PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1937 ~ Comment Politics, Like Life, Is What You Make It "The class of '37, the group of young college graduates from which will emerge the national leaders of 20 years hence, believe that virtue has little reward, and that the thing for them to do is to work as little as possible, get paid as much as possible, and retire as soon as possible," writes Bruce Bilven, Jr., in the Woman's Home Companion. Bliven was graduated from an eastern college this spring, and while in college he was active in the American Student Union and other campus organizations and had ample opportunity to form his opinions. The quarrel then, is not with Bliven, but with the college graduate for substantiating these statements, the truth of which may be seen and heard in the classrooms and on the campus of the University every day. Neither are these truths confined to the class of '37. The class of '36 was much the same, and the class of '38 is bewing to a like course. And 1957 will suffer . . . along with the class of '37 . . . for it is an economic truth that all can't achieve the ambition of the current college crop. The greatest loss, as it has always been, will be in the field of politics. For one thing, politics is too rigorous for the class of '37. Too, politics brings to the college graduate the savor of the pork barrel and the protruding waistline of the cartoon politician, and the college graduate doesn't want to be caricaturized. In other countries young men are reared in political families and trained for politics from elementary school. Government service (politics) is an honored profession. Although thousands of men in government positions in our country are intelligent and honorable, Joe College still can see only the cartoon and column politicians and doesn't care to become one. He is too obsessed with his ambition to crusade for a change in the profession, so he avoids it. Until he changes his mind he and his country will suffer. Will the Pirates Walk the Plank? A powder keg which rests in water, the waters of the Mediterranean, is once again threatening to plunge the major nations of Europe into war. Great Britain, fully aroused by acts of piracy on her vessels, has mobilized nearly 200 warships in the Mediterranean in a search for marine mauders. Relations between Britain and Italy are more strained than ever before because of the failure of Italy to participate in the international anti-priracy conference at Nyons, Switzerland. There seems to be overwhelming circumstantial evidence that Italy is the culprit: Britain, France and Russia have been attacked by these mauraders; Italy and Germany have not, and Italy possesses the greatest number of submarines in the Mediterranean area. Italy is offended because of the small position offered her in the anti-piracy patrol, and because of the point-blank accusation of her guilt by Russia—a member of the anti-piracy patrol. If Italy is found to be responsible for these pratic raids, the British are prepared to demand and fight for reparations — a challenge which under the Italian dictatorship, where war and valor are idealized as the supreme raison d'etre, could only be answered with war. You were starving . . . a tenant farmer in the Midwest in 1935. You and your family were transplanted to Alaska. You lived in tents for months. You worked, you built a house and cleared land. You've produced prodigious crops, but you've had trouble marketing them all. Your cows produce well, but you pay $65 a ton for hay. You now have forty acres of land, only five or ten acres of which is cleared, and the government informs you that you owe $8,000 . . . You are a member of the Matanuska colony, and you have a staggering debt hanging over your future in an adopted home you have learned to love. You may give up. You may get an adjustment. You may work on with the debt haunting you. You don't know and neither does the government that brought you there The fault is partly yours for living too well from an unreluctant government commissary where double a reasonable price was charged for everything. The fault is partly the government's for being so idealistic and so impractical. Pay Day Comes... Even for Dreams Where do you go from here? 'Who Cared Most, And, Caring, Dared' ≈ A small but growing vanguard of college students, sobered by depression and present world conditions, is beginning to think, beginning to realize that international and national problems are of deep concern to us all. They realize the complexity of our modern economy, and though they may not understand the implications of the latest crisis in Spain or the Orient, they know that indirectly it affects even so cloistered an individual as the college student. William Allen White, the Kansas sage, has thrown down to youth the following challenge: "You must point your achievement toward a fairer distributive system in America. Abundance is here for the taking. Out of the laboratories will come new processes to multiply almost infinitely material things for your America; but only if you will hold open the channels of free science, unfettered thought and the right of man to use his talents to the utmost, provided he gives honest social returns for the rewards he takes." We must meet this challenge. Our fate is plain if it is left unanswered. Campus Opinion Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the Summer Session Kaman. Articles over 200 words in length are subject to cutting by the editor. Contributions on any subject are invited. Standing Room Only Editor, Daily Kansas Editor Daily Kansan: This morning I attended what purported to be a convocation. Had I not attended the opening Convocation for the past four years I should have the thought I had lost my bearings and stumbled into a church. Standing Room Only I have no objection to churches. I think they are admirable places in which to hold church services. But my idea of a concoction is a well-balanced combination of entertainment and educational features, without alternately sitting and standing through the body, responsive readings, the Lord's prayer, and a hymn. The present set-up, however, is not entirely without its beneficial effects. The coke joint report a Probably more students would like to attend convocations. But students don't like to be bored. J, H, R. Official University Bulletin Notice due at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m., preceding regular publication days and 11:00 a.m. on Saturday, May 26th. Vol. 35 SUNDAY, SEPT. 19, 1937 No.8 --tally unbalanced, or a musician who plays just a bit screwy—usually the latter. ADAGIO GROUP TRYOUTS- Tynports for the adagio group will be held Monday, September 20, at 4:30. All men interested report to Room 101 Robinson Gymnasium - B. F. Humphrey CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION The * Christian Science Organization at the University of Chicago,* will be held on Friday, September 21, day afternoon, Sept. 21, at 4:30 in Room C. Myers hall. All students and faculty members who are interested may attend this meeting. COLLEGE FACULTY MEETING: The faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will meet at 4:30 tuesday afternoon, Sept. 21, in the Central Administration auditorium. E. H. Linden, President. CREATIVE LEISURE PICNIC: The Creative Leisure picnic hikes planned originally for September 19, 2014 will be held in August. DRAMATIC CLUB TRYOUTS; Trouws for the Dramatic Club will be held in the Little Theater of Green hall on Monday afternoon. These trouws will be to all students of the University--Rolla Nuckles, Sponsor. PHI CHI DELTA': Phi Chi Delta will hold a super meeting for all Presbyterian girls Tuesday, September 21, from 7:30 to 7 at Westminster hall. 1221 St. John's Street, Observations Monday—Ezina May Parks, Vice-president. MEN'S STUDENT COUNCIL. There will be a meeting of all M.S.C. members in the Pice Room Mon- tage on Thursday, March 26th at 10am. TAP CLASS. There will be an advanced tap class Mondays and Wednesdays at 3:30 p.m. I should like to have anyone report who has had experience or has been working in advanced tap -Elizabeth Dunkel. University Daily Kansan Official Student Diary of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS KANSAS PRESS MEMBER 1957 ASSOCIATION J. Howard Rusco MANAGING EDITOR CAMPAUS EDITORS KENNETH MOORMAN AND JON COCHRANN SOCIETY EDITOR SCOUTS EDITOR TELEVISION EDITOR WILLIAM FEDERALG MARKUP EDITORS BOBIE CAKEY AND JANE FLOO SUNDAY EDITOR ALAN ASHER By Dale "Brody" Shroff, e'unel DOWN THE GROOVE EDITOR-IN-Chippe ASSOCIATE EDITOR BERNIE MORTON AND GREG HINKS AUCE HALDEN-JANUY MARTIN THOMSON AND GREG HINKS FEATURE EDITOR ... GRACE VALENTINE Kanian Board Members ALERE HALDAMAN-JULIUS F. QUINSTON BROWN D. FREYAN ROBERT DAVID E. PARTHGE DAVID E. PARTHGE RICHARD M. PAPILLON MORGEN VALENTINE EDWARD BARNETT KENNETH GRABER MARK REMOUND MARVIN GOBELB RICKMAN PACIFIC MORES THOMPON REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY Now if you've read this far, you are probably thinking someone is crazy, but that's because you don't know about jazz. And after all, "jazz don't mean a thing if you don't like it." And we don't even weave a hammock. $ ^{2} $Business Staff If you alligators are beat to the sox after riffling through this first session, kindly remember that it's a little off the beat for those of you who haven't been swinging with the rest of the cats. BUSINESS MANAGER F. QUENTIN BROWN Entered as second-class master, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan. In order that you may get your "kicks", if any, out of this column, it will be necessary from time to time to define a number of terms that are used by swing musicians. These terms are found in the true vernacular of the swing world so that it may be a little more interesting and instructive. Perhaps it would be a good beginning to translate the second paragraph. The term "alligator" is one used by swing musicians when speaking of these swing enthusiasts who are interested in swing but who do not play themselves. In other words, if you go for swing and "jam sessions" you are an "aligator". Some of the most enthusiatic aligators on the hill include Dorothy Fritz, Jane Coates, Doc Dear, Gene "Slugger" Haughey, "Stew" Chamberls, and others who like to go to Bottles. "Bottles" Payne gets a lift out of a good riff session. You've probably had your "sox beat" or have been "beat to the sox" without knowing it. Someone told me, and I'll have to keep it a secret, that Don Woods thinks having one's "sox beat" is a most unusual way of having the laundry done. However, this expression did not originate in a laundry, and still it's been kept clean. "Beat to the sox" means that someone has worn it out, laundry service eliminated. A very similar expression is one used by a musician who plays a wind instrument. When such a musician has played so strenuously that his lips are tired, he will say that his "chops are beat." To the average layman the expression "off-bat" might have several interpretations. For example, it means to be silent, or to describe a description of a cop who wasn't on duty, but the expression, in its true sense, is used when referring to something that doesn't adhere strictly to the conventional. It may mean a lie. So much can be written about the jazz that it would take months, so if you alligators are interested in getting in the groove with things and learning all about this thing they should do, they should sit this column and sit on in the Sunday session of alligators. To the first 10 who write we'll mail absolutely free an invisible Chinese drum stick. Keep swinging and we'll go out and play. (In case you don't have a.swing dictionary "jive" meens chatter.) On the Shin-were German the lads said, "no they were 'sweetish.'" Continued from page 1 Things: Bob Black, Sigma Chi, must be thinking about the more serious side of life judging from his enrollment schedule—Child care in the morning, and family finance in the afternoon... Fred Littoux, Art Welf, and Bob Martin from the Beta house went on a six weeks junt up in Wisconsin this summer and spend the whole time on an island in a lake supposedly fishing. They were able to catch that time the time was devoted to—well there were eight girls on an adjoining island, and then there was a hamlet of beverage houses a few miles distant. When asked if the girls You'll 'be reading another column in this paper today, or so they tell me. The by-line says Dale Shroff, and here are a few items from his past: Comes from the Kansas Cow college up on Manhattan way; is the trumpeter for Louie Kuhn's band at present; for two years he wrote a humorous column for the Cow Journal; for four years he was president of Manhattan in their last mayoral election and just missed being elected—The PI Phi's are old stuff to him—and his big eyes are helping him make a living right now. HOWDY! Every One Goes to the BLUE MILL Just two of the stars who dare portray the truth in the picture which was held over for two weeks in Kansas City, "Damaged Glo" opening at 10 a.m. on Wednesday. AT THE VARSITY Sonipa Henie, helen as the star discovery of 1937, in the Twentieth Century Fox speculative smoother "Sone in a Million," which has won the VARSITY. RN LEARNING AUGUST 23, 1948 AT THE GRANADA 1009 Mass. Dick Powell, Priscilla Lacey, Fred Waring and his Pennyvailians all join him and not rhythm in "Varity Show," now playing at the BRANADA AT THE DICKINSON ALFRED H. SCHMIDT AND BARBARA RYAN The University Men's Glee Club Will Hold Tryouts for New Voices Monday, Sept. 20, 7:30 p.m. A to M inclusive Tuesday, Sept. 21, 7:30 p.m. N to Z inclusive Bring a song if you have one. College Credit Given RCA Victor ELECTRIC TUNING! $159⁵⁰ • Electric Tuning • Arechair Control(optional) • Sonic-Arc Magic Voice • Magic Brain • Magic Eye • RCA Metal Tubes • Straight-Line Dial • Beauty-Tone Cabinet • Magnite Core • JF Transformers • Full Dynamic Speaker • Tone Control • Phonograph Connection Model B11K—11 tubes PUSH A BUTTON... THERE'S YOUR STATION! Model 811K-11 tubes IMAGINE...for the price of an ordinary radio, you get Electric Tuning! Push the button—there's your station easily! Perfectly! Foreign Stations, Police, Aviation, Amateur calls—easier than ever before. Greater power! Increased selectivity! Radio's most lifelike tone! Come in NOW! RCA Bell's Music Store 925 Mass. 5 Phone 375 SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1937 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Here on the Hill --an account of Mt. Oread Society JUNE ULM Society Editors 1 8pm call. KU 1,213 after 8:20 **MAR 4TH** *BIRD SHORE* Miss Coriine High, fn38, entertained with a dinner at the Colonial Tea Room, Friday, in honor of Miss Dorothy Derfelt, 37, whose marriage to Clarence Dodson will take this fall. Quartet tables decorated with vases of rosebuds were laid for 20. The following were guesses Doorney Darrelle, '77 Barbara Edmons, c40 Margaret Smaffa, f88 Ruth Birdner, 1d1 Kathryn Meyers, '73 Saray Ghephe, c91 Susy Hewlett, '65 Ali Chesw, '83 Marie Russell, c40 Gregory Ecclidw, '40 Eli Craig Hedder Harman Arthur Ackel Mr. George Hedrick Mr. Ebiah Allen Mr. Jack Hickman Mr. Ecclidw High The following were guests: Dinner guests Thursday of Delta Vulnerable guests only. Marlyn Miller Betty McVey Bettie Burch Virginia Hawkinson Mary Fowler, buncl Louise Grayson, c'40 Mary Alice Livingston Virginia Wade Mary Marilyn Carlon Felissa Lourie, fau'l Jane Montgomery Mr. and Mrs. Ray Wright, Lawrence ☆ ☆ ☆ The women of Miller hall, the new women's dormitory given to the University by Mrs. J. B. Watkins, have elected the following officers: Sophi Schellenberg, c38, president; James Tillman, c39, secretary; Helen Wilson, c38, treasurer; and Barbara Woodard, historian. Mr. Arvid Jacobson, of the department of design, spent the summer studying at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts, with the exception of two weeks which he spent vacationing in Michigan. Mrs. E. C. Nuell, Great Bend, is visiting at the Chi Omega house this weekend. ☆ ☆ ☆ Miss Ruth Learned, '37, and Miss Jane Marshall, "37, of Kansas City, Mo., are weekend guests at Gamma Phi Beta. ★★★ ☆ ☆ ☆ Alpha Chi Omega entertained with a miscellaneous shower and tea yesterday afternoon, honoring Miss Florence Wahli, who will be married Oct. 2 to Edward Marti of Minneapolis, Minn. Mr. and Mrs. William Ball, Kaunn City, will be dinner guests today at the Kappa Alpha Theta house. Miss Lucille Davis is a guest this weekend of Helen Myers at Corbin hall. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Pinder, Kansas City, were dinner guests Friday at the Acacia fraternity house. Ray Noble, '37, is a weekend guest at the Kappa Sigma house. The women of Westminster hall and Mrs. Stanton Anloren, chaperone,ield a dinner at the Colonial Tea room Wednesday. The Zeta chapter of Kappa Beta, an organization for Christian Church women students, gave a tea honoring freshman women Thursday, at the home of the Rev. Mr. Barr, the new minister of the Christian Church Mr. and Mrs. Don Healy and daughter, Catherine, of Lincoln, Kan, were visitors yesterday at the Pi Kappa Alpha house. ☆ ☆ Alpha Delta Pi announces the engagement of Miss Dorey Dorffelt, 37, Galena, to Clarence Dodson of the wedding will take place this fall. Gertrude Spiers, '37, Spearville, is a guest at the Chi Omega sorority. ☆ ☆ ☆ James Polkinghorn, '37, Dodge City, was a guest Friday and yesterday at the Acacia house. Phone K. U. 66 Corbin hall will have open house to all University women this afternoon from 3:30 to 5:30. --believed that they were going t Spain and did not learn the truth until they came to Leuzig. CLASSIFIED ADS STUDENT WASHINGS: Guarantee satisfactory. Call for and deliver. Phon- 2561M. -12 Jayhawk Barber Shop Completely Modernistic BOYS: 1 single front room, 1 room for 3 boys. Very nice rooms. $1247\frac{1}{2}$ Kentucky. Phone 1071W. -11 Enjoy the best at no additional cost. Hair cut 35c. FOR SALE; Almont new Tuxedo, Reason able price. Call 2488J. Earl Ellis Joe Letch "Bill" Hensley "Paddy" Hyatt BOYS: Board and roam $22.10 per month. Board 120 per month. 1247 Kentucky. Phone 8668. -9 LOST: Filigree silver butterfly pin. Please return to 1345 Louisiana or call phone 982. -1 727 Mass. YOU WANT a large, clean, quart room on the first floor, with private entrance to bathroom, and private outside front entrance. In a private home with no other rooms. A large, central school building, a school and town. To rent single, or double up to upperclassmen, graduate students or instructors. It is a nice room. So, ph. 24983, 1328 Tennesse. -14 Subscribe for THE WICHITA BEACON Kanas' Greatest Newsapue Sunday 10 cents per week — Phone 2316 ---------------------------------------------------believed that they were going t Spain and did not learn the truth until they came to Leuzig. Phone K. U. 6 6 The Venus Beauty Salon Individual Booths THE WICHTI BERCOR Kansas' Greatest Newspaper Delivered to your door Daily an Five Experienced Operators Featuring Dana Ray Cosmetics Dera Aderholdt, Manager Phone 387 Flips 842 Mass First Floor. 842 Mass. FOR RENT: Newly decorated furnished apartment. Two rooms and bath with or without kitcheneet and garage. 1100 Louisiana. Phone 471. -9 ROOMS FOR GIRLS. Twin beds, one room. Bath. Gas and furnace heat. Entertaining privileges. One-half block north Caribir, 1121 Ohio. Phone 16719 - 8 BOYS: 1 front single, 177; 1 large south room, beds on sleeping porch, also cook- ing privileges, newly decorated, 92 Ala- bama. Phone 2292J. -9 RENT: Large comfortable front room, single or double. Rates reasonable. 1314 Tennessee. -9 FOR RENT: Men or women. Room in private home. No other rooms. Use piano. Single 12, double 15. Garage $28-12 Illinois. WANTED: Laundering. For fine laundering at reasonable prices, call Mrs. Omar Huey, 216 Rhode Island. Phone 24251.7- SAVE part of rent allowance for something else. Very nice double room 12. Sleeping porch, study downstairs, 44. Five blocks from campus, 84 Ala. -11 Name | Pos. Wt. | Length | | :--- | :--- | ---: | | Amerine, Dick | HB 170 | 6' | | *Anderson, Ferrell* | G 165 | 6' | | O'Neill, Gilbert* | HB 183 | 6' | | Akel, Xanth | T 190 | 7' | | Billups, Gene | HB 100 | 510' | | *Hoseleve, Ford* | G 165 | 2' | | Warren, Howard | E 175 | 6' | | Cadwalder, Elmore | HB 165 | 511' | | Caldwell, Keoneth | QB 180 | 511' | | Warren, Charles | HB 175 | 5'8' | | Chiwood, Russell | E 169 | 5' | | Day, Merrel | C 170 | 9' | | Lennard, Leonard | HB 190 | 510' | | ***Dougall, Clarence* | FB 195 | 6'11' | | Elling, Dong | HB 153 | 511' | | *Gearhart, Herbert* | T 200 | 6'11' | | Jeffield, Carl | C 170 | 9' | | Hamford, Floyd | E 192 | 6'17 ' | | *Harderde, Forrest* | G 165 | 5'7' | | Luft, Kurt | G 165 | 5'7' | | Kevan, Stuart | C 100 | 6' | | Kovach, Rudy | E 170 | 511' | | Lutter, Harlan | FB 185 | 6'11' | | Troll, Nicholas | C 190 | 7' | | Loughman, Rodney | E 180 | 510' | | *Masoner, Pat* | QB 180 | 6'10' | | Miyau, Pat | E 170 | 6' | | Meier, Milton | QB 180 | 511' | | Meier, Milton | QB 180 | 511' | | Meier, Milton | QB 180 | 513' | | ***Mooreland, Howard*** | G 150 | 5'8' | | Morrison, John | C 165 | 6' | | Nees, Wayne | P 170 | 6'10' | | Nees, Wayne | Max 170 | 6'19' | | Ruke, Dan | T 185 | 6'11' | | Richardson, J.R. | HB 165 | 510' | | Rosacker, J.D. | HB 180 | 510' | | FB 180 | HB 180 | 510' | | Shihnick, Mike | G 180 | 510' | | Stapling, George | G 180 | 6'12' | | Stapling, George | GB 180 | 512' | | Stipp, Charles | HB 175 | 6' | | Soliluvin, Milton | HB 167 | 510' | | Turner, Jack | G 180 | 6' | | Warren, Charles | T 180 | 5'8' | | Warren, Charles | C 180 | 510' | | White, Paul | E 180 | 6'12' | | Wilcoy, Emil | QB 180 | 6'11' | | Wilcoy, Wilcoy | C 170 | 6' | WANTED *Indicates lettermen. Typewriter Cleaning and Repairing Ribbons for sale CLARENCE M. BAKER 1323 Kentucky Phone 2095J CHURCH NOTICES Trinity Lutheran church. Thirteenth and New Hampshire; the Rev. Charles A. Puis, pastor; Sunday school, 9:45; morning worship, 11:00; socil hour for University students, 6:15 p.m.; discussion period for University students, 7:00 p.m. 924 Mass. First Baptist church, Eighth and Kentucky; the Rev. Howard E. Koelb, minister; the Rev. Charles W. Thomas, minister to students; church school, 9:45; morning worship, 11:00; tople of sermon, "Singing The Lord's Song in A Strange Land"; young people's fellowship period and meeting 6:00 and 6:30 p.m. Twenty-five words or less one insertion, 27c; three insertions, 36c; six insertions, 75c; contract rates, not more than 25 words, $2 per month flat. Payable in advance and accepted subject to approval at the KANIAN Business Office. CLARENCE M. BAKER TAXI HUNSINGER'S 920 - 22 Mass. Phone 12 --believed that they were going t Spain and did not learn the truth until they came to Leuzig. CHURCH NOTICES ONE STOP Clothes Service Station SCHULZ the TAILOR Trinity, Lutheran church. Thir- Buy GOOD shoe repairing Our Prices are RIGHT! HER'S SHOE SHOP First Presbyterian church, Ninth and Vermont, the Rev. Theodore D Hassman, minister, Dean Donald M. KANSAS UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL ROSTER = church school, 8:45; prayer and ser- OYLER'S SHOE SHOP 1246 Ohio Swartwhatch, chief director; church school, 9:45; worship service, 11:00. "The Mind of Christ for Today." Westminster forum for students at 7:30 at Westminster hall, 1212 Oread, with Dean Paul B. Lawson, speaker. Home Lawrence Kings City Garden City New York City Kansas City, Mo. Kansas City, Kan. Coldwater Alma Charlotte Yates Center Conway Springs Kansas City, Mo. Kansas City, Kan. Burlington Lindsborg Lindsburg Kansas City Lee Lummis, Mo. Clay Center Mountain Center Mound Center Albany, Mo. Columbus Oklahoma Trenton, Mo. Orange Kansas City, Mo. Kansas City, Mo. Topeka Herington Earley Wichita Brush Lake Coldwater Apinwall, Pa. Kansas City, Kan. El Dorado Lawrence Lawrence Lawrence Kansas City, Mo. Waverly Markle Joseph, Mo. Fort Scott Kansas City Tulsa, Okla. Omaha, Neb. Plymouth Congregational Church $25 Vermont, the Rev. Joseph F. King, minister; church school, 9:45 worship; for all Congregation students, 7:00 p.m., Dr. Bert Nush will speak on "Why Students Fall." First Methodist church, Tenth and Vermont, the Rev. Robert A. Hunt, minister and director of Wesley foundation, the Rev. F. Price, minister and director of student activities; Sunday school, 9:45; morning worship, 10:50; Wesley Foundation outdoor nursery service, 5:45 p.m. Trinity Episcopal church, Tenth and Vermont, the Rev. Carter H. Harrison, rector. Seventeenth Sunday after Trinity; communion, 8:00. We Have the Pictures and the Price TODAY The Picture You've Waited to See Again! Continuous Shows from 2:00 The Show Value of Lawrence Admission never over 15c THE GIRL IN A MILLION-believed that they were going t Spain and did not learn the truth until they came to Leuzig. VARSITY Home of the Jayhawks The Show Value of Lawrence! Glorifying the Show in a Million! Sonja HENIE in a Mill with The Cast in a Million ADOLPHE MENJOU JEAN HERSHOLT NED SPARKS DON AMECHE RITZ BROTHERS ARLINE JUDGE BORRAH MINEVITCH and his gang DIXIE DUNBAR LEAH RAY SHIRLEY DEANE Directed by Sidney Lonfield American Producer Rowland Furrow DARRYL L. C. 2436 E. 10th in charge of production 1234567890 lion MADISONS MUSEUM OF CULTURE First Church of Christ Scientist, 1240 Massachusetts Sunday service at 11:00, subject: "Matter"; Sunday school at 10:00. A N D—She Loved As All Woman in Dream of Loving—But as Few Dare! First Christian church, Tenth and Kentucky, the Rev. Harold G. Barr, minister; church school, 9:45; worship and communion, 10:50; student fellowship hour, 5:00; forum program, 6:00. 1937' SPECTACULAR MUSICAL SWASH with the songs you'll remain inspired hits of the year! lion St. John Catholic church, 1240 Kentucky, the Rev. Fr. M. T. Hoffmann, pastor; morning services at 7:30 and 9 o'clock. Elisabeth Elisabeth BERGNER in DREAMING LIPS Y.W.C.A. Assembly To Be Held Tomorrow WED - THUR - 10c to All Margaret Sullivan "SO RED THE ROSE" "And Lombard-Mac Murrey" "And Lombard-Mac Murrey" With Raymond Massey—Romney Brent After the meeting announcements will be made concerning the Commission meetings for the next two weeks. The first Y.W.C.A. assembly of the year will be held in Central Administration auditorium tomorrow afternoon. This meeting, open to all University women and all faculty women, will be a worship service for men and women, play a violin solo as a prelude to the period of worship. Ellen Payne, secretary of Y.W.C.A., will speak on "Flow of Horizons." Work of Designers Is Displayed in Topeka IPS Watch for These Hits "HO DOCTOR" "THEM DOWN" "CHAMPAGNE WALZT" "PENNIES FROM HEAVEN" Work of students of the department of design was on display at the state fair in Topeka last week. Two collections will be sent to Kansas high schools this week for exhibition, one to the new Wyandotte high school in Kansas City where Frances Hamlen, a graduate of the University of Kansas, is an instructor. The other will be displayed at the Emporia high school where Frances Keeney, another graduate, is teaching. C. I.O. Refuses A. F. of L. Invitation Washington, D.C., Sept. 18. (UP) John L. Lewis's Committee for Industrial Organization will reject the American Federation of Labor invitation to come to its interconvention and settle labor's family quarrel "man to man" fashion, on the ground that the condition attached to the proposal would put the C.I.O. at a suicidal disadvantage. German Diary-believed that they were going t Spain and did not learn the truth until they came to Leuzig. Continued from page 1 Butchery in Russian War The first great battle of the Russia invasion was the one off Smolensk, Aug. 17, 1812. The battle of Berodino, which followed, English historians have called the most hideous and wasteful butchery in the 'history of the world.' This battle opened for Napoleon the way to Moscow, where his army arrived on Sept. 16. Mr. Walter Meyer, a senior diplomat in Moscow, which he calls the "holy city" with its all its domes and cathedral glittering in the sunshine. He also likened Moseley to the holy city of Jerusalem "over which our Lord Soldiers Liked Nscow soldiers later. Moscow sent the phase for Soldier Walter. He says, "everyone felt like being regular citizens of Moscow; there were bakers, and tailors, and shoemakers." We were all very sorry when, after a four-weeks' stay, Napoleon gave orders to evacuate the city on Oct. 19. Napoleon's army left in a southwest direction, the soldiers loaded with supplies from the north so that leather ready to return to their native land. But the Russian army coming from the south pressed them toward the north so that Napoleon had to retreat over the same route which they had come. For the first time the grand army was defeated. After this on a spot near the river Bolshevets, Napoleon paused poiense pass his troops in review. The men were in a miserable state: "He put on an air of indifference and showed lack of sympathy with SUNDAY SPECIAL YOUNG TURKEY DINNER 35c with all the trimmings MIDWAY CAFE 1031 Moss. THE STUDENTS THEATRE DICKINSON Starts Today MIDWESTERN PREMIERE of the grandest, gayest and swellest picture of the year. WIFE Loretta Young DOCTOR Warner Baxter Virginia Bruce smart Subjects - COMEDY - CARTOON - FOX NEWS Continuous Screws 1 hour to 11 p.m. Continuous Shows 1 p.m. to 11 p.m. STARTS THURSDAY DAMAGED GOODS" From the Famous French Stage Play by EUGENE BRIEUX Adapted BY UPTON PRODUCER CLAIR DAMAGE GOODS The Picture that Dares Tell the Truth! DAMAGED GOODS" From the Famous French Stage Play by EUGENE BRIEUX Adapted by UPTON SINCLAIR Produced by Phil Goldstone with a Brilliant All-Star Cast D with a Brilliant All-Star Cast A Fleeting Moment of Pleasure Then Long Years of Misery and Regret! the history of his army', but, the soldier continued, "I wonder what was happening inside the man; the battlefield tilted toward the beat honor and ambition." Manuscript Nearly Ready 145 Dr. Sprenger hopes that he will be able to publish the manuscripts in the Humanistic Series next spring, both in the original German dialect and the parallel English translation. The German text has been type-written b Randall Week, c 40, and is nearly ready for printing. The German version will be published C.S.S.P. students under the super-vision of Dr. Sprenger and members of the departments of English and history. WEATHER Bills of exchange and promissory notes in Great Britain and Ireland are payable on the preceding bank- date, unless otherwise stated. Falls on Christmas or Good Friday. at the COKE YOURSELF Kansas: Fair and continued cool. Party cloudy in west portion. UNION FOUNTAIN Get the habit early--- Memorial Union Sub-Basement GRANADA Your Entertainment Spot G TODAY ENDS TUESDAY ★ Readin', Riotin' and Rhythm-a tighte Taught To the Tune of Fred Waring's Stick! --- BOY WE'VE GOT SOMETHING HERE! WITH DICK POWELL FRED WARING J.K. Pennyvaniant CHEER THE CLASS OF 37 IN COLLEGE MUSICALS! MUSICALIST 'VARSITY SHOW' M. JOHNSON & MICHAEL PARKER ALSO Color Cartoon Latest News HOT AND HIGH, Sweet AND LOW, LUCH MIS THAT GETS YOU AND NETHER, NETHER AND NETHER, NETHER AND NETHER, NETHER THAT'S VARSITY SHOW. WEDNESDAY "ANOTHER DAWN" The Little House of Big Hits PATEE CONTINUOUS FROM 2 p.m. ALL SHOWS 15c TODAY ENDS WEDNESDAY 2 SMASH HITS The Mightiest of All Jungle Adventures! "TRADER HORN" HARRY CAREY EDWINA BOOTH DUNCAN RENALDO AND - CAN A SMART BLOND MAKE T RO U B L E ? ASK THE MAN WHO LOVES ONE. Glenda Barton FARRELL MacLANE "Fly Away Baby" ALSO NEWS - NOVELTY PAGE FOUR A UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1937 Varsity Team Is Rounding Into Shape Coaches Begin To Pick Candidates for Starting Positions After Week of Practice The varsity football squad moved a step near game condition yesterday afternoon with a lengthy backfield drill, tapered off by a dummy scrimmage session. Monday the squad will start actual scrimmage. After more than a week of practice the coaches are beginning to size the candidates up for start-up games. In the final definite as yet, still a fairly good idea of the starting lineup can be had. At ends, Arnold and White are two outstanding candidates. Both a theorist and a musician. Hardiaore, a reserve from last year, and Chil- wood, another sophomore, are also making a strong bid for the starting ...Ores Hardacre, a re- DAVE SHIRK PETER MORRIS DAVE SHIRK Line Posts Filled The tackle posts are more definitely filled with Boslevac and Ward, both regulars from last year, back to carry the brunt of the defense. The guard positions are also well taken care of with two regulars back. They are Staplen and Anderson, both heavy, fast men. At center the battle is between Jack Hall, lettered reserve and Charles Warren, a newcomer who plays the Ft. Scott Junior College team. Backfield Indefinite backfield is indefinite. The backfield are indefinite yet. At quarter there are two men who have played baseball and they have lady, Ms. Omar. MARSHAL JOHN CRAFTY JAY. Masoner FERREL ANDERSON MAX REPLOGE year and Wieneke was a regular last replogge the year before. Meier and Caldwell are making a try for the starting position through their blocking ability. There is a world of material for the halftack posts. Repogle, a regular, and Divens and Richardson, reserves, are well up in the race. However, they must fight off the challenges of such promising sophomores as Amerine, Sullivant, Cadwallader, Ebling and Rosacker. The fullback position is developing into a first class race between Douglass, regular last year, and Shirk, who was a regular end last season. With the advantages, there is no prospect of Shirk's returning to an end position. Frosh Get to Work Fresh Get to Work Monday, with the freshman game only five days away and the Washburn game only 11 days away, and with regular scrimmage starting, the backfield candidates will be sorted out and a better idea of the starting four can be obtained. The freshmen got serious with their first scrimage yesterday morning. Hard work will be the order of the coming week with the important varsity game just ahead. Freshman Coach Conger said that he would probably have his starting lineup ready by Thursday. A synthetic gasoline that is more powerful than TNT has recently been developed by scientists. SHOE REPAIRING U will B Proud to Wear Shining, Dyeing, Tinting and Cleaning ELECTRIC Shoe Shop 1017 Mass. Phone 686 Along the Sideline By William Fitzgerald, Kansas Sports Editor KU's neighbors from the very north south, the Haskell Indians, will have to depend largely on new material for this year's team. Nevertheless Coach John F. Carmody feels that the 1937 team will be better than that of last year. His optimism is based on the new determination displayed in practice. The Indians, who are boys of high school age, will play only Ottawa teams. They open with Ottawa there and conclude their nine-game schedule with Missouri Valley at Marshall, Mo., on November 22 with their winer Baker on Oct 22 and McPherson on Nov. 11. Four lettermen are returning to form a nucleus for this year's squad. The lhe are: William Washington, halback; Homer Folsom, center; Lloyd Yellow Horse, tackle; and a Mackey Kenyon, tackle. Some of the new men who look impressive are "Skeeter" Holloway (130-pound flash), halback; Abbey Arya (200-pound, Acy Red Leaf, d and Cedric No Afraid, tackle. These of last year's squad-men are also looking good. The team won't measure up to those of former years who used to rank with the leaders of the nation, but it should make a good show. Coach Wes Fry of Kansas State has three sophomores and a junior to pour into the shoes left vacant by Ramblin' Red Elder, three years an all-star Big Six fullsuek. Probably the most prominent is Elmer Hackney, who has been his team's tank team. Hackney, who was high school heavyweight wrestling champion during his younger days, is being pushed by Bob Briggs, 180 pounds; Fred Klemp, 170 pounds; and James Broek, 185 pounds. He was terrible after all Fry's squad, consisting largely of sophomores, opens Oct. 2 against Boston College there. "The Dear Shirk to end" movement received some active support the other morning in the Kansas City Times but the story proved to be just another rumor. Shirk, who last year was the Jayhawks' most popular player at an end position, is still playing fullback and it looks as though he may remain there. Meanwhile Lindsey is still worrying about what happens with Paul White sophonore wingman, outstanding Hardacre, Arnold and Chitwood are battling for the other regular position. Shavings—The Lapetins, K. C. Ban Johnson champions, made short work of Concordia by winning four straight from the Kansas champions . . . We had the pleasure Friday of meeting Jack Buckman, x-Argentine high jumper and basketball player. Buckman had planned to attend George Washington University but switched at the last minute to Kansas and enrolled here yesterday. With Buckman, Engleman, Miller and Showalter already in school to name three, Buckman's ball outlook for the future doesn't look bad at all . . . Howard McCarty, 172-pound half-back, is slated to set the Big Six on fire according to early reports . . . If "Biff Jones backfield measured up to his line, Nebraska was beheaded toward the Rose Bowl this year. Have Your Brakes Checked NOW! We Are Authorized by the State Highway Patrol to Furnish an "OK" And get out of the 51% Defective Group Organize Cheering Sections Additional color will be added to the froth-varsity grid tilt next Saturday with the development of two separate cheering sections composed of two layers. The most promising yearling squads since 1929, and the upperclassmen supporting a squad of 17 lettered veterans and a crop of enthusiastic aspirants for a variety position who whipped in into a confident ball club. We have the latest equipment, perfect checking system, and three experienced brake service men. A freshman girl will be chosen by the Ku Ku's to assist the freshman cheer leaders in leading yells. The girl will be selected from candidates elected by the freshman group in each organized house. Girls in unorganized houses may become eligible upon submitting a petition supported by ten rights will be held on hand to lead the upperclassmen in pitting their strength against the freshman lung power. You Get a Guaranteed Job Hege! The freshmen and upperclassmen will comprise possibly the two largest cheering sections to meet in the fall of 2013, days of the overvictorious eleven. Super Service The Hexagons, last year's runners-up in the intramural soft ball tournament, turned the tables on the Sigma Alpha Epsilon队 Thursday night by beating the champions 3-2 at South Park. The Hexagons led 2-0 up to the seventh, when the Sig Alphs combined two scratch hits and an error to tie the score. The Hexagons came back to score another run in the eighth to win. Intramural Champions Are Defeated by Hexagons 24-hour Service 1000 Mass. Phone 1300 CARTER Bert Barmon, Hexagon hurler, allowed five hits and struck out 12, while Hocevar gave up seven hits and fanned 14. Batteries: Barnum and Conklin Hocevar and Brenneisen. Score by innings: R.H.E. Hexagons ... 101 000 01-3 7 1 Sig Alphs ... 000 990 20-2 5 3 After the movies, E. J. Burnham, '15, was elected president of the organization and D. G. Saurenman, '27, secretary. Most of the members of the group are employees of the General Electric company. Connetchy Alumni Club Holds Reunion and Picnic Members of the Connetchy, NY, alumni club recently held a picnic in honor motion pictures of scenes taken from the University campus were shown. The pictures were sent to the club by the extension bureau. France has decided to raise her railway speed limit from 75 m.p.h to 87 m.p.h. The new limit will apply only to trains with all-stainless traction. Trains of wooden coaches will continue to overse the old limit. Read the Kansan Want Ads. Boat Accident Doesn't Halt Winn's Football Ambitions Real determination is being displayed on the Kansas football field this year by a boy whose own athletic career was halted at its very height by an accident in which he lost a leg. Several years ago, while Larry Winn, Jr., was still a student in Southwest high school of Kansas University, he motor boat managed his leg so badly that amputation was necessary . At that time Larry was well on his way to duplicate the athletic feats of his father, Larry Winn, Sr., who made a name for himself as a track man in the University of Kansas in 1916-17. Larry was resultant in scoring three touchdown team and also a star in basketball and track. He loved sports and it seemed as though he was on his way to a great athletic career when the accident killed all his dreams. It nearly killed Larry too, and only remarkable physique enabled him to fight his way back to battle again. The loss of his腿 didn't dampen his interest in athletics. If anything they attracted him more than ever, and he plants now to become a sports writer. He enrolled as a freshman in the University this year, pledged Phi Kappa Psi, and plans to major in journalism with sports writing as his principal objective. In order to let Larry get a real Cunningham Wins Two-Mile Race Travers Island, N.Y., Sept. 18.—(UP) —Glen Cunningham, the barrel-chested Kansan won the two-mile handicap from scramble in 2024 here today in the 70th annual fall games of the New York Athletic Giving away handicaps up to 160 yards, Cunningham did not catch up to the rest of the field until after the first mile, but won 60 yards in a Phil Silverman of the Milrose AA., second place winner in the race. knowledge of football, his lifetime friend, Coach Adrian Lindsey, has invited him to help out around the field. Larry has enthusiastically accepted. His duties will consist mainly of keeping time, keeping spectators off the playing field, and other odd jobs. He will have a home team game, he will be a football squad a service at the same time. Long copy cannot be used on bill boards. Therefore, advertisers rely on art work and usually a slogan or tagline to persuade or to nail down his sales argument. While Winn cannot be active in competitive sports, he gets around very capably on crutches and is a very good dancer. Larry Winn, Sr., is now president of the Winn Construction Co. in Kansas City. Come to Kansas City's JUBILESTA SEPT 17-25 Municipal Auditorium ★ Admission 80c plus 10c tax The ONE Dance Nite Saturday, Sept. 25 Continuous Music BENNY GOODMAN ★ Emperor of Swing ISHAM JONES and His Orchestra Jam Dance Session! Missouri Varsity Team Trounces Freshmen 53-0 Columbia, Mo., Sept. 18—(UP)—Couch Don Fauro trusted his University football eleven out against the freshmen here today in the first real scrimmage of the year. The varsity gridders rode over the yearlings 53-0 in a display of power. Rev. Joseph F. King, pastor of Plymouth Congregational church, will speak on the broader aspects of theology in a narrow scholastic implications. John Russe, c'uncle, will sing several numbers before Nash's discussion. Refreshments will be served. Nash To Speak Tonight Bert A. Nash, professor of education; will speak at the first meeting of Fireides Forum of the 1937-38 school year this evening at 7 o'clock in the parish house of Plymouth College, where he subject, "Why Students Fail." Professor Nash, according to a statement made yesterday by the LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas wrence, Kane 641 Louisiana Graduates Get Good Positions Phone 894 W. H. Quakenbush, Pres. E. S. Weatherby, Supt. STUDENT SUPPLIES Zipper Notebooks (Your name embossed in gold FREE) $2.00 — $2.75 — $3.75 K.U. Canvas Notebooks $1.00—with paper Jayhawk Sport Shirts 89c Sheaffer Fountain Pens $1.25—$2.25—$3.75—$5.00 Note Papers - Drawing Sets - Ink - Gym Clothes Drug Sundries We Serve a Complete List of Tasty Sandwiches, Fountain Drinks and Quick-Lunch Specials. "CALL US—WE DELIVER" COE'S Drug Stores Phone 516 No.2 411 W.14th Phone 521 No.1 1347 Mass. Subscribe for THE KANSAS CITY STAR Headquarters Rexall Drug Store PHONE 17 H. L. Nevin Distributor 13 papers - 15c per week 847 Mass. St. "The Best Daily Kansan in University History" Official Student Paper at the University of Kansas One Year----Five Days A Week Your Private Newspaper United Press Service Last Minute Reports Campus and World NEWS Sunday Rotogravure Tabloid Section Extra Every Sunday Experienced Campus News Reporters and Editorialists Plus State Sales Tax $3 Complete University news Complete University news Campus gossip Official bulletins Campus opinion column Classified ads Featured articles United Press news service Sport news Reliable advertising Roving reporter column Buy It at the KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE Phone K.U. 66 VII A 10 A UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1. C2, C3 8 VOLUME XXXV The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas NUM 4 Enrollment Monday Puts Total Up 26 Lawrence and Kansas City Campuses Now Have 4,621 Students In Classes Twenty-six more students enrolled in the University yesterday to bring the total to 4,621, including the 237 in the School of Medicine at Kansas City. Yesterday's enrollment fell below that of a year ago, when 2 entered on the Monday following regular enrollment. The figures which were compiled at the close of business Saturday show a total enrollment of 4,443 in Lawrence, of which 91 were duplicates who were enrolled in two schools for a combined degree. With the 146 graduates and medics and the 91 nurses enrolled at Kansas City, the net enrollment Saturday was 4,589. 1936 1937 Graduate School 265 241 Graduate School 224 224 Engineering 631 664 Fine Arts 313 294 Law 162 148 Pharmacy 162 148 M medicine (Lawrence) 177 174 Education 177 174 Business 259 344 (Kansas City) 256 237 The number of new students compared with the former students for this year and last: The enrollment in the various schools as compared with that a year ago follows: LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21. 10372 1936 1937 New Students 1596 1452 Former Students 2851 2900 Total at Lawrence 4357 4352 The enrollment by classes this year as compared with that of last year: Upper classmen and Upper classmen and graduates 2639 2642 Freshmen 1012 994 Admitted Standing 650 654 Specials 56 62 on the SHIN by Virgil Mitchell manufacturing music for campus "alligators" has reached the mass production stage and something must happen or all the "jerris" will go the way of Saratoga's long shots. First the Cottage, yesterday the Cafeteria, and it is rumored the Jayhawk is coming out sometime this week with a swing session. The Cafeteria session yesterday was noble experiment; the audience responded to the tables were filled—and it was settled that what the undergrowth is swing. The secrecy of fifteen minutes of the program was much better than the first half, seeing as how the tempo went rampant and stopped conversations. The whole crowd stayed through and more than one student was hoping that succeeding sessions will be all swing and red hot rhythm. After all this is college, not the Ritz. --students will be allowed to work the full month's allotment but are limited to eight hours a day and 30 hours a week. Time should be reported to the department supervisor on Saturday each week. Failure to report the time worked each week will mean that the check will necessarily fall short of the amount granted, Miss Tillman warned. Patterings on the Peripatus: Pattierings on the Peripatus: You sing a little song or two; You have a little chat; You make a little candy fudge; And then you take your hat. You hold her hand and say goodnight, As sweet as you can. As sweetly as you can. Ain't that a hell of an evening For a great big healthy man? Daily Texan Sunday saw two Vassar girls being seen by us westerners. Stew Chambers and his friend Smity were responsible for this exhibition of floor length furs and short skirts. Rumer has it that there will be another Big City slicker with us today. We got the tip that she will have her afternoon coffee at a quarter after four ___? (To the Ed. This is a plug but I don't have any idea for whom.) Fleas and what not: Pi Phil's have fleas! Rather some of Pi Phil's have flea bites, in fact there seems to be an epidemic of fleas hereabouts this fall. Everybody else—但 Pi Phil—Martha Jane (the dumbest publication, Consola-Per) Landon cut her first boys: Baye like dumb girls and Starr class Monday. Newt Hoverstock has already been to see the Dean. And then there was the freshman couple who wanted to dance to some Continued on page 2 Cancelled Stamps Must Be Removed By Ruling of Postoffice Dep't Announcing that cancelled stamps must be removed from packages of second, third, and fourth class matter, R. C. Abraham, University postmaster, further emphasized that old insured marks, post marks and special delivery marks must also be removed. This requirement is made by a recent ruling of the postoffice department. To Hear Local Coaches Program Will Consist Of Interview Between Football Mentors A discussion of the football situation in Lawrence at nonday today the Eldridge hotel will mark the first regular fall luncheon meeting of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce and give the game its yearly send off. The meeting will begin at 12:20 o'clock. A program, open to the public, has been arranged and will consist of an interview between the coaches of the three Lawrence schools: COACH "AD" LINDSEY Adrian Lindsay, head coach at the University of Kansas; John Carmody, head coach at Haskell; and Edd A. Wood, coach at Liberty Memorial high school. Ed Elbel and Fritz Meyn will also participate in the interview. The program will be bradcast by station WREN. Tickets for the luncheon will sell at 50 cents each, and persons planning to attend should make their reservation in advance by phoning the Chamber of Commerce office, number 485. Ivan C. Crawford, dean of the University School of Engineering and Architecture, will speak at a conference luncheon to be held Oct. 19. CSEP Students Must Report Time The payroll ending date 'or al. CSEP students for the first month will be Oct. 2, and the second day of the month thereafter, Martha Tillman, executive secretary, announced yesterday. Lawyers To Visit Lawrence Sundav The commission on uniform state laws of the American Bar association, meeting this week in Kansas City previous to the association's convention next week, will be the guests of the University and city of Lawrence for lunch at the Eldridge hotel, Sunday. Psychological examinations psychological examination for the last time Saturday morning at 9:30 in room 15 Frasher hall. All new students who enrolled late or missed them at the assigned time must be present to take these examinations. Psychological Exams John Brand, representing the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, Olin Tetefish, the local bar association, and Fred Ellsworth and F. J. Moreau, the University, will meet the commissioners about 11 o'clock. After visiting the Campus and various parts of Lawrence, the group will meet at the Hotel Eldridge approximately at noon. Under the chairmanship of W. B. H. Piatt, graduate of the School or Law, the commission urges state legislative bodies to adopt uniform laws affecting taxation, divorce, marriage, prohibition, and other considerations to consider recommendations to be made at this regular convention. Ku Ku's Meeting of all Ku Ku's today at 3:30 p.m. in the hallroom of the Union building. Lost Airman Found in Canada Ottawa, Ont., Sept. 20—(UP)—A message received by the radio branch of the Canadian department of transport from its operator at Coppermine, Northwest Territory, was Sir Hubert Wilkins was seeking the lost Russian fliers, was forced down on a lake near Aklavik, Sunday, by bad weather. The operator reported that Sir Wilkins and his party inquired about York, as seen on the weather clears and the plan motors are checked. Several airplane pilots tonight were prepared to search for the airplane explorer, Sir Ruben Wilkins, and his party, who were on board more than 24 hours on a flight in search of the six lost Soviet airmen. Sour Owl Issued Soon The first issue of the Sour Owl will make its appearance on the Campus next week. According to James Coleman, c38, editor of the magazine, half of its 24 pages will be devoted to gossip. Half of Space Devoted To Gossip; New Science Page Is Featured The price of the magazine will be 15 cents, and it is to be sold on the Campus this year instead of by subscriptions as it was last year. Some of the other features of the first issue will include an article written by David Hamlin, editor of the Owl last year, on "Experiences of a Student in Europe". The science page will be a new feature this year. It will be devoted entirely to all the latest inventions for the best careers, and Lloyd will be director of the scientific research carried on by the Sour Owl. Several staff positions are open to students interested in the publication of the magazine. The positions open are: copy editor; circulation manager; assistant advertising manager; and assistant business manager. Coleman said that he would gladly accept any photographs or written stories that were suitable for the pages of the Owl. Late Wire-- Antouleme, France, Sept. 21. (UP) The Paris Express was re-commissioned in the kilometers from hero, near Latrade, in the department of Charente. Hyde Park, N.Y. Sept. 20.—(UP)—President Roosevelt revealed tonight that his first public appearance on his western trip, starting Wednesday, will be Cheyenne, Wyo. next Friday morning. Wyoming is the home state of Senator Joseph C. O'Mahoney, the democratic foe of the administration's supreme court enlargement plan. The number of deaths was no known, although first reports said 10 were killed. Washington, D.C., Sept. 20.—(UP)—The United States today decided to participate to a limited extent in the meeting of the League of Nations advisory committee on Far Eastern affairs. New York, Sept. 20—There would be less misery and discontent in the world if man studied happiness the way he studies bridge, pores over a jigsaw puzzle or tries to perfect his golf swing, according to Dr. Charles Gray Shaw, professor of philosophy at New York University. A new system of membership is to be introduced this year in which every apprentice will go through three month of probation before being eligible for membership. During the three months, he will be cast in one several-act plays which will be presented in the Little Theater of Green hall. Drama Club Chooses 25 Apprentices This probation period will take the place of the experimental laboratory which has been held in the past. Students who have done satisfactory work will be taken into the Dramatic club as regular members. Quality of Aspirants Is Below Average of Past Y e a r s. Says Professor Crafton The first play to be presented by the dramatic department will be given Oct. 25, Professor Crafton said. The first play will probably be L'Aiglon, by Edmond Rostand, and will be given in Fraser theater. Dramatic club tykouts held Friday and yesterday afternoon netted 25 apprentices and four stage workers, sponsor, announced yesterday. Study Happiness the Way You Study Bridge, N.Y.U. Professor Urges "The college curriculum is soft enough as it is, and besides a professor of that subject would be hard to find. If there were such a course, it could never be like mathematics, physics or economics, which would have to be more akim to gymnastics, music or dramatics. "Naturally I do not mean that human happiness should become the subject matter of academic study and a course on 'Happiness' be added to the curriculum in the company of many unhappy courses of study'. Dr. Shaw stated in his latest book "The Road to Happiness." Allen Crafton, prof. and dramatic art, seemed discouraged with the applicants yes-When asked what he thought of him he said, "In the last 15 years I have never seen such poor candidates, as a whole, for Dramatic Club tryouts." "Happiness is no problem to entrust to the schools; we must make it up for ourselves and become acquainted with our own hearts. To be thoroughly happy we must rationalize our emotions and not simply absorb them. Mary Maxine Pendleton, George Murphy, Arthur Wille, Kathleen Burner, Richard White, Patty Bishop, Rosemond Bombard, Alfred Berry, Mary Noel, Betty Butcher, Dan Thomas, Francis Hurd, Jack Nelson, Fred Lake, Emmy Jane Harben, Helen Helbu, Gordon O'Brien, Bernice Randill, Paul Willow, Edwin Browne, Bob Brakes, Orin Armstrong, Carter Butler, and Mary Jo Connell. Discouraged With Candidates To Entertain Apprentices Apprentices selected for the Dramatic Club are; These students were chosen from over one hundred prospective apprentices who tried out for the Dramatic Club Friday and yesterday afternoons. They will be the guests of the Dramatic Club this evening at 5:30 when a dinner will be given for the new apprentices The following were chosen for stage hands and general assistants: Mary Marshman, Cecilia McKennan, Annie Brown, and Lucille McVey. Washington, D.C., Sept. 20—(UP) —Rep. Samuel D. Pettendell (Dem.) ind. predicted today that an attempt will be made to impach Justice Hugo L. Black in the next session of Congress on Tuesday to move the movement unless Black disclaims membership in the Ku Klux Klan. The Indiana congressman said he did not know who would introduce the impeachment resolution, which can be passed in the House by only a minority vote, but he said he is aware that such a measure will be offered. Attempt To Impeach Justice Black Predicted "There are well-marked highways to education and culture, salesmanship and personality. But where are there adequate guides to happiness? With some of the care of the ski m means more than the care of a child as though our epidermis meant more to us than our emotions" In his 312-page book Professor Shaw develops the theory that America is now creating a native philosophy of happiness which it requires, and it still requires while the old standardized ideal were man-made for man alone. Dr. Shaw said that the modern American found little happiness in the old Grecian ideal of beauty or in the British ideal of pleasure, but was learning to find enjoyment in "the stalwart satisfaction of getting somewhere." This new philosophy may bring enduring happiness. Dr. Shaw said, for it combines, for the first time in history, man's superior opportunities with woman's tremendous capacities for enjoyment. Credit for the discovery of the diary of the German soldier who fought in the Napoleonic wars was given to Prof. F. E. Melvin yesterday by Prof. Otto Springer, who was also a disciple in its discovery in the Kaukasi Sunday. Springer Shifts Diary Discovery Credit Toward Melvin According to Doctor Springer, the manuscripts were first called to the attention of Professor Melvin, who was not acquainted with the dialect in which the diary was recorded. Melvin, however, recognized their historical value and when Doctor Springer arrived on the Campus he was told of the diary. The dialect proved to be one with which Springer was acquainted, and he undertook the translation. The diary was written by Jacob Walter, great-great-grandfather of Mr. Walter, postmaster of Lecompte. It was brought to this country as a gift from the family in 1867, and has been in the possession of the family ever since. To Sell Ten Cheerleaders NATION land. Ten rs Again; Open Ten new cheerleaders will be chosen by the University Pep committee at tryouts to be held before the east stadium at 3:30 Thursday afternoon. Anyone with necessary ambition will be given a chance to strut his stuff, according to Newton Hoverstock, c38, chairman of the judging committee, and non-fraunfaternity candidates will be given an equal break with members of organized houses. Last year's leaders will not retain their positions unless they return and try out and qualify again. Both men and women are urged to appear. There will be four freshmen chosen, three sophomores, two juniors, and one senior who will serve as head cheerleader. The group, who will take charge of all organized cheering at pep rallies and football and basketball games, must be chosen before the Freshman-Varsity football game next Saturday. Besides Hovstock, Men's Student Council representative, the Pep committee consists of Doris Stockwell, c39, of the Women's Self-Governing Association; Don Voorthee, c39, of Dorsich; Doremh Caldwell, c38, of Mortar Board; Wade Green, c38, of K Club man; Bill Bailey, c39, of Ku Ku, and Roberta Cook, fa39, of the Jay James. Mellon Estate To Charity Trust Pittsburgh, Sept. 20. —(UP)—Virtually the entire multi-billion-dollar estate of the late Andrew W. Mellon was given to charity today in a will filed with John M. Huston, Allegheny county register of wills. The will provides that the bulk of the estate, variously estimated from 100 million to 5000 million, to be given to Andrew W. Mellon Education Institute, established by Mellon in 1850 to his numerous philanthropies. United States treasury officials announced that if bequests made to the trust were found to be stricty for educational and charitable purposes, they would be exempt from federal taxation in the federal estate tax, the government would receive taxes of 68 and 323 million. New Oil Engineering Head Attends Scientific Meeting Eugene A. Stephenson, newly appointed professor of petroleum engineering, and for the past five years secretary-treasurer of the petroleum division of the American helium industry Engineers, will go to Oklahoma City to attend the Mid-Continent meeting of the division, Oct. 7-9. Dr. Stephenson is to present a paper Friday afternoon on "Behaviour of Contents of High-pressure Reservoirs," and on Thursday morning a paper will be presented by A. J. Miles of the Missouri School of Mines, on behalf of Dr. Stephenson, and with this Paper in the subject, "Pressure Distribution in Producing Oil and Gas Reservoirs". One of the associate chairmen for the opening session is Russell L Knappen, formerly associate professor of geology here. Ineligibility May Unseat 7 in M.S.C Prof. John lse To Address Y.M.C.A. Council John P. Isahe will speak tonight to the Freshman council of the Y.M.C.A. The meeting will be held in the office of the organization in the basement of the Memorial Union building, and it is open to all freshmen and new students. Professor Isahe will speak on the subject "What is Culture?" The Y.M.C.A. is making plans for a fine program of events for the entire year. The program will include helpful hints in handling many campus problems that arise during the year for freshmen. It is also the plan of the organization to take anactive part in intramural athletics. This afternoon at 4:30 the campus problems commission of the Y.M.A. Paul Merlin, c30, will be in charge due to the absence of Don Henry. Plans for Air Club To Be Made at Student Meeting Plans will be discussed for organizing a flying club to enable students to learn to fly or obtain some flown time at a very reasonable rate. William H. Wells, manager of the airport, will attend the meeting and answer all questions that might arise concerning the organization of the club. Definite club rates for dual occupancy are to be made to the club members. Symphony Selects 14 All students interested in flying are invited to meet in "**" ball, room 116, Thursday, at 8 p.m. Meissner and Stubb Will Direct Group Rehearsal Tomorrow Fourteen students have been added to the personnel of the KU. Litts Symphony as the result of the invitations held during the pass week. The Little Symphony will be under the direction of Otto Missner, professor of public school music, and Raymond Stuhl, instructor of violin, with the first rehearsal set for tocorno午晚 at 3:30 in Hoech auditorium. Following is the list of students who have been added to the organization : Bass-L, A. Copeland, fd 40, Charles Hopkins and Velman Cassel. Flute - Helen Whitcomb c. 38, Martin Hagen, fd 28, cormart Martin. First Violin—Bob Shoemaker (concert-master), Ema Montgomery, and Joan Ann Crawford. And Janet June Gray and Loreen Wothers. Oboe—Eleanor Gregory, fa'40. Clarinet—Lenora Grizzell. Trumpet—Laura Holste. Lewis Calls CIO Heads For Atlantic City Meeting Washington, D. C., Sept. 20—(UP) John L. Lewis has called a meeting of CIO union heads at Atlantic City, N. J. for Oct. 11. His action is regarded as a move anticipating the expulsion of the CIO unions from the American Federation of Teachers, and another convention which opens Oct. 14. Simultaneously President A. W. Green maneuvered the A. F. of L forces to bring about a major test of the CIO's strength south of the Mason-Dixon line where the CIC estimates zerode thousand of testil workers. United States Ambassador Abandons Embassy Offices Shanghai, Sept. 21, —(Tuesday)— (UP) United States Ambassador Nelson T. Johnson and his staff abandoned the embassy offices in Nanking last night after Japanese naval airplanes had made four raids on the capital, killing scores of Chinese civilians. It was announced officially in Nanking that the United States embassy was moved above the gunboat Lazon at 8 p.m., and that the American warship was moved across the side of the 12-mile limit established for Japanese bombing activities, some time after midnight. Dr. M. G. Westmoreland, 36, has accepted a position as associate professor in the department of bacteriology at the University of North Dakota. Accepts Position Council Urges Wasserman Examinations Committee Reports on Housing Conditions; Thank Jayhawker foe New Purchase Plan Possibility that a maximum of seven seats may be emm; next week as a result of intelligently greeted students, the Men's Student Council last night. Voorhees delayed declaring the seats vacant because of the possibility that some *c* might be carried on by petition to the *e* ability committee, or 'hat incomplete might be made up. Council members under temporary suspension because of an unavoidable restatement to complete restatement. Prof. G. W. Stratton is chairman of the eligibility committee. Don Voorhees, president of the Council, acting on his constitutional authority, delayed announcing the names until next week. The constitution states that inequalities need not be acted upon until the second week after the beginning of the semester. Urgle Wasserman Tests After discussion of the campaign in the University to secure a compulsory, parental role the Council passed a motion as follows: "This Council goes on record as strongly in favor of accepting the federal government's offer to administer a Wasserman test to University students and urges the Chancellor to secure in his power to secure the test." Provision was made for Voorhees and some other Council member to make these representations to the Chancellor. Leonard Makes Housing Report John Hunt, chairman of the Y.M.C.A., spoke to the Council, thanking that body for its co-opération and that team for its continued support this year. Tobarard makes *Housing Report*. Wilbur Leonard of the men's health and welfare department report to the Council on the work of the committee in checking men's rooming houses this summer. He said that more than 200 houses had been inspected and that of this number 20 had been given a conditional rating and that some few had been rejected. A second inspection of houses will start immediately. The Council has recommended that housing committee, recommended that it continue its work, and thanked Leonard for making the report. The solons also passed a vote of thanks to the management of the Jayhawkwer for its co-operation in launching the skim plan in selling the publication. A parking committee consisting of Don Hanson, chairman, Frank Harwi and Newton Hoverstock was elected. Before adjournment Voorhees mentioned the Midwestern Conference that is tentatively to be held here in November. He said that since this conference is a regional division of the National Student Federation of America of which the University is a member, it has been suggested by N.S.F.A. officials that the Midwestern conference with the national convention of the mother organization in Albuquerque, N.M., in December. No action was taken on this matter. Glee Club Tryouts Concluded Tonight Competition is keen among the 35 men who tried out for the 12 or 15 vacancies in the Men's Glee Club last night. Approximately 40 former members are back this year. Only those whose surmises begin with the first half of the alphabet were heard; the rest will be tied tonight. At Thursday morning it will be held in Thursday morning's officers, will be made by the officers of the club and Joseph F. Wilkins, director of the club. The first meeting of the club was held yesterday afternoon. Plans for the year, including the annual week's tour and the possibilities of singing on the Pontiac college radio program, were discussed. Tryouts for all who were not heard last night will be held tonight at 7:30. All prospects are urged to bring a sheet of music to sing. TUESDAYWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1937 He 1 // ample Theory sound Practice Comment y would probably gain if the most students were selected for college Gaugh-Stock ardless of financial status, and were Chi Omege in a university as equals at a common rage of Miss to Dean Gauk took place Jument is a combination of the ideas their home city by President James Conant of Harc Gaug city, university, and represents in a sense his Albis citizens for Harvard. Idealistic, it is true, but realistic to the degree that there are no social fraternities at Harvard, where a democratic house system operates instead, and that a program of regional scholarships, 33 of which were awarded in the Middle West this year, will enable students of ability to study without outside work. Someone has said that minds are like rough stones which attain a brilliance and polish by the friction of contact with other minds equally solid and rough. Doctor Conant's practical use of this theory in mixing mental equals of widely separated economic status, has convinced him of its worth. The prevalent belief that the most promising students are not always in the long run of the most benefit to society must be considered, for the wide belt of better-than-average grinds often includes the most tenacious, vigorous and steady workers. By taking a wide view of the possible sphere of application in Doctor Conant's proposals, we may give the word "promising" a broad interpretation. Although it is only a gleam of light, filtering through an entangled maze, Harvard's Doctor Conant has found the secret of a true liberal education. New York Takes a Test Run And Tammany bites the dust again. That statement has been uttered in a thousand different ways in a thousand different newspapers and at a thousand different times. From past events we all know that Tammany never really bites the dust or encounters defeats—at least the Tiger never has. So that is not the meat of the New York mayoralty election. The significance lies in its relation with the national political set-up. The New Deal organization has defeated the old Democratic machine, throwing into opposition two factions, the La Guardia Reform Republican machine and the liberal Democratic forces. In the past presidential election both factions were pro-New Deal. With this turn of events New Yorkers are left with two candidates who have no issues of importance with each other. It does not matter nationally now who is elected. The anti-New Deal issue has been settled in the primary. The decisive defeat of Copeland verifies suspicions that little issue remains between the people of the United States and the present liberal form of government. Anti-New Deal factions are many and strong, but until now they have not been able to realize that their issue was not conservatism. This primary should make evident the fact that future state and national campaigns will rest on liberal policy. Formula for arriving at correct figures for casualties: Chinese claims plus Japanese claims, divided by Spanish Insurgent claims, multiplied by 3.2. She May Come Through, Butt turn aside for this great sight, Ye men and women true, he burns bulb by day and night Against the Kansas blue. The Endeavor I, Britain's defeated challenger for the America's cup is lost at s e a. Breaking loose from her convoy she disappeared and a coast guard search has failed to locate her. Sea going men are divided on the possibilities of her riding the storm and showing up on the "other site" in due time. Their greatest fear for the ship is due to her unseaworthiness. She is built for speed and uneasiness more. But it can all be charged to the cost of specialization, and the modern desire to excel in one thing to the exclusion of all others. Racing horses only race and are good for nothing more. Modern automobiles are comfortable and fast, but they would flounder after a quarter mile of muddy road, and so down the list until we come to man, who is in like danger. Jim Counley said before the races that the modern racing yachts had sacrificed all semblance of real utility for another knot or so of speed. He bemaned the change since the days of the first historic race when the ships were really ships and not finely designed and altogether incapable instruments of speed. In the desire to specialize and be unusually good in one thing, modern man leaves himself unable to maintain an even keel in the storm of life. ~ Who Wants To Be a Good Egg? With the greatest elation we note the arrival on the book market of a counter-causaltic to the most recent threat to modern civilization—the spread of Dale Carnegieism. The emollient for this despicable practice of "Winning Friends and Influencing People" is taken in book form under the attractive title of "How to Lose Friends and Alienate People, and is appropriately enough, dedicated to Adolph Hitler, whom the author, Irving Tressler, says needs no coaching in the art of being offensive to people. Time was when we envisaged mankind degenerating into a sheep-like herd of attentive listeners, cleverly avoiding any subject bordering on the line of controversial issue, and finally, we pictured the homo-sapiens evolving into a veritable filing cabinet from which we drew forth the first name of even our most obnoxious acquaintances in hope that some day we would be able to "influence this fellow creature." But comes the dawn of a new era, and we predict that humanity will manfully tighter its girth strings and set about extricating itself from the terrible abyss of mutual deception The task is not slight, and we can expect, as in periods of past catastrophe, that the road back will be filled with seemingly insurmountable obstacles. But equipped with a copy of Irvin Tressler's little book clasped tightly to our breast we see the future unfold before us—future in which the plague of Carnegieism wi be banished forever from our proud land. Headline from New York Times: "Miss America of 1837 Shuns Beach Crow" . S'pose age has at last left its mark? Official University Bulletin Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 1 p.m., preceding regular instruction days in a n.m. am. Please visit www.chancellor.edu/notice to obtain details. Vol. 25 TUESDAY, SEPT. 21, 1037 No.9 CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: The Christian Science Organization at the University of Michigan will host a conference this afternoon in Room C, Myers hall. All students are invited to attend. Keith Davis, President COLLEGE FACULTY MEETING: The faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will meet at 4:30 this afternoon in the Central Administration auditorium—E H. Lindley, President. ESTES REUNION PICNIC: There will be an Estes reunion picnic on Friday, September 24, for all who are interested in the reunion. Benley House at 5 p.m. Bring twenty cents. Make reservations by Thursday—Eddie Parks, Chairman JAY JANES: There will be an important Ja y Jane meeting on Wednesday in Room 212 Ad. at 4:30 p.m. Attendance is required—Roberta Cook, President. NEWMAN CLUB. There will be a very important meeting of the Club at 7:30 this evening at the Parish hall. All Catholic students are urged to attend-Virginia Rodriguez. QUACK CLUB. There will be a Quack Club meet on Wednesday at 8 p.m. Members and pledges are requested to attend—Betty Jane Heitmann, President. TAP CLASS: There will be an advanced tap class Mondays and Wednesdays at 3:30 p.m. I should like to have anyone report who has had experience or has been working in advanced tap -Elizabeth Dunkel. TAU SIGMA: There will be a meeting of Tau kinder day evening at 7:45 - Catherine Dunkel President. W. S.G.A.: There will be a regular meeting this evening in the Pine Room—Bette Wasson, Secretary. University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS KANSAS PRESS MEMBER 1937 ASSOCIATION [Editor's note: This poem, explaining the meaning of the Great Seal of America, was written by Florence L. Snow, daughter of former Chancellor Snow. It was read by Martin Maloney. It was read induction ceremony last Thursday.] EDITOR IN CHIEF ASSOCIATE EDITORS: MORGAN THOMPSON and GREG HINES LANGUAGE: ALICE HADSMAN-JOYES PUBLISHER ... J. HOWARD RUSCO Editorial Staff MANAGING EDITOR CAMPUS EDITORS KENNETH MOREN and JOE COCIABIAN SOCIETY EDITOR SUPER EDITOR CLUBMEMBER EDITOR MAKEUP EDITORS RWITE EDITOR GLOBAL VISION EDITOR BOBBI CAKEY and JANE FLOOD VICE EDITOR GLOBAL VISION EDITOR 'The Meaning of the Seal News Staff Kansan Board Members ALFER HALDEMPHAN-JULIUS P ALQUERTIN-BROWN J AQUERTIN-BROWN DAVID E. PATRIDGE KERNTH NATHAN MACHAE JAACKE EDWARD BANNETT KENNETH GRAEMAN MARIO BROOKMAN MAKIM GOELBEZ KERNTH NATHAN JAMES FLORE MONI MORGAN And most high God is found. What does it mean, the steady flame, Uniting earth and sky? "Take off thy shoes from off thy feet For this is holy ground. The place where dream and action meet Some see the fire and do not wait.— REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Services, Inc. 420 MADRID AVE. NEW YORK, N.Y. CHICAGO BOSTON SAN FRANCisco 160 W. 35th ST. For this is holy ground, They perish in their need.— Be thine the power involiate In every thought and deed. BUSINESS MANAGER ... P. QUENTIN BROWN What does it mean? Look in thy heart. Entered as second-class matter, September 12, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan. heart, Forever strong and true, And glory be to life and art Against our Blessed Blue. An angel speaks each eager name And answers sacredly. Heads Department "O see just why the heavens fire Can never burn away, Be thine the service to inspire Some far exceeding day." Business Staff Dr. Donald Hether, graduate of the University, who received his Ph.D. at Yale is to report this month for his new position as head of the baccalaureate department at the University of Montana. On the Shin-of, Cunningham's唱——Charlie McCarthy add: A wire from Penn. State chapter of D.U.'s blackhalls Charlie because there are too many dummies in said houses—Delu Cin a cap, sleeping sox, and sweat shirt and hit the hay one night last week and still almost froze to death. Sigma Nu are teaching wow art to their pledges. Instruction go something like this: If you want to put your arm around the drag, then ask her if she wants to woo a little. If she says yes, the sky is the limit. If she says maybe, the car is the best way to tell the rest of the brothers so no one else will make the same mistake. The A.T.O.'s have solved their transportation problem by buying a yellow station wagon. Collected Poems of SARA TEASDALE Published to-day $2.50 The Book Nook 1021 Mass. St. Will Speak on Photo-Engraving P. R. Mapleston, secretary of the Bungar-Board engraving company, Kingwood. Engraving processes Tuesday morn- mg, Sept. 28 at 8:30 in room 316 West Administration building. Al- though the lecture is primarily for students, faculty and staff are intere- sted are invited to attend. Come to Kansas City's JUBILESTA SEPT 17-25 Municipal Auditorium ★ Admission 80c plus 10c tax The ONE Dance Nite Saturday, Sept. 25 Continuous Music ★ BENNY GOODMAN Emperor of Swing ISHAM JONES and His Orchestra Jam Dance Session! --- THE GREAT OPEN SPACES We are headed for the open . . . Open spaces where fresh air and sunshine put roses in our cheeks. Open diplomacy that substitutes frankness for secret scheming and negotiation. Open opportunities, open doors in business . . . And modern business in general conducted in an honest and open manner. No force has been as powerful as advertising, in bringing American business into the open. A manufacturer who advertises, issues an open challenge to every competitor to produce better goods if he can. He invites the public to compare his article with all others. He makes definite claims for his product over his own signature. And he knows the vital importance of keeping his promises. Advertising tells you where you can get the greatest value for your money. When you buy an advertised article, you know it is dependable. An unknown product means nothing. Advertising prohibits the worthless, and promotes the good. Advertisements appearing in the KANSAN are the daily record of business progress, the report to you of the manufacturers and merchants who serve you. It will pay you to read them. --- TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1937 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Here on the Hill an account of Mt. Oread Society an account of Mt. Oread So JUNE ULM, Society Editor Before 1 p.m. call K.U. 21; after 1, call 2702-K3 Gaugh-Stockman Chi Omega announces the marriage of Miss Martha Jane Stockman to Dean Gaugh, of Chanute, who took place June 4. They are making their home in Lawrence while Mr. Gaugh attends the School of Medicine. Mr. Gaugh is a member of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. Dr. and Mrs. Floyd A. Eberly of Kalamazoo, Mich., visited friends in the University and at the Acacia fraternity while in Lawrence Sunday. Doctor Eberly received his M. degree at the University in 1952 and his Ph.D. degree in '55. He was a member of the Acacia fraternity while attending school. He is now employed as a chemist by the Ulpion Pharmaceutical company in Kalamazoo. Mrs. George C. Shaad, widow of the late George Shaad, who was dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, visited the Campus Sunday. Mrs. Shaad will spend a day in Lawrence visiting friends. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Mary Jane Haynes, c'38, and Daisy Hoffman, c'38, were luncheon guests of Kappa Kappa Gamma, Monday. Miss Edna Birt of Kansas City, Mo., was a luncheon guest yesterday at the Gamma Phi Beta house. Chi Omega announces the approaching marriage of Miss Catherine Vallette, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Vallette of Beloit, to Wesley Brinker of Kansas City, Mary G. C. Frace of Kansas City. The wedding will take place Sept. 25. Louis Macer of Parsons was a visitor yesterday at the Sigma Nu house. Jean Smiley, c'41, and Virginia Hawkinson, c'41, were dinner guests Sunday at the Kappa Sigma fraternity. Miss Ann Hurt was elected president of Ricker hall at a meeting Thursday evening. Miss Virginia Atwell of Newton is a house guest at the Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. Alpha Omicron Pi will give an hour dance for the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity tonight. Mrs. Hendrickson of Atchison was a weekend guest at Watkins hall. ☆ ☆ ☆ Mr. and Mrs. Albert G. Becker, Kansas City Miss Jane Walker of Cedavale was a weekend guest at the Chi Omega house. Ceil Haas, Kansas City, Mo., and Merrill Hass of Maracibo, Venezuela, were dinner guests at the Acacia house Sunday. Ricker hall, 745 Ohio, will hold open house from 7 to 8 this evening. Dinner guests at the Alpha Delta Pi house Sunday were Will Woodman, and Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Zentmert of Horton. Sunday dinner guests at the Delta Vacation resort course. Kathleen Cannon Greta Glumon Martha Montgomery Sally Jo Dempsey Jason Wheeler Sunday dinner guests at the Phi sunday dinner guests at the Ph Gamma Delta house were: Dr. and Mrs. Henshall, Ohorew and Dr. and Mrs. A., N. LeMoine, Kana Mr. and Mrs. Foot, Concordia Mr. and Mrs. Clark Kurtis, Kansas City Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Jewell, Kansas City Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Anderson, Tampa City Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Dillen, Mr. and Mrs. W. Carr, Kansas City Mr. and Mrs. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Saxton Mr. and Mrs. Martin Visitors at Watkins hall Sunday Sunday dinner guests at the Delta Chi house were: Sigma Phil Epsilon fraternity announces the pledging of Jack Buckman, c'41, of Kansas City, Kan. Mu Phi Epsilon, Honorary Music Society, Elects New Officers Xi chapter of Mu Phi Epion, honorary music society, elected the following officers to serve for the committee: President Lucille McVeay, f39, vice president; Betty Grove, f38, secretary; Elizabeth Scarle, f39, treasurer; Romona Harmer, f38, teacher; Georgia Stue Reuter, f48, alumna secretary; Ruth Gratt, chancellor; Louise Ey, f39, chapelain. The opening meeting of the society will be held next Wednesday evening at 7:30 at the home of Romina Harnar, at 1216 Tennessee street. Aured C. Ames, A.B., 36, University of Illinois MA, 37, has received a continued assistantship in English at the University of Illinois. He will continue work in English for the advanced degree. While attending KU, Ames was well-known on campus and in other kinds. He was a member of Sachem, Phi Delta Kappa and Phi Beta Kappa. Ames to Continue at Illinois Downstown display windows of Lawrence business firms will be "unveiled" Thursday evening for the opening of latest fall styles and merchandise. Windows Will Be Unveiled Thursday The usual thousands of people are expected in town for the event and merchants will award prizes to persons making the most accurate guess as to the total value of merchandise displayed in a merchant's window. Only the merchants participating in the showing will award prizes. The evening's entertainment will be provided by three bands and a drum and bugle corps parading on the stage. The audience will participate are from the Univer- Okla. A&M *Wayne Univ. Washburn. *Emp. Tehran. SCHEDULE OF KANSAS' NOR-CONFERENCE OPPONENTS Wichita Mich.State *Okln A&M Manhattan Col. "Okla. A&M Southwest'n Pittsburg Chrs. *KANSAS New Mex.Ag. The search is to be directed to the recovery of porous, oil-bearing rock tran that are in contact underground with an overlying seal of impervious rock, such as clay shale, and at the same time in a structurally high position, so that the oil and gas in the oil-bearing rock may rise to the highest available point where it may be trapped. So. Dak, State *Marquette Alva Tehrs. Michigan New Mex. Ag. Loyola at Los Angeles Nov. 6 Kans. State Texas Tech. *Washburn Nov. 13 St. Mary's (San Ant.) Nov. 19 St. Mary's (*Pt. Hays St. Col.*) Nov. 23 St. Bremantle* ***KANSAS**** Nov. 27 Dec. 4 — Home Games. Scientific study of the geological formations of sections of Kansas mountain gas, with a view to discovering if possible, combinations of strata which might offer possibilities that oil or gas might be found there, are to be undertaken at once by the State Geological Survey and the United States Geological Survey by the conducting the Kansas Survey, has just completed arrangements with the federal agency for the co-operative undertaking. Univ. San Francisco *Oregon Univ. Hall, Haskell Institute, and Liberty Memorial High School. The drum and bugle corps is from the Dorsay-Liberty post of the American Legion Phone K. U. 6 6 Survey to Seek Prospects For More Oil and Gas Some of the counties in which favorable conditions for deep oil production may be found are Leavenworth, Wyandotte, Johnson, Doug- SAVE ON YOUR LUNCH at the Fountain Buy a $2.75 Meal Ticket for Only $2.50 CLASSIFIED ADS Memorial Union Sub-Basement UNION FOUNTAIN Subscribe for THE KANSAS CITY STAR Headquarters Rexall Drug Store PHONE 17 13 papers - 15c per week 847 Mass. St. Phone K. U. 6 6 727 Mass. BOYS: 1, from single; 372, 1 large south oom, beds on sleeping porch, also cook privileges, newly decorated, 912 Alabama. Phone 22991. -9 WANTED: Student laundry, shirts 10c Phone 1587L -14 BOYS: Board and room $27.10 per month. Board 220 per month, 1247 Kentucky. Phone 2868. ROOFS FOR GIRLS: Twin beds, two room. Bath, Gas and furnace heat. Entertaining privileges. One-half block north Corbin. 1121 Ohio. Phone 1671R. * BOYS: 1 single from room; 1 double room; 12 rooms. 125/7%) Bathroom. 1087W. RENT: Large comfortable front room, single or double. Rates reasonable. 1314 Tennessee. SAVE part of rent allowance for something else. Very nice double room 112. Sleeping porch, study downstairs, Five blocks from campus, 843 Ala. -11 WANTED STUDENT WASHINGS: Guaranteed satisfaction. Call for and deliver. Phone 2561M. -12 FOR RENT: Newly decorated furnished apartment. Two rooms and bath with or without kitchenette and garage. 1100 Louisiana. Phone 4711. -9 Marion Rice Dance Studio Over Rungey-Allison Flower Shop 927 1/2 Mass. St. Jayhawk Barber Shop Completely Modernistic Enjoy the best at no additional cost. Hair cut 35c. Sunday Earl Ellis Joe Lesch 'Bill' Hensley 'Paddy' Hyatt Submit for THE WICHTA BEACON Kansas' Greatest Newspaper Delivered to your door Daily and 10 cents per week — Phone 2316 Don't Miss the Fun! Learn to dance with the last ballet stepss Special Aid. Mario Rise Studio Ramion Almour. Flower. Shop Twenty-five words or less one incription, 25c; three insertions, 16c; six incision, 72c; contract rates, not more than 21 words, $2 per month flat. Payable in advance and accepted subject to approval at the KANAN Business Office. Typewriter Cleaning and Repairing Ribbons for sale. CLARENCE M. BAKER 1323 Kentucky Phone 2095J TAXI HUNSINGER'S 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 --lan, Jefferson, Franklin, Shawne Osage, Coffey, and Lyon. ONE STOP Clothes Service Station SCHULZ the TAILOR Individual Booths Five Experienced Bootists Featured Artists Ceramics Vera Aderholdt, Manager Phone 387 First floor, 842 Mass. Our Prices are RIGHT! OYLER'S SHOE SHOP 1396 NW 57th St Buy GOOD shoe repairing The Venus Beauty Salon 1346 Ohio Now In Full .. "Swing" Luncheon and Dinner Music 12:30'til 1:00 --- DAILY --- 6:00'til 6:30 - Try Our Special 25c and 30c Luncheons * Cafeteria Counter Hours Open every day except Sunday at the following hours Breakfast --- 7:30-8:30 Lunch ------ 11:30-1:00 Dinner ------ 5:30-6:30 As ask to see our new banquet rooms and get prices for special luncheons and dinners. Ask about the Memorial Union Co-operative Meal Plan. For complete information—see, call, or write the Director of Food Service, Memorial Union Building. Dinner (Present Saturday Evening) UNIVERSITY DINING ROOM Memorial Union Building Somewhat similar favorable conditions exist on the flanks of the Sajina Basin, which occupies the north central part of the state, and includes such counties as Marshall, Okeechobee, Worth, Linekin, Mitchell, Osborne, Smith, Cloud, Republic, Powell and Ottawa. The first full rehearsal of the K.U. Symphony orchestra, with Prof. Karl O. Kuerestein directing, will be held at Barnson at 3:30 in Heech auditorium. First Symphony Rehearsal To Be Held This Afternoon Practice will begin on the complete Tschaikowsky Symphony Pa- THE HIT HOUSE D DICKINSON The Friendly Theatre Today and Tomorrow The Laugh Fest of the Year Doctor "Wife Lorette Warner Virginia YOUNG BAXTER BRUCE Blue Added Short Subjects Nurse" STARTS THURSDAY The Picture That Every Student Should See! "Damaged Goods" SUNDAY "Artists and Models" Jack (Buck) Benny Rides Again G GRANADA WEEK DAY SHOWS 2:30-7-9 25c til 7 Your Last Chance ENDS TONITE "VARSITY SHOW" DICK POWELL FRED WARING And His Pennsylvanians. Ted Holly- Walt Robert The Lone Sister-Johny Davis-Buck and Bubbles. Plus Color Cartoon, News thetique, the feature number to be played at the fall concert, Nov. 16. WEDNESDAY 3 GRAND DAYS 2 GREAT STARS TOGETHER FOR THE FIRST TIME! KAY FRANCIS · ERROL FLYNN Another Dawn EXHIBITION-FRIDAY-JANUARY 18TH AT THE MUSEUM OF ART IN NEW YORK 50 WEST 42ND ST. NW 600-732-6222 LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. ALSO ALL NEW—LATEST ISSUE MARCH OF TIME BAND ACT—Latest News. Graduates Get Good Positions Phone 894 W. H. Quenubakht, Pres. E. S. Weatherby, Supt. PATEE "TRADER HORN" Week 10 c Til 7 Days Then 15c TODAY ENDS WEDNESDAY 2 SMASH HITS SCREEN'S GREATEST JUNGLE ADVENTURE HARRY CAREY EDWINA BOOTH DUNCAN RENALDO "Fly Away Baby" GLENDA FARRELL BARTON MCLANLE - ALSO - NEWS - NOVELTY TORCHY BLANE IN A NEW ROUND THE WORLD RECORD 2 WEEKS 1 DAZE Admission 10c and 15c SHOWS 2:30-7:00-9:30 The Finest Entertainment "YOURS FOR THE ASKING" SHOWS ZION Last Times Today! THE GIRL IN A MILLION Sonja HENIE VARSITY Home of the Jawhawk Glorifying THE SHOW IN A MILLION "One In A Million" ADON AMCHEE - RITZ BROS. Dodole Memione Ned Spokes ELIZABETTE BERGNER "DREAMING LIPS" " 2 GRAND TO HITS 10c ALL TOMORROW AND THURSDAY An American Cavalcade of Courage! Adriach Zuber directs MARGARET SULLAVAN "So Red the Rose" WALTER CONNOLLY A Paramount Pictures and Just a Gossip of Heels Heat Up Her Hoes In Love! CAREO LOMBARD FRED MURAIRR MAGIC "Hands Across The Table" FRIDAY—SATURDAY "THE WILD CATTERY" "Gelloping Dynamite" SUNDAY! LAUGH> "OH! DOCTOR" "I'M IN STITCHES!" and YOURS FOR THE ASKING BUY YOUR JAYHAWKER - Five Timely Magazines - $3.00 per Year $3.00 per Year - One Permanent Yearbook - WHEN YOU PAY YOUR FEES PAGE FOUR I UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 21. 1937 Varsity Drills For Frosh Tilt Saturday Lindsey Satisfied With Early Showing of Men; F r o s b May Outweigh Regulars The first scrimmage of the season yesterday found the varsity foot-ball squad looking far advanced in comparison to the form shown at this time last fall. Head Coach Lindsey and his assistants drove their charges through a rather lengthy session in preparation for their game Saturday with the freshmen. Lindsey's first line combination yesterday was composed of "Chuck" Warren, center; Staplen and Anderson, guardes; Boslevac and Ward, tackles; and Chitwood and Hardie, ends; starting back and starting front, hardie backhacks Douglass, fullback; and d Milton Meier, quarterback. Opossing this team was one made up of May, center; Huff and Sihlamick, guards; Lenhart and Rhule, tackles; and Maturo and Nees, ends. Turner and Moreland worked as guards and looked very good. Hanover also served with White and Arnold also served as replacements in this lineup. Masoner quarterbacked another backfield composed of Dave Shirk fullback; and Richardson and Sullivan, halfbacks. Amerine, Rosacke, Carvalherde, Lance Cannady and Wiencke also worked well as backs. Sullivant A Standout Perhaps the feature of the afternoon was the work of Sullivant, a hard-driving little halfback. He repeatedly drove gains, his drive through for nice bringing favorable comment from the sidelines. Divens and Replogle worked well at halfbacks and on hard to displace from the starting lineup. Meier and Masonner alternated at blocking MILTON SULLIVANT back and their work showed that there would be plenty of competition for this position. Line Shows Fight The only score of the afternoon was made by Amerine on a 10-yard dash after Masoner and Sullivan helped him carry the ball goalward. A pass, Sullivan to Hardace, also figured in the scoring. about his guards. Both lines showed plenty of fight and made lots of noise. Boslevac looked at tackle and should cause some real trouble for his opponents this season. Staplton and Anderson make the guards the team's strongest positions with and Silhanke, Huff, Turner and Moreland as replacements, Coach Lindsey should not be a bit worried Turner injured his head and neck on the first play he was in, but the injury was not thought to be serious he will be back in the lineup again this week. Among the reserve linemen who showed up well were Pat Maturo BOSILEVAC at end and Rhule at tackle FRED BOSILEVAC SHELLINGTON New Frash Out Meanwhile, Coach Ralph Conger was getting his yearlings in shape as rapidly as possible on the north practice field. There is a strong possibility that his starting lineup will outweigh the varsity, but they will be handicapped by lack of experience or ideas as to who his starter will be as yet but hopes to give the varsity a real battle. Four new men, all from Kansas City, Kan., have reported for freshman practice. These are Bill Ridgenac, fullback, and last year's captain at Wyndotte high: Frank Harvey Wigner, 220-pound tackle; and Ted Kinney, star Wyndottie weight man last year. Graduate Is Prize Marksman Allen Sterling, 16, son of Prof. and Mrs. M. W. Sterling of Lawrence, was high-scale marksmans of the San Jose, Calif., pistol club, winning the R. D. Mattison trophy as first prize in one of the individual matches at the Apton pistol shoot, Sunday, Sept 9. Sterling's score was 193 out of 200. Fine Exceeds Profit Galena, Kans., Sept 20 — (UP) C. O. Adams was fixed $18.50 for trapping a moose in the soonon. He received 73 cents for the pelit Along the Sideline By William Fitzgerald, c'39 Kansas Sports Editor The University of Texas is all peeped up this year with its new deal under Dana X. Bible, former Nebraska mentor. Their followers are even hoping that Bible can do as well as third in the conference this year, and if it's possible, he'll probably get the jgb done. (Bible didn't even know there was a third place in the Big Six.) Meanwhile, the Southwest Conference is plenty wary of any team coached by D. Xenophone (which has appeared to be a musical instrument). Here's wishing him luck as long as he stays out of the Buf Six. Two of the Big Six teams go into action against other schools with Oklahoma perhaps getting the stiffer assignment. The Sooners meet Tulsa, at Tulsa, and Tulsa is always tough. The Sooners are somewhat of an unknown quality this year and a better line on them in Iowa. Jim Yeeager makes his debut at Iowa State against the Iowa State Teachers at Ames. The remainder of the teams are idle until next week. It looks as though Saturday's Varsity-Fresh may really be something if the boys hammer at each other as expected. Conger's charges seem to be quite enthusiastic about the meeting and the varsity will be taking no chances on starting out with a loss. The varsity is likely to be outweighed and it may take a lot of scrap on their part to convince the first year men that they're really only freshmen after all. Jayhawk Jolts - Mike Silanick. 180-pound sophomore guard, hutchicked to Lawrence this fall from his home in Leechburg, Pa. . . Charles "Chuck" Warren, promising center, and Milton Sullivan, flashy halfback, are both formulas for Warren. Warren played two years and was captain of the team his second year . . . It looks as though last year's starters at the guard and tackle positions will remain the same. Fred Bosilevac and Lewie Ward, tackles, and Ferrel Anderson and George Staples, will be for their old posts . . . Jack Hall's hand injury was not as serious as it was feared and the scrapy center is back out on the gridiron. Shavings—Garold Brown, who tossed horseshoes for the Galloping Ghosts in intramural competition last year, won the 1937 state horse-sitching title at the Kansas Free Fair Wednesday afternoon ... Cubs signed two players from the recent national softball tournament. ... The Sig Alph softball team, winners of last year's intramural title, defeated the Phillip's team from the City League Tuesday night, 4-1. They play a return game with the Hexagons, last year's runners-up. Torpey Wins Golf Tournament Bunny Torpey, professional of Oakwood Country Club in Kansas City, Mo. blazed his way to victory in the 38-hole medal play Kansas City played yesterday at the Lawrence Country Club with a score of 141. In the morning Torpery broke the course record of 69 for the 18 holes, which was set by Glenn Gatman, Missouri Amateur champion and d former University player. Torpery shot a 67, which is under for the 18 hole course. His smooth and cool-heated game was the result of hard tournament play which he has participated in all summer. Bob Gilbert of Topeka and Le兰 Gebion Gibson of Wichita tied for runner-up with a score of 144 for the 36 holes. The following Lawrence golfers participated in the tournament: G H. Penny, 187; W. G. Hutson, Jr., 162; Don Wetzel, 171; Ovrille Stone, 147; George T. Wetzel, 137; Glenn Oatman, 148; Giles Barker, withdrew; Glenn Charlton, 176; and Ray Wilson, 155. Walter Blevins, Kansas City, was awarded the prize for the lowest amateur in the tournament. His score was 146. Dr. L. R. Fletcher, who studied here in 1918, visited the Campus Saturday. Doctor Fletcher was on his way from Guatemala, where he is affiliated with the United Food Companion Program in York. Upon his return, he will become the chief surgeon of a hospital in Guatemala. Grad Heads Hospital The Women's Athletic Association's annual sports pow-wow will be held Thursday afternoon at 4:30. All women on the Campus who are interested in sports or in competing in intramural athletics are invited to attend. Women who wish to take part in this event will be affiliated with any organized house will be assigned to teams at this meeting. W.A.A. Sports Meet Thursday Ruth Baker, president of the association, will extend a general welcome to the women, as representative of W.A.A. The manager of each sport will explain her sport program. Catherine Dunkel and Betty Smith have planned a short dance program for Ms. Sigma, women's dancing sorority. The managers of the sports, who will appear on the program, are Maxyne Woody, hockey; Mary K. Lattner, vallet ball; Dorothy Lemine, basketball; Jane Blaney, soccer; Barbara Bottom, minor sports; Barbara Kirchhoff, rife; and Catherine Dunkel, president of Tau Sigma. Troubles for Quack Club, women's swimming organization, will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 25. Any ability to struggle able to try out for this organization. Takes New Post Quack Tryouts To Be Saturday Dr. G. Alvin Matton, who received his M.A. in bacteriology here is now associate professor of bacteri- Following the tryouts Saturday, practice periods will be held during the following two weeks, after which final tests will be given. Backstroke, sidestech, crawl, and single overarm strokes in good form. Float or tread water for three minutes. Surface dive in good form. Plunge or underwater swim. Endurance swim of 15 lengths of the pool. ology at the University of Utah. To become a pledge of Quack Club, the following tests must be passed by the applicant: To become a full member of the club, the swimmer must pass the following tests in addition to the pledge test: Running front dive. Back dive or front jackknife. Endurance swim of one-quarter mile. For the next step in the club, known as the "major Quack," the swimmer must be able to pass the first two tests, and in addition, exercise against fast-moving speed swimming. The tests for this rank will be given later in the year. 'Tokes' Make Debut at University This Year A recent ruling by Carl Webb, tax official in Topeka, makes compulsory the collection of the sales tax at the Union fountain but not at the Union cafeteria or at Corbin hall, where they work. At Corbin, who work for a salary and their meals, are required to pay a tax on **u** food. The University Daily Kansan, official student newspaper, will be forced to charge a sales tax amount to six cents on each subscription. The Jahyawah, Sour Owl, Kansan Magazine magazines will all be tax-free. The sales tax will be charged on all but $2 of the year's $8.75 activity fee, the tax free $2 going to the Memorial Union. Printing work done by the Journalism Press for a regular part of the University will be tax free, but for organizations a tax will be assessed. Another item of interest on which the sales tax will be charged is on both new text books and old ones sold at the book exchange. Laboratory and health fees will be exempt. Professors are also subject to the tax if they have mimeograph work done in a department which does not commonly do such work. If the department is a general policy of the department there will be no tax charge. Atchison, Kans., Sept. 29. —(UP)— One by one the street markers in Atchison have been disappearing. The street markers are made of aluminum, and the increasing value of that metal has caused vandal to make away with them. City officials are planning to order street markers made of galvanized tin, which has practically no junking value, and to place them one and one-half feet higher than the present markers. Street Markers Disappear COMPOSITE SCHEDULE OF "BIG SIX" CONFERENCE—1937 Distributes Native Quail Iowa State Kansas Kansas State Missouri Nebraska Oklahoma Sept. 25 *Iowa Tchrs. 0-0 *Freshmen 0-0 *Freshmen 26-0 Freshman 54-0 Tulsa 0-0 Oct. 1 Washburn 19-6 Oct. 2 Northwestern Boston Col. Colorado *Minnesota 0-7 *Rice Oct. 9 *NEBRASKA 0-34 Wichita MISSOURI 7-7 *KAN STATE 7-7 IOWA STATE 6-0 Texas Oct. 16 KANSAS *IOWA STATE 7-21 Marquette 0-13 *Mich. State 0-13 *OKLAHOMA 14-0 NEBRASKA 0-14 Oct. 2 Drake 21-7 OKAHOMA 0-14 Creighton *NEBRASKA 0-20 MISSOURI 20-0 *KANSAS 14-0 Oct. 30 *MISSOURI 0-10 Mich. State 0-6 *OKLAHOMA 1-8 IOWA STATE 13-9 KAN STATE 6-6 Nov. 6 OKLAHOMA 0-10 NEBRASKA 0-26 *Washburn 0-6 St. Louis 13-7 *KANSAS 26-6 *IOWA STAT 7-7 Nov. 13 Marquette *KAN STATE 6-26 KANSAS 26-6 *OKLAHOMA 21-14 Pittsburgh 6-19 MISSOURI 12-14 Nov. 20 *KAN STATE 7-47 Arizona 0-0 IOWA STATE 47-7 Washington U. 10 *Iowa Uni. Okla A, & M. 35-13 Nov. 25 *MISSOURI 3-19 KANSAS 19-3 *Iowa Calif. KAN STATE 40-0 Rev. 27 *NEBRASKA 0-40 Univ. of Los Angeles KAN STATE 40-0 Osage City, Kan., Sept. 20,—(UP) —The district game warden has distributed 140 native quail about 12 weeks old over Osage county. The quail were distributed in groups of 10. - Designates home games. Conference games in CAPITALS. Scores The interior is finished off in five grades of marble. Centered over the first floor loggia will be a large mosaic, in the center of which will be To Open War Memorial Its exterior of Indiana limestone and granite is of modern-classical design. Four massive American eagle, done in masonry, adorn the approaches to the building. Thirty-two figureheads, set in basil in relief around the top represent 18 branches of the armed forces of the nation. St. Louis, Mo., Sept. 20.(UP)—The St. Louis Soldiers' Memorial probably will be opened to the public in late October, according to August A. Voirlo, city construction engineer. The building, situated in City Hall Plaza, is a WPA project and will cost about $90,000. Work has begun in June, 1936. a large silver star surrounded by smaller stars. A sarcophagus of Belgian blue-black marble, carved with the names of about 1500 St. Louis World War victims, will be situated in the center of the loggia. Two museum rooms and two lobbies complete the first floor. The second floor will house three meeting rooms. Safety Congress To Meet in Kansas City Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 20—(UP) A speaker listes of 400 persons, speaking in continuous meetings divided in 40 sections comprise the tentative plans of the 26th National Conference of the Boards of the American Society of Obstetrics Oct. 11 to 15, officials revealed today. Seven thousand delegates and visitors are expected to attend. Of special interest this year will be the aeronautical division program, Capt. E. V. Rickenbacker, general chairman, has set aside Oct. 14 as a day of reflection for the program will include such noteworthy speakers as Lt. Col. Charles W. Gatesche of the aviation safety commission and Richard Galeazey, chief of the safety and planning division, Bureau of Air Commeure. Agricultural safety will be featured Friday, Oct. 15, under supervision of Chairman Dr. David J. Price of the U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, vice president of the Society of Agricultural Engineers, will speak. To Inaugurate Unit Plan In Missouri County Schools Liberty, Mo., Sept. 20—(UP)—The "unit plan" of correlating subjects will be inaugurated this year in 69 Clay county schools, E. L. Black, superintendent of Clay county schools announced. Under the new system, geography, history and civics will be grouped in single study periods and will be known as the "political science" group. English composition, rhetorical analysis, and literature will be the "art" group." Mathematics, however, will retain its individual identity. Lantern Trek Thursday W.S.G.A., Y.W.C.A. To Head Annual Night Parade to Chancellor's The Lantern Parade, traditional autumn event for University women under the auspices of the W.S.G.A. group, meets on Thursday, when the group assembles in the lounge of the Union Memorial building. They will adjourn to the ballroom for supper and a program, under the direction of Joyce Vet- Japanese lanterns will be obtained from the lounge from Jane Roberts, c38, and Burrie Dalton, c39. With lighted lanterns the line will wend past Spooner Thayer, down Fourthstreet to the Chancellor's home where Dorothy Stockwell, c39, president of the W.S.G.A., and Eleanor Slaten, c38, president of the Y.W.C.A., will make short speeches. The group will be directed by Alice Russell, f91, and Elon Payne, executive secretary of the Y.W.C.A. The return route to the Union Memorial building will be back of Oread High. Velma Wilson, c. 40, and Margaret Stough, afr. 38 are in charge of plans for the parade. Tickets are 35 cents. They may be obtained from WCCC Cabineteen or from WCAY Cabinet member or from Hewey House by phoning 1315. To Preserve Stables St. Joseph, Mo., Sept. 29—(UP)—Frank Crank, president of the Junior Chamber of Commerce, will name a committee soon to work for the preservation of the old Pony Express stables here. The organization would rehabilitate the building and preserve it as a city exhibition. Read the Kansan Want Ads. HOW TO PICK THIS SEASON'S FOOTBALL WINNERS A FOOTBALL EXPERT TELLS YOU IN THIS WEEK'S POST 27 IN THE SAME ISSUE **SEVEN MUST DIE.** Begin a peach of a South Sea mystery; Thirteen on an adventure cruise that gets too dangerous for comfort. Second of seven parts. By James Warner Bellah. **FOUR STORIES** by George S. Brooks, Dorothy Thomas, Ray Millholland, and Arthur Train. **FOUR MORE SPECIAL FEATURES.** What the newspapers didn't print about the White House fight on the Court. Plus more articles, serials, cartoons, humor and what not. Pick up your copy at the newsstand now! NEXT WEEK DON'T MISS A new romantic novel, "And One Was Beautiful," by Alice Duer Miller. A young girl's love for a man the world condemned. Here's a plot that will keep you in suspense from the first page. In six parts starting next week. WHAT'S the football forecast? Good, bad, or medium? What men from here will be in headlines? Here's a football expert's prophecy, and a team-by-team appraisal of your competition. Over 200 players are named, the choice of coaches and sportswriters for fame this year. How the new kickoff and forward pass rules will change the game. Who's paying for players this year and who isn't. Pages of good dope, enough to make you a one-man expert, and dinner table marvel. Don't miss it. Pigskin Preview by FRANCIS WALLACE AUTHOR OF "I AM A FOOTBALL FIXER" THE SATURDAY EVENING POST An Illustrated Weekly and Popular Journal 5¢ If you haven't received your copy of "1937 Football Schedules," showing new rule changes, this year's games, and 1963 scores of 119 leading colleges, ask at the business office of the paper publishing this advertisement. VI X 80 E V 8 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 6 The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXXV Rumored Jap Raid Panics Chinese Fear of An Air Attack Causes Gas Masks To Be Confiscated for Military Use Nanking, via Shanghai, Sept. 22 (wednesday).—(UP) Reported rumors that Japan's mighty air fleet which threatened to destroy this capital by aerial bombardment, planned to wipe out the civilian and military population with a gas attack spread among thousands of Chinese today. Fear of a gas attack increased when the Chinese military command ordered gas masks confiscated over the territory for military purposes. The rumors increased tension. Inhabitants have been fearfully awaits the threatened Japanese raid for nearly ten days. Hundreds of coolies worked throughout the night tearing up sidewalks in the business section to construct ductures affording at least half the city's population somesemblance of shelter if the great Japanese air armada carries out its threat to blow Nanking off the map. Military experts said that many on the dugouts were death traps, and pointed out that collapsing shelters killed as many Chinese as the Japanese raiders did yesterday in their city, "preliminary" raid on the city. Drug stores were besieged by Chinese and foreigners, seeking to purchase makeshift gauze "masks" on which an anti-gas preparation is poured. The city's supply of the needed chemicals, which are effective against gas for only 15 minutes is nearly exhausted. Tension in the foreign colonies was increased by a rising resentment against Americans because of the evacuation of the United States embassy to the gunboat Luzon, anchored on the Yamate river. The handful remaining in the city were subjected to a series of near-insults, not only by the Chinese but by other foreign nationals. United States Warns Japan Against Proposed Air Raid Washington, D. C., Sept. 21.—(UAP)—The United States has bluntly warned Japan that her proposed masked bombing of Nanking, capital of the Chinese central government, would be a violation of the United Nations law and could ardize diplomatic relations between the United States and Japan, Secretary of State Cordell Hull revealed tonight. on the SHIN by Virgil Mitchell In an effort to win back to goodwill of the Pi Fli's and the Beta's we give you this morning the candid opinion and descriptive prowess of that trumpet-tootin' master of ceremonies. Dale "Brody" Shroff. Will give you the bootstrap from the big Apple school of dancing. Get out your dictionary, here it comes. "First you truck on down, lightly and politely, Suzy Q, yeah man, Shim Sham Shimmy and the Linda Hop—that the BIG APPLE Yeah, yeah, and the big me all your cats and alligators, that is just what the grove will be at the most torid terpichore treat of this hill—the BIG APPLE VARSITY of the coming Friday. "Everybody's truckin' and Paul Kilm, the new varsity dance manager, is really in the grove when it comes to picking a fine deal because the BIG APPLE will feature a truckin' contest, singles a nd doubles, no holds barred, and prize to the winnabis. "As a super-special sender, Isabel Emery, who has appeared in some of the city's fine night spots, will give an exhibition of trucktin'! But here is more to come. Hill's best colored dancers will truck on down as it is really done in Harlem town—such a super-killer should make the apple a BIG APPLE. After the sessions with the professionals every- LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22, 1937 Continued on page 2 Request CSEP Workers Hand In Class Schedule Students working on CSEP are are requested to leave their class schedule at the CSEP office in the Administration building. Checks to students will be mailed from the Topeka office so it is important that CSEP students inform this office of any change of address. Time worked must be reported to supervisors so that they may turn in the hours work to the CSEP office each Monday . When the payroll ending date falls on a day other than Saturday, the time must be reported by noon of the day for completion. Each student's signature is necessary on his time sheet, otherwise time worked will not be accepted. Optimism In Discussion Coaches Strike Not a Of Confidence in Football Interviews Optimism was the keynote in the opening football discussion luncheon held at the Hotel Eldridge grill room yesterday noon. It was the first time that coaches from the coachs clinic. Perhaps the presence of the largest crowd ever to attend such a banquet, or maybe the fact that the luncheon program was broadcast over WREN, but such an optimistic frame of mind. Bonnie Ashburn, WREN sports snapchat, put the program on the air and Ed. R. Elibel, professor of physical education, introduced each speaker. The speakers were interviewed by Fritz Meyn, former football player at the University of Kansas. Promise Real Football Coaches Edd Wood and John Carhasken, of Lawrence High and Haskell, were both very confident as to the prospects of the coming season and promised some real football to Lawrence fans. When questioned about what kind of a football team the University would turn out this fall, Head Coach "Ad" Lindsey replied, "good." Lindsey said that the fans can judge for themselves by attending the Varsity-Freshman game in Memorial stadium next Saturday. He promised a good game although he handcapped by lack of practice. Freshmen Bigger and Faster In reply to a query concerning the freshman crop of football men on the Hill this year, Landy adduce that this year, the men were bigger and faster. Gwinn Henry, new director of athletics, said that the squared looked good and that the "men are in there triving". Henry emphasized the fact that the home schedule is an attractive one. He believes that the three conference games with Iowa State, Kansas State, and Missouri are very adequate. Prof. W. W. Davis, University faculty representative in the Big Six, and assistant football coaches M. J. Getto, H. W. Hargas, Glenn Presnell, and Ralph Conger were introduced but did not speak. Benn Hilbs, associate editor of the Country Gentleman and a graduate of the department of journalism in 1923, arrived Sunday with his wife and son to visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Hilbs, the latest article on flood control in the Ohio valley was recently reprinted in Readers' Digest. Graduate Visits Campus Seventy-five University women students attended a luncheon meeting of Phi Chi Delta, Presbyterian women's organization, at Westminster hall last night. Plans for the semester were discussed. Attend Phi Chi Delta Meeting The executive council of the W.S.G. A.W. will be hostesses to all University women at a tea thistle on Saturday, 26 November of Central Administration building from 3 to 5 Women To Be Guests at Tea Psychological examinations will be given for the last time Saturday morning at 9:30 in room 15 Fraser hall. All new students who enrolled late or missed them at the assigned time must be present to take these examinations. Psychological Exams Members Of A Cappella Selected After listening to auditions for the past week, Dean Donald M. Swarthor, director of the Westminster museum, introduced his members he members for the season 1937-38. Dean D. M. Sawutout Will Direct Choir at Many musical Events Again This Year The choir, composed of 27 men and 46 women, will sing at numerous University and city musical events, including the All-Musical Vespers. It will give a concert here during the Music Week Festival and will appear in Kansas City, Topeka and other nearby cities. Boyer, Eleanor Black, Alice Aldene Boyer, Helen Campbell, Vera Caruthers, Charlie Dutton, Dorotha Jacobs, Eva Ruth Meinke, Alice Jacobes, Eva Ruth Meinke, Alice Marie Meyn, Della OHlhausen, Virginia Lee Porter, Crystal M. Price, Agnes E. Romary, Ehiel E Ruppen, Elizabeth Searle, Eva Teagarden Following are the members listed bv sections: First Soprano Mary Elizabeth Bear, Martha Maxine Boucher, Eileyn Burns, Ramona Hacurn, Roberta Mitchell, Margaret Laugher, Margaret Stough, Jovette Vetter. Second Soprano First Alto Velma Cassell, Jean Fisher, Lulu Keith Murray, Emma Stone, Elizabeth Owens, Maria Stache, Mary Virginia Stauffer, Marjorie Alice Elizabeth Wilson, Ruth Yeeaman Elizabeth Wilson, Ruth Yeeaman Second Alto Barbara Edmonds, Lenora Grizzell Helen Mae Peters, Virginia Vargia Celeste M. Veddy, Mary Etta Walton Orena Yowell, Blanche Yeoman Orange Yowell. First Tenor Gordon B. Day, Edwin C. Hytay m. McCormack, Keith Sheerer tion, Thompson, DeLloyd Tibbs wants Watt. Second Tenor Storm Frederick M. Beal, Robert Brigg ack M. Heppy, Wendell H. Plan Varren Wilson. First Bass Claude H. Burns, Luther A. Carteri, Horace V. Edmonds, Samuel J. Po, Samuel B. Master, Loren R. Schmidt, Richard G. Padfield, Halbert E. Whitaker Paul G. Becker, Larry Blair, Homer Dodge Caine, Lewis Copeland David Warren Craik, Donald C. Lucas. Second Bass Psychologists Meet Next Monday Programs of the graduate colloquium of the psychology department were arranged at a business meeting yesterday afternoon. The college's faculty, including Ms. Mondays, and also meet with the Psychology club at its meetings. Any student who has had at least three hours in the psychology department and who is interested in the lectures and the discussion of psychological problems is eligible for membership in the club and is invited to attend the first meeting to be held at 4 p.m. in room 21 Administration building on Monday, Sept. 27. Formal meetings of the Psychology club, except for initiation and business sessions, will be abandoned this year and informal programs substituted. Psy Chi, national honorary psychology fraternity, will assume responsibility for most of the club's activities. Psi Chi as well as the colloquium will meet with the Psychology club. Washington, D.C., Sept. 21—(UP) John D. M. Hamilton of the Republican National Committee (Kansas) discussed the political situation with big-city G.O.P. leaders today and reported their证商 that President Roosevelt's appointment of Hugo L. Black to the supreme court will have "a very beneficial effect" for the Republicans. Hamilton also revealed that he planned to present former Pres. Herbert C. Hoover, during an off-year party convention to the G.O.P. executive committee at a meeting Thursday. He predicted, however, no defenses will be made until the entire committee meets later in the fall. Hamilton Believes Black Row Beneficial to G.O.P. Hamilton met at headquarters with eight Republican leaders from the nation's larger cities in one of the series of gatherings designed to pro-communism by campaigning to increase representation in Congress at the 1938 election. Flat-Feet Prevali While Students Make Parking Applications The University of Kansas is fairly over-run with flat-footed persons—if the applications for parking licenses may be used as a measure, Newton Hoverstock, c38, a member of the parking committee, reports 400 applicants who have 400 more than 400 are suffering from fallen arches. No official decisions have been made yet pertaining to the parking licences. Students have been signing up for these permits for tha past week, but no action has been taken. There will be a meeting of the committee in charge today and students who are granted permits may be able to find out their zones by Thursday. The first all-student rectal of the fall semester will be presented Thursday at 3:30 p.m. in the Central Administration auditorium. The program is a varied one and will present solos in piano, voice and drum. The film will be concluded with two numbers by Gretchainoff for two pianos. To Present First Recital All - Student Program Will Begin Series of Fall Concerts PIANO: Scherzo in C sharp minor ...Chopir Bernie McNown Prelude and Fugue in E Minor Mendelssoh The program: VOICE: Villanelle Dell 'Acqua Alice Marie Meyn, fa'39 Mendelsohn Orene Yowell, gr. CORNET TRIO: Firtations Clarke VOICE: Del Firtations Clarke Bob Boyle, fa'39, Leo Horcek. Bob Boyle, fa'39, Leo Horcek, Lewis Maser, e'ncl. VOICE: Variations brillantes Chopin Mary Jane Bruce, fa'39 Ombra mal fu ... Hande Charles Neiswender, b'38 PIANO VOICE: Ombra mafu Hande Niemanden k/78 Intermezzo from L'Arlesienne Bizet-Naumber Bizet-Naumbert Beethoven-Kreisler Homer Dodge Caine, fa39 102 La fleur que tu m'avais jeteé. Bize (from "Carmen"). NUMBER 16 TWO PIANOS Poon Gretchaninoff Cortege Gretchaninoff Jovece Vetter, fa'39, Alice Russell, The Watkins Memorial hospital came out ahead on its physical examinations of new students this year, according to Dr. R. I. Canutez, director of the student health service. fa'39 Hospital Reports Lost Articles A watch, some note paper, and a key were found after the examinations. Owners of the articles may be seen by asking at the hospital office. Miss Ritter will appear before the laboratory section of the meeting which is to begin Oct. 4 or 5. Ritter To Present Paper Before Health Association Several Openings Listed For Graduate Pharmacists Earnet Boye, director of the Sanitation Division of the State Board of Health, will also read a lecture on the status of the American Health association. Miss Cassandra Ritter, bacteriologist in the water laboratory, a division of the State Board of Health, will leave this weekend for a two-weeks vacation during which time she will appear before a meeting of the American Association of Public Health in New York City to read a short paper entitled "A Revised Fuchsia Lactose Broth for the Conformation Test in Water Analysis." The School of Pharmacy has several openings listed for graduate harmacists including two in Oklahoma and one in Indiana. The Chope's Drug store in Newirk, Okla., offers an opportunity for great deal of valuable experience, while the Bear Drug company of ihawne, Okla., has a job available to graduate fulfilling heir requirements. The third offer made by the Elbe teacher's agency in Indianapolis, Ind., specifies that the applicant be particularly trained in materia medica, as well as in the general pharmacy course. Lindley Gives First Faculty Talk of Year Applicants should see Prof. L. D. Haverhill, dean of the School of Pharmacy, for further information concerning these jobs. Ursges College Faculty To Understand Outside Activities Which Could Possess Value Sympathetic study of extracurricular activities was urged upon the College faculty by Chancellor Lindley in a brief talk yesterday afternoon at the first faculty meeting of the fall semester. The meeting partook more of a social than of a formal event, some time ago, devoted to the introduction of two-score new members of the faculty, greetings from the Chancellor, and from Paul B. Lawson, dean, who presided. "Not so many years ago we college students had to get our practice in public speaking in our literary societies; now public speaking has become a curriculum," said the Chancellor. "Who knows but what, by a sympathetic study of some of the things that now appear to interrupt the academic program we may find here, in the true education of youth." Quoted Conant of Harvard Chancellor Lindley quoted from remarks made recently at Kansas University in a speech in which the Harvard president spoke approvingly of the scholarships that are being established for undergraduates, and expressed the hope that the plan of students must be extended to include upperclassmen. "Through its scholarship of $1,000 a year for a probationer, and $1,200 a year for the next three years for the young man who makes good, Harvard is putting into practice its belief that the choiceest students should not be expected to do much beyond their class work. "Here in the middle west, where the days of the pioneer are not far in the background, tradition seems to impel some youths to earn at least part of their expenses, even though from families amply able to provide the education. I hope more of our choiceest students may be enabled to pursue their studies unencumbered." Stanathan to Committee State of Nassau. But before the meeting consisted in the approving of the action of the administrative committee in accepting the resignation of Prof. W. S. Johnson, and the appointing of Prof. J. B. Stanahan to that committee, and in approval of the petition of Prof. J. B. Stanahan to the petroleum geology, substituting therefor a junior-senior course that would fit better into the curriculum of the new department of petroleum engineering. The course, as it af- fled from the School of Engineering and Architecture, has already been approved. Prof. Guy Smith, chairman of the committee on improvement of enrollment procedure, asked that suggestions be submitted to the committee before the October meeting of the faculty. Dean Lawson announced that granting of degrees for work completed in summer session would be business before the October meet. Denbart Slayers To Be Arraigned Shelbyville, Ky. Sept. 21.—(UP)A joint warrant was filed today against the three Garr brothers, bluegrass aristocracy, charging them with killing Brig. Gen. Henry N, Denhart, who today would have gone to trial the second time for the claving of their sister. Eye witness to last night's slaying was Rodes K. Meyer, Bowling Green lawyer, who was chief defense council at Denhart's murder trial last May. That trial ended in a jury disagreement as to his guilt for the murders of Mrs. Derna Gaylor, pretty widow to whom he was engaged. Myers told his version of the shooting to Dr. F. L. Lapsley, county coroner, but the brothers, Roy, Jack and Dr. E. F. Garr refused to discuss when commonwealth prosecutor H. B. Kinsmoor advised that they should be charged. Roy Garr had tried to take all the blame for the shooting. The brothers will not be arranged before Friday it was said, so that Myers first can take Denhart to his home at Bowling Green. Ku Ku's To Present Woman Cheerleader From a list of candidates submitted by the freshmen in each organized house for women, one girl has been chosen by the Ku Ky's to assist the freshman cheerleaders in coars-hairy grid tilt here Saturday. Her identity was not revealed last night. Bill Bailey, president of the Ku Ku's, said that she would be officially presented at the midweek in the ballroom of Memorial Union building tonight. Vacancy In W.S.G.A Charles Resigns F rom Council; New Member To Be Elected Two new members, Dorothy Nelson of Watkins hall and Ruth Spencer of Miller hall, were introduced to the Women's Self-Goverrin Association council at the first meeting of the year last night. A vacancy on the executive council was created by the resignation of Margaret Charles, vice-president of the sophomore class. This office will be filled by an election of the council. Miss Elizabeth Meguiar, adviser to women, opened the meeting with words of greeting and advice to members of the executive council. Any sophomore woman interested in being nominated for this office should contact Doria Stockwell *make sure you make a application to the* An appropriation of $50 was made for the Federation of Counsellors. A meeting time was changed to 7:30 and the subject, subject to change at any time. Appoint Two Instructors Teachers in Woodwind An d Brass Added to Fine Arts Faculty Two instructors in brass and woodwind, Leland Goebel and Bruce Thomas, have been added to the School of Fine Arts faculty. This is a step in the direction of a new instrumental degree in public school music which has been planned and worked out by Dr. Otto Missner, Dean D. M. Swarthout and Russell Wiley, band director. These courses are outlined to give intensive instrumental training in brass, woodwind, and string to those who have supervisors of public school music. More and more young men are coming to the University for the purpose of preparing themselves to work in a coding to Mr. Wiley. He said, "Since my coming to K.U. I have noticed this fact: we have never had enough instrumental supervisors for me, which we are called upon to fill." Leland Goebel was for three years a pupil of Llewellyn, who, until his death a year ago, was solo cornetist with the Chicago Symphony and orchestra, as well as teachers of cornet. Goebel was a student at Vanderbilt School of Music and the American Conservatory. He later taught at Millikan College, Decatur, IL, and has taught at St. Mary's University in the city school of Furibay, Nebraska. Bruce Thomas, reed instructor, formerly of the Kansas City Phil- harmonic orchestra, is one of Kana- sia City's outstanding reeers Thomas will spend one to two days here as his teaching demands. Benito Mussolini Will Confer With Hitler Rome, Wed., Sept. 22—(UP) —Premier Benito Mussolini will leave Friday for Berlin to confer with Dore Fuherle Adolf Hitler and attend the Reich's army maneuvers in Neuchdturt, it was announced no- After a one-day visit in Munich, it was announced, Mussolini will go to Nechliendort on Sunday, Sept. 26 to attend the war games. After annuaries he will return to Berlin and will depart for Kone Sept. 29. WEATHER Kansas: Generally fair Wednesday and Thursday, except somewha unsettled at times in east portion cooler in west and north-central portion Wednesday and in east Thursday. Band Leader Organizes Large Group Over Ninety Members Have Been Accepted: Wiley Needs More Men In Several Sections One of the largest bands in the history of the University, consist of over 50 members, has been based at the University by Russell Wiley, director. Personnel of the University of Kansas Band, Fall, 1937: The man who heads the list of each section is the principal or soloist of that group. Claus Hothusen, German exchange scholar, Hamburg, Germany, heads the flute group. Germany, heads the list of band members by section; Mr. Wiley still has one opening each in the alto, tenor and baritone saxophone sections. More flutes and French horns are also needed. Anyone who can try out for these selections should see Wiley within the next week. Claus Holtbussen, Herbert Krauss, Robert Wallace, Eugene Rickets, Merlin Hachett. Conard Gilham. Dick Gage, Bob Pine, Sam Heporth, A! Fancuello, George Glasean, Stuckenbruck, Larry Blarr, Greg Brown, Greg Jenner, Kenyon Phillips, Charles Seeh, Herbert Schoenfeld, Quintus Lauritzen, Tupper, Kern Malton Alphen, Preston Johnson, Ralph Janssen, Gov. David James, Dennis Robert, Robert Burns, Geirhardt, Herbert Reger. Oboes Wendell Plank. Alto Clarinete Keith Coad, Bob Wolverton, Clar- rion, Robinson Bassoons LaVerne Hackler, Robert Forman, Wendell Plank, Wallace Sturm. John Bremyer, Kenneth Shook. Bass Clarinet Brent Campbell, Russell Cham- Don Foncannon. Joe McAnarrey, Gordon Barnard The Scavenger French Horns Baritone Saxophones Dee Fenceman Bill Van Sickle, Jack Happy, Robert Hedges, Charles Paddock, Bob Humel Cornets Ted Windsor, Don Wood. Robert Boyle, Leland Goebel, Lewis Masen, Clyde Smith, Leo Horacek, Deibert Crabb, Bruce Jackson, Herbert Glasson. Melvin McDonald. Baritones James Van Dyck, Jack Dalby, Norman Brown, Don Fannel. Dean Brooks, John Riisoe, Earl Stuckenbruck, Everett Beatty, Wayne Dikey, Vincent Tharp, Rex Tharp, Eller Lowe, Cecil Frey Rex Conner, Worth Blair, Curtis Johnson, Joe Langworthy, Arthur Harris, Lawrence Hinsley, Charles 'Jokins' String Bass Lewis Copeland, Lloyd Tibbs. Recursion Tympian, Robert Briggs; Bass Drum, Bill Ward; Snare Drums, Jack Laffer, Bob Wilson, Don Cluster. Dancing Group Arranges Tryouts Tau Sigma, dance sorority, met last night in the gymnastium to make plans for the year and to arrange for tryouts for membership in the program. All of these dates of these tryouts will appear in the Kanaan within a short time. Tau Sigma will sponsor ballroom dancing classes this year, as it has done in the past. These classes will start about the middle of October and continue for six weeks, with occasional a week meeting in the evenings. Each year Tau Sigma presents one public dance performance. For the past three years this has been given in co-operation with the University of Kansas symposium. The event will be completed in its year's performances will be completed in a later date. Tau Sigma has 20 members back in school this year. The officers are: president, Catherine Dunkel; vice-president, Paul Saylen; treasurer, Dorothy Bucher; and sergeant-at-arms, Helen Tibbets. Rebel Leader Moved to Cayonne Paris Sept. 21 — (UP)—Mujil Julian Cronosco, Spanish rebel commander who was arrested by French secret police in connection with the attempted "hijacking" of a Loyalist submarine, was removed to a jail in Paris after an 1000-vehicle troops threatened to cross the border and exact reprisals. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22, 1937 ≈ Comment If and When The Forums Series An opportunity to attain a broader picture of the world we live in and a better perspective on life is offered by our Student Forum Series. The Men's Student Council and the Women's Student Government Association sponsor this series, which is dedicated to the treatment of controversial issues, issues which are important to us as students and as citizens, issues which are usually ignored in our newpapers a nd classrooms. The Student Forums Series, if it offers a constructive and progressive program, can do much to destroy this "No Man's Land" of college education, or it can become a pawn for platitudes clothes in academic pedanticism. Count Categories In Unemployment Census Cotton picking time in Georgia has brought forth several episodes which clinch the croakings of New Deal critics of government extravagance. WPA workers are refusing to desert their jobs to meet the present crop emergency. Transferred from a federal road project to employment in cotton fields last week, they went "on strike" against farming at the prevailing wages. At Okemah, Okla., the sheriff has threatened to throw loiterers, some of them part-time relief men, into jail if they refuse to pick cotton. If they're able to work on relief, they're able to pick cotton, the sheriff says. This situation has been paralleled in other parts of the country. It merely intensifies the growing need for new and detailed figures upon unemployment. Information should be made available concerning the various degrees of unemployed and unemployable. There are all shades of unemployed, from the desperately needy, willing-to-work common laborer to the dependents who could "use" work but are in no great hurry to find it. There are all shades of unemployables, from the physically disabled for whom special occupations and training must be provided, to those who definitely won't work. Argument that the census figures would be inaccurate a short time after they have been taken may be justifiable, but any figures nearly approaching the truth are necessary to the intelligent expenditure of the new relief appropriation. The regular national census is used year after year as a basis for far more prodigious undertakings. "Let's count them," but insist upon special attention for the wide and diversified qualifications of the term "unemployed." We'll See You There "K. U. supporters are smiling again this year, and gloom clouds have cleared from Mount Oread. Of course, no one expects Kansas to have a championship team this year, but signs of improvement are in the air and on the gridiron," so write the sport dopersets of the Kansas situation in the football setup. --- Last year when the clouds were the darkest, after a miserable season, a campaign culminated in a change in the athletic organization here. That new organization has justified the change, the efforts of those who worked for re-organization. True, no football games have been won. In all probability, many games will be lost. The reward, then, lies not in immediate athletic victories, but in the new spirit and the new energy being displayed. The coaching staff has been enlarged until it compares favorably with those of other schools on the schedule. More athletes have been attracted by the awakened spirit, and prospects are for many seasons of increasing athletic prosperity for the University. Saturday the varsity meets the freshman team and supporters will have an opportunity to size up the material. Catch the new Kansas athletic spirit and attend the game. Defend to the End The Right to Say I "Defenders of liberty," and the man on the street are busy these days bemoaning the spread of Nazism in these United States. No reliable figures have been published on the extent of that poisonous spread, but it is an established fact that Nazi propagandists are at work in this country and that organizations of pro-Nazis have been formed. Those who so fear the invasion of our country by this movement spend one paragraph or one minute extolling the great blessings of freedom of speech and press in this country and the next paragraph or minute calling for investigation and merciless suppression of all Nazi activity. This is a paradox at best. Of the 130 million persons in the United States, there will always be a few who will fall for any movement, who will listen to any soap box orator, or sympathize with any secret agitator. But they fall in the same class with wide-mouth side show suckers who become victims of confidence men. Freedom of speech and press are indeed a blessing. But if we are frightened by the activities of minority groups we have no right to freedom of expression. If we are fearful of minorities we deny the proposition that democracy is worthwhile and is actually on our way out. Why not use our freedom to counteract the authoritarian movements that would presume to take our freedom from us? Campus Opinion Senior. No Doubt Editor Daily Kansan: In the course of University life there appears now and then a bit of enlightenment that may cause the burden of that downrotten group known as Freshmen Upon the University scene this year has come a little further. To be sure, it is important for their entrance into the social life of the University. In two hundred and fifty words it would be impossible to do justice to this little freshet of wisdom, so it must be treated with only pasing affection. The K.U. Freshman's Bible! Freesmain, it is yours for the asking. It is indeed refreshing to note that diminishing the ability to sing a subtle and persuasive manner that even dear Emily would have to blush. Its stimulating advice about what to wear on a date is most revealing. Now this wee little paragon of campus social policy has been taught in school, emphatically that a suit must always be worn on a date. To the unsuspecting Freshman this may seem easy, but when you are going to be done on a date. But it is the goopel because the Owl Society tells you so. It has been some time since overwhelmed were the soiled you must put these aside for the time being. (Providing you were bold enough The little booklet does not stop with what to wear on a date but goes on to tell the mode of attire for most occasions. For example, that in the "strictest sense of the word formal attire means tails." However, the bible is willing to make an exception, that "*a tuxedo* is equally acceptable when a tie is worn, if they are about a pipe or smoking tobacco. B. C. Official University Bulletin Notices due at Chancellery' Office at 3 p.m., preceding regular publication days and 11:10 a.m. Vol. 35 WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22, 1837 No. 10 A. M.S.E. The A.M.S.E. will smoke a smoker an hour and industrial engineering students at 8 gpm on Thursday, Sept. 23. Come out and meet your new Dean and hear what he has to say-D. A. Barnett, Secure ESTES REUNION PICNIC: There will be an Estes reunion picnic on Friday, the Estes conferences, the Estes conferences. Meet at Henley House at 5 p.m. Bring twenty cents. Make reservations by Thursday—Eddie Parks, Chairman JAY JANES: There will be an important meeting on this afternoon in 212 Aft. Attendance required. MID-WEEK DANCE. There will be a mid-week dance from 7 to 8 o'clock this evening in the ballroom of the Memorial Union building. Men bringing date cards for the dance will be fined ten cents plus tax—Jack Townsend. QUACK CLUB: There will be a meeting of Quack Club at 8 o'clock every evening. Members and pledges are welcome. WOMEN'S GLEE CLUB TRYOUTS: Late tryouts for the University Women's Glee Club and for Glee Club accompanists will be held at 4:30 this afternoon. Administration building—Vera Caruthers, President. W.S.G.A. BOOK EXCHANGE 5 p.m. refund on Thursday Sept. 23 - Elden Borders 5 p.m. on Thursday W. S.G.A. TEA: There will be a tea for all University women from 3 to 5 this afternoon in the lounge of the Administration building—Bette Wasson, Secretary, W.S.G.A. PHYSICAL ED. MAJORS: Physical Education majors will hold their first convoction on Thursday evening. Sept. 23 at 5:15 in the auditorium of central High School. Students must attend A. Schwinger, Dean of the School of Education. STYLE SHOW TEA: The style show tea for freshman women and their counsellors, which was announced last week but been postponed until Friday. 1, from 3:30 to 4:45 in the Union ballroom—Dorothy Trekty, Chairman. TAP CLASS: There will be an advanced tap class Mondays and Wednesdays at 3:30 p.m. I should like to have anyone report who has had experience or has been working in advanced tap -Elizabeth Dunkel. University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE KANSAS AICE HADDEEN-TOMUSS AMI SCHWARTZ MORRIS THOMPSON BARRY TROLLER FLATURE EDITOR GRAVEY VALENTINE Editorial Staff News Staff MANAGING EDITOR CAMPUS EDITORS KEENNETH MOREN & JOHN COGANBURY SOCIETY EDITOR SOCIETY EDITOR TELLSIZE EDITOR TELLSIZE EDITOR MAKEUP EDITORS BOBBIE CAREKY AND JANE FLORE REWRITE EDITORS TOMMY EMMALI PUBLISHER ... J. HOWARD RUSCO LIMITED STOP F. QUENTIN BROWN Entered as second-class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan. Business Staff Aged Chemistry Building Houses Many New Features CARLTON HILL By. Jack McCarty. c'38 The date, 1900, directly above the door of the Chemistry building has always suggested to this writer a sense of the antiquated and the outmoded. A易 semester's struggle with Chem. I on the second Floor of the building. A wide evidence of anything modern in laboratory or classroom facilities. However, a visit to the extreme west portion of the basement of this same hall with the 1900 on the facade was enough to indicate that the musty classroom and laboratory on the secondextreme west corner of the entire building. That section of the Chemistry building devoted to the department of chemical engineering gives to the lay visitor a sense of newness and excitement, and trust to the rest of the hall. Concrete floors, three levels of them, white brick walls and a maze of odd looking tanks, pumps, pipes and spigots give the visitor a real sense of bewilderment. The sensation was exhilarating. Details of the project were explained by Associate Prof. T. H. Marshall. "Considering that we have grown rom virtually nothing to some 4,000 square feet of floor space and have become the largest department in the School of Engineering, we feel pretty good," was Professor Marshall's comment. "No one outside the department seems to be aware of the requirements been done during the regular school terms. The construction of the laboratory, which involved the removal of floors, installed of steel pillars, which necessitated the jack-up of the building, installing of a reinforced concrete floor were all done during the summers of 1936-37. Mr. Marshall was as proud of his interior rooms as of the main office; he took extravagant to the layman, the locker rooms, the shower room, and the study room with continually changing air (other departments please note) are of almost vital necessity to the students. The chemicals with Is Largest Department Your Comfort Comes First DICKINSON The Friendly Theatre LAST TIMES TONITE "WIFE, DOCTOR, NURSE" which they work call for a bath aum change of clothes at the end of the day and since the study room is be- come the room, a ventilation system is demanded. STARTS THURSDAY Life's greatest pitfall exposed "DAMAGED GOODS" SUNDAY Showing 3-7-9 10-25c 'til 7 then 10-35c TONIGHT IS TONIGHT. TOMORROW'S ANOTHER DAY JACK BENNY - BEN BLUE JUDY CANOVA - IDA LUPINO Projects Completed by Students Projects Completed by Students Of exceptional interest was the nature of the laboratory equipment itself. A miniature oil refinery, a chemical laboratory, an evaporator for the study of salt compounds, now in the process of assembly, are projects completed by the students themselves, and their construction may occupy a student's time for the best portion of a semester. For example, the parts of the new蒸发器 are at present installed in laboratories in the university will be entirely in the students' hands. ADDED SHORT SUBJECTS Construction details of the new laboratories include the use of trough drains replacing the regular cast iron fittings, an elaborate system of pipe racks giving piping facilities for power lines, compressed air, gas, steam and water. Everything has been so designed that any piece of equipment can be delivered whenever replacement is necessary. A weird place, this chemical engineering laboratory. Yet out of just such weird places have come such strange things as rayon and dow metal—a material lighter than any heretofore developed, yet with strength enough to be used in airplanes. Who knows but that the new laboratory in Chemistry building houses some genius who will have his name added to the list of those who have done great things in that same gently aging building. "ARTISTS and MODELS" The new underpass in North Lawrence is completed, and awaits construction of the new highway. Necessary To Amend National Labor Acts Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 21—(UP) - Prophenyess that both the Social Security act and the National Labor Relations act will require substantial amendment before they can be made workable, the committee on labor, employment and social security of the American Bar association should note that it is studying the legislation further with a view toward making detailed recommendations on Association policy. The request came in the report of the committee to be made at the annual convention of the association to be held have late this month. Wuther (continued): Generally fair today and Thursday; moon nearly full in extreme west portions, but partly obscured by clouds. Long-distance forecast indefinite, but indicates snow. To Have New Telephone System On the Shin-body will have some truckin'-ant from all reports the groove should be solid and sending. Anyway, you will see in action such truckin'Test- ness, Squeek, Speakman, Charle- ne Barber, Mary Kate Dorman, and on the male side such demons as Bill Southern, "Slugger" Haughey, Ted North, Jr., Doc Day and a raft of others. There is a time to pick the truckin' class to demo but Friday night is BIG APPLE pickin' time." Wlb City, Mo. Sept. 21—(UP)—The state public service commission authorized installation of a battery telephone exchange system here replacing the magneto type of instruments. Continued from page 1 It comes pretty straight that the members of the Kansas Crime Wave gang are none other than that notorious quintet, "Tommy Gun" Van Cleve, *Slew*, Chambers, "Synph", Seifer, "Gin" (short for Gene) Wyatt, and "Fight Ball" Lewis. SAVE ON YOUR LUNCH at the Fountain Buy a $2.75 Meal Ticket for Only $2.50 UNION FOUNTAIN Memorial Union Sub-Basement TODAY AND THURSDAY 2 GRAND 10c TO HITS ALL The Show Value of Lawrence! VARSITY Home of the Jawhaws SHOWS 2:30-7:00-9:30 MARGARET SULLAVAN 'SO RED THE ROSE' AND WATER CONNOLLY Tanya Scott, Janel Becker, Elizabeth Palmer, Berry Wagner, Diana Moore, Sussex by the library Stark Young's novel of the War Between the States comes to gloriou life! PANDA No. 2—Just a Couple of Heels—Head Over Heels in Love! NO 'LOVE IN A COTTAGE STUFF FOR HER! She was going to marry me she was going to marry me she was giving a gift she was giving a gift dollar personality, and not a dollar personality, and not a dollar personality. Zucker presents CAROLE LOMBARD FRED MacMURRAY "Hands across the Table" A Paramount Picture with Atitid Alwyn + Reish Bellamy Directed by Mitchell Levine Friday - Saturday Drama of Block Gold Hunters "The Wildcatter" And Kermit Meyerd And—Kermit Maynard "Galloping Dynamite" SUNDAY! Laugh riot that will make "OH. DOCTOR" And—George Raft "Yours for the Asking Subscribe for THE KANSAS CITY STAR PHONE 17 H. L. Nevin Distributor Headquarters Rexall Drug Store 13 papers - 15c per week 847 Mass. St. To the public: Seems as though these lads could not take a healthy ribbing in the form of a take-off on their Vassar Sarmur. So when the local campus widow pulled a phony of same, they resorted to brute force in an effort to get retrieved from the gravestone气痕 style they soaked the fair lady with charged water from a seltzer bottle and then filched the trail before she could find a towel. BUT CRIME DOES NOT PAY! Candi cameramann got at least eight good shots of the kidnapping and the proofs are now in a well-coached safe. The Sour Owl has revised its makeup in the interest of ensuring all the pictures in the first issue. What will these pictures tell? Will the crime be solved and the gang brought to justice? Take it away, Editor Coleman. We seldom bury our dead, but here is an epitaph just waiting to find a nice cornerstone to eat into. Be, Western Union. EDGAR BERGAN TDS BEVERLY HILLS, CALIF. KANSAS CHAPTER DELTA UPSI- LON: PATEE Week 10 C Til 7 Days Then 15c DEAR BROTHERS THANKS FOR THE INVITATION STOP REGRET THAT SHOW SCHEIDULES AND DISTUDIO RESTRICTIONS WILL MAKE FLYING IMPOSSIBLE STORE FRATERNALLY ENDS TONITE "FLY AWAY BABY" ENDS TONITE "TRADER HORN" EDWINA BOOTH HARRY CAREY FLY AWAY BABY GLENDA FARRELL BARTON McLANLE THURSDAY 3 Days 2 SMASH HITS 'THE THREE MESQUITEERS RAY CORRIGAN MAX TERHUNE 'Heart of the Rockies' AND "Man of the People" JOSEPH CALLEIA FLORENCE RICE Also Serial - Comedy GRANADA E Lawrence's Leading Theatre WEEK DAY SHOWS 2:30-7-9 25c 11 f NOW! ENDS FRIDAY Two Great Stars Together for the First Time, in Their Greatest Hit! It's Everything YOU WANT IT TO BE When KAY FRANCIS is in the arms of ERROL FLYNN in Winner Bros, now romantic, Another Dawn with JAN HUNTER FRIEDA INESCORT X-TRA AUTNA All New Just Out MARCH OF TIME BAND ACT — Latest News. Your Entertainment Spot 5 WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22. 1937. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Here on the Hill --an account of Mt. Oread Society JUNE ULM, Society Editor Before 1 a.m. call KU-21; after 1, call 2702-83 Bruckmiller-Snahr Mr. and Mrs. Frederick W. Brücke, manager of Kansas City, Mp., announce the marriage of their daughter, Mary Jane, to Charles Engene Spahr, son of Mrs. C. T. Spahr, also of Kansas City, to her stepmother, place Sept 16 at Independence, Mp. Both Mr. and Mrs. Sphr attended the University of Kansas. She was a member of the Chi Omega sorority, and he was a member of Theta Tau, Sigma Tau, and Sigma Tau and Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternities. Mr. and Mrs. Spahr will be at her after Sept. 25 in Cambridge, and she will be emailed in the Harvard graduate school of business administration. Cordenier-Hargiss The Apple Delta Pi sorority announces the marriage of Alma Cordonier of Troy to Carson Hargiss of Hawiatha, which took place July 28, at the home of Dr. or Mrs. R. C. Cordonier in Troy, Mrs. Hargiss was a student at the University last year, and Mr. Hargiss attended Washburn University in Topeka. He was a member of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. Mr. and Mrs. Hargiss are now at home in Hawiatha. Teagarden-Smith The Alpha Delta Pi sorority announces the marriage of Kathleen Teagarden, '36, to Norman Smith, both of La Cygne. The wedding took place Aug 22 at the house of Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Teagarden in La Cygne. Mr. Smith, a student at the University in '35, was a member of the Delta Upsilon fraternity. Mr. and Mrs. Smith are at home in La Cygne. Kappa Ea Kappa, electrical engineering fraternity, announces the pledging of James Clark, e38, and Richard Graber, e39. Phone K. U. 6 6 END CURLS, $1 up, inquire 7 Experienced Operators New Equipment Added IVA'S BEAUTY SHOP 491'1; Mass. St. Phone 533 Next door Keel Book Store WANTED: Roommate for quiet studious boy, also large double room for rent Meals if desired. Phone 21801. -115 STUDENT WASHINGS: Guaranteed satisfactory. Call for and deliver. Phone 2563M. -12 IVAS BEAUTY Shor 941½ Mass. St. Phone 533 Next door Keeler Book Store WAVE, new styles, any style 25c dried COTTVILLE CO-LIDS - COBK-Conkright Elliot of Vogue Beauty Shop in New York. Call 212-545-7760, Shop 9415 Mass. Old and new customers are welcome. Phone 333). -12 BOYS: 1 angle front room, 1 room for X boys. Very nice rooms, 1247½ Kentucky Phone 1075W. -11 SHAMPOO and WAVE, 35c dried Economy prices on other beauty work also A ROOMS FOR GIRLS: Twin beds, twin room. Bath: Gas and furnace heat. Entertaining privileges. One-half block north Corner, 1121 Ohio. Phone 1671-58. WAVO BEAUTY SHOP Phone 95 - 921 Miss. St. Shampoos 25c up Finger Waves 25c (dried) Oil Permeants $2.50 up CLASSIFIED ADS Phone 95 — 921 Miss. St. --------------------------------------- --------------------------------------dons Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Lefter, Marguerite and Alain Mait Lefter, Kansas City, Ms. and Mr. Z. Jones, Tompkins Mr. and Mrs. Towe, Kansas City Mr. and Mrs. Towe, Kansas City Dr. Clare H. Baker, Kansas City Dr. and Mrs. H. B. Smith, Waverly Mr. and Mrs. W., F. Morgan, Kansas City Jayhawk Barber Shop Jayhawk Barber Shop Completely Modernistic Enjoy the best at no additional cost. Hair cut 35c. Earl Ellis Joe Lesch "Bill" Hensley "Paddy" Hyatt 727 Mass. Sunday Subscribe for THE WICHITA BEACON Kansas' Greatest Newspaper Delivered to your door Dally and your address. Alpha Omicron Pi entertained the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity with an our dance Tuesday evening. 10 cents per week — Phone 2316 ------------------------------------- ------------------------------------- ------------------------------------dons Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Lefter, Marguerite and Alain Mait Lefter, Kansas City, Ms. and Mr. Z. Jones, Tompkins Mr. and Mrs. Towe, Kansas City Mr. and Mrs. Towe, Kansas City Dr. Clare H. Baker, Kansas City Dr. and Mrs. H. B. Smith, Waverly Mr. and Mrs. W., F. Morgan, Kansas City Sunday dinner guests at Delta Tau Delta were: --dons Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Lefter, Marguerite and Alain Mait Lefter, Kansas City, Ms. and Mr. Z. Jones, Tompkins Mr. and Mrs. Towe, Kansas City Mr. and Mrs. Towe, Kansas City Dr. Clare H. Baker, Kansas City Dr. and Mrs. H. B. Smith, Waverly Mr. and Mrs. W., F. Morgan, Kansas City Don't Miss the Fun! Learn to dance—all the latest ballet steps SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN BEGINNERS Marion Rice Dance Studio Over Ramsey-Allison花店 Shop 927½ Mass. St. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Philips and daughter Mass. Ahleng ☆ ☆ ☆ BOSCHMAN, Dr. and Mrs. Servin, Kansas City, Mo. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Johnson, Abilene Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Tanner and fami- lal friends Miss Mary Nicholson, "37, Ellis Bill Calhoun, "36 Kansas City, Mo. Ed Oden, "27, Kansas City, Mo. Cochrane, "36 ☆ ☆ ☆ Kappa Alpha Theta announces the engagement of Miss Florence Campbell of Kansas City, Mo., to Dr. Raymond B. Riley of Bay City, Mich. Mitx Campbell is a graduate of the University of Kansas, and Doctor Riley also is a graduate of the University in the School of Medicine. The wedding will take place in November. Visitors at Miller hall Sunday were: . Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Waggoner, OtkA 927 1/2 Mass. St. Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Cornwall, Topeka ☆ ☆ ☆ "Oread House," an organized house for women at 1225 Orden, elected the following officers Monday; president Doris Schuerman, c38; vice-president Helen Palmer, c41; secretary Chesley James, c38; t隶师, Hesser Martin, c38; and publicity chairman, Marion James, c41. "Oread House" was organized this fall and has a membership of 20. Phone K. U. 6 6 WANTED: Student laundry, shirts 10c. Phone 1587J. -14 GIRLS: TWO-ROOM nicely furnished Sink, hot and cold water Frigidiaire, S. E. exposure, Phone 1131J 119 Vermport. -11 SAVE part of rent allowance for something else. Very nice double room 121. Sleeping porch, study downstairs, 45. Five block from campus. 845 Ala. -11 SHAMPOQ and 25c WAVE, dried SHAMPOO and 25c WAVE, dried Oil - Drene - Fitch Shampoo and Water, dried Wave, dried, 5oc End Curls $1.00 up. Complete PERMANENTS, Any Style $1.00, $1.50 up. complete Twenty-five words or less one incription, 21c; three innotations, 16c; six incription, 27c; contract rates, not more than 23 words, 92 per month flat. Payable in advance and accepted subject to approval at the KANIAN Business Office. MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP 7321/2 Mass. Phone 2353 WANTED Typewriter Cleaning and Repairing CLARENCE M. BAKER 1323 Kentucky Phone 2095J Magazine Exchange 729 Massachusetts All popular magazines at onehalf to one-third regular price. MAGAZINES TAXI HUNSINGER'S 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 ONE STOP Clothes Service Station SCHULZ the TAILOR 924 Mass. 4185. The Campus house, a semi-organized house at 1245 Orden, elected the following officers Monday night: president, J. V. Mann, c/ucl; counsel, Vincent Rethman, e'39; and secretary, Marvin Funk, gr. Buy GOOD shoe repairing Our Prices are RIGHT! OYLER'S SHOE SHOP 1346 Ohio The Venus Beauty Salon The Venus Beauty Salon Individual Booths Five Experienced Carers Featuring Cosmetics Vera Aderholm. Manager Phone 387 First floor, 842 Mass. George M. Flint, son of Prof. and Mrs. L. N. Flint, is visiting in Lawrence for a week. He will then go to San Antonio, Texas, where he is home office representative of the Acta Life Insurance company. Miss Jane Allen, 37, daughter of Dr. Forrest C. Allen, left Tuesday evening for California, where she will attend Leland Stanford University. Miss Allen is a member of the Pi Beta Phi sorority. All old members of the K.U. Dames, an organization of married women students and wives of students, will meet tonight in the wom- ne's room. An administration building at 8 o'clock. All members are urged to attend. Fred Cook, Dodge City, was nl luncheon guest at the Delta Upsilon fraternity yesterday. Mrs. Fisher of Leavenworth was a visitor Monday afternoon and evening at Watkins hall. The pledges of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity entertained the pledges of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority with a baskin brook grove Monday evening. Sigma Kappa entertained Phi Delta Theta with an hour dance last evening. ☆ ☆ ★ Kappa Alpha Theta entertained Phi Kappa Psi last evening with an hour of dancing. Miss Jean Eubert and Miss Joan James were luncheon guests at the Pi Beta Phi house Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Flint of Poria, Ill. 111, have returned home after spending the week at the home of Prof. and Mrs. L. N. Flint. Chi Omega entertained Sigma Alpha Epsilon with an hour dance Tuesday evening. Dorothy Curry, Miller hall, visiter her parents, Dr. and Mrs. L. A. Curry in Topeka, Saturday and Sunday. ☆ ☆ ☆ Venereal Disease Clinic Unattended by Afflicted The Boone county clinic is for those people who cannot afford to pay for treatment of venereal diseases. Each patient is charged 25 cents to pay for the medicine used. The doctor is matched by the doctors and the hospital. Columbia, Mo., Sept. 21—(UP)—Dr. J. T. Capless, director of t h Boeon county venereal disease clinic, said that only a small number of cases were treated at the Boeon county hospital where the clinic is located. Dr. Caples urged those who thought they might have syphilis or gonorrhea, or might have been come to the clinic for examination. a doctor explained that the next goal of the Public Health Service of the United States was the eradication of syphilis. He said that this would be achieved in a year's time if the diseased would submit to treatment. Recent information discloses that the structure of the buried rocks underlying Kangaroo is much more conditioned is indicated by surface conditions. Kansas Rocks Are Complex Sub-Surface Laboratory Organized by K an s a s Geological Survey Accordingly, the Kansas Geological Survey has this fall organized a sub-surface laboratory, under the direction of Raymond Keroher. It is the purpose of this laboratory to study in insulating residues and other techniques in the use of all parts of Kansas, so as to determine more accurately the thickness and structure of the various buried formations. Need Accurate Knowledge Need Articulation More accurate knowledge of subsurface chemistry is highly important to the oil and gas industry, said Dr. R. C. Moore, state geologist and head of the department of geology at the university. While at present the main oil production is in western Kansas, and some of the survey's projects are now focused there, supplementing work carried on by private enter- tors will be active also in eastern Kansas. Dr. G. E. Abernathy, recently added to the staff of the Geological Survey, is gathering new information in the southeastern counties of the state, and J. M. Jewett has been added to parts of neighborhood counties. Working with Petroleum Group This work, says Dr. Moore, is planned not only with reference to the renewed activities in the shallow fields of the eastern part of the state, where repressing and other methods are increasing with prolific reference to increasing knowledge of sub-surface geology in central and western Kansas. In conjunction with the project, the Survey is cooperating with the new petroleum engineering department of the University, wherein Prof. Engene Stephenson, newly appointed to the faculty, is developing a research program in petroleum engineering at the Missouri School of Mines, and for the past few years a petroleum engineer for Cities Service at Bardesville, Okla., has been added to the State Geological staff staff as a research assistant in petroleum engineering. He is rapidly setting up the new laboratory equipment for the Survey and department's use. Missouri Traps M Wolves Frederickton, Mo. Sept. 21—(U.T.) Tapney, Pa.) Kemp stored his traps until the opening of the fur season, convinced that he had done his part in exterminating wolves in southeast Missouri. Kemp recently killed his ninety-sixth wolf. Miscourian Trans 96 Wolves WE SERVE LARGE CAFE Regular Meals Plate Lunches Quality Beverages Free Shrimp Friday Evening 18 E. 9th Nation-wide Contributions May Erect New Eugene Field Memorial Plans for the proposed national Eugene Field Memorial with a statue of Little Boy Blue to be erected in St. Joseph are progressing steadily and the campaign for funds, conducted on a national scale, will soon begin. The architect's drawing of the memorial, in the form of an exedra situated on Lovers' Lane, has been completed by the St. Joseph firm of Eckel & Aldrich, the designers who collaborated with Hermon A. MacNell, the New York college and bas-reliefs, Pink Minisaur granite will form the background for the bronze figure of "Little Boy Blue," and his toys. On the upper part of the central figure will be a portrait medallion of Eugene Sarge surroundedy by carved verses of certain of his poems. On one side is a monochrome image and has inscriptions of "Wyken, Blynken and Nod" and "The Little Peach." W. S. Aldrich, the architect, winner of the Rotch travel scholarship, was later a student at the American Academy of Fine Arts in Rome for three years, and was director of the academy for one year. His contemporaries and fellow students were MacNeil, the sculptor; John Russel Pallery, designer of the Mellon Art Gallery; George Beck the mural painter; and Ellhu Vedder, Jr., the painter. the sculptor, MacNeil, spent several years studying and working abroad. Establishing his studio in New York, his first memorial was the one to President McKinley in Columbus, Ohio. He has done war memorials for Alany and Philadelphia, executed the statue of Erz Cornell for Ithaca, N.Y., and the Fort Sumter Memorial at Charleston, S.C. The most important of his architectural works is the building of the U.S. Supreme Court building. His medalistic work includes the United States quarter dollar in 1916. Funds for the memorial are to be raised by a nation-wide campaign, including contributions from school children and college students as well as from large donors. A committee of former residents of St. Joseph formed to aid this work includes Gen Malin Craig, chief of staff, U. S.A.; Walter W. Head, president of the national council of the Boy Scouts of America; Erik E. Hollis of Kansas City; and Harold Hall, assistant general manager of the New York Times, who once held down Field's old desk as city editor of the St. Joseph Gazette. A special university and college division committee includes Dr. Edward Hardrigs Griggs, author and lecturer; Frederick A. Middlesbrough, president of the University of Missouri; and Homer Croy, novelist and playwright. Let Your Mind Alone By James Thurber (Author of My Life and Hard Times) $2.50 The Book Nook 1021 Mass. St. Ancient Dart Interests Visitors Jack Cotter, field director of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia for an expedition in the southwest this summer, and William Clark of the same institution, lurbed with perf. Loren C Eisley of the sociology department at the University Club Tuesday. For the past three years the expedition has made excavations in New Mexico, during the first two weeks of the program. Professor Elsayn accounted them. Both Clark and Cotter expressed regret that Dyche museum was not open, as they had hoped to see the extinct bison which Prof. S.W. Jenkins and H. T. Martin had published open at the turn of the century. This case, in which a dart was associated with an extinct type of bison, was similar to another discovered by Cotter and Clark, which also had a dart-head in the vertebra. In addition, they reported that more discoveries in Folsom place covered unimassed lands again. These discoveries were made in the dead lake regions around Portales and Clovis, N. M. From a cave in the Guadalupe mountains, the expedition secured the remains of a number of small mammals. The cave in the past has yielded the remains of a musk ox, extinct American camel, and horse, in association with the Folsom dirt point. It is hoped these creatures will throw more light on the possible return of the Folsom culture. Golf Fan Plays 147 Holes in a Day According to Professor Eaisley, C. P. Schultz, of the University of Nebraska, who has recently been specializing in a study of the rodents of the last portion of the glial age, is highly enthusiastic about the species discovered, and optimistic about the light they may cast upon the time of extinction of many late Pleistocene animals. B Morris turned in a 555, 33 strokes under par for that many holes on the course. Warrenens, Mo., Sept. 21—(UP) Whom Morris, local golf fun fair, will host this weekend, will be the Warmonsburg course one day last week "just for the fun of it." B RICK'S "ON THE HILL" SAVE 10% Buy a Meal Ticket $2.50 Ticket (Value $2.75) $5.00 Ticket (Value $5.50) Flair for Fashion Rich dark shades in velvety suede are so necessary this season. That is why you will want this new Simplex Co-ed Dragon pattern in your fall shoe wardrobe. The tongue on this shoe may be worn up or down. Weaver's black, brown and navy $6.50 Simplex CO-ED Flair for Fashion implex CO-ED Simplex CO-ED "Big Apple" VARSITY A Three-Star Attraction FEATURING ★ Trucking Contest (To Find the Hill's Best Trucker) The Two Steppers (Sensational Colored Dance Team ★ Dale "Brody" Schroff (As Master of Ceremonies) LOUIE KUHN'S ORCHESTRA STAGS Friday, Sept. 24 Watch the Kansan for More Details. 75c -DATES PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22, 1937 . Daily Kansan Gives Frosh Biographies Sports Editor Writes "Thumbail Sketches" To Acquaint Readers With New Men By Elon Torrence, c'38 Asst. Sports Editor Monte Merkel is one of the huge tackles from Chicago. Merkel stands 5 feet 11 inches, weighs 233 pounds, and plays in the tackle position. His pre school was St. John's Military Academy, where he made three letters in football as well as six letters in soccer. He also distinction of being the best all-around athlete and scholar in the academy. This is the first installment of a series of "minute biographies" of members of the freshman football squad to be presented by the University Daily Kansan to acquaint the readers with the personnel of the squad. No attempt is made at alphabetic transcription, but importance, rather as it has been possible to gather the facts from interviews with the players. Dick Driscoll; Driscoll's home is Russell. There he made three letters in football and captained his team through the season and weighs 157. Position, halfback. Howard Martin is the other large tackle hailing from Chicago. He is feet 1 inch tall and weighs 232. Martin attended the Morgan Park Military Academy and lettered three times in football. Halden Hooper is a guard who lettered four years under Freshman Coach Conger at Smith Center. Coach Conger 176 and is 3 feet 8 inches tall. A name history in recent Jay-hawker history will be kept alive by a guard candidate from Williams-town, Ralph Schanke. Schanke is in 7th place with 142 pounds. He attended high school a Perry but did not compete in football Frank O'Leary, Melrose, Mass. Height, 6 feet 1 inch. Weight, 16.0 O'Leary made one letter at Melrose and earned one at St John's Prep. H. D. Fulk, Jr., is a halfback candidate from the western edge of the state, coming from Goodland where he played for 14 games and carries 102 pounds and is 6 feet tall Ralph Meller probably needs no introduction. This all-sport star from Chanute lettered four times in football. Three times he was selected on the Southeast Kansas League all-star team at a halfback position, and was selected as captain twice. Miller also captured his own team in his senior year. Height. 6 feet $ _{1/2} $ inches. Weight. 171 pounds. Lloyd Savely is a halfback from Greensburg. Savely made four letters and captained his team two years, the last year being an undefeated 15. He rushed a ritter over Dodge City. Savely is 6 feet tall and weighs 155. W. F. Jack. Jack is a 205-pound tackle candidate from Caney, Height. 6 feet 3 inches. Letters: two at Caney (left), three at Bartlesville, Oka., Okla. high school. Charles Wenstand is a three football-letterman from Leewearn, playing in the end position. In his senior year, Wenstand made the Northern Kansas League all-star and he averaged 6 feet tall and weighed 170 pounds. Among the end candidates is John Burge, St. Louis. Burge attended McKinley High School and lettered three times, twice being chosen all-city. He tips the scale at 180 pounds and is 6 feet tall. Bussen is a 6-foot 3-inch, 197-pound backlash from Overland Park. He attended Shawnee Mission High School, lettering twice in football and making the all-Northeast Kansas League team in his senior year. Hockey Team Practices On Tuesdays and Thursdays Practice for women's hockey team will be held on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 4:30 o'clock on the hockey field south of Robinson gymnasium. All women are invited to attend and try out for positions on the team. Last year the team played games with the teams from Baker University and Washburn College, and it is hoped that games with these schools can be arranged for this year. It is not essential that one know the game to come out for practice, as according to the coach, very often it will be first play before they start playing here. Adagio Dancers Organize The adagio dancing class which took part in the "Mardi Gras" of last year's dance recital has started working for the year. Anyone interested in joining the class should be in touch with B. F. Humphrey. Men's Program Gets Under Way Entry blanks for participation in the fall schedule of intramural sports were sent out yesterday to the fraternities and various organizations that expressed their interest in being part for the sweepstakes cup. With more than six hundred men participating last year, intramural sports were considered very successful by the intramural director, Prof. E. R. Elibel. With interest up, another big year is expected. Entry blanks have been sent to all organizations having four or more men. If any organization has been overlooked, they are removed and part in intramural sports, the intramural office is open to anyone who wishes to register. Following is the schedule of fall intramural sports: horseshoe pyramid; tennis pyramid; handball pyramid; team tennis; team handball; team horseshoes; 11-man touch football; and 6-man touch football. German Language Table To Be Held This Afternoon The German Language Table will hold its first meeting of the year today in the Memorial Union lounge at 5:30 p.m. The Table will meet on every Wednesday at the same time throughout the year. The Table is open to everyone who wants to speak German or to hear it spoken. Everyone will buy his own dinner and the meeting is usually over by 7 p.m. The Table is not connected with the German club. Everyone interested is invited to attend. Britain Will Test Reaction to Withdrawal Ration 10 London, Sept. 21—(UP) It was reported unofficially tonight that the British government shortly will approach the United States to learn what the reaction would be in Washington if Britain would withdraw her ambassador from Tokyo. The foreign office would not cor ment upon the report. Noon Is Deadline on Tickets All University women wishing to purchase tickets to the Lantern Parade will be sponsored by the University row evening at 6 p.m. should do so before noon today. Reservations may be made at Henley House. . Varsity Not Up to Form Second Scrimmage Is Far Infertior to First Workout on Monday An afternoon composed mostly of work on fundamentals was climaxed yesterday afternoon by a half hour's scrimmage by the variosity football squad. This was the second scrimmage of the season and the team looked far inferior to the form displaced in Monday's workout. The first-string backfield composed of Divae and Repiagle, half-backs; Shirk, fullback, and Meier, quarter was being rushed too fast JOHN JAMES and didn't have much time to get PAUL MASONER LLOYD gains. Divens at- tempted three punts during the session and had two of them blocked. Paul Masonier reported to the field sick and was not in uniform. George Stapleton was also unable to respond and position was handled by "Whitey" Huff. There may be another scrimage session today with the hope of getting a 'smoother working outfit' for Saturday's game with the fresh. The second-string backfield was made up of Sullivan, who starred in Monday's scrimmage, Weinecke, Amerine and Douglass. The University Daily Kansas delivered to your door for only $3.00 a year. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. 641 Louisiana Graduates Get Good Positions Phone 894 W. H. Quenakub, Pres. E. S. Weatherby, Supt. Professor Sluss Elected at Dinner A. H. Sluss, professor of machine construction at the University of Kansas, was elected president of the Kansas City section of the American Society of Heating and Ventilating Engineers at a dinner meeting in Kansas City, Mo., Monday evening. Features of the evening's program were talks by Ivan C. Crawford dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, speaking on "Professional Development of the Engineer," and R. L. Grider, associate professor of mining engineering, who told of experiences in prospecting of the Miners' Delight mine at Atlantic City, Wyo. Others from the University attending the meeting were Ralph S. Tait, associate professor of mechanical and industrial engineering, and Art Whitney, instructor in the department. President Sluss said monthly dinner meetings are to be held, usually in Kansas City, but with occasional meetings at the University. Blue Rapids, Sept. 21. —(UP)—Charles H. Wagoner, local dairyman and melon grower believes if he could tame a crow and teach it to pick watermelons he would have ripe melon selector in the world. Charles H. Wagonen Says, "Crows Find Best Ripe Melons" “When a crow goes into a patch to pick a ripe melon he never misses. I've watched them at the business for years,” he said. Along the Sideline By William Fitzgerald, c'39 Kansas Sports Editor The Chicago Cubs, with a fighting chance for the National League pennant, moved to within 1½ games of victory yesterday afternoon by beating their New York rivals 7-5. There are only two weeks of play remaining and the two teams meet again today and tomorrow to complete a series that may decide whom the New York Yankees will play in the World's Series. The Giants and the Red Sox face off at Melton and Carl Hubbell, to throw at the Cubs, but Chicago is baseball mad and will be playing inspired baseball. We'd certainly like to be in Chicago this afternoon. To get a line on Nebraska this year you have to get an idea of Nebraska's line. "Biff" Jones has seven letterm in the starting line: Dohrmann and Richardson, end; Doyle and Shirey, tackles; Mehring and English, guards; and Broek, center. And he came up with a mere 197 pounds with Doyle, the big boy of the team, at 222 Mehring, a guard, will be the midget of the line at 174, but he makes up for his lack in weight through experience, speed and aggressiveness. Meanwhile Jones is still worried about his backs, although he three letterm with the team, with a big, brusing sophomore, McIravy, at fulback. The Huskers don't have too much to fear in the Big Six unless Missouri keeps up that rapid development. The increased interest in freshman football this year is easily noticeable. The frosh look like something to write home about and every afternoon they draw their share of the fans. It looks good to have big tackles like Martin and Merkle around, and with such men as Ralph Miller and Ben Roethlisberger back pants and plunge through holes in the line, the game Saturday should be worth while. We're not even suggesting that the frosh will win, however. The varsity has too much experience and members have worked together too long and been sitting till the short. Nevertheless, the冠军 and a hisides, Stukey and Giannangelo, appear to be doing a good job with their recruits. ARRIVED TODAY--- The New Outer Door Garment "BUSH" JACKETS COLORS FOUR • Green Wine Brown Blue Tailored in Crompton Corduroy, Belt Around, Norfolk Style, four bellows pockets, loose back. A Jacket for Sport, Campus and Day Wear. A 'HONEY' OF A GARMENT See them in our windows The Price $5.85 CARL'S We heard a fellow remark yesterday that it was going to seem good to have Glenn Prenell on our side rather than having him hammering the sword in the end of the game. Prenell ranks on the all-time all-Nebraska team and was an all-Amer- nean halfback his senior year at Nebraska. And don't think Prenell didn't make things tough on Kansas. Ask the old timers. He's a welcome addition to the Kansas staff, not only because he knows his football but beware of his teammates and the players really like him. With Prenell and Getto, former all-American tackle from Pitt, Kansas has two all-Americans as coaches. The Jayhawkers play Arizona U. at Tuson Nov. 20 as part of Arizona's homecoming activities. Last year Kansas surprised the experts by holding the Bursar Conference for a special memorial stadium. A week later Michigan State, one of the country's leading teams, had plenty of trouble beating the Wildcats 7-0. Coach Tex Oliver lost 11 lettermen from last season to 38 left, to work with and hopes to be even tougher than in 1936. Admission 80c plus 10c tax The ONE Dance Nite Come to Kansas City's JUBILESTA SEPT 17-25 Municipal Auditorium Saturday, Sept. 25 Continuous Music ★ BENNY GOODMAN Emperor of Swing ISHAM JONES and His Orchestra Jam Dance Session! BALANCE 2.50 Linked together for your pleasure in Chesterfield Cigarettes Chesterfield CIGARET Copyright 1937 LIGGETT & MVERS TOBACCO Co. Better Tasting ...because they're made of MILD RIPE tobaccos ... only Chesterfields give smokers that refreshing mildness and delightful aroma that taste that smokers like . . . ...it's because Chesterfield links together blends and cross-blends-the finest aromatic tobaccos from Turkey and Greece and the best mild ripe cigarette tobaccos from our own Sunny South- Enjoy Chesterfields . . . THEY SATISFY 5 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas A VOLUME XXXV Frosh Rally For Grid Tilt With Varsity Demonstration at 7:30 Tonight in Southeast End of Stadium; Conger To Bring Squad The Ku Kua, Jay James, and "Ki men will sponsor a freshman rally tomorrow night at 7:30 in the southeast end of the stadium. The rally committee has secured the suppor of the freshmen in all organizer efforts (otherly, urged to come out and help stimulate enthusiasm for the squad which will match brawn with the varisity thi Saturday. Ralph Conger, freshman coach will be at the rally to introduce members of the freshman squad to the crowd. Martha Starr, who was presented at the mid-week last night as the JOHN P. HALL COACH RALPH CONGER woman chosen by the Ku Ku's as a freshman pep leader, will assist the cheerleaders in directing the vells. Following the rally the freshme are invited to attend a free picture show at the Granada theatre. Slides which have been made of the yellts that will be used throughout the season, will be thrown on the screen and will be turned over to the rally commen- dity session of cheers and a free show. In this event the upperclasman must take a back seat, for arrangements have been made to take care they may visit their rest may find seats where they can. on the SHIN by Virgil Mitchell LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1937 Expose: For the benefit of the readers we are exposing Gene Lloyd, K.U. racket man all of long standing. We want all three of you to know that Gene is trying to get a corner on all the "Vodka Vests" in town so as to make some creature fall over. The conditions cool down to where there will be a demand for back-to-the-soil fed. Lloyd is about 5 feet, 7 inches tall, and is five pounds overweight. His complexion is dark and he has a most uncomfortable look in his eye. If you see this man, cross the street. Shinning around: The A.T.O.'s now have a radio station as well as a station wagon. Seems as though the boys want to get closer to the campus. Someone suggested that they might start attending classes from those of Brick's and other hangouts to the Crimson and the Blue—Fred Littty has once again become a victim of circumstances. This time the blame goes to Doris Johnson, Kappa slayer of men, who inveigled the Beta model into the Cottage for the afternoon jam session. Perhonen was very popular, a hot spot was blacklisted by the Beta's who think it below their dignity to mingle with the common hoipoi Now the ice is broken? Idea: Wonder if Sally Joe Dempsey could tell the difference between her Barley and Bob McNaughten? —Daisy Hoffmann can't sing and so she won't try. Wish some of the other gals were that way inclined. —Erke of the Pi Pb!s is on the loose since Townley got interested in the charms of the big city.—Jim Bradford sings as a blues player, though they old sentiment ditties about "being somebody's sweetheart." —Daffynion Fan Dancer: A mudist with a cooling system. Things are getting back into the old swing, what with the mid-week last night story can be the case for the library. The stag line was the longest ever formed this Continued on page 2 Identification Cards To Be Distributed Today To Be Distributed Today Distribution of identification cards will begin this morning in central Administration building. Activity books must be presented to secure the cards. Students are urged to carry their identification cards at all times, since they are required for admittance to many University functions. Beginning Saturday, all cards not yet called for will be distributed from the business office. Choose Men For Glee Club Twenty New Singers Selected From Eighty Aspirants Tuesday Twenty new men have been selected from 80 aspirants to fill the vacancies in the Men's Glee club. The club is the senior member of the club up to S2 members. After the last man had been heard at 11 o'clock Tuesday night, the officers of the club and Joseph F Wilkins, director, discussed the merits of each applicant and finally arrived at their decisions. "Competition was astoundingly keen," said Professor Wilkins. "There was only an increment of difference in many of the voices. Thus the selections were very difficult." The new members chosen are as follows: first tenors, Bockrao Gordon Day, Milburn Griffith, Gordon Day, Harry Patton, Bill Overton. Second tenors—Raymond Watson Barley Cunningham, Jarvis Brink Hugh Siman and Ira Layton. tones—Richard White, Charles Pierson, Lyman Harrison, and Douglas Tarbet. Baritones—Richard White, Charles Pierson, Lyman Harrison, and Douglas Tarbet. Basses—Ira Scott, Herbert Regier, Everett Buhler, Dwight Kurth, and James Giddings. These men bring the totals of the sections up to 12,14,13 and 13, respectively as listed above From the rest of those who tried out it is expected that there will be a waiting list compiled from which excasion vacancies will be filled. The officers of the club are Harry O'Riley, president; Loren MacCormack, vice-president; Claude Durez, business manager; Jack Laffer, supervisor; Vernon Landon, librarian; and Louis Focke, public manager. The first rehearsal of the entire club will be held Monday at 4:30 in room 32 Administration building Practice will start immediately on new literature and material for the annual tour and other appearances CSEP Age Limit Will Be Enforced Raymond D. Nichols, executive secretary to Chancellor E. H. Lindley, said today that, contrary to his hopes, all CSEP students must relinquish their jobs upon becoming 4 years of age. The students four students on the Hill, who will become 25 before the current school year is over. Fifty members and apprentices of the Dramatics Club enjoyed a Dutch lunch and informal program in Fraser theater last Tuesday evening. The 25 apprentices were introduced formally made members of the club. Citing a letter received Tuesday from the CSEP headquarters, Mr. Nichola said that specific orders had been reached in an effort to reach the age limit, although that rule had not been observed during the past year. As the first number on the program, the theatre stage was the scene of a "Big Apple" session. After a D lunch clinic, the program continued with a piano solo by Art Wolf, a duet by the famous Joe Myers-Jim Bradley combination, a chorus number of Kappa Kappa Gamma and a piano solo by Prof. Aller Crafton. Dramatic Club Members Entertain Apprentices Garr Brothers Denied Bond Petition Shellyville, Ky., Sept. 23 (UP)—The three Garr brothers, "Doc" Jack, and Roy, charged with the "retiree" case of Jeffrey W. DenHart, were denied a petition for release under bond today by Judge Harry F. Walters. KFKU Inaugurates 13th Year First Program Monday Night Will Inaugurate New Series of One-Act Plays For the thirteenth consecutive school year, station KFKU Monday night will resume its broadcasting of informative talks, music and drama. Many new programs are to be offered throughout the entire year, but the details of the semester week are not be completed until next week. The opening program will inaugurate a new series of one-act plays and sketches of campus life, and will be presented by the radio playing company from the department of speech and dramatic art under the direction of Rolla Nuckles, instructor in the department. We will be given Monday evening will be entitled, "The Barge of Time". NUMBER 11 Another new program, "Spotlighting the News," will be a weekly feature beginning Tuesday evening, Sept. 28, at 6 p.m. This broadcast will be opened with a summary of the outstanding events of the preceding week. Mr. George Church of the journalism department will gather the material and read the summary. Following this summary Mr. Maloney will present more interesting events, which will be written and directed by Martin Maloney III, assistant instructor in the department of English. The remaining programs for the week will be composed entirely of musicals, including a soprano recital by Marie Wilkins, concert from the studio of Dean D. S. Swarthout, and Mary Jane Bruce from the studio of Prof. Carl C. Preyer; the KFKU string tric composed of Homer Dodge Caine, violinist; Savali Mohler, cellist; and Nicola Benedetti, violinist; Jayhawk trumpeteers, Louis Master, Leo H麓chr, and Bob Boyle. Further plans and schedules for the KFKU "School of the Air" program and additional new features will be announced next week. "World War in Spain" will be offered for discussion by the Y.M.C.A. forums board, headed by Greg Hines, c'38, at the second "Y" assembly this afternoon at 4:30 o'clock in the men's lounge of the Memorial Union building. Paul Moritz, c'39, will preside. Y.M.C.A. Forums Board To Discuss Spanish War John L. Hunt, general secretary of the present will, "open the discussion with the background for the present conflict, speaking on the people, geography, and resources of Spain. David Angevine, c 39, will follow with a resume of political events in the Iberian peninsula from the overthrow of the monarchy in 1931 through the "piracy" phase of the present revolution. The disbandment of the Métodist movement and questions from the floor. The Rev. Charles C. Webber, secretary of the Methodist Episcopal Federation for Social Service, had been scheduled to speak at the assembly, but will not be present because of a change in his plans. A football coach who had a squad of 85 boys in a school of 165 male pupils, and whose teams have lost only 13 games in 13 years of coaching, the Akron Chattah coach at the University of Kansas. His name is Ralph L. Conger. FIRE GUTS APARTMENT Woodward coached the Hays teams Fire, believed to have been started by a lighted cigarette, last night gutted the apartment of John L. Hunt, secretary of the Y.M.C.A., at the Williams apartment, 1045 Kentucky. Bob Bailey, b.38, and Oscar Hassel, curel, who live in the adjoining apartment, notified the fire department and were forced to flee from the back door when flames blocked the front entrance. At the moment, Conger is working his yearling squad hard in preparation for the game Saturday when he will be taking on varsity team in the Jayhawks' season opener. The freshman material is the best in years, but with only nine days of practice before the season comes, he sees a dark outlook for his men. The fire, starting in the daven at about midnight, was believed to have been caused by a lighted cigarette. The fire was removed by the local firemen. No exact estimate of the damage caused by the fire could be given last night, but Fire Chief Paul Ingalls expressed the belief that the damage would run into hundreds of dollars owing to smoke and water. The 2½-year-old daughter of the Hunts was carried from the blazing apartment by Tsugu Hidala, Japanese student who lives with Mr. and Mrs. Hunt. Mr. Hunter was at home at the time of the blaze. A cocker spaniel belonging to Hunt was carried out of the apartment by firemen, who were obliged to hold him on the floor and re-enter the blazing apartment. With Dale "Brody" Schroff as master of ceremonies and Louie Kuhn's band furnishing the swing, the "Big Apple" variosity to be held tomorrow night will be entirely different from anything ever presented on the Hill, according to Paul Kihm, dance manager. There will be a "truckin" contest with the best "busters" on the floor each receiving eight passes to the Granada theater and two passes to varisty dances. Second place winners will receive a granada from Granada theater. An orchid corsage will be given to the woman winner of the first place team. 'Big Apple' Will Be Sliced Tomorrow Played Football at Hays Conger is not new to contact with the University for he played his college football under two K.U. football heroes of byeone eras. "Hooked on the New Jayhawker freshman mentor graduated from Hays Teachers College in the spring of 1924 after being a member of Hays team in 1921, 1922 and 1923. Hays won the Kansas Conference championship in 1921, Conger's sophomore year. Judges for this "truckin" contest will be Virgil Mitchell, Jim Coleman, and Bob Pierson. Freshman Coach Ralph Conger Known for Winning Football Games The "Two Steppers," two negro students of the University, will give an exhibition of the Harlem style of "truckin." Then there is the "Apple Session," which to dancers is the same as the "jam session" to musicians, any type of dancing being permitted. Many University women were welcomed at the W.G.S.A. tea given in the lounge of Central Administration building yesterday afternoon by Dors Stockwell, president of the organization. The "Big Apple" varsity is sued to begin at 9 p.m. in the Memorial Union ballroom. W.S.G.A. Reception Held for New Students Played Football at Hays Miss Elizabeth Meguiar, adviser to women, and Miss Else Neuenschwander, professor of Romance languages, poured. The decorations were carried out in yellow and d bronze chrysanthemums and candles. that Conger played on in 1921 and 1922, with Weidlein as assistant coach. In 1923 Woodward went to Washburn and Weidlein stepped into the position of head coach. During these three years Conger played halfback, although in high school he had been an end. Coached in High Schools After graduating from Hays, he took a position as coach at Glen Elder high school, where his football teams lost two games his first year there, were undefeated the next year and lost one game in his third year at that school. Following this successful start in t he coaching profession, Conger moved over to Smith Center where he joined the team. He defeated teams came out of Smith Center during those ten years and among the stars he produced were Lyman Divers and Forrest Hardace, members of the present KU- Record for Getting Boys Out Smith Center played in no con- ference so Coger made a practice of playing the best two teams it Continued on page 3 President To G u a g e N at i t o nal Sentinel On His Administrative Objectives Abbott President Roosevelt's Special Traint, Sept. 22 —(UPC)—President Roosevelt left tonight across New York state en route to the West American coast, where he met with the social, economic and judicial objectives of his administration. Although the route of his 10-car special train lay through big eastern and midwestern cities, Mr. Roosevelt planned no personal appearances until he reaches Cheyenne, Wyo. Friday morning. Will Sneak in West After that the President will swing through Wyoming, Idaho, Oregon Washington, Montana, North Dakota and Texas. He will also swirl to Washington, D.C., via Chicago. Rear-platform appearances providing opportunities for the President to speak 15 or 30 minutes to crowds around his private car will be made in each state. Mr. Roosevelt will inspect federal power and reclamation projects in Oregon, Washington and Idaho. Wyoming, Montana Important Wyoming, Montana Import Political interest centers about the President's activities in Wyoming and Montana. They are the home of Mr. McDonnell and Joseph C. O Mahoney and Burton K. Wheeler, who led opposition to the defeated supreme court program. The President's judgment of the public attitude toward his program is expected to be revealed after he returns Oct. 6. If he feels the people are behind him, he may once more seek to liberalize the high tribunal. It also was considered possible that Mr. Roosevelt's decision on whether to provide a special seat in Congress to a minimum wage and farm control legislation depended on this 6000-mile journey across the country and back. To Visit Daughter in Seattle The announced purpose of the President's trip was to visit his son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. John Boettger of Seattle. The President and Mrs. Boettger will be there next Tuesday night. Wednesday and Wednesday night. Mr. Roosevelt was in a jovial mood with his 16-car special train carrying three clerical secretaries, 21 news paper reporters, eight photographers, broadsheets, and secret service men, let Hyde Park, NY, at 5 p.m. EST. Residence Board Acts on Petitions From a list of 68 petitions from students seeking residence status in the University, there have been 21 rejections. The board determined residence qualifications has granted a total of 37, and at present there are 10 which have not yet been acted upon. There have been three meetings of the board, headed by Henry Werner, men's student adviser, on Friday and Saturday afternoons of last week, and Tuesday morning, Sept. 21. The remaining petitions will be considered in the next meeting, to be held soon. Chrysler Workers Demand Wage Increase Detroit, Sept. 22. —(UP) The United Automobile Workers of America tonight disclosed that it had presented to Chrysler demands for higher wages and per hour for the manufacturer's 50,000 production employees. A corporation spokesman said the new wage demand had been received. "Therefore, there is no comment," the spokesman said. Authorized Parties Friday. September 24 Friday, September 24 Beta Theta Pi, Dance, Chapter House, 11:30 p.m. Lutheran Student Association, Hike, 9:00 p.m. Oread House, 1225 Oread, Dance, 12:00 p.m. Varsity, Memorial Union Ballroom. 12:00 p.m. Elizabeth Mequir, Adviser to Women, for the Joint Committee on Student Affairs. Fees Deadline Announced It was announced yesterday at the Business office of the University that few more than three thousand of the 4000 students enrolled had paid their fees. With the deadline at 5 o'clock today, the Bursar urges everyone who has not yet paid his fees to do so and avoid the 50 cents a day penalty which will be imposed starting tomorrow. Traditional Event Tonight Y.W.C.A. Sponsors Annual Lantern Parade For University Women Jane Roberts, c38, and Burrie Dalton, c39, will supply the group with Japanese lanterns and, with lighted lanterns, the line will march from the Union building to the University of New York Stockwell, c39, president of the W.S.G.A., and Eleanor Slaten, c38, president of the Y.E.W.C.A., will make short speeches. Group singing will be led by Alice Russell, fa39, and Ellen Payne, executive secretary of the U.S. Army to the Union Memorial building, the parade will pass in front of Oread High. Velma Wilson, c40, and Margaret Stough, fa38, are in charge of the plans for this annual autumn The traditional Lantern Parade, under the supersides of the W.S.G.A. and the Y.W.C.A. will be held this evening at 6 p.m. for all University women. The group will assemble in the lounge of the Union Memorial Hall on Friday and have charge of the supper and program to be given in the ballroom. K.U. Band Will Parade Annual Fall Unveiling Scheduled for Tonights Prizes Offered The University of Kansas Band will be one of four bands which will parade in the 16th annual fall unveiling a Lawrence store window this evening. The K.U. and Liberty Memorial High School bands will march up and down Massachusetts street from South Park to Sixth Street, while the Haskell Institute Band and Dorsey-Liberty American Legion Drum and Bugle Corps will march from the first direction to the two former bands. The parade will be continuous between 7:45 and 8:45 o'clock. This semi-annual event staged by the downtown merchants is always an attraction for University students and draws a large crowd from Lawrence and surrounding trade-territory. The popular guessing contest will again be bald. More than forty merchants will offer prizes to the persons who guess most nearly correctly the total value of the merchandise displayed in the various windows. It is estimated that more than 25,000 persons were entrants in this contest last year. Entry blanks may be obtained at any of the local stores; each merchant will have a box in which to deposit the blank* Suspect in Fascist Plot In France Sent to Brest Paris, Sept. 23 (Thursday).—(UP) Major Julian Troncino, Spanish rebel reported implicated in a Fasist plot to provoke an uprising in southern France, was hustled from jail in September and day and put aboard a train for Brest. Police decided to remove Troncoo to Brest, where an attempt was made last weekend to hijack the Spanish Loyalist submarine C-2, to avoid incidents along the FrancoSpanish front where insurgents have threatened reprisals because of the major's arrest. Private piano lessons for children given by advanced students in piano-teaching courses, are now offered by the School of Fine Arts. Piano Students To Give Private Lessons These lessons, under the supervised instruction of Prof. G. Cris Simpson, argo open to the first 10 students in arrangements at the Fine Arts office. A fee of $5 is charged for the term of 18 weeks. Applications should be made at once as classes have already begun. W.A.A. Holds Intramural Meet Today Kappa Kappa Gamma To Receive Cup as Last Year's Champion; P i Phi Second The Women's Athletic association will hold its annual sports pow-wow today at 4:30 p.m. in the Robinson gymnastium. This meeting is designed for people who are interested in W.A.A. or in competing in this year's intramural sports. Persons who desire to participate in the intramural games, with an organized group, will be assigned to teams at the pow-wow. Tau Sigma To Dance The women will be welcomed by Ruth Baker, president of W.A.A. and the manager of each sport will explain her sport program. The managers are: Maxine Woody, hockey; Mary K. Lattner, volleyball; Tiffany C. Foster, Jane Blaney, swimming; Irene Moll, tennis; Lucile Bottom, minor sports; Helen Ward, rifle; and Catherine Dunkel, president of Tau Sigma. Catherine Dunkel and Betty Smith have planned a short dance program to be given by Tau Sigma. The intramural cup for last year's winner will be awarded to Kappa Kappa Gamma for the fourth consecutive year. This cup is earned on the basis of total points amassed during the year. Kappa Kappa Gamma had a total of 1,069 points, combined with h 1,059 points, and Corbin hall was third with 1,115 points. Kappa's Lead Kappa Kappa Gamma also had the largest number of women participating in intramurals during the 1970s. Alpha Theta was second with 33. Individual honors for points earned were won by Dorothy J. Willecult, Corbin hall, with 155 points; and Dorothy Lemoine, Pi Beta Phi, with 124, for the organized houses, and Dorothy Pulley, 122 points, for the independent women. **Winners To Be Announced** Winners in the individual sports will be announced as follows. Winnery Phi will cheer屋es match, Alpha Delta Phil; fall golf, Kappa Kappa Gamma (Betty Stephenson); tennis singles, Corbin hall (D. J. Willetts); handball, T.N.T. (M. M.rowd); deck tennis, T.N.T.; ping-pong singles, Kappa Kappa Gamma (Virginia Wallace); ping-pong doubles, Corbin ball, Corbin hall; basketball free throw, T.N.T. (T.Olsen Wilsler); tennis singles, Corbin hall (D. J. Willetts); tennis doubles, Corbin hall (D. J. Willetts); final match not played (finalists, Betty and Kay Stephen Housekeepers, horseshoes, L.W.; swimming, Peta Bhi; darts, Corbin hall (D. J. Willetts) U. S. Sharply Rebukes Japan Washington, Sept. 22. —(UP) The United States government in a new and sharply-worded note to Japan, today condemned the bombing of non-combatants in Nanking as "unwarranted and contrary to the principles of law and humanity," and expressed the "earnest hope t h a further bombing will be avoided." The note criticized as "inadequate" the amount of time given foreign diplomats and nationals of other countries. Nanking bombed the bombing began, and bluntly told Japan that this government doubts the ability of Japanese officials to safeguard the lives of foreigners or their property during an aerial bombardment. Women at Miller Hall Form Constitutional Organization Miller hall, the new women's dormitory, has adopted a constitution. The new constitution consists of three categories similar to the one at Watkins hall. It records the duties of officers, house rules, and allows for a social committee, flower committee, intramural sports manager, three formal dances a year, open house from 7 to 10 p.m., and other states, that, proctors for every floor shall be changed every two weeks, that the vice-president of the hall is also the W.S.G.A. of the various other rules and duties. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWBENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 23. 1937 ≈ Comment They Are Asking for It Students in the department of geology have posted a petition asking for the addition of a course in photography in the University curriculum. Murmurs of similar petitions in other departments point to a general demand and need for such a course. Photography, a relatively new field of science encompassing a large and growing expanse of knowledge, looms too large and is too much in the spotlight to be ignored by the University. It should consider this new science of pictures not as a goal in itself, but as a mechanical aid and tool in all the science subjects. Pictures supply a means of teaching for the educator, of recording scientific data that cannot be preserved in any other manner for the scientist, of reporting for the journalist. Enumerating, we are only able to scratch the surface. For instance, engineers are finding pictures invaluable in recording the progress of construction, to show details of design and in organizing notebooks wherein pictures replace sketches. Students in many departments cannot call their education complete until they have learned something of the principles of optics, the chemistry of development and printing of pictures, and of problems connected with exposure. They are demanding a course in this science at the University of Kansas. Arches And Autos Six hundred applicants and four hundred cases of fallen arches among them. . . that is the problem facing the newly elected Parking Committee. This committee had the responsibility of issuing permits and licenses for driving and parking on the Hill. Surely there can be discovered some far-reaching significance in this general collapse of the pedal extremities of frequenters of the Hill. Can it be the contention that automobiles will bring about the physical deterioration of the race, has at least received a ray of substantiation? Can it be that the almost vertical nature of Mount Oread has brought about this alarming prevalence of excuses for staying out of the army? Or do lots of persons just want licenses? Wassermann at O.U.? Yes! Wassermann at K.U.? No! Without fuss, without agitation, and without fear the University of Oklahoma has introduced compulsory Wassermann examination for new students. This test is to be administered in connection with the general health examination and the results of all tests are to be kept confidential, requiring only that the student having syphilis receive treatment as specified by law. Students at the University of Kansas desire that the Wassermann be included in our physical examination. Last year a sampling of student opinion showed no objection. This year new students taking the entrance examination have asked to be given this test, and now more students have volunteered for the Wassermann than can be handled by present hospital facilities. The Men's Student Council has petitioned the Board of Regents and the Chancellor to approve this examination. But administrative authorities would object that even the voluntary syphilis test would cause the general public to suspect that venereal disease was running rampant at our state university, and it it was no fit place for a decent child. However, the inclusion of the Wassermann in Oklahoma University's entrance examination, and in compulsory form at that, has not been accompanied by screening headlines and branding of that school as a den of infiquity. Another, and even less valid objection, is to the cost of administering this test. . Under the proposed setup the Wassermann test at the University of Kansas was to be financed as a federal project with federal funds. If the regents and Board of Health withhold their approval the money will be used for some other project—possibly the construction of a dam which may collapse upon completion. Side by Side On the Table Sat That John L. Lewis and William Green are the leaders of labor no one doubts, but where is the man who does not doubt where these two men are leading labor? For the past year the trend has been away from the labor-capital feud to that of a battle of brothers, and labor is losing much good ground as a consequence. Here are two men carrying much responsibility which they continually abuse, much to the consternation of labor and glee of the capitalists and dividend collectors. = Will the laboring classes tire of this banner-carrying drama? Will labor see the point and put a stop to the pro-capitalisite actions of Green and Lewis in their war on each other? Who will be the first to recognize the fact that laborers must be united at all costs if it is to realize its objectives? Jungle Law Or Civilized Justice? Law-abiding, justice-worshiping. America gsaped this week at news of the vengeance death of a retired army officer, slain in Kentucky by three brothers of the woman he is accused of murdering. The attitude of the killers, as reported in the papers, is shocking to any person (and that means almost everybody) who has the conventionally complacent outlook that everything is as it should be and "all's right with the world." 1 But here were three men who refused to sit quietly by and "see justice take its course." Their action, if explicable at all, was an expression of distrust of the American judicial system, amounting, by its violence, to an open condemnation. Can their indictment be quashed? We have done much in recent years to improve methods for apprehending criminals, yet our system of "rendering justice" is fundamentally the same as it was 300 years ago. Delay is the watchword, and offenders frequently serve longer terms before conviction than after. It is high time an efficiency expert were put to remodeling our creaking and outmoded courts. Capatin Kidd would turn over in his Davey Jones' locker, if he could hear us modern refer to those mysterious Mediterranean submarines as "pirates." Official University Bulletin Notices due at Chelsea's Office at 3 p.m., preceding regular publication days and 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Vol. 35 THURSDAY, SEPT. 23, 1937 No. 11 A. S.ME. The A.S.ME. will hold a smoker and to-gether in the Union building for all mechanical and industrial engineering students at 8 o'clock. Come out and meet your new Dean and hear what he has to say. EMPLOYMENT: Will University women who are interested in exchanging labor for room and board please report to the office of the Adviser of Women. The university is available now—Marie *tiller*, Assistant to the Adviser. ESTES REUNION PICIC: There will be an Estes House at 5 o'clock. Bring twenty cents. Make reservations today-Eddie Parks, Chairman, Estes Com- munity. IDENTIFICATION CARDS: Student identification cards will be given out from 9 to 12 a.m. and from 1:15 to 4:30 p.m. today and Friday in central Administration. Activity books must be presented. - Oren Bingham. INTRAMURAL SPORTS REGISTRATION: All those men who wish to compete in intramural sports and are not affiliated with some organization kindly register at 105 Robinson gymnasium - E. R. Elbel. PHYSICAL EDUCATION MAJORS: Physical Education majors will hold their first convalescation at 7:15 this evening in the auditorium of central Admin- //strut Building. Send resume to A. Schweigel, Dean of the School of Education. STYLE SHOW TEA: The style show tea for freshman women and their counsellors, which was announced for this week, has been postponed until Fri. March 28 in the Union hallroom. Dorothy Trekell, Chairman. W. S.G.A. BOOK EXCHANGE: Full refund on books not be mailed after 5 p.m. today - Edith Borden Bookstore University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANASA LAWRENCE, KANASA KANSAS PRESS MEMBER 1937 ASSOCIATION PUBLISHER... J. HOWARD RUSCO EDITORS IN-CHEF ASSOCIATE EDITORS; MORKIN THOMPON AND GRIN HINES AUCE HADSMAN-JULIAN MANAGING EDITOR CAMPUS EDITORS KENNETH MOBRIN AND JOCO CHAUMBIN SOCIETY EDITOR SOUTHERN EDITOR TELEVISION EDITOR MAKEUP EDITORS Bobbie CAKEY and JAMIE FLOOD SUNDAY EDITOR ALAN AMER Editorial Staff ALICE HALEMAN-JULIUS J. HAWKES RUSCO MARTIN BRENTNON MARIA PAYE GOLDBERG KENNETH MORISKI JANE FLOPE GRACE VALENTINE JACQUELINE BROWN EDWARD BARNETT MARTIN BRENTNON MARIA PAYE GOLDBERG KENNETH MORISKI JANE FLOPE GRACE VALENTINE JACQUELINE BROWN Kansan Board Members FEATURE EDITOR ... GRACE VALENTINE REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Services, Inc. 242 MADRON AVE. NEW YORK, N.Y. CHICAGO • BOSTON • GAT FARMACY Business Staff BURNESS MANAGER ... F. QUENTIN BROWN Entered as second class master, September 17, 1916, at the post office at Lawrence, Ran. Lamented Likenesses Are Developed in Library Basement By Grace Valentine, c'38 The students' horror, the pitfall of the registration line—the taking of identification pictures. Today the results of the momentary experience will be ready for distribution. Be careful when viewing the results the lies inter- To secure thih highly prized photograph the student must first stop for a moment in front of a finely made camera. Thirty-five faces are recorded on each roll of a movie film. During a rushing period a rate of 400 an hour was maintained for short periods. A rate of 300 an hour was customary for an hour's film. The rate of 50 an hour of film are taken to the office of the Photographic Bureau for development. Bureau Is in Library Bingham Supervises Work Mr. Oren Bingham, in charge of the photographic service, has designed the out system used. Mr. Bingham was a student in the chemistry department when he first became interested in a photographic service project. The artist did done was in the apprehension Only last year observers about the campus noticed the construction going on at one side of the library. On the east side of the building are steep steps leading down to an almost hidden laboratory, the Photographic Bureau. It is here that identification pictures are produced. The office is built under the library proper. A five-foot ledge of glass covers the walls and the five rooms composing the complete laboratory. The oddly assorted equipment has been assembled through the kindly efforts of many individuals. One table came from the old Spooner library; another was from the old student hospital and was donated by Dr. Catueson. The refrigerator is once one used at Corbin hall. A rack for drying the pictures has been made from a wooden chest. The cabinet was given by Mr. C. G. Bales, superintendent of buildings and supernets. The Finest Entertainment "YOURS FOR THE ASKING" The Show Value of Lawrence! SHOWS 2:30-7:00-9:30 VARSITY Home of the Jawhawk Last Times Today Last Times Today MARGARET SULLAVAN "SO RED THE ROSE" WALTER CONNELLY RANDOLPH SCOTT - AND — FRED MacMURRAY CAROLE LOMBARD "HANDS ACROSS THE TABLE" TOMORROW! And Saturday Thrilling Romance of Black Gold Hunters! SWASHBUCKLING HEROES OF THE OIL FIELDS! The WILDCATTER with SCOTT COLTON JANE POPER JACK SHARP & NEW UNIVERSAL SWASHBUCKLING HEROES OF THE OIL FIELDS! Punch-Packed Action in Days When the West Was Young MANHATTAN PUBLICATIONS GALLOPIN' DYNAMITE" BY KERMIT MAYARD AND. SUNDAY! "Yours For The Asking" Oh, Docto. Edw. Everett Horton And~ George Raft De-Gloom Yourself—See... "Oh, Doctor" Soon—"The Man I Marry" of a student who had stolen examination papers from a professor of chemistry. In a thick layer of dust the thief had left finger prints and a picture of these fingerprints led to the discovery of the student's photophyography grew, many varying types of services were required. As a result of these growing needs the Photographic Bureau was established. Mr. Bingham, who had been doing work independently for a number of years, was chosen to head the business, established a year ago last April, Keep Files of Negatives Only last November the laboratory was completed and the bureau's work became a definite part of the University's services. Yesterday afternoon the office was a busy place as Mr. Bingham, two assistants and several students completed work on the identification pictures when they stocked them for distribution to the children of the schools, and the mom's and women's advisors. The rolls of negatives are filed away, easily accessible for future reference. Thus is concluded only a small part of the Photographic Bureau's work. In two weeks of the year this work is completed. The rest of the year is spent in doing services for all departments of the University. But that is another story. On the Shin--early in the year, going clear around the lounge and it just kept on growing. The library was the scene of a study and the studying and no little whispering. Continued from page 1 WEATHER Kansas: Partly cloudy and continued warm Thursday; Friday cloudy and cooler. Week 10c Til 7 Days Then 15c NOW! ENDS SATURDAY DOUBLE TREAT! Your Action Trio "THE THREE MESSENGERS" BOB BOSTON BOTTY CORRIGAN MAX TERHUNE 'Heart of the Rockies' — AND — Love If He Won The Gutter If He Lost! — AND — JOSEPH CALLEIA FLORENCE RICE TED HEALY "Man of the People" Serial - Comedy The House of the Students 3 - 7 - 9 10-25c 'til 7 then 10-35c DICKINSON The Friendly Theatre NOW SHOWING W. W. The Picture that DARES tell the TRUTH! "DAMAGED GOODS" He feared the worst and found it true! He feared the worst and found it true! Coming SUNDAY Adolph Zukor presents JACK BENNY and "ARTISTS and MODELS" A Filmament Pictures We Show the Really Great Hits Y.W.C.A. Elects Secretary Today An election for secretary of the W.Y.C.A. will be held at Henley House this evening immediately before the Lunar Parade, Virginin Kay Griffen was elected to fill this position last year, but resigned when she did not return to school this fall. This vacancy must be filled as soon as possible so that the year's activities may be arranged. All old members who wish to vote in the election and who are not going to proceed the Lantern Pandar may go to Hangzhou House today at 5:45 p.m, and cast their vote. Win a Prize tonight at the Style Show and Window Unveiling An Exciting New Star Team! It's Everything You Haped it It's Everything You Hared it Most Gligious Woman Sur- renders Her Heart to the Rack- less and Romantic Hero of the World RAY FRANCIS in the arms of ERROL FLYNN in Warner Bros. daring Another Dawn vocal IAN HUCKLEY songwriter / composer Just One More Day AND TODAY FRIDAY WEEK DAY SHOWS 2:30-7-9 25c til 7 A Love Story as Strange as the Enchantment of Desert Nights! with IAN HUNTER FRIEDA INESCORT Herman Mackenzie P. L. Patterson J.-Albertovan WM. DIETTELER made by Erik Bash Kernweg A - Warner Bill Furman Of all the newest in woolens for suits, topcoats, and Obercoats here Friday and Saturday — Also a special representative here to take your special measure. Come in for the newest! X-TRA Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS Special Showing GRANADA All New - Just Out MARCH OF TIME BAND ACT - Latest News The candidates who are to be voiced upon are Ruth Kinche, c/40, and Betty Jane BoddING, c/40. Other vacancies open in the Y.W. school, including the chairman of Henley House. These positions are to be filled by the end of the week, so that the new officers will be able to attend the W.Y.CA. canned retreat which takes place from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. this Saturday. SATURDAY 4 GLORIOS DAYS America's Own Great Star Gives Goals, Most Moving Performances Numbers of the Y.W.C.A. cabinet attend the retreat every year for the purpose of reviewing the program of the year's activities and to make any further plans. There is also a club for the children of the organization. This time the retreat is to be held at the McConnell near Leiceton. RITE HENRY DAVIS·FONDA A man in a suit stands behind a desk, holding a folder. A woman in a white blouse and skirt is standing beside him, holding a document. That Certain Woman WITH IAN HUNTER-ANITA LOUISE-Donald Crisp Walters and Designed by Edmund Goulding Music by Mate Salzer. A First National Picture. PRESENTED BY WATERS BRIDGE WEDNESDAY "BIG CITY" TOKEN GAY MATCH for your sport clothes America's most dashing shoes are these Red Crest Boots. Designed by the footwear company they are the favorites of the go-go girl. They keep you happily on the go. Same High Quality • Price Still Only COBBIE SHAWL $650 100 Those smart Campus Clogs that go places and go in comfort. Brown or Black Buck. Built up leather heels. Made over exclusive "Limit" Lasts THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR MEDICAL SCIENCE SCHOOL OF EXAMINATION RED CROSS COBBIES Yes! We do shoe repairing and do it well. Quo Aloche's On Mass. at 813 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1937 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Here on the Hill an account of Mt. Oread Society JUNE ULM, Society Editor 1见 p. 1, call K.UL 2i; after p. k.uul2025 The Zeta chapter of Kappa Beta entertained rudebees with a dinner at Myers hall, Tuesday. Those present were: Roufe Etta Carr Rout Kyle Carr 'c40 Russell Harburg Eunice Nielson Sarah Snork Lance Levee Anna Woyneyoucan Winnifred 1910 Ajax Jake Jackson 'faucl Matthe Jackson 'fa40 Mary Jackson 'c40 Dhore Wilson Jacobi Relle Agnes Romy, ca40 Leonuse Lewis 'fa40 Sharon Shaw Agnes Romy, ca40 Leonuse Lewis 'fa40 Mary Burden, c40 Mildred Grable, c18 Kimberly Cox, c19 Wanda Jo Reade Lorraine Lawrence Mary Beryl Miller, c3un Chase Miller Marie Miller Mr. Dunkley Marley Barb Margaret Barr The Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Bar The Xi chapter of Mu Phi Epsilon, honorary music sorority, hold its first convocation in the home of Ramma Harnay, fa-38, 1216 Tennessee street. Watkins hall has elected the following officers for this year: Lela Rose, president; Dorothy Nelson, first vice-president; Lucille Roach, second vice-president; Lela Siebert, treasurer; Armela Buda, secretary; Dorothy Hendrickson, historian; Lois Sholander, social committee; Marjorie Frazier, social committee; Frances Strait, social committee; Lilian Fisher, intramural committee Sigma Phi Epsilon announcees the pledging of Ralph Wire. Phone K. U. 6 6 Gamma Phi Beta entertained Sigma Chl with an hour dance Tuesday evening. Miss Julia Kunz, Mrs. Mary R. Kunz and Mrs. Patrice Bishop of Kansas City, Mo., will be dinner CLASSIFIED ADS **FARM TO PLAY popular music on pi** 9 am. H. Charlson with music on piano 11 am. L. Johnson 10. 73 Vermont, to open a studio on Sept. 24, hours 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. for interview. PLEASE RESPOND BY MARKETING EDITOR. WANTED: Roommate for quiet stadium boy, also large double room for rent. Meals if desired. Phone 21830. -14 The Phi Kappa Psi chapter went to Kansas City last evening to see Buddy Rogers, who was a member of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity when he attended the University of Kansas. STUDENT WASHINGS: Guaranteed satisfactory. Call for and deliver. Phone 2563M. -12 ROOMS FOR GIRLS: Twin beds, two room, Bath. Gas and furnace heat. Entertaining privileges. One-half block north Corin. 1121 Ohio. Phone 1671R. *BOYS: 1 single room; 1 room, Kendall room. 1247 R.宿舍 1075W. ☆ ☆ ☆ WAVE, new styles, any style The Delta Tau Delta fraternity pledges entertained the pledges of the Alpha Delta Pi sorority with a Kansas City Tuesday evening. T A X I Call 2-800 UNION CAB CO. "Origins of the Cab" IVA'S BEAUTY SHOP 941 $1 Mass. St. Phone 533 Next door Keeler Book Store END CURLS, $1 up, inquire 7 Experienced Operators New Equipment Added SHAMPOO and WAVE, 35c dried Economy prices on other beauty work also WAVO BEAUTY SHOP The approaching marriage of Mist Louise Anne, daughter of the late Rev. Harmon Allen and Mary Dunlap Allen, to Clem Rawlin of Freehold, N.J., has been announced. The wedding will take place Sept. 25, at the home of the bride's sister, Mrs Gustave Geelue, Kansas City, Kan. Shampoos 25e up Finger Wavers 25e (dried) Oil Permains $2.50 up Phone 95 - 921 Miss. St. Miss Allen attended the University last year and was a resident of Watkins hall. Mr. Rawlin is a graduate of Gloucesters State College at Manhattan. Jayhawk Barber Shop Completely Modernistic Enjoy the best at no additional cost. Hair cut 35c. Earl Ellis Joe Lech "Bill" Hensley "Paddy" Hyatt 727 Mass. --guests of Kappa Alpha Theta this evening. 10 cents per week — Phone 2316 ********************************************************** ********************************************************** Subscrive for THE WICHTA BEACON Kansas' Greatest Newspaper Delivered to your door Daily and Don't Miss the Fun! Learn to dance—all the latest ballet steps SPECIAL ATTENTION GYMN BEGINNERS Marion Rice Dance Studio Over Runesey-Allion Flower Shop 927 1/2 Mass. St. Phone K. U. 6 6 WANTED: Student laundry, shirts 10, Phone 1187J. -14 COFFEEVILLE CO.—Elizabeth Chick- Right Elliot of Vogue Beauty Shop in Coffeeville, is now on display at Ivya's Coffeeville, is now on display at Ivya's new customer 21, Old. Old new customer are welcome. Phone 353. ROOMS AND BOARD: Double rooms 6 each, board 3 a week. Home cooks food, family style. Special Sunday meal 924 Alabama. Call for phone. Phone 2811 GIRLS. TWO-ROOM, nicely furnished apartment. Sink, hot and cold water. Frididge. S. E. exposure. Phone 13131 1319. Vermont. -1 SAVE part of rent allowance for something dice. Very nice double room 112. Sleeping porch, study downstairs, Five blocks from cannon, 843 Ala. -11 SHAMBRO and %s WAVE delay SHAMPOO and 25c WAVE, driE Oil - Drenze - Fitch Shampoo and Curls, dried, 50c End Curls $1.00 up. Complete PERMANENTS. Any Style $1.00, $1.50 up. complete Corbin hall will have an hour dance from 7 to 8 this evening. WANTED Twenty-five words or less one inition, 27c; six initions, 56c; six inception, 75c; contract rates, not more than 21 words, $2 per month flat. Payable in advance and accepted subject to approval at the RANSIAN Business Office. Typewriter Cleaning and Repairing Ribbons for sale 732 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. Phone 2353 CLARENCE M. BAKER 1323 Kentucky Phone 2095J The Venus Beauty Salon Miss Dorothy Blue was a luncheon guest yesterday at Pl Beta Phi. All popular magazines at one-half to one-third regular price. Magazine Exchange 729 Massachusetts ONE STOP Clothes Service Station SCHULZ the TAILOR TAXI HUNSINGER'S 920 - 22 Mass. Phone 12 924 Mass. Buy GOOD shoes repairing Our prices are RIGHT! OYLER'S SHOE SHOP 1346 Ohio ☆ ☆ ☆ --department does not furnish costumes for practice. MAGAZINES ☆ ☆ ☆ Mrs. Fred Harris of Ottawa was a guest yesterday at the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Miss Jean Robertson was a buncheen guest at the Chi Omega house yesterday. The Venus Beauty Salon Individual Booths Five Experienced Operators Featuring Dona Ray Cosmetics Vera Adorbelde, Manager Phone 387 First floor, 824 Mass. Pledging services for Miss Tilda Fowler were held Tuesday evening at Alpha Chi Omega. Mrs. Grotchen Speimel Snyder of Winfield was a dinner guest at the Alpha Chi Omega house yesterday. Luncheon guests at the Sigma Nu house yesterday were: Mrs. S, J. Martin, Kamesa City, Kan; Mary Nightman, and Rocka Nuckles Miss Janet Turner, Kansas City was a guest at the Alpha Omicron P house Tuesday and Wednesday. Linton E. Grinter, who received his B.S. in civil engineering at the University of Kansas in 1923, has just been appointed director of civil engineering and dean of the graduate division of the Armour Institute of Technology at Chicago. Notice the promotion was contained in a response issue of Engineering News Record received by Dean I. C. Craweff. University Graduate Is Appointed to Armour Tech For the past few years Professor Grinter has been professor of structural engineering at Texas Agricultural and Mechanical College. He registered at the University as from Lawrence. Design Department Seeds Exhibit An exhibit from the department of design was sent Wednesday to Frances H. Robertson, president of Artex Prints, Inc., Baltimore, Mo., who is showing them to educators interested in the work of the K.U. design department. A was sent yesterday to Miss Betty Tholen, teacher of art in the Newton, Kan., schools. To Lecture in Wichita Miss Maufe Elworth, instructor in public school art methods at the University of Kansas and supervisor of art in Lawrence public schools, will talk at Wichita Art Museum next Sunday. Her subject will be "The Value of Art in the Public Schools". Dance Sorority Will Hold Tryouts Tat Sigma, honorary dance sorority, will hold tryouts for membership beginning Tuesday, Sept. 28 in the women's gymnasium, downstairs. Solo tryouts will be held at 7:30 p.m., and class tryouts at 8 p.m. Solo tryouts will not be confined to any special type or types of dancing, and anyone interested in solo performance or technique demonstration may take part in these. If the solo tests are passed, no other tryout will be required of the applicant. For those who wish to enter the tryout class, four meetings will be held. Beginning with the class on Sept. 28, one will be held on Monday and Tuesday for day two weeks. Class tryouts will be based upon classical dance techniques—ballet and modern. These classes will be taught by members of Tau Sigma, and eliminations will be made on the basis of performance in class. Anyone may enter the classes on Tuesday, Sept. 28, or Thursday, Sept. 30, but after this no new members will be accepted. After entering the classes, students automatically dropped from the tryouts unless excused beforehand by Miss Dunkel or the president of Tau Sigma, Catherine Dunkel. It is a new Tau T sigma regulation that the women taken into the organization from the classes will be rated in groups A and B according to ability shown in their tryouts. Those taken into the B groups will be required to attend dancing classes at 2:30 on Mondays, Tuesday, and Friday until Thanksgiving. These students will have time, and anyone who wishes to practice before the tryouts may attend them. All women expecting to try out for Tau Sigma must be their own practice clothing - danning costumes, bathing suits, or other suitable clothing. No one will be allowed to practice in street clothing, and the Come In and Browse VIRGINIA MAY'S 'A CARGO CP GIFTS' In Hotel Eldridge Penney's Majors in School Clothes Here's a style to please every man's taste . . . at a price that's easy on your wallet. Sport models and business suits . . . single and double breasts. MEN'S SUITS 1975 Students TOPCOATS 14.75 32 Oz. All-Wool Melots — slide fastener fronds, sport backs, side straps! Mackinaw plaids! Just the jacket you need for that extra pair of pants for school and sport wear. Men's All-Wool JACKETS Styles Corsack 4.98 Soft, fleecy fabrics that mean smartness, fit easy, drape — They will give lots of wear, too! Raglands, single and double breasted styles . . . Polo types, wrap-arounds. A wide selection of colors and patterns. PENNEY'S C. PENNEY COMPANY Incorporated Orville Osborn, graduate of the University of Kansas School of Pharmacy last spring, was appointed manager of the Sedalia Drug company at Sedalia, Mo., Sept. 1. Orville Osborn to Sedalia Tea and Style Show Postponed The Counselor's ten and style show for freshman women, which was scheduled for tomorrow afternoon has been postponed until next Friday, Oct. 1, from 3 to 5 p.m. at the Union building. Freshman Coach-each conference in that part of the state and two good Nebraska high school teams each year. The Nebraska teams were usually, Hastings, but Conger's team is shown by the fact that although the Nebraska schools were considerably larger than Smith Center, the latter has broken even in the games played with Hastings and Conger. One of the outstanding things in Continued from page 1 Conger's coaching career has been his ability to get large numbers of boys out for football. At Smith Center his squads almost always included between 75 and 80 men, and one year he reached a high of 85, although there were only about 165 boys in school. MEN'S SHIRTS FALL OXFORDS A feature price—much lower than you'd expect to pay for this will constructed shoes. They're great bargains because they're made after a very extra long wear and they will give you lots of com-fort. The new freshmen coach says that this was done by getting the boys football minded and then playing as many of them as possible in games. Conger used the multiple-team system, substituting a whole 98c team at a time, and on occasions he used as many as four different teams during a game. Granada Coffee Shop Three to four full teams were taken on trips, and letters were awarded almost as liberally. Last year, Conger gave thirty letters and eight provisional letters. MEET AND MUNCH At the New The teams at Smith Center scored 1543 points to their opponents' 228, despite the fact that their teams unaccounted for less than 100 points to the man. When you can buy such fine quality for so little . . . it’s time to stock up. They compare favourably when selling for much more money. 395 20 Opened under new management 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed GENE STOVER, Manager The Gibbs Clothing Co. "WHERE CASH BUYS MORE" KICK-OFF One Door South Granada Theatre Visit the Fall Opening Thursday Evening at 7:45 With Clothes Especially Styled for University Men! You'll want the newest style in the smartest patterns and colors, and when you buy a Gibbs suit or overcoat you know you'll get just that. FALL SUITS 1595 1950 2450 Suits that are especially styled for college men—Fabrics for this season are particularly attractive, tones are appealing and tailoring and trimming are of super quality. You'll find all the popular new models, including sport backs, as well as plain backs in single or double branded styles. TOPCOATS 1595 1950 Every type and every pattern and color you might desire in a new topcoat is included in this marvelous group, they are all made of fine quality woolens and tailored to our most rigid specifications. USE OUR LAY-AWAY PLAN Ony Dollar will reserve your selection, you get the choice patterns and sizes. You get the advantage of low cash prices. (You do not pay for bookkeeping systems and credit cards.) The Ony Dollar will provide when the garment is paid for you may take it out. SPORT SLACKS 395 Wool wool flannels and tweeds in greys, browns a and blues with wide spread plaid, stripes and no nice mixtures for school or sport wear. Come in and see our selection, the smart new patterns will stand every test of good taste. NO CHARGE FOR ALTERATIONS KATZMAN MEN'S LEATHER JACKETS 795 795 Make your selection of fine quality suede leather jackets, there are all the new corsack style jackets with leather collar and cuffs in chameleon pane, grey and reindeer shades. You'll want one for school. All Styles PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1937 Frosh-Varsity Rivalry Renewed Squad of '37 To Make Official Debut Against Frosh Eleven Saturday Afternoon The 1957 Kansas football team will be exhibited publicly for the first time in the fifth renewal of varsity-freshman rivalry, on Memorial Field Saturday. Although Coach Ad Lindsay's varsity squad is a heavy favorite, one of the strongest freshman teams in several seasons is doped to give the veterans sufficient trouble to make them show something of what they have this year. Only four scheduled varsity-freshman games have been played in a series dating back to 1921, although many battles have been waged each year on the practice field. In previous games, varsity teams have won two, the freshmen, while one game resulted in a tie. Ad Lindsey coached the only freshman team ever to defeat the varsity eleven. In 1921, the yearlings took a 14-0 lead in the first half and the veterans to one downhill in the last two periods to win, 14-7. "Stony" Wall, who later starred against Missouri, kicked a 40-yard field goal in the first period, but the varsity pushed over a touchdown in the third quarter and won the 1924 game. Wall then won the 1926 game 13 to 0, scoring two touchdowns in the final period after three scoreless quarters. In 1836, near the end of a disappointing season, K.U.'s sophomore varsity squad staved off three last minute freshman threats to hold Bill Hargis' yearlings to a scoreless tie. Several stars of that freshman team will see action Saturday as varsity men for the first time. Schedule Listed For Swimmers Herbert G. Alphin, University swimming coach, announced the new schedule for the swimming pool yesterday. The pool, located in the center of campus, has maximum will be open for University men and women at different hours. Following is the schedule: Monday : 4:30 to 6:00 p.m. Tuesday : 4:30 to 6:00 p.m. Wednesday : 4:30 to 6:00 p.m. Thursday : 3:00 to 6:00 p.m. Friday : 4:30 to 6:00 p.m. Saturday : 2:30 to 5:30 p.m. Monday ... 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday ... 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. Wednesday ... 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. Friday ... 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. Saturday ... 10:00 to 12:00 noon Entry Blanks Distributed For Women's Intramurals The intramural board of the Women's Athletic Association met last night in the gymnasium to discuss the fall sports program and to elect a treasurer. Mary Learnard was chosen for this office. Entry blanks were given out to the sports managers for the following sports: Volley球, tennis singles, horseshoes, handball, and golf. These blanks are to be filled out by the captain of the station office by Tuesday morning. Intramurals will start immediately after the posting of the drawings. "EVERYDAY SPECIAL" Ham Salad Sandwich and Chocolate Milk Shake 20c UNION FOUNTAIN UNION FOUNTAIN Memorial Union Sub-Basement LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas, 641 Louisiana Graduates Get Good Positions Phone 894 W. H. Quickenbush, Pres. E. S. Weatherby, Supt. Frosh Biographies- Rv Elon Torrence, c'39 (Note this is the second in a series of minute biographies published by the University Daly Kanan to document its readings with the personnel of the freshman football sound.) Bob Allen is a husky end candidate from Batavia, ind. In high school at Brazil, Bob made four letters in football and was chosen on the all-Wobush Valley team. His six points in game 6, 6 inches tall and weighs 195 pounds. Maurice Belse comes to the University from Wellington, where he lettered four years in football. In addition he was chosen all-league fullback for two years in the Ark Valley Conference. Belse is in only 5 feet, 11 inches tall, but he weighs 195 pounds. Mike Andrews keeps the state of Pennsylvania on the squad roster here. Mike's home town is Central City, where he earned two letters at the Shade Township High School and made the all-county team. Andrews' weight is 174, and his height is 5 feet, 7 inches. George Arnold. Arnold is a tucked candidate from Topeka, however he attended high school at North Kansas City. This is Arnold's first try at football since he did not compete with Heist. Weigh 175 pounds, height, 6 feet. Another player from Chicago is Earl Close, a 5 feet, 10 inch quarter-back who weighs 170 pounds. Close attended Englewood High School, earning three letters and being named third all-city team in his last season. Continuing the list of mammoth tackles is Frank Callowish of Kansas City, Callowich played at Wy- andotte where he made two letters. He weighs a mere 211 pounds and is 6 feet, 2 inches tall. The tallest man on the freshman squad is Bob Buchanan, 6 feet, 4 inches tall, who hails from Dallas, Texas. Bob attended Forrest Avenue High School, where he earned a letter, Buchanan's weight 18 197. Ed Suagee is a 160 pound halfback from Bartlesville, Okla. At Bartlesville High, Suagee lettered in football each of his three years. To cap his career he was picked as all-state high school quarterback and also captain of this mythical eleven. Frank Bukaty is another 160 round halfback candidate. Bukaty played one season with the University College. There he was known as a hard-running, elusive Seven members of the University Pep committee will judge aspiring cheerleaders at tryouts to be held in front of nest stadium at 3:30 this afternoon. Ten cheerleaders will be chosen from the group of candida- Newton Hoverstock, c38, chairman if the judging committee, urges both men and women to try out. Everyone will be given a chance to show his qualifications, and there will be no discrimination between non-fraternity and candidates from nominated houses. Hoverstock said. F The judging committee will be composed of Newton, Hoverstock, Doris Stockwell, c'39, Don Voorhees, Dorothy Dorich Welld, c'38, Wade Green, c'38, Bill Bailey, c'39, and Roberta Cook, fa'39. Cheerleaders Tryout Today Pep Committee Will Judge Candidates At Memorial Field Frank Warren, c 38, and Hazelt Steiger, b 38, cheerleaders of last year, will be required to try out and qualify with the others before being eligible for their former positions. The 10 cheerleaders to be chosen will include four freshmen, three sophomores, two juniors and one senior, the latter being the most eligible. These candidates must be selected before the Freshman-Varsity football game next Saturday. back. His high school days were spent at Ward High School in Kansas City, Kan. He there he lettered four years and made the all-city and Interstate Catholic league all-star for years. He is 5 feet, 10 inches tall SCHULZ "Suiting You Is My Business" The Tailor 924 Mass. St. Ed Hall. Ed's home town is Sublette. In high school he made four letters in football and was captain of his team two years. His height is 6 feet and he weighs 176 pounds. Position, halfback. TAILOR-MADE For You as Cheap as Ready-to-Wear $27.50 and up Touch Football Starts Program Touch football will be the opening fall sport on the men's intramural schedule. Entry blanks were sent out Tuesday, and competition will get under way as soon as a schedule of the teams can be arranged. was inaugurated last year for the benefit of smaller organizations that could not compete with the fraternities. While 6-man teams were begun chiefly for the benefit of smaller-than-fraternity organizations, that does not keep the fraternities from entering the 8-man team division. In addition, as a result of the division, however, a fraternity must first enter in the 11-man division, which is solely for fraternities. Both 11-man and 6-man touch football teams will be entered in the competition. Six-man touch football Come to Kansas City's JUBILESTA SEPT 17-25 Municipal Auditorium Admission 80c plus 10c tax The ONE Dance Nite Saturday, Sept. 25 Continuous Music ★ BENNY GOODMAN Emperor of Swing ISHAM JONES and His Orchestra Jam Dance Session! CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Footballingly Speaking Here we are "Back Again." Tonight in our store windows, for your approval and comparison, the finest of Fall and Winter Clothes that spell--- Your name "all over 'em.' Victoria's Secret FULLBACK QUARTERBACK HALFBACK WINGBACK America's finest merchandise "backed" by our guarantee of good clothes satisfaction — is one of the real reasons why your fall apparel should carry our label. Window Prices — $2. Manhattan Shirt on each window Hart Schaffner & Marx Varsity Town Suits Topcoats - Overcoats You feel poised to show you and you feel proud to wear— Subscribe for Headquarters Rexall Drug Store THE KANSAS CITY STAR PHONE 17 H. L. Nevin Distributor 13 papers - 15 cper week 847 Mass. St. NEW 1938 DOUBLE "X" PHILCO IT'S HERE "Only Philco has it" with AUTOMATIC TUNING NO SQUAT NO STOOP NO SQUINT EASY TERMS Only Model 18-XX. All wave Philco with the new ConnecTion Center. Included Tuning Panel, makes it easy to use your phone. Just twist the dial and press your program. Has the inclined Sounding Board, electronic speaker and other features. with Automatic $22.95 Volume Control Beautiful New Philco Compacts All ware $3.00 AMERICAN AND FOR- MIGRATION COMPAC- TION MODEL 38-157. A spi- ne cabinet with Foreign Recep- tion guaranteed by the control, full vision dial, and an Only $79.95 Less Aerial Phone 303 HANNA'S $2995 904 Mass. Everyone Is Going! "Big Apple VARSITY Tips on the Trucking Contest 1. Singles Contest: Any K.U. student may enter. 2. Doubles Contest: Any K.U. Couple may enter. 3. Prizes: Two FREE Varsity Tickets to Each Winner. 4. Music: The Cottage Dixieland Sextette. Also Presenting The Two Steppers Versatile Colored Dance Team Louie Kuhn's Band FRIDAY, SEPT.24 STAGS----75c----DATES THIS IS THE LAST DAY!!! BUY YOUR JAYHAWKER FOR $3.00 IN THE FEE LINE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XXXV The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas University Will Be Host To Law Group } LAWRENCE. KANSAS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1937 Seventy Members of The Commission on Uniform State Laws To Be Here Sunday The University and the city of Lawrence will be hosts to 60 or 70 members of the Commission on Uni- teresting Funds. The American Bar Association, Sunday Dean F. J. Moreau of the School of Law, and W. H. Piatt of Kansas City, Mo., graduate of the School of Law and former athlete here, were influential in getting the memorial commissioned in Municipal auditorium, Kansas City, to make the Lawrence trip. Dean Morcau Is Chairman This group of men are representing states of the Middle West under appointment of their governors and may be among the more uniform system of inter-state law. They will present their report at the formal opening of the American Bar association which opens on September 27 to October 2. Dean Moreau is chairman of the committee, composed of R. E. Melvin, representing the Douglass a County Bar association; Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the Alumni association of the University, and John Brand of the Lawyers' Association in its charge of entertainment for the visiting lawyers Among the prominent men expected here Sunday will be Douglas Armit, Birmingham, Ala., brother of former dean of the School of Law. Invite Senior Law Students Those members of the School of Law who plan to attend the convention of the American Bar association when it opens are: Dr. Burdick, Prof. W. G. Brockelbunk, Dean Moreau, Professor Lesar, Prof. J. B. Smith, Prof. R. M. Davis, and Prof. P. W. Vesselman. invoice. The first time in 15 years that the national convention of the American Bar association has been held in this part of the country. On Tuesday, Dr. Burdick will be toastmatter at a lunchon the th Hotel Baltimore for alumni of the University School of Law. Senior law students from the University will be guests of the association all day Friday, October 1 and will attend the program in March. Students will feature orchestra leader Rudy Vallee as headliner. Principal speakers at the Wednesday day session of the convention will be Justice Vandevant, recently retired justice of the U. S Supreme Court, and Robert Hutchins, president of the University of on the SHIN by Virgil Mitchell NUMBER 12 Yes, it is true that the girls mentioned as truckers in Wednesday's column were called into the office of the adviser to women for a consultation on "truckin". And from all reports the dean did not know a lot about truckin', she perceived that it was a little demonstrable to let both sides in the conversation. The result of the interview should end forever the rumor that Miss Meguiar is out to stop this steal from Harlem. And for the first time in the history of the school, the SHIN is coming out with the statement that the dean does not understand and has made known her wish that it be a good time that it be. It seems that she really like to paint her as a rascal, she really understands a lot of things. "To the & 'x''!@@@ of the Shim: I feel that it is of general interest to the readers of your column to know that I am not overweight, and that my interests are those of the students. I shall find it necessary to sue you for libel, slander, and gross duty of duty. Gene Lloyd." Letters to the Shin: We stand corrected on the first point and thank you for confirming the second. Please write often. Japanese Threatening Seat Of Military Headquarters Continued on page 3 Peiling, Sept. 24. —(UIP) —Japanese i troops (have roped the walls if Phaoping-I and are packing the fighter aircraft headlines, announced tonight. Sour Owl Will Appear Papeping-Fu is 85 miles south of Peiping on the Peiping-Hankow railway. It is the seat of China's northern military headquarters and is the key point in the center of the Chinese lines. First Issue of H u m o v Magazine Goes on Sale Tuesday The first issue of the Sour Owl, University humor magazine, will make its appearance on the campus yesterday, it was announced yesterday. "On The Shin' snee we were coming out in September with our September issue, so we to do it" James Coleman, c38, editor. It will be a markedly different Owl that the Hill will see this year, if reports emanating from the Union building are correct. Many improvements in makeup will be included, and the magazine will be replete with art decorations and photographs. Four artists and two photographers, in addition to the entire Sour Owl staff, have been hard at work for the past week in laying out a magazine that will be in step with the rest of the art world, different as possible in appearance from the usual college humor publication, Carol Johnson, art editor, has had the assistance of J. T. Kepner, Al Muzenick, and Max Nixon, all well-known student artists, while he has written by Boh Hoffmann and William Long. Several pages of gossip will be featured in the Owl, every organized house being represented. The Owl staff promises to include this year pictorial gossip, photographs of annual events, to supplement them with photos to add their methods of variation from the ordinary. The Owl will sell this year for 15 cents, and may be procured from salesmen scattered on the campus Fine Arts Students Presented in Recital Twelve students were presented in a recital in central Administration auditorium by the School of Fine Arts, yesterday afternoon. Fine Arts, yesterday afternoon. Three piano solos, three voice works on cornet titre, and one piano duo were included on the program. The next rectal will be given by Associate Prof. Jan Chiappuso, pianist, on Monday in central Ad ministration auditorium at 8 Barney Ross Retains Crown Polo grounds, N. Y. Sept. 23. — (UP) Wealtler weight Barney Rose became the first title holder to retain his crown in tonight's Carnival of Champions when he won the trophy. He was joined by the Phillipines after 15 hard rounds. The dark-eyed Chicago sharp-shooter succeeded where Marcel Thil of France failed in the first of tonight's four title bouts. Thil lost his European middleweight championship to young Fred Apostol of San Francisco on a technical knockout in 10 rounds. Professor Gardner Loans Pottery Exhibit to Museum Mis Lai Gardner, associate professor of English, has loaned a collection of four pieces of black Indian pottery to Spooner-Theray museum. It is being exhibited in the basement show room. The pottery is the craftwork of Marie, Rose, and Tonia Martinez of the Tewa Indians. Marie Martinez, who lived at San Idelfono Pueblo, Suea Fe. N, M. was a full-blooded Tewa, and was an entirely self-taught artist. Pottery made by her in co-operation with Julian Martinez were used as display of her work at the Chicago world's fair. In the past, Spooner-Thayer museum has had some of Julian Martinez's painting on display. Rose Martinez originated the type of relief work which appears on the pottery. Accompanying the display is a piece of fine embroidery work from Guatemala, also loaned to the museum by Miss Gardner. Committee Selects Ten Cheerleaders Ten cheerleaders were chosen, rom a group of 37 candidates yesterday afternoon by the Pep committee. Frank Warren, c'38, was selected cheerleader, with Hazt Steiger b'38, as alternate. Thirty - seven Students Try Out for Positions; Will Lead Cheers f or Frosh Rally Tonight Freshmen Have Most Candidates, Thirty-seven students, 3 seniors, 6 juniors, 12 sophomores and 16 gathering in east stadium, a small gathering in east stadium. Jack Nessly, c'39, and Charles Fore were elected junior cheerleaders; Joe Parker, c'40, John E. Green, c'40, and Earle Radford sophomore cheerleaders; and Russ Townsley, C. J. Brown, Ralph Wire and Jack Minor were selected as 'reshman cheerleaders. Each candidate was required to lead the others and the spectators in two yellows of his choice. The prospective cheerleaders were graded on their ability at bringing forth no noise from the group of rooters. The newly elected freshman cheerleaders, together with Martha Star, Kuku cheerleader, will take over the cheering at the freshman rally to be held tonight on the southeast side of the stadium at 7:30. Free Show After Rally Arrangements have been made for a free show at the Granda theater at 1 o'clock for all who attend the rally. These freshman cheerleaders will take charge of the freshman cheerleading section during the Freshman meeting scheduled for tomorrow afternoon. The pep committee, members o- various student activity groups, were: Newton Hoverstock, Men's Student Council; Harry Wiles, K Club; Robota Cook; Jay Janes; Dorothy Caldwell; Board of Moses State; Bill Barris; Ku Ku; and Dorothy Trekell, W S.G.A. Lindley Lauds Pharmacy Work Chancellor E. H. Lindley spoke yesterday at the weekly Colloquy of the Pharmacy school in the Pharmacy lecture room at 11:30 a.m. "A young man can go into the prescription department of a drug store and get a good education by reading books on how to treat him. The tradition and history connected with drugs adds to the fascination of the field," said Chancellor Lindley, who had experience as a young man in his father's drug store. "Most successful men in a learned profession are not interested in the money side of business and strive to make their services wider. Many doctors would not send bills if they were not for the fact that they need an income to live on themselves," the Chancellor continued. The Chancellor congratulated the students upon their entrance into what he termed a "semi-learned profession." The Chancellor ended his address by congratulating the students on the start that they are making on the road to a professional career and upon the increased enrollment that has been gained in the School of Pharmacy over last year's enrollment. Applications for University parking licenses have been passed upon by the Parking committee and successful applicants may obtain their licences today and tomorrow at the Business office. Students may learn the result of their application at the office of Dean Worrer. Tags may be objectionable to office upon payment of 25 cents. Despite the fact that rusk week is over and all of the Greek organized houses have all of the pledges they need, probably the most tpid hot-box of many years was perpetrated by one of the fraternities of the room in Edgar Bergen at the dressing room of Edgar Bergen at the Jubilesta. McCarthy, who arrived in Kansai Parking Licenses Available Todav Charlie McCarthy Pledges Fraternity After Strenuous Rushing Permits have already been granted to faculty members and the committee reports about 300 student permits were issued. The University of Kansas band completed its first field drill on the parking west of Hoch auditorium Wednesday morning. Approximately the full membership of 90 members reported. Band Starts Field Drill Director Wiley Plans Group Rehearsals for This Coming Year In order to add various parts of individual numbers to accommodate the enlarged hand, some 25 or 30 numbers will be copied by CSEP students on manuscript paper. In addition, the music library has 74 sets and the purchase of 50 or 75 new concert numbers. The band rehearses five days a week, beginning on a new program each Monday morning. For the coming year, Russell Wiley, band director, plans that the band shall read more than 300 concert numbers. This is in addition to the regular marches played by the band. Students who are training in sight reading, increasing ability in individual talent and improving the general quality of the entire organization. City Wednesday night at 8:10 from Hollywood, was difficult to locate, but after diligent efforts the fire was ignited under the hot-box between shows at the Jubilaea. Eventual completion of the band's music library will include all the works prepared for band of Wagner, Teichavsky, Bach, Mozart, Liszt Schubert, Schumann, and other old masters. The library will include also the works of contemporary composers as Rudolf Frimmel, Victor Hubert, Hayden Wood, Erich Leidzen, and Ferde Grofe. The band's library is now located in Mr. Wiley's office. After being renovated, it will be filed under a four-way filing system, each company being listed according to title, publisher, composer, and classification. Members of the committee are: Ruth Brown, c'40; Joyce Voyers c'29; Harri Stephens, c'40; Frank Hahn, c'40; Peter Mackenzie, c'40; and Homan Hansen, c'38 and Don Hansen, c'38. Mr. Aliphin conceived the idea o. writing the article while making a tour of several European countries during the summer of 1836. This is the first time he has made an educational and is supported by the state of Sweden. It accommodates approximately 80 students. Two of the four gymnasiums are 120 years old. it is the hope of Sweden that they will soon be able to play basketball, tennis or the suberbia o the city so that they can have more adequate playing surface. Aliphin's Story Appears In Physical Education Journal A n article entitled "The Royal Central Institute of Gymnastics," written by Herbert G. Allpin, instructor in physical education, appears in the July-August issue of the Journal of Physical Education. In the process of rushing Charlie McCarthy, the cantankerous but colorful music and radio star who uses Edgar Bergen and W. C. Fields as stooges, the local DUJ chapter has released a ten word telegram to Los Angeles; various members of the lodge made several trips to Kansas City; an airplane was chartered; innumerable long distance phone calls were made from many busiest rookied with appended humor for sean of "humping". According to one member of Delta Upson, "We had nothing but good recommendations from the Northwestern chapter where Charlie lived for several years while working Bergen's way through school there. We heard that he wasn't very sharp and durability have been有 plenty. Delta Upson for over a hundred years and most of them turned out pretty well." McCarthy said in accepting the pledge button, "Well, there are a few boys that I don't like very well but I still want to be a good boy. All, I'm just a chip off the old block." Bergen was a D.U. at Northwest ern, graduating in 1927. 1 Cancel Grand Opera Engagement To Substitute Claivac l; Rudolph Serkin Opens Concert Series Program November 8 Because of a postponement of the Century Grand Opera Company's tour, due to a cancellation of a one week booking at Vancouver, B. C. Dean Swarthout has cancelled the company's engagement at the University. The Glavlux or Color Organ will be substituted for the opera. The Glavlux made a sensation when it appeared here ten years ago and since then it has been greatly improved by its inventor, Thomas Wilfred. It now offers a showing on a large screen of every shade and hue, so that the concert is seen instead of heard. Piano Genius To Appear The opening concert of the year will be the appearance of Rudolph Serkin, a new genius of the piano whose work has been praised by New York critics. Mr. Serkin will be on November 8. The world-renowned violinist Heifetz, who is now at the peak of his career, will appear on December 8. Marian Anderson, the negro contralto, sings on Jan. 17. She has enjoyed a great success in Europe as well as in America. On Feb. 24, the Kansas City Philharmonic orchestra under the direction of Karl Kruger, will play the music now has $3 players in its personnel. Emmanuel Feuermann, cellist, will play here on March 14 and on March 28, the two-piano team of Vronsky and Babin will appear. These pianists have appeared on radio programs by Bing Grosby and Rudy Valles. Cellist Is on Program An extra attraction comes on Feb. 11 when the Monte Carlo Ballet Russie will play a one night stand, their first engagement at the University. The company has more than one hundred dancers and players and carries its own symphony orchestra and scenery. Reservations both from the city and over the state are steadily coming in, with more to offer. The hotel will admit students to the regular attractions. Nanking Prepared For Aerial Raids Nanking, Sept. 24 (Friday)—(UP) -Chinese authorities estimated today that at least 1,000 people have been killed here and that about 560,000 have fled from Nanking since 1978 with her ferial bombing of the capital. The city is entirely calm and business is being carried on in the mids of thousands of dugouts which have been used to pop the population from explosives. Camouflage anti-aircraft batteries are scattered over the city and Chinese planes are maintaining a constant patrol overhead. From what could be seen of the city aerial defense, however, it appeared that they are in far better condition than they were some weeks ago. Hadley Employed in Texas Hugh G. Hadley '36, former journalism student, has moved from the staff of the Oklahoma City Times to a position as sports writer and courthouse reporter for the Sherman Democrat at Sherman Texas. Mr. Hadley was married recently to Miss Freda May Brooks Visits the Alumni Office John Fullen, alumni secretary of Ohio State University at Columbus, Ohio, visited the K.U. Alumni office Thursday afternoon. Authorized Parties Friday. Sept. 24 Beta Theta Pl, dance, chapter house, 11:30 p.m. Lutheran Student Association hike. 9:00 p.m. Varsity, Memorial Union ballroom 12:00 p.m. Alpha Kappa Alpha, 1:00 a.m. Wesley Foundation, 9:00 p.m. Wesley Foundation, 9:00 p.m. Elizabeth Meguiar, Advisor to Women, for the Joint Committee on Student Affairs. Dramatic Club Rehearses For First Production Thirty-five members of the tentive cast of L'Aiglon, current production of the Dramatics Club, gathered in Fraser theater last night for the first rehearsal. The characters merely read their parts while seated, since the business and scenery for the play has not been completed. A reading of the entire play was given Wednesday night in the Little theater of Green hall by Prof. Allen Crafton. This was to familiarize the various characters with the play whose role before formal rehearsals begin. Announcement of the sixty-odd members of the cast will be withheld until their eligibility has been determined. 'Ghosts' Fry While Haunted House Burns By JOE COCHRANE and 'FLASH' MORRIS Kansas Fire Eaters The "haunted house" is no more. This famous student rendezvous was last night destroyed by fire which began at approximately 8:30 in one of the rooms on the upper story of the 17-room stone mansion of the '60's, and was still burning when the Kanans went to press. A. E. Bocurman, farmer residing one-half mile north, reported seeing a small flame in a northeast corner room, but imagining it to be on a unusual picnic fire paddled little away. It be noticed the flame growing larger. Place Unoccupied The house is located approximately a mile north and a mile west of the Lawrence Country Club. It has been unoccupied for several years and is believed to be owned by a Kansas City realty company. When the Kansan representatives arrived at the scene last night the fire department had not yet been called. Mr. and Mrs. Charles E Daniels, who live two miles south of the house, who were at the scene of the fire, expressed deep regret that "the old house must go." The Daniels said further that "other persons did not appreciate the beauty and his beauty." tone background or the 'old house'. They told of the one-time beauty-loving husband and dark knot, which was brought in by ox-raisons because there were no railroads when the place was cannested. The builder, a Mr. Caluck, was a minister who was in sympathy at the time with the southern slaves and the house was used as a station in the famous underground railroad system, which was used in transporting them north. Until last week, a newly-drained early-day landmarks of the Lawrence community. Populated Picnic Spat Populated Pentic Site. During the years the house had become exceedingly popular among University students as a picnic place. The fact that it was thought by many to be haunted accounted for much of its popular Bearman reported that the probable cause of the house's burning was a small fire started inside by picnickers. Several smaller out-buildings located directly north of the house were set on fire by flying sparks and nearby grass was also ignited, but no other large buildings were in danger. A.S.M.E. Meets Dean At Smoker Last Night The American Society of Mechanical Engineers held a smoker last night in the lounge of the Memorial Union building. The purpose of the meeting was to acquaint with Ivan C. Crawford, new dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture. Dean Crawford spoke on the value of the engineering society to the undergraduate engineer. Ralph S. Tait, associate professor of mechanical and industrial engineering, was honorary chairman. Officers of the organization who were elected last spring and took over the duties of their offices last night were: chairman, George Russell, e38; vice-chairman, George Cobb, cbb; treasurer, Fred Thudium, e38; secretary, Don Barnett, e37. Rureau Requests Schedules Students registered at the Men's Student Employment Bureau in the Alumni office are urged to hand in their class schedules within the next week. Their jobs have been reported recently but students could not be found. Varsity Will Open Against Freshmen New Jayhawker Eleven Will Be Seen in Action For First Time T his Season Saturday's game will be played entirely under regular conference regulations, and the varsity will be season as impressively as possible. By present indi- A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. Kansas fans will not only get a glimpse of the 1937 Jaswhacker warmer in action tomorrow afternoon, but they will also get to see one of the best freshman teams in school history, and the battle should give them a chance to look for few years in anticipation of what is to come. FRED BOSILEVAC DAN R. HULE CLEVELAND cations they have a safe edge over an untried froch crew which has been playing together for only about a week. Another interesting angle to fans will be the debut of several promising sophomores, particularly Milton Sullivan and Dick Amerine, halbacks, who have been displaying some classy ball carrying ability. Bosilevac Is Out Maurice Cannady, speedy junior sack is a surprise starter, having drawn the assignment over Dave shirk and Clarence Douglas: The varsity will be handicapped by the absence of Fred Bosilievac, regular tackler, who is nursing a painful bulion. His place will be taken when he gets up from sitting on suchmore. Chitwood and Warren are other sophomore starters. MAURICE CANNADY however 1942 latter two will see plenty of service. Another varsity casualy, Herb Gearhart, may not PETER JACKSON GEARHART get into action owing to an accident in which he mashed a finger in a ear door. Frosh Lineup Uncertain Meanwhile Freak Coach Ralph Conger is undecided on his starters because of the short time he has had for practice. He will be able to put a team on the field that will easily outweigh the varsity but lack of experience and teamwork will count heavily against it. Conger has done well on both ends, however, and they may put up more of a battle than is expected. The fresh starters will probably be picked from the following who have been showing up well in practice: Centers: Kenneth Gise, Pittsburg; Don Pierce, Topeka; Bob Grubb, El- Dorado. Quarterbacks; Ralph Miller, Chanute, Ed Suigee, Bartlesville, Oka. Frank Bukaty, Kansas City, Kan.; Bill Jewell, Goosele. Halfbacks: Ed Hall, Sublette; Maurice Belshe, Wellington; Dick Driscoll, Jack ack Morgan; Robert Sinclair, Michael; Dick Wolgart, Alta Vista. Book, Doe Fullbacks: Bill Bunsen, Overland Park; Sam Travis, Garden City; Louis Thompson, Osakaola. Endi; John Burge, St. Louis; Bob Allen, Bailen, Ind; Dick M McDougall, St. Louis; Charles Wentrand Leavenworth; Charles Wodtman City, City, City, City show Dewalt. Tackles: Monte Merkel, Chicago; Howard Martin, Chicago; Quido Massare, East Monongahela, Pa.; W. F, Jack Cane, Eagle Georgio, Trotta. Guards: Mike Andrews, Central City, Pa.; Ward Crowell, Attica; Herbert Jertman, Newmont; Den凯 Talui, Haldane Hooper, Kauai Tei School Children Admitted Free The game will start at 2 p.m., and school children will be admitted free of charge. This includes the grades, junior high and high school. Students need not have activity books stamped, but if they do have they still may sit on either side of the stadium. Continued on page 4 PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 24, 1987 --- Lost or Comment Strayed or Stolen Away Last year an active campaign was carried on here on the Hill for a co-operative book store. In fact, so high was interest that the Men's Student Council first fell into an internal squabble over the issue, then became involved with the W.S.G.A., and the Daily Kansan carried on an editorial campaign on the subject. But difference between the student governing bodies was straightened out and a workable, feasible plan was submitted to the Chancellor. The Chancellor forwarded the proposal to the Board of Regents. There it died. The plan called for the establishment of a co-operative book store for the purpose of selling books to students at a saving to the students. A definite organization was provided under which the store would sell to students at near list prices and return the difference between expenses and receipts to the students at the end of the year. This profit would be returned in proportion to the amount of individual purchases. The files of the Men's Student Council are creaking with documentary evidence of the success of such plans and similar plans in large and enlightened universities all over the nation. Many individual students who have been actively interested in the subject can talk for hours on the advantages of such a store. The files of the Kansan contain editorial after editorial calling for such a store. The Board of Regents now has a proposal for a co-operative book store in the University of Kansas. The student body mourns the loss of one so young-so promising. The A. F. of L. refused to invite Madame Secretary Perkins of the Department of Labor to speak at its convention. The federation no doubt felt that the lady need not break her long silence on labor problems just for a convention. . . It's a Sin To Tell the Truth Americans have always looked askance at European diplomacy, considering it an underhanded game from which Uncle Sam has always returned home in the proverbial barrel. But never has the hypocrisy and intrigue in diplomacy been revealed in so glaring a light as in negotiations during the recent Mediterranean crisis. Russia, ignoring all standard practices of previous diplomacy, accused Italy point-blank of having destroyed two of her ships and boasted of proof for this accusation (photo-static copies of Italian orders to her submarines). Such truthfulness and frankness in the handling of foreign affairs was unheard and threw foreign departments throughout the world into consternation. Britain, until then the nation most vigorous in denunciation of Italy, vacillated, turned and criticized Russia for her statement. After a short time of muddling along, Britain has reversed her retreat attitude toward Italy, all the while drawing France submissively along. Italy has been invited to Paris for further discussion of the Mediterranean situation—to discuss the situation without the presence of Russia. Russia, it is feared, might commit the heinous crime of telling the truth—the unpardonable sin in diplomacy. A radical in the home town is a young fellow who goes to college to discover he is a liberal. . College liberals are purely a peculiar product. ~ We agree that there is something askew in our present system of education. But we maintain that you can't send irresponsibility and weakness to classes on "Build Your Character" and see them emerge as models of morals and ethics. Who's to Blame For Our "Crazy Education"? The real trouble lies in the misconception of education as vocational training. The present heterogeneous mixture of vocational and cultural courses entails a great deal of purposeless activity. Students bent upon the goal of securing a job after graduation find themselves involved in studies irrelevant and worthless in their chosen field. Students seeking a cultural background are continually surrounded by extraneous and worldly activities which only serve to muddle and discredit their original purpose. Culture belongs in smaller schools where it can be nurtured, and vocational training in schools intended and adequately equipped for such work. John Erskine labels ours a "crazy education." He bemoans the absence of character-building courses in schools and colleges, where, he says, an incomplete knowledge of enough courses leads to a degree in "culture" supposed to spring from prolonged idleness surrounded by architecture. Rather than provide a steady keel for character, this mixture of two totally different approaches to life serves only as a disintegrating force. Erskine terms this fundamental disorganization lack of character. Lack of character, yes. But on the part of responsible persons who have turned education into a business racket, rendering it a virtual impossibility to remedy the situation. Georgia Gives The Optimist a Break It's bats off to the state of Georgia Last week at a conference of wardens in charge of county convicts in that state, a proposal was made to reinstate the lash. This savage punishment had been abolished 17 years before by Governor Hardwick, but legislators said they would recommend flogging in their new prison plans. The news brought a bowl of protest from Georgians all over the state. They not only condemned the lash, but would also have the abolishment of chain gangs as well in a general reform of the entire state prison system. Acting upon this display of public sentiment, Governor Rivers hurried to formulate a program which would establish the new and modern Tattnall prison as a central point from which prisoners would be graduated on an honor system to chain-free camps. The governor has the full support of the legislative committee, which early dropped consideration of the lash. This is a hopeful note from an unexpected source. Members of the Lion's Club have discovered that prairie dog is good to eat. . Now if the Elks would just discover same about road hogs. . Official University Bulletin Notices dau at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m., preceeding regular publication days from 10 a.m. to 5 o.m. Vol. 35 FRIDAY, SEPT. 24, 1937 No. 12 CREATIVE LEISURE PICNIC: The Creative Leisure picnic hike will be held Sunday, Sept. 26, at 3 to 6 p.m. for all ages. Meet the geologist on Saturday and be there. Meet at Henley House and bring 15 cents — Ruth Fengel, Chairman. EMPLOYMENT: Will University women who are interested in exchanging labor for room and board please report to the office of the Advisor of Women. The Advisor is available now—Marie Miller, Assistant to the Advisor. IDENTIFICATION CARDS: Student identification cards will be given out from 9 to 12 a.m. and from 1:15 to 4:30 p.m. today. Activity books must be presented—Oren Bingham. INTRAMURAL SPORTS REGISTRATION: All those men who wish to compete in intramural sports and are not affiliated with some organization kindly register at 105 Robinson gymnasium - E, R. Elibel KAPPA PHI: There is to be an open meeting for all Methodist women interested in Kappa Phi at the home of Rev. Hunt, 1527 Massachusetts Street, from 10am-4pm, or active members are sure to be sure - Avis Petrus. MEN'S STUDENT COUNCIL: There will be a meeting of all M.S.C. members in the Pine Room Monday evening, Sept. 27, at 8:15—Moe Ettenson, Secretary. STYLE SHOW TEA: The style show tea for freshman women and their counsellors, which was announced for the fall and been postponed until Friday from 10:30 to 5:40 in the Union ballroom — Dorothy Trekell, Chairman. University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY OF POTOMAC KANSAS PRESS MEMBER 1937 ASSOCIATION EDITOR-IN-CHEF ASSOCIATE EDITOR: MORMIS THOMPSON AND GREY HENES ALICE HALDEN-JOHNSON ASSOCIATE EDITOR MANAGING EDITOR CAMPUS EDITORS KENNETH MOREN and JON COJCABIAN SOCIETY EDITOR SOCIETY EDITOR SPORT EDITOR ULTRA POINT EDITOR MAKEUP EDITORS BOBbie CASKey and JANE FLOOD REWITE EDITOR MARVIN GOBEL FOUND EDITOR News Staff When bacteriologists throw things into high gear there is an average turnover of approximately 3000 test tubes and 800 petri dishes daily, to say nothing of the flasks, Wassermann, and Kahn tubes, dilution bottles, and glassware used to the preparation room to be cleaned and sterilized each day. PUBLISHER J. HOWARD RUSCO Editorial Staff Kantan Board Members Devious Is the Path Of a Bacteriologist's Test Tube FEATURE EDITOR J. HALDEMAN-JULIEN A. JOHN RUSCO P. BRADKE MORRIS KENNETH MORRIES GRACE VALENTINE Q. QUINSON BROWN EDWARD BANNEY MARTIN INTENSO MARK TURNER JANE FLORE MOREL THOMPSON The tinerary of a test tube from the time it leaves the washroom until it returns again is an interesting procedure. Upon leaving the wash room the tube is filled with a media upon which the bacteria may feed. After being filled the tube then goes into what is known as an autoclave, a device which sterilizes the media, freezing it from all air. It then closes and the steam pressure for a certain specified length of time necessary to insure the technician that the tube and its contents are sterile. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING WORK National Advertising Service, Inc. 420 MADRID AVENUE. NEW YORK, N.Y. 817-532-2600. BAN FRANCISCO LOS ANGELES. Student Performs Experiment From the autoclave the tube is then sent down a dumb waister to the floor below where the laboratories for students are located. The student takes the tube from the waister and checks it out to some student. The student takes the tube, performs his experiment and in from one to three days results have been obtained, successful or unsuccessful. Upon reaching wash the bathroom the many other items is placed in a wire which will hold approximately 85 tubes. Business Staff BRUNNIE MANAGER F. QUINSTON BROWN Entered as second-class matter, September 17, 1905, at the post office. Fifteen baskets of tubes are placed in a tub filled with a solution of tri-sodium phosphate, oxydol and water. By releasing steam from the bottom of the tub the tubes are boiled for approximately twenty minutes. The heat mets the media in which the oxydol cut the fats and greases which may have been collected on the tubes. Rinse Tubes in Tap Water The tubes are taken from the boiler and rinsed through a tap water solution to remove the sups and are then run through a distilled water solution to rinse free the natural salts of the tap water solution and thus allow the tube to dry without the usual milky color character of glassware when it is not dried with a cloth immediately after being washed. From the distilled water solution the tube is taken out to the tech- nician's desk where it is again filled with media which some student will use in cultivating another growth of bacteria. Rehearsals of the second band will be each Monday and Friday afternoon from 3:30 to 5 at Hoch auditorium with James Van Dyck and Rex Conner as assistant leaders. The entire band, however, is under the supervision of Russell Wiley, band director. Second Band Begins Rehearsal All students participating in this bard have the privileges of reading and conducting complete scores. In addition they have the opportunity to play instruments other than their own. More members are expected today who did not have their schedules arranged for Monday's practice. The following men reported for the first time. George Classen, Zenith Fowler Kenneth Shook, Bob Moses. Clarinets Cornets Donald Coulter, Elhue Moore Jack Henry, Wilbur Pro, Wayne Barnes, Lewis Miser, Melvin Mc Donald. Jean Klussman. Robert Forman. Oboe Flute Baritone Baritone Ralph Burson. Percussion Trombone Rex Tharp, Loren Akers Trombone --- Eb Alto Saxophone John M. Wilson. Tubas Rex Conner, Curtis Johnson, Edward Fischer, Charles Hopkins. Get the Daily Kansan delivered to your door for only $3.00 a year. A REMARKABLE RECORD ARROW SANFURIZED The New Trump With an amazing soft collar that outwears the shirt Thanks to a new ingenious weave, the soft collar on our New Trump shirt will still be smart — and unfrayed after *fifty* washings. Like all Arrow Shirts, the *New Trump* is Mitoga form-fit and Sanforized. $2 Ober's Headquarters for PIPES Close-Out Sale of $1.00 and $1.50 Pipes for 29c Rankin's Drug Store "Handy for Students" 1101 Mass. Phone 678 Organize 2 Music Groups The new musical groups, the Little Symphony and the Little Chorus, organized by Otto Miesner, professor of public school music, began rehearsals in Hoch auditorium this week. The Little Symphony is composed of 35 members and the Little Chorus of 50. The former rehearses in Hoch auditorium Wednesday afternoons at 3:30, and the latter in room 76 of central Administration building at 11:30 Tuesday and Thursday mornings. Many men and women do not have the time and others are not eligible to play in the regular music groups of the School of Fine Arts, but desire to sing or play an instrument and to associate with others in similar activities. Consequently these organizations were formed for the purpose of allowing students to participate in some music of Music to participate in some musical activity and to develop music as an avocation. "Of the many students for whom music is an avocation," said Professor Miesner. "there are undoubtedly many who took an active part in the musical life of their high schools, such as playing in orchestra, band, and singing in club clubs and choruses—many who do not intend to follow music as a career but to be pleasurable hobby throughout life." He concluded by saying that no other requirements than the desire to play or sing are necessary for admittance to these groups. Get the Daily Kanan delivered to your door for only $3.00 a year. Dr. Buckmaster to Elkhart Dr F H. Bukmaster, graduate of the University of Kansas School of Medicine in 1935, began practice in Elkart, Kan., Sept. 1. . Railroad President Travels by Automobile St. Louis, Mo., Sept. 23—(UP)—When Matthew S. Sloon, president of the Missouri-Kansas-Trail railroad, tours the trade territory served by his lines he does it in an automobile, fitted to travel on rails. Sloon says he uses the automobile because he likes to travel that way rather than by train. He also likes to visit places where he uses a complete train and crew, and it permits him to make frequent stops. Record Enrollment At. Oread. Training. School The automobile has no steering wheel since it is guided by the rails. It is operated like a train and the chauffer is an experienced railroad engineer. Before the machine leaves a station its schedule is made out, with proper sidetrack orders at necessary points in order to prevent interest in the tracks or to pull trains. During the year Shoon has used his unique mode of travel, he estimates the c car has been driven nearly 1,200 miles. An enrollment of 110 students at Oread high school this year is somewhat in excess of the capacity of the school, but by making the necessary shifts in schedules of students, all who were promised places were accommodated. The senior class of 28 is the largest known to the school. Attend the Freshman - Varsity football game Saturday afternoon. 1930 ARE YOU. TRUMP POOR? - If you can't boast of at least one New Trump shirt in your collection, you're missing part of your college education. The New Trump will wear well and look smart semester after semester, because of Arrow's specially woven soft collar that refuses to give up. $2$ ARROW`SHIRTS and TIES Mitoga—form-fit Sanforized-Shrunk VITALITY MEETING MASCULINE APPROVAL Glendale Crepe Sole - Tann Grain Upper - is proving the most popular "Campus" Oxford. Price $5.00 Brown Buck, Crepe Sole "Olympic" $4.45 Sport Socks 25c and 35c THE SPOT CASH SHOE STORE Gym Wool Sweat Sox 25c 819 Mass. St. — Haynes & Keene FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1987 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Here on the Hill an account of Mt. Oread Society JUNE ULM, Society Editor Before 1 p.m. book R.E. 2) after 1 p.m. book R70-83 Theta Epsilon, Baptist sorority, entertained with its annual marigold supper party for runeshe in the garden at the home of the Rev. Charles W. Thomas. About forty members and guests were present. A gold diamond pendant is a decorative decorations and in the menu of the supper. Mrs. L. E. Sisson poured. ☆ ☆ ☆ Miss Mary Cavaness, president of Theta Epinion, spoke to the group, the Rev. Mr. Thomas welcomed the guests, and Mrs. Howard K. Koelb, one of the patronesses, gave a short talk. Alpha Phi Alpha announces the pledging of the following men: Daniel Jodlin, c41 Daniel Benson, c41 Daniel Rapp, c41 Arthur Parks, c41 Dumbie Maran Lauris, gr Dumbie Maran Lauris, gr Mavonv K. Dillard, c41 Ivory Wallace, c41 Ivory Wallace, c41 Habert Perkins, c41 Gilbert Alexander, c38 Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Hubig of Wichita announce the bi birthday of a son, to whom they have given the name, Philip Edward. Mrs. Hubig was formerly Miss Billowen Macourie of Lawrence. She was a member of the Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. ☆ ☆ ★ Members of Mu Phi Epison, honorary music sorority, the guests of Ramona Harner at her home Wednesday. Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemistry fraternity, announces the pledging of Loren V. Burns, 'gr. Phone K. U. 6 6 Guests this week at the Ch Omeg house are: Mrs. H, W. Fitzgerick Miss Alna Williams, and Billy Wal lace Smith, all of ElDorado. ☆ ☆ ☆ Mr. and Mrs. D. A. January of Ga- watomite were dinner guests yester- day at the Alpha Chi Omega house. The Alpha Delta Pi sorority entertained the Kappa Praphyla fraternity with an hour dance last evening. Corbin hall held an informal party for all nil students staying there last evening after closing hours. LOST: Navy blue purse in 119 Fraser. Rowward offered. Call 267. Virginia Varga. Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Kepliginer of Kansas City, Mo., were dinner guests yesterday at the Delta Tau Delta University, where he is one of them, Bob, who is a pledge. Corbin hall had its first hour dance from 7 to 8 last evening. WANTED: Student laundry, shirts 10c. Phone 1587J. -14 Guests at the Triangle house Tues --- WANTED: Roommate for quiet studios boy, also large double room for rent Meals if desired. Phone 2180J. -11 Marine Miller, c'41 Harriet Darby, c'40 Marsanne Banticon, c'40 CLASSIFIED ADS LOST: 10:34 a.m. between 9:10 and 10:30, an Eastern Star pin. Lost some- where between Green Hill Island, Reward. Call 225, Nancy Fleming. -14 STUDENT WASHINGS: Guaranteed satisfactory. Call for and deliver. Phone 21631M. -12 Lutheenna guests at the Gamma PBI Bet莎醒 sortery yesterday were: Ellen Grant, Kis, Kansas City, Mo Ruth Leared, 15, Kansas City, Mo Cocera Queen Kis, 17, Kansas City, Mo Mrs. Hülerin Appel, Kansas City, Mo Luncheon guests at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house yesterday were: J 25c drilled SHAMPOO and WARE. 35c drive Economy prices on other beauty work also. END CURBS. $1 up, inquire 7 Experienced Operators New Equipment added IWETRA BEAUTY SHOP 941% IWETRA Phone 533 Mee Door Book Store TAX I Call 2-800 UNION CAB CO. "Originations of 186 Cabe" WAVQ BEAUTY SHOP WAVE, new styles, any style Phone 95 — 921 Miss. St. --- Jayhawk Barber Shop Completely Modernistic snampoos 25c up Finger Waves 25c (dried) Oil Permeants $2.50 up Enjoy the best at no additional cost. Hair cut 35c. Earl Ellis Joe Letch "Bill" Hensley "Paddy" Hyatt 727 Mass. Subscribe for THE WICHTA BEACON National Advertising News THE WICHTI BEACON Kansas' Greatest Newspaper Delivered to your door Daily and Sunday. 10 cents per week — Phone 2316 ----------------------------------------------------------------------day night were Mr. and Mrs. Ray T Wright, Mr. DeVon Carlson, Mr. De bert Hermann, and Mr. Ed Fouch, all of Lawrence. Don't Miss the Time to Learn dance to live a halfway life step. GIVE THE GIVEN BEGINNER Mation Rice Dance Studio Over Ramayne-Aimily Flower Shop The Y.W.C.A. will hold its annual Estes Park picnic this afternoon at 5 o'clock. All students who went to Estes park last summer or who have ever been to the park are invited to attend. The group will meet at Henley House tomorrow afternoon, and they will be joined by E. F. Engel, professor of German, in University Heights. Ehna May Picture, c'40, and Bill Fusion, gr., are in charge of the program. Pictures taken at Estes park last year will be shown. There will also be discussions and reminiscences of the activities last year. In addition there will be a discussion Sette Poole means Estes Co-op, which is a plan by which students can save and make money for the purpose of going to Estes Park next summer. The group's activities of the W.W.C.A. group is invested in Government Postal Savings bonds. At the close of the school term this money is withdrawn and is used to help the student go to Eates during the vacation. Y.W.C.A. Holds Estes Reunion In this way every student interested has an opportunity to attend Estes park. The plans concerning this idea will be discussed at length this afternoon. Later there will be a guest lecture by the Rev. Ruth Knoche, c.40, and Corinne Martin, c'40. All students interested are invited to attend the picnic. WANTED: Student Laudry, prices reasonable, mending done free. Will call deliver. Phone 1313. -12 COFFEVILLE COILDS - Elizabeth Cook Right Elliott of Beauty Shop in Coffeyville, is now located at Ivai's Beauty 店. There are new customers in are welcome. Phone 1331. Phone K. U. 6 6 Tennessee Straw Vote Shows 4 to 1 Dry Vote ROOMS AND BOARD! Double rooms 8 each, board 83 a week. Home cooks food, family style. Special Sunday meals 92 Alamanda. Call for John. Phone 2811 GRELS: TWO-ROOM nicely furnished TABLE, Sink, hot and cold water, Frigidaire, S. E., expound, Phone 1131J, 1139 Vermont. -15 SHAMPOO and 25c WAVE, dried Oil - Drene - Fitch Shampoo and End Curls $1.00 up, Complete PERMANENTS, Any Style $1.00, $1.50 up, complete MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP 732 1/2 Mass. Phone 2353 Twenty-five words or less one inscription, 25c; three insertions, 16c; six inscriptions, 24c; contract rates, not more than 25 words, $2 per month flat. Payable in advance and accepted subject to approval at the KANSAN Business Office. WANTED Typewriter Cleaning and Repairing CLARENCE M. BAKER 1323 Kentucky Phone 2095J All popular magazines at one half to one-third regular price. MAGAZINES Magazine Exchange 729 Massachusetts TAXI HUNSINGER'S 920 - 22 Mass. Phone 12 ONE STOP Clothes Service Station SCHULZ the TAILOR 024 Moss Buy GOOD shoe repairing Our Prices are RIGHT! OYLEEN'S SHOE SHOP --on --on The Venus Beauty Salon Individual Booths Five Experienced Operators Featuring Dona Ray Cosmetics Vera Aderholdt, Manager Phone 387 First floor; 842 Mass. 1346 Ohio Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 23—(UP) -Dry forces rolled up a one-sided majority in an unprecedented straw bridge on responst of Tennessee dry laws. Ufficial returns from 871 of 228 precincts, giving dry a dresy four to one lead; showed for repeat 15,692; against repoll, 57,478. Indications are that only about one-third of Tennessee's approximately 500,000 eligible voters cast ballots in the referendum—a vote measure that effect on state laws prohibiting sales of all wines except beer. Many University Women Attend Lantern Parade A record-breaking crowd of University women took part in the annual W.S.G.A.-Y.W.C.A. dinner and lantern parade last night The group assembled in the lounge of the Union building at 6 p.m. Eleanor Slaten, c38, president of the Y.W.C.A., presided over the dinner and program in the ballroom. Following the dinner, the women formed a line and marched with lighted Japanese lanterns to the home of Chancellor E. H. Lindley. Eleanor Slaten and Dori Stockwell, president of the W.S.G.A., gave short speeches and presented Mrs. Lindley with a bouquet of roses. After return greetings by Chancellor and Mrs. Lindley, the group returned to the Union building and disbanded. *coh 'Wolin Servekoger* Westminster foundation will hold a fun hour tonight at 8:30 from Westminster hall. All students are invited. Candid Craze Causes Clamor for Camera Classes To Hold Scavenger Hunt Doubless a candid camera shot of Washington crossing the Delaware would be infinitely less romantic than some of the popular artists' concepts of this great historical event, and doublesh future generators. Franklin D. Roosevelt nodding in his chair at an important conference. But there is a great deal to photography besides candid work. Students in various departments are enthusiastic about a course in photography which would help them in their own studies. This has been stimulated by the circulation during the past few days of a petition for such a class. Various students have been asked their opinions on the introduction of a course in photography on the Hill, and here they are: 'Course Is Necessary' James McGinnis: "It seems to me that such a course is a necessity in the journalism department especially, and it is a means toward a livelihood. If a place can be found where you work, is should by all means be added." David Tindal: "Well, I think it would be a good idea. I think it would be very beneficial in helping out different lines in the business field, such as advertising. I think I would enroll in this course." Esther Mai: "I believe there is a definite place in the University for a course in photography." Helen Wilkerson: "I should think a well-rounded college would have a course in photography, although I know nothing about photography, a course in it would undoubtedly be adding in other fields of study." 'Short Changed Without It J. Howard Ruseo: "Any journalism student who plans to enter the field actively is being short changed when he leaves college without a course in photography." 'Short Changed' Without It Elon Torrence: "Why, of course! It would be the means of teaching students an interesting and valuable hobby as well as teaching fundamentals for use in professional fields." Greg Hines: "We should have one because the growing demand of newspapers and magazines using a large number of photographs are bringing about an increasing demand for photographers of ability and experience." Gwinn Henry, University athletic director, spoke to members of the Rotary Club and members of the football squads of the two Leavenworth high schools at a lunch in Leavenworth Wednesday noon. We Serve FREE SHRIMP Gwinn Henry Addresses Rotary Club Quality Beverages Tasty Sandwiches 'OPEN HOUSE' Friday Evening LARGE CAFE 18 E. 9th calls for Floral Decorations CORRECT and BEAUTIFUL Our unlimited supply of fresh cut fall flowers will meet your needs and insure the success of your party. Phone 820 931 Mass. St. "Flowers of Distinction" WARD'S Flowers See Us for Distinctive Varsity Corsages "Flowers telegraphed or delivered anywhere" Alumni Group Starts Work Representatives S v e n d News and Questionnaire To Graduates Beginning its fourth year of operation, the University representative planned started yesterday with the mailing of Campus news and a questionnaire to representatives of the Alumni Association. Ray T. Weight, chairman of the representation committee, urges members of the committee to co-operate with the University and Kansas Department ofiversity and the various committees of Kanas in "close harmony." Duties of the 137 members of the committee are to keep up-to-date the list of graduates and former students in their respective communities and to send news concerning events that will be discussed, and also asked to furnish information concerning students from their communities who are now attending the University. In addition, they are requested to help build membership in the Alumni Association and activities of the university, entertainments and concerts. In cities where a local University of Kansas club exists, with elected officers, the official representative is urged to co-operate with the club. On The committee is composed of 137 members in the 165 counties of Kansas. Working in Minneapolis + + + sanfrancisco Pendleton 36, is now working for International Business Machines company, Minneapolis, Minn. To the Shin: "This is to let you know that we have given up pool, snooker, billiards, ping pong, and other vices in the interest of learning and the higher things in life. I want you to know that I didn't mean what I said about blacking your eyes if you printed anything else. Also, I'm afraid Elmer, and may the better life find you as amusing as the baser side did. And I was uneasy about the eye deal. UPDRAFT On the Shin-to see this great picture FAKE. The Owl was out last night in the persons of the editor, secretary, and that victim of Wed- UPDRAFT A special Shin investigator reports that the fire in the apartment of John Hunt night before last was not the result of a lighted cigarette, but one of Bill Downs' short stories that had bad smoldering ill summer and had finally burst into flames by Bill Downs. Then by Bill Downs and Dave Hammast last semester. Chalk up another crime solved by the Shin. LATEST DISCOVERY IN PIPES CARBURETOR U.S. Pat. No. 2,082,106 YELLO-BOLE $125 To Dye and Tint. IT IS TIME--to see this great picture This new way of burning tobacco gives you a better, cooler, cleaner smoke. Udraft of air from bottom coals smoke, keeps bowl absolutely dry, takes rawness out of any tobacco, improves comforter quality. But the same famous honey treated bowl. Nothing else has its flavor. At dealers' now. Command from page 1 SHOE SHOP Let us do it the distinctive way. See us for quality shoe repairing ALEXANDRA STEPHENSON 1017 Moss. Phone 686 ELECTRIC TOMITE and TOMORROW The House of the Students 3 - 7 - 9 10-25c 'til 7 then 10-35c DICKINSON The Friendly Theatre The Picture that DARES tell the TRUTH! DAMAGED GOODS" 1939 He feared the worst and found it true! 图 Coming SUNDAY We Show the Really Great Hits Adolph Zucker presents JACK BENNY in "ARTISTS and MODELS" A Paramount Pictures ARSITY Home of the Jawhaws The Show Value of Lawrence! Admission 10c and 15c TODAY AND TOMORROW Thrilling Romance with Black Gold Hunters! SWASHBUCKLING HEROES OF THE OIL FIELDS! The WILDCATTER SCOTT COSTON JAMES DOOBS JACK SHARP A NEW INNOVATION Thrills! Action! As the Wild West Grows Wilder! MEMORANDUM AIRPLANE DEPT. GALLOPHONE DYNAMITE" NERMIT MAYARD Continuous Shows from 2 SUNDAY! 2 SWELL HITS De-Gloom Yourself FUN! LAUGHS! PANDEMONIUM! EDWARD EVERETT HORTON J. HARRY LEEN WILSON'S Upstream Barry OH DOCTOR! A UNIVERSAL PICTURE AND GEORGE BART Delbert Cotella BRARYMORE YOURS FOR THE ASKING A Penguin Book A Galloping Romance of a Gambler Who Was too Smart to Gamble with Love! YOURS FOR THE ASKING Soon — "MAN 1 MARRY" and — "13 Hours by Air" needs' kidnapping. It is reported that they were working on the final details of the crime committed on the previous afternoon. Pictures were taken, cokes consumed, and the children may could fool the public. We are asking you if the Owl has ever done anything but fool the public? "EVERYDAY SPECIAL" UNION FOUNTAIN One of "Diddle" Aasher's frat brothers called him up from around the other night and posed as a reporter from a city newspaper. He wanted the dope on Charlie McCarthy and was a little rude in his handling of "Diddle". Aasher got tired of the importance of the supposed re-importance he up told him that "I am a newspaper man, too". With this the frat brother burst into gates of laughter and dropped the phone. Ham Salad Sandwich and Chocolate Milk Shake 20c Memorial Union Sub-Basement PATEE Week Days 10C Til 7 Then 15c DOUBLE TREAT! TODAY ENDS SATURDAY "THE THREE MESSUETERS" BOB LIVINGSTON RAY CORRIGAN MAX TERHUN AND 'Heart of the Rockies' "Man of the People" JOSEPH CALELF FLORENCE RICE TED HEALY — ALSO — DICK TRACY SERIAL COLOR CARTOON GRANADA G WEEK DAY SHOWS 2:30:1-7 25eil T 11 SATURDAY - SUNDAY Continuous From 2:30 ENDS TONITE! Two Great Stars Together Together KAY FRANCIS ERROL FLYNN "ANOTHER DAWN" MARCH OF TIME Sport Thrill - News SATURDAY 4 GLORIOUS DAYS Why Is a Woman Judged by Her Weakest Moment? AMERICA'S GREATEST ACTRESS IN THE HIT OF HER CAREER! BETTE HENRY DAVIS·FONDA THAT Certain WOMAN THAT Certain WOMAN IAN HUNTER • ANITA LOUISE • Donald Grisp Plus—Olympic ski Champions Novelty Bond Act-Latest News WEDNESDAY "BIG CITY" PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1937 Foursome To Play Golf Oatman, Matson and Stephenson Sisters Will Give Exhibition Glenn Oatman, captain of the 1936-37 Jayhawk golf team, will compete in an 18-hole mixed four-some exhibition match to be played on the University course, Thursday, Sept. 10. Oatman is paired with Keith Stephenson against Betty Stephenson a d 24 against Watson c'39. Oatman, who holds the Missouri State Golf Championship, left Wednesday for Little Rock to compete in the Hard Scrape Invitation tournament, will return to Lawrence for next week's match. He had been here supervising the work of his university University course for play this fall. Watson, who was a member of last year's varsity golf squad, holds the Western Open Junior Chambers and Watson sisters are University students. The match will consist of three rounds of the six-hole course. Under Oatman's direction, two CSEP students have worked the course into excellent condition for the match, Allen, who arranged the match, desires a large student gallery for the match, which will start at 3:30. Quack Club To Hold Tryouts Quack Club, women's swimming organization, will hold tryouts for membership tomorrow at 10 a.m. in Robinson gymnasium. Any woman student may attend this tryout. Practice periods will be held for two weeks, after which the final tests will be held. An applicant for membership must pass the following tests to become a pledge of the organization: Back, side, crawl, and single overarm strokes in good form. Float or tread water for three minutes. Plunge or underwater swim. Surface dive in good form. Endurance swim of 15 lengths of the pool. In addition to the pledge test, to become a full member of the club the swimmer must pass the following tests: Running front drive Back dive or front jacknife. Running front dive. Endurance swim of one-quarter mile To become a "major Quack," the highest rank of the club, one must execute eight dives in good form, and pass tests in speed swimming, diving and two-thirds of test tests. The tryouts for this rank will be held later in the year. Civil Service Offers New Positions The United States Civil Service Commission has announced open competitive examinations to be held in locations and positions are among those available. Medical social worker, $3,800 a year; associate medical social worker, $3,200 a year; and assistant medical social worker, $2,600 a year. All positions are in the children's bureau, department of labor. Associate botanist, $3,200 a year; and assistant botanist, $2,600 a year. These positions are in the bureau industry, department of agriculture. Froshographies-- (Note: this is the third in a series of minute biographies published by the University Daily Karanse to acquaint its readers with the personnel of the freshman football squad.) The distinction of being the smallest man on the squad goes to Rex Brouss of Pittsburgh. Brouss is only 5 feet, 5 inches tall and weighs 140 pounds. Rex is trying for a halfback position, the post where he lettered one year at the Lamar, Mo. High School. Another Amerine is on the fresh grid squad this year. Last year it was Dick, this year it is Kenneth, Dick's cousin. Kenneth weighs 183 pounds and is 6 feet tall. His home town is Penalosa. This is his first experience at football and he is trying for a backfield position. Ward Crowell. Height, 5 feet, 10" inches. Weight, 170 pounds. Crowell attended the Attica High School with him and served for his four years. Position, guard. Chesster Buddenbohm is competing for a center position. At his some town high school in Effingham he lettered three years and made the Big Six (a high school conference) all-star team. Buddenbohm is 5 feet, 11 inches tall and weighs 174 pounds. Another winner of four football letters in high school is Charles Dalyplem, a 6 foot, 1 inch, 170 pound player. Dalyplem plays in the backfield. Adding to the long list of half-back candidates is Ralph Dugan of Circilliveau. Dugan attended high school at Soldier, where he earned three letters and an EOE. He later hit his height in feet and his weight is 173 pounds. From Jewell comes a red-headed end candidate, Keith Fedde. In high school Fedde was captain of his team two of the four years he earned letters. Keith is 6 feet, 2 inches tall and weighs 174 pounds. The scales register 210 when Harry Wigner, Kansas City, Kan., steps on them. Wigner is a tackle, earning one letter in that position at Auburn and one at Panda high school. He is 5 feet, $11 \frac{1}{2}$ inches tall. Sam Travis hails from the dust bowl region, his home being in Garden City. In high school Travis earned four letters and quite a reputation as the premiere time travel 'Travis' is 192, and he is 6 feet, 2 inches tall. Louis Thompson, another red read, played his high school football Owing to a 'a lack of interest last year, we was no two-mile team running for Kansas. This year a great deal of interest has been shown and Coach Hargiss hopes to put a good team on the field. Head Track Coach "Bill" Hargiss yesterday announced that the University would be represented by a two-mile team this year. Two-Mile Team To Represent K.U As a nucleus for the two-mile team, Coach Hassig has Klann, Haslam, Toberin, Ryan, Cameron and Hepner. All of these men have been showing up well since practice started Sept. 13. Several good sophomores also are expected to bolster the team. Four dual meets, in addition to the conference meet and a tentative meet with Drake, have been scheduled. Three of the scheduled meets fall upon the day of the varsity football battles with the same schools. They are: Nebraska, there; Kansas State, here; and Oklahoma, there. Meets with Missouri, and Drake (tentative), and the conference meet complete the schedule. The Wesley Foundation will meet at Tenth and Vermont street at 5 p.m. to discuss the future hike. In case of rain, an indoor picnic will be held at the church. Methodist Students to Hike Albert Simoncic is an all-around athlete from Pittsburg. In football he lettered three years and made it the all-Southeast Kansas jeague fullback last year. He is 6 feet, 1 inch tall, and he weighs 190 pounds. at Okaolaosa. There he earned three letters at a backfield post. Thompson is 6 feet, 2 inches tall, and weighs 182 pounds. Steve Renko is a 191 pound end from Wyandotte high school, Kansas City. In high school he lettered three times and made both the all-ity and the all-Northeast Kansas league teams. Height, 6 feet, 1 inch. Jack Morgan, Jack is a 163 pound quarterback from Pittsburg. There he made three letters in football, was captain of his team in his senior season, and the all-star east Kansas league team. Morgan's height is 6 feet. teague Teams, a bright Bill Rudenick is another end from Wakefile. Bill also made three letters and was captain of his team last year. In his junior year, Radencic made the all-city team, but in his senior year he was out the greater part of the season with a broken hand. WEAVER'S Soap Sale Buy Your Favorite Soaps at Low Sale Prices. Friday and Saturday only. Phone 636 Cosmetics Along the Sideline By William Fitzgerald, c'39 Kansas Sports Editor From tackle to tackle the Jayhawkers look as good as any other team in the Big Six, with the possible exception of Nebraska. Lewis Ward and Fred Boslewice are big and rough and both have experience. Gearhart and Rhule are two of the most likely replacements in case either of the regulars is injured. But Boslewice is developmentally older than all of the conference. The队 strong's cows, however, are the guards. Both Anderson, the swinging guard, and Stapleton are big and aggressive and rank with any guards in the valley. There are several good guard replaces as though part of Lindsey's task at foot will not be unpleasant. --about their chances of beating the layhawkers. And from Wichita comes the good news that Head Coach Al J. Gebert is worried. (From what we had heard the lads at Wichita weren't the worrying kind.) The Shockers, who lost their entire regular line from last year, are shooled out to play now in an attempt to plug the bolles. Thus far the Wichita line is made up entirely of sophomores, and with the Oklahoma Aggies invading the Shocker stadium Saturday night it looks as though Gebert had some justification for his worries. The bright spot in the Wichita picture is the kid-legged halfballs, Harold Bill and Captain Tromer Smith; a hard crashing fullback, Rein Niehage; and a veteran quarter-back, Pike Gawthrop. We hear the Shockers are still hopped up Jolt- The Kansas line suffered a setback Tuesday when Herb Gearhart, berry reserve tackle, lost the tip end of the little finger of his left arm in a car door. Herb probably couldn't get to the game. `Capt. Clarence Dew of Iowa State may not be as brilliant on the gridiron as his running mate, all Big Six Ed Bock, but Ed has to remove his head covering to Clarence in the classroom. Carrying the full attack, he was also at same time working for all of his college expenses. Dee has maintained a straight "A" average. The Chicago Cubs bowed their way back down the ladder yesterday when the Giants from New York shut them out cold 6-0. It begins to look very much like another all-New York series with the odds on the Yankees and, of course, our guess is that two great southpawns, "Lefty" Gomez of the Yanks, and Carl Hubbell of the Giants, will face each other in Yankee stadium on the opening day of the series. Oct. 6 Another five-event World's Series seems likely now after the Chicago Cubs bogged down in the last two games of their three-game "crocial" LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas, 641 Louisiana Graduates Get Good Positions Phone 894 W. H. Quakenbush, Pres. E. S. Weatherby, Supt. SAVE TIME and MONEY Enjoy Air-conditioned Comfort TRAVEL by TRAIN AVOID THE HAZARDS OF HIGHWAY TRAVEL Ask your Union Pacific Agent about low fares anywhere. UNION PACIFIC OVERLAND PROGRESSIVE UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD Subscribe for THE KANSAS CITY STAR Headquarters Rexall Drug Store PHONE 17 13 papers - 15 cper week 847 Mass. St. species with the Giants. The Giants are leading now by $3\frac{1}{2}$ games, and only a mild earthquake could upset them. The American League representatives, the N.Y. Yankees, are more than mild earthquakes, however, as rival American League pitchers can testify, and they will again rate favorites over the National Leaguers. The World's Biggest Diamondium diametrum Oct. 6, will probably find "Lefty" Gomez of the Yanks facing another portside, the great Carl Hubbell of the Giants. Frosh Varsity-- The varsity starters: Chitwood RE Ward RT Anderson RG Warren C Stapleton LG Rhule LT Hardacre LE Masoner QB Amerine LH Divers RH Cannady FB We Telegraph Flowers - Orchids Continued from page 1 The varsity starters: - Roses - Gardenias Flower PHONE 72 "Big Apple" Varsity CORSAGES Start the social season right by sending her an individual styled varsity corsage. RUMSEY Flower Shop ALLISON 60c Alka Seltzer 49c KOTEX 33c Puretest Aspirin 12 for 10c 100 for 39c Pkg. 12----20c Pkg. 48----75c 50c TEK Tooth Brush 2 for 51c 40c Pepsodent Tooth Paste 33c REXALL Milk Magnesia 1 Pint 39c Imperial Cleaner 1 Gallon 69c 1 Quart 29c Drene Shampoo MAZDA LAMPS 25 to 60 Watts 15c 75 and 100 Watts 20c 60c size 49c $1.00 size 79c EVERY DAY CUT PRICES Free Delivery A Daily Gargle Helps to Keep Down Colds and Irritated Throats You will be amazed how much good you secure by gargling with Mi 31 Solution every morning and night. Mi 31 Solution is a double-strength antiseptic that kills germs when diluted with equal parts of water. By using this excellent antiseptic as a gargle regularly, you can kill millions of germs that congregate in the mouth. In this case, the clearse the men biomers. You can slide after every through garging. By getting often, you help to reduce your chances of catching colds and other infections. Germs might have caused The Rexall Store 9th & Mass. Phone 238 Buy Mi 31 Solution at the Rexall Drug Store. It is sold on a moneyback guarantee, get a full pint for only 49¢. H. W. STOWITS — FREE DELIVERY — Zipper Notebooks 3 Rings $1.69 KLEENEX 200 — 13c 500 — 28c Student Desk Lamps Cascade Pound Paper KLENZO Facial Tissues 500 — 25c 72 Sheets 50 Envelopes 59c Alarm Clocks 89c 50 Pepsodent Tooth Powder Haliver Oil Capsules 100 — $1.29 Stag Hair Oil 6 Ox. — 35c SOMETHING NEW! LOUIE KUHN'S BAND SOMETHING DIFFERENT The Newest Campus Craze Big Apple VARSITY Tonight BIGGER AND BETTER PRIZES FOR TRUCKING CONTEST SINGLES CONTEST — First Prize: 2 Varsity Dance Tickets: 8 Granada Theatre Tickets. Second Prize: 5 Granada Theatre Tickets. DOUBLES CONTEST — First Prize: 2 Varsity Dance Tickets; 8 Granada Theatre Tickets; 1 Orchid Corsage (Given by Rumsey- Allison). Second Prize: 5 Granada Theatre Tickets. NOTICE Regular Dancing Except During the Trucking Contest Trucking by THE TWO STEPPERS DATES----75c----STAGS AY W YJMAY UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN K VOLUME XXXV The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas I Sixty-five Enroll To Set New High With 65 students registering in the University during the past week, a new record was established with a total enrollment of 4,854. This figure includes the enrollment both before and after graduation of Medicine in Kansas City, Kan. The previous record was set last year with a total of 4,649 students enrolled in both the schools, five less than are enrolled now. The 1937 figure has been reached despite the increase in fees that went into effect this semester, and there were of 405 students in the CSEP quota. LAWRENCE. KANSAS, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1937 NUMBER 13 on the SHIN by Virgil Mitchell At the Big Apple varsity Friday: A tid bit in a blue cap with much of that stuff grandma used to trim petticats with—Only one white Palm Beach in the crowd—the Corners were full of "Truckers" —truckin'-The Chancellor watched the show from the Pine Room—some say he smiled, the others say he frowned, so ask someone else-Best "Shine" goes to Terry Lilly-,he sure made a hole in that Apple Best crack of the season came from those kissable lips of "Brody" during his show at the Big Apple. Brody was calling names, as they were called to him from the floor, for the trucking contest. Some wiseware called "Dean Meguiar". Several puscherons took up the role of a guard in name and unwittingly called for Dean Meguiar. His exact words were: "Dean Meguiar, yes we must have him"-and from the way he never cracked a smile we know he didn't know what it was all about. + + + Conscientious freshman: A lad with his freshman lid clamped tightly in one hand approached an upperclassman in the basement of Fraser one day last week and asked where he could get a "turd" slip as he was late to class.—Which reason did he ask? Drinking reporters, "Flash" Morris and "Bing" Cochrane. Flash and Bing were back from the haunted house fire and halfway through their copy when the fire department finally got to the scene. This is no reflection on the fire department as these boys were in the vicinity of the house when the fire started. Thus, they are more likely to be ledge of the place it might be added that both lads are familiar with the house, having among the best customers of the ghosts. Woo In The Afternoon: Challis Hall is of the opinion that some of us have missed something during our freshman year, or years. The inspiration for such a conclusion came from a fancy pair of between classes tanimizers, one Ray Riggs and one Lucilia Forrest. They were playing a game where things on with the other hand, every twenty paces for an about face and then a rather youthful scene of heaven off the silver screen. I'm beginning to think I missed something, too. items for my Memories: John Deter and his Yale wardrobe circulating over the campus before his return to the East. The rain, Carl Smith's editorial on "My Darling", and cellophane lumberjacks-Freshman Harold Haney asking Frances Hurf for a kiss in the Union fountain—bob Hoffman filling up his coke while no one is looking-Jack Townsend's affection for his hires help—the feminine side, of course. Coming event: The weekly trucking class will be held as usual Wednesday evening just before closing hours on the front lawn of the Chi Omega's. All trucks will be expected to come. First rehearsal of Men's Glee Club will be held Monday afternoon at 4:30, in room 23. Administration building. All old and new members please be present. MEN'S GLEE CLUB JOSEPH F. WILKINS. NOTICE The University Library will be open Sunday afternoon 2 to 5. C.M.Baker, Director. Women Song Birds Chosen nenty-six Selected; Add Three to Soprano Section as Result of Keen Competition Thirty-six of the 72 applicants were elected to the Women's Glee Club Thursday night after a week's tryouts. Twenty-tix of the 36 members were active in the club last year, according to Miss Irène Peebody, assistant professor of voice and director of the glee club. Close competition among the first sopranos caused three more than usual to be added to that section. The second soprano, first and second also sections, however, received their membership in now closed Membership is now closed for the year. Accompanist for the club is Winifred Hill of Lawrence. Her assistant is Elizabeth Hertzler, who regularly stings in the second alit section. The members of the Women's Glet Club, listed by sections, are as follows: First Sonrano G钛 Gebiao, Arloune Goodjohn, Margaret Harbaugh, Hortense Harris, Corinne Harrison, Jean Henderson, Donna Hughes, Helen Marie Lortie, Lorraine Jacobs, Jean Stauffer, Treva Thompson, Catherine Rewerts Second Soprano Ruth Ann Cray, Betty Grove, Amber Huff, Flaur Kaufman, Rose Alice McCrystal, Lucie McVey, Theo Sperry and Geral Dean Dutton. First Alto NOTICE Helen Bubler, Kathleen Burner, Mirian Ellis, Milred Ewing, Violette Grossardt, Jeannette Leech, and Faith Seeley. Sarah Boddell, Anianta Clements Louella Deforest, Lora Grizzelli Elizabeth Harterter, Arlene Meichert Jarilov Miller, Jean Roberts New Sour Owl Will Have Exclusive Photos On Kidnap Mystery Exclusive and authentic photos of the kidnapping last Tuesday of the mysterious "woman in black" who visited the Cottage at "jam session" on Saturday, the first issue of the new Sour Owl, which will appear Tuesday morning. The Sour Owl photographer, informed that a celebrity might be visiting the Cottage, was busy photographing her when the gang of students entered, shot at her with a knife and spilled her from the scene. The cameraman succeeded in getting several excellent shots of the whole happening, and the photos will be given a prominent position in the Owl, according to James Cole-Collier, editor of the humor magazine. Other features will be Dave Hamlin's autobiographical sketch, "How I became a Sour Owl Editor," an article concerning the tea-dancing situation, "Why Not Dance," and several others of interest. Instead of selling subscriptions, as was done last year, the present staff will depend on single-use sales. The sales manager will direct streets Tuesday morning for 13 cents. Karl Kleoz, Bursur of the University, has announced that about 250 students have not yet paid their fees. These students are being penalized 50 cents for each day of tardiness. Stukey To Aid Frosb Mentor subsequent to an auditor's report on the corporation's status the board clarified its broadcasting policy. The 1937-38 schedule of non-conference basketball games was also approved. When asked about his plans for the future, Hans replied that he Included in a busy evening for the University of Kansas athletic board at its first fall meeting, Friday, was the naming of Mano Stucky as assistant to Ralph Conger, freshman football coach. Non-Conference Basketball Schedule Approved By Athletic Board Although Stucky has been working with freshmen since the latter half of last season his employment had not been officially recognised As yet po contracts have been let for the broadcasting of football games, the board was told by Gwin Henry, athletic director. Communications from several teams had been received, he said. Earlier the board indicated that any station be permitted to broadcast games upon payment of a $100 fee. At Director Henry's suggestion, the fee was put at $25 for distant stations not broadcasting. He decided that WOI, of Ames, is planning such a broadcast of the Kansas-Iowa State game. Approve Basketball Schedule Dec. 6—Doane College at Lawrence. The board approved the following schedule of non-conference basketball games submitted by Dr. Forest C. Allen, basketball coach. Dec. 7-Ottawa University at Law- rence Dec. 10-Ottawa University at Ottawa. Approve basketball Shuttle. In event no fee-paying student is present, the board decided that the University's station, KFKU, may broadcast free. Dec. 14—Southwestern College a Lawrence. Dec. 16, 17 or 18—Washburn College at Topeka. German Exchange Student Compares College Customs Dec. 23—Southwestern at Winfield River, Pa. Fair magazines may be bought on the Tuesday morning for 15 cents. Fair today quite so cool Jan. 3 or 4—Washburn at Law rence. Jan. 4 or 3—Utah at Lawrence. Forty-two Students Given Residence Status His eyes twinkled with the humor which has helped him to make numerous friends and which has aided him in overcoming his initial speech difficulties. A laugh and a twinkling eye are a universal language. Hans is a typical German boy. He was born in middle Germany in a small town near Leipzig. After fishing what corresponded to grade school and high school Hans studied the University of Munich for a semester, and the Martin Luther University for four semesters. His course of study included history, German, English, and teachers' training. Forty-two students have been granted residence status and 30 have been denied by the residence board, according to Henry Warner, adviser to the governor. Six petitions for residence status are still pending for residence Plans to Teach "Some of my friends make long speeches all night," was the early morning observation of Hans Martin, German exchange student, after spending his first night at the Phi Kappa Pai fraternity house where Hans is residing during his year's study at the University of Kansas. When questioned as to the meaning of long speeches he withdrew his and withdrew a good imitation of his Pointing to one of the boys Hans complained, "My bad neighbor," as he lay snoring in the bed. are still pending receipt of residence affidavits by the board. wishes to become a teacher in a German high school. At present he is enrolled in American history and English literature. Their libraries are similar in organization to ours. After surveying the stacks Hans decided that the University of Kansas library is well supplied with German books. The other day Hans visited the second floor study room. Puzzled, he inquired how one studied at night. "I see no lights in the entire hall. In Germany we have lights at each desk for night work," he went or to explain. Such was Hans' rec- German Classes are Like Ours The University of Kansas is similar to the universities, according to Martin. The classes are conducted in much the same way; some being lectures, others discussions or laboratories. Class attendance is less compulsory and the students are allowed to take their own. Thus they are not burdened with routine classwork. Fewer examinations are given in German schools. (Let's go to Germany.) There the practice informal auditing of classes is practiced. German universities concert and lecture course. Continued on page 4 Varsity Downs Frosh In Season Opener A varsity squad that displayed some old time fire was the pleasing sight that greeted some three thousand fans in the season's opener yesterday afternoon in Memorial Stadium. When the final gun barked the Varsity had piled up a 32-0 score over what has been called the most promising freshman crew in years. Freshman Team Is Considered Best in Years but Yearlings Are Unable To Hold Fast-Blocking Veterans; Last Touchdown Made After the Gun; Score, 32-0 The feature of the game was the blocking and tackling displayed by the Varsity. Blocking was one of the forgotten arts of last year's team but they went at it yesterday as though they might use some blocking as a useful weapon this season. The line was charging fast and the Fresh backs were rushed so fast that the usually slowest have time to set the ball away accurately on passes and d points. The Fresh were not as disappointing as the score shows how- The Frosh were not as disappe ever and after a jittery first*\ half they really displayed some\ football ability. YOUNG Recognition Score 100 The Varsity didn't waste any time in their scoring activities. After receiving a Frosh post following the Richardson Scores First J. D. RICHARDSON opening kick-off, Landes's charges aided by the march of 45 yards for the first score with J. D. Richardson doing most of the ball carry-carrying the caribou carried the ball over. Douglas place-kicked the point. A few minutes later Ralph Miller who supervised most of the Frost punted from back of his own goal only to have one of his own men shoved back into the ball. Daw Darn Low tackle, pounced on the bounding ball for the second touchdown. The last touchdown of the first PETER BROWN IRELAND DAN PHULA DICK AMERINE After a scoreless third quarter Richardson and Rosacker took turns sliding through toward another to touch him. An upper-season conversion failed. a few plays later Amerine was in jured and helped from the field. Last Score a Fluke perate Front attack after a lateral behind their fists and fumbled the ball. Enil Meiille ne blocked off the only freshman with a chance at the ball and "Chuck" Warren飞了 "Chuck" Warren飞了 "Chuck" Warren飞了 "Chuck" Warren飞了 "Chuck" Warren飞了 "Chuck" Warren飞了 "Chuck" Warren飞了 "Chuck" Warren飞了 "Chuck" Warren飞了 "Chuck" Warren飞了 "Chuck" Warren飞了 "Chuck" Warren飞了 "Chuck" Warren飞了 "Chuck" Warren飞了 "Chuck" Warren飞了 "Chuck" Warren飞了 "Chuck" Warren飞了 "Chuck" War The fifth touchdown came after the final gun had barked. The des- 10 CHARLES WARREN The Freshmen are to be commended on their fight and several times their passing attack, including laterals, put them in scoring territory. Miller and Bukaty provided most of their offense with help from Bunsen and Wendrand, who caught two passes. wick was good for the extra point. Frosh Keep Battling On defense, Morgan, Gire and Thompson were perhaps outstanding although the yearling tackling on the whole was commendable. For the Varsity, Amerine, Richardson, Weineke, Sullivan, Repogle, Divers and Rosaker did most of the ball carrying although all three went on the ground. The line looked better than it has at any time previous KU, Fr First Drowses 14 Lards from scrimmage 3244 Lards to scrimmage 32 8 Punts, No 69 Punts, puntes 362 471 Return of punts, yards 52 25 Return of kick-off, yards 52 75 Forward passes attempted 10 14 Forward passes hit 1 4 Forwardays, gained 9 44 Passes intercepted 2 3 Penalties 7 3 Punts penalized 40 14 Score by Periods: Kansas 15 0 6 7-32 Florida 0 0 0 0 The starting lineup: Varsity Burnette LE Burge Rhule LT Merkel Stapleston LG Andrews Warren Armen RG Crowell Ward RT Martin White RE McDougall Caldwell QB Miller Cairnlee RH Behce Ritcardoon RH Behce Douclass FB Bunsen Officials: L. E. Bice, referee; A. E. Woestemeyer, umpine; Dick Skar, field judge; Rutherford B. Hayes head linesman. this season and they showed some old time fight and chatter. The new deal in K.U. football may turn out to be more than just idle chatter although the g r e e n e is unprepared to give them a real test. The play by play: First Quarter Douglass kicked off to the Freshmen. Bunsen returned the ball to the 2 yard line and netted tackle. Two line play netted no gain, and Miller punted out of bounds on the Foshii 61 Richmond. The tackle. Richardson then went thru left tackle for 13 yards and first down on the Freshman in a ball through left tackle for 9 yards. Douglass plunged for five yards which made him third down on Freshman 3 yard line. Richardson gained a yard at leaf touch. On the next play he fumbled a pass from the Freshman so son then scored a touchdown on a run around end. Douglass kicked the extra point. Score, Varsity 7 Dougless kicked off to Bunsen who, returned to the freshman 15 yard line, scored a three-point Caldwell returned to the Fryst 47. The Varsity could not gain a n d Winecke punted to the Fresh 6. In two plumages in two plumages the Freshmen gained only one yard. Miller's attempted attempt struck a freshman player, who was out at the end zone for a touchdown. Conger substituted a complete new team Weincke's attempt at conversion was wide, Score, Varsity 13, Freshman 27. The Varsity kicked off, Radencie returned 20 yards to the Freshman. Line plays failed to gain for the Freshmen and Sungee, substitute for Miller, painted to Caldwell, who was taken out in the 30-yard Jar. Varsite took time out. The Freshman stopped three line plunges and on the fourth down the clockie made the last hole in midterm man 42. The Varsity lost 5 yards for offside, on two successive plays, to give Fresh first down and Wendland downed the kickoff. Plays failed to gain, Bukaty punted and Wenandlaw downed the kickoff. Diven substitute for Douglass, kicked for 90 yards. The quarter ended with a 3-0 victory, but the ball on their own one yard line, after a 15 yard clipping penalty on the play. Score, Varsity 13, Freshmen 18. Second Quarter Bukaty punted out to the Freshman 47 yard line. On the first play of the second time, the Ameritee, who had been through the left tackle for the third Varsity touchdown. Divers missed the extra point. Score, variety 19. Warren kicked off, Belshe returning to the Freshman 30. Miller funneled on the second half to win over the Varsity on the Freshman 22. Amerine then circled left end for 6 yards. Divens intercepted the first pass and recovered for the Freshon the 21. Amerine then intercepted Miller's pass, and was tackled on the Miller. Miller intercepted Divers' pass and was tackled on the 46 yard line. A pass, Miller to Belshe gained 21. Boslevac down, and Chitwout recovered the ball for Varsity on the Frosh 45. Divens and Cannady made it first down. Continued on page 4 NOTICE Since campus parking licenses have been issued, there will be strict enforcement of parking rules, according to George Snyder, campus cop. There will be absolutely no parking on campus throughfares beginning tomorrow, and only those properly licensed may park in the zones. Unlicensed zones are on the east side of campus and across from the Chu Oriental house at the west end of the campus. Fines will be levied upon violators. Tau Sigma Calls Tryouts Dances, Interpretative And Modern, Subjects For the Candidates Members Will Teach Classes First try outs for membership in Tau Sigma, women's honorary dance sorority, will be held Tuesday, Sept. 28. The solo try outs will start at午场. To try outs not permitted, Solo tryouts will not be confined to any special type or types of dancing, and are open to anyone interested in solo performance or technique demonstration. The class tryouts will include niques of modern and interpretive Members Will Teach Classes Anyone passing the solo tests will not be required to participate in any other try out. Members of this class will be members and elimination will be based upon ability, as shown in class work. There will be four meetings of the try out class. Beginning with the nteting Tuesday, the class will be held each Tuesday and Thursday, at 8 o'clock, for two weeks. Any-one starting from this class, September 28, or on Thursday, Sept. 30, but no new members will be admitted to later meetings. Anyone starting with the class and missing a meeting will be automatically dropped from the try outs and not allowed to re-enter unless excused by Miss Elizabeth Dunkel or the president of T.S.A. Catherine Dunkel. To Have Two Groups To Have Two Groups Women taken into the organization from the class will be rated in two groups, A and B. according to the instructions in group B will be required to attend the 2:30 dance class on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday until Thanksgiving. This class is now meeting, and anyone may wish to attend it for practice may do so. All women trying out must bring their own practice clothes. Bathing in a warm washroom, wearing a clothing will be acceptable, but no street clothes will be allowed. They cut the Big Apple Friday night at the Memorial Union ballroom, with a grand mixture of "trucking," "Sury Q." "pecking" and "shamus" by fifty-some ardent fans of this new dance mode. 'Big Apple' Proves Popular With Students Termed by students the most unusual and enjoyable variety dance ever given, the Big Apple variety initiated the seasons dance program and demonstrated the abilities of the new dance manager, Paul Khim. Featres "Trucking" Contest Louie Kuhn and his orchestra furnished the music for the fad dance and Dale "Brody" Shroff acted as master of ceremonies. Highlights included performances by two of the Hill's colored students, and a trucking contest for both individuals and partners. Contest judges were Bob Pearson, James Coleman and Virgil Mitchell. Winners of the singles conten was Alice Marie Meyn and Bill Southern. Winners of the partners contest were Jack Richardson and John Lester. The music was awarded by the Granada theater and Bunsey-Allison flower shop. "Cut the Big Apple' The climax of the planned program was the cutting of the Big Apple right after the intermission. More than fifty dancers formed a circle covering a large part of the dance floor and danced the Big Apple to the calls of Master of Ceremonies "Brody" Shroff. Individual talent came to the force in the "shiners" of individuals called by the members of the apple. Among the most popular "shiners" were Terry Lilley, Jackie Mitchell, Hugh T. Jones, Jane Coats, Bette Wasson Comedy Substituted For Drama Dramatic Cl u b Drops Austrian Play in Favor O f Farse; Rehearsals Begin Tomorrow "L'Aiglon," the Austrian court drama, which was to have been the first production of the season by the Dramatics Club, will not be given. Instead, "Beggar on Horseback," a riotous foe-comedy, will be precluded at 25, as a substitute. Preliminary rehearsals for the new play will be held tomorrow night at 7:30 in Fraser. It was found that Lee Schubert, who holds the American rights on 'L'Aiglou', will not release the play for amateur production except by special written permission. It would have taken 10 days or two weeks to get permission after clearing all of the red tape connected with it. Since the first production is schedled, a lot of time goes back head of the speech department, felt that too much time would be waited in waiting for the permission. Read Forty Plays Professor Crafton and Rosa Nuckle- ness, instructor in the speech depar- ment, read 40 plays Friday in an effort to find a substitute for basketball. "Beggar on Horseback," the play chosen, was written by George S. Kaufman and Marc Connelly. Kaufman was one of the co-authors of last year's Pulitzer Prize winner, "You Can't Take It With You." Connelly is the famous author of "Green Pasture." "Beggar on Horseback" remembered Broadway productions of the last few years. Professor Crafton says of this play, "It is the best example of the so-called 'expressionistic drama' we have in America today. Although most drama of this type is serious, it is often comedy which we feel will be an immediate success with students of the University." To Use Revolving Stage The play is not heavy drama in any sense of the word. It runs its characters all over the theater; it dramatizes the dream of the leading male character; it is riotous, satirical comedy of the highest type. The play will use 30 characters in 12 movies. Among other things, "Beggar on Horseback" will use a revolving stage in its production, the first time this stage equipment has been used in this part of the country, outside of Kansas City. Plans for the revolving stage are now being prepared by Professor Cuffin Don Dixon, technical assistant of the department. Orchestra Will Play The play will use an orchestra of 8 or 10 members. Favier String Trio, usually used. The orchestra will play incidental music throughout the performance and at least one long composition. No formal tryouts will be held because of the lack of time. Professor Crafton feels they will enough to cast the play without tryouts. If possible, parts will be assigned on the Monday night reading of the play. Orchestra Will Play Brown Elected President Of Senior Law Class Officers for the senior class in the School of Law were chosen in an election Friday morning in Green hall. F. Quentin Brown, business manager of the Kansan, was elected president of the class of '38. James Molby was elected vice-president and Ruth Bordner was elected secretary and treasurer. Miss Bordner has served in this capacity all three years of the class's existence. Browna and Molby are both members of Phi Alpha Delta, legal fraternity. Radio Speech Class To Present Play Over KFKU The radio class of the department of speech and dramatic art will present the first of a series of one-act plays for KEU, at 6 p.m. tomorrow. "The Barge of Time" is to be the first play. It is a radio dramatization of three scenes of college life written by Rolla Nuckles, instructor in the department of speech, who is also director of the radio series. The cast will include about 25 members of the radio class. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 26. 1937 ~ Comment Two More Professors Bite the Dust Once more the charge of radicalism has been hurled at university professors. This time two Harvard professors of economics have been notified that they would not be reappointed because of radical tendencies. One of the professors, J. R. Walsh, has now resigned. Many times has the average college instructor been pictured as the timid rabbit afraid to express anything but the most meaningless platitudes in the classroom. Unfortunately this suppression of freedom of classroom discussion becomes most rigorous in times of social dislocation, in times when discussion and freedom of expression are most necessary to the solution of our problems. A liberal in the home town is a young man who comes to college to discover that he is a conservative. Correcting A Misconception Many Kansans have the feeling that they have been "duped" by the state social welfare program. "It's the biggest piece of graff ever foisted upon the people of this state," says one objector. "We thought we were voting for an old age pension, but instead we have a system under which the state supports paupers, but merely lends the money to persons who have managed to hold onto their homes. It discourages thrift by discriminating against the thrifty." The basic cause of such objections lies in failure to understand the underlying motive of the social welfare program. It is not a pension, as is the national social security act. It is merely assumption by the state of the problem of caring for the aged poor. Under this program, a person is not entitled to state support until he has exhausted all other means. If he has property, he may borrow upon it from private sources; but if he prefers not to do this, he may obtain state aid by giving a lien upon his property. Upon his death and the execution of his estate, the state collects exactly the amount of money it has paid to the individual, without interest. The lien is never foreclosed while the person is living. It is difficult to see a legitimate objection to this plan, when its purpose is understood. One can hardly expect to receive assistance from the state, at the taxpayers' expense, and then leave one's property intact to one's heirs. We simply do not have a state old-age pension yet; and until we do, we cannot expect the social welfare plan to serve as one. ≈ Trailer enthusiasts have easily explained how they can wind the alarm clock, but the unsolved problem lies in what becomes of the cat when they put him out. . . Citizens Service and Surveys An interesting aspect of the need for an unemployment survey is brought out in an article dealing with the Citizens' Service Exchange in Richmond. The primary object of the exchange is the physical welfare of its members; that is, food, clothing and shelter. But its most worthwhile work is and has been the rehabilitation of the individual and the bolstering of the morale of Richmond's unemployed. But the real lesson of this effort lies in the fact that it must be done elsewhere, even on a nationwide scale. The government seems to have come to the realization that direct relief is not the solution for unemployment. It is cutting down relief appropriations but is offering no substitutes. Direct relief is being turned back to the state and local communities. These communities might well consider the manner in which it has been handled in Richmond. Before an exchange can be organized, however, each community must know precisely the extent of its unemployment problem. Why not, then, a local unemployment survey, correlated, if necessary perhaps, with a national agency, if the national government still desires the figures? Members of the exchange work for scrip with which they in turn buy the products of the exchange. There unemployed bakers have taught untrained men their trade and fitted them for jobs outside. Skilled laborers and tradesmen in all lines have trained others in the exchange, gone on to work in industry and taken with them many men who were unfitted for private industry before entering the exchange. The exchange is still operating and probably will continue until the arrival of that horizontal Utopia known to economists as "the long run." The story of the organization is long and brimming with human interest and economic good. It has shown an employment turnover of 40 per cent as compared with $2\frac{1}{4}$ per cent for the WPA. Campus Opinion Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the University Daily Karen. Articles over 200 words in length are subject to cutting by the editor. Contributions on any subject are invited. Editor Daily Kansan: I was just wondering if your attention has been called to the seemingly unjust selection of one of the cheerleaders last Thursday. As an eyewitness to the occasion I believe that attending University football games for the four years has at least educated me a cheerleader should do and how he should do it. At the selection of the cheerleaders I saw, with my own eyes, a remarkable demonstration of leading organized cheering and was certain, as it so far surpassed the standards of the team, certainly be selected for his superior work. During the tryouts the other competing candidate for the coach of our team was also diligent in directing cheering by other candidates present. To my complete dumfoundedness the inexperienced chap, who quite evidently didn't know the primary pointers, was chosen over the candidate that gave the remarkable directing demo; his sheer leader to the students. Investigation after the selection revealed that the slighted candidate had taken 28 acrobatic lessons, spending his own money and time to be able to command the attention of the team. We have heard that the football games lack so distressingly. I would like to point out that the defeated candidate is not "sore" and has not complained as the good sport that he is, but as one that is not personally acquainted with him, we give this unanswer- version as I saw it Thursday. What is really back of this selection? C. A Official University Bulletin Notice due at Charrell's Office at 3 p.m. preceding regular publication days and 11:50 a.m. on Wednesday, October 27th. Vol. 35 SUNDAY, SEPT. 26, 1937 No. 13 --hold Gussein in the act of sneezing, or Mabel with that particularly fat-headed expression on her face; you know that your camera will, with merciless accuracy, preserve forever the totally inhuman appearance of (a) Gussein or (b) Mabel. And, knowing this, you snap the camera—to the everlasting damnation of your soul. CREATIVE LESURE PICICN: The Creative Leisure picnic will be held from 3 to 6 this afternoon for students treated by geologist and botanist will be there, at Henley House and bring 18 cents—Ruth Fengel, Chairman. DIRECTORY. Students who have not filed addresses and telephone numbers at the Registrars' office should do so at once so that the information may be included in the directory copy now being prepared. EMPLOYMENT: Will University women who are interested in exchanging labor for room and board please report to the office of the Adviser of Women. The office is available now—Marie Miller, Assistant to the Adviser. FRESHMAN COMMISSION: There will be a meeting of the Freshman Commission at 4:30 Monday afternoon at Henley House. All freshmen women are invited—Dorothy Caldwell, Chairman. INTRAMURAL SPORTS REGISTRATION: All those men who wish to compete in intramural sports are not affiliated with some organization kindly register at 105 Robinson gymnasium.-E. R. Elbel. KAPPA PHI: There is to be an open meeting for all Methodist women interested in Kappa Phi at the home of Rev Hunt, 1527 Massachusetts Street, from 8am to 10pm. Active members are sure to be present.-Avis Peters. MEN'S STUDENT COUNCIL: There will be a meeting of all M.S.C. members in the Pine Room Monday evening, Sept. 27, at 8:15 - Moe Ettenson, Secretary. SCHOOL OF EDUCATION FACULTY MEETING: The faculty of the School of Education will meet at 3:30 Thursday, September 30, in room 115 Fraser hall. —E. H. Lindley, President. **STUDENT FORUMS BOARD:** Initial meeting for students in the Pine Room on Tuesday, Sept. 3 at 3 p.m. WOMEN'S GLEE CLUB: All members of the University Women's Glee Club will meet for rehearsal Monday, Sept. 27, at 4:30 in the auditorium of Marvin ball—Vera Caruthers, President. KANSAS PRESS MEMBER 1937 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRIENCE, KANASA ASSOCIATION EDITOR-IN-CHEF ASSOCIATE EDITORS: MORRIS THOMPON AND GRIGI HUNS ALICE HALDEN-JUDAN ASSOCIATE EDITORS: MORRIS THOMPON AND GRIGI HUNS PUBLISHER ... J. HOWARD RIVER Editorial Staff News Staff FEATURE EDITOR ... MANAGING EDITOR DAVID E. PARTNIE CAMPUS EDITORS KENNETH MOREN AND JUDI COURCIAN SUBSCHOOL EDITOR LARRY ROBINSON SOCIETY EDITOR JUCE UEM TELLEPHONE EDITOR WILLIAM FITZGERAD TELLER EDITOR CHARLES MASON MAKEUP EDITORS BOBBIE CAREY AND JANE FLOOD REWITE EDITORS MARVIN GARCIA REWRITE EDITORS MARVIN GARCIA Kansan Board Members By Martin Maloney What is giving those professors nerves that jerk like Mexican jumping beans? What makes University officials draw the shades and look under the bed even when what is giving our campus headliners a grand new excuse to complain about "these awful people who put their names in the papers"? BACE HALDMAN-JULIUS HORACE HUROC DE JEAN EARLMAN SENNETH MORIS BRACE VALENTINE WILLIAM THOMPSON EDWARD BARNETT MARTIN BRENTSON MARK DAVENPORT JANE FLOOR MOREL THOMPSON REPRESENTATIVE FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Services, Inc. 420 MADRIGUE AVE. NEW YORK, N.Y. CHICAGO • BOSTON • ST. ANNEX CAROLINA Caustic Comment on Candid Camera Craze—Cause, Conduct, Consequence Why, it's that man again. But this time he is carrying an instrument of torture known to fame as the candid camera. Now a candid camera is a small, easily-coupled camera with a precision lens, using super-super film, that takes pictures under any and all conditions. Where grandpa had to squeeze himself into a hardness that resisted the kneeling heel of Nuremberg, freeze a smile onto his face and hold that pose for minutes at a time, the modern photographic subject is usually snapped in one two-hundredth of a second, often in the act of devouring various foods, leaping hurdles, playing pool or whatnot. Inasmuch as this is a strictly proper article, it should be treated as a subject may, and often is, doing when the candid camera fiend pushes his little button. BUSINESS MANAGER Entered as second-class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post- house in New York City. Invade Private Lives **Invade Private Lives** It's funny about these cameras. To the casual observer, they are not much different from those boxes we use to hide cameras and vacations for the purpose of embalming our more inane actions to amuse posterity. But there's something about a candid camera. It uses madness lies. You hold the little apparatus to your eye; you behold Gussein in the act of sneezing, or Mabel with that particularly fat-headed expression on her face; you know that your camera will, with merciless accuracy, preserve forever the totally inhuman appearance of (a) Gussein or (b) Mabel. And, knowing this, you snap the camera—to the everlasting damnation of your soul. For the true candid camera fire has no respect for God, man nor devil. It is a matter of record that one such snaked into a statefully cathedral and knelt for two hours, apparently lost in silent worship. Actually, he was snapping one picture after another of an archbishop being consecrated. Yet another maddened citizen purchased an attachment for his camera resembling a periscope, with the aid of which he can photograph slides. He spared all his time now-ready to participate in the private life of paramaccium caudatum; a dirty trick, indeed! How would he be if the paramaccium caudatum dic something like that to him? No Cure for This Mania And once you have manipulated one of these frightful little instruments, there is no turning back. You are forever lost. Henceforth and forever, there will be a bulge beneath your coat and a glitter in your eye; forever you will be sneaking around corners and hiding in coats, with an eye for certain of the follies of humanity which make good pictures. So shun the candid camera. There has been no Keeley cure invented to purge this particular taint from your blood. AT THE DICKINSON And if you are merely one of the innocent bystanders; if, when you go A. F. One of the lovely models in Jack Benny's new smash hit, "Artists and Models," which is now playing at the Dickinson Theatre. AT THE VARSITY Explosives THEIR USE and ABUSE Edward Everett Harter and Eve Arden in University's mithquacking "Oh, Doctor," is playing today at the Varsity Theatre. AT THE GRANADA PORTRAIT OF THE MADAME BACARDI AND JOHN W. KENNEDY Bette Davis, America's greatest actress and academy award winner, in *The Great Gatsby*, now playing at Candida through Tuesday. home at night and take off your shoes and unlosen the toe and haul out the copy of Red Hot Mammas for a little light reading, if we say, that solemn moment you hear a faint clck, don't worry little man, don't worry. You'll be in the Sour Owl by and by. Look Out, Mitchell! As a matter of fact, we have been able to conceive of only one really good use for the candid camera. Someday, by way of poetic retribution, we intend to take our camera (oh, yes) we have one!) and follow the editor of the Shin about, snapping pictures of him as we go. The results will be published in a special folio volume, bound in red morocco with decked edges to sell at five dollars a copy (no stamps or markings). In other words, the book will probably have to be boot-legged, you'd better not try to buy it at the W.S.G.A. book exchange. See us personally. And now, gentle reader, you will know—when you see people with leather cases on their hips that they are not carrying binculars, and that one of three courses of action is indicated: (1) scream, (2) run and hide, (3) form a lynching committee. What more do you want in a feature article? DOWN THE GROOVE - by date 'brody' shroff, c'uncl Upon viewing the mass movement of K. U. alligators on their pilgrimage to 1837's swing mecca, the Boney Goodman solid-super-smelling sex is definitely City's Junior love, are definitely assured that jazz is here to assist. Swing fans "took off" for the city in trains, cars, buses and some of the more ardent fans hitch-hiked to hear the swing band. All seats were sold out and very little standing room was available. Continued on page 3 Without doubt, Harry Jones, hot trumpeter, formerly with Ben Pollock and who recently joined the band, received and has been receiving a greater hand than that given drummer Gene Krupa or Bonnie himself. James' hot choruses are more exciting than the brutal violent sounds he's strictly a "killer-diller" when it comes to blowing the jazzy, and rates number one man in the band with this column. Let Your Friends Show You the New Things for Fall The Palace is glad to include on its staff--and it's OUT TUESDAY Buy Them on the Street --- 15c - Robt. Houk - Don Hayes - Ralph Boyington - Robt. Packard - Ed Wieford And of course The regular ones "Click" Maier Geo. Houk Jane Byrn They will appreciate your dropping in any time for any need The Palace 843 Massachusetts SOUROWL 5 15¢ Remember This? Well--- It was nothing compared to the first issue of the New SOUR OWL SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 26.1937 UNIVERSITY DAILY RANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS BACK THREE Here on the Hill --an account of Mt. Oread Society JUNE ULM, Society Edito @ 10am, call K.Ul. 212; after 5.202 Differ ent parents of Alpha Chi Omega. Mrs. L. A. Snyder, World Fold Mrs. Spelman, Lawrence Mrs. H. B. Spellman, Lawrence Mrs. Paul B. Lawson, Lawrence Guests at the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority house this weekend are: Guests at the Alpha Gamma Delta sorority house Friday night were: Mia, Bridget Keats, Kara, Cam, Me. Miss Bardice Krebs, Kansas City, Ms. Miss Bardice Krebs, Kansas City, Ms. Miss Mcclellan Aaron Kansas City Mo Miss Marie Gulley, Kansas City, Mo Miss Graege Adele Pearson, Kansas City Mo Miss Arline Martin, Benner Springs Weekend guests of Alpha Chi Omega sorority are; Miss Alice Simons, Leverworth Misses Helen and Janet Markwell, Hay Miss Helen Krug, Kansas City, Misc. Miss Iris McDonald, 37, was a visitor on the campus yesterday. She is now teaching journalism and English in Harper High School. Members of Alpha Omicron Pi will entertain with a formal dinner Monday evening in honor of their men's team. Warren C Drummond, Evanston, Ill. John McNown, son of Prof. au Kappa Ea Kappa, electrical engineering fraternity, entertained the students and faculty members of the department of electrical engineering at its annual fall smoker last Thursday evening at the chapter house ☆ ☆ ☆ An open meeting of Kappa Phi, Methodist Church sorghor, and of University women interested in the organization, will be held this afternoon from 3 to 5, at the home of Mrs. Robert A. Hunt, 1527 Massachusetts ☆ ☆ ☆ Miss Betty Lee Weaver, Kansas City, Mo., and Miss Ruth Esther Purdy, 37. Topeka, are guests this Phone K. U. 6 6 CLASSIFIED ADS LOST: Foutaine white gold lady's wrist watch. Elise Lowell. WANTED: Student laundry, shirts 104 Phone 1587J. -1 WANTED: Roommate for quiet studios boy, also large double room for rent. Meals i'd desired. Phone 21803. -15 LOST: Navy blue purse in 119 Fraser. Rev ward offered. Call 267. Virginia Varga. Mr. Hutchinson is a former University student. He is now employed by the Katz Drug company of Kansas City. LOST: Thursday a.m. between 9:30 and 10:30, an Eastern Star pit. Lost on the way to New York. In-wait, building. Reward. Call 2258, Nancy Fleming. The marriage of Miss Betty Hacker of Kansas City, M., daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. Hackley of Fayette Mo., to耳铁 Hutchinson, son of Dr. and Mrs. R. B. Hutchinson of Lawson, place table Tuesday in Kansas City. Mra. W, C. McNown, left Friday for Minnesota, Mina, to continue his graduate work in hydraulics at the University of Minnesota. He received his Master of Science degree from the University of Iowa in Augsburg. Typewriter Cleaning and Repairing "Originators of 15c Cabs" WANTED CLARENCE M. BAKER 1323 Kentucky Phone 2095J T A X I Call 2-800 UNION CAB CO. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- WAVE, new styles, any style IVAS BEAUTY SHOP 941½ Mass. St. Phone 533 Next door Keeler Book Store END CURLS, $1 up, inquire 7 Experienced Operators New Equipment Added WAS EQUIPMENT SHOP SHAMPOO and WAVE, 35c dried Economy prices on other beauty Shampoos 25c up Finger Waves 25c (dried) Oil Permeants 2.50 up WAVO BEAUTY SHOP --weekend at the Chi Ofhega schoolhouse. Jayhawk Barber Shop Completely Modernistic Enjoy the best at no additional cost. Hair cut 35c. Earl Ellis Joe Lech "Bill" Hensley "Paddy" Hyatt 727 Mass. THE WICHTH BEACON Kansas' Greatest Newspaper Delivered to your door Daily and Sunday 10 cents per week — Phone 2316 ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------- Don't Miss the Fun! Learn to dance—all the latin ballroom step! SPECIAL ATTENTION GYMN BEGINNERS Marion Rice Dance Studio Phone K. U. 6 6 Marion Rice Dance Studio Over Runney-Allison Flower Shop 927 1/2 Mass. St. FOR RENT: Room for girl =1147-1028 St; east and west windows, south French door. Modern; approved. 99.00 per month. Phone 1147. -17 WANTED: Student Laundry, prices reasonable, mending done free. Will call, deliver. Phone 1331. -17 ROOMS AND BOARD! Double room 68 each, board 33 a week. Home cooked food, family style. Special Sunday meals 241 Alabama. Call for John. Phone 2811 GRLRS: TWO-ROOM nicely furnished apartment. Sink, hot and cold water Frigidaire. S. E. exposure. Phone 11131 1139 Vermont. -11 Twenty-five words or less one insertion, 21c; three insertions, 16c; six insertions, 27c; contract rates, not more than 23 words, 42 per month flat. Payable in advance and accepted subject to approval at the KANSAN Business Office. CONOCO CAR SERVICE! Expert Washing ... 75c Check-Chart Greasing ... 75c Thorough Vacuum Cleaning ... 50c --weekend at the Chi Ofhega schoolhouse. Miss Daria Warden and Mist Anti Simmons were hunchback guests Friday at the Gamma Phi Beta house. --weekend at the Chi Ofhega schoolhouse. GAS and OILS CONOCO SERVICE STATION 9th and New Hampshire M. H. Mitchell, Lesson Jack Alk Student A Miss Virginia Melvin was a dliner guest Friday at the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority house. --at the MIDWAY CAFE Mr. and Mrs. Herman Engel and son, Stewart of Wichita, spent Fri- day at the home of Mrs. Engel's parents, Prof. and Mrs. E. F. Engel. SHAMPOO and 25c WAVE, dreee Oil - Dreene - Fitch Shampoo and Wave, dried. 50c End Curls $1.00 up. Complete PERMANENTS. Any Style $1.00. $1.50 up. complete Miss Genevieve Andrews, Abilene is a weekend guest of Sigma Kappa. 732½ Mass. Phone 2353 MAGAZINES Dinner guests at the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority home Friday, were Dorothy and Marcie Forbes of Eurasia. All popular magazines at one-half to one-third regular price. Magazine Exchange 729 Massachusetts TAXI HUNSINGER'S 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 The board of the American Association of University Women will meet Wednesday evening at 7 o'clock in the home of Mrs. Waddemann to discuss plans for a new chairman has been appointed the new finance chairman of the organization. ONE STOP Clothes Service Station SCHULZ the TAILOR 924 Mass. Miss Valere Davey, Hiawatha, is a weekend guest at the Alpha Gamma Delta sorority house. --at the MIDWAY CAFE Buy GOOD shop repairing Our Prices are RIGHT! OYLER'S SHOE SHOP 1346 Ohio The Venus Beauty Salon Individual Booths Five Experienced Operators Featuring Dona Ray Cosmetics Vera Adlerholdt, Manager Phone 387 First floor, 822 Mass. --at the MIDWAY CAFE R. and Mrs. Henry J, Hood of Mrcheel, N.Y., announce the birth of a daughter Thursday, to whom they have given the name, Judith M. Hood was formerly Miss Margrant Farr, daughter of Mr. and Mrs E. H. Farr. Mr. Hood is the son of Mr. and Mrs George J, Hood. Dinner guests at the Alpha Gamma Delta sorority house yesterday were Mrs. Macy C. Bure, Miss Hera Farbakebeli, and Miss Marion Nichols. Mrs Nees Olen, Topcka, who has been visiting her daughter, Mrs J. K,ister, and family, since Tuesday, returned home Thursday. Creative Leisure Committee To Have Nature Study on Hike The creative leisure committee of the Y.W.C.A. will go on a picnic-bike this afternoon. The group will meet at Henley House at 3 p.m., to take the trip around the campus and 'neighboring country, They will be accompanied by Rufus Thompson, of the department of botany, and Frank Merchant of the department of geology, who will describe the flora and geological formations the group will see. _Ruth Fengel is in charge of the activities of the day. Everyone who is interested in the work of plant science may be made by calling either Bufel Fengel or the Henley House. The first faculty recital of the year will occur tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the auditorium of the Administration building, when Jan Chumpson, p.i., and a member of the School of Fine Arts faculty, appears in the recital. LOOK at the PRICE Mr. Chiapuso at the age of 17 entered the Conservatory of Cologne in Germany, later studying in Paris and Berlin. In 1911 he won the coveted "Musical Prize" in Paris in a field of 36 contestants. Judges for the event were Harold Bower, Isador Phillipen and Pumo. Chiapusso Opens New Recital Series TIVOLI Made Concert Tours In 1916 he came to America, making several successful tours of the country. Later he became head of the piano department at the Bush Conservatory of Music in Chicago, where he stayed for 10 years. ONLY $1999 Taught in Chicago University Before coming to the University three years ago, he was lecturer in music at the University of Chicago. LOOK at the PRICE A Complete Radio for ANY CAR ONLY $19.99 Mr. Chiapusso has made many successful tours in Berlin, Paris, London, Amsterdam, the Hague, and in cities in Beltram and Spain. The program is devoted to Variations on a Theme of Paganini (Brahms). BELL'S Rondo in D (Schubert); Sonata, Op. 103 (Boehnen); Allegretto, Viace villa Marcia, Mariaa, Allegro, Cloches a Traverses les Feuilles (Debussy), Fairy Tale (Mediter); Primavera (Meditner). Islamey (Oriental Fantasy) (Balaikirew). WHEREVER YOU GO CROSLEY fiver ROAMIO YOU'RE THERE WITH A CROSLEY MUSIC STORE 925 Mass. Phone 375 Lockwood's Portrait of Landon Exhibited at Snooner-Thayer A portrait of ex-Governor Landon, which was used in the recent presidential campaign will be on exhibit at Spooner-Thayer museum for the next few days. The portrait was painted by Norma Lockwood. Baldwin a former student at the University. Big Apple-at the MIDWAY CAFE Continued from page 1 The rest of the time was spent in conventional dancing, which was more enjoyable than usual owing to its lively singing and the not-too-t crowded floor. Betty Jean Sayles, Charlotte Barber, Hilda Stela, Carlton Dickinson, Dec Day, Jack Richardson, Maxine Klein, Carolyn O'Neill, Southern and Alice Meyn. Quack Club Pledges FIVE OUT OF FORTY-EIGHT Forty-eight women reported for trougs of the Quack Club. University women's swimming club, yesterday morning, passed the recess to become Quack pledgees and 14 were added to come back for practice and another trial next Wednesday. Five Out of Forty-eight The pledge list includes: Elsk Lawell, *c*40; Arnette Lawrence, *c*39; Mary Lewis, *c*41; Jane Montgomery, *c*41 and Virginia Anderson, *c*41. The women who are to report for further trial are: Jean Willekens, c'41; Margaret Cleveron, f38; Bettie Green, f39; Elizabeth Green, Louise Owens, c'41; Caroline Humphrey, c'41; Betty Bridges, c'41; Edith Kickman, c'41; mural Markwell, c'41; Barbara Snythe, c'41; Ann Dillow, c'41; and Jane Two Students Undergo Minor Operations Friday Two minor operations were performed Friday morning at Watkins Memorial hospital. George Pro e'38, had his tonsils removed and Barry Senne, c'38, submitted to a nasal operation At present five patients are confined in the hospital, all with minor ailments. THE WORLD'S LEADING COMICS MARTHA RAYE . . . LOUIS ARMSTRONG . . . SCORES OF OTHERS Down the Groove-at the MIDWAY CAFE Continued from page 2 It is of interest to note that Goodman is the first to surmount the barrier of color and use both white and colored musicians. His aggregation includes such famous colored "gates" as Lained Horns and Lainey Wilson, piano and his latest addition is Omar Simone, sax and clarinet. The famous Goodman can Quartet, which may soon become a quintet with the addition of sax man Omar Simeon, late of Earl Hines who has joined Bernice's boys to arrange, is among the fastest jam units of today. Eat a Chicken Dinner That IS a Chicken Dinner. 11:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. MIDWAY CAFE 1031 Mass Mrs. Stover's Bungolow Candies 1031 Mass. We Have the Cream of All Hits at Skim Milk Prices DICKINSON STARTS TODAY Continuous 1 p.m. on 10c-35 BIGGEST HIT IN YEARS - • THE TOP FUNSTERS OF SCREEN AND RADIO • * What a picture, folks! ARTISTS and MODELS The world's most beautiful girls! Topnotch, song, dance and laugh artists! 图示:四名身着传统服饰的武士背对镜头,双手持武器,姿态威严。 JACK BENNY in "ARTISTS and MODELS" IDA LUPINO • RICHARD ARLEN • GAIL PATRICK • BEN BLUE • JUDY CANOVA • THE YACHT CLUB BOYS • LOUIS ARMSTRONG and Specialty by MARTHA RAYE DUE TROUBLE! "BLONDE TROUBLE Eleanor Johnny WHITNEY DOWNS COMING SOON Lawrence's Most Beautiful Theatre Bing Crosby - Mortha Rye "Double or Nothing" Unidentified Man Mauls Student Brutally beaten and in a semiconious state Rustie Russell, e'38, was left in a ditch on No. 10 highway west of Lawrence Friday evening after being assaulted by an unidentified individual from his home in Topeka. He accompanied by Miss Lela Edlin, 37, of Herington. Kelly's face was badly swoller, and his head bruised as a result of being kicked several times in an al-abration, following a minor auto attack. Both drivers stopped and one on the unidentified man came over to Kelly's car. Kelly, who was impacing the damage of his machine, asked him why he was driving in the middle of the road. Kelly stated that he was attempting to pass a car after sounding his horn and blinking his lights. The other car moved over and then swerved back. Kelly's car, in attempt to pass, skidded on the loose gravel and sideswiped thither car. The man then struck Kelly in the jaw, knocking him into the ditch. He followed Kelly down and repeatedly kicked him in the face according to Miss Edlin, who tried to protect Kelly but was violently LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas Phone 894 641 Louisigna Graduates Get Good Positions Phone 394 W. H. Quakenbush, Pres. E. S. Weatherby, Supt. "GREEN LIGHT" Continuous From 2:00 ALL SHOWS 15c 2 SWELL SHOWS THE ROMANCE THAT CHANGED A MILLION LOVERS LIVES NOW LIGHTS THE SCREEN "GREEN LIGHT" ERROL FLYNN ANITA LOUISE Margaret Lindsey AND "Mary the Girl" THE BUGHHOUSE COULDN'T HOLD 'EM SO WE PUT 'EM IN A SHOW NEWS - TRAVELOG MARY BOLAND HUGH HERBERT FRANK MCHUGH ALLEN JENKINS CARROL GUHGES pushed away and threatened by the assailant. The unidentified man's companion, however, jumped out of the car and put the assailant away. He then drove with knife hanging Killy in the ditch in semi-conscious condition. Kelly was immediately taken to the University hospital by Miss Edlin, where his bruises and injections were treated. An X-ray was taken but no report could be gathered as to the seriousness of any internal damage. Lawrence's Leading Theatre It was believed that Kelly suffered little more than severe bruises as he was able to eat without much difficulty. Killy could not be left out all night. Reporters weed by friend who had gone to the Jubilea. Continuous Shows from 2:00 GRANADA G TODAY MON. TUES. A laugh Attack! SUNDAY SHOWS A Laugh Attack! Continuous From 2:30 NOW! THRU TUESDAY DRIVEN TO DISPAIR! America's Greatest Actress and Academy Award Winner in the Greatest Role of Her Career! Why Is a Women Always Judged by Her Weakest Moment? BY HER FAITH IN LOVE!! She got all the breaks, in her heart Bette DAVIS Henry FONDA THAT CERTAIN Woman with Anita Louise ALSO Olympic ski Champions Band Act Latest News WARNER BROS. PICTURES Starts Wednesday LUISE RAINER SPENCER TRACY "BIG CITY" The Show Value of Lawrence VARSITY Home of the Jvshawk Admission 10c and 15c Admission 10c and 15c A Rip Roaring Riot of Fun! DE-GLOOM YOURSELF! SEE-- EDWARD EVERETT HORTON in HARRY LEON WILSON'S Uptoarious Story OH, DOCTOR! With a Smile-α-Minute Cast! 100 TWO Blondes Spell Trouble! Double Trouble! SCORCE BAFT AND-One Blonde Spell Romance!… Double Trouble! TWO Blades Spell Trouble!… Double Trouble! GEORGE RAFT DOLORES COSTELLO BARRYMORE "Your For The Asking" Ida Lupina - Lynne Overman - James Gleason Edear Kennedy - Reginal Gowen "Skeets" Gallagher WED.-THUR.—10c to All Doris Nolan - Michael Wholen "The Man I Marry" And MacMurray - Bennett "13 Hours by Air" Watch for These Hits "Pennies From Heaven" "Pennies From Heaven" "Champagne Waltz" "Fighting Youth" PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 26,1937 'Fire Eaters' To Convene Expect Seventy-five Delegates To Attend Kansas Fire College Approximately seventy-five visiting firemen are expected to attend the annual Kansas Fire College conducted by the Kansas State Firemen's Association in co-operation with the University, to be held here tomorrow through Thursday at Martinsburg hospitalization will begin at 8:30 tomorrow. The program will include lectures and conference sessions in the main lecture room on the second floor of Marvin hall, and outdoor work and ladder evolutions in the rear of the building. The four-day program will be featured by lectures and demonstrations by W. Fred Heisler, director of the school of technical training, division of engineering, Oklahoma A. A & M. College; by Capt. Roy Moulton, fire department inspector, Kansas City, Mo.; and fire chiefs from Hutchinson, Wichita, McPherson and Kansas City. Practical instruction in rope and ladder evolutions, first aid, fire department organization and inspection of all firefighters are to be conducted. Froshographies-- The college will conclude on Thursday, Sept. 30, with a final conference and discussion of the firemen's training course. (Note: this is the fourth in a series of minute biographies published by the University Daily Kansan to acquaint its readers with the personnel of the freshman football squad.) Kenneth Gire of Pittsburgh ranks as the largest center candidate. He is 6 feet, 1 inch tall and weights 265 pounds. He has earned two letters on the gridiron. Vincent Graves: Graves is from McFarland, however, he played his high school football where he earned four letters, captained his team, and made the Jayhawk league all-star two years. Graves plays at guard position, is 6 feet tall, and weighs 185 pounds. Bob Grubb is another of the all-Ark Valley league players on the squad. Grubb is a center from Newton, where he lettered twice, making the all-conference team in Michigan. Height 6 feet. Weight 175 pounds. Shirley Hamm: Hamm is a 5 feet, 11 inch, 17-room pound halfback from Hampton. In high school Hamm lett- tered each of his four years of com- pletion. Another candidate, who played under freshman Coach Conger at Smith Center is Roger Hardcare. Hardcare is an end, earning two letters at Boston in high school and 5 feet 11 inch tall and weighs 160 pounds. Herbert Hartman is a promising guard from Newton. There he carried two kills and made the valley hole. Her in 6 feet tall and weighs 175 pounds. Joone Showalter is an end candidate from Chanute. In high school Joe earned two letters in the grid sport, making the all-star team of the Kaima long jump team. 2 inches tall, and weighs 180 pounds. The naming of Sklar will be perpetuated in Kansas football history by a nephew of Dick, Sidney Sklar of Newark, N.J. In newark he attended the West Side High School where he earned a varsity in the halfback position, is 5 feet, 8 inches tall, and weighs 144 pounds. Reginald Taylor: Position, tackle. Height, 5 feet; Weight, 9 inches. Weight, 177 pounds. Taylor is from where he was born in high school and one letter in junior college. Louis Olsen, Everest: Olson attended high school at Effingham, where he earned three letters at a tackle position. In his last year he made the Big Six high school all-star team. Olson tips the scales at 196 pounds and is 6 feet, 2 inches tall. FOOTBALL SCORES Tulsa 19. Oklahoma O. Missouri 46. Freshmen O. Nebraska 38. Freshmen O. Iowa State 14. Iowa State Teach- Michigan State 19, Wayne University 0. Along the Sideline By William Fitzgerald, c'39 Kansas Sports Editor By Hugh Wire Guest Conductor Yesterday saw the beginning of another season of the great American sport called football. Twenty-two men on various gridirons here and there in the nation took another hitch on their $12.50 pants, took deep breaths and marched to do battle over a bag of air. Thousands of fans gulped hasty dinners and hurried to bonded stadiums to see their respective favorites do battle. Football as it is today is a product of evolution. Away back in 500 B.C. the Greeks of Sparta began a game which was probably the great-grandfather of our present game. In those days the game was used to condition soldiers. Now it is used to pay for stadiums. Later the Romans and English rules game, but without divine rules. American football was an outgrowth of rugby game still played in England. In 1876 the first American Intercollegiate Football association was created. A team then consisted of 15 players. Nine men formed a rush line, there was one quarterback, two halfbacks, one three-quarterback, and two full-backs. With so many men in the backfield the line had its hands full. Later on, the game got so rough in the days of the mass attack and firing a number of schools that a binned in a number of schools of the country. Rules were made to rectify this and the game again assumed national popularity. Subscribe for THE KANSAS CITY STAR The cost of outfitting a football team has gradually increased until today the cost ranges from $70 to $80 for each man on the squad. Everything possible is done to protect the players from unnecessary bumps and bruises. Some of the old pads have been combined in the present day football paddles to make the outfit more flexible. The age cost for players must be sufficient as follows: helmet, $12.50; undershirt, $1; jersey, $4.50; shoulder pads, $1; hip pads, $5; knee pads, $2; thigh pads, $3; sweat shirt, 1.75; pants, $12.50; shoes, $1; practice shoes, $10; game shoes, $11. For a squad of 40 men the cost of equipment is a considerable item. The freshmen showed the expected jitters yesterday afternoon against the varsity, but settled down in the second half, though most of the freshmen spent their time going off and on the field. Despite the attempted intimidation of some of the freshmen by the use of several old tricks of the trade by the varsity men, the freshmen show promise of developing a strong team. Frank Rudicky, who has played at Rockhurst, played an excellent game at halfface. Several of the varsity players have the usual pre-season blisters and sprains. Dick Amell will probably not see service for several days because of a leg infection. A meeting of all students interested in golf has been called for Tuesday evening at 7:30 in the Memorial Union building, according to Bill Moles, student tournament manager. Discussion of fall championship matches will be the main purpose of the meeting. Headquarters Rexall Drug Store Golf Meeting Scheduled 1009 Mass. N BLUE MILL HOWDY! Every One Goes to the BLUE MILL PHONE 17 13 papers - 15 cper week 847 Mass. St. Open Track Meet To Be Held Soon H. L. Nevin Distributor Possible variety material -dormant and active-will have an opportunity to show "K" men and potential "K" men in track what it is all about when the open track meet is held in Memorial stadium about the middle of October, according to an announcement by "Bill" Hargiss, head track coach. Intramural Entry Blanks To Be in Tomorrow Intramural armbleaks should be turned in at the intramural office to tomorrow, according to an announcement by the director, director of intramural athletics. Many more entries are expected this year than in former years, owing to the canvassing of boarding houses. Entry blanks were sent to every house having four or more men so that every man interested in intramural athletics could have an opportunity to participate. Anyone wishing to come out and condition himself for the meet is welcome to use the stadium track. This meet is open to anyone not having won a "K" in track competition. Organizations may enter teams as well as individuals. Points given will be counted at the conclusion of the meet to determine the winner. The meet, which is being held earlier this year, is in years past in order that the oncoming cold weather, is the proving ground for possible variety material. Coach Hargis will welcome anyone interested in track to compete in the even if for no other reason than to enter into the competitive spirit. Anyone wishing to come out and Klann Runs an Easy First in Two-Mile Race Intramural sports will get under way as soon as schedules can be arranged. Leading his nearest opponent by almost a full lap, Ernie Klenn won the 1½-mile race here yesterday after distance in 7 minutes. 38.8 seconds. Downs to Denver Coleman, who placed second, was nearly a lap behind as Klann finished the race, with Ryan running a close third. The race, which was a preliminary test for the two-mile relay team, was run at Memorial stadium between halves of the freshman-varsity football game. William Downs, 37, was transferred last night from the Kansas City bureau of the United Press, to its bureau in Denver. Downs was managing editor of the University Daily Kansas last year. German Student-for the Varsity on the Freshman 20 yard line. Repliepg gained 15 yards on his own on the Fresh 15. Miller intercepted Divers' pass on the Fresh 10, and was tackled for 7 yards. He scored 73 yards to Repliepg who returned 20 yards to the Freshman 42. Conger accepted 14 yards to the Freshman 42. Varsity gained five yards on exchange of punts. Divers' punt rolled over the catch, putting the ball in play on their own 20 yard line. Fresh gained 9 yards on three of their own 20 yards on their own 32. A. pass, Bulaty to Wenstrand netted 20 yards as the half ender Score, Varsity 19. Fresh The jam sessions of the "Radio City Music Hall" (Hans' name for the Cottage) were his introduction to American swing. They don't "swing" in Germany. Hans describes the jazz variation by the main ingredients—noise and pronounced rhythm." Continued from page 1 Gentlemen may prefer blondes but Hans takes his light brown. The school girls in his country wear no makeup; however, Hans is broad-minded and does not condemn costumes. His opinion of the world is the same as it is the world over, some good—some not so good." "K.U. dancing has more body motion," decided Herr Martin after attending several Hall dances. American Idiom Puzzles Him Herr Martin gets many laughs from American idiomatic expressions. Upon entering a fraternity house in Cleveland, Ohio, he was greeted by 10 boys who asked, "How do you do?" Hanna was punished. These boys had had no question and were not interrupted. He replied. He now understands that "how are you doing" and "what do you know" are merely English methods of greetings. "You have great football heroes and great basketball heroes, but the majority of you take care of your heroes and have no regular exercise." This is the German boy's analysis of American athletics. Hans enjoys running, swimming and broad jumping. Although he appreciates music, he does not participate in it. Reading, sports and photography are his hobbies. Maybe his next hobby will be Maybe his next hobby will be "swing" Varsity Downs-for the Varsity on the Freshman 20 yard line. Repliepg gained 15 yards on his own on the Fresh 15. Miller intercepted Divers' pass on the Fresh 10, and was tackled for 7 yards. He scored 73 yards to Repliepg who returned 20 yards to the Freshman 42. Conger accepted 14 yards to the Freshman 42. Varsity gained five yards on exchange of punts. Divers' punt rolled over the catch, putting the ball in play on their own 20 yard line. Fresh gained 9 yards on three of their own 20 yards on their own 32. A. pass, Bulaty to Wenstrand netted 20 yards as the half ender Score, Varsity 19. Fresh Continued from page 1 Third Quarter The Freshmen kicked off, Replogle returning to the varsity 33. Replogle and Sullivan made it first down on the Varsity 46. On tries at the line 41, Replogle scored down on the Fresh 43. With Sullivan and Replogle alternating, theVarsity made first down on the Freshman 31 yard line Your Phone Can Do Your Laundry CALL 432 ... it's more economical Figure it out for yourself! Everything Washed, Dried and Folded. Handkerchiefs torn. SPECIAL STUDENT BUNDLE 6 pounds for 50c. 8c for each additional pound. Fourth Quarter Shirts Finished from Bundle — 10c each (Buttons replaced — Rips and holes repaired) After a, incompletened forward pass, Miller punted to Reploge who was downed on the Varsity 26. The Freshmen took time to recover, and Huff tackled him on the Varsity 24. After two incomplete passes, Reploge intercepted Miller's pass and was stopped on the Varsity 11. The Varsity made it first down on the 21 yard line in three play plays, kicked up two yards off tackle and quarterback. Score, Varsity 19, Freshmen 0. Replogie then completed a pass to Meier for a first down on the Freshmen. Varsal was off at the half, and 5 yards for Replogie. Bucky knocked down Replogie's pass. On the fourth down, Replogie passed the ball to Bucky. Bucky took the ball on their own 19 yard line. Bukaty punted and Bucky scored. Bucky returned to Frosh took the ball on their own 24 yard line. Bucky pointed and Frosh returned to Frosh. Sullivan found a hole in the center of the line and gained 17 yards and a first down on the third down. He sized 15 yards for holding. On an attempted pass, Replogie was thrown behind the line of scrimmage by Bucky in third and 23 yards to go for the Varsial. Replogie then punted to Miller who returned the ball to the Frosh 20 yard line. INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY The Fresh held the Varsity on three line plays and then Lanter punted out of bounds on the Fresh, necked Bukaty for a 15 yard loss. Bukaty punted to Rosaker who ran the Fresh to the 46 yard locker back on the fourth down, saw an opening and circled left end for 10 yards. The Varsity played and the Fresh turned play. Weineke then punted to Fisk who was tackled on the F23. Bukaty punted out to the Fresh and Rosaker made it first down on the through right tackle for a first down on the Freshman 33. Richardson and Rosaker made it first down on the Fresh 8 yard line. Rosaker putted 12 yards and a first down on the Fresh 8 yard line. Rosaker putted 9 of the line. Richardson then sliced off tackle to score from the 6 B BRICK'S "ON THE HILL" SUNDAY SPECIAL! FRIED CHICKEN DINNER DINNER 35c VIVA VIVA VIVA yard line. Winecke's place kick was wide. Score, Varsity 25, Freshmen 0. Winecke kicked out for the victory. Bunsen took the ball on his own 5 yard line and returned to 89. He made the second kick. Bunsen lateraled to 201, who circled left end for 9 yards. Bunsen then drowned on the Frosh 46. Miller took another lateral from Bunsen and gained 14 yards for first down. Bunsen drowned on the Frosh 46. Miller we were good for another first down on the Variety 20. A forward pass, Meyer broke through the Frosh line by Bunsen and no gain and Ebling punted out of bounds on the Freshman 6 yard line. The Frush were penalized 5 yards for offside. On the last play, the Frush attempted lateral and Warren recovered in the end zone for a touchdown. A touchback point was good, Final Score, Variety 32, Freshmen 0. A MEAL TICKET Is a Good Investment $2.75 value for $2.50 GET ONE NOW At Your UNION FOUNTAIN INTRODUCING THE "LONDON" A New Topcoat—Tailcured in Import Harris Tweed from the Isle of Harris. "A HONEY OF A COAT" New Wool Mufflers to Match the Coats Tailored in plain colors and in block weaves. See three line costs. Waterproof $35 Windproof Wearproof Super Service THE GUARANTEE OF THE BROOKLYN WORKSHOP TRADE MARK HARRIS TWEED MONSERUM & HANDDWOVENY THE CROPERS OF PARIS, LONDON, IN ENGLAND. OWNER COPIES. S.A. NEWALL & SONS LTD. 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NEXT TIME — SEND IT TO 85c of UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XXXV The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas LAWRENCE, KANSAS,TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28,1937 5 NUMBER 14 SEVEN COUNCIL MEMBERS INELIGIBLE Kansas Law Alumni Meet Today W. L. Burdick, Former Dean Here, Will Preside At Luncheon to Be Held In Kansas City More than two hundred alumni of the University School of Law are expected to attend the alumna's conference in Baltimore and Baltimore hotel in Kansas City. Dr. Wm. L Burdick, former dean of the School of Law, will preside over the K.U. Alumni luncheon in Kansas City, held in connection with the meetings there of the American Bqr association. About 35 law students from here will attend. Law classes will be dismissed today to permit law students to attend the meetings. Dean Moreau and other member of the law faculty are attending afternoon and evening meetings of the association. Wednesday noon, Dean Moreau will be the speaker at the Columbia Law School Alumni luncheon, and on Friday the seniors of the University of Kansas School of Law are expected to attend the associations' meetings. Hail Elected Secretary Of Women's Glee Club Many prominent guests will attend. Among them will be Huge Wedel and Walter G. Thiel, members of the Kansas Supreme Court; Governor W. E Huxman; Frederick H. Wood, New York City; Senator Fred M. Harris, Ottawa, a member of the Board of Regents; Chancey B. Little, Olathe, former Congressman; S. S Alexander, United States district attorney; and C. V Beck, attorney general of Kansas. At a special meeting, Mary Jean Hall, c39, was elected secretary of the Women's Glee Club last night to take the place of Mary Markham, who resigned from the glee club because of minor throat trouble. Other officers of the club, elected last spring, are: Vera Caruthers, Marianne Schmidt, Kiehl, c'20, manager; and Ethelyne Burns, c'40, librarian. on the SHIN by Virgil Mitchell In the interest of that old institution—gossip—we give to you today a female shinster, Dorothy Fritz. Fritz has just completed an extensive tour of K.C., and brings you unceased and unexpurgated joy today, as she prepares for the Saturday Night Hour. So-Fritz and her key-holes—V.M. Harry Brown, charm child from Wichita, had the opportunity to lavish some of his allure on the Keeper of the Bees in the city Saturday night. It seems the state was a little irked at the kiddies for a social sidewiping near the Plaza. This was one time when a friend in need was a friend indeed. Leone Hoffman. Jody Stewart, Jayne Coats, Bill Bright, Jim Nelson, and all other available Pi Phi's and Phi Gan's went on a "touching" tour with the 100 rockets needed to jumpy the lock that controls the “spring.” The contribution of 26 pieces of wampum came from the Kuhn handsters. By 6 a.m., the budget was balanced and “hairibrum” Harry was released from his flat in the City Hostel. + + + Dame Rumor has it that the Sigma Chi's have done an A-1 job of sticking out their fair necks again. At this late hour they have joined the team that has won "The Show Independence or Bust." True to form, there proved to be a catch in that the feminine side of the deal failed to see the humor in it all. Now the boys are definitely behind the eight ball (Hello Souder and Miles- Pardon the professional plug—the Continued on page four X-ray Pictures Show Kelly Has Fractured Jaw X-ray pictures show that Russell Kelly, e38, suffered a fractured right knee, as the result of the sequestration of an unidentified man Friday night. Dr. R. I. Canutson said yesterday that Kelly's face is still badly bruised and swollen. Kelly and Miss Lela Edin, 37, of Herington, were returning from Topeka Friday evening when they became involved in a minor car acclimation accident while struck Kelly with his fat and then kicked him in the face several times. To Hold Quill Club Tryouts Writers, Pledges, and Potential Members To Meet Thursday An informal, Bohemian, get-to-together for those interested in trying out for the Quill Club this semester will be held in Green room, Fraser hall, at 8 a.m. next Thursday. Old all members, prospects, prospective students interested in the furtherance of creative writing are asked to attend. The program will introduce several Hill writers who have gained national recognition during their enrollment at the University. George Michalopoulos, *sp.* winner of first prize in the narrative verse contest conducted by the College Poetry Society of America, *Moth*, winner of a completely novel, "Moth." Martin Maloney, *gr.* winner of the 1936 Carruth Poetry Contest, whose work has appeared frequently in national magazines and anthologies of younger writers, will read, "Moth," on Friday designed for pulp- paper horror-story magazine consumption. Kenneth Lewis, c39, winner of last year's *Craint Contest*, and chancellor of the organization, will also read a short story, "A Kind of a Symbol." Two short-shorts, "Decision," by Agnes Mumert, and "Triumph," by Karl Krauss, will also be read. Plans for the year include presentation of guest speakers of note at meetings, the production of several radio programs, and the marketing of as much of the members' materials as possible. Members should be handed to the chancellor or placed in the Quill Club box in Fraser hall, on or before Oct. 15. Ministers Meet At Bible College A group of ministers from the Christian churches in the northern section of the state will be the guests of the Kansas Bible College, Tuesday, Sept. 28. Members of the board of directors have also been invited. A program arranged to begin at 10 a.m. will include the following church speakers: Ray E. Snodgrass, Central Christian church, Wichita; Harold Humbert, Christian church, Independence; Dean Paul B. Lawson, First Baptist Church, Attkins, First Christian church, Winfield; C. S. Alvord, field representation of the Kansas Bible College, and Harold G. Barr of Lawrence. The afternoon session will be an informal conference of the work and an opportunity to view the building and equipment for work. The general program will be concluded about 3:30. The delegation will lunch at noon in the Pine room of the Memorial Union building. Local members of the board of directors are George O. Foster and C. E. Birch. Drumheller, Alta. — (UP) — Two youths, who shot themselves in a plot to gain "public sympathy," were sentenced to three months imprisonment here. The youths, John Lane and George Knox, were brought to the hospital here with bullets through the legs and shoulders. Sympathy Seekers Jailed AUTHORIZED PARTIES All parties must be registered at the office of the adviser of women by noon on Wednesday preceding the date of the party. ELIZABETH MEGUIA Adviser of Women. Music Groups Include 387 Students Band. A Cappella Choir. Symphony Orchestra. A n d Two Glee Clubs Will Give Performances More than 300 students are members of the various musical organizations connected with the University, including the e bands, orchestras, choir, and glue clubs. Membership varies among some students are in more than one group. The student members come from all parts of the state. Next in size to the band is the Westminster A. Cappella Choir of 73 voices, under the personal direction of Dean D. M. Swarthout. The choirings regularly at the Sunday morning service of the First Presbyterian Church of Lawrence, and at numnerally on Sundays, usually the Christmas Vespers. The choir appears in concerts in Topeka and Kansas City each spring. The largest group is the University Band, with 97 members, directed by Russell L. Wiley. It appears at University conventions, and at all major athletic events. Supplementing the work of the University Band and a feeder for the larger band, is the "second" band, led by James Van-Dyck, a junior in the School of Fine Arts, from Ponce City, Okla. Almost as large, is the University Symphony Orchestra of 62 members, which appears in at least two main concerts each year. It is directed by Karl Kuersteiner. The orchestra has as a feeder, the little Symphony of 25, directed by Raymond Stuhl, instructor in violin. Glee club of about fifty members each for men and for women, conclude the musical list Miss Irene Peebody, assistant professor of voice, Joseph Wilkins, professor of voice leads the men's club. Paul C. Schulte To Be Installed As New Bishop St. Louis, Sept. 27—(UP)—Bishop Paul C. Schultze will be officially installed as bishop of the Leavenworth school on Tuesday, it was announced here today. Bishop Schulte is one of the youngest bishops in the country. Since his ordination as a priest in 1915, he has held a parish in St. Louis. Now he will establish residence in Kansas City, Kan. "Bob" Allen, c'41, son of Coach "Phog" Allen, and Mrs. W. B. Wilcox, 1018 Kentucky street, were involved in a minor accident in front of the Sigma Chi fraternity house last night. Neither was injured and the cars were damaged only slightly. Slight Damage in Auto Misha The K. U. Press Club will hold its first meeting of the year at 3:30 p.m. in room 102 of the Journalism building. The principal business of the meeting will be to elect new officers and make plans for the newspaper conferences and roundtable discussions which the Press Club will help entertain. K.U. Press Club To Hold First Meeting An increased use of photographs, more art work and fewer jokes characterize the first issue of the new Sour Owl, which makes its first appearance on the campus this morning. With General Franco's Armies—(UP)American movies are popular in Nationalist Spain today despite the civil war. Franco's Soldiers Cheer Gang Films; Laurel and Hardy Second in Choice Requeite and F Falangist soldiers who have just returned from battlefields where the have seen hundreds and even thousands killed, and even participated in the killing themselves, still get excited over a good, fast-moving gangster film in which no more than one man—the villain—may be bumped into or killed. Hardy are the most popular attraction, probably because of the strain of war and the relief that such comedy offers. All students enrolled in any class in journalism are eligible for membership in the Press Club and all are invited to attend. The magazine is entirely new in makeup from any before published here. Instead of the usual printed headlines, the new Ow1 ones hand-lettered heads through a variety of layout styles is found. Since the war started, I have gone to at least a score of cinemas in Nationalist Spain. Some of them have been in small close-to-the-front towns like Talvaera and others in big cities like Sovilla and Salamanca. In all of them, the majority of films shown are American and are enthusiastically received by both soldiers and civilians. In many cases the films are not even dubbed in Spanish, but are translated. In the movies, the war-war By Reynolds Packard United Press Staff Corresponder An entirely new printing process is responsible for the changed appearance of the Sour Owl which, according to the staff, will be use for subsequent issues if student opinion supports it. Use New Printing Style In this issue are photographs of the kidnapping of the mysterious "woman in black" last week in New York, and several other photos taken during the daily "jam session," used in connection with an article entitled "Why Not Dance?" Several Staff Positions Opan The cover, done in black, white and blue, is the work of Carol Johnson, art editor of the Owl; other art work was done by J. T. Kepner, Max Nixon and Al Muzenick. Photographs are the work of Bob Hoffman and Bill Long. Revamped 'Owl' On Campus Today The Owl will continue to use photographs, according to Editor James Coleman. He used a sadid, story-telling pictures from any students. Use New Printing Style Love-making Too Cool Several staff positions on the Owl are still open, including that of circulation manager. Applicants must be enrolled in the Sou owl office in the Union building. Enrollment at Baker Increases Baldwin, Kan., Sept. 27 — (UP) — baker University here reported 10 per cent increase in the fresh- man class and an approximate six per cent increase in the freshman class for the first of the week in its eighteenth year of exi- sence. WEATHER towns, the best of Hollywood's lovers come in for good-natured booing and hissing whenever they make love. These soldiers, who have been constantly under rife and shell fire for more than a year and separated from their wives or sweethearts for months, apparently don't think there's enough abandon in American screen kisses. Kansas: Increasing cloudiness followed by showers and cooler in west and north-central portion Tues' day; Wednesday generally fair, except possible showers in south and east, cooler in east. During the interval a patriotic touch is always given to every program. The picture of Gen. Francisco Franco is thrown on the screen and the "Mareza Real," the national anthem, is played while everybody stands at attention and salutes with the right hand raised high. Comedies Shown Under Fire "Longer and louder" they shou in their best Castillian. At the front, I have seen bits of American comedies and animated cartoons shown right under enemy fire. The films, screens and projection apparatus are carried from front to front in a huge truck and shown wherever the soldiers have not been relieved for several weeks. In seven of these movies, the civilians of these ambulatory movies have nearly been killed in trying to provide entertainment behind the front-line trenches. Mussolini And Hitler Form Pledge Dictators Down Wine In Vowing To Repulse Attempts at Dividing Two Nations Berlin, Sept. 27—(UP) —Reichschein Adolph Lohm and Primero Benito Mussolini today formed a pledge to "repulse attempts to divide our two nations" with toast of the great reception in the chancellery. More than 200 guests, the privileged few from among millions who had cheered the two dictators' triumphal entry into Berlin a few hours earlier, cried "hell" as his glass raiser raised his glass and said solemnly: Arrival Stirs Big Celebration "We believe our political work for the purity of peace and protection of the flame of European culture cannot be considered as the establishment of a blockade of the European state against the others. "In this spirit Italy and Germany will treat political problems side by side and will repulse any possible attempt to divide our two nations." Mussolini, whose arrival in Berlin stirred a celebration more flamboyant than anything ever staged for a fashion show, replied to the toast with gusto. Exclude Soviet Russia "The conversations which I have had these days with my Excellency have heightened our friendship and made it unimpressionable against any attempt to disturb it. When on which side it may come." Heller stood among the dark red marble pillars of the chancellery terrace room with Musdolini at his side when he proposed the heist that held the band of Nazi-frienders, every nation except Soviet Russia. Hilter Toasts "Close Friendship" "Italy and Germany found them- selves in common co-operation and also in close friendship," he began "at a time when dangerous elemen- tic threats back and destroy ancient civilization." Mussolini, in his answering toast, took recognition of German demands for recognition of her war-launched colonies, access to raw materials, and of Italy's demands for recognition first power of the Mediterranean. Journalists To Convene Here This year's session of the Kansas Council of Teachers of Journalism and the High School Journalism Conference will be held at the University under the auspices of the department of journalism. Oct 15 and 18. Prof. Hugh C. Brown, president of the K.C.T.J., has completed the program for the two days' session of the teachers' organization which will include the reading of papers and discussions. The High School Student Conference sessions will be held under the direction of the faculty members of the department of journalism. Each high school in the state has two student structurer and two student delegates and as many other unofficial delegates as care to attend. The annual Conference banquet will be held in the Memorial Union building. Attendance includes states and representative students from the department of journalism. Hill Leaders Discuss Campus Activities Four student speakers will give a picture of Hill activities at the Freshman Council meeting tonight at 7 in the "Y" office. Don Voorhees, president of the M.S.C., will speak on Hill politics. Dean Moorehead, chairman of the M.S.C., will discuss proposed reforms. "Red" Blackburn, maestro of "swing," will speak on Hill amusements and dramas. Wade Green, freshman lin coach, will talk about Wilbur Leonard will preside a chairman of the meeting. P.S.G.L. in Majority As Grades Take Toll Five Pachacamacs and Two P.S.G.L. Representatives Ruled Out By Committee Action; Petitioning Of Some Members for Reinstatement Meets With Failure Ineligibility vacated seven seats in the Men's Student Council and swept P.S.G.L. into a secure majority in that body last night, as president Don Voorhees read the final report of the eligibility committee. Seventy-three firemen from 32 Kansas cities, two mayor's, one city manager, and two representatives of equipment and supply houses, registered yesterday morning for the opening sessions of the second annual Kansas Fire College being held on the campus this week. Seventy - three Fiecem H e e r for the Opening Sessions Yesterday All lecture and conference sessions are being held in the main lecture room on the second floor of Marvin hall, with the outdoor work stations being held in the area back of the main engineering building. Fire College Gets Started Hold Onen House Tonight W. Fred Heisler, director of the school of technical training, division of engineering, Oklahoma A. & M. College, opened the session yesterday with a talk on "The Job of the Fireman." The other talk on the morning program was given by Mr. Heisler from department, Kansas City, on "Planning and Making Fire Department Inspections." The afternoon session was taken up with a lecture on "Rope and Ladder Evolution's" by E. Hudburg, fire department instructor, school of technical training, Oklahoma A. & M. College, and a demonstration of gunnison given by Chief Glen West and the Hutchinson Fire Department. Captain C. E. Holder of the Wichita Fire Department lectured on the "Ventilation of Burning Buildings," during the evening session. The seven men declared permanently ineligible were: Harry O'Riley, c'38, treasurer; Paul Fisher, b'38, business representative Cliffa Blackburn, 2nd m, medicine representative; and Jake Young, c'40, freshman representative; Pachacamae The Lawrence fire department is holding open house at the Eagle hall tonight for the visiting firemen This will be in the nature of a smoker and Dutch lunch, beginning at 6 o'clock. This school is conducted by the Kansas State Firemen's Association, in co-operation with the University and the State Board of Vocational education. Its purpose is to prepare students for work throughout Kansas the newer and more efficient methods of fighting fire and protecting property. Will Continue Through Saturday The instructors in the school are: Pred Hatfield, training, division of engineering, Oklahoma A. & M. Stillwater, Okla.: captain Roy Moulton, inspector, fire department, Kansas City; E. Hudburg, fire department instructor, school of technical training, Oklahoma A.& M. College; Inspector, fire department; C. E. Holder, trainee of the Wichita Fire department; Joe Hutchinson, assistant chief of the Arkansas City Fire department; E. J. Stewart, chief engineer, Kansas Inspection bureau, Topeka; Thomas Killen, chief engineer, Arkansas City Mo., Fire department; and H G. Lindgren, chief of the McPherson Fire department. Ivan B. Crawford, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, will address the Fire College at the dinner to be held in Wiedemann's grill at 6:30 tomorrow night. The college will be held through Thursday, with talks and demonstrations scheduled on all days. TAU SIGMA Tui Sigma solo try outs 7.30 and ass try outs 8 tonight, in the wom- n's gym. Bring something to work CATHERINE DUNKLE President. Greg Hines, c' 38, college representative; and Ferrell Anderson, c' 39, athletic representative; P. S.G.L. S., leaving a balance of 11-9 on the P.S.G.L. side of the ledger. After a publication period, calling for petitions, the vacancies will be filled by vote of the Council. With a two-man majority, it is unlikely that PS.GL will relax its restrictions in selecting men to fill the vacancies. Don Voorkees, president of the Council, announced last week that the seven men were temporarily ineligible, but did not announce the names of the possibility that some might be re-instated by petitions. The men petitioned the eligibility committee, but without success. C. H. Mullin, chairman of the board of directors of the official student correspondent's bureau appeared before the Council to explain the functions of the bureau and to petition for an appropriation of $35 from the Council fund to help defray the expenses of the bus company. The Council will report on this question pending a report of the budget committee. The Council appropriated $150 for the Y.M.C.A., subject to the report of the budget committee. Voorees and Moe Ettenson were authorized by the Council to contact member school of the Midwestern Conference of Colleges and Universities relative to the combin- body with the annual convention of America in Albuequerque, N.M., in December. The Midwestern Conference was held here last year and was slated to be held here again in Novem- ber 1972. It is the N.S.F.A., of which the Midwestern Conference is a part, have suggested the combination of the two. Skilton Sails For Europe Charles S. Skilton, professor of organ, sailed Saturday for Europe, accompanied by his daughter, Helen. Since leaving Lawrence this fall on his year's leave of absence, Prof. Shaw's class at the University of Dewell County, Peter Bortham. N H Skilton, who is an honorary conson- member of the National Fédération of Music, was recently elected to the Musical Association of London. The new festival communion service by Professor Skilton is to be sung tomorrow evening at the consecration of Adjunct Bishop Goodrich R. Fenner in Grace Episcopal church, Toneka. The offertory anthem, "O Love Divine," also is by Professor Skilton, who has dedicated it to Bishop Wise. Professor Skilton's "American Indian Fantasy" was included in the London organ rectal of Pietro Yon given recently. Pictorial Plorki will play a version of the same composition on his concert four i tha season. The Apollo Club, men's chorus of Boston, has included Skilton's cantata, "Tirconeroga" on their program for this year. Reorganizing Art Library The art library in Spooner-Thayer museum is being reorganized, with the addition of several new shelves. The library has about three thousand and volumes on fine arts and related subjects, such as costume, history, and biography. The books are being arranged in more convenient and easily accessible order than heretofore. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1987 Comment A Word To the Wise—And Unwise As some of the more energetic professors announce the first round of examinations for this week, comes again the fight between two widely honored systems of conducting courses. System A (the least popular among professors because it entails a greater number of papers to be graded) calls for frequent examinations that will keep the professor in touch with his class and the student in touch with his course. System B calls for a maximum of four examinations a semester and a minimum of two. This system was established on the premise that all students are sincere and that learning, once garnered, can never be lost in the hubub of the semester. (Also to be considered here is the apparent fact that fewer papers have to be pored over and passed on). Students can be divided into three distinct classifications in reference to their reaction to these two systems: Class A, the dilgent, sincere student (needleess to say, Class A is select) to whom the system really makes no difference for he is always prepared for either a two-week quiz or a semester examination; Class B, the dullard, the insincere student, whose reaction is the same, but is based on the fact that he is never prepared; Class C, the twilight zone student. To the twilight zone student, System A opens broad avenues to B-dom or even A-dom, for the twilight zone student will study if goaded, and will keep up his work under an efficient stimulus. The best advice for any and all students is to follow the slogan on a bulletin board in Administration building, "It's easier to keep up than catch up." Every Available Force---- Must Fight "Damaged Goods," a dramatic presentation of the syphilis menace in the form of a motion picture, represents a new angle of attack in the educational campaign now being carried on against the dread venereal disease. Educated persons have long had access to articles telling of the ravages of the disease, the course of treatment and the possibility of cure. If education is truly a sign of intelligence, syphilis should be on the run among educated people. But the great problem now is in reaching that strata of our society that has no access to the more learned journals and no desire for or comprehension of the drier discourses on the subject. One of the answers to this problem is the motion picture. For it combines the powerful truths of the destruction of syllables with stirring action. It mixes human emotion with the information that the disease can be cured. It blends the tragedy of the disease with visible human tragedy. It predicts the ultimate conquest of the disease as it presents the individual conquest. The best bet, then, would be to arrange for the continued run of this picture and to cooperate in the making of more pictures of the same type with new information and developments presented in each. National agencies combatting syphilis have so-far passed up a chance to co-operate more fully with the producers of the picture . . . Not that it should be openly endorsed or shown free. For, strangely enough, the very people that will most benefit from the show are represented among that class who will go to any show that promises something lewd and "sensational." Every available force must be enlisted in the fight on syphilis. Collective Effort, For Once,a Solution The President's intention of establishing "a new national foundation for infantile paralysis" which will "lead, direct and unify the fight on every phase of this sickness" may mean the ultimate discovery of its cause and prevention. It may mean that the victims now living by aid of respirators and nasal sprays may someday be saved from this kind of existence. The plan for combatting this disease which often turns living creatures into twisted and mishapen ogres is one that strikes at the roots of the malady—the cause of infantile paralysis. Government research amply supplied with funds and equipment is the only answer to infantile paralysis's latest widespread challenge. The cost of equipment and time spent in research precludes successfulness for the average physician in private research. As a government project the cost would be inordinate and the results and data gathered of immense usefulness. True, the now familiar cry of collectivism and socialized medicine will be raised by a few, but their protests pale to insignificance when they are weighed against the appalling human wreckage wrought by infantile paralysis. --- Help the Farmer--- Insure the Future Dr. Glenn Frank recently reminded Chicago that its most dependable underpinning is mid-western agriculture. If the city was to be prosperous, he said, the farmers who lived in the large agricultural areas tributary to it must be prosperous. Strange, it seems, that he need reiterate this long-accepted fact. Not only does it hold true for a city, but for help the farmers has always uppermost in the minds of politicians with an eye to immediate results at the next elections. Little concerted effort has been expended, until recently, upon the long-time agricultural policy not bent upon immediate results but rather to further the actual good of the land itself. This is the purpose of the government's soil conservation project. It is true that those farmers who have been following right practices of crop rotation and contour plowing have received little material returns from the government. But already they have seen results in the condition of the soil, and those who have newly come under the program are already noting an improvement in their land. Price manipulations of crops and regulatory measures advanced to meet immediate conditions are helpful, but the soil conservation program, if it continues to accomplish its purpose, is one of the most fundamental and progressive undertakings of the New Deal. Campus Opinion Editor Daily Kansap Am I Thirsty! Being by birth an Arizona desert rat I thought, could take it but I find it can. Many have been the times during the past five or six years when I had a chance to walk the east hall of the Adm. bldg to love my parched and burning tongue only to find, as usual, a more tolerant environment than the thirsty soul, but what with thanksgiving to a thirsty soul, but what with people impatiently standing around to tame their turn, we had to walk in amongst where previous noses have wallowed in a gnawing-like effort to get the water my timid nature needed, and to be careful not to be held who can really root. And besides, who wants to gurple and suck and shurp in the presence of a host of witnesses, for only thus does one get a bit of water Yours for a bubbling, spouting, year, roaring water, with a flickering bludgeon, of blades, after these many years (literally sparing you). Official University Bulletin Notice due at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m., preceding regular visit by the President to a m. day for Sunday visit. Vol. 35 TUESDAY, SEPT. 28, 1937 No. 14 --office at Lawrence, Kan. A1EE. The local A1EE branch will hold a smoke this evening at eventing in the area. All electrical engineering students are invited to attend this meeting to get acquainted with their fellow electrics—Ray A. S.C.E. There will be a meeting at 4:30 this afternoon. Election of officers. A group picture will be taken. All civil engineering students are urged to come—Ray Rogers, Vice-president. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: The regular weekly meeting will be held this afternoon in Room C, Myers hall. All students and faculty mem- brates are invited to attend—Kevin Davis, President. DIRECTORY: Students who have not filed addresses and telephone numbers or correspondence in the Registrar's office should do so at once so that the information may be included in the directory copy now being prepared. JAY JANES: Remember to turn in activity books to Winfred Jameson the Registrar's office today. There will be a regular meeting at 4:30 Wednesday afternoon in 212 Ad—Roberta Cook, President. SCHOOL OF EDUCATION FACULTY MEETING: The faculty of the School of Education will meet at 3:30 Thursday, Sept. 30, in room 112 Fraser hall—E.H. Hlind, President. STUDENT FORUMS BOARD: Initial meeting for the students on Tuesday, Sept. 28, at 3 p.m.—Dear Mooredhoad, Me University Daily Kansan EDITOR-I-N-GHEF ASSOCIATE EDITOR: MORTIM THOMSON AND GREG HENNIE Editor's Note Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS News Staff PUBLISHER ... J. HOWARD RUSCO GRACE VALENTINE MANAGING EDITOR CAMPUS EDITORS KENNETH MOREN and JON COUBANE MANAGING EDITOR SOCIETY EDITOR SPORTS EDITOR TELEGRAPH EDITOR WILLIAM FitzGREGOR CHARLES KROSS MAKEUP EDITOR BOBbie CASKEY and JAME FOGOEL RUNWAY EDITOR MARTIN GOGOLL MANAGER Editorial Staff Kansan Board Members ALICE HALIDMAN-JULIUS J. HOWARD RUSCO MARTIN BURTON MARVIN CAGE KENNETH MORRIS JANE FLOPE GRACE VALENTINE BRIAN THOMPSON MORRIS THOMPSON BURNER MANAGER F. QUENTIN BROWN Entered as second-class matter, September 17, 1908, at the pos Business Staff Two Music Critics of the Old School Disclose Qualities of 'Jam' Editor's note: The following is the opinion of two of the Hill's better known and versed on the trend of modern jam. By Martin J. Maloney Morris M. Thompson The Front Line, 4 p.m., Sept. 27 — As we write this article, peeking with two fingers on the keys of an aged typewriter, your correspondents are seated immediately in front of you, down a barrage of jam. Two trumpeters are blasting away at thirty-seconds intervals in our right ear, a clarinetist is sniping just beside our left ear, and an energetic drummer is hitting the floor with fast cross fire, about five hundred thumps to the minute. Above the thunder of the attack rise the shrill cries of strong men and women, attempting to make themselves heard in spite of the music. A wild glitter hurks in their skin is awry; feet pound the floor. The question arises in our shell-shocked minds, what is jam? Maybe it arises in yours, too. How should we know? How should we know anything, as a matter of fact? We're lost in rhythm. They are enjoying themselves. This is the jam session. What Is Jam? To get back to the question, jam is music by divine inspiration. You've heard those highbrow compositions by Mozart and Bach and the rest of the boys, called Theme and Variations? Well, that's jam. You take a tune and do tricks with it, sometimes ending up with a different time. You'll notice, in a jam session, that the boy start off fairly normal. Then suddenly a trumpeter, let us say, seized with something that appear to be an epileptic fit. He does trick with his instrument that you, he am the supreme court all know are certainly not on the program. That jam. You go along quietly for a while. When you're playing music, and you start playing music that was never before on land or sea. Mr. Sigmund Freud would interpret jam music as a complete abandonment of the musical inhibitions. It might even tell it a reversal to the primitive. A musician not under the spell of the moment would call it--but we can't reproduce that sort of thing here. Waxing Learned The music critic is up against a stump. He should be able to find something in his dictionary of critical phrases that jam definitely doesn't have . . . but there the diffender form of music has verve in abundance. The tempo ranges from adagio to agilio within the pushing of a key. Phrasing, we thought, would be entirely impulsive . . . that is, the definition of rhythm structure, at first impression, seems to come from the pre-concentration; but, at rare intervals, this small group of musicians can pour out a chain of melody possessing all the scholarly THIS WEEK Memorial Union Sub-Basement Combination Ham Solad Sandwich with Potato Solad and Pie a La Mode UNION FOUNTAIN 25c and reflective shreds of a philharmonic. PATEE Week 10℃ Til 7 Days Then 15' NOW! ENDS Choice of tempi should represent a weakness, and to those who do not make a study of jam, it is truly so; but no aggregation of musicians could so abruptly switch from one tempo to the other in such a way that a beat, without being truly versed in the eccentricities of tempi. Only by Hate and Heart-Break Could Life Fashion a Love Such as Theirs. 2 SMASH HITS K F K U NOW! ENDS WEDNESDAY So with the mandates of our training in mind, to wit: "The greatest secret of critical justice is the ability to measure works by the standards that have been developed over the traces of long-faced esthetics for the mantle of the truly liberal, and endorse this art of jam, so pleasing to those who set the standards . . . standards as flexible as the oratory composition of a teacher or the artistry of retinue from no-man's-land in favor of the jaminias . . ." NUTS AT WORK Tuesday, Sept. 28 2:30 p.m. Silent. 0:00 p.m. "Spotlighting the News, George Church, instructor, de- signation of the magazine institutions directed by Martin M oney, department of English. ERROL FLYNN ANITA LOUISE Margaret Lindsay MARY BOLAND HUGH HERBERT FRANK McHUGH "GREEN LIGHT" 6:00 p.m. Sherrit 6:00 p.m. Soprano recital, Marie Wulbine "Mary the Girl" Thursday, Sept. 30 Wednesday, Sept. 29 2:30 p.m. Silent 2:30 p.m. Silent. 6:00-6:30 p.m. Piano recital, Prof. Jan Chiapusso NEWS - TRAVEL TALK 00 p.m. Physical Education 101 Health, roundtable discussion by members of the division of physical education. 9:15 p.m. Intramural News. Jayhawker Trumpeters—Lewis Maser, Leo Horacek, Bob Boyle; Bob Glotzbach, accom- panist 8:28 p.m. Campus News Friday, Oct. 1 9:28 p.m. Campus News. 2.50 p.m. Snift. 6.00 p.m. KFKU String Trio: Home H 00 p.m KFKU String Trio Homer Dogue Caine, violinist; Violin Mother, violoncellist; Robert Glerhack, pianist Glotzbach, pianist. 6:15 p.m. Piano Recital, Lila LeVan, studio Dean D. M. Swarthout. Saturday, Oct. 2 6. 00 p.m. Piano Recital, Mary Jane Bruce, studio Prof. Carl A. Preyer. Varsity Leads - Always the Best VARSITY Home of the Javahawk Admission 10c and 15c Shows 2:30-7:00-9:30 Last Times Today! Do-Gloom Yourself! She- Edward Eveett Harton "OH DOCTOR" AND George Raft Dolores Costello Barrymore "YOURS FOR THE ASKING" 2 Swell 10c TO Hits ALL She Couldn't Cook--- But He Loved Her Anyway! She Couldn't Cook---and DORIS NOLAN The MAN I MARRY with MICHAEL WHALEN DORIS Fine Arts Students Must Attend Musical Programs Action! Mystery! Romance! At 10,000 Feet! FRED MacMURRAY JOAN BENNETT "13 Hours by Air" Zasu Pitts - Alan Baxter FRIDAY - SATURDAY "It Happened Out West" And "Fighting Youth" Attendance this year, as in previous years, at the University Concert course attractions, weekly student recitals, faculty recitals, the college recital, graduate recitals, and graduate recitals, will be required of all students regularly enrolled in the music division of the School of Fine Arts. Certain other recitals throughout the year are assigned as those requiring attendance. Students are required to keep notebooks containing the programs given for each recital they attend. The notebooks are turned in at the end of each semester and recital attendance credit given. "Dilettantes" To Meet Tonight SUNDAY! LOOK! "Champagne Waltz" And "She's Dangerous" The "Diletantes" Y W.C.A. group will meet at 7:30 this evening at Hensley house. Alice Russell, fa38, will lead the meeting and lend the discussion. Cole Elected Chairman “Diletantes,” meaning lovers of fine arts, indicates the purpose of the group. Any University woman presenting a painting, is invited to the meeting. Sanderson Gets Appointment Cole, president of the P.S.G.L. political party, will preside at the first meeting of the commission at 4:30 this afternoon at the "Y" office. Zeke Cole, c'39, has been elected chairman of the campus problems commission of the Y.M.C.A. He takes the place of Don Henry, who is fighting with the Loyalist forces in Spain. Milton Sanderson, Ph.D., 37, has received an appointment as instructor in the department of ontology at the University of Arkansas. Kellermans Visit Campus The program last year reached 532 students enrolled in 999 courses in 108 classes, with 41 teachers employed. Classes were offered in the following Kansas cities: Atchison, Belleville, Coldwater, Leavenworth, Fitch, Haysport, Hornsby, Hawaiwa, Horton, Kansas City, Kan., Lone Star (CQ), Olathe, Osawatomi, Oxford, Paola, Seneca, and Topeka. Mrs. Blanche Kellerman, fs, and L. J. Kellerman, president of United Royalties company of Boulder, Colo., visited the Campus yesterday afternoon. Early last summer requests for transcripts begin to come in, indicating, according to Mr. Ingham, that they are needed in the impetus to go to college, by reason of their freshman college class work, or were at last finding it possible to finance a college education. Both influences may have accused some, ANNOVERS FANTAISIENS FANTASY TREASURES PER ROLL 8-EXPOSURES KODAK FINISHING IN INDIVIDUAL ORDER ALBUMS Frosh Colleges Bring Students DAILY SERVICE FUEL Fully three-fourths of the high school graduates of university age who were enrolled last year in the university are maintained by the University, are attending college this year, according to H. C. Ingham, director of extension at the University, but many are to Manhattan, or to other schools. The freshman colleges were first offered two years ago as a means of bringing instruction at the university level to high school graduates who were unable to go away to college. In 2014, they joined the PWA, since the project involved the placing of otherwise unemployed teachers. (Write for a supply of convenient Film Mailers) with 25c DellLuxe Panel Enclosed and Dared Snapshots delivered in a form for ready reference and convenience afterfeeding. Keep both positive and negative in sets as taken. An DICKINSON The Friendly Theatre "Artists and Models" Box. 119-A Artisto Photofinishers Rockford, Ill. Follow the Crwods and See the Best IDA LUPOIN - RICHARD ARENLE GAIL PATRICK - BEN BLUE and a whole host of other stars NOW SHOWING! Everybody's Headin' for JACK BENNY'S FOR SALE! One brand new love song. Writer's got to buy-buy with a certain blonde baby! 'Blonde Trouble' FREE TRALI OFFER - To check the quality of Aranha and demonstrate the convenience of this new style delivery, mail all sd and two your closest negative for free sample prints as album covers. SUNDAY BING CROSBY Showing 3-7-9 10c-25c 'til 7 then 10c-35c Eleonor Whitmire Johnny Downs - Terry Walker Lynnaovo Lynno - Benny Baker "Double or Nothing" "SOULS AT SEA" Coming GRANADA Your Entertainment Spot YOUR LAST CHANCE To See America's Greatest Actress in the Greatest Role of Her Career. WEEK DAY SHOWS 2:30-7-9 25c 'til 7 BETTE DAVIS HENRY FONDA THAT CERTAIN Woman Also—Sport Thrills Band Act - Latest News Together For the First Time! WEDNESDAY 4 Thrill Packed Dave Faithful Favorite to watch on TV RAINER TRACY "BIG CITY" Mingle with These Celebrates of Broadway and the Sport World Jack Dempsey - James Jefries Jimmy McCain - Jim Thorn Also—Musical Comedy - News SUNDAY! "THE LIFE OF EMILE ZOLA" Subscribe for Headquarters Rexall Drug Store THE KANSAS CITY STAR PHONE 17 17 H. L. Nevin Distributor 13 papers - 15 cper week 847 Mass. St. V1 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28. 1937 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Here on the Hill an account of Mt. Oread Socie PACE THREE an account of Mt. Oread Society JUNE ULM, Society Editor UFT 1 pm, call K.U. 2512 after 7pm Hungerford-Hamilton The marriage of Miss Helen Hurgerford, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert B. Hungerford, and Andrew C. Hurgerford, daughter of Mrs. Morris B. Hamilton of Kansas City, took place Saturday at 4 o'clock at the Trinity Episcopal Church. The couple left for a motor trip through San Diego on Friday after Oct. 15, in St. Petersburg, Florida. The bride attended the University of Kansas, where she was affiliated with the Pt Beta Phi sorority. She has been a member of the faculty of Christian College in Columbus, Mo. for the past four years. Mr. Hamilton is a graduate of Baker University and of the Harvard Business School and is a member of the Kappa Sigma fraternity. ☆ ☆ ☆ Dinner guests at Corbin hall Sunday included: Paul Moritz, c'18 Byron Beaurain, 138 Gerhard Kienny, gr Henry Parker, gr Jean Cowan, Lawrence Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Scott, Topica Clint McCormack, Topica Mr. and Mrs. J.D. Spiegel, Topica Gloria Spingle, Topica Jack Schiffmacher, '37 Lorraine Brown, '39 Louis Manning, Independence Ruth Page, m'19 Mrs. Curby, Lawrence Mrs. Burns, m'19 Sunday dinner guests at the Delta Upson house were: Shirey Jean Smith Virginia Grey Mary Willekson Mary Alice Livingston Margaret Harvey Janet Roe Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Rush, Thayer Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Galloway, Kansas City Sunday dinner guests at the Delta Chi fraternity house were: Ann Reynolds, m4; Miss Virginia White, f5; Miss Virginia Payne, Kansas City, Mo; Miss Roberta Walker Miss Wylie, Woodley Millard DeNluser, f5, Kansas City, Mo; Fran Logan, f6, Kansas City, Mo. Dinner guests Sunday at the Theta Tau fraternity house were: Miss Jean Robertson Miss Jean Donahue, Topena Mr. and Mrs. Fldon Elliott Sigma Eta Chi, Congregational Church sorority, announces the pledging of Naomi Campbell, Jean Stouffer, Alice Ann Jones, Mabel Venton, Mary Piercy, Virgil Frazier and Ruth Mason. Prof. and Mrs. E. F. Engl entertained with a dinner Saturday for members of the University German faculty and their wives: Mr. and Mrs. Noble Litch and daughter, Kansas City, Kan. Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Jewell, Kansas City, Kan. house Sunday were: Mr. and Mrs. A, Onofrio, Kansas City. Visitors at the Delta Chi fraternity Dr. and Mrs, Otto Springer Dr. and Mr., George Morse Dr. and Mrs, Gerald Gronika A. P. M. Sturtewrn W. B. Schrafth P. Balker Miss Agnes Engel Mr. and Mrs, Engel Weekend guests at Corbin ha Mr. Junior Simmons, Kansas City, Kan. Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Avery, Alta Vinta Mr. and Mrs. A. Onofrio, Kansas City, Mo. The Alpha Delta Pi sorority will entertain the Delta Upsilon fraternity at an hour dance this evening. The University Club will hold its annual mixer and smoker this evening. Mrs. Mimie Hall, Horton Leda Edit, 17, Heington Mary Ruth Thomas, 37, Oakley ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Miss Margaret Wilson was a luncheon guest Monday at the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority house. PHONE K.U.66 Miss Louise Moore, Mr. and Mrs Springer of Kansas City, Mo. and Mr. Murphy of Tulsa, Okla., were Sunday dinner guests of Beta Theta Phi Kappa Psi held formal pledging service Monday night. Mary Noel, '641, was a luncheon guest at the Gamma Phi Beta sorority house Monday. Miss Betty Prim, Wichita, was a weekend guest of Gamma Phi Beta Miss Betty Winne, Kansas City Sunday A LOST: Red and black Parker Everhart cither Tuesday or Wednesday, Reward Kenneth Wright, Phone 3173W. -14 WANTED: Student Laundry, prices rea- less, mending done free. Will call deliver. Phone 1513. -1 LOST: THORN a.m. between 9:10 and 10:10, an Eastern Star pin. Lost where between Green hall and Administrators' Reward, Call 231-8253. Nail Heming. Daily Kansan Classified Ads Don't Miss the Fun! WANTED: Roommate for quiet studious boy, also large double room for rent, Meilis it works. Phone 21801. •15 cents per week - Phone 2316 Subscribe for THE WICHTA BEACON Kansas' Greatest Newspaper Delivered to your door Daily ar Don't Miss the KIDS Learn to dance with the latest ballet class SPECIAL AVAILABLE BEGINNER MARion Rice Dance Studio Over Rumy-allison Flower Shop 927.1/Mas. St. It isn't too late to subscribe to the University Daily. Kansan—delivered to your door every morning for $3 a year. $1.75 a month. Ten survivors were brought in by the Scharnhorft, which picked them up from wreckage to which they had been clinging for more than four days. The Chinese said the fishing fleet contained about 350 persons and they thought about 300 were either drowned or killed by gunfire. Jayhawk Barber Shop Completely Modernistic Enjoy the best at no additional cost. Hair cut 35c. 921/71 mann 68 --ventured the guess that appointment to fill the places might be made soon after Oct. 1. Earl Ellis Joe Letch "Bill" Hensley "Paddy" Hyatt 723 May "The submarine was flying the Japanese flag when it opened fire. All the occupants of the defenseless Chinese ships were either killed outright by shrapnel or were thrown into the water," reported another. Southern Barbecued Sandwiches and Ribs Big Sandwich with sauce 15c PENN'S SUPREME Ice Cream Shop "The submarine rose to the surface without warning one-half mile from the junk on which I was riding and found that there were diving," reported one survivor. Frosty Malts - Ice Cream Fresh Roasted Peanuts 1111 Mass. Phone 499 Open Sundays Mo. and Miss Olive Adole Krebiel '37, Wichita, were weekend guests of Kappa Kappa Gamma. Hong Kong, Sept. 28.—(UP)—Chinese, together with British sympathizers in the British settlement charged today that Japan has added submarine warfare to her "burrow attack" against the Survivors of a fleet of 12 Chinese fishing junks who were brought in yesterday by the German liner Scharnhorst their ships were shelled and sunk by a Japanese submarine off Cheung Point, about 30 miles from Hong Kong, five days ago. The boats were beached but were accepted by the British authorities as accurate. Chi Omega held initiation services for Emileen Johnson, c38, and Lacile Springer, c'unc1, Monday afternoon. Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity held initiation services yesterday for Lyman Corlis, b39, and Loren Florrell, b39. Bakee Bayre, Goff Rae Bat Moinhe, f4/40 Fleurence Horne, fa.39 Virginia Wargery, c.97 Pledging services of Thet Epilion Baptist sermon, were held Sunday afternoon at the home of the Rev Charles W. Thomas. Submarine Warfare Emerges To Plague Chinese Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia featernity had the following dinner guests Sunday noon: Women pledged they Seen Jeele, Mary Thomas, Marjorie McCarty, Helen Wolfe, Arlene Mcelchert, Anna Turner, and Ruth Beckorth. ROOFS AND BOARD! Double rooms 5 & each, board 63 a week. Home cooked food, family style. Special Sunday meals 242 Alabama. Call for John. Phone 2811 LOST: Navy blue purse in 119 Fraser. Reward offered. Call 267. Virginia Varga. LOST: Lady's Fontaine white gold wrist watch. Reward, Elise Lowell. Phone 1183. 744 Ohio. -16 PHONE K.U.66 SHAMPOO and 25c WAVE, DIE Oil – Dry Brush Fish shampoo and Shampoo (1.5 oz) End Curls $1.00 up. Complete PERMETAL Alloy Any Style Permaflex $1.50 up. MAGAZINES All popular magazines at one half to one-third regular price. Magazine Exchange 729 Massachusetts Clothes Service Station SCHULZ the TAILOR MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP 7321'; Mass. Phone 2553 TAXI HUNSINGER'S 920 - 22 Mass. 924 Mass. 729 Massachusetts 品 --ventured the guess that appointment to fill the places might be made soon after Oct. 1. SCHULZ the TAILOR Buy GOOD shop repairing Our Prices are RIGHT OYLER'S SHOE SHOP Phone 12 + --ventured the guess that appointment to fill the places might be made soon after Oct. 1. FOR KENT: Room for girl=1147,Ohio St; east and west windows, south French door. Modern; approved, 95.00 per month. Phone: 1147,-12 GRIES: TWO-ROOM nicely furnished Apartment, sink, hot and cold water, Frigidaire. S. E. expoure. Phone 1151] 119 Vermont. -15 WANTED: Student laundry, shirts 10c Phone 1587J. -19 1346 Ohio Extensive Play Program Planned SHAMPOO and WAVE, 35c dried Economy prices on other beauty works also A plan to enable the participation of "every student in his favorite sport" is the object of an extensive play program planned by the department's physical education according to a statement yesterday by Dr. F. C. Allen. Participation in Every Student in His Favorite Sport Aim of Athletic Department WAVE, new styles, any style 25c dried. TAX I Call 2-800 UNION CAB CO "Originators of 15c Cabs" 941 $ _{2} $ Mass. St. Phone 533 Next door Keeler Book Store Shampoos Finger Waves Oil Permanents 25c up 25c (dried) $2.50 ed "The purpose of the department of physical education is to provide facilities for every student to compete in his favorite sport," he told a reporter for the Kansas. The plan, as needed, provides equipment and extension of recreational facilities upon the Campus. WAVO BEAUTY SHOP WANTED Students and faculty will be allowed to use the golf course and tennis courts without charge, as in the past, but by a new regulation outiders will be charged a fee to be used for Further in-person involvement. "The program places chief emphasis upon golf and tennis, which have led all other sports in popularity the last few years." Dr. Allen said, pointing out recent renovations of the golf course under the direction of Gleem Outman, and the tennis courts. The tennis courts, he said, are an awe of one dollar a day each for sprinkling and rolling. Because of this the department hopes to have cement courts eventually. END CUBLS, $1 up, inquire 7 Experienced Operators New Equipment Added HAWKINS SHOP Beauty Salon Individual Boots Five Experienced Operators Featuring Dona Ray Cosmetics Vera Aderholdt. Manager Phone 387 First floor. 842 Mass. Typewriter Cleaning and Repairing Shampoos Phone 95 - 921 Miss. St. Other sports as handball, horse-shoe pitching and swimming will be included in the program. Phone 95 — 921 Miss. St. CONOCO CAR SERVICE! GAS and OILS Expert Washing ... 75c Check-Chart Greasening ... 75c Thorough Vaccum Cleaning ... 76c IVA'S BEAUTY SHOP 94114 Moss, St. Phoen CLARENCE M. BAKER 1323 Kentucky Phone 2095J Ribbons for sale. CONOCO SERVICE STATION Intramural sports have also been broadened to several fields of team activity and will include various forms of individual competition, under the supervision of Prof. E. R. Elbel. Dr. Allen said student criticisms and suggestions will be welcomed by the department. 9th and New-Hampshire M. H. Mitchell, Jack Allen Lessee Student Att'd Grads Get New Positions Teachers Appointment Bureau Places Many in Kansas High Schools Ranedown; Alice McCleland, M.S.Ed. 37; Education, State Norma School, Ellindale, N.D.; Iris McDonald, A.B. 37, English and Journalism, Harper; Clara McGrath,B.M. 37, E.M. 37, Waterville; Ethiel Jean Melone, B.M. 37, Music, Lakim; Dera Cooper Meyers, B.M. 27, Math, Vinhand; Frieda Middendorf, M.S. Home Economics and Typing, Robert Mitchell, A.B. 37, History, Iola; Elizabeth Maurer, M.A. 36, English, Hays. The following University graduates have recently secured new positions in Kansas high schools through the aid of the Teachers' Appointment bureau or on their own. Students with slight resistance from the bureau. Dorothy Avery, B.F.A. 37, Art, Dodge City; Victoria Ayers, A.G. 37, Brecke; M.A. 38, Brecke; M.A. 38, Bies. 31, Art, Salina; Mary Breece, B.Des. 31, Art; Des Moines, Elvin Brickley, Art; Des Moines, Eric Brickley, Braceine; A.B. 36, Biology, Vale Crins, N.C.; Mary Frances Butler, Art; Lois Caffrey, A.B. 37, English, merfield; Adelaide Classeus, B.M.E. 37, Music, Leoni; Sara R. Cook Anna Neufeld, M.A. 37, Music, Barclay, Lola Newcomb, B.M. 34, B.M.E. 33, Music, Girard, Mary Belle Oldridge, M.A. 27, English and Latin, English, Pearl, Mary Belle, English, Peabody; Oyberne, O- B.M.E. 33, Music, Pawhmuwk, Okla; Edua Jane Peunew, M.A. 37, English, M.A. 37, Math, Stockton, Jean De Poison, B.A. 37, Home Economics, Herrion; Elizabeth Rees, B.S.Ed., Music. Margaret Cowles, A.B.35, Home Economics Valley Falls; Mary Garrison, A.B.36, Clarence Craig, A.B.31 Social Science, Junction City; Lucie Davis, B.M.34, Dana Donelson, B.M.32, Muskegon, R.E.DeVore, M.A.37, Social Science, Oklahoma City, Oka.; Richard City, Oka.; Saki Dalk, Oak; Douglass, Oka.; Commerce, Samuel Erickson, M.A.27, French, Institute of Mathematics, Carrie Fanning, A.B.32, Home Economics Burmese English, Elwisworth Freeman French, A.B.37 History, Emily Brown English, Elwisworth Elementary, Piper J.E. George M.A.37, Prin of H.S. Edwardsville; John Gervais Latin, White Cloud; Cormorant Hatun, M.A.35, Mathematics and Biology, Olive Lowe; Orange Cleaver, Ruth Hacken; Central College, McPherson; Central College, B.F.A.37, Art Valley Falls, Fulton, B.F.A.37, Art Iden Reese, A.M.36, History, Kansas City, Kans; Carl塞尔, A.E.37, B.38, Science; Dodge City; Maurice B.39, Green; Margaret Seargher, A.B.37, English, Coffeville; Frances Skinner, M.A.27, English; Humboldt; G.28, High School; Capital High School, Vernon; Eula Smith, M.S. Ed.37, Music; Oberlin Caleb Sommersvelt, M.S.37, Science B.39, Biology; Bennet, MeN.43, B.35, Bioloyery. Margaret Hutchins, A.B.34, Music Society, Bernice Kresbis, B.S.35, Iron, A.B.34, Spanish, Hutchinson; Dorothy L. Jones, B.S.Ed.36, Commerce, Savery; Bernice Kresbis, B.S.35, Kroebel, A.B.37, Music, Steelevel, Mo.; Virginia Lorcic B.O., M.34, men; Chichester College, Millard Laing, M.36, B.Mion, Colorado Robert Laing, B.S.Ed, English, Mar- quette, Nebl; Elizabeth M. Lewis, A.B.34, Home Economics, Olathe; entary, Nim Topka. Mary, Ruth Thomas, B.M.E.7,Music, Oakley; Norman Thompson,B.A.37. Music Economics, Center,Music, Ellis; Dorothy Ward, B.M.37Music, Arcaedia; Paul Weimer, M.A.37. Science and Mathematics, Labor,Music, Ellis; Dorothy Ward, B.M.37.Music, English, Junior College,Chantee; Mary Margaret Williams,M.A.37. English, Arkansas City; Dora, B.S.E., Constitution,Darra; Ortega Louise Lumb, B.M.E.'32, Music Business College 641 Louisiana Lawrence, Kansas Graduates Get Good Positions Phone 894 Lois Anderson, B.S.Ed.37, Art, Clayton; Allen Bennett, B.M.37, Ender; Lennie M.37, Psychology; Bob Lindstrom, Industrial School, Topek; Irene Ewen, B.S.28, Musica, Ness City; Carmel Business College, Kansas City, Mo.; Margaret Gustafson, P.S.A.37, Art, Chev- ney Gardens, NC; Carmel Business College, Kansas City, Mo.; Martha Heaton, M.A.36, Child Welfare, Garden; Vilene Lotine, Lyndse, B.M.37, Music, Hasho, Colo.; Martha Heaton, M.A.36, Child Welfare, Garden; Vilene Lotine, Lyndse, B.M.37, Music and English, Lake Arthur, N.M.; Marjorie McGill, MA W. H. Quakenbush, Pres. E. S. Weatherby, Supt. Washington, D.C., Sept. 27—(UP) *Mail carriers will distribute unemployment census blanks to 30 million families on Nov. 16 and 17, John D. Biggers, director of the census, announced tonight.* Government Census Plans To Estimate Unemployed The blanks are to be filled out by unemployed and partially unemployed and mailed to the census administration by midnight Nov. 20. Attendance is a four-hour conference with leaders of business, agriculture, and labor. Holtzclaw Back Soon A six-week house-to-house census will then be conducted in typical counties and cities to test the accuracy of information supplied voluntarily. H. F. Holtreclaw, professor of economics at the University, and chairman of the personnel committee for the Kansas unemployment insurance commission, said last night that examination of candidates for executive office in the Weekend in 10 cities of Kansas, were completed Saturday. Operates Like Civil Service Statue on Display Examinations for clerical positions in the staff that will administer the unemployment insurance were held in the same cities Saturday. 4.000 Take Tests Some 4,000 persons took the examinations. Professor Holtzclaw said, the greater number, of course, being applicants for the clerical and stenographic positions. There are 41 different classifications in the staff lists. "The Mare," a status sculptured by Bernard "Pooo" Fraizer, is on display in Spooner-Thayer museum. It has been placed in the museum to replace another of Mr. Fraizer's works, Spooner-Thayer. She came there where, "The Mare" won first prize at the Kansas State Fair when exhibited there. Professor Holtzclaw said the personnel committee is directed by law to certify the commission, lists of three persons for each of the executive positions, and prepare lists for the clerical places in the same way that the federal Civil Service Commission does. Correction and grading of written papers, and holding of personal interviews with candidates for executive positions may require two or three weeks, he said, after which he will resume his regular duties in the School of Business at the University. He will assist the personnel committee, but after the staff is once organized, the committee will not have arduous duties. Topping the list is the director of the service. Names for this position will be sent to the commission soon, Professor Holtzclaw, and he Many To Attend Safety Congress Kappa Exchange Scholar Studies Journalism at Missou The University Fencecg Club will hold its first meeting of the year this afternoon at 4:30 in Room 202, Robinson gymnasium, James Report, Robinson gymnasium. Old members and prospective candidates are urged to attend. Anyone interested in fencing is asked to attend and arrange for a tryout. The team will be building a team that will equal or better the team that he coached through a successful season last year. Everyone will be given a chance to Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 27.—(UP) The campaign against preventable accidents will attract seven thousand delegates at the 26th annual National Safety Congress here Oct. 11 to 15. Attendees which took a toll of 111,000 lives in the United States in 1936 will be studied. Dobbs Hats — Bostonian Shoes Studies Journalism at Missouri Elizabeth Noelle, first student to enter an American university, will participate in the university exchange scholarship, is a student in the School of Journalism at the University of Missouri here. Representatives will be here from Mexico and Canada, South Africa, Japan, China, India, Germany, France, Russia, Venezuela and the Scandinavian countries. Four hundred speakers will address various sections in more than 100 safety sessions during the convention. Coach Raport Announces Fencing Tryouts Today M The Fall Models Are Trumps and The Topcoats Follow Suit If men's clothing keeps on improving as it has since you purchased your last suit, our ad man will be between the dictionary and the deep sea. As it is . . . it's impossible to put into words what these garments put into a mirror. They're so different from the clothes you're wearing that you'll immediately start figuring how to get rid of all your suits and topcoats without having the rest of the family think you've lost your mind. Confidentially . . . a try on is what we both need. Griffon Fall Suits $25 to $45 Hickey-Freeman $55 and up Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTER Clifton and Burns In Conjunction with the UNIT MUSIC SERVICE PRESENT Red Blackburn's Swingsters STARTING TODAY Playing Nightly 9 p.m. t10 p.m. Saturday and Sunday 3:30 p.m. t4:30 p.m. Featuring---- BUD FRINK ... Piano CHARLIE DOTTER ... Drums DON DICKETS ... Trumpet DON WRIGHT ... Sax DON KAMPAI ... Sax DON WALLACE ... Bass The JAYHAWK CAFE 14th and Ohio microsoft & baltimore university, maryland university, univ of michigan. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1937 Lindsey Shifts Shirk To End Players Injured in Frosh Game Will Be in Shape For Friday's Tilt With Washburn The only change in the Karsas lineup in preparation for the Washburn game will be the shifting of Dave Shirk from backluff to his old position, at left end. Shirk was shifted to the backfield last spring at his own request, but decided after the freshman game Saturday that he would be better off at the position where he starred last season The wing positions have been worrying Coach Ad Lindsay considerably and the return of Shirk should be a big help to this department. He will probably pair with Paul White, 190-pound sophomore in the starting lineup Friday night although there is a possibility the Chitwood or Hardcase may draw startling assignment. Injuries received in the Freshman game were only slight and the team is expected to be at full strength RICHARD DANIEL SULPHY DICK ANFRINE DAVE SHIRN Friday. Bioslave is having troubles with a bunion on his foot and was missing from practice yesterday. Dick Amerine is in the hospital with a leg injury but will be released and should be ready to go tomorrow. Old Grid Rivals Will Meet Again The return of Herb Gearthart to action will relieve the tackle problem, leaving the aerial attack which didn't click against the Freshmen as Lindsay's chief worry. The variety completed only two passes out of 10 tries in the Frost and Packing matches, also be worked in an attempt to improve the men at these important phases of the game. A grid rivalry of 46 years will be renewed when Kansas tangles with Washburn College Friday night in Moore Bowl, in Topeka. In 1936 the series was resumed after a lapse from 1931. Led by Clarence Doughlass, who scored two touchdowns, Kansas won what was to be its only victory in a dismal season, by a score of 19 to 6. Kansas first played Washburn in 1891, the same year of the first game with the Missouri Tigers. Since that time a total of 31 meetings have been recorded and the Jayhawkers have been victorious in 2 contests, have lost five and tie three. KU. leads in total points in the long series, 546 to 161, and also boasts the best mark for a single game, a 41-point effort in 1915. In two seasons, 1891 and 1900, the teams played return engagements. The Jayhawker won both contests in 1891, while Washburn swept the 1900 series. The highest total score was recorded in the second game in 1891, when Kansas won by a 38- score. The last Washburn victory came in 1912, when the Ichabods turned the trick to the tune of 10-0. K.U. has not failed to win since 1919 when the last tie game, a scoreless battle, was played. Rooster Goes to School Leamington, Ont.—(UP)—Martin Awerbuck, 9, has a pet rooster that follows him to and from school every day. While Martin is in the classroom, Dick, the rooster, feeds on the school grounds or perches on the windowsill of the classroom waiting. Intramural Entries Due All women's intramural entry blanks for tennis, horseshoes, horley ball, handball, and golf are to be turned in to the women's physical education office this morning. When all these have been received at the office, drawings will be made, and intramurski will start immediately. Labrador Imports Ice nattle Harbor, Labrador—(UP)—Labrador, usually pictured as a land of perpetual ice and snow, in importing leaf lice from Belle Isle has forced fishermen to import ice from Canada to pack salmon catches. "The Collegiate Digest," rotograve section of the Sunday Kansan, will appear with next Sunday's issue. Along the Sideline By William Fitzgerald, c'39 Kansas Sports Editor Were you one of the three thousand and spectators at the Varsity-Freshman game last day? If you were, you would probably on the Sullivan-Amerite - Richardson bandwagon. These three speedsters, while it is doubtful that they will play regularly, should cause some trouble or at least some excitement in the time they do get to play. Then there are Rosaker and Cadwalader who also have the ability to play. Now they all are the all-around brilliance of Divens and Replogle, but they may supply some of that scoring punch Kansas has been looking for. Jolts from the game...The way Miller, Bunsen and Bukaty were tossing that ball around, prospects are looking up for some real open football in the future...The Meier-Masoner fight for quarterback is still far from being the safety in street clothes but should be back in time for the Washburn game...After making 55 yards in two plays Dick Amerine reinjured his a bid leg and had to be helped from the field. When Amerine gets into the open he knows how to play. He's not as long line of Fresh players along the east bench...If the Freshman acting captain, Merkle, had wanted to do any beefing he had plenty to do it with. Merkle, a tackle, has 233 of those useful things called pounds. The Jayhawkers future opponents had a rough time of it Saturday against outside opponents. Wash-burn, whom they meet Friday night, lost to the Emporia Teachers 6-12 in what was considered a mild upset. But the teams didn't want to rebound Friday night if they don't want to lose two straight ... Wichita put up a fight against the Oklahoma Aggies but the Sooner Farmers beat them 14-8. Wichita, with a green line, will improve with every game but may not improve enough to win. That passing attack for Oklahoma a and Stidham's youngsters dropped their opening game 19-7. ... Iowa State finally beat the Iowa State Teachers but their margin was so narrow that probably are still sweating real perspiration at times. The score was 14-12 and its opponents opened everything points. Michigan State met the least resistance as they beat Wayne University 19-0. Added jolts. . . We got a slight jolt in Friday's K-State Collegian but we're glad that Freddie Klemp reads our column anyway, even though he doesn't seem to agree with everything we say. Thanks for setting us right. Fred. . . Remarks "Chuck" Warren is reminding fans of Ed Phelps, Big Six center two years ago. If Warren can fill Phelps's shoes, he's good enough for our money. K-State may have bitten off a large-sized bite in Boston College, according to Quentin Reynolds, sports writer for Colliers. Reynolds rightly figures that when "Gloomy Gill" Dobie can see anything cheering in one of his football teams it is time to watch out. Grantland Rice has rated Boston with Pitt as the two teams to beat in the East this year and the fairly green Wildcats may run into plenty of trouble. Don't forget the golf foursome Thursday afternoon featuring Glenn Oatman, 1936-37 Jayhawk captain; Raymond Watson, Western Open golf champion, and Kay and Betty Stephenson, finalists in last year's women's University golf tournament. Dr. F. C. Allen has arranged the match and would like to have a large gallery out to follow the match. "Whitey" Hwau was caught at a disadventy Saturday when Coach Lindsey wanted to send him back into the ball game. Huff had his shoes off and couldn't get them back in before the game ended. On the Shin-boss's orders—but the Sour Owl is out today. A sneaked preview revealed a super-smooth assortment of pages above the par bracket. Look on page 9. Continued from page 1 Dope Upset In Openers Rosy Barr has been living a life of unsease since Merro Sherwong swiped one of her hot letters from Steve Howbert. The boys came down to the Theta house Sunday to heckle Rosy and she greeted them with a loud and lusty Pelt Delt song. The boys were so crushed by this traitorous display that they opened the hereofre unread letter and broad-cast its contents to all within range. Conclusion: Sigma Chi's are divided into two classes by Rosy—the abnormal and sub-abnormal. --with competition getting under way tomorrow, Professor El b el urges any individual wishing to participate in intramural sports and not attend an organization or register as soon as possible at the intramural office. Sooners Lose to Tulsa U. 19-7; Emporia Wins Over Washburn By Elon Torrence, c'39 Although the 1937 football season, is scarcely under way, the process of the supposedly weaker team's rising star has been the favored team has already started. In games of local interest, perhaps the biggest surprise was the defeat of the touted Oklahoma eleven by Tulsa University. Tulsa passed and lateraled its way to a 19-7 triumph over the Sooners, making its first start under its new conch, Tom Stidham. Washburn and Wichita Also Lose Washburn, who will be the Jayhawkers' opponent Friday night; meet defeat at the hands of Emporia Teachers. Basketball tactics played an important part in this game also. The Teachers made 6 of their 12 points on a lateral that gained the opposing and the love Washburn really came as the result of an intercepted lateral. Wichita, Kansas' opponent two weeks hence, went down before the onslaught of the Cowboys from Oklahoma A. and M. by a score of 8 to 14. Wichita did everything to win except score touchdowns. Twice in those years worked the ball within the 10-yard line, only to be denied the points. Another surprise was the difficult time Iowa State had in downing the Iowa Teachers College. Outgained and outplayed, the Cyclones managed to score as many touchdowns as their opponents and in addition made both conversions to score the winning margin 14 to 12. Three Varsities Beat Frosh On all other fronts in the Big Six the varsities were opposing the freshmen. At Lincoln, the Cornhuskers had little trouble downing the yearlings 38 to 0. The Missouri Tiger displayed what the sports writers have been talking about in a 46-13 triumph over its frost. At Manhattan, the Kansas State regulars scored nine downhills in a scrimmage with the first-year men. Lawson To Give Address Dean Paul B. Lawson will address the district P.T.A. meeting in Ottawa Friday afternoon, Oct. 1. Women's Volley Ball Schedule Announced The Yearabout Women's intramural volley ball practices for this week and next are scheduled as follows: The Yearabout YESSIR! Here's a Real Coat For You The Yearabout FOR RAIN OR SHINE, COOL...OR COLD The Yearabout Wear This Coat to the Washburn-Kansas Game Wear it on the Campus Wear it for Dress $25 New Mufflers and Hats to match the coats Glad to show you. 7:30 p.m. E.T.C.; I.N.D.; T.N.T. Oread house. The Yearabout 8 p. Kappa Kappa Gamma; Wat- kins hall; Miller hall. 9 p. Kappa Alpha Theta; Pi Beta Phi; Chi Omega; Alpha Gamma Delta. Wednesday Oct. 6 CARL'S GOOD CLOTHING 8 p.m. Open hour. Oread house. 8:30 p.m. I.W.W.; Sigma Kappa; Alpha Delta Pi. To Resume Quack Club Tryouts Quack Club, women's swimming organization, held its first practice and tryouts of the year Saturday morning. The next practice will be Wednesday, Sept. 29, at 8 p.m., anyone who did not try out Saturday, but would like to do so, should report at that time. Wednesday, Sept. 29 The following women were taken into the club or were asked to return for further practice or for completion of their tests: Minor Quack, Elise Lowell; Quack pledges, Annette Lawrence, Mary Lewis, Jane Montgomery, Virginia Anderson; asked to report for further practice, Jen Wilkens, M. Clevenger, Betsy Laurence, Purdue Owenes, Caroline Humphrey, Betty Bridges, Edith Kirkman, Martha Markwell, Barbara Smith, Jane Foole, Eleanor Cavert, Mary Ann Dillon, Jane Keilman. Sober Driver Advertises Quiney, Mass.—(UPI)—This advertisement appeared in the "Situations Wanted" section of the Quiney Patriot Ledger: "Don't sascrice your license. Careful, sober man will drive your car evenings from 6 on." Glenn Cunningham, former Jay hawk track star and America's foremost mile runner, has announced that he will quit running after the coming indoor season. Cunningham Will Retire Cunningham's announcement came after he won the Causack Memorial mile in 4:19.7 at New York Saturday night. The reason he will retire from the track is that he does not have the time to devote to training. This spring Cunningham will have completed nine years as a runner, and will have obtained a doctor of philosophy degree from New York University. Will Abandon Track 1938 Glenn Cunningham, former Kansas miler and acclaimed as the greatest distance runner of all time, who has won four NCAA titles will retire from active competition. Pittsburgh, Kan., Sept. 27 — (UP)—There will be no hockey for 9-year-old Gene Humble this year. Nor will he have any trouble in keeping at Gene is the only pupil in the rural school near here. Instructor Robert Shaw said he expected to be able to answer questions there were a room full of scholars. Intramurals Start Tomorrow Westerday was the deadline for entries in the fall intramural sports program. Schedules for team tennis and touch football will be drawn and released today and games will get under way tomorrow, according to the official by Prof E R Ebel, director of intramural athletics. Scheduled for the other fall sports will be drawn as soon as possible. Anyone that registers will be given in opportunity to compete in some sport with an organization or team. You can e ce d breaker in interunit participation. Bear Stampedes Goats Marathon, Tex. — (UP) — Nineen domestic dogs, stamped by a black bear, hurtled 3,000 feet to the south rim of the Chisso Mountains. The canyon where the goats jumped to death is on the Rio Grande in the proposed Big Bend national park. Accepts Teaching Position Lois Leeman, '36, has accepted a position as assistant instructor of biology at the branch school of medicine of the University of Tennessee. Bethany A Strong Foe Ex-Jayhawker Coaches The 'Terrieble Swedes' From Lindsborg The "terrible Swedes"—those stalwart men that constitute the grid team of Bethany college at Lindsborg, will invade Memorial stadium, the Jayhawker roost Saturday afternoon, and try to tame the Jayhawker "B"队. The Bethany team, coached by Elmer Schake, former star athlete of the University, will rank as one of the top colleges under the tutelage of Bill Hargis. Boast Strong Teams The Swedes boast their strongest team in years, with a heavy line to show the way for such fast stepping backs in Ireland, Albertenburg, Gammonet. Warren and Ireland are former Jayhawkers, having attended the University and played on the fresh team during the 1934 season. Ireland calls signals for the Swedes and is a fasty passer while Warren does a great share of the ball lugging. Giannangelo in Backfield Altenberg, a smooth fallback, can name the best fullbacks in the Six in the opinion of Ad Lindsey, head coach of the Kansas football team. Giannangelo is a brother to Joe Giannangelo, varsity player on the Jayshaw team last year, and is fast and shifty. "the Kansas 'B' team will be comprised of the men on the Hawkeyw squand who do not play in the Washburn game Friday night and will play at home ahead of them if the Bethany team comes up to advance notice." Read the Kansan Classified ads. In THE SATURDAY EVENING POST this week WILL STOLEN SIGNALS win the World Series? IN THE SAME ISSUE BEGIN A NEW ROMANTIC NOVEL And One Was Beautiful Would you reveal a sister's sister to save the man you love? Start this powerful story. Tell your sister the crime that upset the lives of three people. First of six exciting parts. by ALICE DUER MILLER Author of "MANSLAUGHTER" MARK POPOVICH AND Damon Runyon's story "A Job for The Macarone". "'Uncharred Honeymoon' by Ruth and Bill Albee... Thomas McMorrow introduces 'The little thug'. Frederick, aged eleven, in "Difficult Child". "Cloudy to Fair" by M. G. Chate... "Dead Mileage" by Joseph Marshall."Sween Must Die"a South Seas mystery by James Warner Bellah... And cartoons, editorials, poetry. Plenty of fun in this week's Post. ASECOND BASEMAN unwittingly tips off each pitch to the batter, and his team loses a World Series. A catcher casualty touches his shirt or someone hollers "Come on, Hank," and an entire team knows the next play. Signals run a ball game, and signals can ruin a game when a smart opponent steals them from you. Here's how baseball's tricky sign language works, and what happens when dugout detectives discover the mysterious hipper-dipper. Read "Will They Steal This Series?" by STANLEY FRANK THIS WEEK IN.. Now at your newsstand THIS SATURDAY EVERYING POST 5¢ DVII DVIII UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXXV Fire College Registration Eighty-nine Local Department Entertains With 'Open House'; W. Fred Heisler And E. J. Stewart Speak Registration in the fire college at the University reached 89 yesterday morning with representatives here from 37 cities in Kansas. The firemen continued to attend their lecture sessions and were entertained night by the Lawrence fire department with an "open house" in Eagles hall. W. Fred Heisler of Oklahoma A. & M. College addressed the group yesterday on the subject, "The Man for the Job." The other speaker was E. J. Stewart, chief engineer of the Kansas Inspections Bureau at Topeka, who discussed electrical equipment and fire hazards. The tamic acid method of treating burns was explained by Joo Hutchinson, assistant Arkansas City fire chief, who demonstrated first aid and resuscitation methods. The University water and sewage laboratory demonstrated carbon monoxide equipment. LAWRENCE, KANSAS. WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 29, 1937 The evolution of the hose and nozzle was explained by E. Hudiburg of Oklahoma A. & M. College Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, will extend official greetings of the University at a dinner to be held tomorrow evening at 6:30 o'clock at the University Building dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, will be the principal speaker. Tomorrow's program is as follows: 9. 10. Fire department organization, Chief Thomas J. Hardwick. tion, Chef Thomas J. Hardwick. 10.30. The mechanics of fire numps. E. J. Stewart. 1:00, Hose and nozzle evolutions E. Hudiburg. 2:30. Fire streams, E. Hudiburg 4:00. Recreation hour. 6. 00. Dinner at Wiedemann's. on the SHIN by Virgil Mitchell What about the Owl? ♦ ♦ ♦ To the half hundred who fired that question this way yesterday we have this to say. Cover swell,印刷打印机,makeup an accident, copy above average and reproduce reproductions awful,a crime—Hamilton came through with a bit of something the next issue will un-doubtedly tell what-Lloyd's children's page typed in any room by Mr. Fowler revolution for the record readers. Our battle cry, "Get A Printer." Another "queer" varsity will greet the hap hops this Saturday eve when the "Battle of Bands" will be staged in the Union ballroom, Kuhn and his manufacturers will hold sway on one side of the floor as they play their fight for your attention on the other side. To be sure that you are worn to a frazzie when the jig closes, an extra hour and an extra ten cents has been added to the program. The possibilities of an emergency squad to carry out those who can't stand the heat is under discussion. Wagers on each band can be placed with either "Red" or Louie. The "Thank God it's Friday" Clut announces that it now has closed its membership. The ranks have beer and wine, but the Dor Junus. Need more be said? The "Potted Petunias Preserver Patrons" have also filled their ranks. Membership is as follows: The gai yellow picket and Bird Wasson. "The Kansas University Fire Eaters and Drinkers Club," composed of "Flash" Morris and Joseph Coch-stein in the KU. U.F. College in the KU. Among the Saturday night "Ha-Tippers" in the city someone found Ed Lane and "Brody" Shroff, all alone together—another angle on this Saturday night business is that no one came back until after the dawn on Sunday morn. Everyone thought that he or she was an ex- Continued on page 3 Mussolini and Hitler Reaffirm Peace Pledge Berlin, Sept. 27, —(UP) –Premier Benito Mussolini of Italy, joining Fuehrer Adolf Hitler in assurance of nazi-fascist desires for peace, today told a rain-drenched thong that “the Europe of tomorrow will turn to fascism to save itself from bolshevism.” NUMBER 15 The two dictators with their Rome-Berlin axis, whose policies of military security has contributed the greatest armament race in history, represent the strongest assurance of peace today, Mussolini asserted. "The Europe of tomprow," said 11 Duce, "will be fascistic because of the logic of events, not because of propaganda. I do not know when Europe will awaken . . . secret but well-armed forces are engaged in turning a civil war into a world war." German authorities estimated that 300,000 persons were in the throng that overflowed from the stadium to millions more listened by radio. To Present New Program Health Broadcast Over KFKU By Members Of Faculty dr. Forrest C. Allen, director of the division of physical education, has arranged a new program "Physical Education for Health," which broadcast from radio station KFKU. Thursday evening from 9 to 9:18. "Pioneers in Physical Education" will be the topic for the opening program Thursday night. There will be special programs of physical education and the present day leaders, which will include early days of K.U. and interesting side-lightls of basketball, volleyball, handball and sports in the present day set-up. Faculty members and guest speakers including Dr. James Naismith, Ed R. Elbel, Dr. Vernon Lapp, Coach Herbert Allipn, and Mr. Jay Plumley will participate in a round-table discussion. These broadcasts will be chatty affairs含的 interposed questions and discussional remarks. In addition, broadcasts at the end of the program. A musical program featuring the Jayhawk Trumpeter, Lewis Maser Leo Horacak, and Bob Boyle and Ivan Brasov, by Prof. W. A. Dill will conclude by Prof. W. A. Dill will conclude the Thursday evening program. Ambassador Flies to Moscow Nanking, Sept. 28, Wednesday—(UP) Soviet Ambassador Daimiri D. Bogomolov was flying to Moscow in a specially chartered airplane to discuss "urgent diplomatic matters" with his government and the reports were widely circulated that he has offered assistance to a sprend diplomatic in return for Soviet military assistance in her war with Janan. Bogomolov left Nanking late Monday night and boarded his plane at Wuhu. 50 miles southwest of this capital, shortly after dawn. He is flying over the new airline between Nanking and Moscow, opened a month ago, and he should reach the Soviet capital within four days. The report that he will submit a Chinese proposal to the Russian government for a general Chinese-Russian military attack could not be confirmed but diplomats were inclined to believe that they were cor- The report of the budget committee was heard last night in the weekly meeting of the Women's Association, in the Union building. W.S.G.A. Hears Budget Report Special appropriations included $100 for the Mortar Board and 3½ per cent of the activity book fund was authorized to be given to the University band for traveling expenses. An announcement was made to the effect that this year's edition of the Gingham Frolic will be held soon. Margaret Shoalley, of the school committee, was placed in charge of the plans for the Frolic. Other suggestions for appropriations were made and tabled for further study. Ministers Try To Raise College Fund $100,000 Endoument Is Sought To Continue Work of Bible College For Students Meeting in conference yesterday morning in Myers hall, Christian ministers from the northern section of the city have been asked to raise an endowment fund of $100,-000. The interest from this fund will be used to support a full time faculty at the Kansas Bible College and to continue the work of the At the present time Myers hall is owned by the Christian Women Bible Mission, which plans to deed the land at the site of the church as soon as the endowment is completed. To Train Ministers The Kansas Bible College is an organization designed to train ministers and social workers for the Christian church. When the plan is put into operation, students may take some denominational work in the college and at the same time take core-religion courses in the University. The Kansas Bible College is a separate organization from the Kansas School of Religion, which is an inter-denominational school offering courses that are accepted for credit by the University. Dean P. B. Lawson of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences spoke to the group about the value of *t* education at the University. Reverend Humbert Speaks The Rev. Harold Humbert of the Christian church at Independence discussed a church officers' meeting that he attended in England this summer. He also spoke of the opportunities of the Bible College. The Rev. Harold G. Barr of Lawrence also spoke during the meeting rence also spoke during the meeting. After luncheon in the Pine room of the Memorial Union building, the Rev. Patricia Tolson afternoon session. Speakers included The Rev. Percy R. Atkins of the First Christian Church at Winfield, and C. S. Alvord, field representative of the Kansas Bible College. Maplesden Describes Photo-Engraving Process R. R. Mapleden, of the Burger-Baird Engraving company, Kansas City, described the process of photo-engraving before commercial art classes and advertising design classes yesterday. Maplesten also described the process of making half-tones and discussed the problems of the commercial artist, art director and the editor. Mr. Maplesden is the executive director of the college department and the secretary of the Burger-baird Engraving company. Swing Rhythm Promotes Safety And Speeds Up Negro Labor Gangs Harrisburg, Pa. Sept. 27. —(UP) Swing rhythm may be new to devotees of the modern pericorpheon art. Here is a collection of Negroes who is old, old "stuff." On Saturday, Douglas, native of Layburgh, Va. who offers "do a swinging sleed and biting pike," relates that rail-lin- ing is an art and singing an essential factor of the work. The gang's "prima donna" calls it "labor by rhythm" a working method as old as the rail- road in the South, but comparatively new in the North. Warning Tickets For Incorrect Parking Issued to No Avail The Pennsylvania railroad yards, far from the polished floors and soft lights of dance palaces and night clubs, are the concert halls of Foreman Art Nunley's rail gang, headed by husky boss, John Douglas, which employs "swing-sing" rhythm as part of daily routine. "Some folk just can't understand an ordinary warning," said the traffic man. "It takes a fine to make them understand." When the men are on the job, Douglas usually sings the words and keeps the time for the best of humour. He also sings in orchestra conductor, he must preserve the rhythm to the speed the ob requires. Whereupon he related the story of the Campus motorist who wanted to return a green ticket yesterday. Baton waving is only a dressed-up takeoff from the swing of sledgehammer against spike set to the heel. Southland chants, these boys assert. "My 'ol captain might be blind, but he sure can line," is one of the chants choured by Douglas and his "band," as they push, tug, hammer and pick in union to fit rails in place before he can participate in program in the local yards. George Snyder, Campus traffic of flier, said yesterday that from 45 to 50 cards had been issued calling for $1 fines for parking cars in unauthorized areas. The fines went to the avenue. The day before some 500 warning tickets had been issued. Old Southern System "It don't want it; it's yours," said Snyder. "Didn't you get a warning yesterday?" asked the officer. "What's that ticket on the seat of your car?" queried George. "But I didn't know about the parking rules," argued the motorist. Presumably the fine has been paid Norfolk, Va. Sept. 27 — (UP)—Hugo L. Black, a board a ship that was fighting a stiff wind off the Virginia Cape came within a half day's sailing from port tonight. Before noon he will have a chance to answer on American soil charges that he was a life member of the Ku Klux Klan who took the role in the white supremacy justice of the United States supreme court. Rumors raced along the waterfront that Black was preparing to make one final move in the game of hide-and-go-seek. His move, according to the rumors, would be to avenge from the ussrmer City of Norfolk far out at sea and getting aboard a special coast guard cutter. Levitt points out that Black was a member of the senate when the supreme court retirement plan passed Congress. This act allowed supreme court justices who have reached the age of 70 and who have spent 10 years on the highest bench, to retire at a salary of $20,000 a year. The Norfolk coast guard said, however, that no orders had been received to send the cutter out to pick up Black and Mrs. Black. When the supreme court convenes for its autumn meeting Monday and Black takes his seat—barring his resignation—he will find on the docket a petition challenging his right to challenge the highest judicial body. This petition does not deal with his reported mem-borship in the Klan. It challenges him on constitutional grounds. It was filed by Albert Lewis, former governor of Arkansas, and asks the court to file a formal complaint against seating Black. Hugo Black Nears States Boat On Which Justice Is Passenger Will Lana At Viraonia Port Lay Rail in Five Minutes Lay kid in free minutes Orchestrations best out by currently popular dance band the institution of railway train have nothing on Doug's beat as he rushes his men to replace a broken rail so that an "honest - to - goodness" express train can continue in its way without a hitch. The crew can lay a rail in less than five minutes to a fast tempo. Rhythm is slowed when work is dangerous to insure care and exactness. When tearing up track, the Wayne King's famous slow waltzes. An experienced person may get a foot cut off when tearing up rails, Douglas said. He modestly adds that his crew is "the best in these parts." Both Douglas and Nunnley are southerners and have worked their system often in various parts of the United States. Many of their gang follow them from one job to another, just as orchestra members follow their leaders from one town to another. Spike-drive requires no human voice accompaniment. During such a "concerto" the sledges beat a natural rhythm much like trap drums. Sledges Beat Rhythm Swing rhythm may not have originated with this rail-laying outfit, but they know they introduced their parer to swing" long before it became popular. Freshman Election Overshadowed Riv al Political Camps Are More Concerned With It Filling Vacant Council Seats By Morris Thompson, c'38 Rendered not so important by the epidemic of enroligability in the Men' Student Council, the freshman election is getting off to a slow start, as the rival political camps are as much concerned with lining up petitioners for the vacant seats in the Council. Before the academic sciae the elimination of P.S.C.L.'s from the Council, Pacha-ceaam was sitting precariously on the upper edge of the legislative body with a 14-13 majority. While this condition existed, the freshman election held the spotlight of interes and party effort for the president o the University to seat and vote in the Council. But Pacchacamie is down with a 9-11 handicap, and with five petitions from either party soon to be voted on for Council seats, it looks like a P.S.G.L. show. Politics have died out in the body, but it is entirely improbable that P.S.G.L will forget party alignment continued by the working margin. If P.S.G.L uses its present two-man majority to the fullest advantage and fills all five vacancies that party will stand with a 16-9 majority. However, should the altogether surprising and unusual spirit of co-operation and senatorial unselflessness continue to exist, P.S.G.L can concede a pair of seats to Pacchacamie and still be on to 14-11. Even this concession would put them out of danger in the event of a Pachacamac victory in the freshman election, for the count would be 15-12. On the other hand, a P.S.G.I. would boost the major to 15-13. But in spite of the aforementioned unusual spirit in the Council, this observer predicts a P.S.G.L. major, who will be 16-10 after the freshman election. Death Takes Victim of Coma Chicago, Sept. 27. —(UP)—Death tonight ended Mrs Patricia Meunegue's long sleep after five years, months and fourteen days of illness. The beautiful brunette sleeping-sickness victim died at the Presbyterian hospital at 8:35 p.m. Bronchial pneumonia and a wasting tumor brought the end to the long fight of medical science to awaken the "sleeping beauty." It was the end of a long battle for the beautiful one-time stenographer who in February, 1932, slipped into the endless sleep from It was not, however, the encephalite letheres, medical name for sleeping-sickness, that caused her death except insofar as the asm prevented Patricia from summoning her to attack the ravages of her twin ailments. She was taken to the hospita, Sunday night. The tumor had cut 50 pounds from her weight in six weeks, but she was unable to die if it were not removed. A few hours before she was scheduled to be wheeled into the operating room, bronchial pneumonia stepped in. The operation was postponed and an oxygen mask was brought to the bedside. While a nurse was in the room, the gen to the solomolent woman, doctors transfused the blood of a policeman in Patricia's veins. It was, however, a futile effort. Women's Style Show To Display Hill Fashions What to wear on the campus to impress that special Saturday night date, or to knock the stags at the big formal frolics will be demonstrated at a style show to be given Friday afternoon under the sponsorship of the Federation of Councillors. The tea and style show will be held at the Union ballroom from 2:30 to 4:30. Tea will be served in a white tuxedo. The style show will be given at 4 o'clock. All the freshman women are invited to attend the demonstration of the latest in campus wear as observed by women students on the Hill. Roosevelt Expects Balanced Budget With President Roosevelt, enroute to Seattle, Sept. 27—(UP)—President Roosevelt said today that he expected a balanced budget by the next fiscal year which begins July 1, 1938. He made this remark almost casually in an address before he pressed a button which started the first production of power from the auxiliary equipment of the still incomplete 51 million dollar Bonneville dam project on the Columbia river in Oregon. New Student Directory To Be Issued October 20, Editor Announcements and in the clinic, which is highly grat- ful. I had hoped to have it ready to be available when my son was born, number of unforeseen things have come up which will make it imposs- ble to issue it at that time." At pres- ent Cottier is waiting to receive the list of students from Mr. Foster and Walt of the school of Medicine. The directory, issued through the co-operation of the Lawrence merchants and the Men's Student Council, Women's Student Government Association, and the University, will contain the names of officers, faculty, employees, and students with their classification, telephone number, home and Lawrence address, and other useful information. The directory was issued on October 19 last year, with 5000 copies being printed. Much Talent In Symphony The first week of rehearsals has disclosed the most promising talent ever available for the University Symphony Orchestra, according to Karl Kuersteiner, director of the organization. Membership Is Almost Complete in University Orchestra Membership in this orchestra, with the exception of the viola section, is now completed and a large number of instrumentalists are on the waiting list The following students have been accepted during the past week: Junior Wagner and Lawrence Hensley. Vicia, Margaret Stough and Theo Steenberg. Cello: Betty Van Deventer and Beatrice Hagendorn. Flute: Claus Holthusen, Clarinet: Zorith Fennig Horn: Vorris Reist and Jack Happy. Trumpet: Don Wood. Trombone: Hall Dellinger. Tyke: Worth Blair Anyone interested in playing the anyone is invited to confer with Mr. Kuersteiner immediately. An instrument will be furnished if necessary. Any capable violinist is eligible for this work because instruction for the change to viola can easily be arranged. The first public appearance of the orchestra will be on the evening of Nov. 11, when the second annual fall concert will be played in Hoch auditorium. Later in the semester another concert will be given with the assistance of Tau Sigma, women's dancing group. The membership of the organization now totals 76. Attend Medical School Meeting Attend Medical School Meeting Profs. N, P. S. Sherwood, O. O. Stoland, and H. B. Latimer attended the meeting of the administrative committee of the School of Medicine at Rosedale Monday evening. Will Discuss World Co-operation The W.K.C.A. will hold meet at 4:30 this afternoon in Henley house, Ellen Payne, secretary, announced last night, Sam Anderson, c'38, and Stanley French, gr, will speak on "Conditions in Europe," while discussion in general will concern world co-operation. Miss Payne expressed the hope that all members would be present. LESTER KAPPLEMAN OWL SOCIETY President. The Owl Society will meet in the Pine room, Memorial Union building. Thursday at 8 p.m. Rhodes Applications Due At Once Scholarship Candidate Must Apply to Prof. A. T. Walker in Next Few Days Applications for Rhodes Scholarships should be filed with Prof. A. T. Walker, chairman of the University committee, in his office, 202 Fraser hall, within a few days. Candidates must attend class from 10:30 to 11:30 Monday, Wednesday and Friday or at 2:30 to 3:30 on Tuesday and Thursday. To Nominate Candidates On or before Nov. 6, the University committee will nominate candidates to the state committee of which W. D. P. Carey of Hutchinson, a former Rhodes scholar, is secretary. The deadline for receive g applications is Oct. 22, but be ause the committee must secure a great amount of information about each applicant, Professor Walker urges all candidates to apply immediately. In his will, Cecil John Rhodes provided for 32 scholarships to the University of Oxford, and that 400 pounds (1,914) be allotted to each of the 32 scholarships. The scholarships are for two years, and if the scholar shows a good record in these two years he may be given his third year. There is no restriction placed upon a Rhodes scholar's choice of studies. The United States is assigned 32 scholarships annually. They are distributed over eight districts, Kansas being in the fifth which also includes Minnesota, South Dakota, Nebraska, owa and Missouri. Require Many Qualities Require Many Qualities To be eligible a candidate must be a male citizen of the United States, a resident of the United States of age, and have a classification of at least a junior in a university or college in the United States. Candidates are chosen on a basis of literary and scholastic ability and attainments, qualities of manhood, ruh, courage, devotion to duty, sympathy, kindness, unselfishness, fellowship, exhibition of moral force if character, leadership, and an interest in outdoor sports. The committee to nominate University of Kansas students consists of Professor Walker, chairman; Prof. Henry Wewner, adviser of men; Dr.W. L Burdick, vice-president of the university and a former Rhodes scholar; Dr.W. E Sandels, professor of history; and W.E Sandels, professor of political science. Law Students Attend Meeting About 50 prospective lawyers of the University School of Law attended the meetings of the American Bar Association in Kansas City yesterday. The convention will last the entire week. The senior laws have been invited by the association to attend the meetings Friday. The A.B.A. is to send its staff to Kansas City and return. Other tokens of friendliness to the young aspirants will include a luncheon and free admittance to the concert and the dance club and his orchestra Friday night. The discussions in the committees yesterday included viewpoints upon political issues, the New Deal, the war on terror and items of interest to lawyers alone. Registration at the convention yesterday afternoon totaled 3,400. This was the biggest registration of any A.B.A. convention. Meetings were held in the smaller rooms of the municipal auditorium. Robert Lee Tullis of Baton Rouge, La, deen curtiss of the School of Law of Louisiana State University, presented a motion which asked for an investigation into the facts of Justice Hugo Black's alleged memoir. The resolution presented with the motion was accepted for consideration along with other resolutions to be reported on Thursday. Cash Prizes Await Lucky Anglers Lake Oark, Mo., Sept. 28—(UWP) More than $500 in cash and approximately $1,500 in merchandise will be awarded as prizes to lucky anglers by the Lake of the Ozarks & during the First Annual Fishing Rodeo to be held here October 4 to 9. The event is being held to call attention of the nation's fishermen to fishing and vacational facilities on the Lake of the Ozarks. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 29, 1937 ≈ Comment Filene—Friend, Philanthropist, Failure? One of the most famous students of the social obligations of man, Edward A. Filene, died in Paris Saturday. He was an old man, traveling about looking, writing, observing, and giving himself and his millions to all who came with a solution to the problems of men. He was known in Boston as a philanthropist and merchant. To the world he was known as a friend, overflowing with encouragement and advice. Those who knew Filene know that he was neither merchant, nor philanthropist. They know that he is not dead. Filene is not dead because he is a cog in the changing wheel of civilization. His usefulness lives and he will wear as long as the machine of change functions. No, he is not dead. Although he was successful in business he had neither the outlook nor spirit of the business man. The profit motive was subordinated by his desire to give service to man. He called himself a failure, and by his own evaluation he was, for his objectives and ambitions were as remote at his death as they were when conceived. As a philanthropist Filene was not in the same category as his contemporary millionaire friends. His gift to man was himself, and just because his money happened to be a part of him is not justification for calling him a philanthropist. His life was a business and so one can not honestly call him a philanthropist. He would resent it. What was he? Filene was a visionary, a sociologist, a scientist who understood and loved all men. He was above classes, dogma, anything accepted. He was the perfect observer, but he could not withstand the temptation to search for the fountain of perfection. And it is because he could not find the pathway to a Utopia that he died considering himself a failure. And it is for that reason that we refuse to let him die as a failure. And Now Some Light on the Subject And now, after months of guessing and estimating, real figures upon unemployment will soon appear. At first depending upon registration blanks which would be mailed to 31 million families, the plans were later changed to include a house to house canvass which will check with the figures obtained through the mails. Further checks by the WPA and other government agencies promise a high degree of accuracy in the count and should yield a low percentage of variation. We're satisfied. But is there one valid reason why this census could not have been taken months ago? 'Proselyte,' Means 'Agitator'—You Dope One of the greatest elements in the building of the Nazi regime was the formulation of social and racial dogma in the form of catch words and "bugaboos" designed to weld the German people into full adherence to the Nazi ideals. While we in this country are far from any such situation, we do have among our social and economic opinions, a set of dogma, that has sprung up, perhaps more or less from our hesitancy to discriminate and to think. Outstanding among the catch words that go with our dogma is the word "red." A "Red" may be anything from a person of mildly socialistic ideals to the most dangerous and seditious proselytize. Most successful of these was the anti-Jewish campaign, which set up the Jew as a person of filth, representative of all undesirable personal and racial attributes and directly responsible for every ill that had befallen Germany since the beginning of its national history. Many of the agencies now in operation in our government today, would have been considered "red" a decade ago. True, some agitators are dangerous to our nation, but let us call them what they are and forget the meaningless by-word—"red." Keep It Clean Of What—Blood? Who goes first, the driver or the walker? Who goes first, the driver or the walker? In baseball, the runner has the benefit of the doubt, if there is a question about who reached the base first, the runner or the ball. Then set up an unwritten law that the walkers on the campus go first. Pedestrians are in the majority, and as anxious to get where they are going as the drivers. The drivers can afford to loose perhaps a minute's time for they can cover more ground. The walkers as well as the drivers take advantage of the fact that there is only one traffic director on the campus. The students of foot do much reckless jay-walking when "George" isn't in sight, and the drivers speed to beat the walkers before they get in the way, and stop them. Keep our campus Clean! Germany would fill hot dogs with fish to help assuage the meat shortage in that country . . . The final triumph of Nazidom . . . Even the dogs shan't bark. Campus Opinion Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the University Daily Kauan. Articles over 200 words in length are subject to cutting by the editor. Contributions on any subject are invited. IT ISN'T ALL ON THE SURFACE Concerning the news of the debacle of seven men from the Men's Student Council, I, as a friend of one of the men think there are many things to be said that could not be said in a news story. That man is Harry "Spike" OFRIS, who is 1½ grade his qualifications to be eligible commission passed on his qualifications to serve on the Council. Many persons appeared in his behalf before the committee, and his record of service to the University read like a paragraph from "Who's Who." Some of Spoke's accomplishments are as follows: Spent approximately 3½ weeks with a committee of five help organize the student body to contact their legislators while home during vocation, spending time with the students in the ways and means committee in the Senate urging appropriations for the University, assisting as a guide in preparing approximately two weeks preparing for G俱乐部 trip, loosing one week of school work while on trip with the university, assisting as a guide in preparing approximately two weeks preparing for G俱乐部 trip, l And yet, 14% grade points keep this man off the Council. Don't misunderstand me, now. Spike isn't sore, and he has enjoyed all these activities. What's more, he'll probably be better off from an academic standpoint by not being on the Council. What I want him to do is help me find someone that he tried his host, did more than could have been expected of him, and that he did not let them down by not studying. A Friend of O'Riley. Official University Bulletin Notice due at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m., preceding regular public day meetings 10 a.m. to 4 o.m. Vol. 35 WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 29, 1937 No. 15 --studied Greek. Six,however,wished to begin. DIRECTORY: Students who have not filed addresses and telephone numbers or contact information in the Registrant's office should do so at once so that the information may be included in the directory copy now being prepared. JAY JANES: There will be a regular meeting a 4:30 this afternoon in 212 Ad. QUACK CLUB. There will be Quack Club practice at 8 o'clock this evening. Any new women interested in trying out and those whose names are posted on the website of the Injury Bureau should report—Betty Jane Heintzman, President. SCHOOL OF EDUCATION FACULTY MEETING: The faculty of the School of Education will meet at 3:30 Thursday, Sept. 30, in room 112 Fraser hall—E.H. Lily, President. VACANCIES IN THE MEN'S STUDENT COUNCIL: Notice is hereby given of the following vacancies in the Men's Student Council: Freshman President (Class of 40), Treasurer, College representative, Medallion recipient, Athletic representative, Athletic representative, Pettitions for these offices must be in the hands of the Secretary before 12 noon on Monday, Oct. 11, 1851. No petitions have accepted after that time; Moe Internship, Secretary. University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS WILMINGTON, KANSAS KANSAS PRESS MEMBER 1937 ASSOCIATION MANAGING EDITOR DAVID E. PARTRIGE CAMPUS EDITORS KENNETH MORRIS AND JOHN CICCHIANNE SUBMITTED EDITOR BERNIE FREESON SOCIETY EDITOR JOAN ULEM SPORTS EDITOR WILLIAM PITZERFORD ELEGIBLUM EDITOR CHARLES GALERI MAKEUP EDITOR BOBbie CAKEY and JANE FLOORE KNEWIT EDITOR MARVIN GOOSEL BOOK EDITOR JULIANA ROSNER EDITOR-IN-CHEF Associate EDITORS: MORRIS TRONPON and GREG HINES ALICE HADAM-JOHN EDITOR 1937 Member 1938 Associated Collecid Press PUBLISHER ... J. HOWARD RUSCO Distributor of Collegiate Digest ALLET HALDMAN-JULIUS J. HOWARD RICO E. BAYARD MATTHEW KENNETH MOHR GRACE VALENTINE MARTHA BROOK EDWARD BRANNTY MARTIN BURTON MARGARET MATTIE JANE FLOPON MORRIS THOMPSON Kansan Board Members REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service Inc National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishing Representation ADAMSON AVE. NEW YORK, NY COLLEGE PARK PORTLAND, LA LOS ANGELES PORTLAND • BEATRICE The faculty of the open session consisted of E. J. Rice, president, and professor of mental and moral sciences; F. H. Snow, professor of ancient languages and literature; and F. H. Snow, professor of mathematics and natural sciences. Albert Newman gave lectures on hygiene and sanitary science. Pursuies Staff The building, for there was only one, was located west of where Corbin hall now stands and had eight recitation rooms and a chapel. Today the whereabouts of but three members of the first classes of the University are known and the incidents that were typical of that time, more than seventy years ago, now seem quite and humorous. Two Courses of Instruction There were two courses of instruction, one in college and the catalogue informed one that "Young ladies who desire can take French instead of Greek, although it is earnestly recommended that all should pursue the Greek. Many was optional with the student." There were 55 students in attendance in that first class in 1866, 20 "ladies" and 29 "gentlemen." Forty-eight were from Douglas county, two from Shawnee, one from Allen, one from Wabueneau, while three registered from other states—Missouri, Illinois and Ohio. BROWN MANAGER F. QUENTZY BROWN Entered as second-class maternal at LAW, September 17, 1909, at the post of Assistant Secretary to the Court. First Year of University Life Differed Greatly from Present One By Rosemary Blakely Two Courses of Instruction Candidates for admission to the Collegiate department were required to be at least 14 years of age and must have completed a bachelor's degree with evidence of good moral character. Students were asked to be prompt at the opening of the term, "and continue unto the end, and not abstain from the duty of her upon permission from the President." For clererymen's sons and daughters fees were cut in half. Soldiers orphans, and those mad orphans by raid, raid were invited to enter free. Faculty Came Early Prof. D. H. Robinson later described the opening day of the University, "The faculty were all present early. No one else, however, came for some time except two or three noisy carpenters, who were at work on the stairs. Soon a few boys came in and after a while a few more. "After the devotional exercises the students were sent around to the several professors for examination. Seniors and juniors were given up at the first glance. If any were present, they were sent back to study the course in college, which comes only from years of work over books, was not there. None had 3 3 No matter how badly your shoes are worn, we'll repair them to give months more of wear! Shoes Last Longer When Repaired the Modern Way! ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP 1017 Mass. Phone 686 "In the spring an unaccountable dropping off of students began. They gradually disappeared, one after another, until by the middle of April more than half our entire number was gone. All Work Guaranteed PATEE Week 10 c Til 7 Days Then 15 Closed With 22 Students' we found that spring work had taken our brawny student to the farm, where we suffered from the unusual strain of head work, were down with the 'spring fever,' Closed With 22 Students ENDS TONITE Erral Flynn "Green Light" Hugh Herbert Frank McHugh "Marry the Girl" "By much visiting and earnest missionary work among our patrons, we finally averted the threatened disgrace of abandonment, and closed our first year triumphantly with 22 students." The Alumni office, after sending out invitations this fall for the annual new student induction ceremony, re-organized its program and served several of the class since last year. M. , Araabelle Newlin, one of the class in a letter from San Malo, Calif., expressed regret that she seven-twelfth ceremony. Susan Savage Alford, another member of the class, is the mother of T. C. Alford, Washington correspondent for the Kansas City Star. Today but one of the 29 who were students from Lawrence, reside in this city. She is Mrs. Lillian Ross Leis at 410 Vermont. Meeting for All Students Interested in Golf Starts Thursday 3 Days 2 Big Hits! GENE AUTRY 'Public Cowboy No.1" All students interested in golf are invited to a meeting which will be held this evening at 8:30 in the Meadows. Fall tournaments will be discussed. AND Victor Moore Helen Broderick "MEET THE MISSUS" SERIAL - COMEDY For information about the coming inter-fraternity golf tourney, call Bill Mills at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house. Former Student Visits Sam McKenna, a former student at the University and now of the U. S. patrol on the Mexican border, visited Lawrence recently. He delivered a lecture to the hospital patientiary at Leavenworth and then came here for a short time. Faculty Recital Well Attended At the first faculty recital of the musical session Monday evening, a large audience heard the piano recital of Jan Chlapasso, associate professor of piano of the School of Fine Arts. Extra chairs were set up in the halls in the auditorium of the Administration building to accommodate the listeners. For the past three years, since he became a member of the faculty of the School of Fine Arts, Jan Chiapus has opened the musical season with his program. On each occasion a evidence has been present to greet him. Last evening, as in previous appearances, he demonstrated an amazing virtuosity. His program began with the Brains Variations on the Orchestra and ended with the Oriental Fantasy "Islamey," by Balakirew. The Great Sonata Op101 from Beethoven was another major offering of the evening. A delightful and sedentary Ronda Schubert gave particular pleasure. Member of Fine A r t s S t a f f Pleases Audience With Selected Program from the modern school Mr. Chianpuso chose the descriptive "Cloches a Travers les Feuilles", and the atmosphere of the distant bell was admirably portrayed through the involved harmonic patterns. Without interruption he procured his characters from Medtner, "Fair Talk" and "Primavera," both played with charm and a fine conception of their pursuits. B At the program's close Mr. Chia- BRICK'S "ON THE HILL" Buy a Meal Ticket $2.50 Ticket (Value $2.75) SAVE 10% $5.00 Ticket (Value $5.50) TODAY 2 Big Hits TODAY AND THURSDAY 2 Big Hits 10c TO ALL [ ] The Show Value of Lawrence Shows 2:30-7:00-9:30 ARSITY No. I—She Wouldn't Get Married — She Couldn't Cook—But He Loved Her Anyway! A NEW UNIVERSAL PICTURE CHARLES ROGERS Beautiful stage star dis- appears from church while tirol groom the mama she'llarry DORIS NOLAN The Glencore New Personality with MICHAEL WHALEN No. 2—They Met in Newark---Kissed in Chicago--And Married in Frisco! ... Five-Miles-a-Minute Thrills ... 10,000 Feet Up! 13 HOURS BY AIR FRED MacMURRAY · JOAN BENNETT ZoSu Pitts · John Howard · A Paramount Pictures IR FRIDAY - SATURDAY "It Happened Out West" And "Fighting Youth" SUNDAY—Fred MacMurray Glaworthwatth "Champagne Waltz" And "She's Dangerous" girl Subscribe for THE KANSAS CITY STAR PHONE 17 Headquarters Rexall Drug Store H. L. Nevin Distributor 13 papers - 15c per week 847 Mass. St. pusso was called back repeatedly to the stage to acknowledge the aplause. Lila Lee Vian, pianist from the studio of Dean D. M. Swarthout, will appear in her senior recital in the same hall Oct. 4. K F K U Wednesday, Sept. 29 3:00 p.m. Silent. 6:00-6:30 p.m. Piano recital, Prof. Jan Chiarusso. Thursday. Sept. 30 :30 p.m. Suent. :50 soprano recital, Marie Wil- Saturday, Oct. 2 Mohler, violence Glotzhach, pianist. 9. 28 p.m. Campus News. 0.5 p.m. Physical Education 1 o.r. Health, roundtable discussion by members of the division of physical education. 9:15 p.m. Intramural News. 2:30 n.m. Silent. Friday, Oct. 1 18 p.m. Jayhawkman Trompeleurs- laws Wleser, Maes Loehner, Boob Boyle; Bob Glotzbach, accom- panist. A G GRANADA 50.0 p.m. Singer; 60.0 p.m. KFKU String Trio: Hamer, Dodge Caine, violinist; Sarai Mohler, violoncellist; Robert 6:15 p.m. Piano Recital, Lila LeVan, studio Dean D. M. Swarthout. 00:00 p.m. Plano Recital, Mary Jane Bruce, studio Prof. Carl A. Prever. WEEK DAY SHOWS 3-20-7-9 25c 'til 7 NOW! ENDS FRIDAY Together For the First Time! The Best Actor of 1937... The Greatest Cinematic Captains *Cougarthus* A POWERFUL INDICTMENT OF ONE OF GANGSTONS MOST VICTUAL SUBSIDIARIES ...THE TAXICAB war! OF ONE OF CINEMAS'S MOST VICIOUS SUBSIDIARIES ...THE TAXICAB war! Luis RAHLER Spencer TBKY IN AN NOIR PICTURE BIG CITY with Charley Grappowin Eddie Quallier Jerret Beacher PLUS PLUS Musical Comedy Latest News Luisa RAIVER Spencer TRACY ON AM-10 IN PICTURES BIG CITY with Charley Grappolin Eddie Quallard Janet Beacher SUNDAY "The Life of Emile Zola" D "SOULS AT SEA" Coming DICKINSON The Friendly Theatre Showing 3-7-9 10c-25c 'til 7 then 10c-35c Last Chance to See "Artists and Models" Dizzy Spells? Feel Faint? Can't Sleep? You've Got 'Blonde Trouble' ELEANOR WHITTNE JOHNNY DOWNS LYNNE OVERMAN TERRY WALKER BENNY BAKER Also Short Subjects: Comedy Cartoon Fantasy Fox News SUNDAY Martha Bing RAYE CROSBY "Double or Nothing" "Lost Horizon" Coming EDNESDAY, SEPT. 29. 1937 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Here on the Hill an account of Mt. Oread Society JUNE ULM, Society Editor Before 1 p.m. call K.U. 21 after 5.27208-83 Hazen-Harnett Mr. and Mrs. F, O. Stone of Emporia announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their grand-daughter, Miss Mary Harnett, to the husband of Togenoxile. The wedding will take place Oct. 24 at Stafford. Miss Harnett was graduated from the University in 1933 and is a member of the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Mr. Hazen, a member of Alpha Tau Omega, received his LLB degree from the School of Law at the University in June and was admitted to the state bar. He is now employed by the U. S. Fidelity and Guaranty company of Kansas City, Mo. Hoax-Bovle The marriage of Miss Dorothy Boyle, c'38, of Boyle, to Carl Hoxx, c'38, of Lancaster, Pa., has been announced. The wedding took place at the Four Seasons Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Hoxx are home at 1400% Louisiana street. ☆ ☆ ☆ The Christian Ministers conference was held Monday at Myers hall and in the Pine room of the Memorial Union building. The out-of-town guests included: J. Lee Reefol, J. J. B. Pastor, Doner Morris伯劳, Jewell L. A. Brumbaugh, Salina L. A. Brumbaugh, Marion William Hort, Leaseworth M. Lee Lorey, Parsons R. K. Ruster, McPherson Larkin, Martin H. J. Humbert, Independence E. Claude Smith, Topica C. A. McMaster, Topica Golden, Golden C. A. Huff, Kansas City F. C. Cross, Kansas City Mr. and M. P. O. Davis, Belleville Mr. and M. P. Davis, Belleville Mr. and M. Prank Sanborn, Markate Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Nicholson, Con Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Berris, Beloit Mr. and Mrs. T. O. Parish, Topeka Alpha Omicron Pi entertained with formal dinner Monday evening, honoring its national president, Mrs. Warren C. Drummond of Evanston, III. Mrs. Drummond spoke on the sorority's social service work in the Kentucky mountains. The college chaplains and Mrs. E. H. Landley, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Werner, Mrs. Elizabeth Magnai, Mrs. A. J. L. Knight, Prof. and Mrs. K. H. Beamer, Dr. Gail McChore, Dr. Mary Wardell, Ms. Janet Turner, Kansas City, Mo., Mrs. Waldo S. I. Sankuan, Kansas City, Mo. The Rev. and Mrs. Carter H. Har- rison of the Trinity Episcopal parish entertained a group of young members in a carriage atpper at their home Sunday evening. Those present were: Joan Tattler Victoriay Dawes Doubly Netherson, c 49 Marsha Smith Tim Woods Robert Rowley Jake Lapper, c 18 Harry Wattle Dick Fleiss Glen Mason Warren Fowne Norman Rehg, émoul Sunday dinner guests at the Phi Delta Theta fraternity house were: Miss Mary Magnus Gougne Miss Emily McGee Miss Donna Felix Fmr Steven Miss Florence Dublin Miss Florence Columbia Mrs. A. H. Mix entertained yesterday with a luncheon honoring Mrs. Warren C. Drummond of ☆ ☆ ☆ Brace-Vallette The marriage of Miss Catherine Vallette, 33, to Wesley Brinker Brace, love place at Beloit, Sept. 25 she was the wife of Walter she attended the University. Watkins hall will entertain with ar hour dance from 7 to 8 o'clock to tomorrow evening. Miss Janet Turner, Kansas City, Mo., was a weekend guest at the Alpha Omicron Pi sorority house. The Phi Kappa Psi fraternity will have a buffet supper and hour dance tomorrow evening from 6 to 8. 宜 宜 宜 Evanaton, Ill., national president of the Alpha Micron Pi sorority, who is a guest for a few days at the sorority house. Paul Flight, Kansas City, Mo. Dr. Anne Lillebrun, Kansas City, Mo. Spencer Gild, Kansas City, Mo. Emily J. Eades, Kansas City, Mo. E. J. Eades, Kansas City, Mo. Ferrette Osby, Kansas City, Mo. William S. Crounnel, Kansas City, Mo. Stefan Wetber, Kansas City, Mo. Stefan Wetber, Kansas City, Mo. Louin Brocaday, Kansas City, Chancellor E. H. Lunley, Port W. W. Davis Dr. E. H. Taylor Professor Faint Dr. Katherine Lincoln, Neb. Norman Strout, Lincoln, Neb. Prank Lawyer, Lincoln, Neb. Walter Schultz, Manhattan David Olive, Manhattan The Beta Gamma chapter of Pi Kappa Alpha last night entertained with a dinner for the national president, Major E. W. Tiege of Atlanta. The Rev. and Mrs Carter Harrison entertained Monday with a formal dinner honoring Jan Chiapusso after his recital. Bill Seitz, e39, yesterday announced that anyone who is interested in securing a position as business assistant on the Jayhawker magazine may apply at the office on the third floor of the Memorial Union building any afternoon between 1:30 and 4:30. PHONE K.U. 66 To Select Jayhawker Assistant "Archaic court procedure, the jury system, long-time elapse between the murder and the sentence, and a high population rate of Negroes," were blamed by the director of the investigation. "Of course our situation is caused by our large colored population." Dr. Whitfield said, "but crime would be lessened if we threw out some moss-back traditions. We need speedy trials and sentences, fewer witnesses, and more legal executions." Intoxicating liquors were listed as accessories in half the homicides. The factor, he pointed out, was a condemnation of "lux enforcement of laws against crimes leading to killings, such as liquor selling, drunkenness, gambling and carrying of concealed weapons." WEATHER Fair today and continued cool. The guests were: Mr. and Mrs.江仲菁翰 Mr. and Ms.陈晋 Mr. and Ms. George Real Rev. and Ms. Joseph King SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN BEGINNERS Marion Rice Dance Studio Over Runney-Allison Flower Shop 927.1 Mass. St. **WANTED:** Roommate for quiet studious boy, also large double room for rent. Meals if desired. Phone 21801. -15 The Kansan Classified Ad Section 727 Mass. Frosty Malts - Ice Cream Fresh Roasted Peanuts Don't Miss the Fun! Learn to dance—all the latest bedroom steps ATTENTION GIVEN BEGINNERS Jackson, Miss., Sept. 28—(UP)—Missouri's unwanted letter of the nation's "homieid capital" continued through 1936, the second year in succession, according to Dr. R. Heldrich, state director of vital statistics. Jayhawk Barber Shop Completely Modernistic 1111 Mass. Phone 499 Open Sundays Don't Miss the Fun! Enjoy the best at no additional cost. Hair cut 35c. Dr. Whitfield reported that the state last year led the remaining states with 314 homicides—a rate of 25.5. PENN'S SUPREME Ice Cream Shop Southern Barbecued Sandwiches and Ribs Big Sandwich with sauce 15c Earl Ellis Joe Lech "Bill" Hensley "Paddy" Hyatt 727 Mass Mississippi Again Leads in Homicide Rate Over Rumley-Allion Flower Shop 927½ Mass. St. GRLS: TWO-ROOM nicely furnished A sink, Hink, and cold water. Frigidaire. S. E. exposure. Phone 1131J, 1139 Vermont. WANTED: Student Laundry, prizes reasonable, mending done free. Will call, deliver. Phone 1311. -17. Dorothy Gould, 37, Parsons, was a visitor at Watkins hall Tuesday. LOST; Red and black Parker Everharp, either Tuesday or Wednesday. Reward, Kenneth Wright. Phone 3171W. -186 The Chi Omega sorority entertained the Sigma Chi fraternity with an hour of dancing last evening. ... TAXI HUNSINGER'S 920 - 22 Mass. Phone 12 --the next meeting, open to all men and women students interested in the club, will be tomorrow at 8 p.m. in room 116, Marvin hall. ONE STOP Clothes Service Station ONE STOP Clothes Service Station SCHULZ the TAILOR --the next meeting, open to all men and women students interested in the club, will be tomorrow at 8 p.m. in room 116, Marvin hall. Buy GOOD shoe repair Our Prices are RIGHT! OYLER'S SHOE SHOP The Venus Beauty Salon 1346 Ohio --the next meeting, open to all men and women students interested in the club, will be tomorrow at 8 p.m. in room 116, Marvin hall. --the next meeting, open to all men and women students interested in the club, will be tomorrow at 8 p.m. in room 116, Marvin hall. Five Experienced Operators Featuring Dona Ray Cosmetics Vera Adderhold. Manager Phone 387 First floor, 842 Mass. MAGAZINES All popular magazines at one-half to one-third regular price. Magazine Exchange 729 Massachusetts WAVO BEAUTY SHOP PHONE K.U.66 SHAPMAS 25e up Shampoos 25e up Finger Waves 25e (dried) Oil Permements 2.50 up Typewriter Cleaning and Repairing --the next meeting, open to all men and women students interested in the club, will be tomorrow at 8 p.m. in room 116, Marvin hall. WANTED CONOCO CAR SERVICE! Phone 95 - 921 Miss. St. 1323 Kentucky Phone 20954 ===================================================================== Expert Washing ... 75c Check-Chart Greasing ... 75c Thorough Vaxium Cleaning ... 50c CLARENCE M. BAKER 1323 Kentucky Phone 2095J CONOCO SERVICE STATION Ribbons for sale. GAS and OILS M. H. Mitchell, Jack Allen Lessee Student Att' FOR RENT: Room for girl = 1147 | Ohio St.; east and west windows, south French door. Modernt approved. $9.00 per month. Phone 1147. -17. 9th and New Hampshire TAXI Call 2-800 UNION CAB CO. --the next meeting, open to all men and women students interested in the club, will be tomorrow at 8 p.m. in room 116, Marvin hall. WAVE, new styles, any style 25% dried Set up Apparatus For Oil Study SHAMPOO and 25c WAVE, dree Oil - Drene - Fitch Shampoo and Mass. St. Phone 533 Next door Keeler Book Store 25c dried SHAMPOO and WAVE. 35c dried Economy money on other beauty END CURLS, 18u, inquire 7 Experienced Operators IVAN Equipment Added IVAN BEAUTY SHOP 941½ Ivy Store $32 Nest, door keeper Store $33 End Curls $1.00 up, Complete PERMANENTS. Any Style $1.00, $1.50 up, complete 7321½ Mass. Phone 2353 Apparatus for making scientific study of oil-field wastes, with view to developing methods of salvaging commercially useful salts, is now being installed in the department of chemical engineering at the University under the direction of Prof. T. H. Marshall. The evaporator is expected to be in operation in six or seven weeks. 1 Kansas Greatest Newspaper Delivered to your door Daily and THE WICHITA BEACON One of the major problems in the Kansas oil-fields is the disposal of salt water that accompanies the petroleum. The State Board of Health watches disposal of these brines, as they contaminate rivers, or, if returned to the earth, may spoil the underground water supplies. 10 cents per week — Phone 2316 Repeated laboratory tests have shown the presence of salts, principally of sodium chloride, the common table salt, and also of bromine, iodine, and strontium. Bromine is the primary structure of ethyl gasoline, and iodine. A second, and equally important, phase of the work is the training of junior chemical engineers in the testing processes. The problem in the department of petroleum engineering is to test brines from various places in Kan-cha, China, and to explore in even short distances—to ascertain regions from which salts might be obtained in commercial quantities. Space for the installation of the evaporating machinery was obtained in the chemistry building by removing a basement floor that was some five feet above ground, and replacing it with one on the ground and another midway between this floor and the old high ceiling. Half Million Gas Masks Made Weekly by British London, Sept. 28—(OP) - Haiti a million gas masks a week are being produced at the British government factory at Blackburn. Thirteen gas-mask storage depots are being established throughout Great Britain. Many of the sites have been selected. Storage has already begun in the London area, which will have three depots, each one capable of holding 3,000,000 gas masks. Experiments are now being made regarding the distribution of masks to regional centers, whence they will be sent in lots of about 30,000 to the buildings from which distribution to individuals will be carried out. It is hoped eventually to organize 300,000 volunteer air wardens, who will carry out the final distribution if any emergency arises. It is not such a simple matter as it seems to store millions of masks. When completed and in metal containers, nitrogen to protect the rubber. They are made in three sizes, the smallest being suitable for children. There are complications regarding the masks for babies, and experiments are still being made to find out how they can help the problems is to protect the baby without frightening it, according to the officials. Pet Cobra Saves Mistress From Raider Simla, India, Sept. 27 —(UP)—A pet cobra rescued its mistress by killing an Indian raider who broke into the home of her boyfriend, par. according to a story, told here. The cobra was at the door when the raiding Dacoit tried to enter the house. He slashed at it with a dagger and slid his slipped into a nearby rat hole. A few minutes later, when the snake saw its mistress being bound and gagged by the Dacito, the cobra slipped out of the hole again and bit the man's ankle. The robber died a few minutes later. Cops Say 'No' When It Comes To Wading St. Paul, Sept. 27—(UP)—Love is having a good laugh these days at the Ramsey county deputy sheriffs. The deputies have been in the habit of breaking up moonlight trys of couples, parked in lightless cars on dark roads in rural Ramsey county. Knowing wary lovers are likely to flee at approach of headlights, guardians of the law darkened their ears to snell up quietly in cooers. Always the deputies delivered a stern lecture on the evils of parking violations and sent the love birds along home. But the swains and their girl friends didn't like it at all. Impelled to search for new parking places, they discovered to their delight that certain sections of sand bottom in White Bear Lake were firm enough to accommodate them. So these fall nights they are spooning hub-deep in water—25 or 50 feet off shore. And there, the frustrated deputies, unwilling to risk a dampening, are left on the shore. FLYING AROUND By Chuck Alexander, c'38 A chance for University students to learn to fly or to add up their飞翔 hours is to be offered in an organized flying club whose members will own an airplane and fly for $3 an hour including all expenses. Members of the flying club are to be provided a complimentary student's permit (usually costs $750) and a mechanic to care for the plane. DeMe尔 Eckhart, Phi Beta Pi, rated his fledgling wings last Sunday when he performed a nice job flight. Confirmation, Eckhart. The aviation committee of the city council has sent a regulation to Airport Manager W. H. Wells positively forbidding any commercial flying from the local municipal field in a ship not licensed by the department of commerce inspectors. The motive of the regulation is to increase the safety of flying, as many unsuspecting visitors cannot distinguish the difference between a licenseed and an unlicensed ship. Jim Clark, employee of T.W.A. in Kansas City, is hanging a Stinson tri-motor airplane here and will be flying passengers every Sunday. Clark has spent the past year "barn-storming" in this section of the country, carrying passengers on both days and night flights. Glen Harman, another medic but of the Nu Sig variety, has started receiving飞训 instruction. It won't be able to "cam" with the best of the pilots. Eliza Stone, veteran local pilot, who recently sold his all-metal Flamingo airplane to a plantation owner in South America, is receiving his new Stinson four-place ship next day. It is a very, neat, ship, fully equipped including night flying equipment. Soon after delivery can make a number of charter flights to the surrounding states. On the Shin-- Continued from page 1 ceitation—as yet the exception has to be found—Ask the Sayles gal for a peek at her identification card and when she says no, breathe something about how the camera never lies—Keith Swinehart slept through one of his classes yesterday morn—in the class room—Found: short article titled "Why I Love Bad Women". If no one claims same I shall put my name on it and have the Owl print it. 💎 💎 💎 + + + Keyhole special: Rumblings in the Hair-Birkini romances come to these ears via the eye. Twice in the last week "Pup" Hare has been coking with other swines. Two years is a record anyway, what? K. C. Billet quote—At the Chesterfield Club Saturday night, during the last strip of a tearing evening, a fair act was just about to be terminated when the orchestra broke into the sweet strains of The Chelsea Follies. This little pretty continued the unveiling as gracefully as possible among the standing songsters. Did the crowd war? Wow! End quote. U There's Youth in the Suits and U in the Models Some stores think only of a man's wishbone and forget all about his wallet. We know that no matter how gorgeous the clothing is . . . if the price is out of reach, the store is out of luck. Our Fall prices are your prices. As you stand before an Ober mirror and see miracles performed with these Fall suits and topcoats, you have that comfortable feeling of knowing that you can well afford to reach down into your old clothes to pay for the new ones. FALL SUITS $25 and up TOP COATS $21.50 and up O'Bee's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS BATTLE OF BANDS VARSITY LOUIE KUHN vs RED BLACKBURN 4 Hours of Continuous Dancing - - 8'till 12 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2 DATES ALL FOR 85c STAGS