reader, Eleganer Schockley, Marjorie Muevilyh, all of Konsum City, Mo. Jeanne Wilkins, Alberta; Betty Miller, Baldwin; Dorothy Roberts, Annabelle Lawrence, Junction City. Daisy Hoffman, *c*; 38; Jean Haines *c*, 38; Dovolich Jane Blue, *c*; 39; Caroline Bailey, *f*; 38; Frances Norland, *c*, 39; Laullette Bodin, *c*, 38; Nadine Ingleman *c*, 38; Marianne Jaloux, *c*, 40; Eather Puffer, *c*, 48; Frances Shaw, *c*, 48; Betty Gilson, *c*, 48; Elizabeth Short, *c*, 39; Jane Heffner, *c*, 53; Sally Jane Martin, *c*, 36; Murray Martin, *c*, 68; Kathyne Foster, *f*; Virginia Taylor, *c*, Charlie Hay, *c*, 82; Chestnut, *c* Martha Hall Johnston, Kansas City, Mo; Mary Lou Borders, 39; Barburn Marie, c37; Dorothy Kennedy, c39; Mar- Jill Harburg, c38; Maren Myers, c38; Rose McVey, c38; Anne Humbard, c38; Renee Frost, c38; Lois Bell- leithen, c36; Elizabeth Hannah, c39; Frances Barrow, c39; Louise Moore, c'unel. Bato Lemo, f38 Painy Anne Lume, c38; Elieucer Cain, c37; Helen Baker, f39; Bertine Helen Baker, Bath Patricia, c39; Margaret White- ford, c41; Charlene Barber, f39 Dorothy Lemo, c30; Gloria Speak- son, c36; John B. June Simone, c32 and Sarah Burgh ☆ ☆ ☆ Wayne Wright's orchestra furnished the music. A string from the School of Fine Avi played during the dinner. The chapman were: Mrs. F. B. M.e.Acorn; Mr. C. E. Sears; Kansas City, Ms. C. E. Sears; and Ms. D. J. Tovaldiella. Sorority Gives Tea ☆ ☆ ☆ Miss Ruth Litchen of the School of Education, assisted by members of PhiLambda Theta, national honorary security for education at Temple University and group Thursday. After a short business meeting, the following women were elected to the sorority; Valliant Barnes, ecd73; Womens College, ecd73; Helen Lester Brooks, c6; Elmela Brown, f3; Martha Heaton, gr; Ava Hess, c5; Lou Humphrey, c3; Martha Elizabeth Peterson, c3; Mildred Meier, c3; Lou Redcker, c2; Addy Adlen Swieca, c9. KU Alpha Delta Fi hold initiation services last night for the following: Harriet Damuire, c23; Jen Hardendorf, --c:39; JAN Manning, c:38; Muriel Manning, c:37; MARY Louise Newby, c:39; DORRICH Scholtz, fa:39; Margaret Shrum, c:37; LUCLE Slusse, c:39; Margaret Achee Roll, c:39; ROSE Worley, Roe, c:39; ROSE Worley is honorable. Today a formal formula will be given in honor of the new members. Guests will include Eileen Baird, Kansas City, Mr. Iris Olsen, Kansas City; Dorothea Watson, Independence and Mrs. George Hedrick and Mrs. Orvis Smith, both of WA- PHONE KIL 66 ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ The Newcomers club entertained with a party for their husbands last night at the University club, Mrs. Russell Wiley, Mrs. Joseph Wilkins and Mrs. Jan Chapausse were in charge of the short program which consisted of lectures, games and charity Men's Glee Club, Stunts and stories were given by each member. Eugene Hook, c'sp, will leave Wednesday for New Orleans, La., where he Prof. and Mrs. Laurie E. Anderson entertained Friday evening with a dinner at the Manor. Places were set for 37 guests. Decorations were in honor of Washington's birthday with the centerpiece of red roses and white freesia. Blue candies and favors and nut cups of three colors completed the decoration. The artistry is sketched by Grethet Speelman, C77, and Aldene Klee, fa'38, of the women's glee club, was presented under the direction of Miss Irne Peabody. CLASSIFIED ADS PHONE K.U.66 ROOMS FOR RENT Phi Della Theta today announces the initiation of Jake Laffer, c39; Herman Smith, c39; *cunel*; William C. Baisinger, c39; William M. Young, Wayman, *cunel*; William Bedley, c39; James G. Janney, c39; Leilyn M. Young, Bev Mcannanya, *cunel*; Richard Basket, c39; William C. Haves, c39; William C. Haves, *cunel*; George Lindey, c39; Chester L. Mize, c39; Leon Hendrickson, c39; Frederick J. McCoy, c37; De Witte Hardness, plh39; William Tholeus, c39; Clifford Porter, *cunel*; William C. Knopf, *cunel*; and Arthur Poldexter, c39. FOR SALE Gamma Phi Beta hold formal initiation services last night at the chapter house for Mary Markham, f39; Par30; Jill Rathbun, f40; Tina Lehman; Frances Shaw, f39; Clement; Betty Jean Shawer, c39; Paolo; Robert Cook, f39; Excelsior Springs, 59; June Shinkle, c39; Pools; Bertha White; Taylor, cunei, Kansas City, Mo; Frances Karlan, cunel; Topeka; Jane Marshall, cunel, Kansas City, Mo; Elva Cheentum, c39; Kingman; Clara Louse Lawrence, cunei; Lawrence; and Jane Reid, c39. Iola. The formal initiation banquet will be held this noon at the chapter house. TAILOR APARTMENT. Two room apartment, nicely furnished, available now. Garage for rent. 1241 Tennessee. —102. FOR SALE: Our home at 115 Louis Hall amide with furniture. Shown by ap- partment Telephone 173. Florence M. Hodder. 100 FOR RENT: To boys, very desirable rooms in modern home. Single or double. Reusable rates. 1301 Vermont Phone 127. –101 One Stop Clothes Service Station TAXI SCHULZ THE TAILOR TAXI LOST AND FOUND Phone 12-987 will attend the Mardi Gras celebration. He will sail from New Orleans for Madrid, Spain, where he will visit five weeks with an aunt. He also plans to visit Italy and France, and from there to Argentina, where he will games. Following the games, he will visit in Sweden and Norway, and return home late next fall. LOST Black leather zipper note book. Name engraved on front of book Helen L. Martin. Phone 3050. Beward. Dean and Mrs. D. M. Swarthout, Mrs. Ruth Sworthout, and Mrs. Ade Bryant drove to Kansas City, Friday evening, and visited the Philharmonic concert at City Philharmonic orchestra, featuring Swarthout, well-known operatic and movie star, as soloist. Following the concert she held the New York Hotel Mouchelbon in given Miss Sworthout's honor. BEAUTY SHOPS SPECIAL—50c reduction on any permanent, with this ad, except Saturday. Permanents $1.50 to $5.00, complete with hair cut. IVAN'S BEAUTY SHOPS, 732½ Mass., Phone 2333; 9411 Mass., Phone 533. Weekend guests at the Gamma Phi Beta house who attended initiation services Saturday are: Mrs. J, C. Piper, 35, and Martha Noyes, Persons; Bernita Brooks, 35, Leavenworth; Emily Murray, 28, Danielle Scales, Shaw, Galeenbury; and Betty Buffo, Dorothy Lee Bert, Jane Benton, Charlene Lathrop, all of K City, Mos. Twenty-two words or less can be used. three inches thicker. six inches thinner. 76c in depth. 128c in width. Accepted to appear in approval at the Eastern Business Office. Payable in advance and accepted by appraisal at the Eastern Business Office. --discount Kappa Sigma will hold initiation services today for Jim Barries, c#; Bill Blecha, c#; Henry Carlson, bumel. Steven Cave, c#; Wayne Clower, c#; Galen Eghert, c#; James Gowens, c#; Charles Pierson, c#; Clyde Smith, c#; Jack Aldlerder, c#; William Leech, c#; and Norman Edmonds, c#. ☆ ☆ ☆ FOR HEALTHYS SAKE ROLLER SKATE, 729 Massachusetts. The world's most thrilling sport. Clean fun for clean people. 102 The following were initiated into Chi Omega sorority yesterday; Roberta Mitchell, fa;39 Virginia Quiring, c'umel; Shirley Miller, fa;aucl; Jean Lindeng, c'undel; Maria Brown, c'unel; Victoria Beverly, c';39 Barbara Boswell, c';39 Alice Marie Meyn, c';39 Kathryne Foster, c'umel; and Hilda Slienz, c'.39 PALACE BEAUTY SHOP The following from Watkins hall are spending the weekend at their homes: Regina Stémeil, c. 37; Iola, Joyce Chaymil, c. 39; Long Island; Armadura Braun, c. 39; Derothy Jane Willecus, c. 39; Torekian; and Doris Schuerman, c. 28; Leav Student Loans ☆ ☆ ☆ Four doors south of Journal-World Ph.282 Five expert operators Ph.282 Phi Lambda Theta pledge services will be held Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in room 116, Fraser hall. Domenico Gagliarlo, associate professor of economics will speak on "The Worker's Education." ABE WOLFSON MISCELLANEOUS ☆ ☆ ☆ Sigma m. Eta Chi, Congregation Church sorority, will hold a superschool service Tuesday evening. Bayles, Tuesday evening. The patroness will have charge of the program. Mrs. Delma Whithe, reference librarian of Watson library, entertained the members of the library staff Friday morning for her sister, Mrs. Charles A. Springer. enworth. ☆ ☆ ☆ Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Robertson and Mary Frances Waller, of Kansas City, Mo., and Robert Lindley, c37, were at Kappa Sigma Station late on Saturday noon. 25c Finger Wave 25c 743 Mass. ☆ ☆ ☆ --discount Margaret Brown, c'unc1, Marion Springer, f39, and Beth Graham, c'99 were dinner guests at the Acacia house Friday night. Calendar of the Week's Events Mrs. J. B. Spiegel, Miss Jean Whiffin, of Topeka, and Miss Charlotte Steel, of Sunday, February 25 Vesper organ recital, University Aug., 4 p.m. Monday, February 24 Kansas Board meeting, 107 Journalism building, 3:30 p.m. Monday, February 24 Psi Chi meeting for actives only, 21 Ad., 4 p.m. ☆ ☆ ☆ Sunday February Freshman Commission, Henley house, 4:30 p.m. German Club, 313 Fraser, 4:30 p.m. Entomology Club meeting, 321 Snow 3:30 p.m. K. U. Peace Action Committee, room 10. Memorial Union, 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, February 25 Y.W.C.A. assembly for all interested women, Aud. 4:30 p.m. College Faculty meeting. 322 Ad., 4:30 p.m. Sigma Eta Chi, 1408 Kentucky, 5:15 p.m. Bartlesville, Okla., are house guests at Corbin hall this weekend. Snow Zoology Club initiation, 201 Snow.5:30 p.m. Theta Sigma Phi, alumni - active dutch lunch, Sky Parlor, 6 p.m. Botany Club meeting, 144 Louisiana 7:30 p.m. Jeanne Wilkens, Abilene, is a weekend guest at the Kappa Alpha Theta house. Tau Sigma, Robinson gym. 7:30 p.m. ☆ ☆ ☆ Kappa Sigma announces the pledging of Everett Allinson, Kansas City, Mo. Bernice Percifield, c39, is spending the weekend in Kansas City, Mo. At the Churches First Christian church, Teach and Kentucky street—Church school at 9:45 morning worship at 10:50. Dr. Stephen J. Corey, president of the Kentucky Missionary Society will be the guest speaker at the morning service. Plymouth Congregational church, 925 Vermont street—Church school at 9:45; morning worship at 11. Sermon them: "After Fredry—What?" At the Fireside Forum at 7, Bernard Frazier, who is sculptoring the diaramas in Dyche museum, will speak on "Sculptors and Sculpturing." Friends church. Eleventh and Delaware streets—Bible school at 9:45; morning worship at 11. Sermon theme: "The Obligation of Brotherhood." Trinity Lutheran church, Thirteenth and New Hampshire - Sunday school at 9:45; morning worship at 11. Sermon by the pastor on the subject, "God's Command About the Sanctity of Marriage." Student forum at 7. First Methodist Episcopal church, Tenth and Vermont streets—Sunday school at 9:45. Wesley Foundation Trinity Episcopal church, Tenth and Trinitio streets—Holy Communion at 8; church school at 9:45; morning school at 10:30; and 12; and young people's schools at 6. Now we offer odds and ends and damaged notebooks and supplies The Book Rush is Over Come in — Browse 25% to 50% Circle Francis, 306 Fraser, 4:30 p.m. Mid-week varsity, Memorial Union, p.m. Admiral Byrd lecture, University Aud., 8:20 p.m. Wednesday, February 28 W.S.G.A. ten, women's lounge Ad. 0-5 p.m. Thursday, February 27 Fine Arts student recital, Ad. Aud.., 3:30 p.m. El Ateneo, 113 Ad, 4:30 p.m. Chemistry Club, 201 Chemistry building, 4:30 p.m. Rowlands Kappa Psi, Memorial Union, 7:36 p.m. Quill Club, Women's lounge Ad., 7:36 p.m. TWO BOOK STORES Friday, February 28 Swimming meet: Kansas vs. Nebraska at Lincoln. Fridav. February 28 Sigma Nu party, Eldridge hotel, 6- 12 p.m. Saturday, February 29 Saturday, February 25 Basketball: Kansas vs. Nebraska at Lincoln. Swimming meet: Kansas vs. Kansas State at Manhattan. Psychological examination make-up, 115 Fraser, 9:30 p.m. Leap Year Varsity, Memorial Union, 9-12 p.m. classes will meet in Funk's Mortuary, 940 Masachueta. Other classes will meet at the church in Morning worship at 10:30, sermon subject: "Soul Tail" The Wealey Foundation League will host a parade and parsonage, 1209 Tennessee street. First Evangelical church, 1000 Convent street — Sunday school at 9:45; morning worship service, 10:45. Sermon theme: "Faithfulness in the Least." Immanuel Lutheran church, Tenth and Kentucky street -Sunday school and bible class at 10; Divine service at 11. The pastor will deliver a special sermon on January 9th as anniversary of his installation as pastor of Immanuel Lutheran church. Unitarian church, Twelfth and Vermont streets-Church school at 9:45; church service at 11. Brotherhood Day will be observed. Rabbi Erwin Rosenweig, Topeka, will speak. Noel Gtist of the university society department will speak on "Morals in Primitive Society" at 6:30. First Priestlyian church, Ninth and Vermont streets—Church school at 9:45; worship service at 11. The sub-Theological Gospel in a Perturbed World." The Westminster Student Forum meets at Westminster hall, 1221 Orden. Dietrich F. Zickner, the German exchange store at St. Mary's Church, Problems of the Church in Germany." United Brethren church—Church school at 9:45, worship and sermon at 11. Arrangements have been made for the use of the hall over the Holloway and Philpstore village. Nineteenth and Massachusetts streets. We Recomemnd DISCOVERY by Richard E. Byrd For sale here — $3.75 The Story of the Second Byrd Antarctic Expedition The Book Nook BREAKFAST Try a--at the 1021 Mass. Grape fruit Waffle Coffee 22c CAFETERIA Try Our Better Shoe Repairing O 图示人物正在做伸展动作。 Let U Tint, Dye, Clean, Resilver or Reglt Your Party Slippers. ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP ELECTRIC SHOP SHOP 1017 Mass. W.E. Whestone, Proc. Phone 685. Subscribe for THE KANSAS CITY STAR PHONE 17 IF 13 papers - 15c per week 847 Mass. St. H. L. Nevin Distributor you've lost your last dollar, you've found a diamond ring, your room-mate stole your collar, you need 'most anything, you'd like to sell the whoopie, you'd change the room you've had, in fact, you need assistance, Merely use a Kansan Ad New Simplified Rates Any ad of less than 25 words inserted once for 25c three times for 50c six times for 75c Use Kansan Want Ads ONE O'CLOCK Mid-Winter JAYHAWKER Out Tomorrow W.S.G.A. BOOK EXCHANGE PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1936 ALL EYES ON JAYHAWKER- HUSKER TANGLE FRIDAY Kansas Victory Would Practically Cinch Big Six Title Loss Would Give Nebraska Team An Outside Chance At Conference Crown; Ex-pect a Record Attendance Kansas Jayhawkers are enjoying a week of rest and regular practice prior to their next and crucial game with Nebraska, at Lincoln, Friday. This game will be Nebraska's final tilt of the season. While Nebraska and Kansas rested on their oars, the four other teams of the Big Six played rather insignificant games last night. Oklahoma opened its invasion of the North by nosing out the Iowa State Cyclones, 42-39, to keep close on the trail of the Huskers. Kansas State continued its climb out of the Big Six cellar by downing the Missouri five, 39-35, at Columbia. Frank Groves, lanky Kansas State center, was the high Kansas State center, with the high scorer in the game, with 16 points on four field goals and eight free throws. The game was a rough and tumble affair, 31 personal fours being called in all, 18 of which were against the Kansas State team. Three Missouri players and one Wildcat were forced to leave the game on fouls. Kansas State was ahead at the ball, 22-16. Okahama will be forced to win the rest of her games and to proy that the Jayhawkers hit a loss streak and are out of the competition. The teams are to have even a show to tie for the championship. An Okahama defeat definitely would drop her from any assumed role of title contender, and the team would move toward surrendering all of its power. Since the addition of Lion Livingston to the Sooner five, they have been a tough proposition to beat. Kansas showed that it was not in any sort of a slump when it ramped on Washburn last Wednesday using its regulars only 30 minutes of the game, but the Oklahoma men might be able to cause trouble. One point in Nebraska's favorite is her hope that Praille, who sprained his ankle in practice Friday afternoon, will not have recovered sufficiently for play by Monday. But she did just when he came down on the side of another player's foot in a scrimmage against the second group. X-rays show that no bones have been broken in Praille's foot, and Coach R. C. Allen said it was possible start when he whisked on his flank. "I look for a record-breaking crowd at the Kansas-Nebraska game. FEB. 28, exceeding by 1500 the previous Big Six record crowd of 6650 that saw Kansas break the tie for the championship in Lincoln, FEB. 14, IBNIWING 34 to 29 "Both Braskraba and Oklahoma have good ball clubs," says Dr. Forrest C. Allen, director of athletics and basketball coach at Kansas. "Nebraka has every ingredient necessary—experience, space, teamwork, Whitaker, and Wallh quist have the experience, and Elkham, the 6-foot-7-inch center, has the height. "Nebraska is not going to have an easy time with Oklahoma, either, with Denton Livingston, the Lawton, Oklahoma Agile transfer to Soonerland, and Bill Martin, a second Charlie Black for speed." Women's Intramurals Matches for the second division are: Seidelman i by bse; Foster i by bse; Kister iv by bse; Doctor vi by Bucher; Hanson ii by bse; Athur i by bse; Crawford; Bowell i by bourassi; Baker i by Fay; Topek i by Dunlap; Modell ii by Kaufman; Lincoln ii by Irwin; Teenjunger ii by ii; Rokane ii by ii; E Lawnan ii by bse. Drawings have been made for the singles in deck tennis. All first rounds must be played before Saturday, Feb. 29. In the first division, matches are as follows: Lockard vs. bye; Worley vs. bye; Engleman vs. bye; Bubultz vs. Krebs; Markham vs. bigelow; Dodge vs. Hoffman; Werner vs. Grisham; Andreas vs. Anderson; Gimpelts montgomery; Irvine fike; Manning vs. Walker; Karlan vs. bye; Lindgren vs. bye; Lemon vs. bye and Rowland vs. bye. The basketball free throw tournament will begin this week. The first round runs from Feb. 24 to 29, the second round from March 9 to 14. In each case 20 throws make a round. Those who have signed up for this event are asked to come in and make their 20 throws as soon as possible. The round will compete in the second round. Rifle Teams in Competition Receive Check From Pennsylvania Receive Check From FelixJvinsula A Naismith fund check direct to headquarters came to the University athletic office to pay the Y.M.C.A. Pa. It amounted to $107, representing 1 cent per person at an intramural game, and was sent by George R. Fleming, sports director of the Y.M.C.A. there. The men's and women's University rifle teams completed their first week's shooting in the telegraphic matches last Friday afternoon. Their scores were telegraphed to the various universities with whom they are competing and replayed in the finals, all to be Monday. The teams are made up of 15 members and the total of the highest ten members of team counts in the matches. The individual members of the men's team shoot from four different positions during the course of the match. They shoot 10 shots from prone position, which is lying on the ground; ten shots kneeling; ten shots standing and ten shots taking total of these four positions constitutes the total of each individual's score. Captain Edgar Leigh led the men's earn a score of 97-95-76-82 and total of 350 while Hazel Hoffman and felen Ward led the women with 88 points to 100 points. The women hoot from only the prose position in he matches. The standings of the men's team are as follows: Captain Leigh 350, Lawrence Wood 344, Wayne Scales 348, Hamlin 384, George Wood 333, Bally Winton 303, Martin Benlinger 322, James Trawr 317, and Kaitin Atkin 312. The total high ten, The standings of the high ten of the women's team: Hazel Hoffman 8, Helen Ward 8, Barbara Kirchoff 9, Tawanna Bickley 10, Martha Holmes 9, Millie Miller 6, Mary Louise Beltz 86, Virginia Starr 4, Martha Dodge 9 and Catherine Holmes 93, with a total of Men's Intramurals The intramural basketball schedule is as follows: Monday, Feb. 24, Kappa Sig "B" (Bac "A"; BETA; A*) vs. Ophi. Phi Kappa Sig vs. Sigma Nau. Rock Chalk I vs. Ki. First Baptist vs. Phi Chi. Phi Kai vs. Tuesday, Feb. 25, Coes vs. Johnson All stars; Oars vs. Rock Chalf II, Wednesday, Feb. 26, KEK J. Eke Church; Wednesday, Feb. 27, Church; D.T.D. vs. S.P.E., Signa chi vs. DU. Piam Gam vs. Phi Deli; A.T.O vs. SAE Thursday, Feb. 27, Haskell JayHawk Friday, Feb. 28: Galloping Ghosts vs. Whirlwinds; John Allars Hosts vs. Hellhounds; Pi K.A. vs. Acacia; Rock Chalk I vs. Triangle. Saturday, Feb. 29: Haskell JayHawk vs. K.E.K; K妻Ka vs. Deta Sigma; Sigma nau vs. D.U.; Phi Gam vs. Sigma Chi; Phi Pai vs. D.T.; D Galloping Ghosts vs. Coes; Beta vs. A.T.O; A.K Psi vs. Phi Sigma uled for Saturday were played in the morning. The Phi Pi team won by a forfeit from the S.P.E team. Coes felttered to Ober's and the Dunkin' Club on Saturday, all All-Stars. Score of the games that were played Saturday are as follows: Tuesday, Feb. 25: Sigma Chi vs. Phi PSI; S.A.E. vs. Triangle; Phi Gam vs. Kappa Sigma; A.T.O. vs. Phi Delt. Volley ball schedule for the coming week: Rock Climber Reed 5 g f t Huls 3 0 1 Anderson 2 1 0 House 2 0 1 Scheyron 1 0 2 The water pool schedule is as follows: Tuesday, Feb. 25; S.P.E. vs. D.T.D. Thursday, Feb. 27; Phi Pii vs. Sigma Chi; S.A.E. vs. Tadpoles. Results of Thursday's intramural basketball schedule indicate that even the best of the teams can be beaten. The Sigma Chi "B" team beat the D.T.D. "B" team 24-20. The Teta Thau team from the first place Haskell Jenkins and the Bioliermakers by virtue of a forift from the Campus Raiders. Wednesday, Feb. 28: Pi KA. vs. Sigma Nu. Thursday, Feb. 27: Delta Chi vs. Beta. The only water polo game scheduled was forfeited to the S.A.E. by the Kappa Sigma swimmers. In volley ball the Phi Gam team beat the Betas 21-19, 19-21, 21-14. The Triangles walled the Phi Psi team 21-12, 21-11. Only two basketball games were played last Friday with the Sigma Nu team, and the Chi Chi team and the Phi Chi队 team on the Rock Chalk I quintet 21-16 Totals 13 1 5 Rock Chalk II 27 Referee, Allen Phi Gam 29 | | g | ft | f | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Harwi | 4 | 1 | 2 | | Gandy | 4 | 0 | 2 | | Bicket | 4 | 2 | 2 | | Kell | 0 | 0 | 1 | | Tenney | 0 | 2 | 3 | All of the intramural games sched- Totals 12 5 10 Referee, Vanek. | | g | f | t | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | McCarroll | 2 | 1 | 1 | | Hays | 1 | 0 | 3 | | Muller | 1 | 1 | 3 | | Murray | 1 | 0 | 1 | | Binney | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Sorristenit | 0 | 0 | 1 | Totals 5 4 6 Gal. Ghots 48 g it Knight 6 ftitzerd Fitzgerald 0 0 Kelly 1 0 Kelly 2 0 Liley 1 2 Liley 2 0 Dawes 1 0 D. T, D. 29 Referee, Corliss. | | g | ft | f | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Hedges | 2 | 3 | 0 | | Veitch | 0 | 0 | 2 | | Finley | 6 | 4 | 2 | | McMorran | 2 | 0 | 3 | | Elmore | 1 | 0 | 1 | D. U. 22 g ft M.Cann 2 1 Alcum 1 0 Barclay 3 1 Davis 2 3 Brock 1 0 Totals 11 7 8 g ft f Dodge 4 Stolland 1 Paris 1 LaToeyo 4 Nessly 1 g ft f Dodge 4 Stolland 1 Paris 1 LaToeyo 4 Nessly 1 Basket 1 6 f Br'duth'1 0 Mize 3 0 Young 6 0 Bowman 0 1 Benton 0 1 Clemens 0 1 Referee, Allen. Totals 19 5 Exwers g ft Roberts 2 1 Johnson 4 2 Moonson 0 1 St'tenng 1 1 nge 1 0 Phi Delt 43 WRESTLERS HOLD ELIMINATIONS FOR BIG SIX TOURNAMENT Totals 10 4 6 Totals 86 Totals 18 2 3 Sigma Chi 29 S.A.E.24 Referee, Corliss. Eastern Basketball Is Openly Flayed By Sports Critic Dean Swarthmore in Chicago the university's daycare for Chicago to be present at a gathering of prominent Chicago musicians at the Palmer House, where plans will be formulated for the program of the National Music Teachers Association which will hold its 60th annual meeting in Chicago next December. Dean Swarthmore, who is secretary of the association, will return to his office on Tuesday. An inter-varsity practice wrestling match was held yesterday afternoon at 10:30 p.m. in preparation for the Big Six tournament, held March 6 and 7 at Norma, OK. Here Are the Answers! Dear Swarthout in Chicago Elwyn Altere threw George Russel in 5.15, half-nelson and body slimmer. Boll Townsley threw Bob White in 2.63, half-nelson and arm bar. Bob Childs won from Jim Boutt by decision, time advantage of 1.12. Jesse Gamber won from Brain Jim by decision, time advantage of 1.11. Jesse Gamber threw Bill Harrison in 3.28, half-nelson and arm bar. Jack Scott threw Philip Nehe in 5.30, arm bar and half-nelson. Clyde Moore threw Sam Erickson in 2:7, cradle and croft. 2. It symbolizes the rock chalk stratum underlying the Hill and found in most parts of the state, 3. Charles S. Skillton... You get more value in a made-to-order suit because you get more satisfaction! You choose the fabric and we make it up in whatever style you want. Not only that, but when you use through you get a like-new look. Have next suit made-to-order and notice the different! 1. Fraser. 5. It is the literary publication composed of original prose and poetical compositions by students and faculty of the University. Better VALUE PRICED AT $25 and up CUSTOM TAILORED CLOTHES GIVE YOU 3. Charles S. Skilton. 4. "Uckee Jimmy Green.' Editor of Leading Athletic Publication Protests Variations of Regulations SCHULZ the TAILOR Suiting you—That's my business 924 Mass. Phone 914 Complaints from Midwest basketball teams about playing conditions when they go to Madison Square Garden to meet New York teams, get definite notice in the leading article in the current issue of the "Athletic Coach," in which the editor, Jack Lippert, charges the "New York crowd" by which he includes universities in that city, and also surrounding territory, with imminent action in conformity with the official rules as played elsewhere in the country. This addition to the rules makes it a foul for a player to make a move that might impede an opposing player, even though no contact result. Under the national rules, every player is entitled to take any position on the floor he would like, unless does not collide with another in doing so. In this connection, Dr. F. C. Allen relates the game of the player upon a foul was called. The player emounted that he had not touched his opponent. "But I detected evil in your eye," the referee is reported to "If a player with the ball attains a position on the floor which results in the cutting off an opponent, the opponent is able to make any movement or motion which actually impedes the progress of the opponent so cut off, a block has been committed, even though no personal contact has taken place. The New York Interpretation The New York addition to the rules, and administered by the officials there, follows: "A player on the offense who has not the ball, and who attains a position on the floor which results in cutting off an opponent, commits a block if personal contact occurs with the opponent cut off." The "Athletic Coach's" article, continuing, quotes from several basketball officials, the most interesting being this from Oswald Tower, editor of the Basketball Guide, the official interpreter of the rules; " . . . It may be predictive safely that the Olympic playoffs, will not be played under any official rules. Official Rules, nor will any official serve who will not administer those rules." "This controversy explains in part why Kansas prefers to stay in the Midwest, trying for championships, like the Tigers, East or the Coast", adds Coch Allen. Huskers Sink Jayhawkers Lincoln, Neb., Feb. 22—(UP)—Nebraska University's track team displayed convincing strength as it awrapped the University of Kansas 80-2-3 points to 23-1-3 today in the season's opening indoor meet. Nebrasa won 11 of 12 events. Shannon of Kansas won the lone victory for his team with a leap of 6 feet 1 and 8-3 inches in the high jump. Lloyd Cardwell of Nebrasa tallied 13 points and won high point honors. He won the broad jump from Charles Pits, Jayaward indoor champion, with a leap Warm Up with a cup of STEAMING COFFEE at the Quotes From Officials CHECK with us 1009 Mass. BLUE MILL DURING THIS COLD WEATHER Hot Water Heaters -----$4.95 up GOOD YEAR Prestone, Alcohol, Winter Gear Lubrication Tire and Brake Service Carter Service Call 1300 Open All Night RIDE THE BUS Prompt - Dependable - Courteous and Economical Service to All Parts of City Save Money — Buy a Coupon Book From Driver The Rapid Transit Co. Phone 388 for Information Regarding Schedules Just Better Cleaning! MARGARET MORRIS Phone 101 Advance Cleaners N.C. LINDSTROM 717-944 M.E. LINDSTROM of 23 feet 10 inches. This mark equalled the conference record. Cardwell also won the low hurdles and placed second in the dash. Kansas was strongest in the high pump, taking the first two places and sharing in a three-way tie for third. R. R. Wheeler to St. Louis Meet Dr. R. H. Wheeler attended the National Educational Association convention which was held in St. Louis today. CONTINUOUS SHOWS TODAY At 1-3,5-7-9 25c 'Tt 7 ONE HOUR TO LIVE! LESLIE HOWARD BETTE DAVIS IN Lips Tasting An Eternity of Love ---As the Clock Ticked Off the Seconds 'Til An Amazing Fate Would Overtake Him! The Incomparable Lovers of "Of Human Bondage" "THE PETRIFIED FOREST" From Leslie Howard's Own Sensational Stage Success That Ran 52 Weeks on Broadway---- Even Greater on the Screen! Held Over for Second Week in World's Largest Theatre, Radio City Music Hall, New York. GRANADA Watch for Dates Fred Astaire - Ginger Roger "FOLLOW THE FLEET" WINTER IS HERE! Skins Are Dryer JAKINS LEE says Whatever you do, don't let Old Man Winter get you down. The one essential thing to keep the skin soft and young is to wear a good cotton jacket. JANICE LEE medically pure Sub-Zero Weather Calls for CHILI 10c at the Union Fountain in Memorial Union ICE LEE medically pure cosmetics on sale at---- PATEE 10c *til* 15c *After* Shows 2 - 4 - 7 - 9 NOW! ENDS MONDAY Rankin's Round Corner Coe's Band Box JOE E. BROWN "BRIGHT LIGHTS" Ann Duvarak, Patricia Ellis A Circus of Stars and Songs - Girls and Gags - With Joe as the Ring-master of Ceremonies! Musical - Novelty - News BRICK'S Phone 50 Free Delivery 35c SUNDAY MENU 35c Swiss Steak (Spanish style) Brick's Special T-Bone Bone Grilled Club (Kosher style) Liver and Onions Cheese or Jelly Omelet Rosat Loin of Pork Early Garden Peas Chilled Sliced Tomato French Fries Grilled Apple and Butter Milk Tea, Coffee or Buttermilk Dessert - Drakes Home Style Plies Choice of — Cocktail — Tomato or Grape 25c 25c Roast Sirloin of Beef Garden Peas Olive Oil Sliced Tomatoes French Fried Potatoes Hot Rolls and Butter Milk - Tea - Buttermilk - Coffee Dessert - Home Style Pies Home Made Chili with Crackers 10c New Records Stampin' at the Savoy Breakin' in a Pair of Shoes Benny Goodman Sweet Sue I Love You Truly Louis Prima The Bride Comes Home I I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Hal Kemp Cling to Me So This Is Heaven Richard Himber Life Begins When You're in Love Suzannah Richard Himber Bell's Music Store UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXXIII --passed under the huge bridge across the Kaw here and the water was not reported rising. The power company took special precautions at Leavenworth and made sure the water was in a power company there from a water supply. Extra equipment was added. The ice on the river here has been the thickest in years and has meltedrap. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1936 on the SHIN NUMBER 101 By BUD EVANS, 36 Alpha Chi's Martyr to the Cause ... Whitaker on County Cruise ... Cribbing Not Friendly ... Cake Instead of Flowers ... Spring and Things. It is rumored among the common people that the Alpha Chi's are no mean outfit. A few of them proved their worth ($9) to the time of about three bucks last Friday night when their date went on a break. The girl, being unable to make the grade, called on the girls for a little financial aid, after rationalizing out of the embarrassment by recalling that it was loup year. Nice girls—but please don't think from this that the boys were going to pay off their money! Things ought to pick up over that way now that this bit of news is out! News comes that Max Whitaker really did a bit of travel this week-end: Seems Max dressed in Lawrencet, attended a dinner at the White House and was last seen sitting in a rocking chair before a comfortable fire somewhere in the town last mentioned. Now, that's we call it -- getting around! How do you do it -passed under the huge bridge across the Kaw here and the water was not reported rising. The power company took special precautions at Leavenworth and made sure the water was in a power company there from a water supply. Extra equipment was added. The ice on the river here has been the thickest in years and has meltedrap. Understand that Professor J. H. Tast gast spent the morning lecturing to on of his classes on the evils of cheating with reference to cribbing in quizzes of course. The professor urges the students to be careful not to consider a on "friendly" basis—consider him a friend—and as a friend to don't, friend's Seems like this ought to be a pretty good idea as long as the professors don't forget their part of the "friendship" and pull "shoelaces" over their feet. This often happens—friends! Hear that Margaret Alice Pope, little Alpha Delta Pi gal, received a really fancy cake from her boy friend upon being initiated recently. Had her name on it, and almost everything! Now, isn't she sweet—and practical, too? "Old 'Snoop' thinks that's swell, and did you ever to try to cat flowers?" Who says chivalry is dead? The other morning between classes some young gent was sent to put his hat on his girl friend in order to keep the snow off her head. That was the other day when she said, so let's talk about something else! And speaking of spring — it really must be here. Saw Hub Meyer, exigot shot of the Kansan, wearing a pair of air conditioned pants this morning. After looking at said pants a little closer, we noticed that they weren't air conditioned after their school in the rear end. Sort of a back-to-nature movement, but personally, we don't think he'll get anywhere with it! Wonder what Bette Wasson was thinking about the other day? She was so engrossed with her thoughts that the bus on which she was riding drove past the Chi Omega house and down in front of it. Bette felt like she was. Must be the spring weather we've been hearing so much about! The Theta's all of are wondering why it was that, out of all the things that are to be put on at the W.S.C.A. with Theta's the "Freak Booth" as their share in providing entertainment for the affair, Well girls, we can't tell you the answer, but no matter how much better than we do Sounds like dirty work to us. CHARLES HULAC IS CALLED HERE TO Y.M.C.A. POSITION Charles Hulce of the University of Nebraska is acting as part time secretary for the Y.M.C.A. here at the University. He will be here seven weeks during this semester. He arrived yesterday and will stay two weeks on Hulac is co-chairman of the Student Christian Movement for Kansas, Nebraska, and Colorado. At present he is traveling through the state to attend the field council of Y.M.C.A. Through arrangements with the field council the board of directors of the organization of Y.M.C.A. has been without a secretary all of this year. Byrd To Relate Adventures Eplorer's Five Months Alone Will B Featured in Lecture Tommorow Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd will be the third speaker on the University lecture course series at the auditorium tomorrow night. He will recount the exciting adventures and discoveries of his expedition with an illustrated lecture. By seeing the new motion pictures which the famous explorer will show, one can get a real glimpse into the Ice Age. The Antarctic continent, where the recent Byrd Expedition was encamped for a whole year, is said to be the most spectacular of what our nearestvent was thousands of years ago before the ice-cap reaped. Fossils, coal-beds, and sandstone found within 182 miles of the South Pole gave the Byrd Expedition evidence that Antarctica was once a lake. The cold cap ranging from 1,500 to 9,000 feet smothered and froze all life. One of the outstanding scientific accomplishments of Byrd's latest expedition was the measuring of the ice-cap—the first known location by—a seismic sounding device. Among the interesting things that Byrd will describe and picture Wednesday night will be his own adventures during the five months he spent alone 132 miles northwest of Vancouver, the most terrifying experiences he had was feeling the fury of an Antarctic blizzard, which Byrd describes as worse than a storm at sea Typographical Difficulty Delays Jayhawker Issue Deer, Brown, Stough, Dunkel and Demsey Are Soph Beauties The Mid-Winter issue of the Jaya- hawker will be ready for distribution at noon today instead of yesterday as was previously announced. The delay was due to some difficult encountered gold-colored gold ink on the cover. The cover is done in light blue, white and gold. A modern technique is employed throughout the whole issue. Appearing in this issue will be the sophomore beauty queens, who were chosen by Benny Goodman, New York orchestra leader. Helen Deer of Chicago, a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma, was awarded first place. The other queens of beauty are Mary Lou Brown, Corbin hall, second; Margaret Stough, Alpha Delta Pi, third; Catherine Dunkei, Alpha Chi Omega, fourth; Dianna Debi, Pi Beta Phi, fifth-full-page pictures of Helen Deer and Mary Lou Brown, quarter pages of the other queens will be one of the features. A new feature that is expected to be a big hit is "Whirligigs." Hugh Haddie gives liberally of his views on Hill politics to those who are not so well informed. A new method of handling personalities in pairs has been adopted in this issue also. There and many other features along with an increased number of cartoons make up the Mid-Winter issue of the awhawk. Copies may be obtained from the W.S.G.A. Book Exchange, or from any one of the Jay James. Those persons who have ordered covers are urged to call for them as soon as possible, so as to avoid any confusion in case a shortage occurs. The University Men's Glee Club was featured on the program at the meeting of the University Club last Saturday night. The Glee Club sax Schumann's "The Two Grandiens"; a group of Neo spirituals, "Steal Alearn", "Holl Jordan Roll", "Bones Come a Knitint"', and "Laughing Song." UNIVERSITY CLUB PROGRAM FEATURES MEN'S GLEE CLUE Other numbers on the program were two selections sung by a quartet composed of Bill Bodley, £39; Jack Laffer, ¢29; Ros Roehert, £37; and Bill McEwan, £36. The numbers played by Prof. Russell L. Wiley. Following the musical program, everyone present told stories or gave a stunt and then in playing games. Miss Hoopes Will Be Speaker Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes will go to Kansas City Thursday as the guest speaker at the annual luncheon of the Browning Society. The luncheon will be at the Mission Hills Country club. Miss Hoones Will Be Speaker Miss Ruth Litchen, instructor in the School of Education, is seriously ill at her home. She is threatened with poisoning and has been hospitalized for her class work for several weeks. Miss Litchen Is Ill Norman Thomas, Socialist Leader, Flays Capitalism Dynamic Speaker Dprides Hoover and Discusses Supreme Court Decisions Speaking dramatically yet sincerely, Norman Thomas, noted social leader, yesterday told students of the University that America, to survive, must give up its superficial political attitude and adopt a system of co-operative collectivism in place of its outworn and unjust capitalism. An over-capacity crowd jammed Fraser theater to hear Mr. Thomas didder former President Hoover's "hymn to rugged individualism," as the "funeral dirge of capitalism," and denounce the injustice of "a system that allows the complete dominance of one class over another." "The present system" said Mr. Thomas, "is so unfair that it cannot continue to exist on its merits. It can only preserve itself through violence, not necessarily physical, but through hypnotizing the people with a religion of a totalitarian state similar to the fascism of Italy or Germany." **Must Adopt New Loyalties** To forestall such a situation, Mr Thomas stated that Americans must adopt new responsibilities to use their brains to plan for themselves not to plan for the profits of an abstentive owner. They must learn to produce for use if they are to escape the insecurity and security that is present in the modern use. I once we pay for machinery that can conquer poverty is the necessity of working together as a team, and in machine, man has made it necessary to co-operate or perish, for if we do not control the machine, then our liberties become fewer. "The failure of our present system is based on our inability to manage it humanely. Cruely must be recursed to to preserve the system and keep men dole. Behind all labor terrorism is a deep, powerful economic order. We have a system that demands planning, but we follow a laissez faire policy." Mr. Thomas stated that the time to consider ways out has passed. The only solution is co-operative collectivism, he said. If a new plan is not adopted, then the drift toward fascism may be expected, especially in case of another war. DUST STORMS NOW THREATEN Frontier of Liberty Is Jagged Chicago, Feb. 24 — UIP) The Kansas and Dakota dust bowl up its normal functions today with the release of dirt and grit held fast all winter by ice and now covered fields. In illustrating his points, Mr. Thomas commented on current political situations and graphically described the incidents upon which he bases his belief of a loss of freedom in the United States. He condemned a system that depends on the maintaining, a relative coexistence in a land that can more than provide for its people. "If America is the frontier of liberty," said Mr. Thomas speaking of freedom in this country, "then the frontier is jagged and rapidly receding. The status of liberty in America is not good; it is too bad." We know that, and it is not likely to get better." "Youth has most to fear," for youth must work out the problems that confront the school system. The school system will not appear as the result of wishing. Young people must develop a new social philosophy, for a planned economy can come about only through education of an organized, intelligent people." Weather officials expected diminishing wind to alleviate the condition but foresaw no precipitation to settle the dust. Clouds of grit and sand had been reported about a return to starving cattle and demed crop land. Dust was thickest near Dodge City, Kan., where visibility was but one-fifth of a mile as a 24-mile wind filled the field with air dry. The temperature reached 63 above zero there. At Amarillo, Texas, center of the "dust bowl", visibility was but half a mile. Thawing Ice Endangers Bridges over Kaw Rive Structure Collapses Causing Loss of Car Near Eudora A watchful eye was being kept on the Kaw river all yesterday afternoon and last night as ice jams, caused by the sudden thawing of the thick river ice, threatened serious damage at various points on the river. The greatest damage reported yesterday afternoon was em-hail mine north of Eddon, wide street of a hinge steel structure bridge collapsed under the sudden impact of the So suddenly dnd but it has to be a bridge that Chipman could have built on Aristotle Creek of Lawrence, formann of a repair crew working on the bridge, was swept into the river with the section of the bridge upon which it was parked. Repair work has been done on the bridge since last spring when the snow had stopped flowing out by the floods. It has been closed to traffic since that time, and was little used as it is on a marked highway. Several jams between Lawrence and Topeka have been reported but at all times there were no incidents by the Kansas Electric Power Co. here were that the sie was moving slowly at all points between Topela and Eudora. About 4 mph, a jam formed above Tecumseh, six miles east of Topela, but broke on 10 a.m. at 4:30 p.m. The ice easily Damage to the bridge at Eudora was attributed to lee accumulation between here and Eudora, enough of the ice to cause a significant collapse of the bridge to cause its partial collapse. The long bridge at Eldora had been damaged several times by floods and ice jaws had been dispelled before blasting with dynamite. Its weakened supports collapsed last night before measures could be taken to prevent it. Although ice that had jammed nearly six feet high west of the bridge here had yet to pass, Eudora, little more damage, was expected. Simpson Gives Dora Retrain Mr. Guy Cress Johnson, instructor in the School of Fine Arts, posited a good-sized crowd Sunday afternoon in the University Auditorium. The program featured compositions by American and British composers including Rogers, Williams, Barnes, Kinder, Fletcher, and Archer. Simpson Gives Ordan Recital Perjury Charge Against Witness May Save Bruno ... Governor Hoffman Say Hauptmann Facts Are Being Suppressed by Lawyers Explorer Faces the Unknown He added that prosecutors are "making a studied effort" to suppress facts favorable to Hauptmann who is under sentence to die the week of March 30 for the murder of Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr. Trenton, N.J., Feb. 24—(UP)-Gov. Harold G. Hoffman charged tonight that a prosecution witness committed a punishment against Rinko Richard Haunstein. Tonight Hauptmann's chances of escaping death seemed brighter than they have been in two months. He seemed to realize that himself for this afternoon he had been in the house of the death house and said, "Hauptmann is more cheerful." The man whom Hoffman accused of lying on the Fleming witness stand is Millard Whited, a slow spoken loger from the Jersey hills who cannot read well and who probably cannot define the word "perjury." Whited swore—at the extrication hearing in the Bronx and at the Fleming trial—that he saw Haippman. "I have seen him here," home just prior to the kidnapping. it was on White's testimony Hoffman contended that Haippman was extraordinarily good. Mrs. Hauptmann Can Acuse but tonight, Mrs. Anna Hauptmann merely was waiting a nod from her lawyer to swear out a curse in the matter, and she will challenge the legality of everything that has hap- tened to Hauptmann since he was extradited from the Bronx, New York, and brought to New Jersey to be tried Last week Whited was taken into Hoffman's office and questioned. Today the governor told why. A member of the Byrd Antarctic Expedition holds aloft a light to guide his path around such bottomless pits as are portrayed here. Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd will give an illustrated lecture tomorrow evening in the Charles Darwin Institute and numerous peril encountered by his brave band of explorers. Witness Has Been Lying "I did not question this man upon whose identification Hauptmann was brought back from the Bronx to stand trial in New Jersey because I thought he was not telling me truth but being told him that I wrote record shows that he was lying. On April 26, 1932, he gave to the state police a signed statement in which he said he had never seen any suspicious persons in the woods or in the vicinity of the Lindbergh home. He also stated that Oct. 6, 1934, after having been repeatedly shown photographs of Hauptmann and having been promised payment and a part of the reward, he went to the Bronx County Jail and identified Hauptmann as the suspect of the Lindbergh home prior to March 1, 1932. "I have both signed statements in my possession. The alibi boys may try to hatch this off but if these records were not given, the trial is given by Whited at the Flemington trial are not significant, then I do not know just what is important in this Should perjury charges be filed against Whitted it would open up two possibilities—Hoffman could convene the Court of Pardons for reconsideration of the case or Hauptmann's lawyers could ask for a new trial. LAWSON WILL BE SPEAKER AT K. U. DAY CELEBRATION Dean Paul B. Lawson will make a talk on "Insects, Friends and Foes" at the celebration of K. U. Day in Kansas City by the Chamber of Commerce and its local branch at the host Hotel. The celebration is sponsored by Lyle Stevenson, and the people in Kansas City who are interested in natural history and the possibility of a Natural History Museum there. The University of Kansas offers a program. The members are: Ross Robertson, c37; bass, Claude Dorsey, c4c; burt, Martin Wright, fa37, second tenor; and Roy Finley, c37. They will sing two numbers: "Dedication" by Franz and "John Wick." Claude Dorsey will sing a solo, "Ringers" by Lohr. Lucile Wagner, fa36, will be the accompanist. Peace Meeting Is a Failure Anderson Band To Play at Varsity Preston Anderson and his 14-piece band will furnish the music for the recital. The band is headed by this Will be Anderson's first mid-week appearance. The amateur program will be continued with the Sig Ep fraternity and a sorority whose name will be announced later, providing the entertainment. Italians Are Against Armx Limitation Because of Sanctions London, Feb. 24- (UP) Italian delegates dealt a possibly fatal blow to the World Naval Arms Limitation Conference today. Bluntly they told the British delegation their government is not interested in naval arms agreement until the League of Nations sanctions against Iran will be imposed, and fleet re-inforcements have been withdrawn from the Mediterranean. The Italian move follows recent similar action by France in informing Britain that enforcement of any new naval treaty must be contingent upon conclusion of a western European air path and other safeguards for French security. The Palans revealed their attitude officially for the first time in a two-hour conference with the British naval conference delegates at the Admiralty Hope for a four-power agreement as a result of the Naval Conference which has been proceeding since Dec. 9. The meeting is in the face of the Italian position. Freshman Council Wants Representation on M.S.C Political Leaders Express Satisfaction with New Proposals the freshman council, under the tutelage of Pachacamac and Progressive Student Government League party leaders, has finally decided to vote on a class representation on the Mera's Student Council. At a meeting last night addressed by Sol Lindenbaum and Ross Robertson, the council appointed committees to approach the inner council of both parties and sound out partisan opinion on the issue. Don Henry, chairman of the council has been striving all year to achieve representation, and Robertson and Lindenbaum have showed him a number of proposals whereby both freshman and sophomore classes will have voting representatives. At present, all members are von-士oring members of the MSC, Phil Buizk is freshman president, and Phil Raup heads the sophomores. The most feasible plan, according to Robertson, would be merely to award the council vote to the two presidents, and this would not change the situated situation which might involve changing the whole council setup. The constitution of the MSC provides for a specified number of members, but this would not require an athletic representative and two additional college representatives not provided for. This would obviate the necessity of altering the constitution which now requires members to show their support. Robertson also pointed out that the whole council membership could be elected by proportional representation, but said this might result in a lower number of members. Due to their larger number, another proposal would award a certain number of representatives to each school, as appropriate, with the assistance of the sophomores. But both Robertson and Lindenbaum agreed that the simplest plan would be to continue electing the freshman president in the fall and the sophomore president from the freshman class in the spring, and give them both their positions. They would also alter the constitution to suit their requirements, members of the freshman council said they would be ready to submit their plan to all the men students at the general election to be held later. Party leaders said that in the absence of any formal decision by the legislature certain that both parties would support the measure. KANSAS ALUMNI IN HAWAII HOLD KANSAS DAY BANQUET University of Kansas alumni and ex-Kansas now living in Honolulu, Hawaii, observed Kansas Day Jum. 29 with a banquet, wearing sunflower corsages and swapping tall stories about Kansas heroes. Ralph Cole, fs1',192, served as toast-master, and read a congruential radiogram from Gov. Al F M. Landon, which was sent collect. Among the speaker was one by Col. Ada G. Clarke, 197 who spoke of Kansas man's history. College Officials Visit Campus Couch Hugo Otokapil, wrestling coach, and Merle Rose, financial secretary at lowe State college, where she pursues his minor and spent a short time with F. C. Allen, director of athletics. Dr. Anna Strong, Communist Editor, To Address Forum Soviet Journalist To Speak On 'Dictatorship and Democracy in U.S.S.R.' Since 1921, Dr. Strong has been an organizer and journalist in Russia, where she helped found the "News," to be published in English "in the Soviet." Dr. Anna Louise Strong, associate editor of the "Moscow Daily News," will speak on "Dictatorship and Democracy in the Soviet Union," at the sixth Student Forum of the W.S.G.A. on Friday at 8 p.m. in Fraser theater. Has Written Several Books She also helped found an organize the John Reed Commune and the American Educational Workshops, which became the first watch factory in Russia. Although at first her work in launching these projects seemed doomed to failure, a half-hour conference with Joseph Stalin, Russia's ironman, and the museum established them. It was after this conference that Dr. Strong decided definitely to remain in the U.S.S.R. Has Written Several Books The author of numerous articles and books, including "Change Worlds," "Russia Conqueres Wheat," and "China's Millions." Born a minister's daughter, Dr. Strong attended three colleges in the United States and traveled abroad. When she returned, she became interested in welfare work, later becoming a journalist in New York and serving as the "Seattle Union Record." It was then that she engaged in the Seattle general strike. To Russia as Correspondent Lincoln Stiefina, author and liberal, urged her to go to Russia, where she acted as correspondent for the Heart papers and as a relief worker. During the 1821 famine she strove to aid the children, especially a colony of starving children. Her idea of bringing the American and British engineers and tourists into close relationship with the Russians in their hometowns, she made a Russian-American club. When the club failed for lack of support, she realized her original idea by founding the English-speaking "Moscow News." She conducted weekly which later became a daily. Three years ago she married Noel Shubin, an investigator for the U.S.S.R. Students Go To Conference Christian Movement Has Religious Meeting at Bethel College Nine representatives of the University of Kansas YWCA, YMCA, and MCA attended the Student Christian Movement in New York and Bethel college in Newton, Kan. Two hundred thirty delegates from colleges throughout Kansas participated in the conference. Representing the University's organizations were Nancy Calhoun, c.36; Dorothy Hodge, c.37; Virginia Hardesty, c.37; Matthew Peterson, c.37; Bethish Pittman, c.37; Michael Schoenig, c.5; F. Walker, secretary of W.C.W.A.; William Fuson, c'unel, and David AngVEine, c'.98. William Fuson and Dorothy Hodge were on the panel discussions of "Religion in the Colleges"? Frisby evening. were on Sunday afternoon to Lawrence. TAU SIGMA FINAL TRYOUTS WILL BE TONIGHT IN GYM Tut Sigma will hold final tryouts tonight at 7:30 o'clock in Robinson gymnasium. The following girls are asked to enter: Jessica Emerger, Beth Walter, Bette Wasson, Margaret Simmons, Charline Barber, and Mary Ellen DeMotte. Any girls who wish to try out are also in position to chance they will have this semester. Reba Corbitt and Arleen Irvine were elected to Tau Sigma after their solo-tryouts last week. Sell Tickets for Show Torch chapter of Mortar Board is sponsoring the current picture at the Granada theater, entitled "Petrified Forest," which stars Leslie Howard and Bette Davis. The picture is taken from Leslie Howard's famous stage play of the same name. The supporting cast includes Genevieve Tobin, Humphrey Bogart, and Dirk Fronk. It is directed by Mortar Board and alumni members are selling tickets at the same price as at the ticket office. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS ≈ Comment TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 25. 1930 Coming of Age And we have to listen to it! During a recent radio address Father Coughlin, Detroit's radio priest, brought out the following facts concerning John J. O'Connor, chairman of the House rules committee. "O'Connor is a servant of the money changers. He is deliberately imbuiding members of the House into striking men in order to force a vote on the Frazer-Lemke inflation bill calling for $3,000,000 in new money. O'Connor was listening to the broadcast and when he heard this thundering charge his Irish blood took charge of the situation and immediately caused him to telegraph Coughlin. "You're a disgrace to my church. Come to Washington and I'll personally kick you down Pennsylvania Avenue with your clerical garb and all your ill-gotten Wall street silver." The whole dispute which arises out of Coughlin's support of the bill and O'Connor's strangle hold on it due to his position as chairman of the House rules committee is a childish and utterly inane mixture of petty political jealousies. This case is not the only offender. There are hundreds of others all arising out of the same type of situation. By just such cases as the one above, however, is shown the fact that our political leaders have not as yet proved they can rise above personalities, and until they do, these happenings will continue. We, as students of this University, are just about ready to vote on the issues and men of our times. What do we see, concrete platforms and men worthy of their positions of trust? No, we a great battle of petty personalities and equally petty issues. We find all this and yet for our own advancement we can do nothing but conform. A Kansas State college student specializing in poultry husbandry has succeeded in getting a hen to lay an egg with a written note inside. This is a novel achievement, but most of us have had experience with opening eggs which speaker louder than words—Kansas City Kansan. Alfred E. Smith will be a delegate to the Democratic national convention. Now the question is, will he be a walking delegate?—Kansas City Kansan. America's Youth The future strength of America lies in the potential strength of its youth. The potential strength of its youth depends upon the opportunity that America offers its youth to prepare for the future. Knowing this to be a fact, the federal government, by a special executive order of the President, established the National Youth Administration, whose duty it is to assure young men and women of this country the privilege of preparing themselves for intelligent, useful citizenship. In 1932, there were 23 million young people between the ages of 16 and 24, in the United States. Of this group, 11 million were employed; four million were in high school, and seven million were riding the rods. They were bums, tramps, lawbreakers—victims of an illusive thing called a depression. They were deprived of their just right to prepare themselves for a harmonious existence. They were in their plastic years and were being seriously affected by the adverse conditions they faced. They had nothing real, nothing substantial on which to place their feet. Realizing the gravity of this situation, youth leaders throughout the country began to take steps to get American youth off the freight trains, out of the hobo camps, and into environments that would breed intelligent citizens, not criminals. At first only a few realized the seriousness of youth's position, but slowly the facts were brought to light, presented to the President of the United States and the NYA was evolved with a federal appropriation of 50 million dollars for a working fund. The objects of this organization were to give aid to capable and deserving college and high school students, to provide a plan whereby high school graduates might continue their work at home if they were unable to attend college, to give students an opportunity to do graduate college work, and aid local organizations in providing profitable uses for the leisure time of youth. This year more than 200,000 students will be helped through high school, 120,000 assisted through college, and many others placed in apprentices jobs throughout the country. These facts show the tremendous amount of good which is being done by the NYA movement. Headline in Michigan State News — Dean Mitchell to Tell Truth on Wednesday. We wondered if Mr. Ripley should be notified but the story turned out to be a harmless "faculty opinion of students" affairs. Chapel Hill seems to be continually getting in the news. Now a group is trying to promote a beer dispensing "rathskellar" in the basement of the Y building to provide a meeting place for the faculty club. --- Leap Year Scheme The true believers in leap year rituals are to be praised! It is hoped that there are many of them. It seems that the true believers have the plan whereby if a young man rejects a girl who asks him for a date, he buys her a box of candy to soothe her wounded feelings. This custom is carried on at Drake and might well be accepted here at K. U. In the hope of getting a box of candy, more girls will ask boys for dates to Leap Year functions, more boys can accept (and reject) and the parties will have bigger crowds and make more money. It is a good idea and should work beautifully here. Campus Opinion Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the authors. Contributions length are subject to cutting by the editor. Contributions may be edited or removed. Editor Daily Kansan: It seems there is considerable concern on the part of some students over the dramatic policy at the University. It should be understood that in any field such as, Dramatics, music, art, eic, there is much to be gained from the standpoint of the student in seeing how things should be done. This plain and simple fact has evidently escaped the attention of "An Interested Student" or else he singles out the dramatic department for some private tuition. But he leasls, he should liecritized the Fine Arts school also, as most of the results are by faculty members. It would seem to be unbused that the writer of these previous editorsials was going far afield to find something upon which to take out his dislike of the weather. This is perfectly understandable, however, because there must be something more than dissatisfaction with the weather to warrant his getting his article published. If the Interested Students' with the inferiority complex has been slightly or not having been allowed to display his talents in these productions, I am sure that a student from our school may have his being allowed to be a member of some mob in the wings, or to sit on the "throne" while the play was going on. If his histrionic ability is not better than his discurment, as displayed in his editorial, he will be able to take the lead and be After all, Mr. Craton is directing the department. Δ. Δ Editor, University Daily Kansan: While reading the Daily Kaman last Sunday, the following headline came to my attention: "Farley Lands in California." Although it is not my intention to criticize a paper for its stand on any controversial issue, it is my intention to refer to or point out any misstatement of fact where it is as glaring in the present case. Having heard Mr. Farley's address, no one could say that there was any attack what-so-called on Mr. Landon. It was just an opening statement of the campaign in this debate, which he did not announce more. There was no mud-slinging at the Landon at all. However, as I read the story concerning the address by Mr. Farley, it was evident that the writer of the headline wrote that the Kansas City Star's basis of his incarceration. The Kansas City Star's headline about the address did not give the same interpretation as did the Kanan. In the Star's headline, the following sentence clearly states that the news reports not quite follow the idea as presented by the Kanan. Perhaps this was just an oversight on the part of the writer of that headline, but it has been evident in many cases how wrong a story can be when conform to the story, or give it the wrong interpretation. One such story appeared recently when the report of the court ordered the arrest of Mr. Shapiro. Clark Howerton Vice-president, K.U. Young Democratic Club. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Notices at chancellor's Office at 3 p.m. preceding regular publication days and 11:30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issues. --of educated man. Vol. 33 FEBRUARY 25,1936 CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: The regular meeting of the Christian Science Organization will be held Wednesday morning at 7:55 in Room C of Myers hall. Keith David, President. No.101 EL ATENTO: El Atento tendra una sesión el jueves a las cuatro y media de la tarde. HOUSE PRESIDENTS ASSOCIATION. There will be a meeting of House President at 4:30 today in the Council Room. E. H. Lindley, President. Margarita Osma, Secretaria. PSYCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATION: Students who failed to take Psychological examinations may do so during the exam. QUILL CLUB: Quill Club will meet Thursday, Feb- herry 27 at 3:30 in the W.S.G.A. Lodge. Pledges will be required. Dorothy Lewis, President. Charles Zeskey, President. TAU SIGMA: Tau Sigma will have try-outs and a dance meeting at 7:30 today in Rohman Gymnasium. A. H. Turney. Helen Johnson, President. Y. W.C.A. ASSUMELY: There will be a meeting of the Y.W.C.A. today in Central Administration Auditorium at 4:00. Miss Anna McCrracken will speak. Everyone is urged to come. Nancy Calhoun, President Strange indeed are the ways of college students in restaurants. Witness for example the young man who danced into a Hill cush during the morning rush and called his order to a waiter. "How Do You Like Your Eggs?" "Fine, How Do You Like Yours?" By Bill Rodgers, e'38 "Give me some bacon and eggs," he said. "Fine thanks, how do you like your?" "How do you like your eggs?" the waiter asked. "How do you like your eggs?" "Cooked, fresh, tender, rare," a some of the common rollicking as sweets. Of course such an answer might have been the result of a misunderstanding, yet that simple question, "How do you like your eggs?" brings to mind a lesson in nature than the most popular limerick contest. Campus wuns recognize in it a golden opportunity to display their capricious talent, while even students who appear in the intellectually above them give way before its mystic appeal. "Fired in deep grease six weeks after they hatch," is a reply calculated to panic everyone within hearing except the youngest. "They do not unfortunately individuals possess not the slightest trace of humor in their makeup, and are apt to be thrown into a state of ruld hysteria by such humiliating answers to such a simple question." Perhaps there is a legitimate doubt in the minds of some students regarding the preparation of their food, but certainly there is no doubt in the mind of waiters after a certain sorrow woman orders. "I want coffee," she says each morning, "and I don't want it cold. I want water." She uses it when it burns. I want orange juice instead of water in it. I want a package of cigarettes and I don't want to wait for them. Stash is the ultimatum. What can we do with it? Perhaps the strangest question asked of a waiter in any Hill cafe, other than what is coco cola and is coco cola r Even worse than the dominant female and the egg funsters are the students who answer "Yes," when asked, "Milk, tea or coffee?" By such an answer they leave everyone concerned, included in an agitated state of excitement. In a jeopardizing their chance of getting even one of the drinks mentioned. Hollywood Film Shop --of educated man. Hollywood. — (UIP) — Although the rhythmic gymnastics of Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire look easy, both say it's the hardest kind of work. "Dancing," said Astaire after the team's latest picture, "Follow the Fleet," was completed, "it's more than 95 pen pens," and just about 100 per cent hard work." His red-haired partner agreed. "It's just work to me," she said. "You don't see me dancing for recreation. I don't like it that well." However, the premise dance team of the screen, isn't averse to the hard work required for its art. It all has compensated by the weekly play checks are delivered. "It takes hard work to make a success of professional dancing," explains a student who has a great deal to do with it is wrong, as far as an inspiration—a dance is good if it appears to be inspired, but inspiration had nothing to do with making it that good. "I sometimes even practice a few steps after the picture goes into production and we're supposed to be all done with practicing and conserving our strength for the grand workout before the camera," he says. Sines the slightly bald member of Rogues and Astirc, in abandoned the workshop to represent the reputation as a hard worker. Not once during the many weeks of rehearsal required for a few minutes of dancing on him did he protest the rigid workout. Despite Astaire's somewhat trite formula for success, he has a few other attributes that have something to do with his role as his dance director, Mark Sandrik. "Even holidays don't give me much of a chance to rest," Astrazi continued. "If so happened that on the last Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Years, I had to put in several hours of work because I had to paint the final polish as the picture progressed." "In the first place, he literally was born with rhythm in his soul. Then he has a flair for acting and possesses inherent talent as a comedian. "Fred is one of the hardest workers I have ever known," Sandick says, "but it has taken a lot more than hard work to make him the star he is today." "All the training and hard work in the world couldn't have given him what he possesses without the foundation of natural talent." But the most impossible situation developed after a charming young woman demanded a recital of all the sand-wiches available at the moment. A menu was given to her. She scornfully cast it aside. "Do you have chicken salad?" she asked. 1. Pick the water question. "Don't you have any dark?" the student asked. 400, resulted from the innocent query "What kind of beer do you serve?" "Yes," the waiter replied. "Is it fresh?" "Well, what does it taste like?" "Chicken salad," the waiter answered. "Yes." "Is there any veal in it?" "No." "Oh, a wise guy," the charming young woman answered with great indignation, and floomed out of the establishment. Yes indeed. Strange are the ways of educated man. A ROCK -- -- CHALKLETS Conducted by J. M. Subbie was the idea that placed the announcement of forum address by the editor of the Moscow Daily News on red cardboard. The sand on the sidewalks for which we were so grateful several days ago is most irritating now, grinding under the pavement, and then bumping into floor, or getting into one's shoes. We daresay it warmed the cookies of Uncle Jimmy's heart to know that the areas are again rolling on the steps of Green hall after a hard, cold winter. Cats may have nine lives, but over in Germany the other day they sentenced an old murderer to twelve death penalties. Dr. Naismith Prayed for His Salary in '96 "Wanted: A coach who can pray." This, in essence, is the type of inquiry that brought Dr. James A. Naismith to the University of Kansas In the early days of athletics at the University, coaching was not a full-time job, so it was the custom to engage a coach who, in addition to his duties in the athletic department, could lead the student body in prayer at the daily chapel presided, Hector Cowan filled this position for several years, and when he left, Fielding H. Yest, not coach at Michigan, was consid- About this time Dr. Snow, then Chancellor of the University, was in Chicago, and told A. A. Stagg of his need. Stagg remembered Dr. Natmith, with whom he had played football at the university, and recommended him for the job. In the years that followed, athletes grew in importance to the extent that a full-time coach was hired. Dr. Nainaith was assigned to the physical education department, but continued in capacity as prayer leader for some time. And so it was that Dr. James A Nalmi, praying coach, inventor of basketball, came to the University of Kan- St. Paul.—(UP)—Cared a co-ed in the "gay nineteen" was an intriguing task according to a copy of regulations in Hammel University, St. Paul, m. 1890. Strict Regulations Rigidly Encircled Student In 'Gay Nineties' Hamline adopted co-education de- severe criticism and its board members sternly set up some "rules, mong which were the following: "Ladies and gentlemen will not be permitted to take walks or drives together and must not seek opportunity for private conversation. "All communications, such as whispering, using signs, passing notes, books, etc., is forbidden during school exercises." "Gentlemen will use the doors and staircases at the western end of the university building, and the ladies those at the eastern end. "Gentlemen and ladies must not visit other's rooms. Russian Museum Solves Painting Mystery By Restoration Job "Ladies will not be permitted to receive calls without the permission of the preceptress. No callers will be received on Sunday." Leningrad—(UP) -A master job of restoring by the Russian Museum cleared up the mystery of a valuable painting recently received here. An expert was ordered to get to work. He delicately removed the top layer of paint and found under it an Eighteenth Century painting. Continued research uncovered a work of the Seventeenth Century beneath the Eighteenth Century drawing. When the icon "Baptism" arrived at the museum, officials were doubtful as to its exact age because of conflicting identification. The style of painting and clothing of the Nineteenth Century, but the wood used belonged to an earlier period. Under the rules, "ladies" and "gentlemen" were free to come and go as they liked, provided they kept up with each other's rooms, between 3 p.m. and 4 p.m., on Saturday and on Monday until evening study hours, which began at 7 p.m. WOMEN SHOW ENTHUSIASM FOR MANLY ART OF FENCIN Cambridge, Mass. — (UP) – Women seem to be taking up the “gentleman’s” sport of fencing which is lunging forward in leaps and bounds in college and schools in Greater Boston; its name Peroy, Harvard fencing imitates Rene Peroy. Not satisfied with these achievements, the expert peeled another layer of paint and revealed the original icon, painted by Andrey Rubley, famous Russian icon artist, who did his greatest work at the end of the Fifteenth Century. Besides Harvard, other colleges taking the sport are aid, Bradford Girl's School and University for Physical Education, several other girls' schools and Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The Boston Y.W. also has started giving institutions. "When I first came to Harvard there were only a few men who practiced 25c 'til 7 --- Shows 3-7-9 GRANADA "The Petrified Forest" ENDS TONITE LESLIE HOWARD BETTE DAVIS Plus—Mickey Mouse Todd and Kellie Comedy Latest News Events 2 DAYS ONLY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY One of the Greatest Mysteries of the Stage, on the Screen. A Quivering Night of Crime and Love in Spooky Baldpate Inn! "Seven Keys To Baldpate" GENE RAYMOND MARGARET CALLAHAN And Big All Star Cast Also — Our Gang Comedy "West Point of the South"Latest News Events FRIDAY - SATURDAY FRIDAY - SATURDAY Ann Harding - Herbert Marshall "THE LADY CONSENTS" SUNDAY Harry Richman - Rochelle Hudson "THE MUSIC GOES ROUND" University Daily Kansan OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS AREY VALENTINE ASSOCIATE EDITORS ASSOCIATE EDITORS BILL, GILL ... ALMA ERAZIER MANAGING EDITOR PRINT M. HARRIS, JE. BUSINESS MANAGER O. FOUNDTAN BURKINS Campus Editee Bill Ruddens Make Up Editors Dana Holloway Bill Dowles Bill Ruddens News Editor Denise Lynch News Editor Denise Lynch Today Edition Zaren De Klangman STAFF Boston, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Papered Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday meetings during school holidays by students in the department of Journalism of the University from the Press of the Department of Journalism. As well as exhibitors national advertising representatives NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE, Inc. 420 Madison Avenue, New York City Chicago, Illinois, San Francisco, Los Angeles Subscriptions price, per year. $7.00 cash in advance, $3.25 on payments. Simple register. Seat. fencing. But with a university fencing teacher from whom the student could easily secure his coaching, students could also to show interest in large numbers. CAN'T SMOKE A PIPE? THEN YOU NEVER SMOKED A United in record time March, September 17 910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas. CAN'T SMOKE A PIPE? THEN YOU NEVER SMOKED A FILTER-COOLED Frank MEDICO (PATENTED) This simple apparently easy-to-use filtration filter in aluminum filter plume exterior and coating shell of plastic exterior and ink RECOMMENDED BY MILLIONS OF USERS The Pipe Filter that Really Filters PATEE WED. - THUR. KAY JOHNSON IAN HUNTER And Alain Clemente voa do la Roche's 81000 Prize novel "JALNA" Connolly - Novelty BANK NITE WEDNESDAY BERIC VON STROHEM "THE COME OF GREED" and WALKING THE NITT FARM" ENDS TONITE ALL SHOWS 10c ALL SEATS Sub-Zero Weather Calls for CHILI 10c at the Union Fountain --- HERE'S THE FRIEND A feller needs HERE'S THE FRIEND A feller needs BRIGGS PIPE MIXTURE WITH A FELLER NEEDS A FRIEND 15¢ © P. Lowland Co., Ltd. BRIGGS PIPE MIXTURE WHEN A FELLER NEEDS A FRIEND 15¢ © P. Lenthard Co., Ltd. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 25, 1936 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE K Hill Society BEFORE 5 P.M. CALL K.U. 25; BETWEEN 7:30 AND 9 P.M. CALL 2701K3 OR 2702K3. Sigma Alpha Epsilon entertained the following with a buffet supper Sunday night: Ann Jeffords, c;嗅; Charles Hay, c;39 Bettie Wasson, c;38 Glenda Speakman, c;38 Elizabeth Hannah, c;83 Helen Snowley, c;36 Dorothy Kennedy, c;39 Ruth Ether Purdy, c;37 Claire Connelly, c;嗅; Mary Markham, fa;39 Chestnut, c;39 Maxine Laughlin, fa;38 Maxine Turme; Lucelle Betton, c;38 Robert Mitchell, town; c;37 Alden Duncan, c;39 Helen Miller, c; and Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Reeder, of Kansas City. Signa Nu held initiation services Sunday for the following: Robert William, c; 230; Harlan Shores, c; uncle; David Young, c; 238; Richard Jones, c; uncle; John Hoover, c; uncle; Richard Newlin, c; 39; Mark Dubach, c; Keith Deay, c; 39; Paul Lomnerchuck, c; 39; Paul McMullen, c; 39; Lambert Libel, c; Richard Bear, c; 39; Larry Calkins, c; and Charles Henderson, c. The marriage of Miss La Vetta Madden, fa daughter of Mr. and W. M. H Madlen, Overbook, to Oscar Lemuel Cox took place Sunday at the home of the Rev. C. L. Nellis, minister of the Friends church, Lawrence. Mr. and Mrs. Cox left for a short wedding trip from 922 Kentucky. Mrs. Cox has been employed in the office of Gorill and Aberts, attorneys. ☆ ☆ ☆ Sigma Chi announces the initiation of William James, b'37; Harry O'Riley, c'38; Charles Godfrey, c'39; Bayerin Yates, b'40; John DeLuca, c'39; Harry Young, c'39; Frank Wilson, c'39; Hugh T. Jones, c'39; Morton Jones, c'39; James Porter, c'41; Forrest Harden, c'38; Croft Braunning, c'38; Don Worthington, c'38; c'unt; and Harold Talafaro, c'28. ☆ ☆ ☆ The following alumni were present to the Sigma Nu initiation Sunday; Dr. Edward Hashinger, Paul J. Parker, and Ralph Wells, of Kansas City; Grant Harrington, founder of the local chapter, Prof. J. J. Wheeler, Farell Strawn, James Campbell, R. M. "Ding" Williams, and James Terry, of Kansas City; Mo; Carl Metner, and Edward Maskorn, of Topka. The following were guests Sunday at the initiation dinner given by the Sigma Chi fraternity. Mr. D. E. Blanchard, of Lee Angeles, Calif.; Clayton Huron, of Santa Monica and Henry Bocky, of Porto Rico. Dr. John Henry, Lawrence; Judge Price, Orange City; Laurence Woodrush, assistant professor of entomology; Paul Benson, of Tulsa, Okla.; Mike BillEhlsrue, of Jaffa, Idaho; Peter Pickles, Lenorice, of Murray, Idaho; City, Mo. KU Alpha Ci Oi Omega held initiation services Saturday for Margaret Lockard, c³9, Elcaran Klappbann, c³9, Armna Kuchier Kirche, c³8, Betty Bemy, Betty Bemy, Mary DeFew, c³9, Grace Valentine, Mary Dew, c³9, Betty Aine, c³ucl, Janet-Jane --- Try Our 25c MEAL Ham Loaf or Steak Potatoes or a Vegetable Salt Pie or Ice Cream Coffee or Milk UNIVERSITY DINING ROOM In the Union Building ☆ ☆ ☆ uary, c'39, Virginia Wallace, c'uncl, Margaret Whiteford, c'uncl, and Nellie In the ☆, ☆ ☆ Alpha Delta Pi entertained the new initiates with a formal dinner, Sunday. The following were also guests: Mrs. Ed Butler, Kansas City, Kam; Mrs. L.B. Krause, LaCroze, Kan; Mrs. Orley Smith, Lawrence; Mrs. Ozair Wattlege, Topeka; and Wilma Tuttle, 35, and Eileen Baird, 36, both of Kansas City. Weekend guests at the Delta City house included Norman Smith, 33, of Kansas City, Mo. Co., Cole Coffman, in Topeka, Etnie Pte. 34, Wichita,巾 and Mrs. Antonio Ondria, N. M. Ono, and M. Onoto, all of Kansas City, Mo. ☆ ☆ ☆ The following were dinner guests at the Delta Upsion house Sunday; Mary Deppe, c'39; Nellie O'Brien, c'39; Eleanor Khlppenbach, c'39; Ebel Seme, c'37; Lida Allene Brown, c'1m; Mr. Lloyd Houston, and Mrs. Watson. Mr. R, D. D. Armstrong, Scott City; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Carruth, Topeka; and Helen Calhahan, GT, were dimer at the Kappa Alpha Thea house. ☆ ☆ ☆ Mr. and Mrs. C, A. Little, Kansas City, Mo., Moe, Hannah, Junction City, Mary Ellen DeMottio, cured, and Mary Elen DeMottio, at the Kappa Gamma house. Mary Rose Barrones, 25, reared in Kansas City, Mo., and educated musically in both the United States and Canada. She graduated from Harmonic Halloreme April 2 and 3. Alpha Delta Pi announces the engagement of Kathleen Teagarden, c37, to Norman Smith of LaCygnne, Kan. Mr Smith was formerly a student at the University and a member of Delta Chi Intrinity. Dr. Dietrich Zwieler, German exchange student, was guest speaker Sunday night at the forum meeting in the Church of the Church in Jerusalem on spoke at the "Church in Germany." ☆ ☆ ☆ Kappa Phi, Methodist sorority, will have a covered dish surver at 1299 Tennessee this evening from 5:30 to 6:45 on cabinet and pledge meeting at 7 p.m. ☆ ☆ ☆ Sigma Chi announces the engagement of Ernest Sturgison, c36, Dodge City, to Suzanne Vergie Fleming, also of Dodge City. The Entomology Club held initiation services yesterday for Imogene Beamer, c'37; Jean Russell, c'37; and Henry Thomas, gr. ☆ ☆ ☆ Florence Olson, Bonner Springs, and Miri Dumms, Topeka, were guests Saturday at the Kappa Alpha Theta house. ☆ ☆ ☆ Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority announces the pledging of Balayne Paych, c3 and Ambara Russell, c'unc. ☆ ☆ ☆ Wayne Clover, c39, and Harold L. Blake, 21, were dinner guests at the Kappa Sigma Iraternity Sunday. Prof. and Mrs. Robert Taft entertained with a dinner Sunday at the Terrace tea room. Marion Whiteford, and Mable Harrity, Topeka, were weekend guests at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house. Kathryn Springer, '35, of Kansas City, Mo., is a guest at the Alpha Delta Pi house. Alpha Chi Omega will entertain with an hour dance Tuesday evening for the Delta Chi fraternity. YOUNG REPUBLICAN CLUB WILL MEET HERE THURSDAY Delta Chi Housemother Is III Mrs. L. C. Harris, housemother at the Delta Chi fraternity, has been ill with a severe cold for the past week. The University Young Republican's Club will hold its first meeting of the spring semester Thursday, 7:30 p.m., in room of the tournamen building. According to the leaders of the organization, this meeting will be the most important of the year. The membership campaign will be officially begin and the entire program will be put for the remainder of the semester. KFKU --p.m. Snow Zoology Club initiation, 201 Snow.5:30 p.m. --p.m. Snow Zoology Club initiation, 201 Snow.5:30 p.m. February 25-Tuesday 2:30 p.m.-Mental Health Book II Mea. Joseph King 2:45 p.m.—Books Old and New, Mr. Kenneth Rockwell Campus Calendar 6:00 p.m.-Athletic Scrapbook, 139th Edition, Prof. E. R. Elbel. Tuesday, February 25 Y. W.C.A. assembly for all interested women, Ad. Aud., 4:30 p.m. Kenneth Rockwell. Cambridge, 1991. Theta Sigma Phi, alumni - active dutch lunch, Sky Parlor, 6 p.m. College Faculty meeting, 222 Ad., 4:30 p.m. Sigma Eta Chi, 1498 Kentucky, 5:15 p.m. Botany Club meeting, 1134 Louisiana, 7:30 p.m. Tau Sigma, Robinson gym, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, February 26 W.S.G.A. tea, women's lounge Ad. 3-5 p.m. Admiral Byrd lecture, University Aud. 8:20 p.m. Circle Français, 206 Frazier, 4:39 p.m. Mid-week varsity, Memorial Union, n.m. Chemistry Club, 201 Chemistry building, 4:30 p.m. Thursday, February 27 El Ateneo, 113 Ad., 4.30 p.m. Kappa Psi, Memorial Union, 7.30 p.m. Quill Club, Women's lounge Ad., 7:30 pm. Thursday, February 27 Fine Arts student recital, Ad. Aud. 3:30 p.m. Friday, February 25 Swimming meet: Kansas vs. Nebraska at Lincoln. Saturday; February 25 Basketball: Kansas vs. Nebraska at Lincoln. Sigma Nu party, Eldridge hotel, 6-12 p.m. Swimming meet: Kansas vs. Kansas State at Manhattan Saturday, February 29 Psychological examination make-up 115 Fraser, 9:30 p.m. Leap Year Varsity, Memorial Union 9-12 p.m. FASHION - Are you looking for a touch of individual distinction in your clothing? Then select a dress from Nanette. N anette's feature price is $7.99 — seems hard to believe, but stop in and see and listen to her dress values awaits you there! --- CLASSIFIED ADS PHONE K.U.66 NANETTE OVER THE BOOK NOOK Phone 511 1021 Mass. LOST AND FOUND MISCELLANEOUS FOR HEALTHS TRANS ROLLER SKATE, 729 Massachusetts. The world's most thrilling sport. Clean fun for clean people. 102 Student Loans ABE WOLFSON 743 Mass. FOR SALE FOR SALE. Our home at 1115 Louis- land with furniture. Shown by ap- pointment. Telephone 173. Florence M. Hodder. 100 TAXI TAXI Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S — 920-22 Mass. One Stop Clothes Service Station TAILOR SCHULZ THE TAILOR 924 Mass. PHONE K.U.66 BEAUTY SHOPS LOST. A black, block, pearl inlaid Sheafer fountain pen, Friday morning, between 12:30 and 1:40 e'clock en route to the Rose Garden. Reward. Not Reward. Not Reschedules. -101 SPECIAL----50c reduction on any per- manent, with this ad, except Saturday. Permanents $1.50 to $5.00, complete with hair cut. IVANS BEAUTY SHOPS, 732% Mass., Phone 2333; 9411% Mass. Phone 833. PALACE BEAUTY SHOP 25c Finger Wave 25c Four doors south of Journal-World Ph. 282 Five expert operators Ph. 282 ROOMS FOR RENT APARTMENT. Two room apartment, nicely furnished, available now. Garage for rent. 121 Tennessee. —102. FOR RENT. To boys, very desirable rooms in modern home. Single or double. Reasonable rates. 1301 Vermont. Phone 127. — 101. FOR ERENT TO BOYS: One large double room with oak floors, in quiet modern room, suitable for sleeping room or apartment. 1132 Ohio. Phone 2982M. --- Twenties four words or less: one insertion, 52r; three insertions, 82r; six insertions, 762r contain rates, not more than 25 words, 18r per month. Fiat is advantage in advance and late for the Tencent deal, with no restrictions. -103 ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP U may be snowed in now BUT we know U will need good shores repair very soon. Remember to cover them with a blanket. ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP 1017 Mass, W. E. Whestone, Prop. Phone 686 OF RICH, RIPE-BQDIED TOBACCO—"IT'S TOASTED" Luckies - a light smoke STELLA MCCARTNEY Lurikis Banana Tree Luckies are less acid Excess of Acidity of Other Popular Brands Over Lucky Strike Cigarettes Excess of Acidity of Other Popular Brands Over LuckyStrike Cigarette BALANCE LUCKY STRIKE BRAND B BRAND C BRAND D CENTER LEAVES The top leaves of all tobacco plants tend to give a definitely harsh, alkaline taste. The bottom leaves tend to acidity in the smoke. It is only the center leaves which approach in nature the most palatable acid-alkaline balance. In LUCKY STRIKE Cigarettes the center leaves are used. LUCKIES ARE LESS ACIDI Recent chemical tests show that other popular brands have an excess of acidity over Lucky Strike of from 5% to 100%. *RESULTS VERIFIED BY INDEPENDENT CHEMICAL LABORATORS AND RESEARCH GROUPS LUCKY STRIKE TO RUINED CIGARETTES LUCKY STRIKE "IT'S TOASTED"-Your throat protection-against irritation against cough ONE O'CLOCK Copyright 1938, The American Tobacco Company « Mid-Winter JAYHAWKER Out Today » W.S.G.A. BOOK EXCHANGE PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 25. 1936 Lindsey Calls Men To Begin Practice Monday Afternoon Stadium Equipment Room Will Be Open To Allow Checking Out of Uniforms With the return of warmer weather Coach Adair Lindsey and his football team will start to look seriously toward the start of the season, break in the weather has come in sufficient time to allow the constant winds to dry the surface of the ground enough If the temperature and other conditions remain favorable, the football squad will be ready to go next Monday, March 2. In case the conditions are unfavorable for outdoor practice, callisthenies and other forms of training will be carried on inside. After practice it on started, sessions will be held five days a week in rain or shine. Chalk talks will be hel in the stadium on bad days. Many universities follow the plan of having the freshmen from the year before report to practice a week earlier than when they receive the former year's squad. The University of Kansas, however, will have its letterment report at the same time as its freshman. The present plan is to have them attend a summer camp and experience help drill the new men. During the afternoons on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday of this week, the stadium equipment rooms will be open to allow players to check out and try or play games. The stadium will also be have his outfitted and ready to swing into practice at 4 p.m. Monday. Practice during the first week will be taken up by the teaching of fundamentals, the shift used by Kansas, and most of the plays to be used. Considerable time will be devoted to scrimmages. For the purposes of competition, the squad will be divided up into three groups—a blue, a red, and a white. Each team have a few substitutes, and will play against each other on different days. The scrimagems are mainly for the purpose of finding kickers and passer to replace Fred Harris and Tom McCall lost from the team by graduation. Coach Lindsey repeats, "I want to new material when practice time laps around on Monday. I don't care if the team wins or loses, but he wishes to play football. I want him to report for practice and he will be given an excellent chance to make good Positions on the team are wide open and I have been able to work has been out for football' before or not.' --an intramural wrestling tournament will be held starting tonight and continuing through Thursday. Each organization may enter three men in each of the following weight classes: 121, 128, 138, 158, 168, 178, heavyweight. Men's Intramurals All men competing must have been certified by a physical examination at the hospital. Those members of the freshman wrestling squad are eligible, but no other members of any varsity squad may compete. Wrestling schedule for today: 121 Pounds D. Harwood, Kapga Sig, v. C. Roberson, Kapga Sig, v. C. Roberson, Deltk, v. X. Hamilton, Phi Psi, KCatten, unatt, vt, J. Alderdler Kapga Sig, 86; S. Aimworth, Phi Psi 128 Pounds J. Gleisner, Phi Gam, v. L. Combs, Phi Pai, 7:65; H. Nixon, Phi Delt, bye; J. Nottingham, Theta Tu, w. D. Sikhan- Choi, Ghc, v. L. Covelace, Ghc, V. Koehler, Theta Tu, v. B. Marshall, Beta, 7:20; D. Baskett, Phi Delt, v. M. Lemone, A.gam, 7:28; W. M. Russell, Phi Gam, v. M. Russell, Theta Tu, 7:30. 138 Pounds A. Eghert, Kapsig Sag, v. McKeenow, Beta; E Alter, D u.拜e; Mizo, Beta; E Alter, D u.拜e; Mizo, Delt;拜e; F Barbee, Beta, v. E.Heter, Beta; E Alter, D u.拜e; Mizo, Beta; K Swinnett, Schiwarc, Chi,拜e; E Paree, unatt, v. D.Kame, Beta, Beta; K Swinnett, Schiwarc, Chi,拜e; H Brown, Ph. Gam, v. D.Kame, Delt;5.50; L. Barbee, S A E.拜e; H, Delt;5.50; L. Barbee, S A E.拜e; Pole; 5:10; Caldwell, P K.A.拜e; P. Cole, Theta Tau,拜e; H.Fulleton, Beta; L. Caldwell, S A E; 5:15, Nessly, Beta. 148 Pounds Leon Henderson, Phi Delt, vs. Lami, Mtla Tha'i, S. Steel 10; Pi Vi, ps. v. Nicholson, Beta, 4:05; B Wilkins, Pi Vi, ps. v. Wlower, C.Warp Sign, by. White, unatt. v. C. Amyx, unatt. 4:15; B Wilkins, 158 Pounds Fees, Beta, bye; T. Longshore, Theta Tau, bye; M. Maze, S A E, bye; D. Trotter, Phi Delt, bye; H. Lamborn unatt, vt; J. Gamber, Tau tau, at; K. Niese, Nisse, at; O. Otis James, S A E, bye; Farley, Bete, by; Greenleaf, Phi Gam, by; C. Hubbard, Phi Gam, by; J. Thompson, S A E at 5:25 Tau, vt; J. Thompson, S A E at 5:25 Tau, vt; Pi K, bye; U. Bruger, Phi Delt, bye; H. Carlson, Kappa Sig, bye; F. Carlisle, N Hesserod, tau; H. Nesserod, Phi Delt at 5:35 p.m. 168 Pounds B. Bodley, Phi Delt, v. B. Jones, S A E. 5:35; P. Wilbert, Phi Psi, v. Gam, v. B. Stockton, Beta, 5:45; Larsen, Theta Tau, v. C. Pierson, Gam, v. B. Stockton, Beta, 5:45; J graft, Theta Tau, v. L. Fields, Phi js, v. D. Tappan, S A E. 5:55; J graft, Theta Tau, v. L. Fields, Beta, 6:00; J. Becket, Phi Gam, bye; L. Gam, beta, v. C. Murphy, Phi 178 Pounds G. Harrington, Beta, vs. P. Trees G. Harrington, Beta, vs. P. Trees G. Harrington, Beta, vs. P. Trees G. Harrington, Beta, vs. P. Trees G. Harrington, Beta, vs. P. Trees G. Harrington, Beta, vs. P. Trees G. Harrington, Beta, vs. W. Morland Theta Tata, 750. Heavyweight B. McNaughten, Phi Psi, vs. D. Shirk unatt., 8:10; G. Morford, unatt., bye. Displaying a powerhouse defense the Kappa Sigma "B" basketball team limits, in the first half, a rugged game played last night. Bird of Kappa Sigma used vitally all of his trick shots and run off with high scoring homes, capturing 16 points by virtue of their double. In the second game of the evening the Phi Gam's presented a smoothly played game, scoring 32 to 28. Credit is due to a hard working pair of guards on the Phi Gam team, namely Harron and Temley, amouit it was Harwi who was the big winner. The box scores are as follows: A. T. O. 25 | | g ft | f | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Harwi | 5 | 1 1 | | Steiger | 2 | 0 0 | |cket | 4 | 1 0 | | Tunney | 1 | 1 2 | | Harmon | 1 | 1 2 | Totals 14 4 3 G g f t Cough 0 1 Ruchen 2 1 Khlipinger 0 0 Kirbw 0 1 Wilowd 6 0 Wiloww 0 1 Ambrose 1 0 Totals 12 1 Kappa Sig **F"** 27 Bird f1 Bird f2 Gird f3 Lyons 0 1 1 Kimh 0 1 0 Robertson 1 0 0 Allderice 1 0 0 Beg. **12** *E*-1 2 ft. Smith 2 1 ft. Robinson 2 0 Velocite 0 0 Hibbard 0 0 Hibbard 0 1 Murphy 0 0 Totals 13 1 5 Totals 5 2 5 AD LINDSEY IS APPOINTED AD LINDSEY IS APPOINTED LEGION BASEBALL CHAIRMAN Coach Adrian Lindsey has recently been appointed department chairman of the American Legion junior baseball program for Kansas for 1936. The arrangement was made by Preston Dunn of Ekridge department commander. Coach Lindsey has played several seasons of professional baseball, and has previously acted as director of various allied activities. The American Legion conducts this junior baseball program over the entire country each year. Approximately half of the participants were participated in the program in 1935. Zoology Club to Hold Initiation The Zoology club will hold an initiation for members today at 5.30 p.m. in Snow Hill to be present, is requested to be present. Defending Champs Now Occupy Cellar Position Oklahoma and Kansas State Victors in Games of Weekend Saturday night's Big Six basketball games brought disaster to the Iowa State defending champions by putting them in the cellar position. The trembling teams were dislodged by place Ole-Hammons, 42 to 38, puts them both Kansas State and Missouri. Although the fowls State quinnet held a one-point lead at half-time, 19-18, and ran the score to 29-24 in the opening minutes of the second half, the Sooners won by 7 runs. Oklahoma State failed to gain the advantage again at any point in the game. Livingstone, Oklahoma guard recently added to the Sooner team, shared the winner's scoring honors with Connell at the 10th inning. Oklahoma State alone with a total of 14 tallies. Missouri held the lead only in the opening minutes of play, and was unable to bother the Wildcats seriously again until late in the game. During the rough and tumble affair, 31 fools were left with three of them Tigers, left the game Groves raised his scoring position by the addition of a 16-point game. In the Kansas State-Missouri tilt at Columbia, the Wildcats staved off a finishing injury to annex the game, 39-35. The result of this game pushes the Titans into fifth place and pulls the Wildcats into a reasonably safe fourth position. Women's Intramurals Those women who won in the various events in the women's swimming meet held last Tuesday, Feb. 18 and Thurs day, Feb. 20, will swim in the fina meet Wednesday, Feb. 26, at 7:30 pm The events and entries are ea follows: Kappa Kappa Gamma, 45; Pi Beti Phi P43; TNT: 43.7; TNTE: 4. --by Breast Form: Rowland, TNT, Mont- gomery, IWW; Speicel, Corbon hall Harbury, Kalpha Alpha Theta; Lissone Thaeta; Theta Thaeta; Thoeka, Kappa Gamma. Diving: Willecus, Watkins hall; Learnard, TNY; Dyer, Chi Omega; Hartley, Kappa Alpha Theta; La Rue, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Short, Bi Phti Bphi. Free Style: Kieno, Pi Beta Phi 214; Deak, IND, 215; Archer, Alpha Chi Omega, Inglenheim, Kappa Alpha, Phi Beta 218; Finley, Pi Beta Phi 228. Back Stroke: Sharp, Sigma Kappa, 25.4; Harrington, IWW, 28.5; Lemon, Pi Beta Phi, 28.5; Worley, Alpha Delta 30.3; Archer, 30.3; Archer, Alpha Chi Omega, 30.5. Crawl Form; Kiere, Pt Bieta Phi, Pieta, Fbieta Pi, Engleman, Koppa Alpha Theta; Linscott, Kappa Alpha Theta; Deyer, Chi Omega, Learnard, Side Stroke: Dodge, Kappa Kappa Gamma, 24; Harrison, IDD, 27;2, La Rue, Kappa Kappa Gamma, 29;Sharp, Sigma Kappa, 29; Learnard,TNT, 29.6; Bottom, Kappa Kappa Gamma, 30.3. Breast Stroke: Sharp, Sigma Kappa, 29.6; Spiegel, Corin hall, 32.5; Ingleman, Kappa Alpha Theta, 32.5; Montgomery, IWW, 32.9; Griffith, Pi Beta Phi, 34.5; Jones, Pi Beta Phi, 46. Crawl-50;yard-knowle, Pi Beta Phi, 36.5; Archer, Pi Beta Phi, 37.6; Deckau, 37.2; Martin, IND, 40.1; January, Alpha Chi Omega, 40.1; Dalton, Gamma Phi Biota, 41.9; Barackan, Corin hall, 41.9. TNT; Marvin, IND; Tholen, Kappa Kappa Gamma. national A.A.U. Invites Naismith As Honor Guest Tournament To Be Held March 15 to 21 in Denver Dr. James A. Naismith, "father of basketball, has been invited to attend as honor guest the National A.U.A. tournament held in Denver the week of March 15 to 21. He will officially open game when he touches the first jump ball. Dr. Nalmith coached the Denver YMCA team in the late '90s, a few years after he invented the game of basketball. Teams from all parts of the country will enter this year's tournament. New York will send at least one team, and the west coast will send three teams: Young Men's Institute, Olympic Club, and Golden State Club. Tournaments are slated to start in all parts of the country this week, with the winners being sent to the national meet. The champion and runner-up in the tournament will compete in the New York Olympic tournament in April to determine what team will represent the United States in the Olympics. The national meet is being held in Denver for the second consecutive year. Previous to that it was held in Kansas City for 15 consecutive years. Last year's winner was the Santa Fe Trails, a team led by the Southern Kansas Stage Lines. In 1953, 46 teams competed in the tournament, 20 of them being college teams. Southwestern State Teachers College of Wetherford, Oklah, is the first to enter the 1956 tournament. The team that entered the tournament more times than any other organization. They have sent 15 teams in the past 16 years. Read the Daily Kansan want ads. We Recommend DISCOVERY The Story of the Second Byrd Antarctic Expedition Richard E. Byrd For sale here — $3.75 Nebraska Wins The Book Nook 1021 Mass Pipe smokers glad they tried P. A. on Money-Back offer! Phone 666 THAT OFFER SURE'SOLD ME! M. BENZAMANI "I've done a lot of pipe smoking," says Dick Collagin, "and 'Pirate Albert' is the ideal, in my opinion. It's very mild—makes a very sharp character." Try Prize Albert yourself. See free offer below. "I've never found Prince Albert's equal for taste. He's a man of great beauty, big mind and may the george heckman be." FROM NOW ON PRINCE ALBERT IS MY ONE- AND-ONLY PRINCE ALBERT RATES FIRST ON MILDNESS AND FLAVOR 9:39. Cornhuskers Cinch Second in Big Six Race "P.A. is the answer to this pipe-smoking business," says Donald LaCasee. TRY 20 PIPEFULS AT OUR RISK Smoke 20 fragrant pipette of Prince Albert. If you don't find it the mellower, taint soappipe you ever smoked, return the pocket tin with the rest of the tobacco in it to use any time within a month. Smoke 30, 40, or 50 fragrant pipettes of R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N.C. The Huskers came back in the second PRINGE ALBERT Lincoln, Feb. 24-(UP)-Nebrush encircled second place in the Big Six race by routing Oklahoma 55-28, before 5,000 fans. The first half was close, with the Huskers leading, 15-12, at the intermission. THE NATIONAL JOY SMOKE --- Standings of Rir Six Basketball PRINCE ALBERT TWO BIG 2 ROUND RED CASE CRIMP CUT LONG BURNING FIRE AND CIGARETTES TOBACCO pulpfelt of fra- grant tobacco in every 2-ounce tin of Prince Albert Team W 7 L Pct. Opp. SS Karasa 1 0,100 197 177 Nebraska 7 2 777 364 284 Oklahoma 7 4 596 364 288 Kansas State 6 3 200 364 283 Missouri 6 2 250 222 278 Iowa State 6 2 229 224 278 half with a dazzling passing and sharpshooting offense to score 40 points, 18 of them in the last six and one-half points. The rest was bewildered by the sudden furry of bar kets and were unable to cope with the shooting of Wahlquist. Wabblquist was the high scorer with 16 points. Parsons was next high with 14 points. Nebraska (55) fg ft pt Wahlquist, f 7 2 2 Leeox, c 1 0 0 Whitaker, f 4 1 0 Baker, f 1 1 0 Amor, c 1 0 0 Elmquah, c 2 1 0 Dohrmann, c, g 1 0 0 Nebon, c 0 2 0 Widman, g 1 0 0 Parsons, g 6 2 1 Albatsa (C8) 23 9 fg 1 f p Livingston, f 5 0 Tone, f 1 0 4 Connelly, f 2 0 4 Thomas, f 1 0 4 Nelson, c 5 0 4 Gunning, c 5 0 4 Martin, c 0 1 2 Ote, g 1 2 1 Borny, g 0 1 2 Warrice, g 0 1 2 Total's ... 12 4 12 Officials: E. C. Jones, Kansas State; Ed Hailpin, Kansas Weaver's CLOSE RELAYS COMMITTEE APPLICATIONS ON MONDAY Will Celebrate K. U. Dav PINUP K. U. Day will be celebrated Wednesday, Feb. 28, in Kansas City, Mo., by the Kansas City Chamber of Commerce. The Gal Who Puts T.N.T. in Collegienne Fashions The closing date for applications for positions as freshman members of the Kansas Relays committee has been set at 2:30 on Monday, March 2. Applications should be turned into the office of Ed Elbel, 160 Robinson gymnasium. Joe Payne, 138, senior manager of the relays committee, expressed the hope that as many freshmen as possible would avail themselves of this opportunity and be able to operate a typewriter and having had previous experience in handling track and field meets. It is also necessary that the applicants have time in the afternoons. This vacant time should be stated in the application. Louise Mulligan Of course you've probably heard her name numbers of times --- probably have a "pet" dress right now that's a Louise Mulligan creation. Well, we just want to let you in on a big sec- A. E. HARRIS "Spring Tonic" A two piece in navy crepe with frills of pleated handkerchief lined down the front. 16. 95 Done up in green and white with tucked organdy vestee and tied up with bows in the front. "Break Into Print" 19. 95 Louise Mulligan ooijirnaks in sizes 11 to 15 READY-TO-WEAR SECOND FLOOR THE SANDY COAT. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXXIII LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1936 NUMBER 102 --- --- on the SHIN POLITICS CAUSE BREAK IN OWL SOCIETY By BUD EVANS, '36 Forman-Fisher Affair .. Pick Out Another One, Ruth .. Susie Sturgeon .. Tain't Fair .. Haggard's Handy Headress .. Betia Need Nourishment (not news!). Fern Ferman (another Chi Omega) who recently threw over a certain A T O, doesn't seem to hide the fact that her affections are now directed at Dave Fisher (one of the Sig Ep boys) as anyone watching a particular booth at one of the local hang-ups last Friday night could tell. 7 We think Rink Bordner, a harris-terto-be, who so persistently plonies Jack Losttuffer (allas, Last-agatas—the Emperor drone) should know that it's really Eureka school teacher who has the strong to his big great (2) heart. Understand that Ernie Sturgeon, Sigma Chi heart-breaker, passed out the cigars the other night. Seems Virgil put his pin on out of the famous Sara Fleming-sure, you remember Sicie Ernie did it this way so he could maintain his repose in Kaisa Konica, Kaisa Konica, and still not have to buy any flowers and candy! What's worrying us is-who bought the cigars? + + + Looks as if the adage "What's sake for the glove is sauce for the gamer" is slightly screwy. Seems that Jim Pollockhanger, erstwhile journalist student, was contentedly ruinning a far older schoolmate in his college walk in trust Prof. Santon. Needless to say that alfredo Polski was severely "ostirated." A moment later, another professor appeared. He too was to inadipint to be a fit of mistreatment, and unsuccessfully "what's sauce for the faculty just isn't" for the students. One girl of Walking ball must have been drifting a few days ago when she answered the basement phone with "cellar." Nighty queer things come to one's mind when that word is mentioned. Some of the female class might crine, with snakes in mind, but the "Snops" stoke theatre of the cellar with its rare spirits that flare toward the cellar as being the place where Thethe's hide Betty Eden when rush week starts. Was just missing over the possibilities of Paul Magherg's taking off that for head-dress now that spring-like weather is on its way. Prospects of its becoming a comedy are in good, Paul, and maybe they'd help you advertise your chewing-gum. You know a little added attraction would give you an edge over your Nobile competition. Anything for a cup of tea or a snack will give you that game, we'll forgive you! The cat that found the rat in Editorial I, the second we had on Hugh Hadley, has been identified—much to our comfort—we thought it wont on relief. Its name is Butch III-Butch The first being the follower that Jake and I have on the肩膀 is a first assistant Like the cat, Butch the Second is always under foot! Well just have to tell this one on Betsy Hogue (Phi Pi) she's been long enough to really know better). Seems that during the swimming meet the other evening, the identified one strayged through the men's door, the other one taking tumors) trying to get to the pool. Did you close your eyes light, Betty? Save Bob Cartis, third-floor man owe at the Beta house, come out of a class room the other day, pull a big red apple out of his pocket, and proceed to eat some (spitting but the worms, of course). Well-groomed, well-dressed, abundant, and besides, the fellas just don't get enough to eat at the Beta lodge! Frederick To Hold Interviews Frederick, to whom Mr. M. L. Frederick's personnel director of the hospitaler's office of the General Electric company, will interview senior men in the School of Business review. Mr Frederick is recognized in business circles as one of the best personnel men in the United States and is interested only in those students who are qualified for accounting and statistical work. Exchange Play To Be Given Wichita Players To Present Play Here Kansas Players Will Act "Olympia" The Wichita Players will present "The Late Christopher Bean" here on March 5 in an exchange play with the Kansas Players "Olympia," which will be presented at Wichita University Saturday, Feb. 29. "The Late Christopher Bean" is a comedy in three acts, adopted from a French story by the American play-wright Sidney Howard. The scene is of domestic setting, and conflict occurs when Christopher Bean, who died 11 years before the time at which the play opens, becomes a famous painter and artist, before his death. After Bean's works, the heraine, the country doctor's housekeeper, Abbie, triumphs, at the end, as the widow of he painter, Christopher Bean. Kansas Music Teachers To Convene in Topeka Vestminster and Other Choirs Will Sing for Teachers With more than 26 students and faculty members from the School of Fine Arts taking part, the University will be well represented at the 8th annual Music Teacher's Association when it meets Thursday in Topeka for a two-day session. Prof. Howard C. Taylor of the School of Fine Arts faculty is president At the general assembly Thursday morning, Joseph F. Wilkins, professor of voice, will sing four Schubert number-one songs named by him by wife, Marie M. Wilkins. Raymond Stubl, collist, and a member of the faculty, will play a cello on Tuesday morning. His program will include numbers by Corey Handel, Haydn, Grands, and Popper. Alberta Boehm of Kansas City, Mo., will be The Westminster a cappella choir, under the direction of Dean Donald M. Swarthwout will take part in the choir festival to be held in the Toppea High School auditorium Friday evening at eight o'clock. The Westminster choir and choirs from the College of Engineering, Baker University and Waheed Washington, and each sing several well-known numbers and then will all combine for four other numbers. These last numbers will be directed by each of the directors of the choirs in turn. John Lee, professor of economics at the University, will be the principal speaker at a banquet hosted by Prof. Taylor will preside as toastmaster. W.S.G.A. Plans for Carnival Details of Affair Were Discussed Prizes Will Be Awarded Further plans for the W.S.G.A. carnival to be held March 20, were discussed last night at the regular meeting of the organization Dorothy Lewis, president of the Organized House Council, presented a floor plan showing the shape and size of the booth their positions. It was awarded the organizer the prize awarded the best booth had been displayed. Among other matters which came up for discussion during the meeting was the suggestion that there should be a two-year representative on the Council. Before a suggestion of this kind can go into effect, however, an amendment must be drawn up to the council. June Thompson, formerly involved, and Johnson were appointed members of a committee to draw up the amendment. Dorothy Lewis is chairman of the election committee, with Betty Hanson and Dorothy Frye as assistants. A joint Council banquet will be held Tuesday, March 3, at 6 p.m., at the Eldridge hotel. "TINY" MOORE TO COMPETE IN MISSOURI VALLEY WRESTLING "Tiny," Moore, former Kansas football and wrestling star, will compete in the Missouri Valley Championship, Bowl, Okla. March 17 and 18. The winners of the various weights will qualify for the national championships to be held at Bettiehee "Tiny" has been training hard all winter and is in good shape. Those who have watched him work out believe he will make a good show. People Controlling Production Rule, Says Dr. Strong Achievement and Mistake of Russian Democracy Cited by Forum Speaker "Real political power resides with the people who control the means of production," said Anna Louise Strong, addressing the sixth student forum in Fraser Theater last night. "Dictatorship; she continues that what that dictator of government." From these two promises, she explained how dictatorship in Russia is actually a military system that benefits the people through their joint ownership of the means of production, than the democracy of the United States, which is controlled by a capitalist system. "Ownership dictates to government," she said, and "under a system of public ownership, the people are in reality their own dictators with the government only carrying out and organizing their plans and ideas." Dr. Strong traced the development of the Russian social movement from the revolution and explained that those who were willing to work, even though at all times a majority of people did not favor their methods, they were able to carry through their plans and now have the support of 90 per cent of the population. When officers are elected in the Soviet Union, each group of people turns in a set of recommendations of needed improvements, Mrs. Strong explained. The first work of new officers is to consider these, letting economists and scientists work out the more complicated ideas; then giving to the people what they want, at least factible material and machinery will allow. But the people themselves do the actual work. The government only organizes. "We do things in Russia," said Dr Strong, contrasting the "we" attitude of that country and the "I" and "They" attitude of America. "Farmers who have never ridden in an airplane speak of 'our' stratosphere record, showing the deep sense of public ownership that has been developed. In America people know why we are depressed by the depression, thereby unconscionably admittit a class distinction." Democracy is not complete in Russia according to Dr. Strong, but this is a result of the early conditions within the country, when the great mass of peasants were too ignorant to understand the modern trends. During the revolutionary period and following this period it was necessary that all people be in control, but now, since practically all people are literate, economists are framing a new constitution that will grant more equality to all classes. Only under socialism is there (Continued on Page Three) Six Class Managers Chosen Sophomore and Junior Members Selected for Student Relays Body Maternity Ward, Zoo Hospital, Washington, D.C. (-UP) - Eanie, Meenie, Minle, and Mo, perhaps the rarest quadruple ever born in America, rested comfortably tonight with their mother, Mrs. Ramona Bear. The romance of Mr. and Mrs. Bear was more than unusual. It was unique. Mrs. Ramona Bear is a dark brown stylish-Koduk lady with a will of her own in everything except the consumption of peanuts. Her husband, on the other hand, is of those long green hairs with hair turned purple naturally white. The four little bears resulting from this union resembled well-teddy bears. Insofar as Dr. Mann has been able to observe, they are of a solid, sandy yellow color. The doctor hasn't been able to observe much because ev M. Bear was so jealous she wouldn't even let Dr. William M. Mann, zoo director and head nurse, approach close enough to see how much the children weighed. So Kelly Bear, the father of Sally Bear, looked on at school and proudly twisted his whinners. William Townley, c37, of Great Bend, and Marie Stantiey, c37, of Saina, have been appointed junior members of the Kansas Relays committee. Four men, Russell Benton, c38, and Grant Coward, c38, both of Kansas City, George Garrison, c38, of Salina, and James Gillippe, p. of Reserve, were chosen to act as sophomore members of the committee. Of these men served on their last year. The director was made by Ed Elbel, professor of physical education and sponsor of the Kansas Relays committee. Infant Market Shows Bearish Trend As Inmates of Zoo Produce Quadruplets oseen went to tide uplees very time he time stole from beach, Mrs Bear was in a him with a well-matured paw; and nails among Kodiak beauties are sharp. Ebel urged that more freshmen turn in their applications in response to the notice made by Joe Plyne, senior manager of the committee. The deadline for these applications is definitely set at 2.30, Monday, March 2 State Debate Tourney To Begin Here Friday Socialized Medicine Will Be Discussed by High School Teams Twenty-three cities of Kansas will be represented by two debate teams each, at the finals of the Kansas High School Debating League, to be held at the University, Friday afternoon and Saturday, Feb. 28 and 28. The subject of socialized medicine will be debated. The last of the district tournaments was held last Saturday. As a result, the following are the entries in the tournament: A, Toplea; Class B, Valley Falls. Second district, A, Waynate; B, DeSoto. Third district, A, Coffeyville; B, no entries at the State Outter, B, St Joseph Academy, of Olive. for the tournament, odd-numbered districts are put in one group and even-numbered in another, and there will be three rounds of debate in each group of each team, which will be completed around Friday evening, the votes of the judges will be insculsed, and the ranking of the various teams determined. The first and second ranking schools of each group will enter the semi-finals in an elimination debate Saturday with the finals Saturday afternoon. ACCORDION AND VOICE SOLOS TO HEAD AMATEUR PROGRAM Ninth district, A. Ellsworth; B. Canton, Tenth district, A. Hutchinson; Little River, Eleventh district, A. Brodie, Twelfth district, A. Pratt; B. Garfield Fifth district, A, Concordia; B, Clyde Sixth district, A, Wakeley; B, Lebanon. Seventh district, A, Klawe. B, Wichita district, A, Wichita B. Mullane. B. Mullane. Sigma Phi Epsilon and Jack Becker 'cunl, independent, will be on the amateur program at tonight's midweek variety, it was announced today by Gene Lloyd, varisty dance manager for The Rockettes, the cordo solo, and Becker will give a vocal selection. Roger Anderson and his orchestra will play for the dance Mrs. Bear has been in the maternity ward six weeks, with Dr. Mann hovering hopefully about most of the time in case Mrs. Bear needed medical attention. He didn't know her youngest doctor. Dr. McMoory "She has been through quite an ordend," Dr. Mann explained. "She is extremely nervous, and why shouldn't she be? arrived last night. The first Dr. Mann knew about it was when he heard squeals inside the hospital. "If their children live they will out- class in rarity the Dione quintuplets They will be among the rarest animals ever born in a zoo." Dr. Mann, who is a romanticist at heart, said he was anamed when Mr.Scottie Bear began giving some of his peanuts to Miss Ramona last year instead of eating them all himself. As the doctor watched the romance blossom, his amusement grew. Kodai's polar bear was anemone-shaped terminally, like East and West, red heads and peanuts, poets and peasants. Then friendship turned to love and Dr. Mann's joy was unconfined. And now that Eenie, Meenie, Minie, and Mire are here, Mrs. Bear was happy too. Rear Admiral Byrd To Tell of Second Polar Expedition Explorer Will Illustrate Lecture with Movies Made in Land of Ice Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd, famous explorer, will speak this evening at the University Auditorium at 8:20. He will describe his adventures and tell of the important discoveries made on his second Antarctic Expedition. Nine thousand feet of motion pictures never shown before will illustrate the lecture. Fifty-six men comprised his band of scientists, aviators and explorers who spent 18 months in a land of ice. The group sailed on the twenty-second of October, 1833, and returned May 10, 1835. Byrth himself considers the achievements of his latest expedition the most important of his entire career. Films Show Adventures Stories pictured by word and film will show the adventures of the party. There were airplane flights over the monstrous glittering continent, sledge and tractor parties which witnessed the biological and geological import, and amusing incidents of the day by day life at Little America. You see the strange life of the dead continent—the penguins, seals, shu gulls, anemones, a fish and other exploratory flights which revealed that Antarrica is one continent and that the Antarctic mountains are probably a part of the Andean chain. You glimpse Admiral Byrd at sea and sail his solitary vall 123 miles south of Little America where, in a tiny hut, in complete isolation, he maintained the world's southernmost weather station during five months of monstrous and monotonous Polar Ice. Many important landmarks like Expedition Thousands of square miles have been added to the world's map. The newly-learned data is of every-day significance i Naval Academy Graduate Naval Academy Graduate Byrd was born in Winchester, Va. Oc., 25. 1888. He entered the United States Naval Academy in 1908 and was graduated in 1912. Five years later, because of injury to his head, he joined Navy in 1917 he entered the Naval Air Training school at Pensacola, Florida and began his career as an aviator. During the war he was in charge of the U. S. Air Stations in Canada, later serving on the Commission in Charge of Air Training Camps. His first experience in the service was with the Navy-MacM竿 Arctic Expedition in 1923 where he was in charge of the Naval unit. He was made Lieutenant Commander upon his return. The next year he headed his group to Antarctica, the Flyd Bonneyienst, was first to cross the North Pole by air. In 1927 Byrd realized his ambition of nine years standing—to fly the Atlantic, and achieved this in a memorable following year he organized and headed the first Byrd Antarctic Expedition, founded Little America, and made the first successful flight over the South Pole, Nov. 24, 1920. He went to Antarctica in May, 1935, he returned from the Byrd Antarctic Expedition II. Will Arrive in Morning Will Arrive in Morning Byrd has received innumerable honors. Unable to confer any further upon him,公爵 presumes adopted a joint treatise with the nation's government to the Expedition, and President Roosevelt himself greeted their return at the Washington, D. C., Navy Yard. Byrd will arrive this morning. The small committee who will greet him will include Chancellor Lindley, Alfred Lawrence, mayor, Col. Babcock, Nicholas Johnson, and Nichols, executive secretary to the Chancellor. The chief of police will furnish a police escort. Byrd will stay at the Eldridge hotel during the afternoon and speak with those five years ago there was a record attendance. Co-Presidents Elected By 'Honor' Organization Students must have their activity cards stamped on the back by the business office signifying that their age has been paid to gain admittance. Pachacamac and P.S.G.L. Wrangle Over Party Ties As Threats Are Made and Unconstitutional Elections Are Discovered Annual Music Week Planned Mid-Western Band Festival to Be Combined With Regular Events Politics have again entered into the Owl Society, supposedly the junior men's "honor" group. And the result is that now the organization has two presidents: one from the PSGL party and one from the Pacachiac. On Feb. 11, Ross Robertson was elected president of the group since last semester's president, Arnold Gilbert, had dropped out of school at the end of the first semester. On this night, the PSGL members present discovered that they would be able to elect the president easily. They saw to it that John Phillips and Bill Townsley were nominated. No other nominations were made. The PSGL members Plans are being formulated to make the University's School of Fine Arts music festival in May one of the finest ever held. Dean D. M. Swarthout, in conjunction with Prof. Russell Wiley, director of the University band, is now at work on a schedule of events that will combine the band festival with the regular activities of music week. Dean Swarthout has just contracted to bring to the University as the artist on the Young American Artist's Program, a young Katherine, who has been winning honors in the East. Mr. Harms, whose home is in Ottawa, has been secured for a recital at the University Monday evening. May he be part of the annual being been a pillow of Josef Hofmann and has already acquired considerable reputation as a young artist of real promise. He has many friends in the state who will welcome this opportunity to hear A concert by the University Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Prof. Karl Kueisterer, has been scheduled for Tuesday evening, May 5. First Arts day has been set for Wednesday, May 6, with an All-University convocation in the foreground, followed banquet in the background, followed installation of the celebrated Negro tenor, Roland Hayes, the last number on the concert course. A number of other important events by choirs, bands, and other musical organizations will be included in the week's program. Influenza Scourge at M. U. Worst Epidemic Since World War Fills Columbia Hospitals Columbia, M., Feb. 24. (UF)—A mushrooming influenza epidemic alarmed faculty and students at the University of Missouri today as hospital space rapidly diminished with no end to the disease in sight. Dr. Dan G. Stine, medical director, said that the influenza spread was the cause of 50 cases were treated. Previously an epidemic involving 500 cases was recorded. The medical director did not believe it would be necessary to close the Uni- "It would only tend to spread the disease and would prove of no benefit to the students," he said. One hundred seventy patients were being cared for at the University's 100-bed hospital. Noyes hospital was full and Parker hospital was nearly full. Thirty cases were discovered today and 45 cases were admitted to hospitals yesterday. One death, that of Justin Findin of Shreveport, La., has occurred. GRAD TO APPEAR IN EDITION OF YOUNG MEN'S "WHO'S WHO" Dr. M. J. Renner, 20, m² of Goodland, will appear in the 38th-39 edition of *What We Wish* by Whitney White. Who among the young men of the nation. His biographical sketch has been requested by the editors of the book. Another young man has been received him for correction. Dr. Renner is a member of the Norton-Decatur County Medical Society, a fellow of the American Medical Association, member of the American College of Surgeons, a director of the Goodland Chamber of Commerce. He is also a member of Nu Sigma Nu, medical fraternity. Then proceeded to write in the name of Ross Robertson on their ballots. It is said that the vote was six, two, two. At that meeting there were six PSGL's press and five Paceacmaes. One Paceacmae evidently did not vote, probably Townley, since he was up for the office. Phillips was off at town at the time, on a debate tour. Two-Thurs. Necessary to Elect During the past few years, all elections for officers of the group were decided by a majority vote (or the group as is done in organizational meetings). But in order to迎战 this affair, which was naturally disquiting to them since they had lost the presidency, the Phaechaeas discovered that the forgotten constitution required a two-thirds vote to elect an officer. When the group met last Sunday to initiate three men who had been passed at the previous meeting, the Facha-maacs immediately pointed out the grave mistake and demanded that it be corrected. Robertson relinquished the chair and the meeting was thrown open for nominations. At this time the PSGL's threatened that unless Robertson was elected president, the three men who were Robertson's aides would be black-ballied as the voting on them had also been pointed out as being unconstitutional. It is not known whether this statement was inferred or said outright as all members of the society have been attempting to cover up their disgrace, and Robertson was able to tell what was said just what the results would be if Robertson was not elected. Pachacamacs Have Had Control 12.418 Natural the meeting was getting no place, except that the two factions were becoming very disgusted with one another, because neither one would let the other have its way. In the past, with unconstitutional elections the common vote was not required to control elections as they have always had a majority of the members. But with a constitutional election requiring a two-thirds vote neither party could elect one of their own members, due to the fact that the party has the required electoral majority. The beauty of the entire affair is that the supposed honor society has been able to over-ride its political boundaries, and even in party now has a president of the organization. After much wrangling, a compromise was reached and Pachacamacue John Phillips and PSGI. Roose Robertson were invited to play the three men, of course, were initiated. NEW MEMBERS ARE INITIATED INTO SNOW ZOOLOGY CLUB Snow Zoology Club hold its initiation yesterday afternoon at 5:30, in snow hall. Before the initiation a banquet was served in honor of all the new members, and was presided over by Martha Dodge, dce8; Dirkin, dce9; Dinick, dce10; Pastor Echaver, cde7; William Fleeson, cde7; Robert Faucett, cde8; G. L. Harrington, Jr., cde8; Robert Holmer, cde8; Harold james, m'umc; C. E. Lewen, c'uml; Reed Maxson, cde7; Stanley Marietta, cde7; Merman D. Herson, cde8; Marjorie Rowland, edt 37; Wendel, edt 37; Lance Lea, edt 37; Lattice Sharp, cde8; Newman V. Treger, cde7; Martin Witters, cde8; Claude Leavell, c'uml; uncle Invig W. Perlow, cde8. The object of the Snow Zoology Club is for the mutual improvement of its members in the science of zoology in all its varied phases and to promote cordial relations among the workers in this field. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 26. 1930 --- Comment 水 Liberty on the Scales "The frontier of liberty is certainly retreating," Norman Thomas told University students. With the citation of numerous cases to prove his point, as "the tragedy of the stark open terror behind the evictions of share croppers in Arkansas," Mr. Thomas demanded, "What do you mean, frontier of liberty?" The threat of fascism has become a favorite topic with our writers and public speakers. Enough examples of the denial of human rights exist, in modern America, on which to base such alarmist opinions. But is the frontier of liberty retreating? Until 1865 the feudal economic system of the great South subsisted on slavery. In 1887, Illinois hanged four men who had spoken at the Haymarket Square riot, because, when police had attacked the audience, some one in the crowd had thrown a bomb. In 1894, President Cleveland smashed the Pullman strike with federal troops. Would Roosevelt dare attempt such a thing? The Sedition Act of the World War caused a complete denial of the "guarantees" of the Bill of Rights, and in 1919 the nation saw perhaps its worst loss. It also led workers, with the "G-Men" to immer in the fun. Not so long ago the masked marvels of the K.K.K. paraded here in the streets of Lawrence, replete with all their anti-Jewish-Catholic-Negro conspiracy. Those who were hardly dedicated to protecting liberty. Then there was the infamous Sacco-Venzetti case, and not until 1928 did the Communist party darge to come into the open with that name. Yet we listened to Dr. Strong last night with safety. Was Mr. Thomas justified in saying, "The amount of liberty in the United States is growing decidedly less?" We may have reciprocity with Canada, but we can send her nothing nearly so frigid as she sends us. —Wichita Eagle. The Date Bureau ≈ The more mention of the name Date Bureau is greeted with smiles, laughs, slurring remarks, and is the object of much joking and railery. But when one sets aside the humorous aspect, he can see that there is really a need for such an institution on a campus harboring over 4000 men and women students. The small minority of students in the organized houses have their social life laid out for them. Open house, parties, and older friends on the campus soon make them feel acquainted and welcome. The majority of men and women students on the campus come to the University as total strangers. The only way they have of meeting people of the opposite sex is in the classroom, and that is generally limited to the persons sitting nearby. What good is one's education if he has no one with whom to enjoy it? The student receives as much education from contacts with people whom he becomes acquainted with during his college years as he does from his books. A date bureau, sponsored by the University and accepted by students as a matter of course, would do much to widen student acquaintanceships. Maybe the ladies shouldn't work, but try to imagine a tobacco-chewing male saying "Number please?"—Daily Tail Heel. Germany Explains Much adverse criticism has been heaped upon the heads of the Nazi party and its leaders for alleged press censorship, persecution of Jews and for the rearmament of Germany in defiance of the Versailles treaty. Since much of this criticism is based on hearsay evidence, it is not fair before accepting all this, to consider the Nazi explanation of their activities? As for the persecution of Jews, we are sure only of the facts that some Semitics have been beaten and some rights been taken away from them. The Nazis deny any political killing of Jews, stating that they have been particularly careful in this matter that they might provide no martyrs for that people. The German looks upon Communism or Bolshevism as a Jewish intention and points to the setup in Russia as proof, where they claim at least three-fourths of the key positions in the government are held by Jews. Despite a deep-seated racial antipathy, the Nazis insist that their anti-Semitic activities have been wholly political—to save Germany from Bolshevism. Germany is re-arming, they admit it. They agreed to a peace in 1918, with the understanding that they too had fought a war to end war, that there was to be no victor, no vanquished. Then came the Versailles treaty stripping Germany of everything worth taking. The German people are bitter about that and feel that those 17 neighbors who helped force the treaty on them will not hesitate to take anything they wish in the future. Re-armament is the German answer to this problem. Censorship is admitted by the German government and is explained as an emergency measure to protect the unity of the German people. Hitler justifies the publicity control measures as being imperative to united action. The United States fought a civil war to accomplish the same end. We are a remote country, comparatively safe from any interference by our neighbors, we cannot visualize the tension existing in such a country as Europe where 17 nations, each bearing a certain amount of distrust for the others, live side by side, suspicious of every move. We are supposed to be a fair_intelligent country, so let us weigh both sides of the case before we judge for or against Herr Hitler and his followers. Campus Opinion Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the University Daily Kaavan. Articles over 200 words in length are subject to cutting by the editor. Contributions on any subject are invited. Editor Daily Kansan: It is with regret that we note that the only member of the Jayhawk stuff not belonging to a Greek-leter organization has had to college after one semester through no fault of his own (nor, he has toen add, through the fault of anyone else). We wonder through what slip he obliterated when he had to drop out of advertising space with such an exclusive magazine. Should the above implication be incorrect, it is unfortunate that no barbarians of such ability as to deserve a post on the annual staff have had sufficient interest to seek a position with the student body. In school, and it is an unfortunate situation when one of the two main groups of the student body does not serve for representation in its production, or is not permitted to observe their conduct. Editor Daily Kansan: What to do? What to do? Twenty-six hundred doLorn is such a lot of money! The two student governing bodies are faced with the same problem these days. With the specter of impending elections nightly disturbing their sleep, the brances of our pompous personalities should be smoking with us and the attending student members. That thirteen hundred or more apiece which the two councils will receive from the activity fees may be too much for them. Now, if these were but year's government expenses, the amount of apiece binges, send a couple of boys out to Boston to the N.F.S.A. convention, buy forty dollars worth of stationery, or purchase one in which to drink one hundred and ten dollars worth of tea. But our present counsels will to think themselves dedicated to useful intentions. Of course, the little girls still drink their tea, but the boys couldn't send their conference delegates farther than Kansas City this year. And unfortunately, they have practically thrown away a large number of arguments for rather beneficial purposes, like forum lectures. The time has now come for these counterfeit politicians to get some good out of our money, before it is too late. And they are having their troubles. They like the services which they render, to at least look indispensable, and few of this type existed on former council programs. New ones must be invented. Perhaps our counsellors will measure up to their for- bearers. After all, it wouldn't do to waste twenty-si- mester hours. The question as to why we go through the motions of electing a student government, give it money, and then forget about it, come up the other day. There were some conversations in the opinion of the answers, but they run like this: The organizations are like the baseball games played in stum area to keep bad boys busy, in that they keep them The councils remove a few duties from the burden shoulders of our faculty and administration. They bring us Communist lecturers. Once in a while, they do something useful They feel us into believing at odd moments that we actually do govern ourselves here on the campus. Once in a while, they do something useful. They promote traditions, although we always believed that traditions were by nature self-promoted. Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m. prepering regular public day and 11:30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issues. B. C. They put more tea in the weekly teas. A. S.M.R. "There will be a regular meeting of the A.S. M.E. in Marvin hall Thursday evening at 8:00. Professor W. K. Porter, U. of N.C." OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN EL ATENEO: El Ateneo tendra una sesión el jueves a la cuntro y media de la tarde. Vol. 33 FEBRUARY 26,1936 No.102 --hunky. To Alf Landon the shovel of the worker is more sacred than the silver spoon of the aristocrat. Ray Halstead, Secretary. Charles Zeskey, President. LE CERCLE FRANCAISE: Le Cercule Francais se reunira un niveau a quatre heures et demies la daille 5900 h. Elle se distingue de ses niveaux par le plus grand nombre. Margarita Osma, Secretaria. Ruth Brandt, Secretaire. PSYCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATION Students who failed to take Psychological examination may do so on the following day. QUILL CLUB: Quill Club will meet Thursday, Feb. 10th at 7:30 in the W.S.G.A. Lounge. Pledge should bring please. RHADAMANTHI: Bhadamanthi will meet today at 4:30 in the Green Room, Alfred C. Ames, President June Thompson, Esther Anderson, Chairmen. WORLD AFFAIRS COMMISSION: There will be a meeting of the World Affairs Commission Thursday afternoon. Kansas City, Mo. — (UP) Roe B. Hinkle, former Kansas labor commissioner, told today he believes Gov. Al M. Landon of Kansas, if elected president, will do more for labor than any executive since William McKinley. Hinkle Believes Landon Could Do More for Labor If Elected President Hinkle was commissioner and state federal labor director during the administration of the late Gov. Sam A. Baker and special agent for the United States Department of Labor in 1931. "It takes more than just a starry-eyed idealist to the labor problems of today," Hinkle said. "A man who is not interested in the problems he instituted by the chief executive. A man born with a silver spoon in his mouth who never earned a dollar by the sweat of his brow cannot attune himself with the feelings of the laborer no matter how many impractical academic schools surround him." Hinkle, who was an employee of the Missouri Pacific railroad before entering politics, 20 years ago, and the laborer he worked as, are "infinitely worse off" than at any time in the history of the country. "Those who are working now must meet, continually rising prices with deprivation wages, and that condition will prevail until business gets a little confidence in our government. Those who aren't working are being undermined by an injurious dole system and coddling paternism which tend to devalue the industry which made this country the greatest in the world today. "Previously a man became a social outcast if he refused to work. Today he is rewarded by the government. Is that the Americanism of our fathers?" Hinkle explained he did not mean to have there were jobs for the millions of unemployed in his father's gratefully learning the cultivation of laziness has its just reward. "It seems to me with the administration's ranting about Jefferson and Jackson, they should go back to their own Cleveland who believed the people should support the government rahet on an government supporting the people." Hinkle said that Lander's entire environment has tended to instill in him a respect for the worker plus an understanding of his problems. "The forgotten man, who apparently remains forgotten, needs a man with the depth of understanding and grasp of human principles such as the Kansas executive has. It is true that London has made considerable money to be started out by the sweat of his brow and native industry and initiative. "He has worked long hours on the farm and in the oil fields. He can plow a furrow as deep and straight as any other farmer. He can drive the oil field that he demands of a Hollywood Roundup Caryy Robinson, scenarist, was given the novel and told to do his best. He began by suggesting a new title, "I Married a Doctor." Robinson then strode into his job by considering the changes in the manner of living since Lewis penned his novel of small town life. Hollywood (UIP—Sinclair Lewis fans have something in store for them as filming of the Nobel prize winner's "Stain Street" neo completion. "Airplanes, better roads, talking pictures and the radio have almost completely removed small towns from isolation," says Robinson. "But the people, their problems, are still the same." But of "Main Street" hammond been changed. "Certain externals and 'props' have been revised to make the story timely," explains Robinson. "Instead of the doctor bringing his city, wife home on a train, they fly in aboard a chartered airplane." "He is the only political leader today with common sense enough to keep a firm hand on the balance wheel which connects change with progress. He can do more for our laboring classes than since the late President McKinley." "And instead of the town's social set congregating at church socials, they meet at the new country club adjoining a nine-hole golf course. "The women play contract bridge and know the latest fashions. The men don't talk about real estate deals and crops. They are all concerned with politics. The motion picture writer then tells of his revision. Robinson is a hunky, greying former newspaper reporter and during the days of silent pictures was a title writer. Among his successes recently was "Captain Blood" that sky-rocketed the new star, Earl Flinn, to fame. Adaptation of literary classics to the modern screen is justified, Robinson contends. ROCK - - - CHALKLETS Conducted by J. M. "Magazines, books and pictures put a terrific drain on the capabilities of creative writers," he says. FIX Up in our town they are having a little trouble getting the minors to work. They can train many more working on WPA proclaims for the mine, and the work is clean. The impending wet season may put a damper on Italy's little campaign into Ebolia. The suggestions that the architecture students have on display in the second floor vestibule of the library show "steps" toward the completion of the library entrance, 11 years past. They are very good; don't miss them. Rustic Fallacy Blamed on Little Bo-Peep And Simple Simon London-(UP)-Nursery rimes were blamed for the popular picture of a farmer as a "hystero" by J. H. Wainwright and *B.* J. H. Kinnick, in *The Littlest Farm Union*, in a speech to Leifield farmers. Complaining that whenever in a nursery rime it was desired to set out something that was ridiculous in it, they wrote: "The Little Bo-Peep, with its rime about sheep—Leave them alone and they'll come home'-tends to give the impression that farmers are a Micewher sort of people who have blind trust in Providence. In Three Blind Mice, when they selected someone for the farm, it would be hard for the farmer's wife'--though it would be the last woman they would run after. Graduate Magazine Out in March "Then, what was the moral of Simplem "Going to the War," which was supposed to be a victory, that he was trying to get possession of something of which he was not in a position to pay. I suggest that that man should have been a meritorious in town than in the country." In the next issue of the Graduate Magazine that will come out the first week in March, there will be a special article on the students in the journal-ism department whose parents are in the newspaper business. Last week a picture of the group was taken. It will appear in the magazine and also will be sent to the different papers throughout the country. The features are special action pictures of football teams and the latest picture of Chaucerloh and Mrs. E. H. Lindley. Prisoners Live Monotonous Daily Routine by darold pee eagle Thousands of Empty Oil Cans Serve As Water Vessels for Selassie's Men Hard faced men sitting around a poker table, murderers, life termens. Unshaven, grim faced men who would as soon as not kill each other if it were not for the present watch of the guards, but after they are taken, the plague. The steady hum of gurgles from the black section. Dixie modules. Shuffling feet. But pervading this atmosphere a grimmness that makes mookery of these attempts at levity. Yes, this grimmess is one of the factors that to bring on that contagious disease. So hard are the primary factors in the cause of prison riots and murder within the penitentiary. Painted and used as flower pots, punched full of holes and transformed into shower-hards by the natives of the island. Their discarded receptacles suddenly have become of military importance. They are worth more today as cannisters than the hundred and one things they can be put to use by the blacks on the African coast. THOUANDS of five gallon tins, carried on the shoulders of the women following the bearded warriors of Ethiopia, are as good as aqueducts or toilets. This is where the saving contents of distant wells to the encampments in sun-parched deserts. Quick to exploit demand, the natives have embarked on a profitable oil can business. Camel caravans and strings or mutes are being utilized to transload cargo from Egypt to the ancient slave routes into Ethiopia. One empty tin sell for as high as one thaler. Dibuit, Feb. 19. —(UP)—The American oil can and British petrol tin, symbols of white man's civilization in the desertlands of East Africa, are being smugged into Ethiopia today to meet the needs for the troops of Haiti Selasie. Become Pipelines The oil can, joke of the slapstick vaudeville stage, has come into its own. It may prove to be one of the all-time greats of the Ethiopian's stand against the Italiana. For years Somaliand people have made use of these empty tins. All the flowers of Dijbourt's Place Menikil sprout from oil and gasoline containers that have been painted blue, green and yellow. In the native villages the cooking is done over a charcoal stove made from a petrol tin. The top is removed and an iron grate inserted. A hole is cut beneath the bottom for a draft. The fabric is simple, but a unstable stone results. Made Into Stoves Uesd as Measure Hammered and flattened out, the tin of these cans is the main material of the Arab carpenter. Any self-reporting native nuthat is roofed with oil cans, and if the owner is really swanky it will be wallpapered with it as well. In the homes of Europeans here, the daintily painted waste-paper papiers formerly were oil cans. In the kitchen, they were bread and cheese. The Arab merchant measures his vegetables and grains with them. But today, little barefoot black boys eat the bread and cheese on streets through the native villages or the European section of Dilhouit. They It is one more use—and the most profitable of all—for the American oil can and British petrol tin. go to the caravan stands and sell them to the drivers, who know the profit they can make, once they cross into Ethiopia. University Daily Kansan OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS PUBLISHER HARRY VALENTINE EDITOR-IN-CHEEP BOB ROBINGTON ASSOCIATE EDITORS BELLE GILL MIA FRANKIN MANAGING EDITOR FRED M. TARASCH BUSINESS MANAGER P. QUENTIN BURGER Campus Editor Bill Badger Mark K. Lee Editors Dana Huebner Bill Duncan Brian Miles News Editor David Warner Disney Siren Sunday Editor James Crawford Sunday Editor Jimmy Paklopheen NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE, Inc. 410 Madison Avenue, New York City Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles Friday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Sunday morning events attend annual holidays by students in the department of Jurition of the University from the First, at the Department of Journalism. Subscriptions prices, per year, $30.00 each in bulk, $2.35 on payment. Subscribers pay $6.00 each. Extended as second class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office, Indiana, Kansas. fairy. It indirectly arises from the unbelievable gray monstrosity of prison life. Morning. Up at six; breakfast at seven; exercise at eight; work till eleven; dinner at twelve; coercion; work till five; supper then cell confinement; lights out at nine; food the same, conversation. Nails. Radiators clunk-ink, leaking steam pipes, bed scripping the floor. The all prevailing prison stench. Hubbed noses, planning, plitting a way to escape. Hidden sex practices. Memories of bygone days, hurry, fundraiser, graduated have an effect on the prisoner and sooner or later he will be in the elementary stages of "sir crazy." Perhaps this factor was present in the recent death of Leeb. Who knows? Smart politicians immediately take the necessary steps to suppress publication of news of this type. Perhaps the public is not aware of the facts of this case. It may be best. Someday all vice and crime arising within prison walls will be dault through legislative action. This day should not be far off, Who knows? University To Be in World Book The University of Kansas will be represented in the next edition of the World Book Encyclopedia, to be issued soon. The editor of the encyclopedia, in a letter to Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary, states that the work will include an extensive article on the state university's history. University. He requested a photograph of the Administration building for publication with the article. --day on both station-to-station and person-to-person calls. Now in effect SPECIAL SUNDAY RATES for Long Distance telephone calls AND REDUCED PERSON-TO-PERSON RATES after 7 every evening Long distance telephone rates are now reduced as follows: 1. Person-to-person rates are now reduced after 7 every night. (Heretofore, only station-to-station rates were lower at night.) 2. The low "night" rates are in effect all day Sunday on both station-to-station and person-to-person calls. The reductions apply on calls to points more than 100 miles distant, and to many shorter calls. The Long Distance operator will be glad to give you the rate now in effect to any point. TYPICAL 3-MINUTE RATES STATION TO STATION PERSON TO PERSON SITATION TO SISTION PERSON TO PERSON NUMBER OF MILES Day Rate Night & Sunday Rate Reduction Day Rate Night & Sunday Rate Reduction 100 .60 .35 .25 .90 .65 .25 150 .80 .50 .30 .115 .85 .20 200 1.05 .60 .45 .140 .95 .45 300 1.40 .60 .60 .180 .95 .60 400 1.75 1.00 .75 .220 1.45 .75 500 2.05 1.15 .90 .255 1.65 .90 1000 3.75 1.20 1.75 4.75 3.00 1.75 SOUTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE CO. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1936 PAGE THREE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS K 2. Hill Society BEFORE 5 P.M. CALL K, U 21, BETWEEN 7:10 AND 9 P.M. CALL 2701(K) OR 2702(K). AND 9 P.M. CALL 2701K3 OR 2702K3 --were luncheon guests yesterday at the Kappa Alpha Theta house. Dr. and Mrs. Edward E. Wheeler o. Ottawa announce the engagement of their daughter, Lima Lau, to Dr. Willi L. Jacobson, Jr., son of Dr. and Mrs. L. J. Lacobis, Sr., of Ottawa. The wedding will take place March 18. Miss Wheeler is a graduate of the University and a member of Chiomega security. Dr. Jacobus is a graduate of the medical school of the University and is a member of Sigma Nu of Na Sigma Nu. medical fraternity. Cook-Bryan Marriage Triangle fraternity hold initiation services Sunday for William Ayers, e'28; Norton Bailey, e'1eul; Emil Bowers, e'owl; Nelson Ehcol, e'uncl; William Johnstone, e'uncl; and Thomas Stevenin e'uncl. Marguerite Cook, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Cook of Hutchinson, and Leland Bryan, son of Mrs. H. B. Bryan of Hutchinson, were married Saturday evening at the First Baptist church at Hutchinson. They will be in house in Haven, where Mr. Bryan is a pastor for the Heilings-Hughes company. Guests and alumni present at the initiation and banquet were G. R, Warren, Dan C. Williams, Jr. Keenham ☆ ☆ ☆ The groom attended the University, where he was a member of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity. Dean Henry Werner, Prof. Robert M. Davis, and Carlene Hellem gr, were dinner guests last night at Delta Upsilon. Professor Davis gave a short talk on the TVA and the Supreme Court decision. ☆ ☆ ☆ Mrs. C. E. Estesley entertained members of the Round Table Club and a group of guests at Watkins hall yesterday afternoon. Dr. John Ise, professor of economics, spoke on, "Gadgets in Civilization." Weekend guests at the Amecia fraternity were: V. F. Webster, Richard Parris, Herbert Sandel, and Leo Koehler. The students, Mo; and Vance Culem of Benedict, Charles Neswander, c38, was ini- dated into Phi Mu Alpha, music frer- tunity, Wiley afternoon, Prof. Ru- hon Wiley was a guest at the iti- tation. ☆ ☆ ☆ ku Alpha Omicron II held installation Sunday for Joan Newbill, cunel, Martha Lourie Turrer, c39. Willie Lee Withe, c39. Dennis Foster, c39. citt, and Ruth Bucher, c39. The K.U. Dames will hold their initiation of new members Thursday evening at 9 o'clock in the Women's Lounge on Fifth Avenue and all members are urged to attend. All members are urged to join. Anne Hubkerd, c'37, Ruth Esther Purdy, c'38, and Jane Walker, c'38, Acacia fraternity held formal initiation services Sunday for the following: Charles Ducker, e38; King Christine Nichols, e36; and James Steele, e37. ☆ ☆ ★ Triangle announces the pledging of Richard Coleman, c'unel, Kansas City, Mo. Watkins hall will hold open house Thursday from 7 to 8 p.m. Members of Kappa Phi entertained with a covered dish supper last night at the home of Mrs. E. F. Price, 1200 Tennessee street. ☆ ☆ ☆ Chi Omega entertained the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity with an hour dance last night. Marian Fegan, c'unel, was a lunch- en guest yesterday at the Chi Omega house. Campus Calendar Sigma Eta Chi, Congregational church sorority held a meeting last night at the home of Mrs. E. E. Bayles. N. Ray Carroll, Indianapolis, Ind, national president of Delta Tau Delta fraternity, is the visiting local chap. W.S.G.A. ten, women's lounge Ad. 3-5 p.m. Wednesday, February 26 Circle Francais, 306 Fraser, 4:30 p.m. Mid-week varity, Memorial Union p.m. One Stop Clothes Service Station Admiral Byrd lecture, University Aud., 8:20 p.m. SCHULZ THE TAILOR 924 Mass. Thursday, February 27 Fine Arts student recital, Ad. Aud. 3:30 p.m. Quill Club, Women's lounge Ad., 7:31 p.m. Kappa Psl, Memorial Union, 7:30 p.m. Chemistry Club, 201 Chemistry building, 4:30 p.m. Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S — 920-22 Mass. El Ateneo, 113 Ad., 4:30 p.m. TAXI Friday, February 28 Swimming meet: Kansas vs. Nebraska at Lincoln. Swimming meet; Kansas vs. Kansas State at Manhattan. Sigma Nu party, Eldridge hotel, 6-12 p.m. Friday, February 28 PHONE K.U.66 Psychological examination make-up 115 Fraser, 9:30 p.m. Saturday, February 29 Basketball: Kansas vs. Nebraska a Lincoln. Leap Year Varsity, Memorial Union 9-12 p.m. **Donor-offs 14:36 Meet** There will be an off-site Democratic club of the K. U. Democratic club tomorrow afternoon at 4:20 in the base-of-Green hall, according to Clark Howerton, vice-president of the group. All those interested are urged to attend this meeting. Plans will be made for future activity of the club and reports will be given by members of the club by the club's secretary. You may meetings at Tooneka last Saturday. TAXI Young Democrats To Meet Student Loans CLASSIFIED ADS PHONE K.U.66 MISCELLANEOUS ABE WOLFSON 743 Mass. FOR HEALTHIAS SKATE, 729 Massachusetts. The world's most thrilling sport. Clean fun for clean people. 102 BEAUTY SHOPS SPECIAL----50c reduction on any per- manent, with this ad, except Saturday Permanents $1.50 to $5.00, complete with hair cut. IVA'S BEAUTY SHOPS 732½ Mass, Phone 2335; 941U¹ Mass, Phone 233. Twenty-five words or less: one insertion, 3 two insertions, 6 six insertions, 76; contract rate, not more than 25 words, 82 per month. Payable in advance and with cash; contract rate, not more than 25 words, 82 per month. Payable in advance and with cash. Four doors south of Journal-World Ph. 282 Five expert operators Ph. 283 FOR SALE FOR SALE: Our home at 1115 Louis ana with furnishings. Shown by appointment. Telephone 173. Florence M Hodder. 100 25c Finger Wave 25d PALACE BEAUTY SHOP ROOMS FOR RENT 1 APARTMENT: Two room apartment, nicely furnished, available now. Garage for rent. 1241 Tennessee. —102. FOR RENT TO BOYS: One large double room with oak floors, in quiet modern home, suitable for sleeping room and I132 House. I132 Office. Phone 2823M. --sense of ownership of all lands," said Dr. Strong, then she illustrated the hold that this feeling has on the younger men and women of the nation by quoting from the speech of a student. "We young owners of our country are called upon to conquer time and space." --sense of ownership of all lands," said Dr. Strong, then she illustrated the hold that this feeling has on the younger men and women of the nation by quoting from the speech of a student. "We young owners of our country are called upon to conquer time and space." All members of the KUKU's club are requested to be present at a meeting to be held in the Union building tonight at 10:30 o'clock. This is a special meeting to plan a game. Kansas-Missouri, basketball game. KuKu's To Meet 'People Are Controlling The Rule of Production (Continued from page one) "There is a growing feeling of power and a reinforced impression of freedom based on joint ownership in Russia." Dr. Strong declared, "It is the type of freedom that was experienced by American pioneers, but it is realised now in modern world that enables to go endlessly forward." About 450 students attended the lecture. Kenneth Born, chairman of the Forum committee, acted as chairman. OBTAIN THREE FORUM SPEAKERS Conservative Speakers Will Be Featured on Remaining Programs The last three speakers of the M.C.E. and W.S.G.A. formes will be ex-Senator ex-ad governor Henry J. Allen speak as Drs. George Hoxie, prominent member f the Women's League of Voters, peaking on "Civil Service Reform," will William Jardine, Secretary of Agency for Agriculture, speaking on "Agricultural Crises." El Ateneo, Spanish club, will meet tomorrow at 4 p.m. in room 113 of the Administration building. Miguel Alvarado, c. of, Forte Rico, will give a lecture in Spanish about his native country. After the talk, the club will sing Mexican folk songs. Refreshtments will be served. "The Forum committee throughout the year has tried to consistently maintain a program of balanced viewpoints," said Lyman Field, president of the M.S.C. "Our problem throughout the year is that we do not adequately do justice to the so-called conservative view of world affairs." "At no inconspicuous trouble," Field continued, "the Forum committee has finally managed to gain the consent of the above speakers, who in our estimation should be the viewpoint they speak from." Spanish Club To Meet "Efforts to secure Herbert Hoover Hamilton Fish, and Sean, William E Borah were unsuccessful, but the committee feels we have been extremely fortunate in obtaining conservatives in the Middle-west—perhaps they may even better reflect the viewpoint of this section of the country." To Race Against Eastman --at the UNIVERSITY DINING ROOM In the Heating Building KFKU February 10—Wednesday 2:30 p.m.—Kansas Trees and Shrubs, 9r. W. H. Horr. February 26—Wednesday 2:45 p.m.—News Bulletin, W. A. Dill, K. U. News Bureau. 2.50 p.m.-Health Through the Ages, Dr. Florence Brown Sherbon. 6.00 p.m.-Violin Reital, Karl Kuer- stener, associate professor of violin. 6.15 p.m.-King Lear, Miss Helen Uhena Hoopes. --at the UNIVERSITY DINING ROOM In the Heating Building Cunningham Also Will Enter Columbian Mile With Venzke You Will Be Delighted With Our 25c MEAL Glenn Cunningham, former Jay-hawker, will continue his indoor track race at the U.S. Indoor Championship in a special 800-meter race at San Francisco. Glenn is expected to run against Ben Eastman, the famous Stanley Cobb, as well as of the present world 800-meter record. In the Union Building After the race on the west coast, Cunningham will return to New York where he will again meet his arch rival, Gene Venkse, in the Knights of Columbus meet. It is thought that Joe Mangan, who has not run recently because of an injury, would have been with Cunningham and Venkse. The Columbian Mile will be the feature event in the Knights of Columbus meet. Cunningham will be out to defend his world indoor record of 4084.4 which he established in this period last year. He has been running record breaking races since December when he vengeged to the tape. If Venkse continues to run as well as he has recently, the record set by Cunningham will probably take a tumble. On the other hand, it would be no surprise if Glenn stepped out and broke his own indoor record. It is believed by critics that the Colum- Weber Opens New Office W. J. Welder, 117, last week opened a new branch state office for the Investors' Syndicate at Hutchinson. The new office will serve the territory of southwest Kansas and part of Oklahoma. W.J. Welder has practiced law in Great Bend, and served as county attorney from 1920 to 1924. Grad Elected Medical Group Head Dr. Emile Thomas湖南,m21;dr. of the clinical pathological laboratories of the Jackson City University, Kansas City, Mo., has been elected president of the Jackson County Medical Association for the year 1937. Dr. Emile ThomasUniversity as instructor in pathology for several years after his graduation. Read the Daily Kansan want ads. Kansas Players Leave Tomorrow The Kansas players will leave tomorrow for a short road trip to present awards, including the Bengal Tiger, Humbolt, Kan. Thursday they will be in Emporia, and Friday in Parsons. From Parsons the players will drive to Wichita to give a matinee and night out at the University. They will return Saturday. Professors To Plan Conference Dr. C. D. Clark and Miss Mabel A. Elliott of the sociology department will go to Kansas City, Saturday to meet in a conference to make final plans for a joint Missouri-Kansas Conference of Social Welfare. from the University where she was a member of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority and was active in campus affairs. She has sung with the Chicago Civie Opere and has had considerable training in music since she MIT the University. MARY BARRONS TO BE GUEST SOLOIST WITH PHILIHARMONIC Miss Mary Barros, of Kansas City, Mo., will be guest vocal solitary with the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra in the final pair of concerts, April 2 and 3. Miss Barrons was graduated in 1924 Mathematics Fraternity To Elect Pi Mu Epsilon, honorary mathematic fraternity, will hold a meeting this week at 4 oclock to vote on national officers. is a valuable asset and can be easily learned at Marion Rice's Professional teach- services or services at moderate fees. Rhythm Tap Acrobatics Ballet Ballroom Classes for Beginners Marion Rice DANCE STUDIO 924 Mass. Phone 914 LEAP YEAR VARSITY GIRLS Your One Big Chance to Show the Male Sex the High Ethics of Dating Your Only Chance to Have a Free Evening in a College Career BOYS DANCE TO WAYNE WRIGHT'S ORCHESTRA 75c SATURDAY, FEB. 29 9-12 p.m. Couple and Girl Stags Union Bldg. What's inside? The woman who started out to fill her library only with books with red bindings, or books whose names suggest red—"Red Pepper Burns," "The Song of the Cardinal," "The Scarlet Letter"—made a whim the basis of her choice. She wasn't particularly interested in the merits of those books. Her aim was to fill up space. Yet when you buy books, you are concerned with what's inside them. And when you buy a flashlight, a refrigerator, a radio—you want wiser than whimsy buys. You want to know the inside goodness of those products, know it before you buy them, be persuaded by what's inside. You may hesitate between two flashlights. You can't tell by the appearance which is good, or which is better. Advertisements could tell you. They point out the underneathness of a product. The truths you can see, and the truths you can't see. The amount and strength of service to expect of what you see. Not just a refrigerator—but how long the ice lasts in it, how it makes lettuce crisp. And not only the now inside merits, but the future inside merits. It's these unseen nows and futures that make a product worth its price. Read the advertisements. Then you can know a product to its center—to its last chapter of service—before you buy. Knowing the advertisements habitually means always strength-buys Read advertising often PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26. 1938 ( ) Freshman Players Promise Quality For Future Squads Hopes Are High for Coming Basketball Teams When Frosh Display Ability A very promising group is the freshman basketball squad which works out nightly in Robinson gym. Their performance has served to a large extent by the team's 1967 year's varsity队. With three of this year's great variety quintet playing their last year, it appeared that the Jayhawks' 1967 team might fall below the usual standard, but the work of the women has prettily oligoliterized this idea. With plenty of height, experience and ball-handling ability, the fresh comprise the type of material with which Dr. F. C. Allen gets the best results. Height is the rule rather than the exception and the men, under the coach's guidance, have excelled. Ex-Jawhaker stars, have learned to handle themselves extremely well. Abilities Are Even Ability among the squad members runs very even in the first fifteen men and it is difficult to pick outstanding players. If two teams had to be picked however, they would probably line up something like this, with neither team possessing a balance of powers: Lyman Corliss, Topeka, and Gall Creek, Kansas City, Mo.; center; Fred Woodward, Warsaw, Poland; guard's George Golay, Warrenburg, Mo., and Paul Masonier, Kansas City, Mo. The other team, equally strong, would include as forwards, Harold Insell, Chanute, and Fon Durand, Journick City; center-Carl Weider, St. Louis, and guards, Hill Kiley, Kansas City, Robinson, both of Kansas City, Mu Skikes starred on the Paceo High team which tied for the city championship in City, Mo. At Columbia Northwest in Norwalk, Mass. As this was the team that Paces had taken, the caliber of the quarter for which they competed was superior. Skikes specializes on piver shoes. Corliss a Toncka Star Corliss led Topika to a conference championship and played outstandingly in the state tournament. In Kansas a state honor roll is substituted for an all-state team and Corliss was one of the 20 men to be placed on this. Bosilvee as the main cog in a power house Wandy Hontet team who won 25 of 23 games. One of the Bulldogs' losses was by a single point and the other by only three points. It was Bosilvee's fourth consecutive conference championship. Bosilvee led the league in scoring and as a result won all-conference honors. Show Good Height Average Golays' ball-handling is little less than superb, especially for such a big forward, feeding of the forewords when he is ready. It is much so to the team offense that it is quite possible he will be used at the next year rather than at counter. Show Good Height Average For height, these four are the each's depth. Shikles and Corlars are 6 feet, 2 inches; Hale and Golay are 6 feet, 3 inches. Masoner was a member of the Northeast team which tied with Paseo for the city championship and then won on to win the state championship, where the state tournament was good enough to place on the all-state second team. Kiley, who is best known as a tennis champion, has shown marked ability on the court. The Missouri Valley A.A.U. tennis champion is a good shot and collects his share of the points. Kiley is about 5 feet, 11 inches tall. Stipp was a teammate of Shkiles on the court, playing as player and he handles the ball well. Robinson played at Central High. He was the only athlete at Central to letter in three sports last year. He is a hunting, energetic player. Wedder Shows Promise Wedder is a ramy, well-built center. Standing six feet three inches tall, his body is designed for potentiality. He is a crack performer, PATEE 10c Til 7 15c After 7 BANK NITE TONITE NOW — ENDS THURSDAY MAZO do la ROCHÉ'S $10,000 PRIZE NOVEL JALNA (The Tragic Romance of Two Yew- lees) KAY JOHNSON, IAN HUNTER and All Star Cast "JALNA" Ussell used alongside the great Ralph Miller and helped Chanute to win 23 consecutive games and the state championship. He was second only to Miller in conference scoring and was named the league MVP, but was placed on the state honor roll. Durand was the star of a Juniceto. City High team which won a conference championship. Durand stacked the soils and was a decidedly outstanding winner, for his fine ball handler and seems to be hitting his stride in that matter of scoring. In addition to these 11 men there are a number of other fine performers who are out. These include: Carroll Campbell, Wayne; Steve Cave Harry Chaban, Hutchinson; Wayne Chaban, Hutchinson; man, Valley Street, N.Y.; Joe Goyer, Manuel de la Vega, Gowna; Tulsa, Okla; Jack Hall, Lena; Mo; Junior James, Kinsley; Hugh Bilton; Walter Lutton, Glencoe; Lawrence; Marion Maze, Carye; Milton; Baldwin; Walter Lutton, Glencoe; Lawrence; Marion Maze, Carye; "Dumpy" Bowles, Kansas City, Mo. Men's Intramurals 138-pound class: McKeenw, Pi K.A., threw Eber, Kappa Sigma, 1.90; Heister, Theta Tau, threw Barbree, Beta, 4.11; Tau, unattached, threw D. Kane, Beta, 1.34; Brown, Phi Gai, threw Corbett; Tau, unattached, 2.95; Jenzen, Theta Tau, threw Barbree, Beta, 1.25; Sec, Nobe, SIGma Alpha Epiphan, threw Fullier, Psi Iai, 1.43 The following are last night's result in the intramural wrestling tournament: 121-pound class: Roberts, unattached threw Harwood, Kappa Sig. 1:10; Hamthrow, Phi Psi, threw Nicholas, Phi Delt, threw Alderdie, threw Allderie, Phi Psi. 4:12 148-pound class; Labb, Theta Tau, threw Hendrickson, Phi Delta Theta, 1.32; Nicholson, over Steel, PiA, for byeft; Wilkins, PI K.A., defteated Male, Phi Dam, decision; White, unattached, threw Amyx, unattached, 3.00; Townley, Phi Delt, won; for byeft, Male, Phi Dam, decision; SAE, Brown, unattached, over Huey, PiKA, decision; Murphy, Beta, threw Bloomfield, Kappa SIG, 4.26; Scott, SAE, threw Downey, PI K.A., 3.22 128-pound class: Koolzer, Theta Tau, threw Marshall, Beta, 5.27; Lemoine, Phi Gai, threw Basket, Delt, 2.35; Russell, Theta Tau, threw Wolf, Beta, 3.44; comc, Phi Pai, deflated Glasser, Phi Gai, decision; Nottingham, Theta Tau, decision; Sigma Alpha, sigma Epsilon, 2.00; Dietter,sigma Chi, threw Loveceh, Beta, 42 sec. 13-pound class. Lambor, unmatched, threw Gamber, Theta Tau; Foul. Theta Tau, threw Thomas, SAE; E利, Beta, threw Nessleville, Phi Delt. 188-pound class; Bodies, Phi Delt, throws Jones, S.A.E. 2:56; Hale, Pi KA, over Wilbert, H.P.I, decision; Danny, Phil Gain, throw Stockton, Beta, 2:21; Pierson, Kappa Sia, over Larsen, Theta Tappen, S.A.E. 2:39; Fields, throws Tappen, S.A.E. 2:39; Fields, beetw Grist, Theta Tan, 6:59; Johnston, beetw Murphy, Tarphe, Delt, 3:28. GRANADA 25c 'til 7 — Shows 3-7-9 TODAY AND TOMORROW 2 DAYS ONLY One of the Greatest Mystery Dramas of the Stage Is on the Screen With a Thousand Thrill! A Quivering Night of Crime and Love in Spooky Baldpate Inn Harrington, Beta, threw Srees, T.A.B. 1:20; Guthrie, Theta Tau, threw Hibbard, Beta, 2:48; McCoy, Phil Delt, deoLoughmiller, unattached, decision; Morland, Theta Tau, over Stoland, Beta forfeit. "Seven Keys To Baldpate" FRIDAY - SATURDAY GENE RAYMOND MARGARET CALLAHAN Also — Our Gang Comedy "West Point of the Air" Latest News Events The Finest Ann Harding Since "Holiday" Heavyweight class: Shirk, unattached, threw McNaughton, Phi Psi 1:10. A Dram-Paced, Smarty Daluged Drama of Woman's War for Possession — Told in a Turbulent Story of Three Souls in Conflict. Billiard Tournament Opens ANN HARDING HERBERT MARSHALL Gordon Weyermueller Is Captain of Billard Team The first game of the inter-collegiate pocket billiard tournament will be played tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. "The Lady Consents" The team that represents the University of Kansas and the Kansas Union will include Gordon Weymerwueller, Joseph Ackman, George Moore, and Honald Ashburn. The alternates for the regular members of the team are Joe Rohr and Stanley Bernhardt. These men were inducted into the all-star team made in the qualifying tournament. SUNDAY "THE MUSIC GOES 'ROUND' This team will compete against five other universities and colleges throughout the country. The key shots, which were composed by leading exponents of pocket billiards, will be used and the scores will be wired to Willard Straight for the tournament. The other results will, in turn, be wired back. The tournament is being sponsored by the National Billard Association and it will award a trophy to the winning team. This team will then be taken to the College Championship, where they met in the national tourney, whether on the winning or a losing team, will receive a miniature gold key. Cornhuskers in Shape For Jayhawker Battk Cage Game at Lincoln Will Be Hard Fought for Kansas Kansas Nebraska settled itself securely into second position in the Big Six Race Monday night by defeating Oklahoma's basketball team 52-28 before a crowd of 5,000. Although the Cornhoppers held only a three-point lead, 15-12 at halftime, they scored the Sooners to pull away with a 27-point lead before the game ended. With only the all-important Kansas game ahead of them in conference play, the Nebraska fans as well as the team members plan to hold big celebrations over the wounded Jayhawker when the Kansas-Nebraska final whistle blows Friday night, and if any lure occurs they will be not due to any fault of their own. **overlook No Chances** Nebraska has charms which will give them a victory over Kansas. According to Mike Getto, who visited Nebraska last weekend with the track team, the Nebraskans intend to win by a big one in a gigantic way. Coach Getto talked to a Nebraska fan who, not knowing he was speaking to a University of Kansas man, expended long and loudly on the team to be administered to the Jayhawkers. The Cornhusker faithfully explained that Nebraska wished to beat Kansas so badly because the Kansas team was unable to make the play. The prestige from running that record. He continued by saying that the Cornhuskers wanted to cut in on the national publicity which the Kannas队 is gaining. The fan seemed not to think of chances for a Nebraska conference game until he defending the now-unfedded Kannas. Commissioners Powerful Nebraska might possibly make such a prediction, a厉威 Quiball quilting up on Ebling in the scoring averages, and with Whittaker and Parsons showing high scoring ability. Kansas is not going to have only one big man to stop in as the case of Kansas State's Greens. In Nebraska's rout of Iowa, Parsons'厉威 Quiball plied up 16 points. Whittaker took 9 and Parsons nanked 16 points. Cornhuskers Powerful Formidable evidence of Cornbush power is evidenced by the 364 points put out against opponents' 288. Nebraska runs up high scores against all its opponents, and the team that keeps up with Nebraska has to keep the net low. The team that keeps Nebraska will furnish plenty of excitement and neither school is planning on a picnic. Prepare For Big Six Meet Hargiss Is Displeased With Showing of Track Team at Nebraska The Kansas track squad, which has been forced to work out under the cold stadium, got a much needed break with the changing of the weather. The men are now hard at work preparing for the Sixth St. to be held at Columbia, Mo., March 7. Coach Hargiss was somewhat displeased with the showing his men made at Nebraska last week. He thought that the poor showing might have been due to the fact that the men have been unable to put the desired finish on he cause of the cold weather, Hargues said that Kansas has a much better track team than the results of the Nebraska meet would indicate. Kansas will be somewhat strengthened for the Big Six meet as Ray Noble and Marvin Cox will be inkend to Columbia after the Missouri basketball game here March 6. Noble is expected to play at Louisville. Cox is a high jumper who should place high. Both will compete in the meet without any previous training. Cox jumped last week at Lincoln and then finished with four of eight to gain second place. Dr. Landes Recovers from Illness Dr. Lands Receivers from Illness Dr. K. K. Landes was confined to his home yesterday afternoon on account of a broken arm and morning classes and was unable to return in the afternoon. He is expected to resume his class ork today. Life Saving Demonstrated in Gym A life saving demonstration will be held in the gymnasium this morning at 11:30, according to an announcement made by Prof. George C. Shand, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture. All students interested in the technique of resuscitation from apparent drowning, from electrical shock, are welcome to attend. Sub-Zero Weather Calls for CHILI 10c at the Union Fountain Sub-Basement Memorial Union --- The "Bantam" New light weight hat by Stetson, that spells Spring, '36, all over it. Strictly a young man' "head piece." $5 You'll like it. Four Colurs Grey, Tan, Brown, Green. "Show You Now." CARLS GOOD CLOTHES Chesterfields! well that's different —their aroma is pleasing —they're milder —they taste better —they burn right —they don't shed Chesterfield GARETTES CHESTERFIELD 10 © 1936, LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO Co. —they don't shed tobacco crumbs They Satisfy UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXXIII --on the SHIN LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1936 By BUD EVANS. '36 Here's Some Leap Year Rules For You Gearls, . . . Poole See His Duty and Do It . . . Dorothy Dix Trees. . . It's leap year, and Gene Lloyd is to capitalize on it by throwing a ratatac for the gals (for the gals to pay). There's no stepping him, so we'll have to make the best of it—and then we still have nothing! --- Now girl*…don't be bachelor. You've gota co-operate, and make this Leap Year variety a huge success. Wayne's the window for that one—so the stage is set. Its only gonna cost you six bits, and you can singer from 9 until 12. Get your date now while the odds are against it—and that's giving you the best of it! Of course, there are rules to be followed—as usual—and here are a few of them: (1) Get your date (phone) or stray it or stay home—or go to the city—and spend the evening by opening a can of crushed pineapple, and then putting the game in again (like game)—or take a walk (this can go on for forever—we hope not). (2) Get your date (car). (3) Dance ankle, and then treat him to either a coke, a bottle of beer (32), a sandwich, a dish of Post Toasties, or in fact, most anything. (5) Let him dance (?) on your feet now and then—just for a change. (4) Keep your hair out of his mouth —remember, this is his "day." (6) **Don't be afraid to "cut" even though you do get "stuck" with a poor foever. It happens to the greets with us. You would have to put up with it that time.** (7) Let the fella use the worm out "don't give a damn" attitude and. "don't give a damn, attitudes, and not being nice," but if you do, please don't murmur that you must be the second happiest person in the world! Give the glove a break—makes him suffer this and other injuries—or something. (9) Have a good time, and be in early Smeea the Gamma Phi's were giving a meal not long ago for their relatives. Hear they called up J. I. Poole, he being a brother of dear of Gamma Phi, and asked him if he would honor them with his presence--you know—that he was a kind person, sorry girls; but I've not a date with my fiancee." Such loyalty, or something, and you can imagine how awful the Gamma Phi must have felt! What will the Kappa do? need well? We don't know either. Found one who recently joins in from New Mexico or created-or is it the Oldmobile, June? Group Honors University Did you know that Paul Treeens is now tagged as "Mr. Dorothy Dist"? Every afternoon Paul can be found in the Library giving advice to the helpless students with their homework etc., etc. Are you speaking from experience, Dorothy, or is it just sympathy? A luncheon honoring Kansas University was given yesterday by Kansas City Chamber of Commerce. Paul B. Pierce, the chair of Arts and Sciences, was the luncheon speaker on the subject, "Inspect Friends and Foes." A delegation from the Law Enforcement Agency was also present. Dean Paul B. Lawson Speaks at Chamber of Commerce Meeting The University men's quartet composed of Ross Robertson, Maryville Claude Burton, Cameton, Mo; Ray Finley, Iola; and Marvin Wright, Wichita; was on the program. The quartet was composed of Miss Rhea Wagner, Wichita. Dean Lawson was accompanied to Kansas City by Prof. Raymond H. Raymond, the associate dean of the university's biology; and Fred Ellsworth, alumni association secretary. The members of the Chamber of Commerce who attended the meeting were John Brandon, and Wayne McHedrick. Engineers Meet Tonight The American Institute of Electrical Engineers will hold a meeting at 7:30 this evening in Marvin auditorium. Professor Frazier will give an illustrated lecture on the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. NUMBER 103 Admiral Byrd Tells Of His Adventures In Little America ntrepid Explorer Show: Pictures of Antarctic Life to Large Audience Illustrating his talk with motion pictures that graphically portrayed the adventures and hardships of his second antarctic expedition, Rear Admiral Sir Jeffrey Adcock, straightforward, 'yet interesting interest story of his experiences at the "bottom of the world." Wearing the full dress uniform of the United States Navy, the explorer appeared erect and stardy as he addressed a lecture on Antarctica University auditorium. "The antarctic region, with its ice age, offers the most fertile field now open to scientists," Rear Admiral Byrd said. However, in his career, he stressed the adventurous aspect of the scientific aspects of the expedition. Gave Running Account of Exploits With the aid of his motion pictures Byrd gave a running account of his efforts in the Antarctic. On October 4, 1967, he led six score men, Jacob Ruppert and the Bear of Oakland with six score men, four airplanes, six tractors and 150 dogs. They arrived at Little America, Admiral Bryde's base established on his first expedition and began operations began immediately. Fighting severe weather, the party "dug in" and prepared for their exploration activities. Admiral Byrd and Captain English, using boats and airplanes, identified a vast area covering 200,000 square miles of hitherto unexplored land and ice floe within the Antarctic circle. Gathered Scientific Data Establishing an inland base, thearty gathered scientific data regarding the weather, glaciation, and coal resources. They also redired the hitherto unknown fact that *natureta* is one continent. Other geological and biological material was also made available to science. Humor and human interest were added by camera studies of the action of penguins, a bird native to the vole habitat, in dogs, geese and cattle taken on the expedition. The explorer also told how the general expedition was conducted, described the daily programs of the various exploring units, and pictured graphically the life of the men in Little America. Swimming Meet At Lincoln oach Alphin Takes 10 Kansans 14 Nebraska by Motor Car Couch Herbert Alphin will take a group of 10 University of Kansas swimmers to Lincoln for a return meet on Friday afternoon. The party will leave at 8:30 p.m. the next day. Lincoln this evening. They will go by motor car, Coach Alphin taking one and Bailen Thomas, freshman breast stroke swimmer from Leavenworth, the other. William Waggoner, Wagener, Okla. William Kester, Lawrence; Ralph Pulp Santana; Santana Brandt, Topeka Clyde Nichols, Kansas City; Mo, Robert LaShelle, Junction City; Max Elas, Lawrence; Paul Fisher, Dean Tiller, Topeka; B. F. Humphrey, Lawrence; and Bill Tholen. Dean G. C. Shaad, of the School of Engineering and Architecture, will address the group and Zoonimir Kuester construction of the Fort Peck dam. The regular meeting of the Junior American Society of Mechanical Engineering is to be held March 3 in building in Kansas City, Missouri. DEAN SHAAD AND KVATERNIK WILL ADDRESS ENGINEERS Dr. Dietrich Zwicker will speak on "German and World Affairs", at a regular meeting of the World Affairs Association in Washington, at 4:30 o'clock in Honey Hill Dr. Zwicker, whose home is in Berlin Germany, is an exchange scholar, and is an authority on the position of his country in international events and relationships. Zwicker Speaks Today Miss Estella Engle, secretary to Dean Swarthout in the Fine Arts office, returned to work yesterday. She was called to her home in Abilene last Thursday because of the death of her mother. Miss Engle Returns Debaters To Meet Texas Field and Zupanec Will Speak Here Friday Night Kansas University's debate team will meet Texas University's next Friday night at 8 o'clock, in the Little Theater of Green hall on the question, 'Resolved, that congress should have the power, by a two-thirds majority vote, to override decisions of the supreme court declaring laws passed by conference committee. The Kansas university team, composed of Lyman Field, e36, and William Zupana, e36, will take the affirmative side of the question. The negative side of the question will be upheld by Chris Dixie and Robert Tharp, who are beginning a tour of 15 colleges and universities throughout Michigan. They will meet Kansas State College tonight and arrive here Friday. According to E. C. Buehler, coach of the debate squad, Texas is the oldest and most formidable rival of Kansas. Gov. Harold G. Hoffmann Questions Old Testimony Defense Counsel Charges Perjury Against Key Witness New York, Feb. 26 – (UP) -Governor Harold G. Hoffman renewed his attack tonight on the credibility of Millar Riddle, who is largely responsible for Bruno Richard Hauptmann being extricated from New York and put on trial in New Jersey for the murder of the Littledubby baby, who was later tried. He might made public part of the secret interview he held with Whistle last Saturday. Defense counsel at Trenton swore to a complaint charging perjury during the trial as a challenge to the legality of the hearings. Meanwhile, Hoffman's next move will be to accuse police of "framing" the ladder found in the mud under the nursery window. Hoffman insisted that excerpts from his interview with Whitehart out his hand, and he said he was from New Jersey who said he saw Hauptmann near the Lindbergh home prior to the kidnapping received money from state police to give such test- In addition the governor contended Whited was promised part of the $25.,000 reward which New Jersey offered to the Lindsberg conviction of the Lindbergh kidnap Until tonight none of the persons present at the Whited interview would have been in attendance. Besides Hoffman, the conference was attended by C. Lloyd Fisher, chief of the defense counsel and Prosecutor for M. Haack of Hunterdon County. Former Student Recovering Marc McPhesters, former University recovering is recovering from a recent appendicitis attack at the Lawrence Memorial hospital. Former Student Recovering "The radio has enabled us to do 10 times more. It is a wonderful thing for us," stated Byrd, and added humorously, "the only trouble with it is the Rear Admiral Byrd and his wife shipped in unannounced early yesterday morning and made the Hotel Eldridge their headquarters. At 11:30 the Admiral granted a group interview to all reporters. The quiet spoken hero talked modestly of his adventures. Hair turning grey, not quite six feet in height, well built, the Admiral gives the impression of force. Robertson Lays Blame At Pachacamacs' Door Kear Admiral Byrd Considers Lecturing To Be More Strentuous than Exploring "Every man in the society had been notified of the meeting at which a president was to be elected, and when the election was over all those present accepted the result. ROSS ROBERTSON'S STATEMENT Miss Ice Johnson, professor of journalism at Baker University, and a group of twelve students of the journalism department were guests on the K.U. campus. They attended the Byrd lecture last night. While in Lawrence, the group visited the office of the Jayhawker magazine, attended the management of the publication. "The incident is certainly a regretful one; PSGL members, however will continue their efforts to make the society truly an honor society. Ceramic students must continue to attain that end." Ross Robertson, co-president, The EWG Society. "We do not realize that there is an Ice Age existing today," asserted Admiral Bindy. "We think of an Ice Age that existed 100 years ago, yet today there are hundreds of square miles that were once fertile and green now covered with ice. Enough coal was found in Antarctica to supply the world, proving that there was a past ice age of fossilized tree trunks in places 2,500 miles from growing grass. The chances are 10 to 1 that this ice cap is receding. Perhaps there will someday be four or million square miles of fertile land, larger than the United States and Mexico." He started on this lecture tour September 28 and has been all over the country in a day. He came here from Oklahoma City and plans next to go to Bartlesville. "It is more strenuous than an expedition," says Byrd of their "troup." Dr. Orr to Speak to Phi Sigma Dr. Thomas G. Orr, professor of surgery at the University School of Medicine, will speak about Phi Sigma, honorary biology fraternity, to tomorrow evening, at 7:30 p.m. in 206 snow hall. His subject will be, "The Development of Anaesthesia." Dr. Orr will show motion pictures illustrating the first either anaesthetic given. The public is invited to attend. "Throughout the year PSGL members of the society have made a sincere effort to make the Owl society a real 'honor' society. Being in the publicity which would inevitably result from such a move on the part of the Pachacamac group, we used the only means in our power to keep them from carrying out their purpose. A rescue team and the dual presidency was evolved. Members of Two Factions Agree That Intrusion of Petty Politics Was Unfortunate; Constitutional Requirements of Two-thirds Majority to Elect Causes Further Dispute Dr. Orr to Speak to Phi Sigma "When, just before the three newly-elected members were to be initiated, the question was raised as to the constitutionality of the previous election, the PSGL members of the society replied that the rule requiring a two-thirds vote for an electorate been enforced and that the raising of such a question was done purely because of petty political reasons. Despite the earnest appeal on the part of PSGL members to members of the Pachacamac party that such a step would undo any reforms that had been accomplished in the society this year, they went ahead with their demands for a new presidential election in order to mighty elect someone from their party. Baker Journalism Students Here it makes it possible for me to give talks." Byrd also spoke of the difficulty of combating loneliness. For five months he lived in a but 125 miles south of Chicago, where he was the darkness of the Polar night, the darkness and the lack of any living thing, plant or animal added to the difficulty. Byrd had a great deal of work and a photograph to keep his mind occupied. "My wife and I spent all our time alteration of the infinite diversions of our life here. The sun rising and setting, the movement of trees and animals, the conduits with people, the innumerable things we all have to do because this life one of infinite diversions." Byrd spoke little of the life of his men. "Their health was better after they became accustomed to the intense cold than it is here. They gained an average of 20 pounds and never arrested cold-characteristic of the ice lumps, or frozen from lungs but we guarded against this as much as possible." Admiral Byrd was still suffering results from inhaling carbon monoxide which filled his but because of a de-formation his pages to be fully recovered in a year. "Our discoveries are of definite practical value," stated by Beyt. He spoke of the discovery that an am not on the shelf yet", is all he said. "It will take two years to arrange the data of our explorations, all of which would involve 12 books of scientific information." Ross Robertson, co-president of the Owl society, last night placed the responsibility for the recent break in the society's ranks at the door of the Pachacamac ranks of the group, in their efforts to introduce politics into the organization. Robertson, whose election as president of the society was declared unconstitutional because he lacked the two-thirds majority required by the constitution, charged that "the raising of political extremism is purely because of petty political reasons." John M. Phillips, the other co-president of the society, refused to make a statement clarifying his party's viewpoint on the affair. Members of the junior men's honorary society, non-political organization which was forced by a political deadlock to elect two presidents, yesterday were unable to agree upon the circum- circumference about thought as this paradoxical situation. Disagree on Constitution Violations Disagree on Constitution Violations on the Pachacutec political party which is supported by hess elected the lion's sympathies of the society's officers, were generally agreed that past elections have been decided by the majority required by the constitution. PSGL members were equally agreed that this rule has previously been disregarded, a bare majority being surrendered. The vice-president was declared unconstitutional on a technicality which previously had not been observed. They point out that last spring, with Pachacamacs holding office, the president of the society's membership, the four principal offices—president, vice-president, secretary and treasurer—were filled by Pachacamacs, while the office holder was donated to a PSGL member. Members of the two factions were agreed upon one point that the intrusion of petty politics in the election was an unfortunate circumstance, and a blow to the avowed ideals of the society. Society Has Purchased Gowns As a matter of fact, they stated, the reason for the Owl society's relative interest in the Gowns is to perform the duty it has set for itself—to lend its prestige to worthy movements on the campus which need stimuli—lies in the fact that so many of these movements were tainted with the fashion and the importance that the group has taken this year is the purchase of gowns to be worn by members at meetings. A large part of the meetings have been spent in these activities either or not these gowns should be worn to the various activities on the Hill. The Owl society was organized in 1914 as an organization of junior men with highest scholastic ratings. For several years it published the Sour Owl, University humor magazine, but a few years later it switched to Chi. Professional journalism fraternity. For years the membership in the group had been dictated by political considerations. Following a series of articles in the Daily Kansan revealing this situation, the society last spring elected a score of members with a scholarly record of 218 grade points, in which the number of parties were fairly well represented. FACULTY AWARDS DEGREES TO ENGINEERING STUDENTS At a meeting of the faculty members of the School of Engineering and Architecture held this week, the following persons were voted degrees (1) Herman Cohen, chemical; Charles H. Cowell, architectural; Charles Edmundson, electrical; Guido Fengogli, electrical; Bob Leon Flint, mechanical; Joseph T. Knope, chemical; Robert M. Lingo, civil; Shiruo Matsumoto, architectural; Michael W. Guy C. Omer, electrical; Louis S. Porsins, mining; Robert Charles Rhodes, chemical; Policisimo Solidarios, civil (bachelor of science, 5 years); Levi Tauri,机械;Edward M. Tucker, engineering;Ewald, electrical; Dick Wullf, architecture. Raines To Work for State Stalin Is Shot (?] Raises for State James L. Raines, fs, of Perry has obtained a position in the State Banking department at Topeka. London, Feb. 26—Rumners that Joseph Stalin, Soviet dictator, has been shot in the head were rife in Stockholm today, dispatches from Daily Telegraph correspondents said. Speculation arose as to why Professor Olz Crona, eminent brain specialist, was hurrying to Moscow to perform a "big brain operation." The patient was unknown but the unconfirmed report said it was Stalin or another high Soviet official, wounded in the head. The surgeon left here Tuesday night by express train for Moscow and later took an airplane back to Paris, where she was due there Wednesday night. Confession Brings Long Term to Baldwin Youth King Admits Starting Fire That Caused Death of Two Women The conviction brought to a close more than a month of investigation by county officers and the fire state marshal, who were arrested and detained the home in Baldwin and took the lives of Mrs. Grace Haasm, mother-in-law, and her mother, Mrs. Sarah Kline, 71, King, his wife and mother, escaped from the burning building. Elden King, 22-year-old Baldwin youth, was sentenced yesterday to 50 years in the Kansas state penitentiary on a charge of second degree murder. The sentence was given by Judge Hugh Brown in the Douglas county district court. King signed a written confession Tuesday night, after ten hours of grilling by officers, admitting he had set fire to his home and lecturing $1,100 insurance he carried on personal property, but denying he intended to kill the two women. He stated he thought surely they would die in a fire, he was asleep in a ground floor room. In passing the sentence Judge Means said that he was not convinced as to whether the defendant "had a conscience or any human decency," but that it was his purpose to deliver a lecture to the youth from the bench. He was sentenced by Sherif Fred Vogler, accompanied by Deputies Jude Anderson and C. W. Gates, left with King for Lansing to commit him to the penitentiary. Sour Owl To Appear Friday Leap Year to Be Feature of Campus Humor Magazine Taking advantage of a quadrennial opportunity, the Sour Owl will present its Leap Year issue on the campus to tomorrow morning according to Joe Pryor, editor. Several interesting and engaging articles will be included in his humor magazine, which will make its first appearance since before Christmas. Bette Wasson discusses the eccentricities of Leap Year in a featured article entitled "Reversals Reversed." A satirical discourse on world affairs is presented by John Malone in "Yea War, Yea Peace." A new department called 'Nobody' will also be introduced in addition to the usual departments, sketches and jokes. Contest fans will have their opportunity in a new competition sponsored by the Lafaye Co. which will award a box of assorted mints to the student editor, the best joke to the Sour Owl editor, who will judge the contributions. The cover design is reported to picture a typical Joe College surrounded by a bevy of beautiful coeds. The price will be 15 cents. Former Student Visits Campus Cecil Ecll, '31, was a visitor on the campus Tuesday morning. Engle has a civil service position as an agent for the United States Bureau of Internal Revenue, with offices in Near, NJ. AUTHORIZED PARTIES Friday, Feb. 28 Fireside Forum, Congregational church, 12. Christian Church Young People's Society, Myers hall, 12. Sigma Nu. Eldridge, 12. Saturday, Feb. 29 Leap Year Varsity, Memorial Union, 12. ELIZABETH MEGUARI, Advisor of Women. For the Joint Committee on Student Affairs. (Limited Date) ARMY AND NAVY MOVE ON TOKIO TO AID EMPEROR on Student Affairs. * * * * * * * * * * * * Bloody Uprising by Young Military Radicals Causes Death of Premium Okada and Other Officials UNDER MARTIAL LAW (Copyright 1936, by United Press) Leading Tokio Newspapers Suspend Publication As Plants Are Attacked Admiral Suzuki, Grand Chamberlain was wounded seriously. Finance Minister Korekiyo Takashai was wounded. Private advices report he was killed. New York, Feb. 26.—(UF)—Army and Navy forces converged on Tokio Thursday morning to reinforce Emperor Hirohito's control after; A bloody uprising by young military extremists who assassinated Premier Keisuke Okada, Lord Sato, lord of the private seal, and General Jutaru Watamabe, Inspector General of military education. Troops of the imperial bodyguard aided the Empower in regaining control after reinforcements sped from the garrison to Tokyo and while the men trained their guns on Tokio, Yokohama Kobe, and Osaka. Citizens Resume Business With the political situation confused, troops controlled Tokyo's streets. Generals promised a commander guard, promoted public service, private property, and ordered citizens to resume normal business activity. Fumio Goto, former home minister, accepted appointment as acting premier but resigned shortly afterwards with members of Premier Okada's cabinet. During the chaos of Wednesday the Bank of Japan suspended operations. Tokio and Osaka stock and commodity prices would reopen Thursday, they would reopen Thursday. Drastic censorship imposed when ex-strickenists struck early Wednesday later lapsed sufficiently to permit transmissions of the attacks. Tokio remained under martial law although the home office announced the city was quiet and that no further violence had occurred. Newspapers Suspend Publication Leading Tokio newspapers suspended publication Wednesday. Extremists attacked the plant of the newspaper by spraying it with toxic. They were inflamed by the newspaper's Liberal tendency. Foreign reports that the Emperor was a virtual prisoner in his moustache, and he had no friends were discredited. It was emphasized that the uprising was definitively proclaimed. There was no foundation for foreign reports that the Soviet Ambassador to Takin had been assassinated. Explaining their resort to violence, the Extremists proclaimed that victims of their attacks were joining in policies "damaging to national interests." Statesmen Study Events Statesmen at Geneva Moscow, and elsewhere studied carefully events in Tokyo with an eye to their possible repercussions in the inter- international relations of nations. Chinese statesmen feared demonstration of strength by military Extremists bode no good for future of Japanese self-defense. Control was wrestled from the hot-headed Extremists by wiser and more experienced army officers and soldiers. Emperor Hirichiro played a leading role in leading the defenders. He summoned advisers to his palace to discuss the crisis. Subsequently, he met with the privy council. New York Feb. 26 - (UP)—The Japanese conulate here on Tuesday late today that five government leaders had been assassinated in Tokio by military Extremists, according to callegrams from the Japanese capital. No Influenza Cases Here Although an alarming influenza epidemic, the worst since World War days, has appeared at the University of Missouri, no cases have been reported at Dr. Ralph L. Canutesk, director of Wakimin Memorial hospital. Professor Sterling Recovers Prof. M. W. Sterling, of the department of Greek, who has been meeting his classes at home the last two weeks, has been back in Fraser hall yesterday. . PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS --- Comment Kansan Policy Ordinarily the Kansan does not take issue with letters contributed to the Campus Opinion column which in no way expresses the policy of the paper and serves only as an outlet for students to air their particular grievances. The Kansan recognizes the right of anyone to express his opinion about any subject, so long as this opinion conforms to the standards of good taste and decency. However, when a letter is received that falsely mistrepeats facts and wrongly accuses the paper of misdeeds, and when the Kansam considers that these opinions are held by more than one misguided person, then we feel that it is our duty to answer such a letter. Yesterday a Campus Opinion was received concerning the editorial treatment of politics, particularly those of a liberal, radical, or Fascist nature. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1936 The writer accuses: That Clarence P. Oakes' feature stories were not permitted in the Kansan last year, but have been welcomed this year. That articles, purportedly attacking the views of a man, but actually attacking the misconceived views of a system or political group, such as the famous feature article known as Hadley's Mistake, were not allowed in the Kansan before this year. That the editorial, printed recently, 'Germany Explains' is not the original idea of the editor, but a plagiarism on an unpublished article by another person. "I can only come to the conclusion that the Kansan no longer represents a sane, sound effort toward the promotion of happier living but has resorted to the "yellow news-sheet" policies of a Hearst paper. That means we, as students, intelligent, skeptical and quizzical, are no longer represented on the school paper, but that we shall pay our $3.00 a year for the privilege of reading a biased paper. Is the Kansan consciously or unconciiously trying to mold public opinion toward Fascism? "An editorial policy of an University paper should be open to the suggestions of ideas of all political movements. . . Republicans, Democrats, Fascists, Communists and middle-of-the-readers should receive the same emphasis." In answer to the accusation concerning the feature stories of Clarence P. Oakes, let it be understood that this writer's stories were not offered to the Kansan last year. The Kansan feels that while the views of Mr. Oakes are perhaps blessed, even his enemies will admit that they are interesting reading and do present the ideas of many. As to the feature stories by Hugh Hadley, again these were not offered to the Kansan last year. Mr. Hadley's stories, if one will consider, deal with other political groups besides liberal and radical ones. In the story designated "Hadley's Mistake," the writer held the same opinion of the Kansan, that at that time, the forums were unfair in choice of speakers. ≈ The editor did not write the editorial, "Germany Explains" but this was the work of a student. The writer interviewed Mr. Zwicker but only to obtain the viewpoint of one who has actually been in Germany. The Kansan did not intend to boom Hitler and Nazism but was trying to fairly present the German side of the controversy. In trying to be fair to all sides, the Kansan is accused of Fascist designs. To the writer of the Campus Opinion letter, we can only say that Dr. Zwicker has not written such an article that we know of and the editorial was the work of a student. If one will read the Kansan closely and weigh the opinions carefully, he will come to the conclusion that "Fussist" and "Reactionary" opinions do not in any way overswap liberal expressions. To the writer of the Campus Opinion, we advise that he adhere more strictly to his own avowed love of free speech and admit that freedom of speech, constitutes not only the opinions of liberals, such as he is, but also the opinions of those who hold conflicting ideas. Again, we repeat, that the Kansan is not Hearstian in policy, but neither does it feel obliged to fill its space with liberal and Communist theory. Stop complaining. Twenty years from now you'll be looking back and calling these the good old days—Kansas City Kansan. We believe that the Kansan has been as impartial in the treatment of liberal and radical views as is humanly possible. A glance through the files of this year's Kansan will bear out on this point. Early in the year, the Kansan campaigned against the showing of "Red Salute" in a local theater. Certainly this was a liberal move. Again, the Kansan carried an interview by a well-known student liberal with Bruce Blivens, presenting Blivens' views fairly. The Kansan has given much publicity to liberal speakers on the Student Forum program, such as Marco Morrow, Norman Thomas, Anna Louise Strong, Blivens, and V. F. Calverton. Owl 'Honor' Society "To originate and sponsor movements for the best interests of the junior class and to create a feeling of good will and fellowship among the students of the University." That is the purpose for which the Owl Society, the so called "honor" organization of the junior class was organized. Along with this purpose goes the requirements for membership in this esteemed organization; namely: leadership, scholarship, and strength of character. Recently the actions of the Owl Society were exposed. Politics in its lowest form has again entered into the organization that gives the "highest honor that the University bestows on a man in the junior class." Party stuff, political ill feeling, compromise, co-presidents that is the story of the Owl Society as it stands today. And yet that organization is the highest honor in the junior class. This year is not the first time that the Owl Society has been condemned, it is an old story for them to be laughed at and looked upon with disgust by the students. Strange stories of the manner they have of electing a man to membership, the over-looking of his qualifications, the political pull that it takes to become a member, all have been outstanding in the Society's past history. Today the Owl Society is a refuge for those who seek the furtherance of their own political whims. It is a haven for those who desire to dabble in politics. Within its present membership lie the forgotten remains of the ideals originally vested in it. Long live the Owl Society, let it continue to serve the purpose as outlined for it by the University. But first keep it free of politics, keep those men who desire to climb the political ladder out of its membership. Let it really give to a man "the highest honor that the University bestows on a member of the junior class." Someone who ought to have been in a better business, sat and counted the number of times the word "I" occurred in the recent radio speech of the President. It occurred just 32 times, the speech being one of the President's briefer releases.-Topoka State Journal. When it really gets to raining in Ethiopia, maybe Ethiopia cannot only win but demand an indemnity for pulling Italy out of the mud. —Wichita, Raleigh The Gazette's important political announcement: All political advertisements in the Gazette will be cash—From the Emporia Gazette. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Notes due at Cancunella Office at 3 p.m., precalculus regular day publications and 11:30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issue. Vol. 23 FEBRUARY 27, 1936 No. 103 ALEE. The K.U. branch of the ALEE will hold its regular meeting at 7:30 vcd time in Mavrik Auditorium. Professor Frazier will speak on "Educational Opportunities at Massachusetts Institute of Technology." Edward Lonsdale, Secretary. A. S.M.E. There will be a regular meeting of the A.S.M.E. tonight in Marvin Hall. Professor Wheeler of the Psychology Department will speak. EL ATENEO: El Ateneo tendra una sesión el jueves a las cuervos y media de la tarde. Margarita Osma, Secretaria. HOME ECONOMICS CLUB: The Home Economics Club will meet Tuesday through March 3, at 4:30 in the library. Evelyn Wallace, President. KAPPA PSI: There will be a regular meeting of all actives and pledges Thursday, February 27, at 7:30 in the Union Building. Gerald Pitcher, Regent. KAPPA FII: Kappa Phi will hold initiation services at 2:30 at the Methodist Church, Sunday, March 18. Please visit www.kappa-phi.org or contact Dir. Mar. K U. YOUNG DEMOCRATIC CLUB: There will be an important meeting of the K U. YOUNG Democrat Club this afternoon at 4:30 in the basement of Green Hall. All persons interested are invited to attend. Clark Howerton, Vice-pres. K.U. Demo. Club. PSYCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATION; Students who failed to take Psychological examinations may do so Saturday, February 29, at 9:30 in Room 115 Fraser. A, H. Turner. QUILL CLUB. Quill Club will meet today at 528 in the W.G.S.A. Lounge. Pledges should bring initiation papers. Charles Zeskey, President. SCHOLARSHIPS: Applications for scholarships for next year (including Warkins Hall scholarships) may be made between the hours 2 and 5 p.m. Monday to Friday, inclusive, in room 902D Administration Building. Appli- Human Soul Continues Through Space After Candle Flame Is Extinguished Mrs. Flora S. Boynton, Ex. Secy., Committee on Aids and Awards. WORLD AFFAIRS COMMISSION: There will be a meeting this afternoon at 4:30 at Henley House. San Francisco,—(UP)—Dr. Arthur H. Compton, world-famous physicist of the University of Chicago, believes the human soul may go on forever much as the hidit of a nando continues stream- ing from even after the candle is extinguished. June Thompson, Esther Anderson, Chairmen. "Through the flame was mortal, the emitted light was immortal," said Dr Compton. Nobel prize winner and master authority on cosmic rays, in discussing the question, "Is Death the End?" Holding out further evidence here for "There is some suggestion that consciousness may be independent of brain processes. Holding out further possible hope for immortality, he added: "How can we know that the soul does not go on forever with a fullness of life corresponding to that of the candle-light? "Science can neither prove nor disprove immortality." *Discovered in Confert Lecture* Dr. Compton was resting in the First Congregational Church of Berkley, across the bay from San Francisco. He met interdisciplinary pastoral conference at the Pacific School of Religion. "The consciousness must die with the body is legitually required only when we adopt the mechanistic hypothesis that a definite thought is the result of an equally definite physical change in the brain." Dr. Compton continued. "The seeming fact of free will makes this assumption appear to me highly unlikely," he said, concluding that consciousness may be independent of brain processes. "Twenty-five hundred years ago, Ganada Budha told a parable to illustrate the futility of belief in a future life. 'Light a lamp for me,' he asked, blowing out the flame he added, "more dead than a fire that is out?" "Yet, according to modern knowledge, though the flame is dead, what of the light it has given? TheHollywood Roundup Hollywood — (IUP) — Prosperity has turned the carcer, for the brightest stars in flambish's milky way no longer are afraid to display evidences of their Actors, aresses, and directors took off their mantles of gloom, perked up and purchased everything new in their Mayfly ball this season. It was for them; in they they had really enjoyed themselves, knowing what their salary cards can buy. The feminine guests were on the scene early. Carole Lombard, long noted for her exotic taste in gowns and accessories, was in charge of the ball, and decreed that all women should attend rowed in white. A conservative estimate of the cost of the affair has been fixed at a quarter of a million -for about six hours of work - by paying on the endurance of the individual. That mode it all the harder, trying to achieve a startling effect with but one color. Despite the limitations, the actresses were a swirling mass of individualism as they disposed in their specially designed machines were worked overtime in achieving different effects, while private "trade" designers reaped a harvest. It cost each woman about $500 to buy her clothes, and it was difficult to enter the inspection of others. The gowns cost more than $135 each. Several were air-mailed from New York when the local supply had been delivered to their offices and were delivered with a bill of $200. Shoes were handmade in almost every case, while the band bags carried by the stars, to bulge the carefully tailored outlines of their escorts' full dress clothes, were purchased at $65 each. The capes, too, were purchased only, it was the caps and jacket that gave the handknecks the heaviest blow. Naturally, the furs had to be some shade of white, and it is a fact that white fox andermine have such attributes. "If placed out of doors, its light was streaming far into space. So conservatives say that each mantle of fur carried with it a bill for at least $200 when delivered. Then there was the cost of facials, waves and manicures. The latter treat-ments are used to the nails of the fingers. The polished skin of sheer hose and open-work slippers made it necessary that the two toes be given a treatment to make them look. Flowers, with, perhaps, the escorts assuming that financial burden, were worn in styles that bespoke high-prize designers had been working hard and long. All shades of orchids were present. Woven ropes of velvety gardenias covered meeks and shoulders, while cushions of flowers dung to shoulder struts. "Through the flame was mortal, the emitted light was immortal. On some remote planet, if the light were caught in a spectroscope, an amazing number of things could be found out about the flame from which the light came. Yet, one blind to the light would say that when the flame was gone it was the end. "Man's body we can see; his mind we can under only the action of his eyes." "We know we are blind to the soul. How can we know it does not go on forever with a fullness of life correspond-ing to that of the candlelight? "Thus, failure to find evidence for the permanence of consciousness is inadequate evidence for rejecting its possibility. "Through the scientific preponderance of evidence must be considered as an important factor in assessing sinensis after death, this evidence is much less definite than, for example, that for the existence of a supreme intelligence in nature and cannot be conceived as a reality." Jewels were taken from safety deposit vaults. Guilty Conscience Causes Student To Admit Lapse of Attention This professor explained to his class that the spinal cord was the seat of reflex actions, while the brain produced movements he himself had his own case: While he lectures he walks about the room and handles various objects. He attributes this to the reflex coming from the spinal cord, or the "houghts" coming from his brain. A guilty conscience always speaks for itself sooner or later. In a lecture course on the fill the other day, a certain professor attempted to distinguish between conscious behavior and reflex movements. The students were not yet convinced. The prof then continued, "For instance, your drawing pictures and marking all over your notebook during a lecture is reflex action, of which you are unconscious." The room was perfectly quiet for a minute! Any number of pencil and pens were put down and notebooks were kept on the desk. The lookers were passed around the room. A couple of days later, a student dropped in that professor's office to apologize for his art attempts during the session. The guilty conscious always speaks! German Composes Hymn For Olympics of the author but a number to guarantee fair competition. Lubainah's Hymn will be translated into all the languages of the competing nations. Last month a German periodical arranged a competition for the best translation of Labahn's Hymn. Among the translations received one from the well known Austro-South African writer Aurelius. The words of the translation are; In view of Germany's great musical heritage the International Olympic Committee granted to the Organizing Committee of the Olympic Games in Paris the Olympic Hymn sung at the opening of the Games in addition to the official hymn of Bradley-Keeler, first heard at the opening of the Los Angeles Olympiad. Thus, two hymns will be sung in Berlin and the International Olympic Committee. A few months ago the Organizing Committee held a public competition in Berlin to get a poem, and from over 60 entries the Hymn written by Robert McCann had been unemployed for many years, was chosen. The Hymn was set to music by Richard Strauss. The Hymn was selected by a committee presided over by Mr. Strauss, who met with Munchenhaus. He received all the entries in envelopes bearing not the name Welcome as our guests, ye Nations, Through our open gates draw night! Festive be our celebration, Bring your gifts and banners! Youth would fail its strength in showing And excel.—Olympia!— Praise on thee by deeds bestowing. Conquer well. Olympia! Many nations' pride and flower To the contest hither came; And their prowess and their power, Bright and clear, burns like a flame, Strength and spirit—ch no turray! Hallowed name Olympia! Some will soon the lurrel carry, Crown of fame! Olympia! And with all our hearts thus beating in a noble unity. Let us all ourœur repeating— Vow to honor thy decree. Let the best theen be victorious, Joy on earth—Olympia! And defeat be not ingorious, Peace on earth; Olympia! GREENVILLE COLLEGE HEAD IS UNIVERSITY GRADUATE Dr. H. J. Long, graduate of the University, and former assistant instructor in the department of cheffairy, re-educates students from the village College in Greenwood, IL. For the past three years he has been executive assistant to the president of that institution, and for nine years has worked with the students. Doctor Long received three degrees Universitv Daily Kansan OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS PUBLISHER HARRY VALENTINE EDITOR IN CHIEF BOB ROBINSON ASSOCIATE EDITORS BILL GELL ALMA PRAZER MANAGING EDITOR FRED M. HARRIS II BUSINESS MANAGER P. QUENTON BROWN 31APP Campus Editor Bill Bridges Make Up Editors Dana Holts, Bill Diewens Leadership Leroy Levy News Editor Doug Smarty Security Editor Franzie Mills Journalist John Smith safe and exclusive national advertising representatives NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE, INC. 420 Madison Avenue, New York City Chicago, Illinois.坐床: San Francisco, Los Angeles. Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday messages eps during school holidays by students in the department of Journalism at the University of Texas at Austin from the Port of the Department of Journalism. Subscriptions price, per year. $50 each in cash. $2.25 on payments. Single copies, 12 each. Enclosed an second class master; September 17, 1910, at the post office of Lawrence, Kissel. rom the University of Kansas, being warded his A.B. in 1920, M.A. in 1922, nd Ph.D. in 1927. He taught part-time while doing graduate work. Sub-Zero Weather Calls for CHILI 10c at the Union Fountain Sub-Basement Memorial Union He is a member of Phil Beta Kappa, national honorary society, and Sigma Xi, honorary research society. He also is an ordained minister in the Free Methodist Church. NOW IS THE TIME ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP 1017 Mass, W. E. Whetstone, Prop. Phone 686 Get out those last summer shoes and usd them by dye grey, blue, red or any of the spring shades. SPRING PARTIES call for FLOWERS A Roses Corsages Nothing lends itself into the spirit of the party like a beautiful corsage. We know what is correct Ward's Flowers Flower 820 Fone "Flowers of Distinction" 931 Mass. LEAP YEAR SOUR OWL On Sale Tomorrow -- 15c THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1930 .PAGE THREE Araucaria UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Hill Society BEFORE 5 P.M. CALL K.U. 25; BETWEEN 7:50 AND 9 P.M. CALL 2701K3 OR 2702K3. Gamma Phi Beta entertained last night with its annual "brother's" dinner. The following were guests: Lamber Libel, c/ulen; Albert Moore, c/ulen; Morris McKone, f; J. 1. Poole, D; Dick Banchar, c/38; Bill Green, C; Dick Banchar, c/38; Silhou Lincett, c; Loring Dalton, c; and Char-Overall, c/ulen. ☆ ☆ ☆ Chancellor and Mrs. E. H. Lindley, Miss Helen Rohr, Montclair, N. J. Mrs. J. B. Watkins, Dean and Mrs. Henry Warner, the Rev, and Mrs. T. H. Azzur, the Rev, and Mrs. T. H. Azzur, will be dinner guests at the Kapsu Alpha Thea house tonight. ☆ ☆ ☆ Chi Omega will entertain the following at dinner tonight: Mr. and Mrs. George O. Foster, Miss Elizabeth Meusner, adviser of women; Dean and Mrs. Frank Stockton, Dean and Mrs. Frank Stockton, Dean and Mrs. Haymond A. Schweigler. Dr. Dietrich Zwicker, German exchange student, will discuss "Germany and World Affairs", at the meeting of the World Affairs Commission this afternoon at 4:30 at Henley house. All students are invited to attend. O. B. Hartley, of Des Moines, Iowa, visited Tuesday with his daughter, Catherine Hartley, c'26, at the Kappa Alpha Theta house, and his son, William Hartley, c'29, at the Delta Tau Delta house. The following will be dinner guests tonight at the Beta Theta Pi house: E. H. Taylor, professor of zoology; Allen Sleeper, c;36; Holtart Smith, gr.; Al Coleman, and Lewis Oswald, of Hutchinson. ☆ ☆ ☆ Phi Gamma Delta will hold its annual sing "pig" dinner at the chapter house Saturday night. Invitations have been sent to all alumni of the Kansas chapter. ☆ ☆ ☆ B. F. Dains, professor of chemistry, Vete Noweinski, 'cunic' Roy, Finley, bunel, and John Pincek, c29, were Alpha Cilis House Tuesday night. Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority was hostess at the W.S.G.A. tea yesterday afternoon which was given in the jounge of the Administration building. Amy. Louise Hoffman, c'35, Kansas City, Mo., and Elizabeth Heaton, c'35, Omaha, Neb., will he weekend guests at the Fi Pai Phil house. ☆ ☆ ☆ Catherine DeTor, gr. Corbin hall, attended a recital Monday night at Ottawa in which her sister, Lyle played the violin. Georgia Wols, assistant in the College business office, and Alice Winchell e'uncl, were luncheon guests at the Alpi Chi Omega house yesterday. KO John McNown, c;36; Jack Miller, b;36; Erwin Ephels, c;36; and Donald Philps, c;38; are attending the Mardi Grasp Exposition at New Orleans, La. Mrs. Ward E. Scott, Kansas City, Mo. and Mrs. B. B. Hurringold, Des Moines ☆ ☆ ☆ Mrs. B. G. Dyer, of Topeka, was a luncheon guest yesterday at the Chi Omega house. Iowa, were luncheon guests yesterday at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house. Sigma Nu fraternity will entertain with a formal party at the Eldridge hotel Friday from 6 to 12 p.m. Parmer Lindsay, '33, Wichita, spent several days in Lawrence last week visiting friends. ✩ ✩ ✩ Mary Lou Brown, c38, Corbin hall spent the weekend with her parents at her home in Olathe. Miss Helen Roh, Montclair, N. J. is a guest of Mrs. J. B. Watkins. ☆ ☆ ☆ Alpha Omicron Pi entertained members of Kappa Sigma with an hour dance last night. SCHULZ THE TAILOR 524 Mass. KANSAS RELAYS COMMITTEE APPLICATIONS DUE MONDAY Mrs. George Brooks, of Burden, was a dinner guest last night at the Chi Omega house. Watkins hall will hold open house from 7 to 8 tonight. One Stop Clothes Service Station The closing date for applications for soilitions as freshman members of the Canada Rehys Committee is 3:20 p.m. ext Monday. Applications should beurned in to the office of Ed Elbel, 108obbinson gymnasium. Oklahoma to Remain in Big Six Stories originating in Norman indicating that Oklahoma had been invited to join a southern conference. Campus Calendar Joe Payne, 138, senior manager of the relays committee, expressed the hope that as many freshmen as possible would avail themselves of this opportunity to learn and able to run a typewriter and having had previous experience in handling track and field meetts. It is also necessary that the applicants have some training in afternoon of same days. This vacant time should be站住 in the application. Thursday, February 27 TAILOR Fine Arts student recital, Ad. Aud. 3:30 p.m. El Ateneo, 113 Ad., 4:30 p.m. Kappa Psi, Memorial Union, 7:30 p.m. Chemistry Club, 201 Chemistry building, 4:30 p.m. Quill Club, Women's lounge Ad., 7:30 p.m. Swimming meet: Kansas vs. Nebraska at Lincoln. Sigma Nu party, Eldridge hotel, 6-12 p.m. Friday, February 28 Basketball: Kansas vs. Nebraska at Lincoln. Saturday, February 29 Four doors south of Journal-World Ph. 282 Five expert operators Ph. 283 Swimming meet: Kansas vs. Kansas State at Manhattan. CLASSIFIED ADS PALACE BEAUTY SHOP 25c Finger Wave 25c Psychological examination make-up 115 Fraser, 9:30 p.m. Leap Year Varsity, Memorial Union 9-12 p.m. HOLLOW GHOO BEAUTY SHOPS PHONE K.U. 66 SPECIAL~50c reduction on any per- manent, with this ad, except Saturday Permanents $1.50 to $5.00, complete with hair cut, IVA'S BEAUTY SHOPS, 723½ Mass, Phone 2333; 941½ Mass, Phone 323. TYPEWRITERS: "Streamline" portables, Remington's latest. All makes inquired and exchanged. Special save-againment. New Bakee or Kahut. 902 - 108 Twenty-digit words or just one insertion, 712; Three insertions, 712; Six insertions, 712; Seven insertions, 713; Eight insertions, 714; Payable in advance and subject to request at the Kenyan Business Office. --but had declined to do so, prevent to remain in the Big Six, brought this comment from Dr. F. C. Allen, director of athletics at the University of Oklahoma and manager of relationship between OKahlaan and Kansas. Owens was director of athletics that endeared him to the Kansas and the fine administration of "Biff" Jones has fostered that situation. Kansas has had some stiff competition with Okahlaan and a desire to be the best of sportsmanship and we are glad that conditions are to continue." TYPEWRITERS Student Loans ABE WOLFSON MISCELLANEOUS 743 Mass. TAXI Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S — 920-22 Mass. TAXI ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT TO BOYS. One large double room with caff floors, in quiet modern home, home for sleeping room or apartment. 1123 Ohio Phone 2828M. Wrestling Meet This Week More than 120 men at the University of Kansas entered the intramural wrestling meet which was held this week. The semi-finals will be held Friday afternoon and evening and the finals will take place Tuesday of next month in the gymnasium immediately after the Kansas-Oklahoma basketball game. More Than 120 Men Turn Out for Intra mural Sports Events It was noted that a good share of the men participating were non-organization men. --the University recently cancelled its remaining intercollege dual meets because of the small size of the varsity squad. The lighter weights were entirely unrepresented and there were no consoles in the heavier weights. Consoles are usually provided for the vursity and the intramural situation, Dr. F. C. Allen, director of athletics, said, "There is no doubt the Kansas boys like to wrestle, but they do not have the time or the inclination for long training necessary for a member of a varsity squad. Also, the intra-tournament do not come under the eligibility rules which keep so many of the varsity squad." Professor Raymond Eastwood gave a lecture Tuesday evening on the art of etching, block printing, image-engraving and lithography in the Spooneron studio. He also course of lectures on the fine arts. Prof. J. M. Kellog of the School of Engineering and Architecture will lecture on painting in "Architecture in Lawrence." Eastwood Gives First Lecture 2.47 p.m. — Elementary French Lea Ha W K Cornell 2:30 p.m. — Spanish Lesson, Mr. Clat 2:44 p.m.—News Flashes, W. A. Dill. February 27—Thursday 6:00 p.m. - Elementary German Lesson m.p.m. E. F. E. Engel A HIT WITH MID-WEEK CROWD Received by dancers with marked enthusiasm, the second animeatur program, held in connection with the regular mid-week variety last night, practically insures the continuation of similar programs each Wednesday. Jack Becker, c'ucll, an independent with a pleasing voice, was given an encouragement hard by his audience. Ed Eldredge, a longtime Sig Epidies holder with an accordian solo. Last night's program took up only 10 minutes time, which has been decided upon as being the time limit for future programs. ENGEL ATTENDS LANGUAGE CONVENTION IN ST. LOUIS Bill Cochran, manager of the Memorial Union, announced that a platform would be erected in front of the grandstand in order that everyone might see the programs more easily. Gene Lloyd brought forth a thunderous applause when he announced the Loop Year dance, which he said, would give the men an opportunity to have a bite at the expense of the women. He also mentioned that the agents to play for the Junior Prom, will come from the famous Cotton Club in New York. The identity of the hand will be officially announced Saturday. Prof. E. F. Engel returned yesterdays from St. Louis where he took part in a panel discussion on the subject, "The Place of Foreign Language Study in an integrated Secondary School Program." The discussion was sponsored by the national Federation of Modern Language Teachers in connection with the Department of Superintendence of the National Education Association. This was the first meeting held at which representatives of foreign languages and supervisors of secondary education have discussed together the value of foreign language study and its claim to a place in a secondary school curriculum. PROFESSOR WILEY CONDUCTS OSAGE CITY BAND CONCERT Russell L Wiley, director of the University hand, was guest conductor of a 75-piece band composed of members of the Burlington, Osage City, and Lyndon high schools, at Osage City last night. The concert, which was sponsored by the Oscea City Chamber of Commerce, had been postponed from Lir con'coin's birthday, because of the unusual condition of the roads in that seek at the time. Apparing on the program, also, were Horace Thornburg, faule, trembonist, and Russell Howland, clarinetist, who gave special solos. They were accompanied on the piano by Mrs. Wiley. CHARLES HULAC WILL WORK WITH LOCAL Y.M.C.A. GROUP Charles Hulac, regional chairman of the Student Christian movement in the Rocky Mountain region, was introduced to the cabinets of the Y.M.C.A. and Y.M.C.A. at a joint meeting held yearly. The student body of the house. Hulac will spend two or three weeks in Lawrence working with the local Y.M.C.A. He is a student of the University of Nebraska at Lincoln. An account of the recent convention of the Student Christian Movement has been planned for the Estes Park convention to be held in Colorado this summer were outlined. work in sanitary engineering. He has been sent here by his firm, Black and Veatch, consulting engineers, of Kansas City, Mo. Former Graduate in New Field work in Mr. Paul A. Diehl, e9, has enrolled been seen in the School of Engineering and Ar- Veach, 6 chitecture as a special student to take was City, HAVE YOU HEARD that Russ Chezem (Designing artist for the Jayhawker) Is Now Connected With Our Interior Decoration Department. Decorations Are Important as Music Make Plans for Them Now His experience in conjunction with our present designers ability enables us to offer you an original and complete design. CALL 72 Initiation Flowers must not be overlooked. RUMSEY Flower Shop ALLISON "K.U. Flowers for K.U." SPECIAL 10% OFF FRIDAY and SATURDAY On Any Purchase of $1.00 or over OCHSE PRINTING and PARTY SHOP 814 Mass. — Phone 288 © 1999, K. J. Bernera Tobacco Co., Wilmington, N. C. For Digestion's Sake_smoke Camels A QUET PICTURE of student life? That's the way it looks—but undercarmel, may be seeing and to umbrella, the long grind. Turn to Camels — they promote good digestion C Smoking Camels Found to Ease the Strain and Promote Well-Being Life gets more complex. The pace grows faster. Where do we see the effects? Frequently on digestion, so often overtaxed by the busy whirl! It is significant that smoking Camels has been established as a definite aid in promoting good digestion. You'll find it worth while. to turn to Camels yourself. They have a mildness that never grows tiresome. Make the pleasant experience of smoking Camels part of your daily life, and see how much more zest you need for smoking and how your digestion is measurably improved. Camels set you right! BARBERSHOP PARKLAND And now we come to one of modern life's most gracious privileges—dining at Keen's English Chop House in New York., famous gatherer of the last century. "We've noticed that patrons who appre 3. 已知 $a, b, c$ 为实数,且 $a^{2}+b^{2}=c^{2}$,则 $a+b=$ ___. M IRON MAN. MURAN Murdock (in center), of the N. Y. Rangers, has played over 500 straight-hockey games. "I often have to eat beef," Muran says. "Canals help me to digest my food." a fine food also appreciate fine tobacco", says William, of Keen's. "Camelts are a favorite here. We noticed that our guests who ate them were happy to see them seem to find more pleasure in dining." JUNGLE BOUND! "I smoke Camels for digestion's sake", says Iwok Buck, famous wild animal collector. "Camels for flavor!" he says. "They are rich and mellow, yet delicately mild." 八里 五里 TUNE IN! CAMEL CARAVAN with WALTER OREKEE DRAKE JANE TED MESSING GLEN GRAY and the CASA LOMA ORCHESTRA Tunnel and Thunder = 9-p.m. L.S.T. 8 p.m. C.S.T. 9-10 p.m. M.S.T. 8:30 p.m. P.S.T. over WALK-Canadian Network SHAWNIE JONES COSTLIER TOBACCOS! Camels are made from finer. MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS - Turkish and Domestic - than any other popular brand. CAMEL TURKISH COUZAH PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1930 水 Jayhawker Squad Attempts To Cinch Title at Lincoln Victory for Team Friday Would Leave Kansas at Top of the Conference Kansas will attempt to hop its final Big Six obstacle in the way of a conference championship Friday night at Notre Dame and Lincoln. With all other teams of the league having more than three losses, a victory for the Hawkeyws over the Cornhunks will clutch the team. Kansas games and still emerse in the load. Kansas showed a supremacy over the fast-moving Nebraskans when the Cornhuskers invaded the Lawrence court. There will be a difference this time—both in the location of the game and the pitch to which Nebraska has worked itself. This time, the Lincoln team led by leaders for a loop or die in the attempt. If one team was ever primed for another, Nebraska is priced for Kansas. In Good Condition Barring further accidents, the Jay- hawkers will be in fine condition for Friday night. Coach F. C. Allen is carving for his team in every possible way, and he will not be to blame if they do not come through. Fred Pralle, who injured his knee in acsimetry last week, was sent to work before Friday night. His shot-shot will not be missing from the two teams step on the court. The Red team is doing its part in preparing the starting five for the tilt that means so much to Kansas. In scrimmages from night to night, they have been pushing the first quintet to force them to keep ahead. Although the Reds have been unable to win in the scrimmage against Washington, the Whites open their bus of tricks. Leading Scorers Meet **Leading Scorers Meet** With the same game, an excellent chance will be afforded for one of them to pull away from the other. At the present time. Eling has a slight edge over Wahqihtul Eling with an 13-point average compared even 13-point average compared BULLETIN Iowa State defeated Drake University 37 to 29 last night, in a non-conference game played at Des Moines. Wahalqiusha 12.6. It will be Wahalqiusha's last chance to overtake Eblish as it is Nebraska's last conference game this season. On the other hand, should Wahlqiust make enough points to pass Eblish, the Jayhawk star will have two more games in which to gain back the coveted lead. Eblish has an excellent chance to set a record by holding the national scoring honors for three seasons. Kansas' squad will probably leave Thursday evening or early Friday morning in order to get to Lincoln in time to relax before the game. They willprobably travel in cars in preference to a train or bus. Men's Intramurals Quarter and semi-finals of the intranural wrestling tournament will be run off this afternoon, and the finals will be held immediately following the Kansas-Oklahoma basketball game next Tuesday night. The pairings for today; 138-mp:倒, 430; foreman, Phi Gam, vs Mize, Phi Delt; 435; Theta, Theta Tau vs. Parcore, unatt; 440; Brown, Theta Tau vs. Parcore, unatt; 445, Cole Theta Tau vs. Noble, S.A.E. 188-pound: 5,00; Fees, Beta, vs Tromer, Phoi Delt; 51, 510, Lambon, unatt, vs Farley, Beta; 51.5, Greenes, Phi Gam, KPA, vs Littow, Jenson, Pi KA, KIA., vs Littow, Beta. 148-pound: 5:25, Lamm, Theta Tau, n vs Nicholson, Baldi: 5:30, White, unatt, v vs Townsley, Phil Delt: 5:35, Moore v vs Knapp, Phil Delt: 6:25, Sleeper, Phil Delt, vs Scott, S.A.E 121-pound: 8:00, Roberts, Phi Psi, vs Hamilton, Phi Psi; 8:10, Catren, unatt, vs Ainsworth, Phi Psi. 128-pound: 8:15, Nikon, Phi Deit, vs Dieter, Sigma Chi; 8:20, Le Moine, Phi Gam, vs Russell, Theta Tau. 168-pound: 8:25, Bodley, Phi Delt, vs Pierson, Kappa Sig; 8:30, Fields, Beta vs Bickett, Phi Gam. 178-pound: 8:53, Harrington, Beta, vs Guthrie, Theta Tau; 8:40, McCoy, Phelt, vs Morland, Theta Tau 8:45, McCoy, 8:45, beginning with the 138-pound class. Rifle Teams Match Held In Fowler Shops Range National Guard Defeats University Team in Match A team made up of Major S. A. McKone, Lieutenant S. A. McKone, Jr., and Decker was a rifle match from a five-man team picked from the University team Tuesday in the Fowler shop team. The score was very close, 1619-1609. Lieutenant S. A. McKone, Jr., was high with a score of 170 out of a possible 400 points. McKone is one of the National Guards in this area. The University team was made up of Carl Helman, Wayne Sellon, Lawrence Hunt, and David Ward. Hunt, Helman and Sellon tied for high team honors with scores of The women's rifle team won one match and the men's team failed to win. The women's team won a week's telegraphic matches with Universities throughout the United States. The women's team from the University of Washington University by the score of Washington University by the score of PATEE 10c 15c ENDS TONITE Mazo De La Roche's "JALA N" FRI. - SAT. Big Double Show JOHN WAYNE "LAWLESS NINETIES" JOHN CARROLL STEFFI DUNA* AL also Choose 14 MIRACLE RIDER* Sunday - Monday "THE BARRETTS OF WIMPOLE STREET" 957-941, and tied them in the hgh five total with 858. All the matches in which the women competed were very close The men's team met defeat at the hands of the University of Pittsburgh R.O.C.T. team, 3656-3329; University of Pittsburgh diversity team, high five, nine, 1821-1821; University of Wyoming, high five, nine, 1824; national biology, high five total, 1398-1231; University of Florida, high five, 1906-1710, high ten, 3733-3329. The women's team lost to the University of South Dakota 962-857, and to Cornell University, high five, 487-485. The telegraphic matches continue this week and Sergent Engle expects some improvement in the team's showing because of intensive practice on the part of all team members. The men's team especially is working overtime. THURSDAY SPECIALS Swiss Steak Chicken and Dumplings And other Good Food O at the UNIVERSITY DINING ROOM in the Union Building No Fine Arts Classes Today There will be no classes in the School of Fine Arts today or tomorrow because faculty members are attending the Kansas State Music Teachers Association in Topeka. However, fine arts students who have classes in the College are expected to attend them as usual. GRANADA 25c 'til 7 — Shows 3-7-9 ENDS TODAY One of the Greatest Mystery Dramas of the Stage Is on the Screen With a Thousand Thrills! "SEVEN KEYS TO BALDPATE" GENE RAYMOND MARGARET CALLAHAN Also — Our Gang Comedy "West Point of the Air" Latest News Events FRIDAY - SATURDAY The Finest Ann Harding Since "Holiday" A Swift-Paced, Smartly Dialogued Drama of Women's War for Passion — Told in a Turbulent Stov of Three Souls in Conflict! ANN HARDING HERBERT MARSHALL Continuous Shows 1-3-5-7-9 'The Lady Consents' SUNDAY "THE MUSIC GOES 'ROUND" Harry Richman Rochelle Hudson 8 New Song Hits Two Famous Bands Les Hite's Band and The Blackbirds Farley and Rilee with Their Original Onyx Club 'Onyx and Around Bears LUCKIES-ALIGHT SMOKE OF RICH, RIPE-BODIED TOBACCO—"IT'S TOASTED Luckies are less acid LUCKY STRIKE TOBACCO CIGARETTES Luckies are less acid Copyright 1956, The American Tobacco Company Excess of Acidity of Other Popular Brands Over LuckyStrike Cigarettes Excess of Acidity of Other Popular Brands Over Lucky Strike Cigarettes BALANCE LUCKY STRIKE BRAND B BRAND C BRAND D Recent chemical tests show* that other popular brands have an excess of acidity over Lucky Strike of from 51% to 100%. They include preliminary analyses of the tobaccoos selected; use of center leaves; the higher heat treatment of tobacco ("toasting"); consideration of acid-alkaline balance, with consequent definite improvement in flavor; and controlled uniformity in the finished product. Over a period of years, certain basic advances have been made in the selection and treatment of cigarette tobacco for Lucky Strike Cigarettes. *RESULTS VERIFIED BY INDEPENDENT CHEMICAL LABORATORIES AND RESEARCH GROUPS . . . uckie All these combine to produce a superior cigarette—a modern cigarette, a cigarette made of rich, ripe-badied tobacco—A Light Smoke. Your throat protection—against irritation—against cough uckies-"IT'S TOASTED" LEAP YEAR SPECIAL TWO DAYS — FRIDAY - SATURDAY TIE One Group of Wool Suits $ Values up to $30. Friday and Saturday--- Hart Schaffner & Marx, Clothcraft and Carlbrooke Tailored. Single Breasters Double Breasters Sport Backs Styles for Men Styles for Young Men $ 17^{50} -a suit buying event that you cannot afford to pass up. 60 Pair Hockmeyer Corduroy Pants, Special---- $2.35 Special Reductions Neckties Robes Wool Hose Sweaters Leather Jackets Wool Jackets Shirts Pajamas Odd Trousers PRICES GOOD FOR TWO DAYS ONLY BETTER COME CARLS GOOD CLOTHES Faculty... Students... Why not patronize the business firms that advertise in the UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN? Read Daily Kansan Ads When you are in need of highquality merchandise and Money-saving bargains 100 . . . . . Kindly mention seeing ad in Daily Kanan . . . . UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XXXIII Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas NUMBER 104 LAWRENCE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1936 on the SHIN By BUD EVANS, 36 Letters At Last . . . Romeo and Juliet . . . Pee Eagle in the News Becker Makes Good . . . Sleuth Nichols . . . Miss Hoover Performs . . . Twas a Close Battle. Old "Snoop" really got some mail this morning, and he feels a bit inclined to sorta take the afternoon off, and celebrate. But, on second thought, maybe we'd better stick around, and run a few of these epistles. "The first one has to do with Jim Clarkson, Pelt Delti, and Bernice Burris, charming Kappa freshman, who seem to be putting on their version of Romeo and Juliet each night at closing hours here of late. Understand that, I think, the play is interesting, and then this "good-night" stuff starts all over again! The said that the drama of the whole affair is much like that of an apprentice, but the sincerity of it all runs true to form when there are two elephants in love. Alm, no matter a business!" + + + As bad as we hate to mention the name of Eileen, we suppose we'll have to—one more. Recently in his Community Recreation class, which is comprised entirely of people with disabilities, plus a few others, Ed suddenly (he's been doing it for years, people, so it wasn't just out of a clear sky) began calling the roll by the mid-80s. In response, he joined Durand Pearl E. Eagle's embarrassment when his name was—skipped! Understand that Jack Becker, the boy who sang in the Amateur program at last night's mid-week variety, really did a swell job. Nice going,Jack! If they all do that well—the thing ought to be a success. Someone writes as that Clyde Nichols, Beta sleuth, was seen safe-housing it up to the Kappa house the other night in the brisk February breces (in and on his shirt sleeve), too. Followed by a joke about her role. Yes she — jeasouoya is a terrible thing, and it always crops out in such juvenile tendencies as these that little Nick displayed: The item was signed and had a magic ring, having magni- tion, even in a Beta). Wonder how many of you saw the girl in the little green coat, and the gent in the gray suit ascend Fourth Street. It was positional, thrilling folks—arm around her neck, and her arm around his, and what not, all the way up. And the weather will do to people! Walking up that hill is struggling even as it is. Yesterday afternoon, the new diving board in the Robinson gymnasium pool broke—very unexpectedly, of course. Seems it all came to pass when Miss Heover was standing on it preparing to demonstrate a "back spring." Must have been funny. Better go easy on the potatoes and for potatoes on a while! Has anyone seen Bill Gill? Paging Mr. Gill! Paging Mr. Gill! We sure want to get in touch with this Phi Gam who handed us a story last night before the heralded Bicket-Field bounty told of poor Lyman's defense. There was only one thing wrong with his little item - Bicket didn't win. Hereafter Bill you got a chance to play your quality before they are fully materialized or something! Anyway, it was a mighty fine scrap, and both boys deserve a lot of credit. Sour Owl Magazine It Not Essentially Issue For Lady Students This morning students will encounter numerous hawkers who will endeavor to sell them the latest, and report them in order to our Owl cappus humor publication. Though the magazine capitalizes in this issue on the leap year situation it is not essentially a ladies' number Joe Pryor, editor, emphasizes. Rus Chechenko, author of Beautiful Women garlanded around a "mere man." The publication carries articles on the leap year situation and troubles, jokes and also a discourse satirically rendered upon the contemporary international situation called "Yea Peacel! Yea War." Phillips Flays PSGL's; Resigns His Position Action Said To Result from Desire To Have Harmony in Group; Pachacamacs Charge Arbitrary Violation of Constitution and Unfairness in Election of Ross Robertson Counter-charges in the Owl society controversy yesterday were hurled at PSGL members by John Phillips, Pacha-jo, and a position as president of the organization as co-president of the group. Declaring that the PSGLS had violated an agreement in fixing blame for the difficulty upon the Pachacamacs, Phillips issued a statement to the Kansan in which he declared that PSGLS had attempted arbitrarily to violate precedent, constitution, and fairness in electing Robertson president with his endorsement. The black-hall" three new members unless he were allowed to retain his position. According to Phillips, he resigned to restore harmony to the society. Robertson was elected president of the group Feb. 11, receiving six votes as against two for Phillips and two for Bill Township. At a subsequent meeting, Pachacamac declared that Robertson lacked the constitutional two- thirds majority, and a new election was ordered. With neither faction holding power, there were three new members waiting outside to be initiated, there developed a deadlock which resulted in the election of two presidental candidates, Pachaemae, and PSG1. It is said that members of the society greed to maintain secrecy on the entire matter, in order to conceal news of the attack. Mrs. Manning used a statement Wednesday in which she accUSED the Pacchiesmen of allowing petty politics to interfere with the owl purposes of the Owl society, and accused the minister is in retaliation of his accusation. It has been pointed out that politics did not enter into the selection of the three new initiates. One had been active in PSGL politics and the others were connected with the Pacchionic party only through fraternal connect- Club Endorses Gov. Landon U. Young Republicans Discuss Membership Campaign Plans A resolution endorsing Gov. Alf M. Landon as its choice for the next President was presented by Lawrence Smith, 137, and unanimously adopted by the K. U. Young Republican Club in the first meeting of the spring semester last night. Approximately 60 students were present. Plans also were adopted to work in co-operation with the Landon-President club in its spring activities. Discussions centered around a proposed nation-wide student organization of Landon clubs in all American colleges. A vigorous membership campaign was outlined by Quentin Brown, president of the club. Bill Downs was appointed chairman of this movement. Harry O-Riley, c'29, gave a report of the state convention held in "bewaakest月" last week. Following is the resolution adopted: "Resolved that the K. U. Young Re-asserts its choice for the next President of the United States, and that it pledges its full support and co-operation to bring the election and election in the coming campaign." Granada Has Leading Films According to a recent announcement the Granada theater last year showed 10 of the 12 pictures chosen by the National Screen Council as being the best films of 1935. The Granada also showed seven of the ten best films selected by the Nation's picture critics and the National Association of Four Star clubs, the Junior Review group of the National Board of Review. Majority of Outstanding Pictures in 1935 Shown at Local Theater These selections included "David Copperfield," "The Informer," "Top Hat," "Naughty Marietta," "Alice Abbett," "Bibbita," and "Muliny on his Bounty." S. E. Schwain, manager of the Granada predicts that these same groups will select the ten best pitchers it hits coming soon to the Granada "Follow the Fleet." "The Story of Louis Pasteur." "Collegen," "The Great Ziegart," "The Rangers" and "Might of Scotland." "Midammer" "Night of a Dream," "and Great Features." JOHN PHILLIPS' STATEMENT "Sunday evening, after the new famous 'Owl Compromise' had been reached, the total membership of the society agreed that in order to heal the rift which had opened between the members and to promote peace, parties would forget the issue and proceed as a unified whole without further argument. Yesterday to attain some political advantage, the PSGL party broke that agreement and attempted publicly to blame us for the entire affair. We now feel it was time to admit the action of the opposition. "In the first place, Owl Society elections have always observed the constitutional provision requiring a two-thirds majority for the election. The other half will vouch for that fact. In our present society, the original officers were elected by a vote of 10.7 is it that this lacks one-third of one vote from being a complete two-thirds majority. But members of the older generation would allow the dropping of any fraction of a vote under one-half, and add one vote for any fraction of a vote over one-half. This practice seemed eminently fair, and we followed it. These officers were required to vote on the two-thirds majority with the full knowledge of the PSLM board. FRANCO-SOVIET PACT MADE "In the pseudo-election which PSGL recently conducted, the candidate was declared elected with a majority. It was not the way could such a declaration be justified. The ballot did not constitute two-thirds of the membership as required by the constitution. Thus, only 30% of the members present. It did not even represent a plain majority vote of the society for there were 18 members. On no basis of interpretation did that election have been legal. "Naturally some members presented an attempt by such a small minority to arbitrarily violate precedent, constitution, and fairness, but they were not under the society constitution. We could not have intended to railroad any one man into office because with the dropping out of two members at mid-year neither group now had the required strength to elect. Any candidate, therefore, would preclude the removal of partisan lines. The PSGL leader, confronted with a motion for reelection, bluntly stated that if an election were held, and he were not elected, that three men waited outside to be initiated would be blackened and would lack the guardess of the fact that these men had been unanimously agreed upon by all of them. It was an openly coerce statement. The selection of an officer seemed to us to be the purely internal affair of the Owl Committee. We felt that the election of new members into an honor society was not merely our personal affair but that it represented a responsibility to the entire junior class. We refused to allow those three men to be sacrificed to the PSGL. We accepted the PSGL terms of compromise. The men were initiated. "I deploy the whole situation with its ensuing complications. I regress the PSGL attitude, violating a whole-hearted attempt to rectify it, which makes this statement necessary but contradicts that they do not intend to let the issue be laid. I am resigning the co-presidency as the only step now open to restore harmony to the society. I do so, not because I have any doubt as to the rightness of our government or to meet the PSGLs on their own petty basis would be disgiring and futile"—John Phillips. "Perhaps Pachacamac members can be criticized for trying to enforce our constitution. Perhaps we can be criticized for refusing to allow six men out of eighteen to elect a president. But we did not allow our personal feelings or petty politics to influence the decisions we were subverting the purposes of th society by refusing to allow the entrance of deserving men. Paris, Feb. 27 — (UP) The Franco-Soviet mutual assistance pact, the strongest link in the military chain being fledged around Nazi Germany was ratified $33 to approve the Chamber of Deputies' touch. The treaty provides for immediate mutual military assistance in case of an unprovoked attack upon European territory of either power, granting the right to determine whether the attack was unprovoked. WAR IN TOKIO Rebels and Loyal Forces Fight in Streets Communications Are Closed Shanghai, Friday, Feb. 18, 11:58 a.m.—(UIP)—Japanese reports from Tokyo at mid-day said rebellious soldiers had refused to evacuate government buildings they have been occupying since the war began; that “tire-faced has been interrupted.” Copyright By UP 1936 The New York Telephone Co. also refused calls to Tokyo after 3.53 p.m. Thursday, eastern standard time (7:35 a.m. Friday, Tokio time). Orders were that no call could be accepted except on government business, the overseas department of the telephone company said. New York, Feb. 28—(UP) - Reporte were circulated throughout the Fair East at mid-day Friday (10 p.m. Central Standard Time) that fighting had started in the streets of Toko between rebelled soldiers and forces loyal to the government. The reports were based on private commercial telegrams and the fact that the Tokio broadcast stations, which held most of all alliance all over the Orient were silent. Singapore, Friday, Feb. 28—(UP) Rumors were circulated in the region usely community here today that fighting has started in Tokio between rebellious troops and forces loyal to the government. Second Scarlet Fever Case Dudley Richards Is Confined Hospital With Malady The second case of scarlet fever among the students of the University has been reported by Dr. Ralph L. Camenote, director of Watkins Memorial Hospital. Dudley Richards, curem, of 1328 Ohio, is now in the hospital wint the disease. A temporary quarantine room and the roaming house in which he lives. The Dick test, given for scarlet fever, was administered to the occupants of the house yesterday. Today the test will be read and those persons show- ing symptoms of it will be quarantined for one week; the others will be released today. Howard F. Tayler, died Wednesday night at Research hospital in Kansas City, Mo. Tayler, who was graduated with a degree in civil engineering, was the secretary and purchasing agent for the annual Railway. He was 61 years old. K.U. Alumnus Dies With incredible precision they moved on to what to them was a sacred crucade and before anyone in Japan had gained their end. They had gained their end. There will be days of deliberation JAYHAWKS ON TO LINCOLN HOPING TO CINCH TITLE That is hara-kiri — suicide by disembowling in the traditional Japanese manner — stipulated by the code of the Samurai. Precision and Daring Mark Japanese Cabinet Killings State High School Debating League Holds Finals Today Two Groups in Each Class To Have Three Rounds To Determine Winners Led by four army captains — who commanded 900 troops — the fanciest swords, pistols, and machine guns. It is expected that some time today the officers will submit to arrest and trial or take the gentleman's way out. Tokyo. Feb. 27-(UP) - it is 7:03 Friday morning and for the first time I am able to tell how 300 Japanese soldiers repelled and killed two cabinet officers and three high officials of the court and army. Clyde high school -- affirmative, Stella Simoneau and Daisy Kuih, Negative, Daward Regnier and Dorothy Slip- Hill, alternate and alternate and Honer Tempin, coach. Concordia high school -Cecil Myers, Bill Gunter, Carl Pettyjohn, and Jack Mahan. Miss Gwendolyn Fletcher is twelve. The following schools have sent in the names of their debaters: Garfield high school--Affirmative, Virgil Hays and Harold Bird. Negative. Meric Dean Basson and George Lunfer. Ward G. Fordman. coach. (By radio telephone from Tokio to New York) World Copyright by United Press, 1935 An elimination tournament with dual, or triangular meets, in case of a tie will be held Saturday morning with finals in each class Saturday afternoon. Grinnell high school—Elizabeth Barclay, Dorothy Smart, Fred Korte, and Wilfred Ostmeyer. Lois E. Ferguson, coach. By Ray G. Marshall Lebanon high school—Charles Hall, Robert Hendrickson, Robert Finch, Richard Fisher, Alfred Stackhouse. Frank W. Cunningham, coach. Little River high school—Bonnade Everett, Cloe Wernet, Dorycker Gucker, Charles Hodgson, Irvin Hodgson, Miss Zeila Rose, coach Mullinville high school—Beth Brown Doris Brown, Garnett Fellers, Alma Rowens, Eena Wollon, coach. Thursday evening an incomplete list of entries was as follows: Clide high school, Grimlin high school, Grimlin high school, Lebanon high school, Little River high school, Mullinville high school, Pratt high school, Wichita high school, High school Finals in the Kansas High School Debating League will begin this afternoon with all schools entered in Class A and 12 in Class B. Each class will compete in one team, and numbered teams competing in one group and the odd numbered teams in the other group. Preliminaries will consist of three rounds in each, the ranking team and rank-up of each team to be announced at 11 p.m. Friday. Pratt high school--Affirmative, B Martin, and Walter Martin; negative Sidney Martin, and Marion Sellers Coach, Miss Grace Dressler. Wichita East high school--Affirmative, Robert McKay, and Leo Rhodes negative, Robert Baird, and Margaree Craig; alternates, Herman Quinius, and Robert Hedges, Coach, Warren T Kinsubury. Wyndate high school, Kansas City, Kan- Sylvia Walnow, Lourie. Whitehurry, John Oakau, Brewer Powers, Warlton Warblow, Coach, Leagard Jensen. before the complexion of the new government will be determined. There will be no change in the form of Jaanan's government. ernment will be d This is certain: But there will unquestionably be a change in its policies in recognition of the demands of the men who killed Mahasibu, Kalashi, Sato, Szukaj, and Watanabe. Not a single name of the enlisted men who participated in the killing has been revealed. Not until martial law was proclaimed and troops began assembling on the streets was Tokio aware of the gruesome killing. For 24 hours after the assassinations and while the assassins and their followers were barricaded in police headquarters, the officials did nothing about them. Investigation showed that the four army captains involved acted alone. Apparently, all the assassinations occurred simultaneously. There is doubt as to what happened to Count (Continued on Page Three) Cornhuskers Must Win Tonight's Game in Order To Have a Chance at Big Six Basketball Pennant The University of Kansas basketball squad left Lawrence about 8 o'clock this morning on its way to a hoped-for sixteenth straight victory and a cinched Big Six conference title. The Cornhuskers will be awaiting with open arms their chance to ruin Jayhawker chances for an undefeated season. "I look for an attendance of 8000," said D Student Supreme Court Bill Read Last Night Coach F. C. Allen took his team in cars, leaving this morning in order to arrive at Lincoln in sufficient time to allow his men to rest. he had formerly planned on using the train for the trip, but decided against it because of the fine weather. Committee on Amendments Will Prepare Form for Council The bill providing for the establishment of a Student Supreme Court was read last night at a special meeting of the Men's Student Council, and submitted to a committee for amendments. Members of the committee for writing the amendments are: Philip Raup, c38; Thomas Wittgenstein, c39; Eunice c'encl; and Vee Tucker, b37. The bill for the court, before it was given to the amendment committee, provided for two associate justices to be chosen from each political party which polled 300 or more votes in the preceding spring election, and the chief justice was to be chosen by the association. court, as stated in the original form of the bill, were: (1) To handle all controversies and cases which are now being handled by the Men's Student Council; (2) To handle all controversies of any nature among students or other persons who shall agree to be submitted to the jurisdiction of the court; (3) To handle all cases, controversies or disputes arising under the laws of the Men's Student Council. Vacancy Petitions Presented Vacancy Petitions Presented Petitions for a vacancy, created by the resignation of Kenneth Born, c36, were presented by both parties and filed with the secretary. The vacancy will be filled in two or more months after the date of publication of the vacancy, as required by the Council's constitution. The date of the intramural carnival has been changed from April 2 to Wednesday, April 1. The reason for the change is that Wednesday is believed not to break up the week's activities as much as having it on a Thursday night. The joint committee on student affairs has granted 12:30 closing hours for the dance with the students that the scheduled dance shall not last more than an hour and a half, and that hereafter such activities shall be held on weekends. Joint Banquet Tuesday The joint banquet of the M.S.C. and the W.S.G.A. will be held next Tuesday in New York to celebrate a Bill pertaining to the council's fiscal year was read and tailed until the next meeting. The purpose of the bill was to make the fiscal year begin and end on July 1, instead of in the spring as be-coordinate better with council and campus activities. Powell to Address Laws The Law School will have its second convocation this morning at 10:30 in the Little Theatre at Green. The speaker will be Judge Elmer N. Powell of Kansas City, Mo., a graduate of the University of Oklahoma, subject will be the "Unflogination Lawyer." All law students and pre-law students are invited to attend. Fireside Forum, Congregational church, 12. AUTHORIZED PARTIES Friday, Feb. 28 Christian Church Young People's Society, Myers hall, 12. Sigma Nu. Eldridge, 12. Saturday, Feb. 29 Saturday, Feb. 29 Leap Year Varsity, Memorial Jnion. 12 (Limited Date) For the Joint Committee ELIZABETH MEGUIAR, Adviser of Women. on Student Affairs. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Palle Will Start Game Dr. Allen. "It will be Nebraska's last game of the season, and Coach Brown's men will be going the limit. The crowd will be thrilled when they see the crowd will, urging on the competitive spirit. Widman, Wahlquist and Whitaker will be playing their last games. "I am hoping that the Kauas players will catch the spirit of the occasion. Pearl, I venture, will forget his sprained ankle, and be in the game. One thing I are afraid of is that the string of 17 victories may become too prominent in minds, and they will be playing to defeat, rather than playing to win." This prolonged 17-game winning streak which the Kansas team is enjoying is the longest since Kansas teams entered basketball competition. During the 1929-30 season, the combination of Bishop *O* Leary-Bauch-Cox-Page ran the victories up to 13 before suffering a setback. That winning streak continued until the Nets regregation and was ended by the same school. An unforested season for Kansas this year would push the victory-string up to the 20 mark. Cornhuskers Are Primed Corkshires are Prime. Judge Titus Judson, which the *Orchhikas* landed in the middle of the heoners' back, are they fully primed or their meeting with Kansas. Neraska knocked the Sooners out of any possible chance to even tie for the conference lead, and the Lincoln cagers must win its next two encounters to maintain the top. A Kansas victory will assure the conference championship while a Kansas loss forces the Jayhawkers to win their last two conference games to stick on top of the heap. Roy Bellinghouser's conference lead in scoring will help Kansas win the Wahquist, of Nebraska, and Frank Groves, of Kansas State. However, to Ebling's advantage, these other two alarms for the lead have only one more game apiece in which to overtake Ebling. The game tonight will be Wahquist's 13-point average point average up above Eblins's present 13-point average, while Eblin will enjoy a two-game chance after the Nebraska game. Groves has considerable scoring to do in his final game if he is to win the game by boosting his own 12-point average. Kansas Squad in Shane The Jayhawkers have no hindrance to their chances by injuries or sickness. In a short scrimmage yesterday, the first squad was laying the ball in from all angles including the impossible ones. The team might like to see on the bench with a sprained ankle, was using that member with his old adoress as he went swinging in for his usual floating setup. They hadn't seen anyone tonight should be a battle from start to finish as both teams feel the urge to win this game at any cost. The starting lineups: Ebling f Holliday f Noble c Kappelman g Wilson g Former Kansas - Nebraska scores since Big Six formation: 1929 29 30 1930 37 29 1930 37 29 1931 36 33 1931 36 33 1931 34 29 1932 34 19 1932 34 19 1933 31 29 1933 32 29 1934 34 20 1934 34 24 1935 25 24 1935 32 21 1936 32 24 1936 45 23 Total points 2,002 1,635 Games won 11 4 All time won 42 26 PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY FEBRUARY 28 1936 ≈ Comment 21 Censorship Abroad The Associated Press carried a dispatch this last week stating that "The Journal," one of the most prominent newspapers in France, had suppressed a recent edition upon the complaint of the German embassy whose objection to the paper was that it carried an article entitled "The Secret Loves of Chancellor Hitler." Evidently the German ambassador considered publicity of this sort unsavory and highly undesirable for Hitler. At any rate, sufficient pressure was brought to bear to prevent the distribution of the papers after they had been run off the press. This is just one example of news suppression in foreign countries. Freedom of the press is a practically unheard of thing in France, Germany, and Russia. These countries have highly effective forms of governmental censorship. It is almost a crime to offend the government in any of these countries. Our entry for the theme song of the campus liberals, "I'm Going to Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter." Suppression of an edition of "Le Journal" takes us back to the reign of Queen Elizabeth in England when, as history goes, a single publication was suppressed for a period of six years. The history of the freedom of the press abroad reveals many similar instances in which the government has put its foot down, and publications have ceased. Not until we hear of occurrences of this sort are we, in America, able to gain a perspective on the situation and realize the amount of real freedom of the press that we enjoy. Our conception of news suppression and censorship in our country is an entirely different one. We do not deny it exists. But only by comparison de we get an idea of our relative freedom of the press. News suppression in the United States is unto control by the government. Remarks derogatory to the government and high officials thereof are not prohibited. Censorship here is a purely local matter, and a discriminating editor rules out of copy only those passages which he deems libelous or of no value to the reader if printed. New Orleans Times Picayune. Washington's inclusion in the far-flung "blizzard belt" may have been intended by nature as an early adjournment hint to Congress. Criticism Suppressed President Roosevelt's order relieving Major Gen. Johnson Hagood of his army command for criticising the administration of relief funds appears to be an unwive move. Whether or not it was intended as such, it appears to be a direct attempt to suppress criticism of new deal policies. In recent testimony before a house appropriations subcommittee Hagood called WPA funds "stage money" because "you can pass it around, but you cannot get anything out of it in the end." This and other statements of a similar nature in his being relieved of his command in the army. No doubt, the President felt justified in taking such action because the success of new deal measures depends upon the support and co-operation of the many, and particularly upon those in the employ of the government. When Hagood, who was an employee of the government, criticised the administration of waste in WPA spending, he hit the hand that feeds him. The President, therefore, took what he considered the only recourse to such action. But, provided the circumstances warranted the action, was it a wise move? One is inclined to believe that it was not. Any attempt by the government to suppress criticism is met by public disapproval. In view of this, the administration seems to have made the wrong move. The current movie entitled "Anything Goes" doesn't deal with the matter of starting an automobile on a cold morning—Kansas City Kansas. Political oratory is resounding in Spain. The fight is between the Right and the Left. The Right contends that a victory for the Left means revolution, and the Left contends that the continuation of the Right is revolution—Topeka State Journal. Public Deprivation Hundreds of people visited the displays every year. They came not only one, but whenever the The present conditions under which the specimens—that once inhabited Dyche Museum of Natural History—are stored are detrimental to the stability of the situation. What about the general public? Before the Museum was closed to the public Nov. 30, 1922, because the floors were unsafe, the Museum housed a great wealth of material. It enabled the layman to understand better and to broaden his knowledge of pre-historic life as well as present life that inhabits our continent. Life in Kansas—through the ages—was emphasized; however, the specimens represented every mammal of North America. circumstances permitted. It satisfied their curiosity and aesthetic cravings—that is, to see the beautiful things of nature and to be closer to them. Groups of school children from all over the State were conducted through the Museum in connection with their school work and to broaden their knowledge exhibits fascinated various clubs and organizations. Until $47,000 is provided to re-open the Museum, the general public will be deprived of such an education and pleasure on the Hill. Campus Opinion Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the University Daily Kawan. Articles over 200 words in length are subject to cutting by the editor. Contributions on any subject are invited. Editor Daily Kansan: Tuesday's Kanan carried a letter from a person who very imply dubbed himself "Oliversee," in which the sadly misinformed writer attempted to criticize the policies of the Jayhawker Magazine and the Jayhawker board. May I take it upon myself to set "Observer" right by pointing out a few generally known facts concerning the Jahyadh from the point of view of one who is necromorphic. You can see that his eyes are dislikes to see it or anything else criticized by someone who evidently knows nothing whatever about it and he has his personal prejudices to carry him away as "Observer". In the first place, anyone interested in the subject can prove to himself the failings in the argument set forth by the self-appointed critic by merely examining the listing of the personnel of the Jawhaker staff and contributors of any or other year. This year's group includes at least three non-fraternity men and women, perhaps more. The Jawhaker's business manager last year was Marissa Kelley, an associate editor of "bark." Such has been the case throughout the magazine's history, a fact easily proven, and will in all probability continue to be. A person who is not a member of a Greek letter organization is as welcome to serve on the staff of the Jaya-hawker as is a fraternity or security member, and their service will be appreciated. We invite those that few "barbs" have the ambition or interest to apply for a staff position, although the few who have done so have gone just as far as those with equal talent who are Perhaps "Observer" is interested enough in the truth to prove these statements for himself, probably not, but maybe not. No, I am not a member of any fraternity. J. C Editor Daily Kansan: I should like to know why the Forums Committee arranged to have Norman Thomas speak in the small and inconvenient Fraser theater when the Auditorium was filled with people. I will have been throughout the talk with twice that many turned away for lack of even standing room. At the present stage in world affairs a speaker like Thomas is interesting to everybody, and the Forums Committee should have anticipated the response. When the Auditorium it isn't to be used on such occasions? W.T. Editor Daily Kansan: Now that "Politics Cause a Break In Owl Society" I should like to know, just what is the "Owl Society" good for? There is widespread belief that it publishes the Sour Owl. Another school of thought contends that the society studies "Commensalism in Relation to Prairie-Dogs, Prairie-Owls, and Rattlesnakes" with an aim toward helping prairie-owl. Just which of these beliefs is correct? If neither has the mark, just why do we have the Owl Society?" H. J. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m. preceding regular publication days and 11/10 a.m. Standard for Sunday issues. Vol. 33 FEBRUARY 28.1936 CANDIDATES FOR TEACHING POSITIONS: Persons desiring the assistance of the Teachers Appointment Bureau in securing positions for next fall should file credentials immediately. Calls for teachers are coming in daily. Those who have not paid their $1.00 registration fee or whose applications do not comply with order that credentials may be placed on the active list. --probably many women in pet clothing, the functions of a perfect escort will be waiting fifteen, twenty, or perhaps thirty minutes. They will be the long awaited man at last comes down stairs he may hand his cigarette case, matches, knife, and other trinkets to the lady to carry. Next, undoubtedly they'll need to go to a coat. After all this and maybe one or two more trips upstairs after things he pretends to forget, they will at last start to the variety. Some will have to walk around the house will be more fortunate and get to ride. GRADUATE STUDENTS IN ENGLISH: The linguistic examination for graduate students in English will be given in Fraser 205 at 9:30 on Saturday, February 29. DER DEUTSCHE VERREN: Der Deutsche Verren vermittelt mitMosting den 2 March um half hulf im Zimmer. H. E. Chandler. HOME ECONOMICS CLUB: The Home Economics Club will meet Tuesday afternoon, March 3, at 4:30 in the Cockrell Center. Evelyn Wallace, President. C. K. Hyder PSYCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATION: Students who failed to take Psychological examinations may do so. Students in the program are Mrs. Flora S. Boynton, Ex. Secy., Committee on Aids and Awards. A. H. Turney. SCHOLARSHIPS: Applications for scholarships for next year (including Wakins Hall scholarships) may be made between the hours 3 and 5 p.m. Monday to Friday, in connection with administration Building. Applications must be filed by Mentor. KAPPA PHI Kappa PHI will hold initiation services at 2:30 at the Methodist Church, Sunday, March 1. France Seeks Moscow's Co-operation While England Withdraws Opposition Vienna, Feb. 27 — (UP) —Whether Russia's Red Army will ever be rushed from the East to fight in any future war in the West has been the political problem of the moment in Europe, overseeing even the Raleo-Ethiopian struggle. Every nation in the Old World has its attention riveted on the secret diplomatic moves now being made. Some see those with hope, but many with fear, that the shadow of a Red regime which hits front of behind marching Red battalions. France, Germany and England to the west are the chief protagonists in the battle against Russia. This action lifted the Soviet Union into a military pact, under which Moscow would pledge to send gun, tanks, men and air fleets to defend Ukraine, and offer any vigilance of France's frontiers. Fotokam's last book to France Since France leet a powerful ally, Poland, whose military machine largely was built under the direction of the French air force, D'Orsay has tried to find a power strong enough to replace the Poles, who had thrown themselves into the mighty embrace of rewoundening Germany. Poland's Loss Blow to France With the realization that events in the Far East, with Japan looking forward for new fields of expansion, dictated a friendly policy toward the Soviets, the British government has changed from its former opposition to the Franco-Soviet rapprochement, but Germany is now obviously watching every play in the range. French have found the best substitute in the Soviet military machine and accordingly set to work to depose the French in the event of war in the West. Halling the Nazi regime as the bulwark against Communism, Adolf Hitler is said to look with the gravest apprehension at the signs on the horizon, and members of the Tricolor of France and Red flag of Russia marches side by side. Not only Germany, however, nourishes this concern. Some of the nations in the frontiers are alarmed at the prospect that all of Europe recorded the Red army through their territories to fight with France. Poland, Italy, will have nothing of such a plan. Czecho-Slovakia, glad to have a new friend to protect new frontiers which contain so many people of German blood and sympathies, has grasped the hand of the Boholweks, but another vital link in the chain of Rumania, and it is skeped away by the war. It must move westward, they must cross Rumania, if they cannot traverse Polish soil. But Rumania has a large strip of former Russian territory, Bessarabia, over which Bucharest and Moscow have quenched. Rumania does not want to see Soviet troops coming into that area because Bucharest, because of the four they might not leave again when the spoils of war are being divided. Hungary Shows Alarm This concern has become known to Austria and Hungary, with the latter already showing alarm at the thought of western powers sponsoring any pact with Russia. The right and involve in the operation of soldiers rushing across Europe. To calm the fears of the Danubia states, the latest project now in the diplomatic matter pot is to give the Soviet Union control of the Danube River of the Danubian Fault, whereby Soviet Russia would stand ready to act if the territorial independence of Austria or any of the other states were violated. If this plan is to go through, it will do Girls, Four Years Is a Long Time To Wait Saturday night is the Leap Year Variety and the women will have a chance to give their dates several suggestions in advance. This is the only way which may be returned to them later. There will be a chance for all the women to get their revenge at the dance, but perhaps they will show the men that they can and make the party a big success by offering them a good time and gets a "good杯". It will be a decided variation from the regular variability routine, and it is up to the women to make it a success. Both parties should deal about what the other endures at these regular Saturday night variations. pend largely upon the decision of King Carol of Rumania. Carol, whose word is law in Rumania, has never encouraged military pacts with the Soviets, but if he rushes through the Rumaniian-Russian military assistance agreement the path of the Bolsheviks toward the West will be opened. It then will depend upon Moscow to keep its powder dry and its bayonets sharpened. the Hollywood Roundup Hollywood (U.P.)-The film version of Harvey Allen's best seller, "Anthony Adverse," has been completed and everyone associated with the production is willing to sweep the job was anything but "colonial in a small owe." It required one thousand scenes and it more film footage than slapped behind the levers during four months of shoot job "A Midamour Nights' Dream." An attempt was made to follow the novel closely. The producers declare such strict accuracy was for the sake of art, but off-the-record entities intimated the producers would find themselves lost between the pages if they skipped a chapter. Giving all for accuracy as Allen traced the life and loves of his hero, set builders worked overtime to bring African jungles, Napoleonic palaces, Italian countriesides, and Early North America to Hollywood. Members of the cast themselves rather felt the strain of it all. One day Frederic Marsh, who plays the part of the wandering hero, didn't report for work. He had decided to rest the book, and after an all-night session slipping pages, had fainted when he figured out how many he yet had to turn over. The picture also caused considerable grief among technicians. Ordinarily, cameraman and lighting experts take the scenes in their stride, but try to create the effects Allen's pen so easily described made them frantic. Tony Gaudio, for almost 30 years an expert cameraman here, had the assignment of "chief cinematographer" during the filming. When the scene number reached a thousand, he gave up. It was just as well, the picture was finished. When the student is competent he will be permitted to start writing brief informal reports, which are in the nature of skeleton reports. Such reports will be continued by the student for the remainder of his laboratory work if he continues to write them adequately, except that, in his senior laboratories, he will be one reversion to the long formal type, which is accompanied by a short formal report summarizing the long one. Some important changes have also been made in report-writing requirements. Long, formal laboratory reports are usually written more year, but as soon as the student is sufficiently competent in the opinion of his instructor, he will be permitted to write short formal reports in order to give a summary of a long formal report. Out of all the scenes, Gaudio remembers only two. They gave him and his crew of assistants the greatest difficulty. "The cameraman has only two materials with which to work," he says. "One is light and the other is shadow. With those two things you have to make your pictures. And it's harder to put a score on film than it is to write it in a book. "Now there was scene no 986. Anita Lauce is playing Marta, Anthony's girlfriend. She closes the window with a candle and signal her lover, Dennis. Sound simple, doesn't work." "Well, the candle flickered when she walked. It gave off tiny lights. And, of course, there had to be enough light in the room to make the characters, and it was hard not to believe that was supposed to believe it was natural." Gaudio admits he hasn't read "Anthony Adverse". But he thinks he will go and see the picture he photographed. "After all," he says, "if it was worth a lot of money, it ought to be a pretty good story." The variety of experience introduced by the new program is in itself a point of superiority over the old plan; in addition it is expected that the new ROCK --- CHALKLETS Conducted by J. M. Each student is expected to do his studying at his own convenience, and to lay out his own program of experimental work under the guidance of his laboratory instructor, who will be able for a weekly half-hour conference. Second Semester Brings Changes in Electrical Engineering Lab Instruction Beginning with the second semester certain changes are being made by the department of electrical engineering in the method of instruction in the elec- tric course. These changes are to encourage students to exercise greater initiative, resourcefulness, and self-reliance in carrying out their programs of work, and to provide more varied yet less time-com- plex experience in the writing of reports. It was an admirable bird who lectured on his Antarctic experiences Wednesday night. There seems to be some question as to whether the Owl society is an honorary or an "ornery" organization. When the country is in the red, it is no mistake to say that people tend to become "reds." As a new plan of instruction each student is given a set of mimeographed material at the beginning of the semester. These materials include a set of reference data and suggestions for experiment, an inventory of laboratory apparatus, and general information, suggestions, cautions and requirements. Students will follow the procedure and the writing of reports. It has been found that the total time required for attention to the laboratory subjects has in general been in excess of the credit hours assigned to the subjects. We see the boys in Washington "putsched" General Hagood out of his position for speaking about fed-fetishism, and Walt until Germany hears about this. Mrs. Walter Liggett, widow of the slain militant editor of the mid-west American of Minnesota, Minn., has sold the paper to Howard Folsom, of Ohio, who would like to ask Mr. Folsom what hymn he would have sung at his funeral. The excessive amount of time required has been due to the large number of elaborate reports required, more than any other item. Norman Thomas the other day said that the Liberty League wanted the people to worship the Constitution while they took up the collection. Read the Daily Kansan want ads. program, by the elimination of considerable drudgery of mechanical details of report writing, would not only bring the laboratory subjects within the bounds of the credit hours allocated for them, but in addition should release more time for actual experimental work. TENNIS This Should Raise a Racket Friday - Saturday Only 60 Suits, Regular $25 to $35 Grades To Clean Up at $15.50-$19.50 University Daily Kansan If you find your size you, sure will make a lucky purchase. 20 Suits, Sizes 35 to 38 One-Half Price OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE KANSAS UBLISHER HARRY VALENTINE DITOR-IN-CHEF BOG ROBinson BILL GILL ASSOCIATE EDITOR ALMA PRAYER MANAGING EDITOR FRED M. HARRIS, JAMES MANAGER FLOUGHTON BROWN FESTUCTIONS Friday and Saturday Only Maybe You Will Want Two Obei's HEAD TO TOE OUTFITTERS Campus Editors Mark Up / Edit Stories Bill Badger Diane Ullman Bill Dusenor Michael Bissett News Editor Desiree Smart Southeast Editors Sarah Blind Jennifer Lynch nation and exclusive annual advertising representatives NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE, Inc. 420 Madison Avenue, New York City Chicago, IL; San Francisco, Los Angeles Literary Magazine Planned Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday morning; event school bidder by students in the department of Jurisdiction at the University of Kansas from the Points of the Expedition **Subscription prize, per year:** $1.00 each in cash or $1.25 on payment. Requires 36 calls. Enrolled as second class matter, September 17, 1918, at the post office in Lawrence, Kansas. Toronto, Ont.—(UP)—Publication of a new magazine, to be known as the "New Frontier," and devoted to "literary and social criticism," is being planned by a group of Montreal and Toronto writers. The object of the magazine, sponsors announce, will be to develop Canadian talent. CONVERTS BEGINNERS CONVINCES VETERANS! FILTER-COoled Frank MEDICO (PATENTED) This simple appearing yet cute filter helps vention with Cellophane interior and serves interior keeps juices in out of mouth. Don't be mistaken by low price FINISH HONEY COLOR ENHANCE OF VALUE Prevents tongs bite, new mouth, fresh color, frequent expectation. We like to improve the aroma of any tobacco. ACOMMERDED BY MILLIONS OF OFTERS The Pipe Filter That Really Filters The Pipe The Pipe Filter That Really Filters 10c $ _{7} $ 'Til 15c $ _{7} $ After PATEE NOWI ENDS SATURDAY Big Double JOHN WAYNE "LAWLESS NINETIES" JOHN CARROLL STEFFI DUNA "HI GAUCHO" Sunday - Monday "THE BARRETTS OF WIMPOLE STREET" GRANADA NOW! ENDS SATURDAY Any Woman Could See Through Hor Tricks, but They Worked All Right on Mon! GUN WARDING HERBERT MARSHALL THE LADY CONSENTS KEO PAPIO PICTURE Also—Comedy Panic - News "Crime Doesn't Pay CONTINUOUS SHOWS SUNDAY 1-3-5 7-9 1936 Wonder Show! 1936 Wonder Show! THE MUSIC GOES ROUND HARRY RICHMAN ROCHELL HUDSON SORGAN SOHN FARLEY RILEY RILEY And Thousands of Others 8 SMASH SONG HITS! FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28. 1926 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE THREE K Hill Society BEFORE 1 P.M. CALL K.U. 21; BETWEEN 7:30 AND 9 P.M. CALL 2701K3 OR 2702K3. Honorary Society Has Pledging Services Pi Lambia Theta, national honorary sorority for education students, held pliding sessions last night for the following: Valiant Barmen, ed'37; Wendela Bott, c'36; Margaret Broker, c'36; Elisabeth Brown, f'36; Mara Heston, le'36; Emily McDonough, le'36; Martha Elizabeth, Peterson, c'37; Mildre McEllow, el'd36; Josephine Redcier, c'56, and Adalyn Swone, c'56. Following the pledge service, Prof D. Gagliardi, of the economics department, spoke on "Worker's Education." ☆ ☆ ☆ Guests at a dinner dance at the Alta Tau Omega house last night were Virginia Arthur, c'urn; curel Mary Helen Finke, c'urn; Catherine Foy, c'灵韩 Miller, c'38; Shirley Jones, c'uncel Nielson, c'38; Virginia Word, c'38; Helen Gubiah, c'37; Alice Meyn, c'39; and Mary Joir Bair. ☆ ☆ ☆ The University house mothers will have a bridge lunchon Monday at 1 o'clock in the Colonial tea room. Mrs John Terry, Mrs Jane McLean, Mrs Margaret Perkins, Mrs N. K. Thompson, Mrs Ala Winne, Mrs Eva Okeas and Mrs R. W. Bixby are in charge of arrangements. ☆ ☆ ☆ Mrs. L, B. Stratton, Hutchinson, will spend the weekend in Lawrence as a guest of her son, James Straton, club. She will chair members of the women's basketball team in the篮球队 who will participate in the Kansas basketball tournament here. ☆ ☆ ☆ Guests at the Triangle fraternity Tuesday evening were Mr. and Mrs Ray Wright, Willd Wright, gr. Lucille Wagner, fa'36, Corn Queen Barber, ed36, and Mr. and Mrs. O. G. Pack Lawrence. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ The following were dinner guests at the Sigma Alpha Epiphone house last night; Tanner Tyler, e'unel; Dan Tapper, e'unel; Frank Wilmer, e'unel; Alexia Marks, e'39; and Glenda Speakman. ☆ ☆ ☆ --hall plans to spend the weekend at her home in Humboldt. Mrs. Brumwell, Kansas City, Mo, was a dinner guest at the Phi Kappa Pi house last night where she visited her mother, Edwin Brawl, c96. Prof. W. R. Maddox, instructor in political science, was a dinner guest at the Phil Delia Tieta house last night. ☆ ☆ ☆ Ruth Doddner, 138, was a dinner guest at the Delta Tau Delta house last night. ☆ ☆ ☆ Norman Hemphill, c'39, was a dinner guest at the Pt Kappa Alpha fraternity house last night. Dorothy Willcox c39, was a luncheon guest yesterday at the Kapp Kappa Gamma house. David Kelso of Boston will be a dinner guest at the Beta Theta P house tonight. Wesley Foundation will hold a party tonight at the Methodist church from 8 to 11 p.m. Herman Smith, Jr., e'unel, left today for a weekend visit with his parents in Paroas. ku Frances Fussman, c'unel, of Corbin --hall plans to spend the weekend at her home in Humboldt. Members of Sigma Phi Epilon fraternity were guests last night at an hour dance given by Sigma Kappa . Corbin hail entertained with an hour dance last night. Japanese Revolt Shows Precision in Its Killings (Continued from page one) Makino, former Lord Privy Seal. He escaped assassination after a fight between his bodyguard and the attackers. The officers who have been called upon to submit to arrest and trial or charge a gentleman's way out, are charged with the offence without permission, of having insured the prerogatives of the high command of having been disloyal to the throne. The fact that the assassinations have made a profound impression is demonstrated by the fact that the officials in control are making every effort to learn the reaction of the people before determining the complexion of the next government. Foreigners are absolutely all right. Censorship appeared to be creeping up but much "copy" remained untransmitted or "killed" by the censors who imposed drastic regulations early Wednesday morning. The rebels in their demands said that the army and the people must be a cohesive unit surrounding the throne. We do not know whether there will be a council of state. The Emperor and his advisers are to discuss that today. W.S.G.A. Elections in March Candidates' Qualifications and Electio Rules To Be Announced Later W. S.G.A. elections will be held March 28, it was announced at a special meeting of the organization yesterday afternoon. The mass meeting at which please are read and the teus which precede it will be held March 2, 2 and 25, respectively. Pettitions for candidates may be secured from Miss Méguira's office any time during the week beginning March 16. Announcements regarding qualifications for candidates and the rules of election will appear at a later date. A suggestion which came up at the last meeting that there should be a two-year representative on the Council was given further consideration at yee-under way. An amendment in now underway to put the suggestion into effect. All applications for Book Exchange manager should be turned in by March 12, it was decided. The next formal meeting of the W.S. G.A. will follow the joint Council banquet Tuesday night, March 3. KANSAS RIFLE TEAM WILL The University rite队 team will go to Leaventhorn tomorrow morning, for a tenth Infantry Sergeant Engl announcement. Portion could be arranged the entire team would go; obsvicev only the ten positions in this week will make the trip. The rife teams will continue with their telegraphic matches this week with universities. The Kansas team will come up and send it to the competing universities COMPETE AT LEAVENWORTH --which this week include the University of Iowa, the University of Missouri, Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Missouri School of Mines, University of Washington and the Natrona County High School, Casper, Wyo. The University Young Democrats club held their second meeting of this semester yesterday afternoon in the basement of Green hall. Clark Hewerton, c36, was elected temporary chairman of the organization. Other officers chosen were: Bob Corey, b36, chairman of the membership committee; and Bill Dodgebridge, chairman of the publicity committee. Several members who attended the Democratic celebration and benquet at Topeka last Saturday gave short talks about the activities. All reported that the general attitude was very good, and enthusiasm was great. Plans were discussed for contacting prospective members and the club's future organization. The next meeting of the club will be held Thursday afternoon, March 5, at 4:30 p.m. The meeting place will be announced later. UNIVERSITY DEMOCRATS HOLD MEETING IN GREEN HALL Dr. Canuteson Re-elected To Continue Service in American Student Health Association Entomologist Publishes Book Entomologist Punishum Dr. Aute Richards, 98, professor of entomology at the University of Oklahoma, has recently published a textbook on entomology. He is also the author of "An Outline of Comparative Embryology" which is used as a text in a number of colleges and universities. "Father" of Elizabeth Short "Diss" Cyde M. Short, father of Elizabeth Short, died at his home in Concord, Rhode Island, on January 29, Mr. Short was a prominent attorney in north-central Kansas and was the chairman of the Kansas Democratic state central committee. He was 54 years of age. Father of Elizabeth Short Dies Dr. Ralph L. Cantezon, director of Watkins Memorial Hospital, has been re-elected to the executive committee of the American Student Health Association for the year 1966–37, he was a member of the executive council for years he has been a member of the executive council of the association and last year he was elected for the first time to the executive committee. This association is composed of 140 members, including the University of Kansas. The health service in the Health Service in the University since 1928. Under his directorship the health service has grown until now it is one of the 14 services in the country which makes complete tuberculosis surveys, and has developed one of the most comprehensive student hospitals in the United States. Campus Calendar Friday, February 28 Sigma Nu party, Eldridge hotel, 6- 12 p.m. Swimming meet: Kansas vs. Nebraska at Lincoln. Basketball: Kansas vs. Nebraska at Lincoln. Swimming meet: Kansas vs. Kansas State at Manhattan. Saturday, February 29 Leap Year Varsity, Memorial Union 9-12 p.m. Psychological examination make-up, 115 Fresher, 9:30 p.m. The conditions in about two-thirds of these scholarships stipulate that they are to go to women, and approximately all of the remaining one-third are for students of the University, either men or women. They are very few scholar-terms. The other semester freshmen are not eligible as applicants for these scholarships. In addition to these 69 scholarship, there are 25 or 30 prizes awarded during the year for excellence in some of our programs and ranges from medals to $100 prizes. These 60 scholarships are exclusive of the Summerfield, Winston Hall, Rhodes, German Exchange scholarships, and some other loan funds and prizes which the University offers. The scholarships, which will be announced in June, have values in general ranging; from $25 to $100. Music Ensemble Gives Concert The National Music Ensemble gave a short concert for a group of Fine Of the 60 scholarships, one-third are gifts, and the remaining two-thirds are loan scholarships. The loan scholarship has an advantage over a loan from a lender without interest until the date due, which in most cases, is one year after graduation. A loan from the student loan fund is for a year with interest, but no interest is charged on loans from the person whom you pay to pay the due date. You can always depend on this DOUBLE FRIEND PHONE K.U.66 Applications must be made not later than March 1 for approximately 60 scholarships which the University will award to men and women students this fall. In addition, the Boyton, executive secretary of the Committee on Aids and Awards. Mi31 ANTISEPTIC SOLUTION THE WINERY TURNER'S STORE 49c FULL PINT A FRIEND that cuts down your chances of catching cold. A friend that prevents your breath from offending. That's M31 Solution. You can depend on its double strength. Full strength, it kills germs; half strength, it sweets breath. Saves you money. Scholarship Applications Must Be in This Month Aid Committee Announces Awards To Be Given Students H. W. STOWITS "The Reall Store" 9th & Mass. Phone 238 PHONE K.U.66 CLASSIFIED ADS SAVE with SAFETY at The Texall DRUG STORE SPECIAL—50e reduction on any permanent, with this ad, except Saturday. Permissions $1.50 to $5.00, complete with hair cut. IVA'S BEAUTY SHOPS, 7321¹ Mass., Phone 2333; 9411² Mass., Phone 533. DEPTTY CROSS TYPEWRITERS: “Streamline” portables, Remington's latest. All makes required and exchanged. Special make available. Baker, or Kalut, 832 - 109 BEAUTY SHOPS Four doors south of Journal-World Pb. 282 Five expert operators Ph. 282 One Stop Clothes Service Station SCHULZ THE TAILOR 924 Mass. PALACE BEAUTY SHOP 25c Finger Wave 25c Every two words or less one insertion, 25c; three insertions, 30c; six insertions, 76c; seven insertions, 114c; eighteen insertions, 149c. Payable in advance and accepted subject to approval at the Keenan Business Office. TYPEWRITERS MISCELLANEOUS TAILOR ABE WOLFSON 743 Mass. TAXI Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S - 920-22 Mass. TAXI --one 12 - 987 Student Loans this Winter See Your Union Pacific Agent for a passport to Summer in CALIFORNIA Arts students yesterday morning at the regular band practice period. Mr. W. B. Parkinson directed this group of students to perform several young musicians who have won national recognition and high honors at various national high school; music Now is the time, and this is the year, to leave winter behind and enjoy the warm, tonic sun of California's vacation paradise. Take advantage of KING MUSEUM LOWEST WINTER FARES EVER For the first time in history, round trip fares to California, on Union Pacific trains, are as low as regular bargain summer fares. And the cost is not too bad, with economies and comforts for coach and tourist car passengers which have made a trip on Union Pacific trains today a new experience in travel pleasure. The railroad is now offering train rides that, than driving, and far more comfortable. Church To Give Leap Year Party The Fireside Forum of the Plymouth Congregational church will give a leap year party at the parish house this evening. Ask your Union Pacific Agent for full information and literature on travel everywhere. 304 289 276 263 250 237 234 231 228 225 222 219 216 213 210 207 204 201 198 195 192 189 186 183 180 177 174 171 168 165 162 159 156 153 150 147 144 141 138 135 132 129 126 123 120 117 114 111 108 105 102 100 97 94 91 88 85 82 79 76 73 70 67 64 61 58 55 52 49 46 43 40 37 34 31 28 25 22 19 16 13 10 7 4 UNION PACIFIC Railroad Filed and Zupanee Will Represent the University Tonight Railroad To Meet Texas Debaters UNION PACIFIC PACIFIC COAST LAND Disie, a senior student in the School of Law, is serving his second year on the debate squad. A member of Delta Sigma Rho, national honorary forensic fraternity, he is also an honor student in his field. He has represented the Kansas University's debate team will meet Texas University's team here to tonight at 8 e'clock, in the Little Theatre at Green hall on the question, "Is Houston unofficially power, by a two-birds majority vote, to override decisions of the supreme court declaring laws passed by congress unconstitutional?" The Kansas University team will take the negative side of the question. The affirmative side of the question will be upheld by Chris Dixie and Robert Tharp who are beginning a tour through the Middle-west. 1.50 - No need to say you never can find a dress small enough, at least 34 inches tall, to see Nanette's dress. She specializes in the smaller sizes.* NANETTE OVER THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mats. Phone 511 university in several intercollegiate debates. Tharp, whose major subject of study is history, has been on the squared three years. Besides his participation in debate, he has represented a member of Delta Sigma Rho, also is a member of Delta Sigma Rho. According to Prof. E. C. Buehler, coach of the debate team, Texas is the oldest and most formidable debate rival of the University. Dixie and Tharp met with Kansa State last night. HAVE A COKE With Your Friends Union Fountain Sub-Basement Memorial Union at the --it's music to the . . . of Lawrence's best dressed, young men . . . the way we run a shirt department. Tuba "and it comes out here" Today it's those deep dark loud pattern shirts with the wide space collars and they're as popular as a song. Listen to the style come out! Like Joe Louis, we don't believe in too many rounds ... no sooner does a style stand 'round than "whoa-ho-ho-ho-ho and it comes out here!" Arrow Mitoga of course. Ties and Hdkfs to match. Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUT FITTERS AND HERE THEY COME Only the GRANADA could give you the screen's greatest *David Cooperfield* *Boise Hatts* *Naughty Marriott* «The Little Colonel» *G-Men* «The Informer» *Love Me Forerer* *Alico Adams* *Top Hits* «Multing on the Bounty» *O'Shaughnessy Boy* *Ash Wilderness*. Blue Ribbon Award Winners of 1935 as Selected by the National Screen Council TEN OF THESE 12 PICTURES PLAYED THE GRANADA AND STILL THEY COME The Ten Best Pictures of 1935 as Selected by the Nation's Picture Critics *David Copperfield* *The Informer*—The Lives of a Bengal Lancer *Naughty Marietta* *Top Hat*—Les Miserables *Broadway Melody of 1936* *Robert*—Rugglez of Red Gap *Anna Karenina. SEVEN OF THE 10 PICTURES PLAYED THE GRANADA AND The Ten Best Pictures of 1935 as Selected by the National Association of 4 Star Clubs, the Junior Review Group of the National Board of Review. *David Copperfield* *The Informer* *A Midsummer Night's Dream* *Top Hat* *Mutiny on the Bounty* *Les Miocarels* *Naughty Marietta* *The Crusades* *Shimpiates Forever* *The Lives of a Bengal Lancer* **SEVEN OF THESE 10 PICTURES PLAYED BY THE GRANADA** SEVEN OF THESE 10 PICTURES PLAYED THE GRANADA LAST YEAR — THIS YEAR — EVERY YEAR You Will See the Pick of the Pictures at the GRANADA WE PREDICT THAT THE 10 BEST PICTURES OF 1936 WILL BE SELECTED FROM THESE GREAT HITS COMING SOON; Clark Gabble: Myna Loya Jan Harielow in "Wife Virus Secretary"—Lonel Bayle in "The Voice of Bulge" Maryann Lauber in "The Story of Louis Pasteur"—Drew Powell, Ryber Kayele, Jack Oakie in "Goose Round": Paul Muni in "The Story of Louis Pasteur"—Drew Powell, Ryber Kayele, Jack Oakie in "Goose Round": Maryann Lauber in "The Story of Louis Pasteur"—Greg Zigfeld, with Wen Powell, Myna Loya Luiz Raimo "Rimoe and Joller" Not Learned to Love Lawn Learned to Love Lawn Jennifer McDonald "Maryland of Scotland" Katherine Hiberno, Fredric March, "The Green Pastures" "An- nouncement" Maryland of Scotland PAGE FOUR FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 28. 1936 31 BIG SIX OFFICIALS MEET TO REVISE SPORTS RULES UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS Faculty Representatives Will Completely Rewrite and Codify Present Conference Elegibility Regulations and Bring Them Up to Date Complete revision of the regulations of Big Six athletes will be undertaken this weekend at a meeting of the faculty representative of the six schools, to be held in the office of Dean George C. Shaad here, starting at 10 o'clock this morning. The present book was printed six years ago and since then many situations have arisen that have called for interpretations of the rules; also situations have made changes necessary. It is the purpose to go through the whole set of regulations, codifying and rewriting. Attending the meeting will be Dr. H. H. King, Kansas State chairman of the committee; H. D. Bergman, Iowa State, secretary Prof. Sam B. Shirey, Missouri second, Sharp, Sigma Kappa, 32; third Spiegel, Corbain hall, 32; fourth Gelfi Dr. E. D. Meacham, Oklah; and Dean George C. Shad, Kansas State Free style, 50 yards. Fee $49.99 One of the principal points to come up for consideration will be that on athletic eligibility. At present, athletes must have completed in the previous two semesters, 27 hours of academic work, which is equal to the time required by general who are working for living expenses. The rule makes no mention of grades the athlete must make, so it is possible for a man to remain eligible for college for 27 hours of D. while he must have a degree average if he is to earn a degree. It has been proposed that the hour completed be reduced, more in keeping with the busy program of the athlete who must work for a living, attend classes, and attend practices offering such training that an increase in scholastic attainment. At hand as a guide, but not now proposed for full endorsement, will be the standards of athletic eligibility as endorsed by the National Association of Athletic Directors. These proposed regulations to define ineligibility, would provide that no scholarships be awarded athletes except in full and free competition with other schools, work done by athletes shall be the same as that paid other students for similar work; that amounts of scholarships or rates of pay be published; that the faculty eligibility committee, in lieu of the current system from prospective competitors detailed statements of their financial earnings from others than those upon whom they naturally depend for support; that faculty members initiate correspondence with prospective athletics inclined students; and other suggestions now commonly in use. --will also admit the bearer to this contest. Women's Intramurals Relay. First, Pt. Beta Phi. 41:6, second, Kappa Kappa Gamma. 43:3, third T47. 44:8, fourth, Kappa Theta 479. Rachel Kiene, Pi Beta Phi, was high scorer with 13 points on two first places and one second. Tholen, Kappa Poppa had a total of 10 points; and Sharp won one first and one third place totaling 10 points. The events and winners are as fol- lows: The women's final swimming meet was held Wednesday, Feb. 26 at 7:30 in the Robinson pool. The Pi Beta Pi won first place again this year with 32.5 points. Second place was won by the Kappa Kappa Gamma with 19 points. Third place, TNT, 15 points; fourth, Sigma Kappa with 10 points. Breast stroke for form. First, Tothek Kappa Kappa Gamma; second, Row- ward, TNT; third, Hartley Kappa Alpha Theta; fourth, Lincsot, Kappa Alpha Free style, two lengths; First. Fin- lay, Pt Beta Phi. 224; second. Kwoe- n, Pt Beta Phi. 225; fourth. 229; fourth. 229; fourth. Leon, Pt Beta Phi. 24. Diving: First. Wilson, Wakulsia hall second. Learard, TNNT, third. Dyer, Learard, fourth. Hartley, Kapka Alba Theta. Back stroke, two lengths, first. Stroke, two lengths, second. Rison, IWW, 2; third, a tie between Worley, Alpha Chi Omega, 28.3, and Lemon, Beta Phi, 28.4, dyer. Dower, Side stroke: First, Learnard, TNT 27.5; second, LaRue, Kappa Kappa Gamma, 27.8; third, Sigma Sharp, Kappa, 27.9; fourth, Harrison, IWW, 28 Crawl form: First, Kiene, Pi Beta Phi; second, Finley, Pi Beta Phi; third, Ingleman, Kappa Alpha Theta; fourth, Dyer, Chi Omega. Breast stroke, two lengths; First Throjan, Kappa Kappa Gamma, 29.2 Free style, 50 yards; First, Kiene, P Beta Phi, 35.3; second, Barackman Cornhall, 42.4. The deadline for deck tennis singles and basketball free throws is Saturday. First round, 20 throws Second round, 20 throws Mar. 2-27 Third round, 20 throws Mar. 9-14 You may come in any time and take their turn. In the round-robin basketball tournament started last night the Seniors defeated the Sophomores, 23-13. The Seniors were leading throughout, the standing players were Teagarden and Hansen for the Seniors and Johnson and Bottom for the Sophomores. The Seniors were leading in garden, Ripley, and Montgomery, forward; Anderson, Kerr, Erwin, Hansen, and Lincott, as guards. Sophomores were Karlin and Johnson, as guard, Baker, and Learand, as guards. In the second game of the evening the Juniors defeated the Freshman 24-21. In the last two minutes of play the Juniors picked up to win the game. At the half the score was 11-8 in favor of the Freshmen, but the Juniors were outstanding forwards. Junior players were Rowland, Smith, and Worley, as forward; Pope, Dunlap, Ware, and Edwards as guards; Erskine came in as a substitute forward. The Freshmen were Willetts, Lattner, and Simpson; the Senators were Stevenson, and Spiegel, as guard; Bird and low were substitute guards and White was a substitute forward. Pi Beta Phi is leading in the number of intramural points thus far, with 7, second and Corbin hall, third, with 52.lows! Alpha Chi Omega, 223; Alpha Delta Pi, 366; Alpha Gamma Delta, 190; Alpha Omicon Iper, 218; Chi Omega, 180; Alpha Omicon IIper, 218; Chi Omega, 270; Kappa Alpha Theta, 273; Kappa Kappa Gamma, 400; Pi Beta Phil, 362; Wotkins Hall, 341; Sigma Kappa LTIF, ETC 140; IND, 242; IWW, These points were won from the following sports: volley ball, horsehorses, onie singles, handball, ping pong, singles, basketball, nd swimming. Freshman Cagers Competio 强 competitive spirit marked the play in the first game between two picked freshmen basketball squads last Wednesday evening when the "Green" team defeated the "Red" team by a score of 26 to 18. Greens" Down "Reds" in First Freshman Basketball Game Thursday night saw the two teams battling to a 17-17 draw. The game was featured by brilliant floor work and ball handing on the part of both sides. The low score was the result of two very evenly matched teams playing. This was the first game between two of the best quintets that Ernie Varek and Gordon Gray, freshman basketball coaches, can select from the squad. Instead of having the freshmen scrimmage the varsity and build up a strong team, the coaches are going to have five of them in the freshmen to determine just what kind of scoring experience is going to be available for next year. The next game will be this afternoon at 3, and there will be another Monday. The final game will be played as a preliminary to the Kansas-Oklahoma game Tuesdays night, beginning at 6 c'clock. Tickets to the varsity game H. Husoe f ft 1 Corliss 0 1 Robinson 3 0 2 Stuff 1 0 2 Stuff 1 0 2 Kappi 0 1 0 Kappi 0 1 0 James 1 0 0 The score for Thursday night's game Beds (17) Greens (17) Totals 816 | | g ft | | :--- | :--- | | Shikkes | 2 0 | | Lies | 1 0 | | G. Unsell | 1 0 | | Bioslevac | 1 0 | | Weidner | 0 0 | | Jones | 1 0 | | Lowe | 0 0 | | Geon | 1 2 | | Massoner | 0 0 | Totals 7 3 2 The box score of the game Wednesday "Green" 26 Cotissi Gf f f Unself. H I f Golay Gf Stopp O f Stopp O 0 James O f Jones O f Kapp'm1 f 0 Kapp'm1 f 0 Totals 11 4 3 g f t Gowan Jones Oren Ussel, C. Shikles Bosilevac Wiedner Nicola "Red" 18 "PETE" MEHRINGER TO MAKE WRESTLING TOUR IN MARCH Totals 74 Peter J. Mehringer, former Olympic wrestling champion and football player at the University of Kansas, will sail in a national wrestling tour of New Zealand. Mehringer was tackle on the 1930-31-32 football teams at the University. In 1932 he was all-a-star in the Big Six and was placed at tackle on the second team all-American. In the 1932 season he took the light-heavy-weight championship. Mrs. Mehringer will accompany "Pete" on his tour, but their two-year-old son will remain with Mehringer's parents in Olathe. RAPORT WILL GIVE FENCING EXHIBITION BEFORE K.C.A. Jim Report, president of the University Fencing Club, will leave for Kansas City today where he will give a talk on the game before the Kansas City Athletic Club. After his demonstration Rappert walt talk with Dr. Diley in regard to tenta- plains for a Missouri Valley Fencing Tournament, where he won the winner of such a tournament would become eligible to compete in the national try-outs for the Olympic fencing UNIVERSITY SWIMMING TEAM HAS TWO MEETS THIS WEEK Today and tomorrow promise to be two burgay days for the University swimming team, which is scheduled to meet the U.S. Army in Fort Hays and the Kansas State team tomorrow. Hope Herbert Allphin fervently hopes that history will not repeat itself, but it will. He is the year Nebraska defeated Kansas by the score of 17 to 1. Kansas State swimmers continued the fast pace set by the Carnhinders by defeating Kansas, 47 to The swimmers making the trip to Nebraska are: William Waggoner, Williamester, Ralph Pusey, Eugene Brandi,dyle Nichols, Robert LaShelpe,Max lias, Paul Fisher, Dean Tiller, B. F.umphrey, and Bill Tholen. Tau Sigma Selects Five Members At Tau Sigma trys out Tuesday, the following women were accepted: Bette Hamilton, C. Ruth Burh, Oeluncf; o'culen, Mary Frances Dolek; o'culen; Mary Frances Cedar; c.99; and Mary Lairward, c.38. Professor Stouffer Is III Prof. E. B. Stouffer, dean of the Graduate School, is unable to be in his office because of illness. Guaranteed Relaxation LARGE'S CAFE 9th & N. H. Enjoy Our DANCE SATURDAY NIGHT New Eriksen Hall At 936-38 Mass. Dates—49c-Stags Ladies Free Music by Band from the Hill SHRIMP and DRINKS DANCE BULLETIN Missouri defeated St. Louis university, last night, 31-22. Men's Intramurals With an offense centered around the accurate goal shooting of Roberts at forward, the S.A.E quintet downed a fighting A.T.O. aggregation, by a score of 34 to 20 last Wednesday evening. Roberts was high point man for the victors with 48 points, while Kiplinger, a rival forward, scored 10 points. In the second game of the evening the powerful Phi Delt squad nosed out the first game and lost to the Phi Gam's 24 to 19. Excellent defensive work on the part of the two Phi Delt guards, Trotter and Bowman were on the same day, working plays of the Phi Gam's. The following are the box scores: ATO 20 SAF 24 | | g | ft | f | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Klipinger | 3 | 1 | 0 | | Kirby | 3 | 0 | 0 | | Gough | 0 | 1 | 3 | | Baldridge | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Buchanan | 0 | 0 | 1 | Phi Delt 24 S. A.E.34 Totals 7 6 5 Totals 16 g ft Roberts 8 2 Wallin'fir 1 4 Johnson 4 0 Ewers 0 3 Noke 0 3 Stolt'n'rb 0 0 Phi Gam 19 Pilid Dell 241 Df b2'41h d2'41h Mize Benton 3 Toonton 1 Trouver Bowman 1 f f 1 f f 0 0 2 0 0 2 1 0 3 1 0 3 1 0 3 Totals Totals 11 211 Harwi Steiger Bickett Tenny Harman Goudy The quarter-finals and the semi- finals for the men's intramuraals wrest- ling matches were completed last night, The finals will be held Tuesday night following the Kansas-Oklahoma bas- ketball game. 138-pound class; Foreman, Phi Gam, threw Mize, Phi Deli, 240; Pardee, uno, Phi Deli, 240; Pardee, uno, Brown Phi Gam, threw Barber, S.A.E. decision; Nale, S.A.E. threw Cole, S.A.E. 148-pound class: Lamm; Theta Tau. 148-nicholson, Beta 1.04; Townsend, Y. Moore, unattached, threw Ritchie, Phi Gam, 37 sec.; Seett, S.A.E, throw Ritchie, Phi Gam, 37 sec.; Seett, S.A.E, throw Ritchie, Phi Gam, 37 sec.; Seett, S.A.E, throw Ritchie, Phi Gam, 37 sec.; Seett, S.A.E, throw Ritchie, Phi Gam, 37 sec.; Seett, S.A.E, throw Ritchie, Phi Gam, 37 sec.; Seett, S.A.E, throw Ritchie, Phi Gam, 37 sec.; Seett, S.A.E, throw Ritchie, Phi Gam, 37 sec.; Seett, S.A.E, throw Ritchie, Phi Gam, 37 sec.; Seett, S.A.E, throw Ritchie, Phi GAM 158-pound class: Trotter, Phi Delt. Five New Books just added to our Rental Library Farson—Way of a Transgregress Hesse—Dr. Morath Dickelfeld—Faster Faster Dickelfeld—Faster Santana—Louis Puritan Let us call you when the book you want is in. 1021 Mass. Tel. 666 THE BOOK NOOK GUARANTEED NONE BETTER AT DOUBLE THE PRICE 50¢ POUND FORTY-FIVE pieces. No two alike. All your favorite cream, fruit, nut and chewy centers covered with as delicious chocolate as you have ever tasted. Guaranteed equal to any $1 a pound chocolates. H. W. STOWITS "The Rexall Store" 9th & Mass. Phone 238 threw Fees, Beta, 4.37; Lambor, unattached, threw Farley, Beta, 1.27; Lambor, unattached, threw Greenski, Phi, unattached, Beta, boret for Tjison, Pi K.A. SAVE with SAFETY at MeJexall DRUG STORE Seni-men: 121-pen letter clearer, Hamilton, Phil Pai thirsty, Phil Pai, Phi Pai, S1, 51 seconds Ainworth, Phil Pai, won from Catren unattached, forfeit. 128-pound class: Dieter, Sigma Chai, threw Nixon, Phi Delt, 1.39; LeMoine, Phi Gam, threw Russell, Theta Tau, 5:11. 138-pound class: D帕德e unattached, three Foreman, Phi Gam, I4; 143, Nobe, Sig Alph, threw Brown, Phi Gam, I2; 144- 148-pound class: Townley, Phi Dell, Sig Alph, Theta Tau, I4; 143, Scott, Sig Alph, won from Moore unattacked, decision. 185-pound class: Lamborn, u-nattached, dhrew Trotter, Phi Delt, 6:45; Harrison, unattached, from Jenison, decision. 168-pound class: Pierson, Kappa Sig. FRIDAY SPECIALS --in the Union Building Fillet of Haddock Clam Chowder Salmon Plates Each Friday during the Lenten season we will offer Hot Cross Buns. THE UNIVERSITY DINING ROOM won from Bodley, Phi Delt, fail in 57 seconds of second overtime period; 4:12. 178-pound class: Harrington, Beta, threw Guthrie, Theta Tau, 1:15; McCoy, Fields, Beta, threw Bicket, Phi Gam, Phi Delt, threw Morland, Theta Tau, 1:41. Read the Daily Kansan want ads. HILLTOP HOUSE (1244 La. — N.E. Corner 13th Street) Now Ready to Serve You Excellent choice of meats. fresh vegetables, desserts and pastries. Weekly Meal Tickets. $4.50. Regular Meal Tickets. $3.50 and $5.00. Mrs. Frank Winston—Prop.—Mrs. Mary C. Turner Breakfast 7:30-9:00 — Wide Chorec Lunch 11:30-1:00 — 25c - 30c Dinner 5:45-7:00 — 35c - 40c Phone 1858 MANY REAL VALUES for Saturday Only, Feb. 29 25c Tooth Brush ... 2 for 29c 500 Sheets Cleansing Tissue ... 25c Mild Mellow Bar ... 10c 50c Pepsodent ... 35c Real Value Pipes ... 29c $1.00 Value Mineral Oil ... 69c 1th & Mass. "Handy for Students" Rankin's Drug Store "Handy for Students" NEW SPRING SUITS For Style, Quality and Value They Have No Equal LOTHURT $24.50 $19.50 $15.95 SLACKS Winter is over! Get out of those old dark, winter clothes! Get yourself a cheerful spring suit today! You'll find a grand selection of the smartest styles priced reasonably at our store. New Spring Colors and New Patterns $3.45 - $3.95 SWEATERS Button and Zipper Fronts $2.49 - $3.45 The Gibbs Clothing Co. "WHERE CASH BUYS MORE" Your One Big Chance to Show the Male Sex the High Ethics of Dating Couple and Girl Stags 75c 9-12 p.m. GIRLS VARSITY BOYS WAYNE WRIGHT'S ORCHESTRA Your Only Chance to Have a Free Evening in a College Career SATURDAY FEBRUARY 29 Union Building